Tag: SON

  • My son’s death is like killing Africa’s Steve Jobs

    My son’s death is like killing Africa’s Steve Jobs

     A promising teenage student of ASACS Group of Schools in Bwari Area Council of Abuja suddenly slumped and died while participating in the school’s inter house sport rehearsals. Since his death, his family has been up in arms with the school authority over the cause of death. Assistant Editor, Seun Akioye spoke to all the sides in the tragic incident.

    On March 1, 2017, at about 2pm, the mobile phone of Mirian Nnnana Ogbe, a journalist and marketing executive rang. The caller was a familiar name, Mr. Uche Cosmos, Principal, ASACS Group of Schools located in Bwari Area Council of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    Cosmos has had plenty of reasons to call Mirian in the last four years, her last child and her only boy, 16-year-old Michael Paul Ogbe had been a boarding student at the school. That day, Cosmos did not wait for the usual pleasantries before asking about the health conditions of Michael.

    “We are at Bwari General Hospital because Michael had an accident,” he told her. He then proceeded to ask about Michael’s medical history, which according to him, the doctors attending to Michael wanted.

    “Is Michael alive?” was the first statement that rolled off the lips of Mirian, Cosmos would later recall to The Nation. “Yes he is alive,” was the assurance, which Mirian needed.

    It took Mirian and her companion about 50 minutes to do the distance to the hospital, but far from the assurances given to her by Cosmos, the scene that confronted her was one that would change her life forever.

    Mirian: “I got to the hospital at about 2:50 pm and met Michael already dead; they had stuffed cotton wool into his nose and tied his legs in preparation for the mortuary. The Principal and other staff members of the school were just saying to me sorry ma, sorry ma.”

    Mirian was seating in a corner of her living room in the Life Camp area of the FCT; it was only a few days ago that her only son died in a yet to be ascertained circumstances in a school he had attended for four years.

    Michael was a final year student of the ASACS Group of Schools. According to his family members, he was perhaps the best student in the school; a computer genius, whose skills at computer programming was almost too good to be true.

    Mirian had lost her husband and Michael’s father 12 years ago and since then, she has had to shoulder the enormous responsibility of raising Michael and his siblings. But the boy’s genius seems to compensate for the days of starvation and sacrifice.

    “They were paid to kill my son,” Mirian said with a ferocious expression. It was a serious allegation to make against a school but she was adamant. “There is no housemaster in that school for one week, so nobody to check on them.  When he was sick, the housemaster would have called me that Michael was sick and asked him to step down on the training,” she said.

    The particulars of the circumstances that led to the death of the promising computer genius have been obtained mainly from the mother, the students who were at the scene and the school officials but none of these testimonials aligned in the most salient of points.

    According to Mirian, the school was preparing for the inter house sports and Michael was supposed to compete in the high jump category. On that day, he had complained of feeling sick to the school matron who asked him to go eat and come back for drugs. But Michael never went back for reason no one could tell.

    Michael went to participate in the High Jump activity but according to some of the students, he muttered “God help me” before he jumped and fell down heavily far beyond the mattress the school provided as a buffer.

    “Final year students were not supposed to be involved in all these inter house sports, which is why I said they were paid to kill him.  On that day, he went to the school clinic to say he was sick, the nurse asked him to go and eat and then come back for the drug, but he did not go back.

    “His blood group is AA and they are prone to malaria. He did not have any sickness; he did more than 30 tests in Germany, so the school needs to speak to us and tell us what happened between 10am and the 2pm they called me. I arrived at Bwari General Hospital by 2:50pm and he was already packaged for mortuary.

    “Michael landed so hard on the ground and according to the principal, the mattress they used was just like the size of this dining table like 4 by 6 and Michael height is 6: 4, so he landed heavily on the ground, he tried to stand up, he collapsed and tried again and collapsed. According to the principal, they started around 9 and it happened around 11am but I know that was a lie, it happened in the morning,” Mirian said.

    If the accident happened in the morning as postulated by Mirian, what then was the school doing between that time and the time he was rushed to the hospital? “They need to tell me what happened between the hours he fell down and the time he was taken to the hospital,” Mirian insisted.

    Another question was if Michael was unwell and it was to the knowledge of the school nurse, why was he allowed to participate in inter-house sports rehearsal? Was the school adequately equipped to run such sports in the premises? Why was there no housemaster in the school to monitor the wellbeing of the students?

    Mirian thinks she has all the answers. The school has no structure on ground to coordinate the sort of sporting activities it embarked on and her son died because the Ministry of Education, which was supposed to supervise such schools, was not monitoring the private boarding schools properly.

    She said: “Ordinarily before, they allowed the parents to come into the hostels to see where the students live but two years ago, they stopped, saying it was no longer allowed. The students always complain about bad feeding but because they are final year students we allowed it to go.

    “The Ministry of Education is not doing what it ought to; there is no monitoring; but there should be a standard. You must have some facilities in the boarding school, and parents have the right to know what the child is eating, where the child is living; the ministry shouldn’t just approve the school and let it run like that. There should be a system!

    “The Ministry of Sports should also come and check if the school has the facilities to run a sports competition. Ask the government if they have been monitoring? The school has dilapidated structures; they should shut some schools down because they are death traps. If you don’t have the facilities, you can’t run it; you can’t play the game.”

    Africa’s Steve Jobs

    “That boy was the Steve Job of Africa,” Marian said, a sad smile playing at the corner of her mouth. As if to reinforce her claim, she went into the room and brought the laptop Michael used the week preceding his death.

    “That boy was a genius,” she insisted. “He was into programming. He could hack into anybody’s phone and computer; he would sit down here just working normally on his computer and he already has locked your phone.”

    The boy they called Slom was truly at home with computers at a very early age. He adored the late Apple founder, Steve Jobs and the first picture he drew in his life was of Mr. Jobs. He was only eight years old then. All his apparatus were from the Apple brand, Ipad, laptop and phones. His mother eventually bought him a “normal” desktop computer; but he never touched it. The computer laid by a corner of the dining area in the house.

    He was said to have spent hours on the internet, soaking up the life and work of Mr. Jobs, learning about computer programming and fashioning his life after the Apple founder.

    The mother switched on Michael’s computer, it was an Apple MacBook and from the background, one could see the traces of a genius. “Nobody can open his computer in this house,” she said. On the home screen, a simple sentence read: “If you are not Michael Paul, shut down now,” it was hard to know if that was a threat or just an admonition.

    Michael called himself the computer god, his profile on Instagram read “Michael the Ghost Man.” None of his immediate family members could remember who taught him about computers, “He just knew it, no one taught him, it was a knowledge he brought from heaven,” a family member said.

    Michael was so versed in computer world he was said to be tutor to University students and would help Master’s degree students in Computer Engineering with their work. “They used to pay him a lot. Even people from IT companies would be waiting for Michael to come back from school to help them solve their issues; so the boy used to have a lot of money,” Mirian said.

    The money he made was reinvested in acquiring more gadgets and helping his family too. And he loved to play pranks by hacking into his siblings phones, diverting their calls and sometimes making prank calls to his sisters while he disabled their phones.

    He was said to also be in the habit of shutting down many fake websites and no matter how secured your website is, he would find a way around it, gain access and shut it down. He was mad over the MMM Ponzi scheme and once threatened to start one just to teach Nigerians a lesson.

    Michael was already processing an admission into a University in Canada; he had secured a partial admission to the Kwantlen Polytechnic University, Metro Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada where he would read Computer Science.

    “If Michael had gone to the university, he could have gone beyond Mark Zuckerberg,” a relative said with a strong conviction. But Michael himself had told his people he never wanted to make money, but to use his unusual knowledge and skill to educate people, come up with ideas and platforms that would solve Nigeria’s problems and prove to the world that Africa is no backwater. Ultimately, he wanted to become a cyber-security expert.

    “He could hack into any website; shut down any website and he wanted to become an expert in cyber security. I am very angry. I am sad but more angry. His death was unnecessary, if we had got to know on time.  It is just a shame that he had to die with his mind and his brain just like that,” another relative said.

    Inside ASACS International School

    The signboard announcing ASACS Group of Schools was sandwiched between about five others announcing different entities, from small businesses to a bank on the dusty and pot bole-ridden Bwari Road. The signboard itself was dirty and old and does no justice to the international appellation the school tried to portray.

    The main building in the school was a storey building which appeared to have recently been re-painted. The building was in a small compound and students could be seen loitering in some of the classrooms whose windows opened to the dusty street.

    Two other compound lay adjacent and opposite to the main school building, one is used for remedial classes while the other with a little more expansive compound housed on one side a rectangular building which housed the senior secondary and the staff room.

    Just like the main building, these two buildings appeared to have been recently painted but in blue colour- a job which even to a novice appeared badly done. Inside the classrooms, which had two sets of windows for easy ventilation, students went about their normal studies, though about two classes appeared to have no teachers.

    The hostels were behind the main building and they consist of small rooms built together. At the entrance to the hostels, two plain clothe security men sat on a stool and greeted visitors politely. A peep inside the hostel, like the whole school, did not justify the international appellation as it appeared old and ugly.

    The ground where Michael met his death was in front of his class; it was the small space the students had to practice for the inter-house sports and where all the sporting activities took place. The principal, Mr. Uche Cosmos, who has been at the helms of affairs for six years, was about leaving the school when The Nation visited.

    The principal disputed many of the statements made by Marian. Even though he could not recall the exact time the incident occurred, he was sure it wasn’t in the morning as claimed by the family. “I was not in the school when it happened; I left the school just before 10am and the inter-house sport practice had not commenced. They were only just preparing, so it could not have been the 10 o’ clock you mentioned,” he said.

    Cosmos said the school did the best it could under the circumstances. “I was called where I was when it happened; I cannot remember the time, but I told them to rush him to the General Hospital and also went there myself. I met him; he was still alive with about five doctors around him.

    “I was asked if he had any prior sickness and I said it was only the mother who could answer that. When I called the mother, the first thing she asked me was if he was still alive and I said yes because he was alive then.

    “It was after that that he died. I did not take not of the time. I could not have been checking the time at that time, but the school did everything it could for him. It was an unfortunate incident and we have cancelled the inter-house sports. We have also gone to see the mother and we have told the family that wherever they want the school to come in and help, we will surely do.”

    The principal also dismissed the allegation that the school does not have the facilities to hold inter-house sports. He claimed the mattress used in the high jump was the one used in the previous year which Michael also participated without incident. He said he could not see any sign of injury on the body which suggested that he did not die due to injuries sustained while in practice.

    “I didn’t see any injuries on him at all, it was a selection process, there had been two jumps and we were looking for the third qualifier. It was an ongoing process. The mother said they want to conduct autopsy on the body, we are waiting to see what it will come up with,” he said.

    He also seemed a little irritated about the claim that Michael was the best student in the school. “You can’t say he was the best student, he was not,” he said. But when asked about his computer skills he relaxed, “Yes, I can say he was good with computers but not the best student.”

    “Bury him in Abuja; we want to visit his grave”

    As the body of the teenager lay cold in the morgue, his friends at ASACS are already planning on some form of immortalisation. According to some of them who spoke on strict condition of anonymity, Michael should be buried in Abuja so the friends can attend his funeral.

    But their last homage would not end at the burial; they also planned on visiting his grave frequently, so they can continue paying their respect to a friend and a genius.

    “We are still on planning where to bury him, the family would decide, “Marian said. Then as if an idea just occurred to her she muttered: “They want to be visiting his grave. That is very touching, can you see that?” And for the first time in this discussion, what seemed like an emotion seemed to overpower her.

  • SON clamps down on expired consumables syndicate

    SON clamps down on expired consumables syndicate

    The Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) has seized expired household consumables and cosmetics worth billions of naira at a house in Kirikiri, Lagos.

    The products were imported into the country by a syndicate dealing in substandard and expired products. The agency has put in place a vigorous process of recall to get these products out of circulation.

    Products discovered at the warehouse included baby diapers, body creams, sanitary pads, detergents and other household items with expiration dates between 2009 and 2015. The most worrisome according to our correspondent, are expired baby diapers which have negative effects on babies.

    Director General, Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON), Osita Aboloma explained that the agency, courtesy of a tip off, stormed the warehouse, stocked with all sorts of expired products, pointing out that when a product loses its active ingredient, it means the product has lost its efficacy and can no longer be used for the purpose it was meant for.  He said as a result of this, the importer would face the wrath of the law based on the new SON Act number 14 of 2015 which gives the agency the power to prosecute.

    Aboloma, who was represented by the Director, Compliance Directorate, SON,  Bede Obayi, an engineer, said:  “What we have discovered, it  is a dubious warehouse where people churn out products to markets and what  we have seen is that they are also supplying to supermarkets. We are going to carry out further investigation and process of recall to use those people that they have supplied, the status of the products and the expiry dates. We have our offices throughout the nation and we are going to escalate the recall process immediately when we get all the details of their transactions. Anywhere we find these products in circulation, SON must get there to pick them at the cost of this importer. SON can no longer tolerate this nefarious act and people who are out to kill Nigerians in the name of merchandise.

    This is not acceptable to SON and we cannot take this.” Aboloma added: “Imagine a product that should be used in wrapping up a baby in 2017 has expired in 2015, what will be the effect on the baby, of course it would be negative reaction on the baby. We have baby powders that have expired since 2013 and four years after, the products are still going into the market. When they sell, they remove the expiry dates and put new dates  to deceive the unsuspecting consumers and when you buy these products, you think they are products that can help you, not knowing that they are products that would cause you all sorts of diseases.”

    According to the SON official, many innocent people suffer without knowing the root causes of their illnesses, maintaining that the importer of these expired products are killing and robbing innocent Nigerians of their hard-earned money

    He urged Nigerians to join hands with the agency in its quest to safeguard them against fake and substandard goods, adding that SON would relentlessly continue to work hard to achieve its zero tolerance for substandard products in the country.

    “These products are popular and imported brands which show that these people go overseas to buy products that are almost close to their expiry dates and bring them down here because they have cheap markets where people can buy them. We have come here and we discovered products all stuffed in every part of the building. This tells you the magnitude of crime that this man is committing bringing in these substandard products,” Obayi stated.

     

  • Minister to SON: assist to get Nigeria out of recession

    Minister to SON: assist to get Nigeria out of recession

    Minister of State for Industry, Trade and Investment Hajia Aisha Abubakar has urged the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) to rise up to the challenge of helping Nigeria to get out of recession.

    She said SON could do this by making available to Nigerians its requisite technical skills and competence.

    Mrs. Abubakar spoke in Lagos yesterday, at this year’s SON’s Management Retreat.

    The minister, who was represented by Executive Secretary of the Financial Reporting Council Mr. Daniel Asapokhai, said SON had developed technical skills and competences, urging the agency to deploy them for economic growth.

    “You need to bring these to bear on your service delivery to Nigerians, particularly in promoting the diversification of the nation’s economy,” the minister said.

    The minister assured the SON that the Federal Government, through the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment, would keep providing the  support and encouragement to serve the people diligently.

    He said the SON D-G and his team should make themselves proud business facilitators and positive change agents to  emerge as the most facilitative agency this year.

    The agency’s DG, Mr. Osita Aboloma, described the theme of repositioning for better performance, as relevant.

    He hoped the workers were better positioned to deliver as ambassadors of standards.

    He was confident they would help Nigeria out of the recession through improved performance, adding that the SON, with the collaboration of sister agencies, had done well so far.

  • SON gets two months mandate on SMEs certification

    SON gets two months mandate on SMEs certification

    The Federal Government has mandated the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) to galvanise the standardisation of all Small Medium Enterprises (SMEs) in the country.  This will include the process of certifying locally-made products and ensuring they meet established standards and competitive quality for exports by removing hurdles on their resolve to get certification for their products.

    SON’s Director-General, Mr. Osita Aboloma stated this in Lagos at a management retreat with a theme “Repositioning the Standards Organisation of Nigeria for optimal performance in a diversified economy.”

    Aboloma confirmed the receipt of the mandate from the Acting President, Prof Yemi Osinbajo. He said Osinbajo directed that SON should through their mandate ease the hurdles for business. He said SON is poised to bring its competencies and expertise in the implementation of the Nigeria Industrial Revolution Plan (NIRP) with measures to drive the economy. He pledged to reposition SMEs to be in the front burner in efforts to ensure effective implementation of the NIRP.

    The SON chief further said they would reposition standardization and quality assurance activities with a view to creating the enabling environment for investments and production of goods and services in the country to improve the ease of doing business and encourage exports.

    The Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Dr. Okechukwu Enelamah said the current economic downturn necessitates the development of various initiatives by various arms of government, which include the recovery and growth plan by the ministry to resuscitate collapsed industries.

    He said the ministry is also poised to boosting trade, attracting responsible foreign direct investments, to reinvigorate Micro Small Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) and enhance patronage for locally manufactured goods.

    He urged SON to reinvigorate her strategies in the fight against the influx and distribution of substandard products as part of measures to protect the local industries from unfair competition and reposition them for export trade to earn the most desired foreign exchange and check recession.

    Enelamah said: “The global collapse of commodity prices undoubtedly provides a golden opportunity for Nigeria to develop its endowed domestic capacity in terms of production and consumption. The implication of this is the increased demand for your organisation services nationwide. Your participation in the ongoing MSME clinic surely provides you the feel of Nigerians and the work that lies ahead in furtherance of the Ease of Doing Business Initiative.”

  • Surety to lose N54m over son’s ‘escape’

    An Igbosere Magistrates’ Court, Lagos, yesterday remanded a 60-year-old man, Amos Oyemade, for his alleged failure to produce his son, Sesan, whom he stood surety for.

    The police said Oyemade entered a N54million bond to produce Sesan, who was standing trial for allegedly stealing N54million but allowed him to flee abroad.

    Oyemade was arraigned yesterday by the Zone 2 Police Division, Lagos before Mr B. A. Sonuga on a one-count charge marked F/12/2017 bordering on obstruction of justice.

    Prosecuting Inspector Steven Molo said the defendant committed the alleged offence last May 11, at Lion Building Police Headquarters, Lagos Island, Lagos.

    He said Oyemade promised the police that he would produce Sesan whenever needed, till the case was determined, but did not do so.

    “The defendant failed to produce his son on May 12, 2016 and other subsequent dates, as was requested by the police. He allowed his son to travel outside the country,” Molo said.

    He prayed the court to compel the defendant to should  show cause why the bond of N54 million he entered, should not be forfeited to the Lagos State Government.

    The defendant pleaded not guilty.

    Magistrate Sonuga remanded him in prison custody and adjourned the case till April 14, for bail consideration.

  • SON to tyre users: Beware!

    SON to tyre users: Beware!

    Mrs. Ebere Okoye bought four brand new 15 rim tyres from a man simply identified as Emma from his shop at No. 38 Fatai Atere Way, Mushin, Lagos, as she prepared to travel home for the Christmas.

    On the fateful day, her driver gripping the steering wheel of the Honda Accord car with confidence calculated that at a steady speed of 100 kilometres per hour, he would be able to enter Onitsha under six hours barring any incidence especially as the car has been fitted with brand new tyres.

    He had gone to a professional to fit the tyres and, immediately after, took the car for wheel balancing and alignment just to make sure that everything was perfect as he was embarking on the long journey with a family of four.

    Leaving home as early as 5a.m in order to beat traffic hold ups, he was happy that after about three hours, he was almost at Ore, Ondo State. But all of a sudden, he heard a big burst and everyone in the car screamed ‘Jesus’ out of fear.

    Alarmed and gripping the steering hard, without applying brakes, he managed successfully to steer the car off the highway. Relieved that no further damage was done, they successfully got a vulcaniser after about 45minutes. After changing the burst tyre with the spare, they continued the journey though very apprehensive and mindful that they had no spare tyre now.

    At Ore town, they had to buy another spare tyre at a very exorbitant price. The question on the mind of every occupant of the car was: how could a brand new tyre bought just a week ago burst just like that?

    As he continued the journey, just after Benin Bye Pass, he heard a big blast, intimating him that one of the rear tyres has gone burst. Pulling over, to his surprise and chagrin, he realised it was one of the new ones that was recently bought and not even the spare tyre.

    The third tyre went burst on Niger Bridge. Out of annoyance, Okoye searched through her bag and pulled out the receipt she was issued when she bought the tyres. In annoyance, she called Emma threatening to get him arrested anytime she gets back to Lagos. Feigning surprise, the seller explained that other people that bought the tyres did not complain and that even if the tyres were substandard that he did not manufacture them.

    Just last week, Engineer Kester Ajayi left his house in Surulere in his Mercedes car to his office at Alausa, Ikeja. Not up to five minutes of driving along Ikorodu Road, one of his front tyres which he attested to be brand new went burst, causing the car to somersault several times before finally resting on its side. The only occupant, Ajayi, sustained injuries.

    Most of us are quite familiar with the story of Chief James Ocholi, the former Minister of State for Labour who died with his wife and son as a result of an accident occasioned by a burst tyre.

    Explaining how the minister, his wife and his 20-year-old son died, Kaduna State Sector Commander of FRSC, Francis Udoma, said the rear tyre of the SUV they were travelling in went burst, while the vehicle skidded off the road and somersaulted several times into the bush. The minister and his son died on the spot while the wife died later in hospital.

    Okoye, her family and Ajayi were lucky, but the minister, his family and many others were not lucky. The stories are endless.

    The Standard Organisation of Nigeria (SON) has been on their toes trying to curb and stop the importation and smuggling into the country of substandard tyres

    Last weekend, many were speechless and taken aback when SON conducted journalists to a massive warehouse beside Navy Barracks, Ojo, Statellite town, Lagos, that was filled with over two million substandard tyres imported into the country by the duo  of Taolung Shen and Xu Jing Yau, Chinese nationals.

    Abuses were hurled at the callous importers as they were paraded before journalists. People wondered at the cruelty and lack of regard for human life they exhibited by bringing into the country tyres which from the look and texture of most of them were already weak and not likely to withstand any road pressure.

    Tempers ran even higher as people examining the tyres noticed that they were also post dated. Some of the tyres had manufactured dates as March, January, February 2017, while the day of this inspection was February 25th 2017.

    The first comment from the Director General and Chief Executive Officer of SON, Osita Aboloma, as he walked into the premises, horrified at the sight of the huge number of substandard tyres, was, “this is a terrible shame.”  A terrible shame that importers could sear their conscience and endanger human lives like that. A terrible shame that with all the warnings and everything that the agency has put in place to deter such unscrupulous importers from such wickedness they still engage in it.

    The tyres described by the agency as the largest seizure of substandard tyres in one swoop in the history of Nigeria is over two million and worth over N5 billion.

    The DG and CEO of SON, who took journalists round the warehouse, described the tyres as dead on arrival, adding that allowing them to enter the market amounted to surreptitiously taking away the lives of millions of Nigerians.

    Apart from being substandard tyres, the two arrested Chinese importers were also cloning different sizes of tyres in the warehouse under brand names of Powertrace, Aptany, Harmony, Daraturn, Bearway, City Tour, Winda, Glory, Chachland, City Grand, Grandsonte [Tyre Type] and Sunny [for tricycle], among others.

    Many of the tyres arrived the country with about five tyres stuffed into one resulting in the tyres bending and most of them ruptured and looking weak and slack.

    The Chinese then adorned them with new tyre labels and shining linings to create the impression of being new and strong.

    According to the SON DG, “We have over 60 containers of tyres, actually stuffed tyre to be precise. Again, even if these are to be standard tyres, the fact that up to five of them were tucked into one, with operators using rods to separate from one another when they reached Nigeria, the tyres will naturally become substandard.

  • SON clarifies roles in ‘fake’ tyre importation

    The Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) has clarified its role in the clearance of products at the country’s entry points, saying the agency was not properly positioned to stop substandard products at the entry points since its exit from the seaports in 2011.

    In a statement issued by its Head of Public Relations, Mr. Bola Fashina, in Abuja, SON said despite its off-shore conformity assessment programme (SONCAP) to assess the quality of products from their countries of origin, some unpatriotic importers still circumvent the process in a bid to make excessive profits.

    This peculiar situation, according to him, requires that imported consignments are closely examined on arrival to confirm the quality which the agency is only able to do diligently when invited for cargo examination which are usually far between.

    On the recently seized tyres allegedly brought into the country by some Chinese businessmen, Fashina said the off-shore certification of the product quality by SON was tampered with during the consignments’ importation.

    The certification, he said only attests to the equality of the tyres under normal and proper storage and transportation.

    “Any alteration or tampering action in transit can only be detected at the point of examination of the products by trained personnel of SON during inspection and sampling,” the SON spokesman stated.

     

  • NAFDAC, SON to fast-track grant of  licences, approvals

    NAFDAC, SON to fast-track grant of licences, approvals

    The National Agency For Food, Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC) and the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON), have undertaken to grant licenses and approvals to Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (SMEs) within 90 days,

    They gave the commitment to the Acting President, Yemi Osinbajo, during a follow-up meeting he had with the Abia State Governor Okezie Ikpeazu, and SMEs stakeholders from the state and some Federal Government regulatory agencies in Abuja.

    Osinbajo had called on the  government’s regulatory agencies to act as catalysts of beneficial change and to take responsibility for facilitating businesses in the country. “We must see ourselves as agents of some catalytic change, we must take some responsibility to make profound changes possible,” Osinbajo told regulatory agencies, according to a statement endorsed by the Senior Special Assistant on Media & Publicity to the President Office of the Vice President, Laolu Akande.

    The Acting President had visited Aba to kick-off the Presidency’s MSMES Clinics where medium and small scale businesses are brought together in one spot with Federal Government regulatory agencies they interface with.

    At the meeting, also attended by the Industry, Trade and Investment Minister-Dr. Okey Enelamah, and the Minister of State in the ministry, Mrs. Aisha Abubakar, the Acting President directed both NAFDAC and SON to give specific timelines within which they would grant licences and approvals required of them by business interests.

    SON Director-General, Mr. Aboloma Osita, who attended the meeting announced that within 60 days,  the agency will issue required approvals, while the Acting Director-General of NAFDAC, Mrs. Yetunde Oni also said within 90 days the agency would issue all required licenses.

    Both officials said the timing starts from the day the requests are submitted.

    According to the Acting President, regulatory agencies such as NAFDAC and SON would be judged by how many people, businesses they are able to support “to achieve the greatest public good.”

    He commended the Abia State governor for his drive, adding that ‘Made-in-Aba’ products are now acquiring a mark of quality.

    Said he: “like I said during my visit to Aba, you can’t have any serious kind of industrialisation in this country, without a focus on Aba.”

    He also met with the Governors of Cross Rivers, Senator Ben Ayade; Akwa Ibom, Mr. Emmanuel Udom and Ebonyi State, Mr. Dave Umahi, alongside top officials of the National Boundary Commission, led by the Director-General, Dr. Muhammad Ahmad, to review updates on boundary  and boundary demarcation issues.


     

  • Mother, son reunite through facebook after 33 years

    Mother, son reunite through facebook after 33 years

    A simple Facebook search reunited a mother and son who were separated without contact for 33 years, the pair said on Thursday.

    Vipavadee Thisorn, 54, and Parinya Thisorn, 36, met each other for the first time in three decades in an emotional encounter on Wednesday at Thailand’s southern city of Hat Yai.

    Their meeting came three days after Vipavadee searched for her son on Facebook and found him, after several previous unsuccessful attempts.

    “I tried searching his nickname ‘Oat’ and his full name many times and never found him,’’ Vipavadee said.

    Parinya just recently bought a smartphone and joined Facebook.

    Vipavadee, who separated from her husband, Parinya’s father, when he was 3-years-old, said she was too young at the time to take responsibility.

    She had tried to reconnect with her son over the years.

    “For the past few years, I kept seeing Parinya’s father, who died in 2011, in my vision, he would sit next to my bed when I was sleeping.

    “I think this is the sign that it is the right time to try to find my son again.

    “I started the conversation on Facebook with my son. He was not sure who I was at first and asked personal questions like his father’s name and my nickname.

    “Once we both realised we are mother and son, we both burst into tears,’’ Vipavadee said.

    Parinya, who travelled 1,700 kilometres from the northern city of Chiang Rai, asked his mother to live with him and his son.

    “I will never let her go again,’’ he said. (dpa/NAN)

  • Kwara, SON make case for made-in-Nigeria products

    The Kwara State government, Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) and an industrialist have pushed for made-in-Nigeria goods as a recipe for the country’s economy development.

    They said this in Ilorin, the state capital, at the presentation of the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON)’s certificate of mandatory conformity assessment programme (MANCAP) to the managing director of an Ilorin-based Forgo Battery Company Limited, Joseph Offorjama.

    The state Commissioner for Commerce and Cooperatives, Alhaji Abubakar Rifu said Nigeria does not need to rely on imported products to grow its economy.

    The commissioner, who was represented by a director in the ministry, Hajia Aisat Abubakar said, “We are happy that SON is ensuring standard for us to have value for our money. If we can get value for our money we don’t need to consume imported products. The campaign for buy Nigerian-made products would have started a very long time ago so that we will appreciate ourselves.

    “I want to congratulate Forgo Battery for doing the right thing. We are indeed very happy with you. We will always support you; we will always be there for you when you need our services. The government is very happy with you. I encourage you not to compromise standard in

    your production. Let the customers recognise you.”

    Kwara state Coordinator, SON, Sunday Yashim said “patronage of made-in-Nigeria goods is the only way to grow the country’s economy.

    “The impression that made-in-Nigeria products are substandard is the mentality of the black man. He does believe in himself. The truth about it is that any product that is manufactured has minimum requirements and almost all the products we have certified have met those minimum requirements.

    “Any product that has our logo, it is assumed the product is of high quality. And SON is an autonomous parastatal. If the product falls short of the minimum standard members of the “public is at liberty to see redress in the law court.”

    Speaking with reporters shortly after receiving the MANCAP certificate, Mr. Offorjama listed some of the challenges confronting manufacturers in the country as “difficulty in sourcing foreign exchange to import some vital materials that are not available locally; difficulty in getting spare-parts for some of the machines as they are not made here; unavailability of technical-know-how. So have to pay through our noses to import experts periodically to handle some things for us.”

    He admitted that locally produced goods are far better than imported ones in some instances, adding that “the local products are good and even much better, because battery has a life. The modern batteries now which are maintenance free start the day they are sealed. If you buy batteries that have been regulated by SON-Nigerian Industrial Standard (NIS) freshly made then you have got true value for your money.”

    He urged the Federal Government to help local manufacturers to get foreign exchange with ease.

    “This should be urgently attended to because most factories still need foreign exchange to get spare parts and some raw materials that are not available here”, he said.

    In the area of power cost, we think government should stop the upward revive of tariff until supply improves. Presently too, there are clamours for other sources of power which we highly encourage.

    “So having other sources of energy through gas and solar is welcome development.

    With that energy cost can be competitive. Over time, as the economy improves we will see how to source raw materials from research institute that available to make these materials known and where they are. And we will explore them to reduce the cost of importation.”