Tag: Stomach

  • Stomach infrastructure has failed in Ekiti, says APC chieftain

    Stomach infrastructure has failed in Ekiti, says APC chieftain

    In All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain in Ekiti State, Olajide Akinyemi, has promised to use agriculture as a catalyst to develop the Fountain of Knowledge and banish hunger, if he becomes the governor.

    Akinyemi in an interview with The Nation in Ado Ekiti, the state capital, said Ekiti has no business being poor if its rich agricultural potentials are well developed and harnessed for the good of its people.

    He chided the Ayo Fayose-led administration for abandoning agriculture and deceiving the people with stomach infrastructure which, according to him, has further unleashed hunger on the state.

    Akinyemi said Fayose’s stomach infrastructure has failed the people with civil servants being owed arrears of five months, adding that local businesses have been killed with ‘outrageous’ taxes and harsh economic policies.

    He said: “It is apparent that Fayose’s stomach infrastructure has failed our people. It was a gimmick used to deceive the electorate. But, we can give our people through investment in agriculture.

    “This will ensure food security, provide more employment opportunities by taking our youths off the streets and also generate revenue into the coffers of our state. “

    The aspirant, a farmer and investor said the sector can employ not less than 50 per cent of the population in the state.

    He promised to establish a youth commercial agriculture scheme in all the 16 local government areas to produce cocoa, plantain, cassava, timber, in large quantity for local consumption and foreign exchange.

    Apart from agriculture, Akinyemi promised to make micro-credit loans available to small scale traders, young school leavers, women groups and artisans to own and grow their businesses.

    He described the APC as the only party that has the interest of Ekiti at heart, expressing the confidence to win its ticket and the governorship at the 2018 polls.

  • Just like us Ghana improves on ‘stomach infrastructure’

    In more than one way, Ghana is showing Nigeria superiority. In chronological age, the country once addressed as “Gold Coast” already comes first: she got her independence in 1957, three solid years ahead of Nigeria (1960).

    It is only in upending democracy that she was slightly overtaken by her Anglophone neighbour: military putschists struck in Accra a month (February 24, 1966) after the “5 Majors” rumbled in Lagos (January 15).

    In contemporary terms, while it is true Nigeria discovered oil first, Ghana, a newcomer in the sector, is fast evincing more gumption.

    Despite its manifest innumerable benefits, the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) is yet to be passed into law in Nigeria as our political actors continue to put personal/sectional interests before country.

    But without much ado, the Ghanaian congress took a bi-partisan route and turned PIB to law few days ago.

    Now, Ghana has transited to the realm of creativity. Since All Progressives Party (APC) was shellacked in the governorship polls in Ekiti State in 2014, Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has often gloated one magic formula – “stomach infrastructure” – did it. Claiming to understand the psychology of politics better than the competition, PDP postulates that physical offer of a “congo” (measure) of rice, salt and “wedging” that cocktail with token cash on election eve is far more irresistible to most voters than the catalogue of infrastructural projects delivered for public use. Since it worked in Ekiti, PDP was then quick at laying claims to the patent right of “stomach infrastructure”.

    But, as usual, Ghana has exposed the structural inadequacies of that Nigerian creation by simply proceeding to stretch “stomach infrastructure” to its culinary limits. With campaigns revving up ahead of their forthcoming presidential elections, members of the National Democratic Congress, the ruling party in Ghana, have been bringing the unusual to rallies: jollof rice massed cooked in massive pots. Those interested were encouraged to help themselves to the feast as campaign “starters”.

    At a recent rally, a foot-soldier of NDC was seen squabbling with a serving female minister during a session of jollof rice (as pictured).

    The message should however not be lost: if they serve raw foodstuff in Nigeria, in Ghana value is already added to the condiment before offer is made to the people.

  • Ikpeazu: Combining physical and stomach infrastructure

    Governor Okezie Ikpeazu of Abia State may have drawn from recent history to drive the two concepts of physical infrastructure and stomach infrastructure simultaneously. He is running on the two lanes; building the badly dilapidated roads of Abia and particularly renewing the city of Aba and at the same time building human capacity by attending to the people’s immediate needs.  Two of his pet projects – the Friends of Abia Schools Adoption Initiative (FASAI) and Feeding of School Pupils obviously fall in the line of stomach infrastructure.

    Indeed, until Governor Ayodele Fayose of Ekiti State popularized the concept of stomach infrastructure and drove on that plank to oust an incumbent governor out of power, Nigerians never knew the dangers of ignoring the concept and the inherent power and goodwill derivable from the practice for a leader. It is today a proven theory that upholding the practice of stomach infrastructure must be an essential character of a political leader and political leadership in Nigeria of today.  It has since entered into our political books that the victory of Fayose over the incumbent Governor Kayode Fayemi in the June 21, 2014, was the vindication of the wisdom in stomach infrastructure.

    The lesson that emerged thereafter from the Ekiti scenario was that, for effective and impactful political leadership, both physical and stomach infrastructure must be given due consideration by any leader who wants to remain a legend in the hearts of the citizenry. The two are meaningful goals of democracy and therefore none must be emphasized above the other. The two must run concurrently. Okezie Ikpeazu got this message, loud and clear.

    What then is physical infrastructure as against stomach infrastructure? Physical infrastructure relates to the building of physical projects – roads, bridges, hospitals, schools, monumental buildings, etc. Today, Ikpeazu is constructing 45 roads and two bridges in Abia and these  cut across the three geopolitical zones of the state. It is no more news, also, that he is constructing four roads in Aba with cement technology or what experts call, rigid pavement technology thereby blazing a trail as far as this technology is concerned in Nigeria. This is because apart from the airport tarmacs and factory platforms where big engines and machines are installed, cement technology is not yet a common experience in Nigeria, especially in road construction. He is daring the nationwide economic crunch to execute this high cost intensive project at this straightened time.

    On the contrary,  stomach infrastructure  looks down to the people’s immediate needs: empowerment programme for unemployed youths and widows; maintenance assistance to the aged; health foundation to assist the poor; agric facilities for the rural poor farmers; skill acquizition centres for poor unskilled men and women; loan grants to enable them take off in little measure; direct food relief to the poorest of the poor; borehole in rural communities to  solve water scarcity problems;  establishment of small-scale cottage industries in the villages where the rural community can work and also acquire experience on how to produce minor things and many more.

    Indeed, it is from this perspective that the governor has launched his pet project of Feeding School Pupils in 170 primary schools in the state, three times a week. Under the Universal Basic Education provisions, the governor is driving a pilot arrangement of feeding primary school pupils three in 10 schools in the 17 local councils of the state. The pupils are to be fed on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. This action will have to be executed in schools in the rural areas with high indigent population. The target public is the poorest of the poor, pupils from indigent homes who study under very unhealthy situations. The governor wants to create an enabling environment for them and share his little milk of human kindness.

    Also, as part of his 51st birthday celebration, the governor also launched the school adoption initiative and invited the friends of Abia to come and rediscover their roots and give back to the communities that made them by adopting indigent pupils and volunteering to renovate the dilapidated structures of the schools. This project is a novel idea which is a bit different from government tradition of renovating and equipping primary schools in rural, urban and semi-urban areas.  The approach is to identify the worst primary schools in each of the local councils and give them a facelift with the hope that when the worst of these schools are upgraded, the effect on the entire primary school system will be enormous.

    The governor regretted that the primary schools which form the base of the entire school system have long been  neglectted  for long due to a number of factors, which   include lack of Old Boys Association, Parents Teachers Association etc. He noted that pupils in these schools are exposed to extreme weather conditions including sitting on bare floors. Thus, the aim is to use the project to turn around the poorest primary schools across the state. The project is designed to give hope to pupils from poor schools by getting well-to-do individuals within and outside the state to adopt such schools and in the process enhance their fortunes and by extension the intellectual horizon of the benefiting pupils. Most of the influential members of the public are products of these schools which in their heydays were glorious institutions. Ikpeazu’s motive in this project is to provide an opportunity for these notable citizens to give back to the society, in this case, the schools that produced them.

    In the same vein, the governor also announced a N20,000 monthly stipend for the first 125 intakes of the newly commissioned Skill Acquizition Centre built by the National Directorate of Employment (NDE) at Otueke in Ugwunagbo Local Council of the state.  His wife is also running another pet project, Vicar Hope Foundation, through which she is attending to the immediate needs of widows, the handicapped and the less privileged in the society.

    Stomach infrastructure, indeed is a moral suasion which is about giving governance a human face.  It is about understanding the bottom-top, gradual approaches in developmental strides. It is about carrying everybody along, everyone in his own pace. By identifying the need for a convergence between physical and stomach infrastructure in Abia State, Governor Ikpeazu is interspersing power with remorse. Remember Shakespeare? “The abuse of greatness is when it disjoins remorse from power.”

    Adindu is Chief Press Secretary to Abia governor.

  • Bishop promises ‘stomach infrastructure’

    The governorship candidate of the Accord Party(AP) in Akwa Ibom State, Bishop Samuel Akpan, has promised to end the biting hunger prevailing among the majority of the Akwa Ibom people, if elected governor.

    Speaking on what people should expect from him, Akpan said his government will implement ‘stomach infrastructure’ and fight unemployment by going straight into industrialisation.

    He lamented that many in Akwa Ibom people were still suffering from abject poverty with most of them going about in hunger.

    This, to him, is a misnomer as the wealth of the state is concentrated only in the hands of a handful of people in government or those having access to them.

    The Accord Party’s candidate promised to distribute the wealth of the state through policies in such a way that will benefit the masses as against what is presently obtained.

    As part of his industrialisation programme, the Accord Party’s governorship candidate said his administration will build modular refineries at different locations in the state and open- up participation in the oil and gas industry so that indigenes of the state can take part and benefit from this God given blessings.

    He said the other angle to his industrialisation programme will be more agric- based.

    Asked to expatiate on the ‘stomach infrastructure’ and the pattern it will take, the Bishop said that remains the secret of his administration when voted into office but assured  it will contain the biting hunger prevalent among the majority in the state

  • Accord Party on ‘stomach infrastructure’

    Akwa Ibom State governorship candidate of Accord Party (A) and its leader in the state, Bishop Samuel Akpan, has promised to end the prevailing hunger among  the people, if elected next February.

    The Accord candidate spoke on what the people should expect from him, if he wins next year’s election and forms the next government in May, 2015.

  • Stomach cancer now spotted by breath test

    A quick and simple breath test can diagnose stomach cancer, a study findings reveal.

    Scientists from Israel and China found the test was 90 percent accurate at detecting and distinguishing cancers from other stomach complaints in 130 patients.

    At present, doctors diagnose stomach cancer by taking a biopsy of the stomach lining using a probe and a flexible camera passed via mouth and down the gullet.

    The science behind the test itself is not new as many researchers have been working on the possibility of breath tests for a number of cancers, including lung.

    But the work by Prof Hossam Haick, of the Israel Institute of Technology, suggests it is a good way to spot stomach cancer.

    The new test looks for chemical profiles in exhaled breath that are unique to patients with stomach cancer.

    Cancer appears to give off a signature smell of volatile organic compounds that can be detected using the right technical medical kit – and perhaps even dogs.

    As well as accurately distinguishing between these conditions, the breath test could tell the difference between early and late-stage stomach cancers.

    The team is now running a bigger study in more patients to validate their test.

    Researchers say that the results of this latest study are promising, although large scale trials will now be needed to confirm these findings.