Tag: UNICEF

  • UNICEF, Niger sign N600m MoU for 2017 work plan

    UNICEF, Niger sign N600m MoU for 2017 work plan

    The United Nations Children’s Education Fund ( UNICEF ) has signed N600 million Memorandum of Understanding with Niger Government for the 2017 annual work plan.

    Malam Idris Baba, Officer in Charge, UNICEF Kaduna Field Office, dropped the hint on Thursday in Minna.

    He said that it was the last plan of the four-year country programme that UNICEF was running with Niger government and was designed to run from 2014 to 2017.

    Baba said that the four-year plan was part of UNICEF commitment to give intervention and assistance to Niger state government in four key areas.

    He said the areas include; maternal and new born child component, communication for development, basic education and media relations.

    He disclosed that immediately after the 2017 plan, UNICEF will develop a five-year plan with Niger government that would run from 2018 to 2022 to cover another five-year period.

    “We signed one MoU in 2014; one in 2015, one in 2016 and we are signing the last bit of the four-year’s plan in 2017.

    “The plan is meant to guide us to commit ourselves in ensuring that we deliver results to children and women in Niger state.

    “We also use the plan to mark commitment because we share the same goals and vision for children and women of Niger state and to ensure that some amount of money is meant for bettering the lives of women and children in the state,’’ he said.

    Baba, however, commended the state government for its continuous support and for providing enabling environment for UNICEF activities in the state.

    Responding, Bello, commended UNICEF intervention programme in the state, adding that such intervention had impacted positively on the lives of women and children.

    He urged UNICEF to increase its areas of intervention to the development of infrastructures, especially in primary and secondary schools in the state.

    According to him, there was deficit of infrastructure in the educational sector that needed urgent attention from state government and our development partners.

    “There is massive deficit of infrastructure in our public schools. We have spent a lot of money in renovating nine schools, and as government we cannot do it all alone.

    “As state, we will continue to contribute our quota and increase our budget, especially in education sector so as to bridge the gap,’’ he said.

    Bello advised UNICEF to make its area of intervention and activities known in the state by using the media to publicise its activities for people to key in.

    Bello signed the MoU on behalf of the state government, while Baba signed on behalf of UNICEF.

    NAN

  • 11m doctors, nurses, teachers needed to save Africa from ‘disaster’ – UN

    11m doctors, nurses, teachers needed to save Africa from ‘disaster’ – UN

    Africa needs 11 million more doctors, nurses and teachers by 2030 to prevent a “social and economic disaster” that could propel millions to migrate, the UN said on Thursday.

    It said the 11 million were needed to help the continent cope with a booming population, with the number of children set to increase by 170 million to 750 million in the next 13 years.

    “We are at the most critical juncture for Africa’s children,” Leila Pakkala of the UNICEF said in a statement.

    “Get it right, and we could … lift hundreds of millions out of extreme poverty, and contribute to enhanced prosperity, stability, and peace,” said Pakkala, who heads UNICEF operations in eastern and southern Africa.

    The UN’s children agency attributed the boom in births to high fertility rates, a rising number of women of reproductive age and lower child mortality.

    UNICEF said by the end of the century, one in two children worldwide will live in Africa.

    If they reach working age both schooled and healthy, they could spur economic growth – but for that to happen, Pakkala said investment in education and health were badly needed.

    UNICEF added that more schools must be built.

    The UN agency said that teachers, doctors, midwives and health workers must be trained and encouraged to stay in their community rather than move to cities or abroad.

    More than one in five Africans aged six to 11 are not in school.

    Girls, in particular, are more likely never to see a classroom, waylayed by child marriage and teenage pregnancy.

    Six in ten Africans lack access to basic sanitation and on average there are only 1.7 medical professionals per 1,000 inhabitants, well below the minimum international standard of 4.45 set by the WHO.

    To bridge the gap, 5.6 million health workers and 5.8 million teachers have to be trained by 2030.

    If it fails to invest in its future, Africa risks a “demographic disaster, characterised by unemployment and instability,” UNICEF said.

    It painted a picture where a lack of jobs, rapid urbanization and climate change could force millions to flee the continent seeking a better life overseas.

    Robert Yates, a health expert at the British think tank Chatham House, said 11 million teachers and medics was a challenging goal but not unfeasible, as shown by the rapid development of some Asian countries, such as Thailand and China.

    The UN agency added that this required a strong political will to boost public spending on health and education – rare in sub-Saharan Africa.

    Nigeria, which currently accounts for 20 percent of all Africa’s births, for example spends only 0.9 per cent of its GDP on public health, one of the lowest rates in the world.

    Exceptions in recent decades included South Africa, Rwanda and Ethiopia.

    NAN

  • UNICEF sensitises 500 rural traders on hand washing in Osun

    UNICEF sensitises 500 rural traders on hand washing in Osun

    No fewer than 500 rural traders were on Monday sensitised on the importance of hand washing at Olufi Market, Gbongan in Ayedaade Local Government Area of Osun.

  • Coca-Cola to launch ‘safe birth initiative’

    Coca-Cola to launch ‘safe birth initiative’

    A new program – The Safe Birth Initiative,  is to be launched by Coca-Cola company to support the Ministries of Health in Ivory Coast and Nigeria to tackle the high incidence of maternal and newborn mortalities

    This was disclosed by the Coca-Cola Europe, Middle East & Africa (EMEA) Group President, Brian Smith, during a courtesy visit to Alassane Ouattara, President of the Republic of Ivory Coast.

    The program will focus on strengthening the capacity of maternity and neonatal units in selected public hospitals in Ivory Coast and Nigeria.

    With US$2 million grant from Coca-Cola to Medshare International Inc., the US-based not-for-profit NGO will source essential equipment, kits and supplies worth about US$20 million to enable safe deliveries and post-delivery emergency care for both mothers and their newborns.

    The program will also include the training of biomedical technicians and other appropriate hospital personnel by Medshare International on the operation, repair and maintenance of the donated equipment as well as the reactivation of a huge stock of faulty or abandoned equipment in public hospitals which is a major challenge for the country’s healthcare delivery system.

    This intervention comes as Ivory Coast, which has enjoyed stability as one of the fastest economic growth rates since the end of a civil war in 2011, grapples with some of the highest maternal and newborn mortality ratios globally.

    According to UNICEF’s 2016 State of the World’s Children report, 38 out of every 1,000 babies die within the first 28 days of birth while 645 out of 100,000 women die during or shortly after child birth due to avoidable conditions. This translates to 31,000 newborns and 5,400 maternal deaths annually in a country with a population of 24 million people.

    In Nigeria on the other hand, about 40,000 women and 260,000 newborns (excluding 300,000 stillborn) die during or shortly after childbirth annually. About 29% of the newborn deaths (90,000) occur in the first 24 hours of birth. For this reason, neonatal mortality is considered as one of the worst public health crises in Nigeria and a major priority for the Government in its resolve to meet the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

    Brian Smith, Coca-Cola EMEA Group President stated, “The commitment to help promote sustainable development in our communities is a fundamental part of Coca-Cola’s strategy for sustainable business growth. This program which demonstrates this commitment will help save the precious lives of many mothers and newborns and also support the remarkable efforts of the Ivorian government at rebuilding this vibrant country”.

    President Ouattara welcomed Coca-Cola’s support for the Health Ministry, noting that maternal and child health was an area the country recorded a weak performance under the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). “Your new program will translate to improved healthcare and budget savings which will be channeled to other needs,” President Ouattara said, adding that his Administration has been able to drive growth in the economy at an average rate of 9% over the last 5 years. “Our emphasis now is to boost social expenditure with a focus on health, education and youth employment in order reduce the poverty level further from 50% to about 25% by the end of my current tenure”.

    Ivorian Minister of Health, Dr. Goudou Coffi, noted that improvement of maternal and newborn healthcare is one of the public health priorities of the country and thanked Coca-Cola for the initiative. “Coca-Cola’s support through the Safe Birth Initiative will significantly strengthen our healthcare capacity and boost our resolve towards achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) targets in relation to maternal and newborn mortalities”, she said.

    Peter Njonjo, President of Coca-Cola West Africa Business Unit said “Coca-Cola has a special relationship with women who are pillars of our business, especially in Africa where women play a dominant role in our distribution and retail network. Just like our 5 by 20 Initiative, the Safe Birth Initiative which we will be implemented in Ivory Coast and Nigeria is a platform enabling us to promote the well being of women, in this case, as it relates to the special but vulnerable experience of childbirth”.

  • Kebbi: UNICEF presents ‘faith for life’ to Gov

    Kebbi: UNICEF presents ‘faith for life’ to Gov

    UNICEF has presented publications entitled “FAITH FOR LIFE” on Islamic and Christianity perspectives about preventive medical care to Kebbi State Government. 

    Quoting extremely from the glorious Qur’an and the Holy Bible, the publications continued endorsement by the two scriptures of immunization and vaccination to children and adults against diseases. 

     UNICEF Chief Field Officer, Sokoto Zonal Office Muhammad Mahiuddin presented the documents to Governor Abubakar Atiku Bagudu in Birnin Kebbi at the inaugural ceremony of Kebbi State Advocacy and Community Engagement Workshop. 

    He said UNICEF recognized the efficacy of traditional rulers and Religious Leaders to mobilizing people to embraced immunization and dropped the wrong conception about the programme. 

    Muhammad Muhiuddin expressed unhappiness that, immunization coverage in the zone emanated to a decimal 4%. 

    Governor Abubakar Atiku Bagudu welcomed the publication which highlighted the approval of Islam and Christianity on immunization against diseases. 

     He emphasized that the involvement of communities as major stakeholders in Health Matters was a paramount importance, adding that, no development could be achieved without commenting advocacy and engagement. 

    Senator Abubakar Atiku Bagudu gave an assurance that Kebbi State would continue to fulfil its obligations to UNICEF and requested the United Nations to increase funding to UNICEF because its present allocations were too meagre. 

    The Secretary to the State Government Alhaji Babale Umar Yauri expressed the belief that most outbreak of diseases could be prevented if there was community involvement. 

    The representative of the Emir of Gwandu Alhaji Muhammadu Ilyasu Bashar, the Bunun Gwandu, Abubakar Zaki Wala acknowledged the immense contributions and assistance of UNICEF to the development of Education and provision of health care services to Muslim, Christians and general populations of the world. 

    In a vote of thanks the Commissioner for Health Alhaji Umaru Usman Kambaza expressed gratitude to Governor Abubakar Atiku Bagudu for giving prominence to improving Health care services in the state and expressed appreciation to the UNICEF Chief Zonal Office Sokoto for his untiring efforts to ensure that, all children in Kebbi State benefitted from this services rendered by UNICEF.

    On the occasion UNICEF signed separate Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the state government and media partnership with the Nigerian Union of Journalist (NUJ).

  • OCHA partner NEMA to tackle disaster

    OCHA partner NEMA to tackle disaster

    The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs ( OCHA ), Nigeria, says it is partnering National Emergency Management Agency ( NEMA ) on strategic planning and coordination of humanitarian agencies, to strengthen disaster response.

    Mrs Alta Bell, UN OCHA Representative, said this at the opening of a four-day workshop organised by NEMA in collaboration with UNICEF on the review and update of the National Multi-Hazard Contingency Plan in Keffi, Nassarawa State.

    Bell noted that the major challenge of humanitarian agencies such as NEMA was coordinating with other agencies during disaster response, which usually delayed conflict resolution.

    She said that the workshop was aimed at bringing together all humanitarian agencies to plan toward proper coordination and early preparation for disaster-prone areas.

    “As a representative of the UN Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), I think our organisation shares a special bond with some organisations like NEMA.

    “We have a challenging role of coordinating across many different organisations and agencies.

    “Even at the international level, we are working with the governments and in the case of NEMA, they have the challenge of trying to work together, coordinate and consolidate across the whole country.

    “They are faced with the challenge to coordinate all the different levels of government and also to bring the different organisations and agencies to work together.

    “To bring everyone together is not a very easy thing; coordination is one of those challenges difficult to define.”

    According to her, coordinating means bringing people together; meeting on a regular basis, doing strategic planning and doing preparation, continuous planning such as the focus of the workshop.

    She urged participants to brainstorm and evolve plans that would help mitigate and improve response to disasters.

    Also speaking, the Director-General of NEMA, Alhaji Yunusa Maihaja, said that the workshop was aimed at strengthening the commitments and collaborations of stakeholders to identify and delineate roles and responsibilities, to reduce and prevent disasters.

    Maihaja said the review and update of the National Multi-Hazard Contingency plan was of critical national significance.

    According to him, an integrated proactive disaster management is being employed as a necessary strategy for the assurance of human security and promotion of sustainable development.

    He said that it also focused on reducing risk and vulnerability at household, community and at national levels.

    He said that NEMA considered its collaboration with UNICEF a priority and valuable in concerted efforts to build a culture of prevention, preparedness, response and community resilience to disasters.

    The NEMA director-general said that the workshop had further created a platform for exchange of ideas between the UN systems, international NGOs and the private and public sector emergency response stakeholders.

    He said that the recent flood disasters in some parts of the country, especially Benue, Imo and Lagos, were sad reminders of the 2012 flooding which caused a lot of displacement, food insecurity, malnutrition and epidemic.

    Maihaja said that the 2012 flooding and the ongoing humanitarian crises in the North-East were huge economic losses which destroyed national assets as well as claimed lives.

    NAN

  • Boko Haram keeps 3 million kids out of school in North East

    Boko Haram keeps 3 million kids out of school in North East

    The Boko Haram insurgency in the Northeast has forced the closure of more than 57 per cent of schools in Borno State, leaving about 3 million children without an education as the school year begins, the United Nations Children’s Fund said yesterday.

    “Children in Northeast Nigeria are living through so much horror,” said Justin Forsyth, UNICEF’s Deputy Executive Director at the end of a three-day visit to Maiduguri, the Borno State capital.

    “In addition to devastating malnutrition, violence and an outbreak of cholera, the attacks on schools is in danger of creating a lost generation of children, threatening their and the country’s future,” he said.

    “Even though the first task is to save children’s lives from pneumonia, diarrhea and malnutrition, we also want to make sure children keep learning and get back to school,” Forsyth said  after visiting the  border village of Banki,about 133 kilometers southeast of Maiduguri.

    Some 10.5 million children are out of school throughout Nigeria, he said, but the insurgency has affected Borno state most acutely.

    Nearly 2,300 teachers have been killed in the northeast since 2009 by Boko Haram.

    “Even in the midst of conflict we need to make sure that children keep learning. It helps them overcome trauma,” he said, adding that many children there have been kidnapped and have experienced violence.

    Two young boys told him about being kidnapped, watching people be killed and being forced to work for Boko Haram under threat of beatings and abuse.

    “These boys are deeply traumatized. They are being supported to overcome that situation, and when asked what they most wanted, they both said to me they wanted to go to school,” he said.

    The eight-year insurgency has claimed more than 20,000 lives  in the Lake Chad region, and displaced more than 2.3 million. Casualties have doubled in the past five months in Borno and Adamawa states because of increased suicide bombings, many carried out by young girls, Amnesty International has said.

    “The use of children as human bombs — close to 100 so far this year — has sown a climate of mistrust among communities in the northeast,” the U.N. agency says.

    UNICEF has been able to enroll nearly 750,000 children in school this year in northern Nigeria, it said, establishing more than 350 temporary learning spaces.

    But the U.N. humanitarian agency says that only 12 percent of funding needed for education in Nigeria has been received.

    Teachers are needed in the remote areas, and funds are needed to recruit them and to rebuild schools, Forsyth said, calling for a deeper partnership and more investment by the government, international community and the U.N.

  • Boko Haram: Three million kids out of school in Northeast – UNICEF

    Boko Haram: Three million kids out of school in Northeast – UNICEF

    The Boko Haram insurgency in the Northeast has forced the closure of more than 57 percent of schools in Borno State, leaving about three million children without an education as the school year begins, the United Nations Children’s Fund said on Friday.

    “Children in northeast Nigeria are living through so much horror,” said Justin Forsyth, UNICEF’s Deputy Executive Director, at the end of a three-day visit to Maiduguri, the Borno State capital.

    “In addition to devastating malnutrition, violence and an outbreak of cholera, the attacks on schools is in danger of creating a lost generation of children, threatening their and the country’s future.

    “Even though the first task is to save children’s lives from pneumonia, diarrhea and malnutrition, we also want to make sure children keep learning and get back to school.”

    Some 10.5 million children are out of school throughout Nigeria, he said, but the insurgency has affected Borno State most acutely.

    Nearly 2,300 teachers have been killed in the Northeast since 2009 by Boko Haram.

    “Even in the midst of conflict we need to make sure that children keep learning. It helps them overcome trauma,” he said, adding that many children there have been kidnapped and experienced violence.

    Two young boys told him about being kidnapped, watching people be killed and being forced to work for Boko Haram under threat of beatings and abuse.

    “These boys are deeply traumatized. They are being supported to overcome that situation, and when asked what they most wanted, they both said to me they wanted to go to school,” he said.

    The eight-year insurgency has claimed more than 20,000 lives  in the Lake Chad region, and displaced more than 2.3 million. Casualties have doubled in the past five months in Borno and Adamawa States because of increased suicide bombings, many carried out by young girls, Amnesty International has said.

    “The use of children as human bombs — close to 100 so far this year — has sown a climate of mistrust among communities in the Northeast,” the UN agency said.

    UNICEF has been able to enroll nearly 750,000 children in school this year in northern Nigeria, it said, establishing more than 350 temporary learning spaces.

     

     

  • UNICEF immunises 108,575 Under-5 children

    The United Nations International Children Emergency Fund (UNICEF) yesterday disclosed that 108,575 under-five children in 850 Hard-to-Reach (HTR) communities in Niger State have been vaccinated and immunised.

    The Niger State Coordinator of the UNICEF Hard to Reach Communities, Dr. Mohammed Khalid, said that 314,604 Oral Polio Vaccines (OPV) doses were administered to the children along with other medical interventions.

    Khalid who disclosed this yesterday in Minna during a one-day sensitisation meeting with journalists in Minna said that there are 3,600 hard to reach communities in Niger State, where people have no access to healthcare facilities due to the challenging terrains leading to these communities.

    He lamented that most of the health facilities are more than five kilometres from these communities which can take a number of hours for the villagers to get health services, adding that UNICEF is handling only 850 communities leaving about 2,950 communities without the possibility of accessing healthcare in the state.

    “So many of these hard-to-reach communities are so far away from civilisation that they do not have electricity or even mobile networks. They have been abandoned, they are socially secluded and do not even know what they are missing because they have been left behind.”

    Khalid further explained that the hard-to-reach project in Niger State engages in routine immunisation, including supplemental oral polio virus doses, diagnosis and treatment of childhood illnesses, nutritional assessment, Vitamin A supplements, among others.

  • Kaadi Igbe Ayo: Ondo’s revolutionary use of technology

    Kaadi Igbe Ayo: Ondo’s revolutionary use of technology

    In terms of social protection, Ondo State is the most progressive environment, in Nigeria, actually in Africa. When you look at the number of social intervention programmes, the quality, and the number of people benefiting from the programmes, and how long that they have been enjoying these social services, Ondo State is unbeatable in Africa. – Tejinder Sandhu, Chief of Field Office of UNICEF.

    Mimiko’s achievements in office, which spanned multi-sectors in the 8 years that he had the privilege to serve the Ondo people, have defied the norms of Nigerian politics. There’s no denying, therefore, that any public official in Nigeria who is interested in driving real change would prioritize putting in place social safety measures to bridge the inequality gap and drive meaningful progress in the society.

    Recently some state governors in Nigeria have announced plans to launch residency cards. Characteristically, buzzwords such as social safety ’, ‘social protection and ‘pull citizens out of anonymity’ litter the government press releases.

    For keen observers of public policy in the country, these press statements, which come straight from the PR engine room of the governments, have been met with a mix of skepticism and concern.

    At various times in the past decade, a number of state governments have initiated a residency card project or some other forms of identification cards. The Delta State (2016) and Edo State (2010) governments launched residency cards, which appeared to have gone defunct after colourful full-page adverts announcing the projects in national newspapers.

    In 2012, the Imo State governor, Owelle Rochas Okorocha made a bizarre mention of a plan to introduce a state identification card for Northerners in the state to checkmate the violence perpetuated by the Fulani herdsmen militia. His intentions gave rise to widespread condemnation. The Nigerian Senate declared the project inconsistent with Nigeria’s constitution and he abandoned the idea.

    In a similar move, the Imo State government introduced a ‘smart ID card’ for civil servants in the state in 2013. The project was met with stiff resistance mostly due to the cost to the state workers.

    The Rauf Aregbesola administration of Osun State launched a smart card for civil servants in April 2014. It was to serve several purposes including being a source of identification. In August of the same year, it launched a Students Card. On the day of the “launch” of the civil servants card, as it turned out, there was neither a database for the card nor proof that any citizen had been issued with one. None of these cards have been widely deployed till date.

    The Lagos State Residency Registration Agency was created in 2011. As at July 2017, records from the agency’s website indicate that only 400,000 permanent cards are “ready for collection”. LASRRA did not respond to e-mailed questions pertaining to current data on the project. However, if available information is correct, it means that 400,000 Lagos residents would have the residency card; this represents 6.7% of the state’s 22 million population. This penetration level cannot be applauded as a success.

    It is safe to say that past and on-going attempts by state governments to introduce residency cards have simply not worked. Unease over recent pronouncements by state governments, center around the fact that past identification card projects, tend to become black holes for sinking public resources.
    But, in the landscape of e-governance false starts, there is a leading light. Before we take a close look at this internationally acclaimed success story, it is useful to review the foundation for creating a database of citizens of any society.

    The Social Protection Floor

    In 2009, when a World Bank report revealed that an alarming 2.8 billion people on the globe lived in poverty, of which 1 billion (about 1 in 6 people) were classified as living in extreme poverty, the chief executives of the United Nations System came together and created the concept of a Social Protection Floor (SPF).

    This high profile intervention put together by these leading international NGOs identified four essential social protection rights, which ideally, should be universal. The SPF contains four key components which are aimed at providing universal access to basic social services (like healthcare, education, housing, clean water, and others) and social transfers (in cash or kind) aimed at primarily guaranteeing income security and food security.

    The United Nations Systems Chief Executives Board for Co-ordination, UNCEB identified governments, as the central actors for promoting social intervention policies that would reduce the extreme inequality around the world. At the time the SPF was coined in 2009, social protection programmes had been implemented, decades prior, in most of the developed world.

    It has been established, through observation and empirical research, that the most impactful governments were those that deliberately designed and deployed a social intervention programme. Also, the bedrock of an effective social protection scheme is the quality of data used in crafting policy, decision-making, and implementation.

    The most recent World Bank report on global poverty, published in 2013 and updated on October 2016, indicates that 10.7% of the world’s population lives in extreme poverty. Half of this 766 million people live in Sub Saharan Africa. A vast majority of them in rural areas are poorly educated, and half of this number is under 18 years old.

    According to Nigeria’s National Bureau of Statistics, 100 million Nigerians live in “absolute poverty” as at 2012. The World Bank puts Nigeria’s poverty level at 33.1% as at 2014.

    Leading development experts say that political stability, a crippling income inequality, ethnic conflict, corruption, and poor governance bring on this grim statistic.

    There’s no denying, therefore, that any public official in Nigeria who is interested in driving real change would prioritize putting in place social safety measures to bridge the inequality gap and drive meaningful progress in the society. One obvious step in this regard would be to identify those people who live on the margins of society; the people who are often undocumented, living anonymously, “the forgotten ones”.

    No government can be effective at driving positive change without a credible demographic disaggregation of its people at its fingertips. Because, at the foundation of an effective social protection policy must be quality data – not taken from a sample, but from the entire population.

    Credible data helps a government understand the people it governs; who they are, where they live, how they live, what they do for a living, how much they earn, how many children they have, where their children go to school, and how healthy they are.

    “It is important for all governments – federal and states to have a credible database of all its citizens for a variety of reasons,” Tejinder Sandhu, the chief of Field Office of UNICEF said in a recent interview.

    “For instance, if the government decided to target the ‘poorest of the poor’ for social services, you need a database of the people you want to serve.
    “The kind of database that supports social protection programmes is supposed to be such that it decodes the life of the citizen.

    “Depending on the level of the data, the government can breakdown the population to low income, mid-income, women, widows of a certain age, occupation, and so much more.”

    “A whole range of government policies would be better implemented with a credible database.” In the 21st century, the use of technology in driving positive social change cannot be overemphasized. Sadly, Nigeria still trails behind in the use of technology in governance. Since the return of civilian rule in 1999, several attempts have been made, albeit unsuccessfully, to capture a modern database of Nigerians.

    The last national census held in the country in 2006 was an analogue affair in which census officials who didn’t use any electronic equipment on the field used the old-school, door-to-door method. Till date, the official population figures for the country are estimated. Multiple experts have called the population figures “dubious” and the statistician-general of the country has labeled the 170 million-census figure as “mere speculation”.

    It is against this backdrop that Dr. Olusegun Mimiko came on the stage in 2009 with a clearly defined vision of what he wanted to accomplish as the governor of Ondo State.

    Pretty much reflective of those of the national statistics, Ondo State had poor human development indexes in 2009. With a population of about 4 million, school enrollment was the lowest in the southwestern region and maternal mortality was one of the highest in the same region, in a country with an alarming average maternal mortality ratio.

    In his inaugural speech delivered at the Akure Township Stadium on February 24, 2009, Dr. Mimiko provided a glimpse into his vision with regards to social protection for his people when he told a jubilant crowd, “I want to know all of you by name. I want to know where you live. I want to know what you do for a living. I want to be able to talk to you one-on-one. I want to know the exact number seeking employment and I want to know what type of qualifications you have. I need to know these and many other things to be able to catalyze the joint processes and mechanism for the realization of our collective dream.”

    In a 2016 press briefing, Dr. Mimiko captured, succinctly, the backstory of the creation of the groundbreaking smart residency card, Kaadi Igbe Ayo. During his famed election tribunal, which lasted between 2007 and 2009, his legal strategy included using technology to prove that his opponent, then Governor Olusegun Agagu had rigged the keenly contested poll.

    At some point, it was suggested that Mimiko’s campaign organization should buy a software from Korea that would help him to strengthen the evidence he presented in the trial. But when his campaign’s Information Communications Technology, ICT, heard of this suggestion, they kicked against it and took up the challenge of creating a software that would sort out hundreds of thousands of ballot papers and match them with right ballot boxes.

    “In forty-eight hours, our team produced a software with a small fraction of money that would have been spent on the foreign software,” Dr. Mimiko explained to journalists at the Ondo Governor’s Office in February 2016.

    “This confirmed what I had always known. That with the enabling environment, Nigerians, especially their youth, can do exploits in the field of technology and quite frankly, even surpass the world’s best.”

    “I always knew we would run a Social Democratic Government and the bedrock of a social protection programme is the ability to track your people, to know who they are, where they live, how they live, and what government interventions they need,” the then Ondo governor said at that event.

    Immediately Dr. Mimiko was sworn into office, the ICT team was one of the first he put in place to begin work on creating a multi-functional residency card that wouldn’t just be a photo identification card or a biometric card, but a truly smart card that was “practicable, scalable, affordable, and sustainable.” The project was part of a broad plan to deliver government services to the people.

    As the team set to work, they soon discovered that they had to work without the benefit of a credible benchmark to guide their processes.
    “It turned out that Mimiko’s vision of a robust multi-functional residency card had never been done anywhere in the world,” Tunde Yadeka, who served as the chairperson of the Ondo State Information Technology Agency from 2010 to 2017, said.

    The team set out to achieve what appeared as impossible at the start of the project. Midway in the process, Governor Mimiko invited officials of the United Nations Development Programme, UNDP, to review the project and offer their technical advice.

    “When UNDP officials came to Akure. They met with Tunde Yadeka and his team, they inspected the project, asked a barrage of questions and concluded that the robustness of what we were trying to do in Ondo State had never been done anywhere in the world,” Mimiko revealed.

    “But they said that given the system that we had put in place, thus far, that a valuable product could emerge at the end of the road. “The UNDP officials advised my government to give the ICT team the necessary support that would enable them focus on the project unwaveringly.

    “I was, then, more confident to keep giving the project the executive support that it needed,” he said.

    Data In Motion

    In 2013, Kaadi Igbe Ayo, which is Yoruba for Card for Good Living, was launched in Ondo State. It is a revolutionary multi-functional smart card with over 90 applications.

    The Ondo residency smart card captures bio data, occupation, family size, income level, tax records, and just about everything about the citizen even up to health records. Since it is a smart card, this means that the information on the card can be updated as the circumstances of the citizen changes. It is scalable and more apps can be added to Kaadi Igbe Ayo at anytime.

    In terms of functionality, the closest e-governance card, to Kaadi Igbe Ayo is the national card in Malaysia and it doesn’t come close to the quantum nature of data of the Ondo State Residency card. The German government tried to set up this kind of revolutionary identification system to address public health care in the country. After 11 years and £1.7 billion spent on the German Electronic Health Card, the project is in jeopardy and there are news reports that it will soon be scrapped.

    Kaadi Igbe Ayo has been used during the distribution of social welfare benefits like micro-loans and women empowerment programmes, distribution of farm inputs to local farmers, distribution of food to the poor, and so many other government programmes.

    As at February 2017, when Mimiko left office, the state government was set to begin implementing the tax-monitoring feature of the card. There is an expert consensus that deeper penetration of Kaadi Igbe Ayo and a strict tax compliance drive using the tool would directly significantly impact the internal government revenue of the state.

    “Kaadi Igbe Ayo is an excellent idea,” Tejinder Sandhu maintained as he stressed that the project was wholly initiated and done by the Ondo State government. “UNICEF only reviewed the project and found it to be a good tool for the government to use in delivering services to the people.”

    When the Ondo State government decided to implement safety policies and needed to license all commercial motorcycle riders in the state, the Kaadi Igbe Ayo database produced an instant report on all the people working as commercial motorcycle riders in the state. It was complete with their contact information and addresses. The implementation of the new safety policies was easy and trackable.

    Mr. Sandhu also endorsed the social protection environment created by the Mimiko led-government in Ondo State. “In terms of social protection, Ondo State is the most progressive environment, in Nigeria, actually in Africa,” he said. “When you look at the number of social intervention programmes, the quality, and the number of people benefiting from the programmes, and how long that they have been enjoying these social services, Ondo State is unbeatable in Africa.”

    Using the database created by Kaadi Igbe Ayo, the Mimiko administration was armed with an up-to-date database of all farmers in Ondo State. When the federal government needed to create a database of Nigerian farmers under erstwhile President Goodluck Jonathan, Ondo State already had a database of farmers in the state up to their locations, phone numbers, family demographic, locations, and health history,” John Paul Akinduro, a former media aide to Mimiko said in a 2016 interview.

    “The officials at the federal agriculture ministry were stunned at the speed in which we provided our state’s farmers’ database.” A Leader’s Vision Comes To Life. In June 2017, officials of the United Nations International Children’s Education Fund, UNICEF, undertook an evidence-based tour with government officials of 16 states in Nigeria with the aim of spreading the “gospel” of social protection. Ondo State was the first stop for the international humanitarian officials where the officials and the current governor of Ondo State, Rotimi Akeredolu extolled Governor Olusegun Mimiko for his visionary leadership. Kaadi Igbe Ayo was one of the highlights of the commendations.

    This latest event is one in a long chain of global and national recognitions that Kaadi Igbe Ayo has received since it was deployed 4 years ago. The project has received the stamp of approval of officials of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the World Bank, the World Health Organisation, and the United Kingdom’s Department for International Development (DFID).

    Between 2013 and 2016, the Ondo State government received two international and at least three national awards for the successful implementation of the residency card. The Development Agenda for Western Nigeria, DAWN Commission has voted Kaadi Igbe Ayo as the “Most Significant Example of Good Governance in the South West Region”. In February 2017, a top government officials’ forum of Lagos, Oyo, Ogun, Osun, and Ekiti States voted Kaadi Igbe Ayo the “Number One Most Desirable Project for Deployment.”

    Mimiko’s achievements in office, which spanned multi-sectors in the 8 years that he had the privilege to serve the Ondo people, have defied the norms of Nigerian politics. “I am told that His Excellency calls me and the other professionals who worked on the project geniuses, that is high praise indeed,” Yadeka said. “But truth be told, he is the real genius.”

    “Without his vision and unique political leadership and mentorship, Kaadi Igbe Ayo would have never happened. “Dr. Mimiko deserves the highest accolades, not just for the groundbreaking Ondo residency card, but also for the many phenomenal accomplishments in our state in just eight years as governor, “ he declared.

    It is worth mentioning that phenomenal things don’t just happen. They are the product of clear thinking, sound planning, and meticulous execution.
    Mimiko’s achievements in office, which spanned multi-sectors in the 8 years that he had the privilege to serve the Ondo people, have defied the norms of Nigerian politics. This is a man with steely leadership abilities, wholly committed to serving his people, and the intellectual strength to craft policy prescriptions that deliver measurable positive results.

    In the wasteland of white elephant projects that is Nigeria’s government landscape, Mimiko’s record takes on a new significance, standing out not just for his brilliance, but also for the far-reaching impact on the lives of the people. Undoubtedly, his record as governor of Ondo demonstrates the difference that purposeful and adequate political leadership can make in the lives of citizens.

    Dr. Mimiko is also a demonstration of what can happen when Nigerians take the wheel on the matters that concern them, and vote for a formidable politician with clout, courage, and inclination to follow through on his campaign promises, face the hard facts of governance, and deliver real value to his people.

    The crucial point to absorb from this developmental stride is that there’s no need for the Nigerian governors who have begun to announce plans to launch residency cards in their states to reinvent the wheel. Under the leadership of Dr. Mimiko, Ondo State government produced a homegrown world-class smart card that will serve the intended purposes of the various governments quite excellently.

    Replicating a Good Governance Model

    It might be a good idea to lift the template of the revolutionary Kaadi Igbe Ayo and deploy it for the good of the people; this would ensure the value gets to the people in the soonest possible time.

    Launching a race to create a brand new e-governance solution could take years and may very well end up unrealized, truncated by the dysfunctional bureaucracy that often rules government institutions in Nigeria. When this happens, the government may end up settling for something less and Nigerians certainly deserve more than that.

    Nigerian governors need to resist the urge to turn governance into a propagandistic adventure. Ego must not get in the way of delivering quality governance to Nigerians.

    It may also be a good time for the federal government of Nigeria to take steps towards eradicating the embarrassment that has dogged the country in the area of creating a unified identification system for all Nigerians.

    It was particularly heart wrenching to read headlines in June 2017 indicating that Nigerian government officials had to resort to outdated door-to-door method for distribution of relief materials to displaced persons in the troubled North Eastern region.

    Kaadi Igbe Ayo effectively eliminated racketeering in the distribution of free food to over 200,000 women under the Eto Igbeayo Food Intervention Programme, which was concluded in two weeks. Clearly, there’s no reason why it can’t be deployed in the North East.

    Corruption by officials and greed by beneficiaries at relief camps can be easily purged by introducing a version of the Ondo Residency card to the people of Borno, Adamawa, and Yobe where the reign of terror by Boko Haram has displaced over 3 million Nigerians.

    It is also important to note that the implementation of a solution as remarkable as Kaadi Igbe Ayo at the national level would serve in enhancing law enforcement efforts in Nigeria, checking tax evasion, effectively deploying social protection programmes, among other uses.

    Finally, we really need to sit down, as Nigerians, and embrace new age solutions that can help overcome the technical complexities of governance and end this uncomfortable reality of not having a credible and scalable national database of our citizens.