Tag: United Nations Children’s Fund

  • Nigeria needs 2m toilets annually – UNICEF

    In order to become open defecation free by 2025, Nigeria needs two million toilets annually, the United Nations Children’s Fund, has said.

    UNICEF stated that the country currently delivers 160, 000 improved toilet annually.

    The country needs to increase its toilet delivery rate if it must attain the Universal Basic Sanitation target by 2025, it said.

    UNICEF said this during a media dialogue on the Federal Government’s ‘Clean Nigeria: Use the toilet’ campaign, in Kano. The dialogue was organised by the Child Rights Information Bureau of the Federal Ministry of Information and Culture, (CRIB/FMI) in collaboration with UNICEF, the European Union and the Department for International Development (DFID/UKaid).

    The campaign is being implemented in Kano, Osun and Cross River states by UNICEF.

    UNICEF’s Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Specialist (WASH), Bioye Ogunjobi stated that 47 million people, representing 24 per cent of Nigeria’s population  practise open defecation or have unimproved toilets.

    According to him, the target of the campaign is to get 47 million Nigerians to use the toilet and stop open defecation by 2030.

    He also stated that UNICEF hopes to increase access to improved sanitation, especially in rural communities, through the campaign.

    Ogunjobi stated: “Nigeria needs to add 2 million toilets per year between 2019 and 2025 to achieve the target of Universal Basic Sanitation. Nigeria’s current delivery of improved toilet is approximately 160, 000 per year.

    “That’s the only way we can become open defecation free.”

    Ogunjobi stated that governments at all levels must begin to see sanitation as a priority.

    Read Also: 3,500 child soldiers recruited in Nigeria —UNICEF

    He added that an inter-ministerial collaboration was important for Nigeria to ensure that open defecation is completely eradicated by 2030.

    “We require concerted effort to ensure that open defecation is completely eradicated by 2030.

    “Open defecation is not a problem that one organisation can solve. We need collaboration with organisations, individuals to end it,” he said.

    Information and Culture Minister, Lai Mohammed, stated that there was need to increase awareness about the impact of open defecation in Nigeria.

    He stated that the practice had brought diseases like dysentery and diarrhoea, adding that Federal Government was making efforts to end it in 2030.

    Mohammed, who was represented by the Deputy Director, CRIB, Olumide Osanyinpeju, stated that the campaign to end open defecation was one of the most ambitious behavior-change campaigns in Nigeria with a strong citizen/public engagement component.

    “The Federal Ministry of Water Resources with support from UNICEF, in partnership with Inter-Ministerial Agencies, civil society partners, the private sector and the people of Nigeria, is currently leading the ODF campaign to end open defecation in the country by 2025 and achieve universal access to safely manage sanitation by 2030.

    “Clean Nigeria: Use the toilet campaign is one of the most ambitious behavior-change campaigns in Nigeria with a strong citizen/public engagement component. Leveraging on what is currently working in the states with local government areas certified ODF, this campaign mode will create a national movement with elements of policy advocacy, public advocacy, grassroots mobilisation and private sector engagement.

    “There is need to increase awareness about the impact of open defecation in Nigeria. End ODF and WASH programmes were integral parts of SDGs 6. It is therefore, critical to intensify efforts in tackling them,” he said.

    He urged participants to support sanitation and hygiene in their communities in order to address the gaps that have been identified.

    Also, UNICEF’s Communication Specialist, Geoffrey Njoku, appealed to journalists to raise awareness of sanitation, particularly by sensitising the people on the benefits of using toilets.

    He urged the participants to see themselves as ambassadors of sanitation and deploy their tools to educate people on the need to stop open defecation.

    He said a deliberate campaign using hashtag #Endopendefecation #cleannigeria has been set up to sensitize people on the dangers of open defecation and benefits of using toilets.

  • 6,000 babies risk HIV in Kaduna

    Thousands of babies in Kaduna State are at risk of contracting HIV this year, says United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) but the state government counters that it has taken measures to avert the disaster. ABDULGAFAR ALABELEWE reports

    The challenge in Kaduna State, as in most other states, is that healthcare facilities are not easily accessible to many citizens, especially in hard to reach rural communities. This situation has left many locals giving birth at home, and not knowing their HIV status. It puts the babies at risk because mothers living with the virus could easily pass it on to their babies..

    Though, the state government under Governor Nasir el-Rufai has made frantic efforts at addressing the inherited ugly health indices through renovation and refurbishment of primary healthcare centres across the state, recruitment of more doctors and other health workers, among others, access to such facilities is still difficult in most cases due to bad roads.

    UNICEF Chief of Field Office, Kaduna, Dr. Adam Zakari, who raised the alarm about the risk of 6000 babies, attributed the challenge to low antenatal care attendance and out-of-hospital delivery.

    He was speaking last Monday at a “one-day feedback meeting with the state governor’s wife and spouses of local government chairmen on the level of the state’s implementation of the 2018 plan to eliminate mother to child transmission or eMTCT.

    The UNICEF boss said the state is equally battling with low awareness about the benefits of eMTCT and inadequate human resources for quality health services.

    Dr. Zakari, said though Kaduna has recorded a lot of achievement of consistent increase in Prevention of Mother to Child Transmission (PMTCT) of HIV, coverage from 16% in 2012 to 66% in 2017, however, HIV in children has become a critical health problem undermining the positive impact of child survival intervention efforts of the state.

    He said, “This increase is as a result of joint evidence-based planning and coordinated implementation of homegrown LGA specific strategies and interventions across the state.

    “However, there are about 6,000 babies at risk of getting HIV infected this year in Kaduna State if appropriate and innovative PMTCT interventions are not implemented. It is therefore evident that transmission of HIV in children has become a critical health problem undermining the positive impact of child survival intervention efforts of the state.”

    Dr. Zakari noted that, Kaduna State is one of the four states in the country being supported by UNICEF to pilot elimination of Mother to Child Transmission (eMTCT) of HIV by 2020 and end adolescent AIDs epidemic by 2030.

    “Currently, there are about 6,000 babies at risk of getting HIV infection in 2019 if appropriate and innovative eMTCT interventions are not fully implemented.

    “This meeting, therefore, provides an opportunity to lay bare all the eMTCT challenges with a view to take proactive measures to tackle them.” He said.

    He however expressed happiness over the way the wives of LGA chairmen are committed in their resolve to help in eliminating HIV in the State.

    Earlier in his remark, the state Commissioner for Health and Human Services, Dr. Paul Dogo, said that the state has taken a giant stride in reducing the prevalence of HIV in the state. He explained that, HIV prevalence has reduced from 11.6 per cent in 1999 to 1.1 per cent in 2018 adding that the state has moved from prevention of mother to child transition of HIV to elimination.

    The Commissioner stressed that the government has put all necessary measures to ensure that attainment of zero mother to child transmission by 2020. “To achieve this, the state government had in 2012 established 126 eMTCT sites and currently we have 927 eMTCT sites.

    “All we need is increase demand for such services, which is where the wives of the local government chairmen come in. We need you to support the wife of the governor to create the needed awareness and enlightenment to our mothers in all LGAs to demand for HIV services which are readily available in health centres.” He said.

    The commissioner commended UNICEF and other development partners for supporting the state in the fight against HIV and AIDS, noting that, partners funding was decreasing, and stressed the need to increase domestic funding for HIV intervention to sustain the progress so far achieved.

    On his part, a resource person at the meeting, Malam Lawal Abubakar, said that inadequate funding was grossly affecting eMTCT activities in the state, leading to inadequate test kits and other HIV commodities in eMTCT facilities.

    “There was also weak linkage of pregnant women tested HIV positive from health facilities to HIV treatment.

    “As at 2017, 56 per cent of antenatal care facilities were provided with eMTCT service and only 66 per cent of HIV pregnant women were placed on treatment.” Abubakar added.

    On her own part, Wife of Kaduna State Governor, Hajiya Ummi El-Rufai, appealed to wives of the local government chairmen to redouble efforts towards ensuring that no child is infected with HIV.

    According to her, “Take this as a personnel responsibility in ensuring that all pregnant women in your domain are enlighten on the benefits of eMTCT, attend Ante-natal and demand for HIV services. This is the only way we will continue to make progress toward achieving zero new infections of HIV among newborn in Kaduna state.” She said.

    Dr. Marc Anthony, Executive Secretary, Kaduna State Agency for the Control of Aids, expressed optimism that the state would achieve zero new infection of HIV among newborn by 2020.

    “But to achieve this target, pregnant mothers in the state must be tested and provided with access to quality HIV services at zero cost.” He said.

    The wives of the LGA chairmen in thier response however reiterated commitment towards ensuring that no woman is left behind in demanding for eMTCT services in their various LGAs.

    They said during their presentation of the implementation of the 2018 LGA eMTCT plan, that they would continue to mobilise pregnant women to go for ANC and demand of HIV services.

    The wife of Zaria Local Government Chairman, Mrs. Amina Bamali particularly said she had visited 13 out of the 16 Primary Health Care centres in the LGA, adding that the turnout of women for ANC was very encouraging.

    Bamali, however, disclosed that some few of the facilities do not have HIV test kits and called on the state government to ensure that all PHCs have adequate test kits so that no woman would be left behind.

  • Nigeria to expect 25,685 new babies Tuesday – UNICEF

    The United Nations Children’s Fund ( UNICEF ) says an estimated 25,685 babies will be born in Nigeria on New Year Day.

    According to a statement issued on Monday by UNICEF Nigeria Communications Specialist, Eva Hinds, Nigerian babies make up 6.5 per cent of the estimated 395,072 babies born on New Year Day globally.

    “Within Africa, Nigerian babies will account for almost 40 per cent of all those born in West and Central Africa, and more than 23 per cent of those born in sub-Saharan Africa.

    “Globally, over half of the world’s births are estimated to take place in just eight countries, including Nigeria.

    “At current life expectancy rates, a child born in Nigeria today is likely to live only to the year 2074, which is 55 years of age.

    “A child born today in Denmark is likely to live until the 22nd century.

    “Only children born in three countries today have a lower life expectancy than that of Nigerian children including Central African Republic, Chad and Sierra Leone, “ it said.

    The statement said that globally in 2017, about one million babies died the day they were born, and 2.5 million in just their first month of life.

    It said that in Nigeria, about 262,000 babies die at birth each year, the world’s second highest national total, while 257 babies die within their first month of life.

    “Among these children, most died from preventable causes such as premature birth, complications during delivery, and infections like sepsis and pneumonia, a violation of their basic right to survival, “ it stated.

    UNICEF Nigeria’s Acting Representative, Pernille Ironside, said in the statement that more could be done to ensure children born in Nigeria survived their first day of life.

    Ironside added that such children should be able to survive and thrive for many months and years to come.

    “In Nigeria today, only one out of every three babies is delivered in a health centre, decreasing a newborn baby’s chance of survival.

    “This is just one of the issues that need to be addressed in order to improve the chances of survival of those babies born today and every day.

    “This New Year Day, let us all make a resolution to fulfil every right of every child, starting with the right to survive.

    “We can save millions of babies if we invest in training and equipping local health workers so that every newborn is born into a safe pair of hands, “ he said.

    The statement also noted that 2019 marked the 30th anniversary of the adoption of the Convention on the Rights of the Child which UNICEF would be commemorating with worldwide events throughout the year.

    According to the statement, under the convention, governments committed to, among other things, taking measures to save every child by providing good quality health care.

    “Over the past three decades, the world has seen remarkable progress in child survival, cutting the number of children worldwide who die before their fifth birthday by more than half.

    “But there has been slower progress for newborns; babies dying in the first month account for 47 per cent of all deaths among children under five.

    “UNICEF’s Every Child Alive campaign calls for immediate investment to deliver affordable, quality health care solutions for every mother and newborn.

    “These include a steady supply of clean water and electricity at health facilities and the presence of a skilled health attendant during birth,’’ it stated.

    It further called for ample supplies and medicines to prevent and treat complications during pregnancy, delivery and birth as well as empowerment for adolescent girls and women who could demand quality health services.

  • Human rights not negotiable

    Tango with UNICEF, Amnesty International; government must restrain the military

    Nigerian Army’s recent knee-jerk response to strident criticisms from Amnesty International and United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) is most unfortunate and indefensible. It speaks of an Army yet to fully subordinate itself to civil authorities and most unwilling to remedy identified ills.

    In reaction to the Amnesty International’s report on the Army’s operations in the North Central zone where herders-farmers’ clashes led to loss of lives, the Army called for closure of the international body’s office in Nigeria. Earlier, the military authorities had sought to expel UNICEF from the war theatre in the North East where the global humanitarian organization, an arm of the United Nations had been offering succour to thousands of victims of the raging insurgency in the region.

    Federal Government’s initial reaction was even more unsavoury, giving no indication it understood the import of the Army’s action any better. There could be no justification for the Army’s branding of UNICEF as an enemy agency that has deployed spies in aid of the Boko Haram insurgents.

    Since its creation in 1946 for the immediate remediation of the Second World War’s effects on children, UNICEF has grown in reputation and effectiveness to an agency catering to the needs of children and women in 190 countries and territories. This fact ought not to be lost on the government, even if the military could not fully comprehend that it would have devastating effect on our national image. Only recently, the organisation lost one of its nurses to the deadly terrorists operating in Borno State, while two others are still being held. The Army’s reversal of that order has done little to assuage feelings it created, portraying Nigeria as a country where government’s authority could be easily usurped by the military. Irrespective of the level of provocation, justified or not, the Army could only have reverted to the Federal Government with its observation and suggestion, outside the public view.

    The Army’s outburst on Amnesty International’s report: Harvest of Death: Three Years of bloody clashes between farmers and herders is uncalled for. The organisation has operated in Nigeria for many years and, contrary to the impression created by the army, its office is operated in the main, by Nigerian citizens. We would expect that, following AI’s apparently outlandish claim that army personnel deployed in the North Central had killed 3,641 people, the Army would have engaged the body in a dialogue, interrogating the methodology employed. If the report had still been published in the form the Army is contesting, a rebuttal pointing out the inaccuracies would have been released.

    We call on the Federal Government to be alive to its responsibility, call all security forces to order in terms of relating with international human rights and humanitarian agencies. It is the responsibility of relevant agencies of the federal government to investigate such claims and reports dispassionately and release the report. Unless the security forces are called to order, we should expect more embarrassments. We recall that, following earlier reports of human rights violations by the military, Professor Yemi Osinbajo, as Acting President had last year set up the Justice Biobele Georgewill Investigation Panel to look into possible violation of rights of Nigerians in the war theatre and displaced persons’ camps in the North East. Till date, nothing has been heard of that probe.

    The government should immediately publish the report and others that preceded it. When culprits, if any, are brought to justice, the world, including AI, would appreciate government’s efforts. Those whose rights are being allegedly violated are Nigerians who deserve government’s protection. When offences as grievous as extra judicial killings are being committed, all civil authorities should rise to the challenge.

    We are aware that personnel deployed for the counter terrorism battle are governed by rules of engagement. Anyone found therefore to have contravened the rules should be brought to book.

    During the Obama administration in United States of America, sale of arms to Nigeria was forbidding as lawmakers reacted to reports of harassment of defenseless civilians.

    “Under the Geneva Convention, even prisoners of war must be treated with decency and dealt with according to the law. If the international community is given the impression the Nigerian Army operates outside the law, sanctions that could hamper prosecution of the war could be slammed again. Nigerians and foreigners alike deserve the assurance that the country is a responsible member of the international community.”

  • UNICEF partners Cross River govt to tackle branding kids as witches

    The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) is supporting the Cross River State government to tackle the branding children as witches.

    UNICEF Nigeria, Enugu Field Office Child Protection Specialist Mrs Nkiru Maduechesi spoke at a two-day workshop on the amendment of the state’s 2009 Child Rights Law in Calabar.

    The workshop was organised by the Cross River Ministry of Women Affairs and the Enugu State Ministry of Gender Affairs and Sustainable Development with support byUNICEF.

    Maduechesi said child witchcraft branding is a manifestation of a weak system, which is not just about law.

    She said the workshop, whose participants were stakeholders and experts on child protection and child rights from Lagos, Imo, Enugu and Cross River States, was to brainstorm in fine-tuning the 2009 law to be more responsive to the contemporary realities.

    She said: “The essence of the workshop is to make it to be in tune with the present happenings, like issues of child witchcraft branding is not in the law, we need to have that addressed. We also have issues of birth registration. Even though it is in the law, there is no penalty for parents who neglect to register their children. There are issues of right to health. So the stakeholders are rethinking this law in such a way that it makes real impact in the lives of children. There are a whole lot of issues.

    “UNICEF is supporting the state because the child witchcraft branding is a manifestation of a weak system and the system is not just about law. It starts from the home, it starts from parents having the right parental skills and information about child development. Because sometimes when children are in their teen years, some people expect you to behave like adults, but they are not. So part of those behaviours, when parents don’t have the right parental skill, they attribute it to witchcraft branding which is not the case, but because they lack the information and the skill.

    “So, UNICEF is supporting the state to set up and effective child protection system that would address both the formal and informal sectors. Informal in the sense that we have rolled out our community actions to educate parents on this issues so that they would understand better and then also to make the social welfare to be more responsive in identifying these issues, but most importantly this year, we are looking at profiling these children on the streets because majority of them are on the streets as a result of branding them as witches and wizards.

    “We want to support these children to reintegrate them because that is where the abuse will always start from. Being on the streets they don’t have guidance. There is no one correcting them or being in charge of their basic necessities. So they are vulnerable to being in conflict with the law, in problems with the police and of course, the criminals out there in society. So, UNICEF is working with NGOs and women affairs to start supporting this programme the state through the child protection system strengthening.

    “The law is a great milestone, because it has codified the rights of children. It is no longer an assumption. It is no longer left to chance. What we need more is the political will and of course the leadership of the various sectors to enforce the standard in the law to serve as deterrent, but most importantly to prevent this abuses because the law has stated grounds and standards that if fully implemented, would have less of child rights violation in the state. But we still have more work to do. We have covered to a great extent, milestones in reaching to the desired goals.”

    Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Sustainable Development and Social Welfare, Cross River State, Mr Takon Asu Takon, said the amendment of the law was necessary as life is dynamic.

    Takon, a lawyer, said: “We have experienced changes which were not contemplated in the law. So there is need once in while to look at the law and see if there are new developments that can be inserted and probably issues that are no longer relevant could be extracted from.”

    Director of Public Prosecution in the state, Gregory Okim, also said: “there are certain provisions in the law that inhibits the effective take off of the family court. So we are trying to see how we can address such challenges, because the law is aimed at protecting the child.”

    In February, the Basic Rights Counsel Initiative (BRCI) in Calabar  released horrific images of three children who were tortured for witchcraft in Cross River State. Grace, 3, Lillian, 5, and Juliet, 13, narrowly escaped death after their accusers tried to extract confessions from them. Their grandmother said to be suffering froma terminal disease was said to have accused the kids of being behind her illness.

    In another instance, Emmanuel David Akpan was arrested for allegedly inflicting grievous injuries on his three kids. Akpan and his wife, the stepmother to the kids, were arrested by the police from the Federal Housing Police Station, Calabar for allegedly bathing the three little girls, Imaobong, 7, Nyenime, 5, and Joy, 3, with hot water, after binding their hands and legs with   electric cables.

    Akpan said: “These children always attacked me in my dreams, they want to kill me”.

    But Mrs Lilian Ekanem of Women, Youth and Children Uplifting Foundation said UNICEF, and the Child Rights Act said: “The action of some parents and family members is evil and such should be condemned. How can you tag an innocent child God has blessed you with as a witch?”

  • UNICEF gives 492 Plateau communities water

    United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has said no fewer than 492 communities in Plateau State now have clean water courtesy of the Fund’s water and sanitation programme.

    UNICEF said it has also constructed 40 ventilated pit toilets in 20 primary schools, two per school in Riyom and Shendam local government areas.

    The Plateau State UNICEF Consultant, Mr. Bekinbo George disclosed this at an event marking the 2018 International World Water Day in the state.

    Mr. George said, “The gesture is part of EU-Unicef water, sanitation and hygiene programme in rural communities implemented in two LGAs of Plateau State. 15 persons per ward have been trained in the area of maintenance for the sustainability of the programme when UNICEF completed the implementation of the Water Sanitation and Hygiene programme in the state.”

    Bekinbo further stated that a hand-pump spare part has been established in the two LGAs and are supplied with parts at an affordable rate to reduce the cost of repairs and going to far places to acquire spare parts.

    The Shendam LGA’s EU-Unicef Water Sanitation and Hygiene Consultant, Mr. Okla Kingsley said the project started since 2013.

    He disclosed that accessing some of the communities has been very  difficult as some can only be accessed by canoe.

    “Some communities are not that easily accessible due to lack of good roads where cars can passed through; sometimes we uses motorcycle to get to some of the communities.

    “And in some cases we’ve had to use canoe to cross to a project community, but we have to do that all in a bid to give the people clean water.

    The Atah’Ateng of Ganawuri, HRH. Yakubu Chaimang said UNICEF has given his community a new and healthy life with clean water in addition to th latrines in schools as well across his communities.

    He said, “Under the UNICEF Water Supply and Sanitation Sector Reform programme in this locality, each household has been mandated to dig a toilet and that has really helped my people who were into open defecation.

    “Before now, we do battle with cows, pigs, goats and other animals on the little water in the stream. And you won’t imagine how my people were suffering with different ailments.

    “Our clinic used to be very busy because of the urine and dung of animals accompanied with open defecation; when it rains, it will wash into the streams, leading to different kinds of diseases gotten from the water we do fetch from the stream.

    “Our community has been introduced to hygiene practices with the introduction of a traditional technology for hand-washing after going to toilet known as Tippy-Tap in almost all our houses and primary schools for the pupils.”

    The Gwom Rai of Bachi District, HRH Da Gyang Dalyop maintained that with the water/hygiene programme of UNICEF, it has saved many women who suffered looking for good water from the streams for domestic used the pains they do pass through.

    “Before UNICEF came, only few boreholes were seen constructed by some of our politicians and they are not even working. But when UNICEF spread the construction of boreholes across various communities in my district I tell you now my people know the importance of taking clean water because all those cases of sicknesses have drastically reduced and we are happy with what UNICEF did I must thank them very much.”

    Plateau State government has attributed the success of the water supply programme of UNICEF to its prompt payment of counterpart fund.

    Governor Simon Lalong who was represented by the Director of Research, Planning and Documentation Prof. John Wade stated this during the 2018 World Water Day marked at Chrest Hotel in Jos.

    “Our success in the water supply and hygiene programme in Riyom and Shendam local government area is hinged on our ability to pay our counterpart fund of N550 million for the two LGAs,” he said.

    The governor while marking the 2018 World Water Day launched two documents on the water sector known as, “Plateau State Water Policy Document.”

    The Commissioner for Water and Energy, Mr. David Wuyep said the document is going to serve as a guide to the development of the water sector in the state.

     

  • UNICEF, others move to check malnutrition

    The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has launched a programme to find permanent solutions to the problems of malnutrition among children and women in the country especially in some states in the Niger Delta region.

    UNICEF in the ongoing four-day Community of Practice Workshop on Nutrition in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, brought a team of nutrition experts to teach government modalities of tackling nutritional challenges in their states.

    The workshop which was organised in collaboration with the Bayelsa State Ministry of Budget and Economic Planning had representatives of Akwa Ibom, Rivers  and Delta states in attendance.

    The Communication Officer, UNICEF, Enugu, Onuoha-Ogwe Ijeoma, in her presentation, solicited media assistance to create awareness on importance of nutrition.

    She said the media tools were required to advance a social and public policy for required attitudinal change on nutrition.

    She said such tools would help to identify and proffer solutions to the problems of policy gaps; mobilise community action plans and reach expected target audience.

    Also speaking a Nutrition Expert, Ngozi Onuorah, said the executive and the legislature should leverage their budgeting powers on behalf of children and mothers.

    She said state’s budget from children’s rights perspective should be probed and pressure mounted on the executive to ensure allocation of substantial resources to sectors relevant to children.

    “The legislature has the opportunity to question the executive during the budget debate and make nutrition and food security a budgetary priority”, she said.

    She appealed to stakeholders to advocate for increased budgetary allocation for sectors and institutions providing services for children such as social protection, education and health.

  • Plateau lauds UNICEF intervention

    The Plateau Government has commended the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) for initiating projects that strive to secure children and women in the state.
    Mr Ja’afaru Wuyep, the state Commissioner for Water and Energy, appreciated UNICEF’s interevention on Tuesday in Jos while declaring open a two-day Media Dialogue on Water Supply and Sanitation Sector Reform Project, Phase III.
    The News men reports that the forum was organised in conjunction with the Federal Ministry of Information and Culture and supported by the European Union (EU).
    Wuyep, who described UNICEF as the “fourth level of government in Nigeria’’, said it had stood out among many donor organisations working in the country.
    “‘In Nigeria, we have governments at three levels; the federal, state and local governments.
    “‘Let me say here that UNICEF is the fourth level of government we have in this country, because of its investment in giving our children and women a better life.

    Read Also: Buhari unites Plateau

    “It stands out among all donor agencies in the country; UNICEF is not only working for children and women, but working for the rural populace,’’ he said.
    The commissioner noted UNICEF’s immense contributions in the areas of water, sanitation and hygiene, child protection, immunisation, and other interventions.
    He restated the state government’s commitment to cooperate with UNICEF to ensure rural dwellers in the state continue to benefit from the organisation’s programmes.
    “‘On our part as a government, we are committed at ensuring UNICEF continues with the good works.
    “We will ensure we pay our counterpart funds as at when due,’’ he said.

    NAN

  • From Skinny to Plumpy: Surviving malnutrition with Plumpy Nuts in Nigeria

    From Skinny to Plumpy: Surviving malnutrition with Plumpy Nuts in Nigeria

    According to the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), over 23 million children are malnourished in Nigeria and over 10 million face the risk of malnourishment.

    For over eight months, Esther Mark followed the recovery journey of two malnourished kids in remote villages of Bauchi state, noting their recovery and post recovery stages. She also x-rays factors responsible for malnutrition in northeast Nigeria, and its effects in the lives of children and by extension, their caregivers.

    Saifullahi looked very weak, frail and thin. With a shirt covering his weak body, he clinged to his mother, while his eyes hurt and body, very hot. He would cry this minute, and close his eyes silently, the next minute. Flies perched on his eyes, while his nose had mucus running down his mouth. His mother looked exhausted, but she still managed to pull off his clothes for him to be weighed.

    She, like every other mother in Cheledi, Kifri Local Government Area of Bauchi state had one mission in mind: the recovery of their children.

    Locating the community and health centre was not difficult with the crowd of mostly women and children gathered at the maternity, to the sachets of already eaten ‘‘plumpy nuts’’ all over the ground, serving as a road guide. Villagers and passers-by were also on hand to readily point you to ‘asibitin madaran yara’’- Hospital for children’s milk.

    The milk is the Ready-to-Use Therapy Food (RUTF) which the women, carrying very sick and thin children, troop in weekly to Kirfi Town Maternity, Cheledi, in Bauchi state collect for their malnourished kids in their journey towards recovery.

    An estimated 2.5 million Nigerian children under the age of five suffer from Severe Acute Malnutrition (SAM) every year – an extremely dangerous condition that makes children nine times more likely to die from common childhood illnesses such as such as diarrhoea, pneumonia and malaria. Every year, nearly 420,000 children under five die as a result of this deadly combination in Nigeria, according to UNICEF.

    The kids in Bauchi state and environs, are all at the mercy and intervention of the Bauchi state government and by extension, counterpart funding from donor agencies to not only live, but thrive in life free from diseases. For them, the UNICEF Early Childhood Development programme of #LivePlayLove, does not apply. Their mothers also need to attend health talks and enrol in a family planning centre, while availing them of routine immunizations. These, all fall under the Primary Health Care Development Agency and the state health budget for these programmes will determine the life or death of the children, taking into consideration, their parents occupation, settlement, and proximity to health care facilities.

    Treating Malnutrition with the ‘milk of life’
    To fight acute malnutrition in children, UNICEF introduced the Community-based Management of Acute Malnutrition (CMAM). This innovative and cost-effective way of treating malnourished children was first introduced in 2009 and has since expanded to 12 northern states. Yet, not every state in the country boasts of this. In the northeast, there are six states which UNICEF oversees across Bauchi, Plateau, Gombe, Adamawa, Taraba, and Jigawa.

    This Community-based Management of Acute Malnutrition (CMAM) programme has treated over two million children since it was first introduced in Nigeria, at a cost of just US$160 per child.
    The RUTF, also called ‘madara’ (milk) in Hausa Language by the locals, or ‘miracle food,’ is a peanut-based paste, which also contains milk powder, sugar and multiple micronutrients. To aid the quick production of this food supplement and reduce overhead cost, a Lagos-based Nigerian company, DABS, recently received international certification to produce RUTF for the treatment of Severe Acute Malnutrition, so the provision of RUTF will no longer be dependent on imports.
    The Bauchi field office supports two major nutrition programmes: the Infant and Young Child Feeding programme (IYCF) and the Community-based Management of Malnutrition (CMAM) project. In the state, the CMAM initial piloting centres are located in Kirfi, Dambam and Katagum Local Government Areas’s. UNICEF also stepped up the fight against malnutrition by establishing six additional CMAN sites in Bauchi State, thus bringing the total number of the sites in the state to nine. The six new sites are located in Bauchi, Darazo, Itas Gadu, Warji, Gamawa and Tafawa Balewa local government areas. Each location has wards/centres. These centres cater for the nutrition needs of malnourished children within and boyond Bauchi state.

    The search

    Malnourished children eat the RUTF’s for a minimum of eight weeks, and maximum of 12 weeks, to be rehabilitated. At the centre in Kirfi abound stories of children who had undergone this process and were rehabilitated. UNICEF, in collaboration with state governments, take charge in the production and distribution of the plumpy nuts to children all over the country.

    But how sufficient are these RUTF’s in rehabilitating the children? Who takes responsibility to ensure that all the kids get the food as at when due? Are these the only things a malnourished child needs to be rehabilitated? To check these, and many more, I embarked on a research with two children at the centre in Kirfi.

    So I randomly selected two children from the over 100 kids that were enrolled that Friday. I followed their rehabilitation process.

    All the way from Ranga Village
    Baby Saifullahi Muhammed, is a nine month old boy. With Registration number Bau/KRF/2017/178, his mother travelled all the way from Bakin Kogi, in Alkaleri Local Government, to access the CMAM centre. This is a three hour return trip on motor cycle. He looked frail. Very weak, with visible ribs cascading all over his very thin body. He was all tears and scruffy, as they made to weigh him on the scale.

    During week one, which was on the 3rd of March, 2017, he weighed 5.0 KG, and had a MUAC of 10.0. He was given a ration of 14 RUTFs for starters. By the second week, he had dropped to 9.5, while still maintaining the 5.0 KG weight. By week three, he still had not improved. He battled diarrhoea, loss of appetite, did not take the required quantity, and had eye sores. He was placed on antibiotics, Amoxyl tabs, malaria tabs and was dewormed.

    It was a different looking Saif that visited the clinic the next week. By week four, (24/03/2017), he had gained weight as he now weighed 5.2 with a MUAC of 9.6. His ration was increased to 28, for two weeks. This was done to help the parents save money on transportation as they are forced to spend an average of N1500 per clinic day. By week six (Friday, April 7, 2017), he was showing significant improvement, as his weight had topped to 5. 8 KG and his MUAC was 10.1. His ration increased to 18 (as he had gone above the 5.5KG recommendation) and this was doubled for two weeks.

    By week nine, my heart melted when I saw him again. When he was weighed, he had shot up from 5.8KG to 6.2KG. His MUAC shot to 10. 7 and his ration was maintained at 18. One could see he was a totally different child. He laughed more and sat on his own. He even looked at the camera with smiles. His mother was happy.

    ‘‘Aunty, she said, “my baby is looking well. He even eats very well now, and responds to instructions and commands. He plays with other children at home and he is really less clingy now. I am really happy this milk is working.’’

    With the improvement he had shown, he was booked for another appointment in three weeks. Thus, he was given 54 RUTFs and his mother excitedly packed the plumpy nuts, as she felt relieved for another three weeks.

    In between these weeks, I called up to know how he was fairing and the response was soothing. He was doing well and adjusting to his normal life. He was also eating well and there was no cause for alarm. Week 10 and 11 were observed and by the final week, week 12, he was back for the last lap of his treatment and recovery. By week 12 (May 19, 2017,) he weighed 6.4 KG, and his MUAC was reading 11.5. He went with a ration of 18 for two more weeks.

    But then, he had not met the discharge criteria and had not recovered. By 12 weeks, a child who has recovered should have his MUAC reading 12.5 (less than 11.5).

    Thus, three months after he began the treatment, he was well. But not fully recovered. From a very sickly child, he rose to a happy, contented lad. He could now sit, hold on to toys, and was more alert. It did not come easy. There were sacrifices made by his parents, to see him live. But that was not all.

    Baby Zainaf Daihiru from Cheledi

    At seven months, she weighed a paltry 3.5 KG. This is what some children weigh at birth. And at seven months, she looked too small for her age. She could only be carried and could neither sit nor stand or even crawl. When I looked up her card, her registration number read Bau/KRF/2017/194. A fair skinned beautiful girl, she was all clingy to her mom, even as her eyes continued to emit pus. She had eye problems, was constantly stooling, and looked very dehydrated, apart from being so thin.

    At week one of her enrolment, on Friday March 3, 2017, her MUAC read 10.2 and her weight, 3.5 KG. She was rationed 11 RUTFs and by week two, she still weighed 5.0 KG, even though her MUAC had dropped to 9.0. She was booked for a fortnight. By week four, (Friday, April 3, 2014), she showed slight improvement in her weight which read 3.6 KG and her MUAC tilted to 9.5. By the fifth week when she reported to the clinic, she had improved and was now weighing 4.0KG, and MUAC measurement read 10.1. This automatically shifted her weekly ration to 14.

    However, she became sick with diarrhoea, had fever and a runny nose and thus, by the time she was brought for her weekly checkup in week six, baby Zainaf had dropped to 3.6 KG and her MUAC read 9.6. Her weekly RUTF ration was brought back to 11.

    By week 7, Zainaf had improved that she was no longer the very skinny girl who was brought in a month ago. She now weighed 4.1 KG, laughed at intervals, and could respond greatly to cheers and body languages. Her MUAC read 9.8 and her ration increased to 14. By week eight, approximately two months into her rehabilitation, baby Zainaf was showing great improvement. This time around, she weighed 4.6 and her MUAC read 10.1. Her mother was excited.

    ‘‘Seriously I am happy. She keeps adding weight and keeps taking her milk. She laughs more, and is no longer always clingy,” she said.

    But then, two months into the programme, baby Zainaf ought to have improved greatly. She had put on 5KG and should have been considered for discharge. But her weight was yet to attain the recommended measurement and thus, had to continue.

    By week 9, she dropped. She now weighed 4.1 KG and MUAC was reading 9.9. By the 10th week, she picked up again, was a baby of 4.6 KG and MUAC read 9.5. By the 11th week, she had dropped once more, and was weighing 4.3 KG and MUAC of 10.7. By the 12th week, she never showed up. She was due for discharge, or reabsorption into the scheme.
    But her mother felt she was slightly better than she was three months ago, and thus, refused bringing her back to complete the final dose of her rehabilitation. She kept bringing up excuses for not attending her sessions and she had to be discharged voluntarily.

    Common Problems
    Incomplete treatment and many other issues, are some of the problems faced by the health volunteers in the centres spread across Kirfi Local Government, and by extension, the state. The officer in charge, CMAM Kirfi Town Maternity, Mr Sunday Bulus said they constantly record a high number of voluntary withdrawals as the mothers, on noticing slight improvement of the children, stop coming to the centres to restock and continue treatment and rehabilitation. This, he said, had a negative effect as most of the non-recovered children tend to elapse, and with time, go back to the same bout of malnutrition, while suffering other ailments.

    But then, getting the plumpy nuts in large quantities also pose a serious threat to the wellbeing of the children as some of the mothers decide to either sell the RUTFs, at N50 per sachet, in their local communities, or give them away to relatives as snacks.

    I had gone for the weekly check-up to meet with the kids, when I met a mother already bargaining with another, who was rejected at the centre as her child was not malnourished. She was willing to part with the RUTF’s for N30, per sachet. It took the intervention of the health workers at the centre to address the sad development.

    Speaking on the effect of this practice, Mr Bulus explained ‘‘What they fail to understand, is that, each child is meant to take an average of two RUTFs per day. In some instances, this could be exceeded depending on the ration allotted a particular child. This then has effect, as the food meant for the overall recovery of each child, is being shared amongst neighbours and relatives, thus reducing the effect of the food on the child’s recovery process.’’

    This is how poverty, combined with ignorance, continues to stand in the way of progress as children’s lives and wellbeing are sacrificed on the altar of money and income. Thus, it’s no surprise that most of these kids, really fail to recover after 12 weeks into the programme (even though UNICEF recommends just 8 weeks). It’s either they don’t take the right allocation, or they don’t eat the right food, or their parents voluntarily withdraw them after they appear to be better than they were, pre-enrolment.

    The Journey to Ranga Village
    How far does Addan Wali (Saifullahi’s mother) come to access good health care for her baby? What kind of environment is he growing up in? What foods do they eat? How close and accessible are they, to proper healthcare centres in their community?

    These questions, and more, propelled me to begin the journey to Ranga. We had finished the round for the week, and baby Saifullahi had been given the allocation for the week. This would last him two weeks after which he and his mother, would return to the centre for more check-ups and restocking.

    She commutes to the centre via a motorcycle her husband hired for the purpose. The commercial cyclist is a member of the Ranga village. Each journey costs the family an average of N1500 and this is a one hour, 30 minutes journey on bike. There are no steady pathways for cars and the journey has to be made on foot, bicycle or motorcycle. Thus, we set out, all four of us, on one bike. Although we understood the health safety implications of having three grown adults and an infant on a bike, we had no choice, nonetheless than to commence the journey.

    In-between the cyclist and I was Saifullahi’s mother (Addan Walli) who had him nestled in her arms, covered with her hijab, as he needed protection from both the scorching sun, the blazing winds and fleas, and other particles flying in the air. The cyclist had the supply for the week settled in his fuel tank, right in front of him. Our journey was tiring.

    ‘‘I am used to this,” she said. “We do this every Friday and I am really happy that I have been given a two week supply. This will save me the stress of this tedious journey, as well as my husband, the money for next week’s transportation. I do this every week and it is the little sacrifice I must go through for my son’s well-being.’’

    An hour later, we arrived Ranga village and I became a little tourist attraction. Armed with my camera in one hand, and my bag in the other, the villagers troop out.

    This is a typical northern village with no electricity, nor pipe borne water, despite the fact that major table water factories in the state are situated right behind the village, overseeing the Yankari Dam. Fariah, Wikki Table waters hold sway in the adjourning community, at Mainamaaji, right before the Yankari Game Reserve. Their houses are made of clay bricks, and they live in family settlements. The young men are either motorcyclists or farmers, and the young girls are groomed for early marriage.

    The village head comes in and introduces himself as the Sarkin Garin Ranga ‘’King of Ranga Village’.

    ‘‘We plant so many grains here. From millets to corns and vegetables. We do a whole lot of farming here and sell them off’’, he says. Even as he talks, he sends for a grain of millet to prove the point to me.

    As I sit on the stool provided by Addan Walli, I took note of the environment. The room is unpainted. It has an old couch, and a cupboard where old big pans and several plates of different colours are stacked. These, were part of her dowry and it is the only ornament decorating the room. There is a door to the left, where their bedroom is located. As we talked, it became clearer that they lived very poor but contented lives, without basic amenities.

    Ranga Village has no healthcare facility, no primary nor secondary school. The closest, is the Primary Healthcare Centre at Bakin Kogi, Alkaleri Local government. This is a 10 minute journey on bike, and almost 30 minutes journey on foot.

    Food Combinations: Quantity versus Quality

    ‘‘A healthy diet helps protect against malnutrition in all its forms, as well as non-communicable diseases (NCDs), including diabetes, heart disease, stroke and cancer,’’ the World Health Organisation states.

    ‘‘In the first two years of a child’s life,” WHO maintains, “optimal nutrition fosters healthy growth and improves cognitive development. It also reduces the risk of becoming overweight or obese and developing NCDs later in life. Advice on a healthy diet for infants and children is similar to that for adults…. From six months of age, breast milk should be complemented with a variety of adequate, safe and nutrient dense complementary foods. Salt and sugars should not be added to complementary foods.’’

    The above requirement is not obtainable in Ranga village and neighbouring communities. A particular class of food is eaten daily, which is neither complemented with adequate, safe, nor nutrient dense complementary foods.

    A typical family here eats Tuwon masara da miyan kuka for breakfast (mashed maize and local soup), Rice and stew (no meat, no proteins-basically tomato and palm oil and salt, with a dash of a seasoning ‘ajino-moto’ made from sugar cane) for lunch and repeat the breakfast menu for dinner. Once in a very long while, they add a dash of beans to the rice and at other times, they eat ‘taliya da manja’- spaghetti and palm oil sautéed in dry pepper and salt.

    But surprisingly, they are known for some grains they plant. Millet and almost every kind of it, is found here, as Bauchi state prides itself in the production of grains and vegetables. But they are lost, as to what they can do with these crops asides selling them for commercial purpose. In all these, it is quite clear that while they may not have the means to meet their needs, they are also not creative and experimental when it comes to food, like most families.

    My major concern in travelling to this village was to see what baby Saifullahi, and by extension, his mother and other villagers feed on. Asides breast milk, he takes kunu and the RUTF. His meals are quite basic and there is hardly any protein or other supplements he needs. And as his mother barely feeds on a balanced diet, it automatically translates to him being malnourished. On occasions where he is fed vegetables, they are so overcooked that the nutrients are lost and also drains the flavour, a practice, medical personnels warn against.

    At exactly 5.00pm, I head out to begin the almost four hours journey back to Jos, Plateau state.

    Pregnancy and ante-natal check-ups
    The quality of life starts from conception, pregnant women are thus mandated to visit hospitals for checkups throughout their pregnancy term and even beyond. During these routine visits, they are examined, scanned, and given proper orientation on the right food combinations, amongst others. The babies are scanned to show their general wellbeing, and complications are noticed and attended to, quickly.

    Most mothers in Kirfi and Alkaleri Local government Areas of Bauchi state are ignorant of the right combination of food classes for their families. From the normal rice and stew, with no protein, to pasta and corn pudding, they hardly combine the right food supplements.

    In 2015, Nigeria ranked 16th on the global tomato production scale, accounting for 10.79 per cent of Africa’s and 1.2 per cent of total world production of tomatoes. While tomatoes are cultivated in most states in the country, Jigawa, Katsina, Zamfara, Sokoto, Kaduna, Bauchi, Gombe, Taraba, Kano lead the pack in the commercial cultivation of the crop, the Federal Ministry of Agriculture, states.

    In Ranga village, they have a healthy supply of vegetables as most of the men there, are farmers who plant tomatoes and other vegetables. But they would rather sell them off, than bring some home to their family. So while poverty helps malnutrition to spread, ignorance of proper food combinations also helps it gain a breeding ground.

    More still, most of the mothers at the CMAM centres are teenage mothers between the ages of 14-19. Saifullahi’s mother is a 19 year old, who struggled with various superstitious beliefs in her first pregnancy. For a village like Ranga, and by extension, others, teenage girls live solely to marry and raise children.

    And as the number of girls in school keep dropping, they increase the number of teenage mothers who are ignorant of best practices and hardly attend antenatal clinics. Both mothers under study, never attended antenatal throughout their nine months pregnancy and minor or major issues that would have been discovered, had they availed themselves such an opportunity, were never brought to limelight. Thus, the various complications the children had to contend with.

    But then, the irony. They are usually the first to visit the hospitals if their children develop complications and they tend to spend more, until it gets beyond their capacity and they thus rely on native traditional medications.

    In Ranga village, there are so many out-of-school children, many teenaged girls who looked forward with measured optimism, to the prospect of getting married and becoming an ‘amarya’, a newly wedded bride. Others, were already adorning different shades of makeups on their black, beautiful skin, as they hoped to attract a ‘samari’- boyfriend- who would eventually marry them. There were no plans for school, nor economic empowerment. There are no schools in Ranga, the closest, is at Bakin Kogi. While the girls only dream of marriage, the boys equally pick up farming, or motorcycle riding, as a vocation.

    Pregnant and lactating mothers transfer food to their unborn children and the quality of food they eat during their pregnancy terms, affects the overall wellbeing of the child.
    For Addan Walli, (Saifullahi’s mother) who eats just carbohydrates comprising rice and locally produced spaghetti in addition to corn and soup, it is very easy to detect where the malnutrition Saifullahi suffers, originated from.

    ‘‘I never attended any ante-natal clinic. I was just at home, and took local medicines once I felt ill. I eat my rice, everyday, and hardly include beans or others. This is what we eat daily, monthly and yearly and everyone here eats the same thing’’, she says.
    She also does not understand the concept of exclusive breastfeeding as Saifullahi both ate and was breastfed before he turned six months.

    UNICEF advocates steps to prevent children becoming malnourished to include supporting and encouraging mothers to breastfeed their babies exclusively for the first six months of life; educating families about the correct feeding practices for older babies and children; and provision of micronutrient supplements and vitamins and fortified food for pregnant women and young children.

    Talking to about 15 women at the CMAM centres, it was also obvious that they hardly attended antenatal clinics while pregnant thus, missing out on essential information and assistance. Also of note, is the fact that they give birth to very underweight children, an indication that either the mother or infant, or both, had not been feeding well.

    Most rural communities in the local government have at least, one primary health care facility. But how this, is run, and the capability of the medical personnel, leaves sore injuries in the mouth. Most of them are ill-equipped, and are manned by trained health workers who work as the nurses and midwives.

    The expensive cost of malnutrition
    As baby Saifullahi rests on his mother’s arm, he looks very uncomfortable. He tosses around, from side to side and she is left wondering what might be the best way to keep him rested. Just as she adjusts his, she feels something warm and humid, all over her. As she looks on, every other person there stares at her as the smell hits their nostrils. He has diarrhoea and has been stooling, non-stop, for two days.

    ‘‘He has been stooling, and despite the drugs we’ve given to him, he has not stopped. He keeps soiling his clothes and I am left with no option than to leave him without panties or diapers.’’, his mother says. It is evident that he has lost a lot in his two-days recorded diarrhoea. But that is not uncommon. Infact, every other child in the CMAM clinic, has diarrohea.

    The National Nutrition and Health Survey (NNHS) stated in 2015 that worldwide, diarrhoea is the second leading cause of death in children, after pneumonia, and is a leading cause of malnutrition and mortality in children aged less than five years, in Nigeria and most developing countries. This is frequently related to the consumption of contaminated water and unhygienic practices in food preparation and disposal of stools.

    Malnourished kids are given basic routine drugs comprising antibiotics, anti-worm , anti-malaria and Vitamin A to boost immunity, and improve eyesight, as is a regular case here. More drugs are given depending on each particular problem encountered by each child. So while the children are expected to improve daily, diarrhoea posses a big threat in their recovery process, and sometimes, even leads to their death. Baby Saifullahi and baby Zainaf were constant victims of the illness and so was every other child at the centre.

    Six months after
    After baby Saifullahi and Zainaf were discharged from the CMAM centre, I decided to follow up their post-recovery phase to see how well they fare six months down the line. Most times, when patients are discharged, and show little signs of proper rehabilitation, they are reabsorbed back into the scheme to start a whole new process of treatment and recovery. Would this be the same case for these two kids?

    The first three months for them were great, the mothers said. While baby Zainaf was gradually eating other local staple foods, she was also able to crawl outside the house and play with her siblings – a feat she was not able to attain, prior to her rehabilitation. For Saifullahi, he was a generally happy chap.

    By the fourth month, their bodies had changed. They both became ill. For Zainaf, it became a constant battle for her health and life. From malaria to eye pains and sores, she was constantly off and on local chemist shops. The mom, at a point, resorted to local medication, as she was administered herbs. By the 5th and 6th month, Zainaf was back to normal; crawling and standing, with the help of her siblings. She eats well, but still battles her eye pains.

    But baby Saifullahi was not so lucky. After the third month, things took a drastic turn for the family. He became very sick, and was regularly in and out of hospitals. They visited the Primary Health Care clinic at Bakin Kogi, in Alkaleri local government area.

    His father said, “we kept giving him the medicine and it was draining us. Today, he is unwell. Tomorrow, he is back to his normal self. He was eating his tuwo very well, and he was a cheerful child. It was not easy for us.’’

    I had been incommunicado for some time and then called Saifullahi’s father mid December, to know how they fared and to inform him I’d be coming the next week to check up on them. When he recognised my voice, his countenance changed. Aunty, he said, “baby Saif is gone. He is dead.’’

    His father narrated what happened.

    By early November, his condition had changed. He became restless, and they assumed it was the normal bout of sickness that he had been battling with. His mother had fed him a little food and by evening, she had him in her arms, while outside the house with the rest of the extended family, chitchatting.

    Suddenly, she felt cold. He felt still and limb.

    She turned, looked at him and raised an alarm. He was looking lifeless and was immediately snatched from her hand by a senior family member. They rushed him to the room, called and jerked him. But he was no more.

    ‘‘He had died, and that was it. Why should I wake his father up to tell him the sad news? It was God’s will and my baby’s time had come. There was nothing I could do about it.’’

    ‘‘I could not cry. I nursed the wound and pain in my heart, for days. I could not sleep, neither could I eat. It was a painful loss for me.’’

    He was buried in the morning, at the community burial ground, some kilometres away from their home. But I asked, what exactly was the problem with him? Did they conduct any test on him?

    ‘‘No,’’ his father replied. ‘‘No test was conducted at the hospital throughout our stay. They just kept giving us prescriptions to buy medicines and administer to him. We kept giving him one medicine after the other.’’

    From the father’s account, it wasn’t hard to conclude that ignorance, and lack of proper access to healthcare, in combination to other factors, had robbed the parents of their only child. Had they been aware that medications should not be administered continuously on children, without proper medical tests, perhaps, baby Saifullahi would still be alive. Had the medical officers at the primary Healthcare facility insisted on transferring them to the general hospital in Alkaleri, perhaps, doctors would have attained to him and helped saved one more life.

    I also sought to know his genotype. Maybe, there might be something wrong. The father was surprised. He had never heard of anything like that, and he just believes his son died because his time was up.

    ‘’That is how God willed it. His time was up and there was nothing we could so about it.’’

    She sought to see his pictures, one more time, as she had no single picture of her late son. I showed the parents his pictures from my camera and I could see a glow of pain and sadness cascade their faces as they saw their late son one more time. I promised to bring along with me, on my next visit, some hard copies of the late baby. It was emotional moment for the family.

    A new ray of hope
    But the good news, is that Addan Walli is already six months pregnant. She was about four months gone when her son died, and she is very hopeful that this very baby would stay.

    Already, the mistakes she did while pregnant for late baby Saifullahi, she is trying to correct. She has registered at the ante-natal clinic at Bakin Kogi Primary Health Care, and she has so far gone for 6 checkups.

    She excitedly brings her card to me. ‘‘See my card’’, she says as she tries to prove to me that she has enrolled for the ante-natal checkup. “I do not want complications,’’ she says.

    As I scan through the card, I can see weighs 52 KG.
    When asked if she was given any medicines, her husband replied: ‘‘she takes some and once she feels nauseous, she discards them. If I go inside the room now, you’d see so many medications she abandoned. That is the only problem I have with her now.’’

    But in her defence, she says, ‘‘Aunty, I am trying o. I feel sometimes uneasy when I take these drugs and it becomes a problem for me. But I will try to be consistent in taking the medicines. I will try.’’

    And thus, the family beams with hope for the future, having lost a son whom 9 months ago, was the centre of their attraction. Hopefully, this baby would stay, and would be well nourished, and have no need for the RUTFs.

    As Addan Walli and her husband walk me to their Zaure (varanda), where a motorcyclist is waiting to take me to Mainamaaji to board a taxi, I see a flicker of hope in their eyes, even as I promise to return when she gives birth. She is excited, and looks forward to the future, to a child well nourished. To a child who would not go through the same process her late son went through.

    And while the rays of hope beams in the horizon, heralding a new era for the family, those in the frontiers of Early Childhood Development continue to call for collaboration between all and sundry to maximize impact.

    The Executive Director, Convergence for Early Childhood Development Africa. Dr Ajimegor Oseaga-Ikuenobe sums it up:
    ‘‘Too many of us are working in isolation. To greatly improve impact and sustainability, we must build all-inclusive stakeholder platform, using a collective impact approach to address challenges surrounding Early Childhood Development in Nigeria, and Africa at large.’’

    And like the Global Nutrition Report, 2016 says, ‘‘malnutrition is the new normal. But it doesn’t have to be.’’

  • UNICEF hails  Akeredolu for signing social protection bill into law

    UNICEF hails Akeredolu for signing social protection bill into law

    United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) on Tuesday in Akure hailed the Ondo State Government for signing the Social Protection Appropriation Bill into law, which will protect women and children.

    Dr Niyi Olaleye, Officer in Charge of UNICEF, Akure, told newsmen shortly after Gov. Oluwarotimi Akeredolu of Ondo State had signed the bill into law on Tuesday, that it was the first of its kind in the country.

    Olaleye said the bill was about the welfare of the vulnerable in the society, particularly the women and children.

    He noted that the Federal Executive Council had a policy on it in 2017, saying, “Ondo State is the first to pass the bill into law at the sub national level.”

    Olaleye noted that it was well in line with the mandate of UNICEF to assist government to protect children and appreciated the state government for passing and signing the bill into law.

    Read Also: Boko Haram destroyed 1,400 schools in Borno –  UNICEF

    “The bill is about welfare of the most vulnerable in the society, this is well in line with our mandate, we have been working with them for the past one and half years on the bill.

    “It is a milestone for women and children of Ondo State, as it makes the state to provide for them. Ondo State is the first state in the country to pass the bill into law.”

    Earlier in the day, Gov. Akeredolu   had signed the 2018 Appropriation Bill of N181.42 billion, Contributory Health Protection Bill and the Social Protection bill into law.

    Akeredolu said the bill was the primary reason the people of the state voted him into power.

    “The bill is about the welfare of the citizens, there shall be a council in charge of the bill,” the governor said.

     NAN