Tag: Usman Yusuf

  • Masari tasks NHIS on advocacy campaign in Katsina

    The Katsina state governor, Alhaji Aminu Bello Masari, on Saturday tasked the management of National Health Insurance Scheme-NHIS to carry out aggressive advocacy campaign to create the needed awareness level of its activities and for the people to understand its programme properly.

    Alhaji Masari who was speaking when he received the Executive secretary of the scheme, Professor Usman Yusuf during a courtesy call at government house, said the scheme, laudable as it is, could be misunderstood by the people as insurance affects the sensibilities of Muslims in general.

    The governor was however happy with the performance of a staff of NHIS who volunteered to educate people from some communities in Danja local government area, on the advantages of the scheme, which he said encouraged acceptance and participation.

    He said’’ the state government in collaboration with the state house of assembly, state chapter of Nigeria labor Congress NLC, Medical and Health Workers Union and others, to closely come up with a bill for an Agency to replicate NHIS in the state’’.

    ‘’ The new agency will no doubt reduce problems of seeking for donations for patients to buy drugs prescribed for them by Doctors in clinics and hospitals’’.

    Earlier in a remark, the Executive secretary of NHIS, Professor Usman Yusuf said the National Health Bill has been assented to by President Muhammadu Buhari. He added that the bill had provided for one percent of realizable federal revenue to be expended on the health sector.

    Read Also:  Masari calls for more NHIS enlightenment

    Of the amount, he said five percent is secondary, forty five percent for primary healthcare while fifty percent is for the NHIS, stressing that although the scheme had been characterized by failures in the past, everything is being done to turn round the fortunes of NHIS.

    Professor Yusuf said he was part of the restoration agenda setting of the Masari led government even before the 2015 general elections and expressed happiness that the governor had started implementing the agenda in the renovated and upgraded hospitals across the state.

    He assured that before leaving Katsina, he will meet with relevant stakeholders to ensure the passage of the bill that would help the state to benefit from NHIS programmes.

    He announced the opening of a new zonal NHIS office in Kano to take care of Kano, Jigawa and Katsina States.

  • Masari calls for more NHIS enlightenment

    Gov. Aminu Masari of Katsina State has urged the management of the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS), to intensify efforts toward enlightening people in the state on the scheme.

    Masari made the call during a courtesy call by the NHIS Executive Secretary, Prof. Usman Yusuf, on Wednesday in Katsina.

    He said the call became imperative because some people misunderstood the scheme, hence the need for more enlightenment.

    The governor said it was only when people understood the scheme that they would be able to enroll in it.

    Read Also: Masari tasks NHIS on Advocacy campaign in Katsina

    He further said the state government was making arrangements to enroll its workers in the scheme for their own benefits.

    Earlier, Yusuf explained that the bill establishing the NHIS which was signed by President Muhammadu Buhari, provided that one per cent of Federal Revenue be spent on the health sector.

    Yusuf commended the administration of Gov. Masari for renovating and upgrading some general hospitals across the state.

    He also announced that the NHIS had opened a new Zonal Office in Kano to take care of Kano, Jigawa and Katsina States for effective service delivery.

  • We have failed Nigerians on healthcare delivery, says NHIS boss

    The Executive Secretary of National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS), Prof. Usman Yusuf, on Wednesday in Kano admitted that the Scheme has committed a lot of mistakes in its operation to better the health of Nigerians.

    Yusuf who spoke to Reporters during and interactive session, after the launching of seven health sector projects initiated by Governor Abdullahi Umar Ganduje at Muhammadu Specialist Hospital (MDH) Gingiyu, said the Scheme has already taken measures to correct the anomalies.

    According to him, “In fact, our mistakes are many! And I am forced to say it because if you do not admit what your mistakes are, you will continue to make such mistakes. We are the regulators of health insurance in this country, and a lot of what you see have been from our mistakes; and we have owned up to that and said we have done mistakes in the past, and we want to tell people we will correct those mistakes and do the right thing.

    “What are the mistakes: we have not been holding ourselves accountable, that is number one. Number two, we have not been holding hospitals we give people’s money to accountable. Number three, we have not been holding HMOs we give people’s money to accountable.

    “We are saying this time around, it is going to be different, we have to hold ourselves accountable, we have to hold the hospitals we give people’s money to accountable and we have to hold HMOs accountable. Now those hospitals and HMOs we give money to, we will go and ask them—what did you do with that money.

    “In Abuja, what we have done in NHIS is that I have deployed Desk Officers to major hospitals in Abuja. They are there to act as advocates for patients. When our patients go to hospitals, and then they said no, your bills are not covered by NHIS, whereas it is, or they don’t get treated well, they go to this Desk Officers and complain to them and the Desk Officers go and advocate for them.

    “We want to replicate that across the six geo-political zones in major hospitals. We are going to be enrollee-centric rather than HMO-centric. Many of hospitals get a lot of money from us and they never held anybody accountable, but this time around, it is going to be different.”

    He added that, “NHIS has been going round the country interacting with states governments, Commissioners of Health and Governors, and encouraging them to create their own health insurance agencies. So far, we have only 19 of such agencies in the country. Our goal is that by the end of this year, we should be where we need to be. “Our call to them is that if you don’t create your own health insurance agency, they will not enjoy these basic healthcare provisions. So, here we are, we are working with them and we will get there.”

    Yusuf also noted that, “people do not know about National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS), I agree, but that is the reason that we are here having this interaction.

    “The misconception is always NHIS is only for Federal Government employees. Again, we are guilty as charged, we have not gone to talk to people; that is why we have this engagement. And now, our goal is aggressively advocating and telling people what NHIS is about.

    “Essentially, the largest pool is Federal Government employees, but it doesn’t mean that is we take care of. We have the organized private sector.”

    He stated that HNIS has come up with a programme that can take care of the health needs of the Nigerian masses, pointing out that, “there is this programme called Vital Contributors’ Social Health Insurance Programme (VC-SHIP), for N15, 000 yearly anybody can enjoy healthcare as I would. You pay N15, 000 a year, you can go to a hospital and they will send us a bill up to N300, 000 and NHIS will pay.

    “The whole idea is that we are able to do that because the Federal Government has put this large pool into the formal sector. Our goal is to have a large economy upscale.

    “The more people contribute into this, (and forget about the sentiment of I contribute, but I probably will not use it) but the whole idea is for the healthy to pay for the sick; the strong to pay for the weak; and the young to pay for the aged.

    “This is what we encourage, unless you have a very large number, you are not going to be able to subsidize that. Let us all think about this—I mean, all of us, from the president to the peasant—we all go back to our villages, there are always people coming to us to ask us about going to hospital; and more often than not, you end up spending more than N15, 000. So, you pay N15, 000 and anyone of us can enjoy healthcare delivery as we can pay for every other person.

    “So, VC-SHIP is what we want to aggressively advocate and sale to people as part of our outreach for the informal sector; because in the Federal Government, the formal sector is for sure because the Federal Government is now employing more people; but the informal sector is where the future is and that is where about 99 per cent of our people are. We will see how we will connect with the states and do the right thing for our people.”

  • Usman Yusuf’s reinstatement

    President Muhammadu Buhari gave fresh ammunition last week to the growing legion of critics who maintain that his war on corruption has been half-hearted and selective when he reinstated the embattled executive secretary of the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS), Professor Usman Yusuf, who was under a suspension order, charged with gross violations of the public service code.

    Specifically, Usman was accused of converting N919 million in subscribers’ premiums to his personal use, purchasing a Sport Utility Vehicle for N58 million, approved contracts worth some N1 billion for his cronies and proxies, and loading the payroll with his relatives. The Senate also accused Yusuf of “corruptly” spending N292 million without recourse to any approving authority.

    Weighty charges indeed, and more than enough to cause the Minister of Health, Professor Isaac Adewole, executive head of the supervising ministry, to suspend Yusuf and order investigations. Yusuf refused to appear before a committee empanelled by the minister and clung to his post, claiming that only the president could suspend him. The committee worked without the benefit of Yusuf input. Its findings, we understand, were placed before the president last September.

    Last week, some four months later, the report finally got his attention. Through his Chief of Staff, Malam Abba Kyari, the president informed the minister that Yusuf had been reinstated and had been admonished to work harmoniously with the minister.

    This amounts to a disingenuous evasion of the problem. It would be helpful if the minister and the head of an agency within the ministry related harmoniously.  But the issues under review go far beyond that. They are rooted in allegations of criminal breach of public trust, which the minister has a duty to act on as stipulated by the governing rules, counting on the president’s encouragement and support, within the framework of the war on corruption.

    They are a manifestation of the bureaucratic indiscipline that has hobbled the civil service and rendered it almost impermeable to innovation and change. And it needs to be said that they are inimical to the agenda of change on which the president was elected.

    The way this matter has been handled is disturbingly reminiscent of the case of Abdulrasheed  Maina, the pensions chief implicated in the loss of N17 billion in pension funds under his charge.  Declared a wanted person, he disappeared from public view for a while, under the protective custody of the very officials who should have turned him in, and was eventually discovered at the Ministry of Internal Affairs, having been reinstated through the back door.

    If in the instant case the Presidency has come into possession of compelling evidence warranting Yusuf’s reinstatement, it ought to have brought it to the attention of the Minister of Health. If its judgment is that the minister exceeded his powers in suspending Yusuf, it ought to have communicated that judgment and how it came by it to the minister.

    Neither the twain nor indeed the public has been served well by the president’s intervention. Until Yusuf is officially and transparently cleared of all charges, a dark cloud of suspicion will hang over him and public trust in the NHIS will to that extent be undermined.

    Yusuf’s reinstatement has left Adewole and the public wondering what he did wrong and what he could have done differently.  More poignantly, it amounts to a not-so-subtle declaration of no confidence in Adewole’s leadership and judgment.

    It has reinforced public wariness about how the war on corruption is being conducted.

    But it is Adewole that has suffered the most damage. He has been treated shabbily. Absent a redress, he should follow the path of honour.

  • PDP chides Presidency for reinstating NHIS boss

    PDP chides Presidency for reinstating NHIS boss

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has chided the Presidency for reinstating the Executive Secretary of the National Health Insurance Scheme ( NHIS ), Prof Usman Yusuf after he was suspended indefinitely by the Minister of Health, Prof Isaac Adewole in July 2017.

    Yusuf was suspended for alleged financial misconduct bordering on the misuse of N919 million and insubordination towards constituted authority following a report of a ministerial panel of inquiry which indicted him of abuse of office.
    In a dramatic twist however, the Presidency on Tuesday, overruled the minister by reinstating the indicted NHIS boss, even as he was still undergoing interrogation by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).
    The PDP, in a statement on Wednesday by its National Publicity Secretary, Kola Ologbondiyan, described the Presidency’s action as shocking, scandalous and a mockery of justice.
    The party also mocked the All Progressives Congress (APC)-controlled Federal Government for allegedly covering up a cabinet minister reported to have bought a property worth N280 million in Abuja from alleged corrupt enrichment.

    “The Presidency stinks of corruption and has lost all claim of fighting graft, as long as it continues to protect indicted officials of the APC administration”, the statement added.

    The PDP added that it was disgusting that the same Presidency that is brandishing a medal of African Union Anti-Corruption champion, would short-circuit the processes, arm-twist anti-graft agencies and pull out an indicted government official, while he was still a guest at the EFCC where he was being grilled for his alleged malfeasance.

    The statement said, “This is a government official probed and thoroughly indicted for abuse of office and fraud to the tune of N919 million by a committee set up by the Minister of Health, comprising senior officials of the Health ministry, Department of State Services, and the Independent Corrupt Practices and other related offences Commission (ICPC) and which report was submitted to the President last September.

     

    Read Also: NHIS:  ‘We’ve attained 98% coverage of formal sector’

     

    “The report detailed Yusuf as a public servant who portrayed a holier than thou attitude but at the background, milked the agency dry by ganging up with other fraudulent elements to fleece the NHIS to the tune of over N919 million through fraudulent procurements, while name-dropping on the President.

    “Instead of allowing for the conclusion of investigation and eventual prosecution by EFCC, the Presidency halted the process and rewarded the indicted official with a recall from suspension, even without any recourse to the supervising minister, simply because Prof. Yusuf is not only of the APC but also known to be very close to the President.

    “The only way the Presidency can redeem itself from this particular scandal is to immediately return Prof. Yusuf to the EFCC and allow the law to take it course if it is actually fighting corruption in Nigeria.

    “In the same vein, we challenge the Presidency to immediately name the minister indicted for corrupt enrichment and bring him out for investigation and prosecution in line with the law”.

    The opposition party called on Nigerians and the international community to continue to note what it called the insincerity and deception of the APC government, especially as the nation approaches the 2019 general elections.

     

  • Man bags 18 months imprisonment for stealing tricycle

    Man bags 18 months imprisonment for stealing tricycle

    A Jos Upper Area Court 1, on Thursday sentenced a 28-year-old man, Usman Yusuf to 18 months imprisonment for stealing a tricycle worth N450, 000.

    The Judge, Lawal Suleiman, sentenced Yusuf after he pleaded guilty to a charge of stealing.

    Lawal held that the convict should serve-out his term without an option of fine.

    He said the sentence would serve as deterrent to others who would want to engage in such crime.

    Earlier, the Police Prosecutor, Sgt. Ibrahim Gukwat, had told the court that the tricycle driver Sani Abubakar reported the matter at the Laranto Police Station on July 22.

    Gukwat said the accused boarded the tricycle from Ahmadu Bello way and told the complainant to take him to Rano filling station Bauchi Road, Jos for N500.

    “On getting to the filling station the accused told the complainant that he mistakenly told him Bauchi Road instead of Zaria Road.

    “The driver agreed and took him to the Rano filling station at Zaria Road, but on getting to the destination the accused punched the complainant on his neck and took the tricycle,’’ he said.

    According to the prosecutor, the complainant screamed for help and some people came to his rescue and arrested the accused.

    Gukwat said the offence contravened Section 95 of the Penal Code Law of Northern Nigeria.

    The accused, who pleaded guilty to the charge, begged the court for leniency saying “I will never do it again, it is the devil’s handiwork, please have mercy on me.’’

  • Yusuf: The insolent child of impunity

    Yusuf: The insolent child of impunity

    Those tempted to view corruption only in materialist terms, overlooking the abstract subversion of norms and values, will perhaps be forced to have a rethink by simply following the farcical drama currently unfolding at the National Health Insurance Scheme.

    Equating his kinship with President Buhari to a talisman, Usman Yusuf was not content at only breaking all extant service rules as the Executive Secretary; he went a step further by daring constituted authorities at the health ministry to hold him to account.

    Directed by the Acting President to examine a slew of petitions against the NHIS Executive Secretary, Minister Isaac Adewole had little or no difficulty in asking him to proceed on a three-month suspension to enable an unimpeded investigation.

    Unsatisfied with the defence made by the embattled ES to the weighty charges, Adewole wrote: “Consequently, you are directed to proceed on three months suspension with immediate effect to pave way for an uninterrupted investigation, in accordance with Public Service Rule.”

    Tellingly, the workers’ union in the agency were the first to applaud the minister’s action as the right step to curtail what they described as the “primitive stealing going on”.

    But in a leaked memo dated July 12 addressed to the Minister responding to his suspension over alleged massive graft among other actions unbecoming of a public officer, the Katsina-born professor pointedly declared he was not answerable to anyone other than PMB, casually hinting he would rather sit tight.

    Drawing confidence apparently from a mis-reading of sections of the NHIS law, he claimed that only the man who appointed him on a renewable term of five years was capable of questioning his actions or conduct. His words: “By virtue of the NHIS Act particularly section 4 and 8 thereof, my appointment and removal from office whether by way of suspension or otherwise is at the instance of the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.”

    The waters would be muddied further following a counter-motion by the House of Reps ordering Yusuf’s reinstatement. According to the House, Yusuf’s suspension is prejudicial to an ongoing investigation into the whereabouts of N351 allocated to the agency between 2005 and 2016. Well, let it be said that the freedom of the House to issue express orders does not include the power to compel the minister’s obedience in the circumstance.

    In any case, when mighty logs fall on each other in the bush, as they say, common sense dictates that evacuation starts with the one on top.

    Yusuf’s thinly disguised arrogance surely bespeaks a mindset never seen in public service at that level in recent history. By his academic standing, a man assumed to be professor can hardly be accused of illiteracy and, therefore, cannot be excused for confusing the meaning of delegated authority. By virtue of being a member of federal executive council, a minister is the president’s agent and the principle of agency therefore entitles him to exercise his principal’s authority in his assigned station.

    In the absence of PMB, an Acting President is supposed to be in place, whose power the health minister would seem to invoke in directing that Yusuf proceed on suspension.

    So, only sheer impunity and contempt for everyone except PMB could have led Yusuf to word his reply to the minister in the insolent manner he did. Intoxicated by transient power, the little wayfarer from Katsina seems incapable of realizing yet that such indiscretion invariably does incalculable damage to PMB, his benefactor. If nothing at all, this will certainly be cited as another exhibit in the now not-so-subtle protestation  against the lopsidedness in Buhari’s key appointments, seen as  a form of sleaze on its own.

    Obviously a product of nepotism, Yusuf instinctively has been feeding the web as well. Among his first actions in office was said to be the appointment of his younger brother as General Manager (Legal) and his niece, a level 8 officer from the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), catapulted to grade level 13 at the NHIS.

    Already, there are reports that the suspended ES has been telling people that he was being “persecuted” because of his refusal to meet an “illegal financial request” by the minister. Well, we honestly cannot rule that out. But even if this were true, it hardly absolves this clear case of mutiny.

    Nor will that be sufficient immunity not to answer the substantive charges of impropriety against him. Therefore, the relevant authorities had better ensured appropriate sanctions are meted to him as restitution for this act of rank insubordination in the first place, even if he was eventually found guiltless for the litany of sins he was originally accused of.

    Indeed, legion and weighty are the charges against Yusuf. The last straw that apparently broke the camel’s back was his decision to buy himself a N58m SUV from NHIS funds way above his N2.5m approval limit without the knowledge nor the concurrence of the supervising ministry despite that his office already had a number of serviceable SUVs.

    Before he landed the “juicy” appointment last year, very little was known of Yusuf beside his stint at an obscure medical address in the U.K. and later being found around one influential Kaduna-based contractor. Considering the nature of the operations of NHIS, not a few industry experts had expected someone with managerial or financial bias would be appointed.

    When the professor of “hematology, pediatrics and oncology” was eventually named the new NHIS boss, many were inclined to assume that his kinship with President Buhari largely influenced the appointment more than merit.

    But no sooner had he assumed office than alarm bells started chiming literally all over at NHIS, the same way domestic fire alarm is triggered by whiff of smoke. He seemed in a great hurry to turn the office into a vending machine for contracts often grossly inflated and incestuous.

    First was a phony N400m training contract allegedly awarded to his “benefactor and confidant” with a view to decimating the N860m set aside for “training” in NHIS’ 2016 budget.

    But in reality, according to one of the petitioners, “In one of the trainings, a course fee of N520,000 per staff for three days was approved without recourse to diligent planning but with the mindset to profiteer (sic) his cronies. After a lot of hue and cry from the general staff the fee was cut to N270,000 under suspicious circumstances.

    “Thus the fraud began, most of these trainings which were scheduled to hold across the 36 states and the FCT never held, while those that held was incomparable to the funds which had all being released for the trainings. There was absence of training materials in most of the designated venues of the trainings.

    “Multiples of payment vouchers ranging (from) N19 million, N18 million (to) N21 million were raised to cover up for the payment of over N400 million for these trainings.

    “All these spendings he carried out were above his approval limit, but he was always heard to claim that he has the ears of the president, they being from the same state, and whatever your complaints, they will go nowhere.”

    There is another allegation that the contract for supply of e-library equipment to a company (Promatrix Global Resources Ltd) to the tune of N28 million was pre-paid before execution against procurement rules.

    In another deal, a princely N150 million was allegedly paid to a consultant “in the training of report writing”. The beneficiary? Yusuf’s own brother.

    For now, we can only hope the administrative panel will carry out a forensic investigation and ensure justice is served.

    But while awaiting the outcome, we can at least take solace in being provided yet another aperture onto why output never really measures up to input in Nigeria. Sleaze or “job for the boys” certainly was not part of the promises made to the nation when the NHIS was first unveiled in 1999. Rather, the mission statement outlined its goal as a quest to bridge the deficit in the nation’s healthcare, targeting government employees, the organized private sector, the informal sector, children under age 5, disabled persons and prison inmates.

    Between then and now, a whopping N351b has been expended on NHIS with little or no impact felt by the citizenry. In fact, eighteen years after, national coverage is today put at an abysmal 1.5 percent. In the current year, revitalization of over 10,000 primary healthcare centers (PHC) was listed among NHIS’ priorities, targeted at the most vulnerable in the society including rural women and children. But the funds earmarked for essential drugs for the people are rather diverted into providing luxury and comfort for officials. Life expectancy remains at 52 years. Malaria prevalence rate is still around 11 percent. Maternal mortality rate is still high. Under 5 mortality rate is still over 10 percent.

    Meanwhile, as things continue to fall apart in public hospitals on account of stolen budgets, more and more Nigerians now resort to churches and shrines in search of healing.

    Correction

    Ali Modu-Sheriff was Borno Governor between 2003 and 2011, not between 1999 and 2007 as stated in last week’s piece.

  • NHIS: Reps accuse minister of corruption

    NHIS: Reps accuse minister of corruption

    The Minister of Health, Isaac Adewole, was on Wednesday accused of corruption by the House of Representatives over his roles in the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) scandal.

    He was also accused of contempt of the Legislative Houses Powers and Privileges Act and tried to frustrate ongoing investigation into the allegations bothering on fraudulent activities of Health Management Organisations (HMOs).

    The allegations came during the debate of a motion sponsored by Chairman, House Committee on Healthcare Services, Hon. Chike Okafor.

    At the end of the deliberation, the minister was ordered to reinstate the suspended Executive Secretary of NHIS, Usman Yusuf, within seven days.

    The minister suspended the NHIS chief over alleged poor handling of the agency.

    The lawmakers alleged that the refusal of the suspended NHIS chief to accommodate several demands like the payment of N197.073 million and $37,383 for trip to a World Health Organization (WHO) conference, and his unearthing of fraudulent activities of the HMOs led to his suspension.

    Members of the House were of the opinion that the minister, who was a President appointee, has no power to suspend another appointee of the President.