Tag: Yobe

  • Polio: Fighting  a tough battle

    Polio: Fighting a tough battle

    As preparations begin for the next sub-national Immunisation Plus’ Days (IPDs) using bivalent oral polio vaccine, Oyeyemi Gbenga-Mustapha takes a look at why the vaccine preventable polio is still endemic in Nigeria.

    Nigeria is one of the three countries that is still polio-endemic, it is in this unenviable company with Afghanistan and Pakistan. Of all the three, Nigeria is the reservoir of wild polio virus, it is the only country with ongoing transmission of all three serotypes- wild poliovirus type 1, wild poliovirus type 3 and circulating vaccine- desired polio type 2. The Northern states are the main source of polio infections.

    In 2009, operational improvements in these northern states led to a 90 per cent decline in cases of wild poliovirus type 1 and a 50 per cent decline in overall cases compared with 2008.

    As of last week, Polio Global Eradication Initiative, a monitoring organisation of polio situation in Nigeria, reported that two new cases of wild polio virus 1 have been found in Kano and Taraba states, bringing the total number of wild polio cases for this year to 18. The case from Kano is the most recent case in the country.

    According to medical experts, as long as a single child remains infected, children in all countries are at risk of contracting polio. Failure to eradicate polio from these last remaining strongholds could result in as many as 200, 000 new cases every year within 10 years. Polio has no cure but can be prevented.

    In most countries, the global effort has expanded capacities to tackle other infectious diseases by building effective surveillance and immunization systems.

    A delicate balance

    Polio is a highly infectious disease caused by a virus. It invades the nervous system, and can cause total paralysis in a matter of hours. Initial symptoms are fever, fatigue, headache, vomiting, stiffness in the neck and pain in the limbs. According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), one in 200 infections lead to irreversible paralysis (usually in the legs). Among those paralysed, five per cent to 10 per cent die when their breathing muscles become immobilised.

    According to WHO, globally, Polio cases have decreased by over 99 per cent since 1988, from an estimated 350, 000 cases to 223 reported cases in 2012. The reduction is the result of the global effort to eradicate the disease.

    Nigeria is fighting to end the endemic. However, there are sundry factors militating against the actualisation of this hope.

    The polio eradication programme continue to miss too many children in key geographic areas and population groups due to a mixture of operational and social factors. In 2012, going by data supplied by Polio Global Eradication Initiative, 61 children were paralyzed by polio in the first half of 2012, as opposed to 24 at the same time in 2011. In 2011, more than 95 per cent of all cases occurred in the eight persistently endemic northern states of Borno, Jigawa, Kano, Katsina, Kebbi, Sokoto, Yobe and Zamfara.

    A formerly strong primary health care system in northern Nigeria has been weakened over many years due to incessant polio outbreaks and resistant of a segment of the populace over the safety of the vaccination. This has led to serious gap in the administration of the vaccine and subsequent disruption of campaigns as well as the killing of vaccinators. Now routine immunisation services are either no longer available or irregular; coupled with limited resources for health services and gaps in vaccine storage and distribution.

    According to a nongovernmental organisation, PATH, Northern Nigeria has one of the lowest rates of immunisation coverage in the world. In many parts of the north, barely 10 percent of children receive all of their routine vaccines. Coverage rates for the vaccine against tetanus among women are equally low.

    Misunderstood scheme

    The north is rife with misperception on the effects of the contents of the vaccine on health, especially reproduction. Campaigns have been on in the north that vaccination leads to reduction of productivity, this has been countered at all levels but the impact is still there.

    But in the face of sundry factors including insecurity, especially of Boko Haram, ridding the country of the polio virus can remain a mirage. Conflicts and insecurity do weaken public health systems.

    For instance, attacks on health workers in Kano State have robbed vulnerable populations of basic life-saving health interventions. In the face of these, Nigeria continues to pose a significant risk to surrounding countries. In 2011, polio viruses originating from Nigeria were detected in five countries on West and Central Africa. Despite dozens of vaccination campaigns over the past years, according to Polio Global Eradication Initiative, no more than 65 percent of children have received four or more Oral Polio Vaccine (OPV) doses in Borno, Kano, Sokoto and Yobe states.

    Viruses with genetic evidence of long periods of circulation without detection are still being found, indicating surveillance gaps. Sub national engagement of political leadership remains patchy. Future benefits of polio eradication are immense. Once polio is eradicated, the world can celebrate the delivery of a major global public good that will benefit all, no matter where they live. According to WHO, Economic modelling has found that the eradication of polio would save at least US$ 40 to 50 billion over the next 20 years, mostly in low-income countries. Most importantly, success will mean that no child will ever again suffer the terrible effects of lifelong polio-paralysis.

     

     

  • Yobe clash death toll hits 25

    At least 25 people were killed in a clash between the Joint Task Force and suspected Boko Haram members who robbed a bank and attacked a police station in Yobe State, police said on Friday.

    The military had earlier said seven people were killed in the shootout on Thursday.

    “Five policemen and 20 gunmen have been confirmed dead and over nine million naira ($56,600) was carted away from a commercial bank,” Reuters quoted Yobe State police commissioner, Sanusi Rufai, as saying in a statement, adding that the loot had been recovered.

    The Boko Haram sect and offshoots such as the al Qaeda-linked Ansaru, as well as associated criminal networks, have posed the main threat to the stability of Nigeria since a 2009 amnesty for militants in the oil-producing Niger Delta calmed violence there.

    Thursday’s shootout followed a major military assault on a Boko Haram hideout by allied forces from Nigeria, Chad and Niger last week that killed dozens of people and may have been one of the deadliest since the Islamists launched an uprising in 2009.

    The Nigerian Red Cross is trying to check reports from locals that 187 people died in that battle. The military said the figure is inflated, but it has barred any access to aid agencies wanting to investigate.

     

  • JTF confirms death of officer in Yobe

    JTF confirms death of officer in Yobe

    The Joint Task Force in Yobe on Tuesday confirmed the death of its officer in the Sunday clash with insurgents at Geidam in Yobe.

    A statement issued by Lt. Eli Lazarus, the JTF spokesman, also confirmed that two other officers sustained injuries.

    “One officer was killed and two others injured are receiving treatment, while four suspected insurgents dressed in military uniforms were killed in the encounter.

    “The dead bodies of the insurgents were haphazardly dressed in military uniforms. Some wear only the top, while others trousers.

    “The suspected terrorists are heading toward Geidam town to carry out attacks and have an encounter with JTF troops close to Tumbulgi, 11 kilometers north of Geidam, and were successfully repelled,’’ Lazarus said.

  • 20 killed in Yobe autocrash

    The Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) in Yobe has said that 20 persons died in a road accident that occurred seven kilometres from Potiskum on the Kano-Maiduguri highway on Monday.

    The FRSC Sector Commander in Yobe, Alhaji Shehu Umar, confirmed the development in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Tuesday in Potiskum.

    He explained that the accident occurred at about 6 p.m. when a bus rammed into a truck and killed all the 20 occupants in the bus.

    “You know due to the security challenge in Potiskum, we were forced to suspend operations in the area and we could not offer rescue services,” he said.

    The sector commander said that the accident could have been caused by over-speeding.

    He, however, observed that “over-speeding and reckless driving” had been responsible for many accidents on the road.

    NAN learnt that the driver of the18-seater bus coming from Kano was speeding to beat the 6 p.m. curfew in Potiskum, due to the current security crisis in the area.

    Sources said that in the process, the bus rammed into a truck belonging to a construction company, killing all the passengers and the driver.

    NAN also learnt that the suspension of operations by the FRSC in Yobe had left victims of road accidents at the mercy of good Samaritans.(

  • Yobe employs 3,000 youths

    No fewer than 3,000 youths, women and vulnerable persons have been engaged under the Subsidy Reinvestment and Empowerment Programme (SURE-P) in Yobe State,its co-ordinator in the state, Alhaji Umar El-Gash, has said.

    El-Gash said this in Damaturu while on a courtesy visit to the Secretary to the State Government, Alhaji Babagoni Machina.

    He said that 1, 000 of them had been deployed to the 17 local government areas of the state, while the 2, 000 others would soon be deployed.

    “We will soon embark on recruitment of another 2, 000 beneficiaries to reach our benchmark of 5, 000 as earmarked for each state of the federation”, he said.

    The coordinator urged the state government to appoint a desk officer who would be briefing it on the activities carried out by the programme in the state.

    El-Gash sought the cooperation of the government in the effort to fight unemployment and improve the livelihood of the people.

    Replying, the SSG assured the scheme of support and requested upward review of participants in the programme.

    “Unemployment in Nigeria needs a collaborative effort and I want to assure you of Governor Gaidam administration’s support to this laudable programme for the benefit of our people,” he said.

  • Yobe SIEC releases council poll timetable

    Yobe State Independent National Electoral Commission (SIEC) yesterday released the timetable for local government election.

    The commission’s Chairman, Mohammed Abdul Jauro, said the poll is scheduled for June 22.

    He said in a forum with the registered political parties and other stakeholders that the election would be conducted after three months’ notice as provided in the electoral law- that is from March 18 to July 7.

    Jauro said the commission would deal with political parties instead of individual candidates, stressing that “they have to go through their political parties and purchase the nomination forms for the election within six days.”

    But the political parties demanded three days’ extension that was later approved- April 1 to April 9.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • ACN to Jonathan: Borno,Yobe visit  a failure

    ACN to Jonathan: Borno,Yobe visit a failure

    The Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) yesterday picked holes in President Goodluck Jonathan’s response to the amnesty request for members of the Boko Haram sect during his last week’s visit to Borno and Yobe states.

    The opposition party said the tactless handling of the crisis has aggravated the insurgency that has claimed the lives of hundreds of innocent Nigerians and foreign nationals.

    In a statement in Lagos by its National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the party also said while the decision to grant amnesty to any person or group is the prerogative of the government, the argument advanced by the President for denying amnesty to Boko Haram members is as illogical as it is puerile.

    It said for a President who has unwisely stayed away from the beleaguered part of the country for too long, last week’s visit only succeeded in inflicting additional pain and insults on the victims of the insurgency, who could have used a little dose of succour and empathy from their leader.

    The party said: ‘’There is no doubt that there has been an upsurge in attacks and killings since the President’s visit, with the clashes between the JTF and the insurgents leaving many dead, drive-by shooting in Kano claiming the lives of innocent people and the unfortunate killing of foreign hostages who were abducted last month in Bauchi.

    ‘’If this upsurge can be used as a barometer to measure the success or otherwise of the President’s visit, then one can only reach one conclusion: The visit is a total failure!’’ ACN said.

    The party also expressed shock at the way the President, openly displaying anger when what was needed was temperance, talked down on the people, who have suffered so much in the hands of Boko Haram, at his town hall meetings.

    It said the misplaced anger of the nation’s number one citizen, who virtually tongue-lashed the prominent citizens who spoke on behalf of their people at the town hall meeting, can only attract sympathy for the insurgents among the beleaguered population, thereby worsening the crisis.

    It went on: ‘’The President wanted to appear tough in dealing with the Boko Haram insurgents. There is no problem with that, except that he directed his anger at the wrong people, the same people who have been victimized by Boko Haram. This is called double whammy,’’ On the President’s argument that amnesty cannot be granted to ‘’ghosts’’, CAN said he simply missed the mark.

    ‘’If the President claims that Boko Haram members are ghosts, who then are the members of Boko Haram that the JTF regularly claims to have arrested or killed? Does it mean the 52 Boko Haram members that the JTF claimed to have killed, in its latest statement dated March 9, are actually ghosts?

    ‘’What about the Boko Haram members that are being tried in court? Could the government have been trying ghosts?

    And what about those Boko Haram members who were declared wanted last year? Are they also ghosts? Also, the government’s spokesmen have said publicly that the government is talking with Boko Haram through back-channels.

    So, the Jonathan Administration has indeed been talking to ghosts?

    ‘’Mr. President, there is nowhere in the world where insurgents have erected a headquarters building and put up a sign to say ‘we are insurgents, come and get us.’ By their nature, insurgents don’t engage in a march past, displaying their weapons. That is why intermediaries are used to reach out to them,’’ the party said.

    ACN said while it strongly condemns the Boko Haram insurgents, their senseless killing of innocent people and attacks on the security agents, it believes that the use of force is not the only option open to the government to end the crisis.

  • President Jonathan’s extemporaneous love note to Borno, Yobe

    From what I gathered from the governor of Yobe during my visit, the problem is coming down (abating). It is coming down in Adamawa, in Gombe, in Bauchi and in Niger. But in Borno, we still have some problems. So, if you elders will not condemn it, you will continue to suffer under the terror of Boko Haram, because without peace, we cannot develop Borno. Myself and any head of the security agencies do not want to pay one day allowance to anybody… We need that money to do other important things that will change the economy of this country. We need that money to fund agriculture and to create wealth across this country, including Borno State.

    “We are not happy to be spending so much money in the Niger Delta, keeping the JTF there. We are not happy to be spending so much money keeping the JTF in Borno State and other places. Definitely, we are not. In fact, if the elders agree now to come and sign agreement with me that I should move out all the JTF, but if anybody dies in Borno State, I will hold them responsible, I will sign and I will move, and I will do it. If somebody dies, yes, I will take you. I am going to remove the JTF, but come and sign and I will remove the JTF and you guarantee the safety of life and property of individuals. When you do that today, as I am going, the JTF will start moving to their barracks. But you must guarantee, if anything happens to anybody that you must be held responsible. If the circumstances that brought the soldiers are no longer there, that day, they will all leave.

    “Let me be very frank, because the analogy that oh, when one soldier is killed the soldiers come and kill scores of people, we have always been admonishing that. We always tell the soldiers to conduct themselves because they are doing internal security job that ordinarily soldiers are supposed not to be involved in. But because of the calibre of weapons the militants are using, the police alone cannot stand. And government will never sit down quietly and wait for insurgents, for some people to take up arms and take a part of this country. Never.

    “Whether it is in the Niger Delta, and I have given the directive to security services, I don’t want to hear that one soldier is killed in the Niger Delta, I don’t want to hear that one security officer is killed in the South East kidnapping, I don’t want to hear that one soldier is killed in Borno State or any part of this country. I cannot preside over this country as a president and my security officers are killed. This people leave their families, stay on the roads and the bush so that we will sleep and I will not want to hear that one of them is killed.

    “We will not allow it and I will not celebrate death of one security officer anywhere in this country, whether it is in Bayelsa State, whether it is in the Niger Delta, Anambra State, South East, South West, North West, North Central, anywhere. We will not, and I repeat, will not accommodate it. So, if we the elders of Borno State will not condemn it, we will continue to suffer under the terror of Boko Haram, and without stopping Boko Haram, without peace in Borno State, we cannot develop Borno State. Who will come and invest in Borno State? You award road contracts, who will come and work? Nobody! So, let us not play to the gallery.”

     

  • Jonathan declines amnesty for Boko Haram

    Jonathan declines amnesty for Boko Haram

    …Says ‘We cannot give amnesty to ghosts’ 

    President Goodluck Jonathan on Thursday said the call of amnesty for Boko Haram members by some people is out of question, just as he declared that his government cannot grant amnesty for “ghosts.”

    The president, who was in Damaturu for the first time since almost one year of the insurgency in the state, also dismissed insinuations that he does not like the north-eastern part of country.

    President Jonathan met with the stakeholders in a Town Hall Meeting at the Wawa Hall of the government House in Damaturu and said that his visit to the state is to reassure the people of the state that he does not discriminate against any section of the country.

    Speaking on the issue of amnesty, the president said,“Even the media was saying the president was going to Yobe to declare amnesty …… you cannot declare amnesty for ghosts. Boko Haram is still operating as ghosts. You don’t see the person. I am from the Niger Delta and I know the amnesty issue of the Niger Delta. Some of these names you hear- Asari Dokobo, Tom Ateke, I never knew them before.

    “The first time I saw them was when I was a deputy governor and a came to Abuja for with a meeting with ex- president Olusegun Obasanjo at the villa. I never knew them even though I am from Bayelsa State, the hotbed of the militancy then. What I am saying is that in the Niger Delta, if you call them, they will come and tell you their grievances whether rightly or wrongly. They will be there to tell you that this is what we want and this is why we are doing this.

    “But the Boko Haram, you don’t see anybody who says he is a Boko Haram as such you cannot declare amnesty. For you to declare amnesty, you have to be communicating with people. You cannot declare amnesty for people that are operating under a veil so we cannot even discuss the issue of amnesty.

    “Let them come, let us discuss how we solve the problem. If amnesty will solve the problem, no problem about it. We can define what the amnesty is. I say so because even the Niger Delta amnesty was poorly managed with a lot of challenges. If I am not from the Niger Delta, the whole thing would have been disastrous by now because of the way it was poorly managed, “the president said.

     

  • Tight security at Yobe’s budget presentation

    Tight security at Yobe’s budget presentation

    The Yobe Government on Wednesday mounted a water-tight security at the state House of Assembly in Damaturu, hours before Governor Ibrahim Gaidam presented the 2013 budget.

    A News Agency of Nigeria correspondent monitoring developments, reports that the road to the assembly complex on Maiduguri road in Damaturu had been cordoned off by stern-looking security operatives.

    Top government functionaries and reporters going to the assembly were subjected to vigorous screening by the security operatives.

    Top government officials and politicians who spoke on the security deployment, expressed satisfaction with measures taken to ensure safety in the state.

    The security officials refused to talk when they were approached for comments.

    Yobe is the hot-bed of the Boko Haram insurgency, currently ravaging many states in the northern part of the country.