Tag: Yola

  • ‎How AUN is using technology to tackle illiteracy

    ‎How AUN is using technology to tackle illiteracy

    The American University of Nigeria has being leading the fight against illiteracy in Yola, Adamawa state capital and other states in the North East. Faith Yahaya who visited Yola recently, writes on the school and its effort to reduce illiteracy among school children in the region.

    A survey conducted sometime ago by UNESCO’s showed that despite moves to better the country’s education system, about 65 million Nigerians remain illiterate.

    The pointer here is that we do not need soothsayers to tell us that the statistic is alarming and as a matter of national urgency, we need to work to redress our literacy crisis. The issue of illiteracy especially how to reduce or eradicate it has come up at different fora, but can it be reduced or eradicated?

    There are so many children who are out of school, while those in school right now cannot boast of even getting the quality education they desire, as there are fundamental issues to be addressed. Are the teachers well trained, is the environment conducive and are the policy makers introducing right policy that will encourage better learning?

    The usual maxim we get is that Nigerians or blacks don’t read, but how do we instil the culture of reading into kids when statistics has it that 35 million Nigerian adults are illiterate?

    Another point that has come to fore is the fact that children of illiterate parents are likely to be illiterate themselves, except in rare cases. This is a fact that we are faced with whether we admit it or not. The situation of illiteracy became worse in some parts of the country with attacks by Boko Haram on some communities which left so many displaced.

    To underscore the importance of education, many people have come up with ideas of how illiteracy and poverty which have been the bane of our society can be addressed.

    The former United States of America President, Bill Clinton, said literacy is not a luxury”, but a right and a responsibility”, but how many people have this so called right in Nigeria?

    According to former United Nations Secretary General, Dr Kofi Anan, “Literacy is a bridge from misery to hope. It is a basic tool for daily life in modern society. It is a wall against poverty, and a building block of development. Literacy is a vehicle for the promotion of cultural and national identity”

    Nelson Mandela also said that education is the most powerful weapon which one can use to change the world.

    There is no denying that literacy is vital to the achievement of every growth index but despite this, illiteracy has continued to be problem.

    To successfully confront poverty, disease, religious fanaticism, political chaos, ethnic bigotry, gender discrimination, economic depression among others, collective efforts must be made to enhance the literary level.

    With the continuous increase in illiteracy level, an expert has said Nigeria needs to do a lot if it wants to remain relevant in the world.

    The African Development Information marked the North Eastern zone of Nigeria as the least educated region in the federation with 52.4 percent uneducated males and 61.1 percent uneducated females.

    With this worrisome statistics, an education expert, the President of the American University of Nigeria (AUN), Prof. Margee Ensign stated that the level of illiteracy ravaging the northeast can be eradicated in three years.

    To eradicate illiteracy, Prof. Ensign said policy makers need to adopt technology noting that if it is done, north-eastern Nigeria will wave illiteracy bye. While she also suggested a shift from the traditional mode of teaching which is the use of classrooms and chalkboard or marker to embracing technology, Ensign however stressed that “What is important is the demographics.

    Nigeria is one of the fastest growing countries in the world with a population of about 180 million now. Do you know where the population will be in the next 26 years? Just double it and that will make Nigeria 360million. How are you going to educate the kids that are born everyday? It is really important that policy makers think about it because with the piece of statistics, it is really unfortunate that Nigeria has more children out of school than any other country in the world. Nigeria has millions of illiterates and now with the insurgency, 2 million more have been added to this groups of people. With these statistics, do you think you have time to do things the traditional way? It is not possible but that is what the policy makers are saying.

    The policy makers are saying you should build schools, train teachers but the fact is that, many of the children in schools now don’t get an education that will prepare them to have an income or prepare them to be productive citizens of the country. So, I really believe there is only one way to do it and that is technology and that is why we are pioneering the use of technology in Yola and the Northeast”.

    Besides, since the solution for Nigeria’s rapidly growing population and for education is technology, she agreed that Nigeria can do it well, “It is not the second best solution, I think if we do it well, Nigeria will leapfrog. If we don’t do it in the traditional way, we are going to teach these kids how to learn by accessing information, by having critical thinking skills to evaluate things and they will be the model for the world but we are not there yet because we don’t have approval to do those things and that is why someone needs to shakeup the people at the top really hard. I would love to have the approval to offer this education in a blended format in every major city in this country so that people can learn both online and in person. The research shows that it is the best way to do it. So, it is not the second best solution to use technology but the best but the policy makers are not there yet,” she added.

    She also disclosed that the school initiated a programme called Feed and Read as part of ways to impact knowledge into young kids, noting that It is the children on the street who are learning how to read, half of them are listening to radio while half are on tablet computers. With this initiative, kids learn in matter of months. “With the programme, the children read well, they have confidence and that is how Nigeria is going to change quickly because Nigeria does not have a lot of time and if we don’t educate the 2 million who are out of school in the northeast plus 14 million who are already out of school, we are going to have social unrest for a very long time. So, these people must have education, they must learn how to have

    income, they must learn new skills. We are basically doing model projects in Yola and it will scale them up to the northeast and then they can go anywhere in the country”.

    Having suggested technology as the panacea to eradicating illiteracy, it is high time we look in that direction. At individual level, we need to be better at making parents throughout the country aware of the critical importance learning and education play in their children’s future. A child who can read and write sufficiently will enjoy better employment prospects, better earning capacity, better access to healthcare and be less likely to face social exclusion. Reducing illiteracy should therefore be viewed as an investment, rather than a cost, for both the governments and households. Overcoming illiteracy in Nigeria will require a long-term commitment from governments, NGOs, educators and parents. We can no longer look to just one group to provide solutions or outcomes and that is why we need to work together to implement reforms and programmes like the one suggested by Prof. Ensign.

  • Ribadu rejoins APC, says ‘I heeded calls to return’

    Ribadu rejoins APC, says ‘I heeded calls to return’

    Former chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC),Malam Nuhu Ribadi, is back in the All Progressives Congress (APC), and it is official.

    Ribadu,in a statement on Friday in Yola,Adamawa State, said his return was in response to “ calls on me to return to the All Progressives Congress (APC), a party of which I was a founding member.”

    He re-registered on Thursday through the party’s online portal after which  the leadership of the party in his  Bako ward of Yola South Local Government Area visited him at his Yola residence to “welcome me back to their fold.”

    He said:“This afternoon (Friday), I visited the Yola South secretariat of the party to present myself and submit to the leadership as a loyal party man. My decision to return to the APC was triggered by my belief that all politics are local.

    “Almost everyone around me, and with whom we started my political journey believed the time had come for us to make sacrifices and make concessions. That is in addition to the unbelievable love that my friends in the APC have showered on me in the past months.

    “They demonstrated in words and action that they wanted me back home. The intractable crises in the PDP also made it impossible for one to contribute to the necessary task of building a viable opposition platform for our country.

    “I also did a deep and long reassessment of the circumstances that warranted my exit from the APC in the first place. I left the APC in 2014 owing to fundamental disagreements with the ways the chapter of the party in my state was run after it fell into some hands.

    “Some colleagues and I tried hard to reposition the fold and save the then APC administration from an orchestrated impeachment plot. We didn’t succeed.

    “Events in the last 15 months have addressed many of the issues and healed some of the wounds. More so, with the genuine and sincere invitations I received since last year to retrace my steps into the party, I decided to return after consulting family and political associates at all levels.”

    He expressed gratitude to  “all those members of the party who privately and publicly prodded me to return to the party. My appreciation also goes to the leadership of our party, from my ward in Bako to the national leadership, for the enthusiasm they showed in having me back.”

    Ribadu left APC in 2014 after failing to get the governorship ticket.

  • Bomb blast rocks police MTD in Yola

    Bomb blast rocks police MTD in Yola

    Adamawa state government, Thursday confirmed a suspected bomb blast at the premises of Adamawa Motor Traffic Department of the Nigeria Police.

    According to NAN reports, Mr. Harun Furo, Permanent Secretary, Special Duty and Executive Chairman of Adamawa Emergency Management Agency, Yola, confirmed the incident.

    Furo said that the detail of damage caused by the blast was yet to be ascertained.

    Eye witnesses said some part of Jimeta Central Primary School was also hit by the blast.

    Details later…

     

  • Photos: Scene of blast in Yola

    Photos: Scene of blast in Yola

    FIRE FIGHTERS PUTTING OUT FIRE AT THE SCENE OF A BOMB BLAST, WHICH OCCURRED IN THE PREMISES OF ADAMAWA POLICE COMMAND’S ANTI-BOMB SQUAD AND MOTOR TRAFFIC DEPARTMENT IN JIMETA-YOLA ON THURSDAY.
    FIRE FIGHTERS PUTTING OUT FIRE AT THE SCENE OF A BOMB BLAST, WHICH OCCURRED IN THE PREMISES OF ADAMAWA POLICE COMMAND’S ANTI-BOMB SQUAD AND MOTOR TRAFFIC DEPARTMENT IN JIMETA-YOLA ON THURSDAY.
    FIRE STILL BURNING IN A ROOM AT THE SCENE OF A BOMB BLAST, WHICH OCCURRED IN THE PREMISES OF ADAMAWA POLICE COMMAND’S ANTI-BOMB SQUAD AND MOTOR TRAFFIC DEPARTMENT IN JIMETA-YOLA ON THURSDAY
    FIRE STILL BURNING IN A ROOM AT THE SCENE OF A BOMB BLAST, WHICH OCCURRED IN THE PREMISES OF ADAMAWA POLICE COMMAND’S ANTI-BOMB SQUAD AND MOTOR TRAFFIC DEPARTMENT IN JIMETA-YOLA ON THURSDAY
  • Coming from Yola

    Coming from Yola

    The appointment in Yola was made about three weeks ago. It was scheduled for Monday, November 9. But for one reason or the other, the delegation could not make it and so it was delayed. The delay and disappointment was not taken lightly by our waiting host in Yola who could not hold back his anger as he lashed out at the delegation. We had to appeal to him to take it easy and that a new date would be communicated to him.

    For about two weeks, we tried to sort ourselves out and prepare for the trip. The journey was finally fixed for any day between November 16 and 18. Of course, we knew that this time around, the dates were cast in iron as we could not afford to disappoint any longer. November 16 and 17 came and we could not make it. We knew that the last day for us to redeem our image and live up to expectation was November 18, a Wednesday and there was no going back.

    By Tuesday morning, November 17, everything about the journey scheduled for the following day, Wednesday, November 18, was set. We had earlier made our flight reservations the first time the issue came up on November 5. But since we could not make it at that time, we had to liaise with the airline to put our tickets on hold till such a time when we shall be ready for the trip. So all we did on the eve of our departure was to revalidate our tickets. This done, we were set for the trip the following day, which was our last window of opportunity to make the trip.

    As we were busy putting heads together and planning for the trip that we were embarking upon the following day, something sinister and scary occurred: Suddenly, a bomb went off in Yola in the evening of Tuesday, November 17. As the news filtered into town, a member of the delegation frantically got in touch with me at about 9pm and drew my attention to the breaking news that was being scrolled by a national television station. Pandemonium set in as one member of the delegation after the other, expressed fears over our proposed trip the following day.

    At this juncture, there was an urgent need to calm frayed nerves. Pronto, I placed a call through to my contact in Yola. I told him what we have heard on the television and expressed concern over the insecurity pervading that part of the country. I also told him that in view of the latest bomb blast in Yola, the capital city of Adamawa State, it could be foolhardy or suicidal for anybody to embark on a journey to this troubled zone at this time. To my greatest surprise, my contact merely laughed off my ranting as he restated his earlier assurance that there was no cause for alarm.

    I communicated this to other members of the delegation who grudgingly agreed to proceed on the journey regardless of the commotion that attended the bomb blast. The following morning, we all converged at the airport. We were five on the delegation. By the time the Medview Airline flight was about to take off, one of us, Morola, a lady, who was coming in from the Lekki axis to take the 8:50 am flight, was still held in traffic on the bridge from the Mobolaji Bank-Anthony Way end of the Lagos Airport road. By the time she managed to get to the boarding gate, the airline officials simply told her that the door of the aircraft had been shut for departure. All pleas to consider her for boarding were ignored.

    Well, that was one of the rules of the airlines which are religiously and rigorously observed by airlines’ officials. Unfortunately, only two airlines –  Medview and Azman – ply the Lagos-Abuja-Yola route at an hour’s interval daily. Rather than be dejected, the lady, whom I often refer to as a He-lady because of her energy, enterprise and guts, quickly dashed down to the ticketing counter and bought another ticket from Azman which was going to ply the same route an hour later.

    After finally landing in Yola at 12 noon on that Wednesday, November 18, the day after the bomb blast, we had to wait for one hour to enable Morola to join us at the airport before moving to town. Everything was calm in the city as people went about their normal businesses without any betrayal of fear and anxiety whatsoever. Yola is home to people from all over the country. We came across people from Akwa Ibom, Cross Rivers, Edo, Kogi, Imo, Enugu, Oyo, Osun, Lagos and Ondo states, to name a few. Upon inquiry, it was discovered that many of them had been in Yola for more than 10 years, engaged in various businesses without any molestation from any quarter in the state. In fact, to them, Adamawa State is home. And not even the deadly exploits of Boko Haram can change that.

    We moved round Jimeta, where most of the government offices are located and then Yola proper where the majestic palace of the Lamido of Adamawa is situated. At the turning point in front of the gate to the palace, a police patrol vehicle was conspicuously stationed there, perhaps, to monitor movements. While driving round the town, our host told us that what happened the previous day came as a surprise. According to him, a Boko Haram suicide bomber had suddenly emerged at a crowded evening market and started distributing N500 notes freely to people. This attracted a large crowd as people moved closer to the would-be suicide bomber to share in the unexpected largesse. Just then, the bomber detonated the bomb and blew himself up. In the process, scores of people died along with him while many others sustained various degrees of injuries. That, probably, was a catastrophe made possible by excruciating poverty!

    We wanted to go to Mubi but our host dissuaded us by telling us that the road was littered with military checkpoints. What this means is that while Yola, the capital of Adamawa, looks peaceful and quiet, there may still be pockets of violence occasionally instigated by the satanic Boko Haram terrorists in some other parts of the state. On the whole, when you look around in Yola, you find a state in dire need of attention and development. The Boko Haram escapades which have been on for many years now, may have further pauperised the state, nay, the entire northeast geo-political zone of the country. From the looks on the faces of the people, they seem to have had enough from the insecurity that has pervaded the zone and they are now looking forward to better days. In that case, an enabling environment must be created for businesses to thrive and blossom.

    To rebuild the North-east and the northern parts of the country in general, the 19 northern state governors and other stakeholders, should, as a matter of urgency, hold an economic summit to fashion out the ways and manner in which their dying economy can be quickly rejuvenated. Besides, the troubled North-east and perhaps, other parts of the country need to look at the issue of community policing and intelligence gathering to be able to fight the current scourge of terrorism and criminality now rampaging everywhere. It is not enough to give the military a marching order to flush out Boko Haram by next month. Even if the military is able to achieve this tall order, how do you curtail the excesses of the renegades who will still be prowling everywhere visiting innocent citizens with death and destruction? That is why we must all be on guard!

     

  • NAF plane crashes in Yola, no survivour

    A Nigerian Air Force plane has reportedly crashed in Yola, the Adamawa State capital.

    Director Defence Information, Col. Abubakar Rabe, according to Channels Television confirmed the crash.

    Air Force spokesman, Dele Alonge, in a statement on Saturday night said the aircraft crashed at about 4:23pm due to bad weather.

    According to Alonge, the F7-Ni fighter jet, with registration number, NAF801, was ‘returning to base from a mission when it crashed  around Hong, in Hong Local Government Area of Adamawa State’.

    “There was no survivour  as the pilot of the aircraft lost his life in the unfortunate incident,” Mr. Alonge said.

  • PayPorte donates to Malkohi IDPs in Yola

    PayPorte donates to Malkohi IDPs in Yola

    TO mark its first anniversary, PayPorte-Africa’s preferred retail online store, has donated relief materials to Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) at Malkohi Camp, Yola, Adamawa State

    Presenting the materials, the Managing Director/CEO of PayPorte Global Systems, Mr. Eyo Bassey, said the company reached out to the IDPs to mark its one year of operations.

    “We are in Yola to commiserate with our brothers and sisters who have been displaced by challenges of insurgency in the North East. As Payporte, we are marking our one year anniversary but instead of a jamboree celebration in Lagos, we decided to come to Yola to celebrate with the IDPs,” Bassey said.

    He urged other outfits to extend a similar gesture to the IDPs, adding that government should not be left alone to handle the problem.

    Also speaking, Head, Corporate Strategy for PayPorte, Mrs. Irene Kayoma, expressed happiness with the warm reception received by the team from the IDPs on arrival.

    “As a mother, it was a welcome idea when PayPorte decided to go the route of a charitable cause by making donations to one of the IDP camps.

    “It is particularly disheartening to see how people – especially children, have been adversely affected by the terror of insurgency. I appeal to other organisations to also reach out to these displaced persons,” she said.

    Also present at the ceremony was Brand Ambassador for PayPorte, Tayo Faniran, who expressed his joy at being a part of the kind gesture by PayPorte.

    “This has been a very humbling and eye opening experience for me. Being a part of a humanitarian effort like this is an experience I will not forget in a long time,”he enthused.

    Receiving the items, the NEMA official in-charge of Malkohi Camp, Mr AbdulAzeezAfunku, lauded the company for the gesture and assured that the items, which comprised clothing, foot wears and detergents among others, would be judiciously utilised.

    Speaking on behalf of the IDPs, Mr Nicholas Samuel expressed their appreciation and thanked the company for the timely assistance coming few days after an unfortunate blast rocked the camp. Samuel also thanked NEMA and other national and international organisations that have been working round the clock to ensure that the IDPs enjoy their stay in the camp.

  • Photo : NEMA DG visits blast victims in Yola

    Photo : NEMA DG visits blast victims in Yola

    .DIRECTOR-GENERAL, NATIONAL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY (NEMA), ALHAJI SANI  SIDI (3RD R) SYMPATHIZING WITH VICTIM OF THE MALKOHI IDPs CAMP BOMB BLAST   DURING HIS VISIT TO FEDERAL MEDICAL CENTRE IN YOLA ON MONDAY. WITH HIM ARE, THE CHIEF MEDICAL DIRECTOR OF THE HOSPITAL, PROF. MUHAMMAD AUWAL (2ND R) AND PERMANENT SECRETARY ADAMAWA STATE EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY, MR HARUNA HARMAN.
    .DIRECTOR-GENERAL, NATIONAL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY (NEMA), ALHAJI SANI
    SIDI (3RD R) SYMPATHIZING WITH VICTIM OF THE MALKOHI IDPs CAMP BOMB BLAST DURING HIS VISIT TO FEDERAL MEDICAL CENTRE IN YOLA ON MONDAY. WITH HIM ARE, THE CHIEF MEDICAL DIRECTOR OF THE HOSPITAL, PROF. MUHAMMAD AUWAL (2ND R) AND PERMANENT SECRETARY ADAMAWA STATE EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY, MR HARUNA HARMAN.
  • Ovaltine, DHL Express to donate to IDPs in Yola

    Twinings Ovaltine Nigeria Limited and DHL Express have partnered to donate Ovaltine food drinks to the internally displaced persons (IDPs) at the Yola Camp in Adamawa State.

    The General Manager, Twinings Ovaltine Nigeria Limited, Mr. Enrico Liggeri, and his DHL counterpart, Mr. Randy Buday said the two firms were leveraging on the deal to boost their Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) initiatives.

    At a briefing in Lagos, Liggeri said as corporate citizens, both firms recognised that this was the right time to respond to the plight of the IDPs because they required their support.

    He said Twinings Ovaltine was touched by the displaced persons’ need for highly nutritious food,  especially children, nursing mothers and aged people to keep them strong and healthy as the government  continue efforts for their permanent resettlement.

    Liggeri praised DHL Express for assisting with the transportation of the consignments of Ovaltine products from Lagos to Yola.

    Also, the Managing Director of DHL Express Nigeria, Mr. Randy Buday, said DHL Nigeria was pleased to support the initiative by Ovaltine.

  • Insurgency: Air Force to deploy more platforms to Yola

    Insurgency: Air Force to deploy more platforms to Yola

    As the onslaught against the Boko Haram terrorist Boko Haram sect continues, the Chief of Air Staff (CAS) Air Marshal Sadique Abubakar has disclosed that more platforms will be moved to Yola, the Adamawa State capital next week.
    ‎He made the disclosure at the weekend in Lagos, during his maiden tour of Air Force command and units in the state.
    Abubakar who stated that one air craft will be deployed from Lagos to Yola, added that several helicopters will also be moved from Port Harcourt to the northeastern state.
    Noting that a number of aircrafts were patrolling the Nigeria-Cameroon border frequently, Abubakar said the AirForce has on several occasions, intercepted and engaged people who smuggle petroleum products to the insurgents.
    “We have our airplanes that are patrolling the Nigeria-Cameroon border at all times and we have intercepted quite a number of people that are smuggling petroleum products to support the insurgents and we have engaged them on a number of occasions,” Abubakar said.
    He further stated that plans were underway to acquire new equipments as well as rehabilitate those that are moribund.
    The Air Chief said: “‎One of our platforms is moving out of Lagos to Yola by next week and quite a number of our helicopters are moving from Port Harcourt to Yola too.
    “We are already working on acquiring new platforms. There are a number of platforms we want to acquire which we are forwarding to the Federal Government.
    “But at the moment, we are working with the ones we have on ground and trying to reactivate some.‎
    “We are not ill-equipped rather we do not have all that we need to have and we are working to improve on the serviceability of the platforms we have.
    “We have been achieving and working closely with the Nigerian Army using the platforms that we have. They might not be adequate, but we are making the best out of what we have on ground and it is producing results.”