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  • Kogi CJ gives courts 3 months to dispense pending criminal cases

    Kogi CJ gives courts 3 months to dispense pending criminal cases

    The Chief Judge of the state, Hon. Justice Nasiru Ajanah has directed that all criminal cases pending before courts in Kogi State before the advent of the coronavirus pandemic must be determined within the next three months as the country ease the lockdown on the pandemic.

    The CJ gave the order when he received the new controller of the Nigerian Correctional Service to the state, Mr Abjubakar Gurin, who paid him a familiarization visit in his office yesterday at the High Court headquarters, Lokoja.

    While assuring the Service of judiciary support where necessary, the Chief Judge said the Judiciary’s existing cordial relationship with the Service would be maintained in order for the justice delivery system in the state to be effective. He said as a critical stakeholder in the justice delivery system, the fundamental role of the custodial centres would continue to be instrumental to smooth judicial processes in the state.

    He lamented that the judiciary was adversely affected when prison facilities were under lock and refused to accept awaiting trial inmates from the courts during the period of the COVID-19 lockdown. He was therefore happy to hear that the Controller-General had reversed the order as a result of the ease of lockdown.

    His reaction followed the disclosure by the new controller who informed him that the Controller-General of the Nigerian Correctional Service had okayed the acceptance of awaiting trial inmates attending courts back into the correctional centers as a result of the ease of lockdown.

    The CJ said the refusal of the centres to receive inmates had affected the courts in manners that suspected criminals who were remanded in detention while attending trials could not be brought before the courts and returned after facing trial as is the normal practice.

    While noting that it was not in the character of the courts to give hints of the possible outcome of the cases the suspects were being tried for, he said the closure of the prisons were not helpful to the case before the courts.

    “You know it is not in the character of Judges to disclose the position of the court on the alleged crimes committed by the defendants who are facing trial. So it was difficult to say whether or not the inmates brought before the court would be returned to detention and this made it difficult for us to continue their trials in absence” he added.

    He was therefore glad that that condition has been lifted by the Controller-General and directed that all the cases be dispensed with within the next three months so that those deserving freedom can be given and those who are to be convicted can know their fates stating that the issue of nonappearance of suspects in courts was vital to the cases before the courts.

    “I am glad and really happy that you have mentioned that the Controller-General had directed that you should begin to accept inmates back into the prisons. This is an important area I was going to raise with you because we were concerned that awaiting trial inmates were in the prisons without knowing their fate. So we are happy that the Controller-General has reversed that order and that is why we are directing our Judges to make sure that all criminal cases pending before them before the lockdown are dispensed with within the next three months so that those deserving to be freed can regain their freedom and those who are to be convicted can know their fate.” he said.

    Earlier, Mr Gurin had expressed happiness over the positive reports he said he received from all the formations and facilities of the Nigerian Correctional Service in the state about the judiciary. He said the reports he got when he visited the centres upon assumption of office was encouraging. The cordial relationship he learnt exists between the Service and the judiciary was impressive.

    He finally made reference to the infrastructural decay in the custodial centres in the state and sought the Chief Judge’s intervention for a remedy. He said he received several complaints from officers and inmates who cried bitterly about the conditions of the wards and cells in the prisons. He said while many have leaking roofs, several others were inhabitable because of their poor conditions. To this the Hon. Chief Judge said the usual problem of transportation of inmates has always taken attention but with this, “we will try our best in solving some of the problems we can and those we cannot, we will try to liaise with appropriate authorities to see what can be done.”

    The Chief Judge who acknowledged the cordial relationship between the judiciary and state command of the Nigerian Correctional Service thanked the new Controller of the state for the visit and wished him well throughout the period of his stay in the state.

  • BREAKING: House of Reps summon service chiefs over insecurity issues

    BREAKING: House of Reps summon service chiefs over insecurity issues

    The House of Representatives has resolved to summon the National Security Adviser, Maj.-Gen. Babagana Monguno (retd.); Chief of Defence Staff, Gen. Gabriel Olonisakin, and other service chiefs including the Inspector-General of Police, Mohammed Adamu; and the Director-General, Department of State Services, Yusuf Bichi, over the rising spate of insecurity in Nigeria.

    The summons were issued based on a motion moved by a member, Sada Soli, over the increasing attacks by bandits in some states in the North-Central and North-East geopolitical zones.

    The lawmakers resolved that the top security officials should address the House next week.

    Details later…

  • Two Nigerian Air Force Officers Test Positive For COVID-19

    Two Nigerian Air Force Officers Test Positive For COVID-19

    Two officers of the Nigerian Air Force (NAF) have tested positive for COVID-19 in Makurdi, Benue State.

    The State Governor Samuel Ortom announced this while releasing new guidelines on the easing of restrictions in the state, on Wednesday.

    The governor said contacts tracing has commenced immediately within and outside the NAF base located along the Makurdi/Gboko road to identify and isolate anyone who had contact with the officers.

    The new measures in the state include the lifting of the ban on worship places which must not congregate for more than one hour, and the resumption of work by all civil servants with effect from Monday, June 8.

    Meanwhile, the NAF has supported the Nigerian government’s effort in combating COVID-19 pandemic in the country.

    They recently produced emergency ventilators for patients with respiratory disease including acute lungs injury and acute respiratory distress syndrome.

    The ventilators were unveiled last week at the Nigerian Airforce Institute of Technology in Kaduna State by the Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshal Sadique Abubakar.

  • NDLEA Detects Cannabis Inside Sacks Of Garri In Edo

    NDLEA Detects Cannabis Inside Sacks Of Garri In Edo

    Officers of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) in Edo State have foiled a criminal attempt to smuggle eighty-three (83) kilograms of cannabis sativa concealed inside sacks of garri out of the state amidst the COVID-19 lockdown.

    The interception of the dried weeds that tested positive for cannabis took place at Aviele trailer park, Etsako West Local Government Area of the State.

    NDLEA Edo State Commander, Mr. Buba Wakawa who announced the latest operational breakthrough in Benin City also commended operatives of the Auchi Area command for the spectacular drug seizure.

    According to him, “officers attached to the Auchi Area command acting on intelligence report raided the popular trailer park at Aviele where the dried weeds of cannabis hidden inside eight (8) sacks of garri were intercepted while preparing to smuggle the drugs out of the State. This is a very successful operation and I commend the officers for their commitment and ingenuity”.

    While describing the mode of concealment as “cunning”, the commander said that preliminary investigation had revealed that a local cannabis snuggling cartel in the area is behind the cannabis consignment.

    In a related operation at Uzebba forest, the command also recovered twenty (20) kilogrammes of cannabis seeds and thirteen (13) kilogrammes of dried weeds that tested positive for cannabis. The commander, therefore, warned that drug traffickers in the State must quit the criminal act or be prepared for the legal consequences.

    “The early detection of the drugs despite the mode of concealment is a clear signal that the activities of cannabis cartels cannot escape our strict supervision.

    “We are prepared to remain proactive in our counter- narcotics efforts.

    “This way,  we will continue to subject drug traffickers to the laws of the country to serve as a deterrent to others who might be tempted to indulge in drug trafficking” the commander warned.

  • NDDC, Reps replies Edwin Clark

    NDDC, Reps replies Edwin Clark

    The Chairman, Committee on Niger Delta Development Commission, House of Representatives, Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo, has challenged the Interim Management Committee of the commission to show proof that the National Assembly is frustrating its activities.

    Tunji-Ojo, while reacting to a petition filed by the Chairman, Board of Trustees, Ijaw National Congress, Chief Edwin Clark, challenged the management of the NDDC to approach anti-corruption agencies with evidence that he or other members of his panel are corrupt.

    Clark had petitioned the National Assembly, asking its leadership to remove and investigate the chairmen of its committees in charge of NDDC probe.

    In an ‘open letter’ dated June 1, 2020, Clark had called on the President of the Senate, Ahmad Lawan; and Speaker of the House of Representatives, Femi Gbajabiamila to remove the Chairmen of the Senate Committee on Niger Delta Affairs, Senator Peter Nwaoboshi; and House Committee on NDDC, Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo and investigate the allegations of corruption leveled against them by the Interim Management Committee of the NDDC.

    Both the Senate and the House had on May 5, 2020, separately resolved to investigate the alleged extra-budgetary spending by the NDDC amounting to N40bn.

    Reacting to the letter, Tunji-Ojo dismissed the allegations as untrue, challenging NDDC management to provide evidence to back the corruption claim, challenging it to approach anti-graft agencies with them.

    He said, “I want to state very clearly that Baba Edwin Clark is our revered leader, not just to the Niger Delta but also to Nigeria. He is a man that has committed so much towards the development of the Niger Delta. But the point that I personally disagree with is the issue of documentary evidence and delay of the budget.

    “I have challenged the IMC more than three times on all media platforms, that if there is any documentary evidence against me, they should either bring it out or petition and submit such to the relevant government anti-corruption agencies. After all, I am a lawmaker and I do not enjoy any immunity. So, if there is any proof, they should act and stop throwing tantrums.”

  • Gov. Sule lauds FG for approving funds for Farin-Ruwa Hydro Power project

    Gov. Sule lauds FG for approving funds for Farin-Ruwa Hydro Power project

    Gov. Abdullahi Sule of Nasarawa State has commended the Federal Government for approving over N8 billion for the completion of Farin-Ruwa multi purpose hydro power project in Wamba Local Area of the state.

    The governor made the commendation on Thursday in Lafia at an expanded meeting of the state COVID-19 committee.

    Sule noted that the Dam, which has the capacity to generate 20 megawatts of electricity, has been taken over by the federal government.

    He said expected the power generated from the dam has the capacity to serve the people of Wamba, Akwanga and Keffi Local Government Areas of the state and beyond.

    “The project was started by the first executive governor of the state, Sen. Abdullahi Adamu, he said, adding that his administration continued with it before the fedeal government took over the project.

    “Government is a continuum; my predecessor started the project and I continued it before it was taken over; that is the beauty of government.

    “Government is a continuum and a lot of government resources have been spent on the projects by the former governor,” Sule added.

    He also expressed gratitude to the federal governent for taking over the construction of 15 kilometre Sisinbaki-Farin Ruwa road.

    He described federal government’s attention on the projects as unprecedented considering the rich potentials endowed in the area, especially the Farin Ruwa Dam which has the capacity to generate 20 megawatts of electricity and other tourist attractions.

    He specifically thanked President Muhammadu Buhari for the release of N8 billion for the execution of the two projects, adding that it will boost socio-economic activities in the area.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) recalls that the Federal Executive Council had on Wednesday approved over N8 billion for the execution of Farin Ruwa hydro power project.

  • Ogun assembly passes mortgages bill

    Ogun assembly passes mortgages bill

    The Ogun House of Assembly on Thursday passed the bill establishing the Ogun Mortgages and Foreclosure Authority to regulate mortgages in the state.

    Mr Damilola Soneye, the Chairman, House Committee on Lands and Housing, presented the committee’s report to the Assembly during plenary in Abeokuta.

    Soneye (APC -Obafemi Owode) moved the motion for the adoption of the report and this was seconded by Wahab Haruna (ADC -Yewa North 11).

    Mr Yusuf Sherif, the Majority Leader, moved the motion for the third reading of the bill and it was seconded by the Deputy Speaker, Dare Kadiri.

    Mr Deji Adeyemo, the Clerk of the House, read the bill for the third time before the members of the assembly.

    The Speaker of the House, Olakunle Oluomo, thereafter ordered that a clean copy of the bill be forwarded to Gov. Dapo Abiodun for his assent.

    Speaking to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in an interview on the importance of the bill, Soneye explained that the law would regulate mortgage banking and related businesses in the state.

    The lawmaker said that the mortgage institutions would be better empowered to meet the demands of modern day housing development.

    “The law will allow for proper mode of operations in managing our mortgages and foreclosure and ensuring the management of the expanding mortgage industry in the state,” he said.

  • BREAKING: Senate summons minister of finance over N1.8trn power intervention funds

    BREAKING: Senate summons minister of finance over N1.8trn power intervention funds

    The Senate Committee on Power, said on Thursday that it has perfected plans to begin a three-day investigative hearing with the purpose of ascertaining how the N1.8trn injected into the power privatisation exercise by the Federal Government between 2013 till date, was utilised.

    The privatisation exercise was consolidated on September 13, 2013, during the tenure of former President Goodluck Jonathan.

    The Chairman of the Senate Panel, Gabriel Suswan told journalists after the meeting of his panel that the probe was not a punitive action.

    Suswan said various sums ranging from N701bn, N600bn, N380bn and N213bn had been released as intervention funds in the last seven years.

    He said the Minister of Finance, Zainab Ahmed, and her counterparts in the Ministry of Power, among other heads of government agencies in the power sector as well as private sector operators, had been summoned.

  • Football won’t thrive in Nigeria unless, says Ibrahim Gusua

    Football won’t thrive in Nigeria unless, says Ibrahim Gusua

    Hope for a flourishing football development in Nigeria may not come so easy unless stakeholders unite to kick out the cancerous misgiving in football circle in the country.

    A member of the board of the Nigeria Football Federation, (NFF) and chairman Zamfara State Football Association,(ZSFA) Alhaji Ibrahim Musa Gusau in an exclusive interview with DayBreak sports said it will be impossible for any board to work towards it targets if the unnecessary distraction caused by some people is not checkmated in the country.

    Gusau who lamented that it was given those whose responsibility is to steer the ship to greater height much to desire, said the uncalled for distraction by some people is not only making the federation to lose its sponsors or would be sponsors because of the negative impact their claims is having on the sport.

    According Gusau, who is also the chairman of chairmen in the football fraternity in the country, positive results can not be gotten with the way distraction from some Nigerians who are not interested in the growth of the game springs up every time.

    He said though he is not against proper scrutiny of how football should be run in the country but the over flow of falsehood is killing the system, saying that objective criticism of the board is a welcome development but should not be laced with blackmail which is taking the game back.

    While seeking for better cooperation among stakeholders to take Nigeria football to the next level, he is of the view that much needs to be done to keep the stake high for a better option for the country.

    He said the present board as constituted has done a lot to see that the present senior national team has crop of players who are relatively young and can keep on with the momentum in continental and global success in the next decade.

    “Though if you follow our performance in 2019, as a nation in international competitions is a pot of mixed grill, at the beginning of the year, we had fantastic results even though at the tail end we had some unpalatable results but on scale of preference I can say the positive outweighed the negative.

    “People forgot the results we recorded earlier even with the distraction here and there, I make bold to say the board has done well.

    “I can say with without any fear of contradiction that most often this distraction from certain quarters is not helping our football development, we must find a way out for the game to move on in the country on positive level because no sponsors will be interested in doing business with anyone in situations like this.

    “You can now see why all this unnecessary distractions are not important rather they are kill joy and we must work to remove such elements from the system for it to grow,” Gusua explained.

    Speaking further, the executive board member, said despite the hiccups, the board still has a good working relationship with their sponsors though the misinformation has caused some damages which could have been avoided.

    Gusau noted that the Sports Minister, Sunday Dare since his appointment has been a pillar to rest on towards the revival of sports in the country as he has shown his commitment towards bringing in private investors into sports development in the country.

    “One good thing I must tell you is that is that the sports minister, Sunday Dare has shown his zeal to allow private partnership with certain organisations in the country which will open more doors for football development; he is a caring and a listening father whose stay has brought stability to sports circle in the country.

    “He is one man I believe can change the tide with his policy drive, so we all have to key in, to get the desired result,” he said.

    The Zamfara State football boss however noted that it will be more beneficial if state governments can follow the line of the minister’s by disengaging from sponsoring football clubs in their states by involving private sector participation.

    This, he said will help open up the business aspect of the clubs as it will go a long way in boasting their finance but he feared that since most of the governors see the clubs as another political agency to increase their popularity and as well as settle their boys, they may not allow such drastic changes.

    Gusau believed private sector involvement in the running of the professional clubs will be good for the country.

     “If it is possible for State Governments to pull out of the Nigerian League and the private sector comes in, even the novel idea by the League Management Company of community ownership by involving the people in the State, it will be a good development, though most government get themselves involved because of political interest, corporate involvement will be worth it, we need a legislation that can enforce it.

    In the past we had teams like Raccah Rovers of Kano, Water Corporation of Ibadan, Julius Berger of Lagos, Abiola Babes, Leventis United, NIPOST, CBN and Customs united and a host of others but today the story is different, we can still there if the political will is there,” he said.

    Gusua who hailed the performance in the league before the outbreak of COVID 19 pandemic, said it was gratifying that results from almost all the league venues every weekend has been very promising and a plus to the organisers, noted that the officiating officials and other stakeholders should maintain the momentum to return the glamour associated with league football in the country.

    “The performance of the clubs so far is worth commending and I must praise the efforts of the match officials who ensure that the right thing is done weekly, we still have much to do by maintaining the momentum any time the league resumes,” he said.

    Speaking on the state of football development in his home state, the NFF executive board member said that the model of football they operate in the State is second to none in the country.

    Gusua, who bemoaned that though things are moving on at a well-articulated level for grassroots football development, the State has not been able to fix back its rightful place at the premiership level in the country.

    While hoping that the present arrangement in the state will propel that, he was emphatic that the 20 clubs format obtainable in the state, played on home and away basis will galvanize a new direction which will make it possible for the winners to do well at qualifiers for national leagues competition before battling for a spot in the premiership.

    He said the State FA was not only concentrating on the top flight league in the state but organizes the state pro league with 24 clubs participating and share into two groups of 12 teams each and the top clubs usually gain spots in the state premier league.

    Gusua also hinted that FA also organised various tournaments for the U-13 and U-15 players in the state and most of the discovered talents have found their places among the top clubs in the state.

    He said the grassroots  drive of the FA has seen to winners  of the State premier competitions coming from outside the city centre as out of the six editions held so far, three champions has emerged from teams from the rural areas.

    He said the FA will continue to explore more ways towards retaining a frontline position in football circle in the country

  • Lalong and the Burden of Covid-19 

    From Government House, Jos, to the Secretariat of the Northern Governors’ Forum in Kaduna, it’s been uncommon baptism for Governor Simon Bako Lalong as the Covid-19 pandemic generates a grill and drill of challenges in the economics of governance and politics of regionalism. BY UGAR UKANDI ODEY, Jos
    In a review of its first quarter performance for the 2020 fiscal year, the Plateau State Inland Revenue Service, last week celebrated that it recorded and posted a surplus – something akin to favourable balance of trade – as its generated revenue stood well above its budgetary projection for the period. An elated Management of the PSIRS rejoiced at a World Press Conference that in spite of the raging Covid-19 pandemic, it did not just meet its target, but scored above it by some billions, an indication, according to the Management, that the Service was disciplined, focused, committed, and hard working in the three-month fiscal process.
    Economy analysts say this could be true and correct, especially because the period which spanned from January to March derived from the calm and stable ending of the last quarter of the previous appropriation process;  and, secondly, the macro distortion that came with the Corona Virus was at best still on the high sea as the index case in Lagos was reported only in  the close of February.
    The beginning of the second quarter in April coincided with the period the Plateau State government unveiled its couterpoise and defensive initiatives against the rage and spread of the pandemic to the State. The inauguration was a decontamination and fumigation exercise of the whole State, an activity that marked the beginning of lock down of the entire State as part of combating the Covid-19 spread, and also set the tone of the controversies and misgivings that will  haunt the anti Covid-19 orchestra, beginning with the cost of decontamination of the entire State which has remained as obscure as it is uncertain even in critical public circles. The vagaries of the Covid-19 which came on strongly in the second quarter – with the State now in the eight week of lock down and inactivity, consuming more than it is producing – and this is bound to influence the performance curve of the PSIRS and others negatively when this quarter will come under review subsequently.
    In a state-wide broadcast to announce and put in place state protocols to curb the spread of the pandemic on April 8 and commence the operations of the State Covid-19 Task Force, Governor Lalong acknowledged that the global health challenge was overwhelming, exasperating, and sapping financially. Some austerity measures and structural adjustments, he said, were ideal and inevitable in the  circumstances. Thus, he announced a whopping slash in the monthly salaries and allowances of political office holders and others, and proceeded to say the 2020 budget as originally projected and premised was  no longer realistic, to that extent, he said,  the budget is to be reviewed downwards to eliminate certain projects and programmes earlier captured for execution. With a chunk of the civil servants at home for the second month now, it is obvious that the budget process is already in straits and stats, even as the government of Simon Lalong is yet to announce the consequential budget size and its pilot emphasis.
    Daily criticized for being ineffective and merely burdensome on the system,  the State Economic Advisory Council has not been outstanding and prolific or proactive as the state stands panting and groping for resourcefulness and initiatives to neutralize the pangs of the pandemic on the State’s environmental collective. Frustrated and desperate, Governor Lalong proceeded to constitute and inaugurate a post Covid-19 economic intllegentsia headed by Ezekiel Gomos who is yet to deliver as Chairman of the State Economic Advisory Council, and as Chairman of the Plateau Business and Investment Summit Committee inaugurated since September last year.
    Yet, the most contentious and controverted aspect of the pandemic management is the administration of palliatives to residents of the State especially during the lock down period. Things have been proceeding improperly in relation to this vital component of the counter-offensive. Opposition and critics ridicule what is going on in the State in the name of distribution of palliatives as mostly ‘audio, and scarcely video’; or that it’s ‘all sound, no sight’. What has happened oftentimes is taking a miserable measure of two or three food items to a community of over two thousand households to share among themselves. A popular perception among Plateau residents is that the issue of giving out palliatives is merely so-called; and many believe corruption has bungled the administration of palliatives; and that  the goodwill of public-spirited individuals and organizations that have been donating to the covid-19 emergency relief pool is no less brought to naught by the sharp practices of those vested with the responsibility of disbursing the package.
    The State government has not informed the people whether it has procured food items to distribute to them as palliatives, in spite of agitations and clamour for such by residents who hinge continuation of lock down on government’s ability to guarantee this. The State government has been opening a window of three days – including Sunday – to enable people “restock” and return to lock down. Hungry and broke, a resistance to continuous lock down is building up strongly at the background, with a potential anything may happen this week if the government is not sensitive enough to review and revise strategy and options. The state economy is basically subsistent and fragile. The government’s inability to provide palliatives is eloquent and impeccable evidence that it does not have the wherewithal to sustain continuous lock down of an economy that is panting and in need of some stimulation.
    So far,  the gains of eight weeks of lock down have been contentious and on a continuum. The state went into the first and maiden lock down in April with zero case of covid-19 infection. In the course of the lock down, an index was recorded, and that commenced an upward
    trend that has been continuing indeterminately and brought the number of positive cases in Plateau State to 108 at press time. Although Lalong has explained that security sabotage and compromise have left the borders porous and made it possible for carriers of the virus to come into the State, only medics and a few others agree with the government that lock down has helped to check the spread of the virus in the state. Popular opinion around the State,  especially those who view the lock down strategy as a lazy option which government is using to worsen official plundering and corruption and further deplete a coomatose economy, prefer a policy that makes the use of face masks and sanitizers in public places compulsory. This group argues further that lock down has proven incapable of stopping the spread of the lethal virus, and that like the HIV or Polio before it,  citizens have to learn how to live with the virus, manage it, until it is wiped out of the country.

    As at press time there was a tendentious mix of emotions  among most residents of Plateau State. Tired and bored by an expensive and unproductive lock down, many are anxious to see the governor coming live with a broadcast that will release the people to their most cherished freedoms. Harrassed by hunger and humiliated by poverty, many are spoiling for action and agitating that should Lalong stay indifferent and callous to the impending catastrophe by insisting on continuing the lock down next week, a civil disobedience of incalculable proportions may become inevitable. Some concessions and reprieve from government could remedy its circumstance : it is presently suffering bad image and unfavorable perception, with such depleted credibility and low esteem that are uncommon even in fairy tales.
    As the chairman of the Northern Governors’ Forum, the covid-19 pandemic did not only come as a health challenge or an all-arresting World War, it hit Northern Nigeria with peculiar socio-ecomic shenanigans that have stoked the old order and tasked the ingenuity, inventiveness, and resolve of the present political leadership. Given the delicate and brazen cruelty and precision with which the Coronavirus spreads and strikes, the notorious Almajeri system in the North was not just readily and easily available and vulnerable, it was an immense and infinite locale for its foment, entrenchment, and consolidation. Realizing this nuisance and moving against it at the level of policy and officialdom was a tidal and revolutionary moment smacking of rebelling against the old order.
    Thus, Lalong, as chairman of the Northern Governors’ Forum spearheaded the effort of the political leadership in the region to outlaw the Almajeri as a way of life; and also ensured that such ‘liberated’ children are returned to their home states and parents. However, Lalong is yet to explain to the nation how the decision to ‘post’ some of such children to states in the south of Nigeria was reached. Nonetheless, banning the Almajeri culture in the North was not only tidal and epochal, but a rich and foremost gain of the tragedy that is Covid-19.
    However, Governor Simon Lalong has got to return home and get down to the base and basics. For one, the people in the state are broke, hungry and angry, and the government needs to review its approach to the handling of anti-covid-19 activities, including improved transparency of the State Task Force on Covid-19 and the methodology of the palliatives committee. The government should show some sensitivity by pulling itself from slurs and abyss of petty jokes, and move towards refurbished image and credibility massage.