Category: News

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  • PDP nat’l committee extends tenure of Francise Orogu led committee in Nasarawa.

    PDP nat’l committee extends tenure of Francise Orogu led committee in Nasarawa.

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) national working committee has extended the  tenure  of the party’s executive members in Nasarawa state for three months .
    The erstwhile state PDP chairman, Hon. Francis Orogu is now designated as Chairman Nasarawa State PDP Caretaker Committee.
    Hon. Orogu confirmed to daybreak news, in  a letter received from the national executives to  that effect from the Abuja national headquarters, stating  that the reason was to avoid a vacuum since the Nasarawa chapter was yet to conclude its state congress election and the current Exco tenure was about to elapse.
     Daybreak news leant  that 22 other state chapters in similar positions enjoyed the  same extension as did the six national vice chairmen and zonal working committee members whose tenures expired on May 14.
    It would be recalled that Nasarawa state PDP like its 22 other counterparts was preparing for its state congress when the coronavirus pandemic forced a suspension of all PDP Congresses and meeting at both national and local levels.
    However, earlier before now  aggrieved members of the party  had faulted the ward and local government congresses, alleging that it did not hold in some wards and did not follow the party’s guidelines.

     

  • Nasarawa govt. To revive Farin Ruwa Power Project.

    Nasarawa govt. To revive Farin Ruwa Power Project.

    Nasarawa state government says it will  revive  Farin Ruwa power project, to generate additional 20 megawatts in the state.
    Nasarawa State Governor, Engineer Abdullahi Sule, stated this shortly after inspecting the 15.5km Sisin Baki-Kwarra road, as part of activities marking his one year in office, he adding that   plans to revive the moribund N5.4 bn Farin-Ruwa Independent Power Plant, awarded in 2004, by the first civilian governor of the state, Senator Abdullahi Adamu was also on the way.
    While highlighting the reasons his administration embarked on the project, which commenced  last year, the Governor said with the Federal Ministry of Water Resources was constructing another dam in the area, the state government is looking at reviving the project started by the former governor, as well as generate additional 20 mega watts from the Farin Ruwa waterfalls.
    Sule cited tourism and agriculture as other core reasons his administration is constructing the Sisin Baki-Kwarra rural feeder road.
    Commenting on the progress of work at the site, the Governor expressed satisfaction that in spite of the challenges posed by the coronavirus pandemic, work is progressing steadily, noting further that from all indications the job will be completed on time.
    He particularly appreciated the quality of work being delivered by the contractors, CCECC, the giant Chinese construction firm, which has started laying the stone base at the project site.
    “From all indications,  we are extremely happy, all of us. Both the Deputy Governor and I, as well as all the other officials that we see, including the Gom Mama, who gave strong recommendations and acceptance for the types of drainages they are constructing. I have seen the drainages and I am happy with it,” Engineer Sule said.
  • COVID-19:Ikpeazu directs task force  members to undergo test

    COVID-19:Ikpeazu directs task force members to undergo test

    By Okechukwu Keshi Ukegbu

    Gov. Okezie Ikpeazu of Abia State has directed that all members of Abia State COVID 19 taskforce and members of the his executive council who might have had contact with the late Commissioner for Environment, Dr. Solomon Ogunji to immediately undergo the COVID 19 test and go into self-isolation, pending the outcome of the result.

    It will be recalled that Ogunji Commissioner of environment, Abia State, died recently.

    The decision, according to a release signed by the state commissioner for information, John Okiyi Kalu, is prompted by the outcome of the result conducted on close family members to the late commissioner.

    The release further said that the governor will also take the test and go on isolation.

    The release reads:”Following the outcome of tests conducted on close family members of a late member of the state executive council (Exco) and member of the Inter-ministerial committee on COVID-19, Abia State Governor, Dr Okezie Ikpeazu, has directed all members of the committee and those of the Exco who might have recently come in contact with the late commissioner to immediately undergo COVID-19 tests and isolate themselves thereafter pending the outcome of the tests.

    “Governor Ikpeazu who is still in mourning will also subject himself to all other necessary protocols as he has directed his Exco members including the Deputy Governor to do”.

    Meanwhile, the government appeals to Abia residents to observe relevant regulations issued by the government and health authorities to stem the spread of the disease.

  • Africa, Eid-el-Fitr and the virus

    Africa, Eid-el-Fitr and the virus

     

    This year’s eid-al-fitr, the Muslim festival marking the end of the month of Ramadan, during which Muslims fast for 29 or 30 days, in observance of one of the Five Pillars of Islam, was celebrated on Saturday and Sunday May 23/24, but it was a different kind of eid. It was sombre, low key, and completely over-shadowed by the COVID-19 pandemic. In close to 100 years, there has been no eid like that: the world’s nearly 2 billion Muslims observed the Ramadan under imposed conditions. People were advised to avoid congregational prayers and stay in their homes. On Sunday, many could not observe the traditions of the eid either: the sharing of gifts, visits to family and friends to share goodwill, hugs and handshakes. In countries around the world, persons were advised to shun large gatherings for their own safety. Eid prayers could not be held publicly in Mecca and Medina. The Grand Mosque was noticeably scanty. Earlier, the Saudi Grand Mufti had advised against large congregations.

    In Egypt, the usually busy Al-Azhar Mosque in Cairo was empty. In the United Kingdom, the Muslim Council, ahead of the Eid-al-Fitri, advised Muslims to pray at home. In Indonesia, Pakistan, Thailand and Malaysia, congregational prayers were allowed but there was very strict adherence to precautions. In Thailand for example, worshippers who showed up for the Hari Raya, as the eid-al-fitri is otherwise known in that country, Malaysia and in Indonesia had to pass through health officials who checked their temperatures, gave them sanitizing gels, recorded their names and addresses so they can be traced and contacted in the event of a report of community spread of the virus. The people prayed but they kept away from one another. The main thing about COVID-19 is how it has imposed a regimen of observances on human behavior and relationships.

    The fact that people are expected to comply or gamble with their lives for failing to do so, is what makes it all so surreal. The mode of compliance varied from one country to the other. The only uniting factor, however, is how on Sunday, the Muslim global community and indeed the entire world was reminded of how so much COVID-19 has disrupted our lives. This sub-text was driven home more poignantly when the New York Times on May 24, decided on a dramatic, all-type concept front page, listing the names and brief descriptions of about 1,000 Americans who had died from COVID-19 related complications. It was the first time in more than 40 years that the New York Times will not have an image on its front page. The published names were compiled from obituary notices in newspapers across the United States by a researcher – Alan Delaqueriere – and put together by a team led by Ms. Simone Landon, Assistant Editor, Graphics. There was also an inside-page essay by columnist, Dan Barry. For me, this was journalism at another level.

    The New York Times went beyond the raw data that is quoted daily by Johns Hopkins University which tracks the incidence of COVID-19 in the United States (over 1.6 million confirmed cases, and over 98, 000 deaths – the highest COVID-19 figures in the world!). The newspaper gave names to the statistics and conveyed a sense of the uniqueness of those that died. Whoever reads that list is bound to realize how it is so easy to be alive at one moment, only to end up on a list of corpses in a short moment. The unpredictability of human transitions is what therefore makes it alarming that certain persons knowing how the grim reaper is on rampage, riding the vehicle of a virus, would engage in suicidal and risky behavior.

    These were my thoughts as I read the New York Times on the day of the eid-al-fitr, and reflected on the sharp variations in how the eid was celebrated especially in sub-Saharan Africa where religion is a virus of sorts. Whereas North African countries (Morocco, Egypt, Tunisia, Libya and Algeria) where there are high figures of COVID-19 enforced rules of physical distancing, many worshippers South of the Sahara threw caution to the winds, with perhaps the notable exceptions of Ghana and Senegal. In Sudan, before and after the eid, neither the leaders nor the people seemed to have heard of physical distancing. Sudan has the highest number of cases in East Africa with over 100 deaths but nobody seems to care. The people and their leaders certainly did not care during this year’s eid-al-fitri. Inflation is over 100% in Sudan. Health workers have no access to Personal Protective Equipment. The World Health Organization (WHO) should watch that country closely.

    In Tanzania, a country that has been “Magufulifized” to paraphrase the eminent Kenyan Professor, PLO Lumumba, the leaders pretended to be aware of the need for physical distancing but the worshippers who trooped to mosques in Dodoma and elsewhere in the country could not be bothered. As in Sudan, the mismanagement of the COVID-19 pandemic could be traced to the failure of leadership. President John Magufuli of Tanzania held much promise when he assumed office five years ago, but he has since derailed confirming indeed that his reform agenda is a double-edged sword of progressivism and dictatorship/primitivism. He insists that there has been a reduction in the number of COVID-19 cases in Tanzania, but this is not based on data. Tanzania stopped releasing COVID-19 figures and suspended daily briefings on April 21 because Magufuli is convinced that such briefings cause panic among the populace. He also insists that testing cannot be trusted, having discovered that even fruits and goats have tested positive due to faulty test kits. The Africa Centre for Disease Control and the US Embassy in the country have warned about the extremely high risk that Tanzania constitutes, especially to the neighbouring countries of Kenya, Zambia and Uganda. Healthcare workers in Tanzania cannot even express an opinion because under Magufuli, it is a crime to have independent thoughts. On eid-el-fitri day, Muslims in Tanzania simply followed his lead and ignored the reality of COVID-19.

    In not too far away Burundi, the management of COVID-19 is not any better. Burundi is officially a secular state. Muslims constitute a minority, previously thought to be only 1% of the population but now considered to be about 5-8% after the last post-civil war census. The big problem with Burundi in the face of COVID-19 is the total refusal of President Pierre Nkurunziza to come to terms with the fact that the pandemic is real. Last week, the country held a Presidential election, a stage-managed election which was rigged to produce the candidate of the ruling party, the CNDD-FDD as winner with 68.72%. The CNDD-FDD’s candidate, Evariste Ndayishimiye was once Chief of Staff to Nkurunziza who wants to retire from office and retain the pompous title of “Supreme Guide to Patriotism”. The new President will be required to consult the “Supreme Guide” on matters of national security and unity. Nkurunziza has apparently forgotten what happened to former Angolan President Eduardo dos Santos whose delusion of indispensability eventually led to his humiliation.

    But in reality, what Nigeria and many other countries in sub-Saharan Africa are faced with is the threat of an exponential rise in COVID-19 cases post eid-al-fitri. In Kano state which is second on the Nigerian COVID-19 League Table, the guidelines were observed more in the breach. The Kano elite at the prayer grounds hypocritically tried to maintain social distancing but nobody provided minimum care for the ordinary people who risked their lives in the name of religion. In Minna, Niger state, there was reportedly a heavy downpour. People abandoned their masks and rushed into the mosque where they huddled together. The Nation newspaper (Nigeria, May 25) reports that Southern Muslims in Nigeria observed the eid in their homes. In the Northern part of the country, where the Northern Governors Forum most recently announced that the region accounts for 54% of reported cases, and 70% of fresh infections, the prayer grounds were unlocked from Kano to Borno, by the same leaders who had only a few days earlier acknowledged a brewing crisis in their region. Does that make sense?

    I have tried to paint the picture above simply to revisit the commendation that Africa has received for beating the world’s expectations with regard to COVID-19 sero-prevalence. The eid celebration is merely a peg. At a recent Africa.Com Webinar Series 6 with the theme: “What’s the real story behind Africa’s COVID-19 figures?”, the WHO Regional Director Ms Rebecca Moeti expressed enthusiasm about the fact that whereas WHO expected higher COVID-19 cases in Africa, the numbers have been lower than expected. She praised African countries. Both the WHO DG and the UN Secretary General have also had cause to commend Nigeria. The praise for Africa may be premature. It is not justified by the attitude of many of the leaders and the behaviour of the people. Could the real story in Africa be – that not enough testing is being done resulting in gross undercount or that corruption has further mutated COVID-19 into a strain that is yet unknown to the world? Or is the virus un-African? These are the key questions.

    Abati is former Presidential spokesman

  • BREAKING: EPL resumes with Man City, Arsenal clash June 17

    BREAKING: EPL resumes with Man City, Arsenal clash June 17

    Aston Villa vs Sheffield United and Manchester City vs Arsenal will be first two games when the Premier League resumes next month, Skysports reports.

    Those two fixtures were originally postponed due to EFL Cup Final. Every club will have played 29 PL games after those matches.

    Details later

  • BREAKING: CBN reduces lending rate to 12.5%

    BREAKING: CBN reduces lending rate to 12.5%

    The Monetary Policy Committee of the Central Bank of Nigeria on Thursday reduced the Monetary Policy Rate to 12.5 per cent.

    The CBN Governor, Mr Godwin Emefiele, announced the decision of the Committee in Abuja, at the end of its virtual 273rd meeting.

    The committee had retained the MPR at 13.5 per cent at the last MPC meeting in March.

    It, however, retained the Cash Reserve Ratio and the liquidity ratio at 27.5 per cent and 30 per cent respectively.

    Details later…

  • Kaduna State Social Register will leave no one behind – official

    Kaduna State Social Register will leave no one behind – official

    The Kaduna State Government says it will capture all Poor and Vulnerable Households (PVHHs) in the state’s social register and leave no one behind in all social protection interventions.

    Mrs Saude Atoyebi, Focal Person, National Social Investment Programme in the state, gave the assurance in Kaduna at the opening of a three-day training of Community-Based Targeting Teams (CBTT).

    Atoyebi said that without evidence-based data of PVHHs, it would be difficult to serve the poor and vulnerable in the state.

    According to her, generating the data is critical in the provision of support to PVHHs.

    She said that the number of PVHHs captured in the social register from nine local government areas of the state was barely 20,500 in mid-2019.

    She listed the council areas as Kachia, Sanga, Kauru, Birnin Gwari, Chikun, Kajuru, Ikara, Kubau and Lere.

    “Having recognised the importance of this data, Gov. Nasir El Rufa’i directed that the social register be populated with all poor and vulnerable households.

    “This is because it is only when the PVHHs are identified and captured in the register that the state and the Federal Government will be able reach out to them with various interventions.

    “Today, we have more than 130,000 PVHHs across the nine LGAs in our register, and plans have been concluded to gradually capture all poor and vulnerable households in the state.

    “The State Operations Coordinating Unit has been working tirelessly to achieve this feat.

    “This training is a milestone in actualising a social register that leaves no one or group behind,” she said.

    The focal person added that the mandate would be achieved with the support of the state government and guidelines from the National Social Safety-Nets Coordinating Office.

    She noted that the training was taking place simultaneously in the state’s three senatorial zones to build the capacity of the CBTTs on community-based targeting processes.

    She said that the main task of the targeting teams would be to support communities in identifying and capturing poor and vulnerable households into the social register.

    She noted that the PVHHs were more likely to be affected in the event of catastrophe, adding that it was government’s responsibility to provide them with the necessary support to live decently.

    “The Kaduna State Government has today, entrusted you with the noblest of service – to serve the poorest and most vulnerable citizens.

    “Through your efforts, the poor and vulnerable households will stand a better chance at a life of dignity.

    “This will actualise the vision of Gov. El-Rufa’i to ensure that no poor person sleeps hungry or suffers avoidable socio-economic shocks,” she said.

    Atoyebi advised the targeting teams to observe all health protocols such as social distancing, hand washing and wearing of mask, while carrying out their duties.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the training was conducted in strict compliance with safety measures against coronavirus, such as use of face mask, social distancing and use of hand sanitiser.

  • BREAKING: IGP Adamu redeploys Edo, Ondo, nine other police commissioners

    BREAKING: IGP Adamu redeploys Edo, Ondo, nine other police commissioners

    The Inspector General of Police, Mohammed Adamu, has ordered the redeployment of Edo, Ondo and Oyo State Commissioners of Police.

    Eight other CPs were also redeployed in various Commands and Formations, according to a press statement by the Force Public Relations Officer, Frank Mba.

    The statement said, “The IGP has ordered the immediate posting/redeployment of the following Commissioners of Police to Commands/Formations as follows: Edo State, CP Johnson Babatunde Kokumo; Osun State, CP Undie J. Adie; Bauchi State CP Lawal Jimeta Tanko; Ebonyi State, CP Philip Sule Maku; Gombe State, CP Ahmed Maikudi Shehu; Ondo State, CP Bolaji Amidu Salami; Oyo State, CP Joe Nwachukwu Enwonwu; Eastern Port, CP Evelyn T. Peterside; Explosive Ordinance Device (EOD), CP Okon Etim Ene; Airport Command, CP Bello Maikwashi; and Anti-Fraud Unit (FCID Annex Lagos), CP Olukolu Tairu Shina.”

    The statement also quoted the IGP as urging the newly deployed CPs to prioritise community policing, crime prevention, public security, public safety, and general crime-fighting among others.

    “The IGP also enjoins the citizens of the affected states to cooperate with the Commissioners of Police to enable them to succeed in their new areas of responsibilities.

    “The IGP charges the newly posted officers to ensure they consolidate and advance the gains of their predecessors particularly in the implementation of communit policing, crime prevention, public security, public safety, and general crime-fighting.”

  • COVID-19: Pilots, other crew members must wear PPEs – FG

    COVID-19: Pilots, other crew members must wear PPEs – FG

    The Federal Government on Thursday declared that pilots and other crew members operating international flights must now wear Personal Protective Equipment and observe infection prevention and control measures for the duration of the flight.

    It disclosed this in the COVID-19 Pandemic Public Health Protocols for Nigeria-based crew, which was released by the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority.

    The protocol also stated that the flight crew would not be quarantined but would undergo mandatory testing for COVID-19 every 14 days at a cost to the air operator upon return to Nigeria.

    It added that flight crew members who test positive for COVID-19 would be taken to a treatment centre for further management.

    In a letter with reference NCAA/DG/AIR/11/16/120, 27th May 2020, signed by the Director-General, Capt. Musa Nuhu, to all operators, airports, and other service providers, the agency said the new protocol had been approved by the Federal Ministry of Health.

    It said the protocol replaced the current practice where Nigeria-based flight crew members who operate international flights were quarantined for 14 days upon their return to Nigeria.

    It stated that Nigeria-based airlines/aircrew wishing to conduct flight operations outside the country shall ensure the orientation and sensitisation of crew on Infection Prevention and Control measures as per training and guidance from public health authorities.

    The authority said the airlines must ensure they have adequate stock of PPE, a minimum of 70 per cent alcohol-based hand sanitisers and Universal Precaution Kits onboard aircraft before the flight.

    Providing further guidelines on how the crew should use the PPEs, the NCAA said flight deck crew should wear non-medical face mask and gloves.

    “Face mask can be removed when the cockpit door is closed for safety reasons,” it stated.

    For cabin crew, it said they should use a non-medical face mask, gloves, disposal surgical gowns, and safety visors/goggles.

    “Ensure the safe removal of gloves after performing specific tasks. Avoid touching their face and eyes with unclean hands,” the agency said.

    It added, “Flight crew is to ensure that all passengers wear a non-medical face mask for the duration of the flight except when eating or using emergency oxygen.

    “Flight crew are to ensure that passengers rub their hands with alcohol-based sanitiser as they embark on the aircraft.

    “Put up a notice in the lavatory/washroom on handwashing that requests passengers wash their hands after using the lavatory.

    The NCAA said flight crew was to maintain a safe distance between passengers and themselves, avoiding direct physical contact.

    It said the cabin crew would serve only pre-packed meals to passengers, adding that where practicable, the flight crew would reserve one lavatory for their own use.