Tag: Nigeria

  • Nigerias Inspector General of Police dissolves SARS

    The Inspector-General of Police, Mohammed Adamu, has announced a dissolution of a subunit of the force, the Special Anti-robbery Squad (SARS).

    Adamu made the announcement on Sunday, days after a public outcry and series of protests calling for a scrapping of the unit over allegations of brutality and human rights violations.

    “The Special Anti-Robbery Squad of the Nigerian Police, otherwise known as SARS, is hereby dissolved across all formations, the 36 state police command and the Federal Capital Territory where they currently exist,” the IGP said.

    Also, in a statement, the Force Public Relations Office, Force Headquarters, Dcp Frank Mba, noted that “the dissolution of SARS is in response to the yearnings of the Nigerian people”.

    He explained that “the Force is not oblivious of the ever-present need to combat armed robbery, kidnapping and other violent crimes in the country which was before now the core mandate of the erstwhile Squad”.

    Mba, therefore, assured that that a new policing arrangement to address anticipated policing gaps which the dissolution of SARS would cause, has been evolved and shall be announced in due course.

    Source: gossib24.com

  • Nigeria needs to be restructured – Lawyer

    A Nigerian lawyer has said that President Muhammadu Buhari must look to restructure Nigeria in other to drive the needed economic and financial independence the country requires to succeed as the giant of Africa.

    Speaking to MyNigeria.com in an exclusive interview, Vice President, Synergies Institute-Ghana, Mr. Ogochukwu Nweke opined that the concept of minority and majority ethnic groups in the country must be scrapped. He further stated that the idea has the tendency of bringing division amongst the more than 700 ethnic groups in the country.

    He believes de-centralizing the channels of power to its barest minimum is what the country needs, adding that major players and stakeholders must also question how Nigeria got to the point it is in now.

    “First thing we have to do is restructuring and let me go back to why Nigeria became a country in the first place. I think we should ask ourselves very important questions and go back to that point,” he quizzed.

    “Now we have over 700 ethnic groups in Nigeria and right now I don’t even believe in the concept of minority and majority groups anymore because people are now looking at themselves as nation-states based on their history and we need to all come together, sit down and discuss the issues very very clearly and give power to these units and make the center a bit weaker than it is right now,” he said.

    “The center is too-too powerful and that will continue to bring about the issue of people wanting their own people to be in the center without paying attention to some of the issues that should drive the society forward.”

    Watch video below

    Source: mynigeria.com

  • Naira Marley cancels protest against Nigerian police unit

    Nigerian musician Azeez Fashola, popular as Naira Marley, has cancelled his planned protest against a police unit accused of harassment and brutality.

    The protest was to be held in the commercial capital, Lagos, from 09:00 local time.

    But he has tweeted that “there’s a lot of changes being made right now”:

    The Special Anti Robbery Squad (Sars) was on Sunday banned from carrying out stop and search duties and setting up roadblocks.

    The Inspector General of Police, Mohammed Adamu, has said “far-reaching reforms to reposition Sars and other tactical squads for better service delivery” are being undertaken.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Nigeria bandits free 40 hostages

    Armed bandits have freed 40 people they had abducted from a village in north-western Nigeria’s Zamfara state on Saturday, police have said.

    The gunmen freed the villagers following the intervention of security agencies and a separate group of bandits who were involved in peace talks with the state government, police spokesman Muhamma Shehu told the BBC.

    No ransom was paid, he added.

    Bandits have stepped up attacks across north-western Nigeria in recent months, but Saturday’s abductions in Zamfara’s Mwaru area were on a scale rarely seen.

    In the last decade more than 8,000 people have been killed in the states of Kebbi, Sokoto, Niger and Zamfara, according to the International Crisis Group.

    The attacks are rooted in decades-long competition over resources between ethnic Fulani herders and farming communities.

    Source: bbc.com

  • UN condemns Nigeria for imprisoning ‘blasphemous’ 13-year-old

    The UN children’s agency Unicef has “expressed deep concern” over the imprisonment and treatment of a 13-year-old boy convicted for blasphemy.

    In August, Omar Farouq was sentenced to 10 years in prison with menial labour by a Sharia court in the northern state of Kano.

    The sentencing “is wrong… it also negates all core underlying principles of child rights and child justice that Nigeria – and by implication, Kano State – has signed on to,” said Peter Hawkins, Unicef representative in Nigeria.

    The sentence is in contravention of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, which Nigeria ratified in 1991, Unicef said in a statement.

    Unicef called on the Nigerian federal and state authorities to urgently review the case with a view to reversing the sentence.

    Several states in northern Nigeria introduced Sharia after the country returned to civilian rule in 1999.

    The Sharia courts only try Muslims but if a case involves a Muslim and a non-Muslim, the non-Muslim will be given the option of choosing where he/she wants the case to be tried.

    The Sharia court can only hear the case if the non-Muslim gives written consent.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Nigerian politicians face UK visa bans over polls chaos

    The UK has threatened to issue visa bans on Nigerian politicians linked to electoral violence ahead of governorship elections in two states later this month.

    It has also warned of their potential prosecution under international law and restricting their access to their UK assets.

    The elections in the southern states of Edo and Ondo are scheduled for 19 September and 10 October respectively.

    The UK High Commission said it would send observers to the elections.

    Foreign observers have previously accused Nigerian politicians of using violence and intimidation in elections.

    The British High Commissioner, Catriona Laing, has met with leaders of the two main parties and urged for a peaceful electoral process.

    On Monday, the US imposed visa restrictions on unnamed individuals in Nigeria for “undermining democratic principles” ahead of the upcoming polls.

    Source: bbc.com

  • US imposes visa restrictions over Nigeria elections

    The US has imposed visa restrictions on a number of people in Nigeria accused of undermining democratic principles ahead of elections in Edo and Ondo states.

    The state department said the individuals – who have not been named – had operated with impunity at the expense of the Nigerian people.

    It urged all parties – including the security forces – to ensure free and fair elections.

    The US also announced visa restrictions on individuals involved in elections in two other states that were marred by violence last year.

    In August the US had expressed concern over the deteriorating political climate in Edo State. It said it was disappointed with the role played by some political actors in the state, especially with regards to allegations of interference by security forces in political matters.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Nigerian doctors suspend strike after talks

    Doctors in Nigeria have suspended their strike after holding talks with the authorities.

    The doctors had downed their tools on Monday to demand a pay rise, better welfare and improved facilities. Those on the front-line on Covid-19 treatment had joined the strike.

    The National Association of Resident Doctors (Nard), whose members make up 40% of doctors in the country, said it is calling off the strike to give government enough time to resolve their demands.

    It said the government had met some of their demands – including getting life insurance for the medics.

    This is a short respite for the government, but the association said they will review the situation after two weeks if the outstanding issues are not resolved.

    The impact of the strike was already being felt – forcing the government to draft graduate doctors on their mandatory one year national service to replace the striking doctors in hospitals.

    The government described the strike as ill-timed because of the coronavirus pandemic.

    There have been several strikes in Nigeria since the beginning of the pandemic, with doctors demanding better pay and personal protective equipment.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Autopsy ordered for former Nigeria goalkeeper John Felagha

    An autopsy has been ordered following the death of former Nigeria goalkeeper John Felagha in Senegal at the age of 26.

    Felagha, a goalkeeper-coach at the Doha-owned football academy, died on 31 August. But there is currently no explanation for his sudden death.

    Aspire Academy have now told BBC Sport Africa that he was found on the floor of his room. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation efforts administered on him failed and he was pronounced dead on the spot.

    “His teammates found him on the floor of his room,” said Sam Ahmedu, director of the academy in Nigeria.

    “He collapsed and so it could be related to heart issues. But we are waiting for the autopsy result,”

    Felagha was a member of the Nigerian Golden Eaglets team that reached the final of the Fifa U-17 World Cup in 2009.

    The Bayelsa-born shot stopper was also a part of the Nigerian team to the U-20 Africa Cup of Nations and World Cup in 2013.

    He joined Belgian side KAC Eupen in 2013. After a long-term injury, he joined Aspire Football Dreams as a goalkeeper-coach, same academy where he was first discovered in 2008.

    “For a young boy to pass at 26, is very sad,” Ahmedu added.

    “The academy is deeply saddened by this loss. We will continue to remember him”.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Nigeria’s Buhari denies aide contracted virus

    Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari’s office has dismissed a media report that indicated one of his aides had tested positive for Covid-19.

    The presidency said all aides are routinely tested for coronavirus and the named staff member had always returned a negative test.

    “The general public is hereby advised to ignore such stories that are intended to mislead the people an create unnecessary anxiety about the safety of the president,” a statement by the president’s spokesperson said.

    President Buhari’s former chief of staff Abba Kyari died of Covid-19 in April.

    Source: bbc.com

  • GUTA replies Nigerian government on trade harassment

    The Ghana Union of Traders Association (GUTA) has said the Nigerian Union of Association Ghana (NUTAG) has over the months fed their government with lies pertaining engagements in retail businesses in Ghana.

    According to the President of the Association, Dr Joseph Obeng, Ghana has never targeted any ECOWAS citizen who deals in goods and services produced in a member state.

    It only enforces the laws to deal with people who operate illegally in the country, Dr Obeng stated.

    “No particular country is a target in the enforcement of the law. However, it should be noted that Nigerians form about 80% of those who engage in the illegal retail trade.”

    He explained that the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre (GIPC) law is only to “discourage dumping of goods from countries outside the ECOWAS community, so as to boost local production and better the lot for the local manufacturer as well as grow and develop our local economy.”

    The Nigerian government has over the week said it can no longer tolerate the incessant harassment of its citizens in Ghana.

    This comes after several shops engaged in retail businesses without the necessary documents were closed down by the Trades Ministry’s Inter-Ministerial Task force in Accra, Kumasi and Koforidua.

    In Kumasi, over 90 shops suspected to be for Nigerians were closed down after the inspection by the Task Force.

    The Government of Ghana, has on the other hand rejected the accusations made by Nigeria of intimidation and maltreatment of Nigerian Nationals in Ghana.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Helicopter crashes into Lagos building, kills two

    Residents living in the Opebi area of Ikeja, Lagos were thrown into panic after a helicopter reportedly crashed into a building.

    The incident is reported to have occurred around 12pm.

    According to the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), two persons died as result of the crash while one person survived.

    The hospitalised victim is in the Intensive Care Unit of the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital while the bodies have been deposited at the morgue, Vanguard reports.

    Speaking at the scene of the crash, the Director-General, Lagos State Emergency Management Agency LASEMA, Dr. Olufemi Oke-Osanyintolu told Vanguard that “the agency got a distress call concerning a privately operated helicopter that crashed into 16A Salvation Road, Opebi, Ikeja and immediately activated the emergency response plan.”

    He confirmed that three passengers were on board the flight,” the helicopter was carrying three passengers; one is in the intensive care unit at the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital while the bodies of the two killed on impact have been deposited in the mortuary.

    “We are on top of challenges especially crowd control while operation is ongoing.” he added.

    Source: mynigeria.com

  • Nigerian police make arrests in #JusticeForUwa case

    Nigerian police have arrested six people in connection with the rape and murder of a 22-year-old student, Uwavera Omozuwa in a church.

    Uwavera had been studying in a “quiet” church near her home in Benin City when she was attacked in May.

    She was found in a pool of blood, with serious head injuries and having been raped. She died in hospital three days later.

    The crime sparked outrage across Nigeria.

    For three months, police hunted for the suspects. This week they arrested four men and two women.

    While parading the suspects, a police spokesman said they would appear in court as soon investigations are finished.

    Rape and gender based violence is rampant in Nigeria with very low detection and prosecution rates.

    There have been widespread protests with calls for justice and stricter control measures.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Nigerian newspaper condemns ‘verbal assault’ on journalist

    A Nigerian newspaper has condemned a former government minister for what it termed as a verbal assault on its journalist who had questioned the source of funding of his tour of the southern Cross Rivers state.

    Femi Fani-Kayode, who served as the aviation minister in 2006, took offence to the questioning and was filmed giving an angry response.

    A video clip of the incident has circulated widely on social media:

    The Daily Trust newspaper, in a statement by its editor-in-chief , said the reporter had “simply sought clarification and information, like good journalism should”.

    It said it would hold Mr Fani-Kayode accountable if anything happened to the reporter.

    But the politician has denied threatening the reporter and accused him of “being part of premeditated plan to embarrass him”.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Nigeria reciprocates travel bans

    Nigeria’s government says it will bar entry to citizens of countries that do not allow in Nigerians due to coronavirus restrictions.

    Aviation Ministry spokesman James Odaudu told the BBC that the government had taken note of the ban placed by some countries on flights from Nigeria, and the policy would be enforced in the interest of its citizens.

    The European Union is among those barring Nigerians entry.

    International flights resume on 29 August but the head of the Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority said only a few flights per day would be permitted as a test run for the protocols put in place to ensure a safe return to international operations.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Nigerian ‘locked up by family for 30 years’ rescued

    Police in the northern Nigerian state of Kano have rescued a 55-year-old man who was locked up by his family for 30 years because he was apparently mentally ill, human rights activist Sani Shuaibu has told the BBC.

    The man had suffered for decades, one of his feet bound by a metal bar to a heavy log in a room without a door and window, Mr Shuaibu of Human Rights Network (HRN) said.

    He alerted police about the man’s plight following a tip-off, and joined the operation to rescue him from a property in Rogo town.

    “He has some mental issues and was becoming aggressive and instead of seeking help in 1990 the father decided the best thing to do was to lock him up,” Mr Shuaibu told the BBC.

    “When the father died some years ago his two brothers, both younger than him, continued with the detention but today he is a free man. Some neighbours aware of his situation were key in this rescue,” he added.

    The 55-year-old is currently at Rogo General Hospital where he is receiving treatment, while his brothers have been taken in for questioning by police.

    Kano Police Command spokesman Abdullahi Haruna confirmed the rescue to the BBC and said they were investigating the case.

    This is the third high-profile rescue operation in less than two weeks of people with special needs detained by their families.

    HRN, a non-governmental organisation, was involved in all three rescue operations. Its head, Comrade Haruna Ayagi, told the BBC that more cases should be expected because it was “a deep-lying issue that has been ignored for long”.

    “In most of these cases, the parents were blessed with children with special needs and since they have no resources to take care of them and no help from government or institutions, they resort to locking them up,” he added.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Nigeria civil war-era bomb injures two children

    Two children were left severely injured when an explosive, a remnant of the Nigeria’s civil war of 1967-1970, detonated in Eziorsu, Ugwuta in the south-eastern Imo state.

    The explosive detonated on Tuesday night when the children, aged 10 and 16 years old, had used it to support a stove while roasting cassava flour outside their compound.

    Their father, Goddey Uzi, said he had unearthed the supposed iron near his house a few years ago and had been using it for domestic purposes.

    Mr Uzi said it must have detonated after being heated by the fire.

    The two children are undergoing treatment at a local hospital.

    Eziorsu town has experienced intermittent explosions over the years since the end of the civil war in 1970. Buried explosives, including land mines, have recently been discovered in the town.

    The town was a stronghold of soldiers of the breakaway state of Biafra during the civil war.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Police rescue man locked up for three years by parents

    A Nigerian man has been rescued from the garage of his parents’ house in the northern city of Kano, where he had been locked up for three years, police say.

    Ahmed Aminu, 30, was discovered after a police raid on the family’s residence in the Farawa area of central Kano on Thursday morning.

    Neighbours had alerted a local NGO, Human Rights Network, about his plight, and the police were then called.

    Some reports said he had been locked up for seven years.

    In a horrific video shared on social media, an emaciated Mr Aminu, too frail to walk, was assisted by members of the NGO into a vehicle as he was taken to hospital.

    He had visible calluses on his knees and his bones were apparent through the little flesh left on him.

    “We found Aminu in a terrible situation, urinating and excreting in same spot without [being] given any food and looking like he was going to die at any moment,” Haruna Ayagi, head of Human Rights Network, told the BBC.

    Mr Aminu’s father and step-mother have been arrested and the case is being investigated, police spokesman Haruna Kiyawa said in a statement.

    Police said the man had been locked up by his parents on suspicion of drug abuse and left without proper food and health care.

    This is the second time this week a victim has been rescued from horrific conditions in their parents’ house in Nigeria.

    On Wednesday, police in north-western Kebbi state rescued a 10-year-old boy from an animal pen where he had been kept for two years by his parents.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Nigeria receives 200 ventilators from the US

    Nigeria has begun the handover ceremony for 200 ventilators donated by the US government.

    The ventilators were a promised by President Donald Trump during a phone conversation with President Muhammadu Buhari in April.

    President Trump while making the promise said the US would support Nigeria during the pandemic.

    Nigeria’s Information Minister Lai Mohammed had to clarify that the ventilators had not arrived in May after President Trump said he had already sent them.

    The minister said that when the ventilators arrived it would be made public.

    The foreign ministry on Tuesday tweeted:

    Source: bbc.com

  • Nigerias COVID-19 cases rise to 46,577

    Nigeria has reported 437 new cases of the novel coronavirus, according to local health authorities, bringing the total number of infections to 46,577.

    The death toll in the country reached 945 as three more fatalities were recorded over the past 24 hours, the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) said in its latest daily update.

    It said that as many as 33,186 patients have been discharged from hospitals.

    With more than 15,800 infections, commercial capital Lagos remains the area hardest hit by the virus in the country.

    It is followed by the Federal Capital Territory, which includes the capital Abuja, where nearly 4,500 cases have been confirmed to date, and the southwestern Oyo state with over 2,800 cases.

    Nigeria is strengthening disease surveillance to help stop the spread of COVID-19. In Lagos, the World Health Organization (WHO) is supporting the health authorities by mobilizing surveillance teams to help investigate and trace patients with symptoms in health facilities, the WHO said last week.

    Since first appearing in Wuhan, China last December, the novel coronavirus has spread to at least 188 countries and regions.

    The pandemic has killed more than 731,453 people worldwide, with nearly 19.87 million confirmed cases and over 12.12 million recoveries, according to figures compiled by the US-based Johns Hopkins University.

    Source: www.aa.com.tr
  • Kano residents groan under burden of abandoned road projects

    The several uncompleted (and some abandoned) roads in Kano State have left residents and visitors of the commercial centre of Nigeria faced with many difficulties.

    During the dry season, thick dust that characterised the roads adversely affects their health, particularly the asthmatic patients; while during the raining season, the roads become unmotorable with flooding and several potholes.

    To businesses on these roads or those that are linked by these roads, the daily sales they make are significantly reducing as most motorists usually take alternative routes to avert the potholes and dust that greet them whenever they ply these roads the same way buyers of goods look for alternative markets.

    Residents of these affected areas noted that most of these projects were initiated by previous administrations but were later abandoned by their successors.

    Inuwa Dutse road of Karkasara in the metropolis, which was awarded for resurfacing by the administration of Senator Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso (2011-2015), has been abandoned for years, leaving residents and passers-by covered in dust.

    It is a road that links communities of Darmanawa, Karkasara (behind Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital, AKTH), Sallari and Court road.

    The road, according to a shop owner in the area, has been like that for long with no hope in sight on when its work will resume.

    Sale Abdullahi, who sells soft drinks in his shop along the road, said he cannot remember exactly when the road construction started before it was abandoned subsequently.

    “Because of the critical condition of this road, our sales have significantly reduced as nobody wants to follow the road again”, he lamented.

    He said, “Sometimes, you’ll buy drinks, and after like two, three days people begin to complain that you may be selling expired products due to the dust that cover the products within that short period.

    “So many people would rather go to other places to buy.

    “About eight months ago work resumed on the road. We were very happy then that at least it will ease our pain, but without reaching any milestone, they packed their equipment and left the site.

    “It has affected us seriously. I used to make sales of about N30,000 daily before, but now, we only get what to eat here due to customers’ drought caused by the road condition.”

    Daily Trust on Sunday observed that in most parts of the road, motorists share one lane to avoid potholes. This, according to Abdullahi, has increased the number of accidents recorded in the area.

    Double tragedy for residents

    In virtually all these roads, the situation becomes a double-edged dagger with each leaving residents and passers-by groaning.

    To Abdullahi of Karkasara, the only time they get some relief from the dust is when it rains.

    “And when the rain comes, we are faced with another tragedy of potholes and water flooding the road since the drainage has not dug. So in any way, it’s a double tragedy for us.”

    20 shops vacated due to road condition

    At Yahaya Gusau, the road linking Sharada community, one of the biggest industrial hubs of the city, to Gadon Kaya, it was gathered that about 20 shops in a house have been vacated because of the road condition.

    The road is one of the 5km road project awarded by Kwankwaso for each of the 44 local government areas in the state at the beginning of his second term as governor in 2011.

    Confirming the situation, Muhammad Baba, who sells motorcycle spare parts along the road said, “You see that house (pointing at a storey-building in the area), 20 shops were rented earlier, but none of them is now occupied because of the road’s critical condition.

    “If you display your goods, dust will cover them and you know what that means; nobody will buy.

    “This road has been under construction for over seven years, though work has partially resumed this week.

    “When it rains, nobody follows this road because it’s not motorable, we only open in such situation and gist, but nobody will come, talk less of buying our goods.”

    Most shops built around these roads that are supposed to be rented as a business entity are mostly vacant, with the little occupied complaining of low sales, it was gathered.

    “Here in Yahaya Gusau road, for instance, the road has almost reached its completion stage before it was subsequently abandoned. They were to lay asphalt to complete it”, said Baba.

    He added that “Now that they have decided to resume work, they will have to start all over as water has washed away all they have done before, including dredging or even building new drainages.

    “You can see how it’s incurring additional expenses to the government. A work that could be completed at the rate of N70 for instance could gulp N100 or even N150”.

    Residents said Yahaya Gusau road is very important because it also links Dandinshe communities with other parts of the city. The area, located in Dala local government is said to be the second-largest political ward in the country due to its population.

    Despite this potential political advantage, residents of the area have been groaning of successive neglect by various administrations.

    Another resident of the area said the road condition has affected their life negatively.

    “Many pregnant women who need to be taken to hospitals have delivered on their way due to the terrible potholes on the road”, said Malam Balarabe Shehu, a resident of Dandinshe area.

    He added, “Anyone living in this area could bear me witness that even the price we are charged by commercial vehicles is usually higher when compared with that of other places.

    “Their justification is that our road is terrible and we don’t have any alternative route to use. Dandinshe is one of the most densely populated areas in Kano; yet, the government neglected us and only check back when campaign time comes.

    “All politicians use this road as their tool of a political campaign, once they are voted, the rest is history”, Shehu added.

    On his part, another resident of the area who doesn’t want his name mentioned attributed their plight to political reasons, arguing that the present administration deliberately abandoned the work because it was initiated by its predecessor.

    “Before the 2019 election, work resumed in the area, but, one fateful day the state governor visited the area and was booed. And that is the end of the story,” he added.

    Abba Anwar, the Chief Press Secretary to Governor Abdullahi Umar Ganduje, denied this allegation, saying nothing of such happened.

    Previous state of roads better than what ‘construction’ caused

    New road in Sabon Gari area of Fagge LGA is one of the most populous roads in Kano, mostly because it houses the park for luxurious buses plying the South East and South West of the country.

    A resident and shop owner in the area, Mrs. Edna Ibe, told Daily Trust that the road was scraped and subsequently abandoned over seven years ago.

    “A few days ago a cripple man fell inside this dirty water (pointing at a wide hole filled with dirty water on the road), the sight was terrible, and I could not help but cry. Every day, you see car owners cursing after damaging their vehicles while trying to navigate the terrible road,” she added, appealing to the government to come and complete the road.

    Madam Joy Iriakany, a food seller on the road, said the attempted repair of the road had even further destroyed the road. “The road was better before they even attempted to fix it. Kwankwaso told us that he wants to make it better but he did not. When Ganduje entered, he also promised to fix the road but nothing. During the election, they promised us that they will fix it, but you can see for yourself the state of the road,” she said.

    “When it rains, even pedestrians cannot access the road not to talk of car owners. This is affecting our business,” Madam Iriakany lamented.

    Like residents of Yahaya Gusau road, most of the residents and business owners on New Road said they preferred the status of the road before the repair work commenced.

    The problem of continuity in leadership is what affects most other abandoned roads in Kano, residents said. The Dakata-Bela road in Ungogo local government, awarded at the tail end of the administration of Senator Ibrahim Shekarau (2003-2011) has suffered similar neglect as the work only stopped at Kwanar Inusawa. Rimin Kebe residents, also in Ungogo are suffering a similar problem.

    Residents of Sheikh Mahmud Salga road along Goron Dutse and Jakara road have also been calling on the government to conclude the work started and make the road motorable again. The road’s importance to Kano’s commercial activities was accentuated by it serving as the link to Kurmi market (an over 500-year old market, known for being the home of traditional attires and artefacts).

    Some of the market people told Daily Trust on Saturday that due to the bad status of the road, they now get just 1/10 of visitors that normally access the market, especially from Sokoto and Zamfara states.

    ‘Governance should be about continuity’

    On his part, Senator Ibrahim Shekarau told Daily Trust through his spokesman, Sule Yau Sule that the Dakata-Bela road was not completed during his administration because “in government, you cannot finish all you start to do. Projects are awarded based on expectation on the flow of funds and hardly can you get all you expect to get by the end of the year. That brings about slowing down some of the projects.”

    He said projects normally suffer when the government is not able to get its expected flow of funds, adding that the impression that the contractors had been fully mobilised was a wrong one.

    “You don’t even have the (full) money on ground to pay”, he said, adding that the contractors were mostly paid based on the level of the job completed.

    Efforts to get an official position from Senator Kwankwaso were not successful as at the time of filing this report. Comrade Aminu Abdussalam Gwarzo, who issued a statement on his behalf the last time he addressed the public, did not respond to calls and text messages sent to him on the matter.

    However, a stalwart of the Kwankwasiyya Movement, Sunusi Surajo Kwankwaso said if governance was all about continuity, the present administration has no excuse to abandon the projects.

    “It’s a known fact that no contractor will start any work without receiving a certain percentage of the amount, so they should just explain why they are being selective on the kind of projects to complete”, Sunusi Kwankwaso, who was the Special Assistant (Government House) during Senator Kwankwaso’s administration added.

    ‘Work is ongoing, we will not stop’

    In his reaction, the Permanent Secretary of the state’s Ministry of Works and Infrastructure, Ahmed Abba Salisu, said it is not true that the Governor Abdullahi Ganduje-led administration has abandoned projects it inherited.

    The Permanent Secretary said many projects inherited by the administration from the previous administrations had been completed, citing examples with Sheikh Isyaku Rabiu Specialist Hospital and the over 2km Alhassan Dantata bridge, among others.

    Salisu said as with everything in the country, the COVID-19 pandemic grounded a lot of the ongoing projects and that it was only until recently that contractors were now returning to their project sites. He noted that one of such roads where work has since resumed is the Yahaya Gusau road.

    He said the administration has directed that all the 5km road projects awarded to each local government in the state by the previous administration that was hitherto being handled by the Kano State Urban Planning and Development Authority (KNUPDA) should be returned to the ministry.

    This, he said, was to ensure the appraisal of the projects and see to the completion of those yet to be completed. New road in Sabongari and Sheikh Mahmud Salga road are some of these roads.

    He appealed to residents to continue to exercise patience with the government, adding that the administration has the political will to complete all outstanding projects and do more for the state.

    Source: allafrica.com

  • Nigerian police ‘arrest dozens’ of anti-corruption protesters

    At least 60 people have been arrested at an anti-government protest in Nigeria’s capital Abuja, according to protest organisers Revolution Now.

    The police have not said what their alleged offences are.

    The nationwide protests marked a year since the first demonstrations by the movement.

    The former presidential candidate and founder of the news site Sahara Reporters Omoyele Sowore started the Revolution Now movement last year.

    He called for a revolution saying last year’s election, in which President Muhammadu Buhari won a second term, was not credible.

    He has since been charged with treason, money laundering and “cyberstalking” for allegedly sharing false and insulting information about President Buhari. He denies all the charges.

    He was held in detention for 130 days before eventually being released on bail and is currently awaiting trial.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Secondary schools reopen in Nigeria

    Secondary schools in Nigeria reopened on Tuesday for classes almost four months after they closed to halt the spread of coronavirus.

    Final-year students now have just two weeks to prepare for their exams.

    Face masks, social distancing and hand-washing facilities are mandatory within all schools, the education ministry says.

    There are indications the government may be using this reopening to test-run the system for possibly opening all schools in Nigeria.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Shoprite to pull out of Nigeria

    South Africa retail giant, Shoprite has announced the commencement of a formal process to discontinue its operation in Nigeria.

    Shoprite Holdings Limited made the announcement on Monday in its operational and voluntary trading update for the year ended on June 28, 2020.

    The multi-national retail group, which announced a 6.4 per cent increase (R156.9billion) in total sales of merchandise for the outgoing year despite the challenges posed by the COVID-19 pandemic, announced that it took the decision to discontinue its Nigeria operation “following approaches from various potential investors, and in line with our re-evaluation of the group’s operating model in Nigeria.”

    “The Board has decided to initiate a formal process to consider the potential sale of all, or a majority stake, in Retail Supermarkets Nigeria Limited, a subsidiary of Shoprite International Limited. As such, Retail Supermarkets Nigeria Limited may be classified as a discontinued operation when Shoprite reports its results for the year. Any further updates will be provided to the market at the appropriate time,” the report stated.

    While the company’s total sales of merchandise may be on the rise, it is struggling outside South Africa. According to the report, the non-South Africa supermarket operation of the company, excluding Nigeria, contributed a paltry 11.6 per cent to the group sales. Its non-South Africa sales also declined by 1.4 per cent in the year under review. The company blamed this decline on the lockdown announced in several African countries due to the coronavirus pandemic.

    “Second half constant currency sales growth of 6.3% was significantly impacted by lockdown regulations across the 14 African countries in which we trade. Lockdown restrictions pertaining to store closures; social distancing; transport restrictions; the movement of people; trading hours; workforce limitations and trade in alcohol impacted various regions to differing degrees at different times.”

    Shoprite opened its first store in Nigeria in December 2005 and now has a total of 26 stores across eight states in the country including Federal Capital Territory, Abuja. The company also claim to have employed more than 2,000 people in Nigeria, of which 99 per cent of them are Nigerians.

    Shoprite also claimed to have built more relationships with over 300 Nigeria suppliers, small businesses and farmers.

    Source: allafrica.com

  • Nigeria urged to review abortion laws

    Experts have called for a review of the restrictive abortion laws in Nigeria to protect women’s sexual and reproductive health and rights.

    They made the call at the weekend during a training for journalists on the Global Gag Rule and women’s sexual and reproductive health and rights in Keffi, Nasarawa state.

    The Global Gag Rule also known as the Mexico City Policy is a United States Government policy that blocks US federal funding for non-governmental organisation that provide abortion counselling or referrals, advocate to decriminalize abortion or expand abortion services.

    Lucky Palmer, Country Director, Ipas Nigeria, said Nigeria was still using an abortion law formed in 1861, stressing that “it is time for us to amend the law to reflect the modern realities and protect our women who are currently dying from unsafe abortions.”

    Palmer said lack of information about contraceptives, abortion services by women and girls as well as the law restricting access to abortion except to save the lives of women had led many women to patronize quacks, and utilize unsafe approaches that have led to needless loss of lives.

    He said it was important for Nigerian civil society organisations to note that the fact that they were receiving USAID grant, did not prevent them from supporting survivors of gender-based violence in case they needed access to safe abortion, referral or counselling.

    Dr Abiola Akiyode-Afolabi, Executive Director, Women Advocates Research and Documentation Centre, said the Global Gag Rule led to unsafe abortions and a major cause of maternal mortality killing tens of thousands of women every year.

    She said those who created the law did not factor its impact on the rest of the world, adding that it affected family planning, HIV services, maternal and child health and even malaria services.

    Source: allafrica.com

  • Nigeria: Terrorist attack leaves 4 dead in Maiduguri on Eid al-Adha’s eve

    Maiduguri was hit yet another time by terror on Thursday night.

    Jihadi terrorists attacked the town of Maiduguri in the North East of Nigeria, as locals were preparing celebrations of the Muslim festival Eid al-Aldha.

    According to emergency services, 3 rockets were shot from the city’s outskirts, leaving 4 dead and 3 wounded. So far the attack has not been claimed.

    “It is certainly the handiwork of the ‘terrorists’ who are bent on disrupting Eid festivities tomorrow,” said Ibrahim Liman, an official with one of the civilian militias which back up the military in the fight against the jihadis.

    Borno State Capital Maiduguri is no stranger to attacks from jihadis.

    No longer than 24 hours before this last attack, the convoy of Borno State’s Governor Babagana Zulum, was hit by machine gun fire. The Governor wasn’t hit, but the firefight left 15 injured.

    The North East region is home of Boko Haram, where the group was created in 2009. The organisation has since spread to neighbouring Cameroon and Chad. In 2016, fighters of the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) faction split from the main Boko Haram group, and have since become a dominant force. in the region.

    Over the past decade, violence instigated by the group has caused killed over 36,000 people and displaced more than 2 million.

    Source: africanews.com

  • Coronavirus: Nigeria records 462 new infections

    Nigeria on Friday confirmed 462 new cases of COVID-19.

    This brings the number of Coronavirus infections in Africa’s biggest economy to 43,151, according to the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC).

    The new figure is slightly lower than the 481 cases reported on Thursday.

    The agency made this known via its verified Twitter handle @NCDCgov on Friday. It said only one fatality was recorded from the virus in the past 24 hours pushing the total number of confirmed deaths from the virus to 879.

    According to the NCDC, out of a total 43,151 infected persons so far, 19,565 have recovered and have been discharged after treatment in the country’s 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    The new cases, according to the NCDC, were found in the following 16 states:

    FCT-93 Lagos-78 Plateau-64 Kaduna-54 Oyo-47 Ondo-32 Adamawa-23 Bauchi-19 Rivers-9 Ogun-9 Delta-9 Edo-7 Kano-6 Enugu-6 Nasarawa-5 Osun-1

    About a third of Nigeria’s cases (over 15,000) were recorded in Lagos, the country’s commercial capital. The second most affected place in Nigeria is Abuja, the capital city with 3,803 cases.

    Nigeria is Africa’s third most impacted behind only South Africa and Egypt. The federal and state governments are working to increase testing as authorities stress that cases definitely far exceed the current tally with less than 300,000 people tested so far.

    Nigeria has tested almost 280,000 of its 200 million population.

    The country continues to record hundreds of new COVID-19 cases daily but has also had to reopen its economy as authorities seek to balance health needs with the economic needs of the populace. Schools are being reopened gradually, domestic flights have resumed, while markets and religious centres are also gradually being reopened.

    Source: allafrica.com

  • Nigeria: Terrorist attack leaves 4 dead in Maiduguri on Eid al-Adha’s eve

    Maiduguri was hit yet another time by terror on Thursday night.

    Jihadi terrorists attacked the town of Maiduguri in the North East of Nigeria, as locals were preparing celebrations of the Muslim festival Eid al-Aldha.

    According to emergency services, 3 rockets were shot from the city’s outskirts, leaving 4 dead and 3 wounded. So far the attack has not been claimed.

    “It is certainly the handiwork of the ‘terrorists’ who are bent on disrupting Eid festivities tomorrow,” said Ibrahim Liman, an official with one of the civilian militias which back up the military in the fight against the jihadis.

    Borno State Capital Maiduguri is no stranger to attacks from jihadis.

    No longer than 24 hours before this last attack, the convoy of Borno State’s Governor Babagana Zulum, was hit by machine gun fire. The Governor wasn’t hit, but the firefight left 15 injured.

    The North East region is home of Boko Haram, where the group was created in 2009. The organisation has since spread to neighbouring Cameroon and Chad. In 2016, fighters of the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) faction split from the main Boko Haram group, and have since become a dominant force. in the region.

    Over the past decade, violence instigated by the group has caused killed over 36,000 people and displaced more than 2 million.

    Source: africanews.com

  • AKO Caine Prize: Irenosen Okojie wins with story of Grace Jones impersonator

    Nigerian-British author Irenosen Okojie has been announced as the winner of the 2020 AKO Caine Prize for African Writing for her short story about a Grace Jones impersonator with a dark secret.

    Judges praised the “radical” and “risky” work of fiction, which deals with questions of trauma and identity as well as pleasure and escape.

    “What I want people to take away from it is not just the pain of tragedy, it’s how we reconfigure ourselves past it,” Okojie told the BBC.

    The London-based writer says her £10,000 ($13,000) winnings will buy her more time to travel, to write and maybe even a garden shed as “a little enclave” to work in.

    “I’m predominantly passionate about writing about black women, and for me it doesn’t just mean black women from Nigeria,” Okojie says. “I think blackness is fascinating, especially cross-culturally.”

    Wearing a mask
    The story, which is called Grace Jones, follows Sidra, a young Martinican woman in London who is wracked with guilt after her whole family dies in a fire that destroys their flat.

    In later life she finds a sense of release working as a celebrity impersonator.

    Sidra is “hiding under” this mask of Jamaican singer, model and actress Grace Jones, says the author. “But under the character [she] herself is committing dreadful acts.”

    This leads to a deliberate blurring between the protagonist and her assumed identity.

    “Human beings are so fascinating – we cope with things in all sorts of weird and interesting ways. So I wanted to capture a character like that,” the author told BBC Focus on Africa radio.

    “The psychology of it, you know the idea of hiding behind another character and, you know, how do we cope with the traumas that affect us.”

    Foreshadowing real life
    Some have commented on the uncanny similarities between the fire that engulfs Sidra’s childhood home and the 2017 Grenfell tower fire in London, in which dozens of people were killed.

    “I’d written it just before Grenfell. It was almost this idea of foreshadowing – sometimes you have an idea that speaks so strongly to you and you don’t necessarily know why, and then something happens in the real world that echoes that idea,” Okojie told the BBC.

    The reality of life under a pandemic is also something the author has channelled into more recent work.

    Though there have been times during lockdown when she has felt overwhelmed and “done no writing at all”, she sees it as the the role of writers to make sense of the world.

    “Sometimes you just want to sit back and process it. We’re artists – and if we don’t respond in the moment, we will certainly respond post it.”

    Source: BBC

  • Nigeria doubles fares as train services resume

    Nigeria Railway Corporation has announced the resumption of services on its Abuja-Kaduna route, four months since it was halted due to the coronavirus pandemic.

    Transport minister Rotimi Amaechi said fares have been increased because trains will carry fewer passengers.

    He said the increment was “nothing compared to the risk of paying ransom to kidnappers” on the Abuja-Kaduna road.

    Fares for the economy class will rise to about 3,000 Naira ($8, £6), while first class could cost 6,000 Naira for the 187km (116 miles) trip, according to local media reports.

    The services will resume on Wednesday with social distancing enforced to prevent the spread of the virus.

    The railway company has shared a video of the new sitting arrangement

    Source: bbc.com

  • UN ‘horrified’ by killing of five aid workers in Nigeria

    The United Nations has said it is “utterly shocked and horrified” by the killing of five aid workers by unknown armed groups in northeastern Nigeria.

    The statement late on Wednesday by Edward Kallon, UN humanitarian coordinator in Nigeria, followed the release of a video showing the murder of the humanitarian workers who were kidnapped last month in Borno state.

    The Nigerian government identified the victims as employees of the country’s State Emergency Management Agency as well as international aid organisations Action Against Hunger (ACF), International Rescue Committee and Rich International.

    “They were committed humanitarians who devoted their lives to helping vulnerable people and communities in an area heavily affected by violence,” Kallon said.

    The aid workers were abducted while travelling on a main route connecting the town of Monguno with Borno state capital, Maiduguri.

    Kallon said he was troubled by the number of illegal checkpoints set up by non-state armed groups along the region’s main supply routes.

    “These checkpoints disrupt the delivery of life-saving assistance and heighten the risks for civilians of being abducted, killed or injured, with aid workers increasingly being singled out.”

    Northeast Nigeria has been ravaged by a decade-long armed campaign led by the armed group Boko Haram that has killed tens of thousands of people and displaced about two million from their homes.

    Last year, fighters from a Boko Haram splinter group, the Islamic State West Africa Province, abducted a group of six humanitarian workers – including a female ACF employee – in the region.

    Five of the hostages were later executed and the ACF worker remains in captivity.

    Aid groups provide a vital lifeline for some 7.9 million people in the region who the UN says are in need of urgent assistance.

    Source: aljazeera.com

  • Nigeria’s fish shortage looms as farmers battle survival

    Just like other forms of farming, aqua or fish farming urgently requires the attention of stakeholders to save it from total collapse.

    Our agric editor who has been monitoring the sub-sector reports that the outbreak of the COVID-19 has further threatened fish farming activities across the country.

    The fear in the sector now is that unless something urgent is done to salvage the situation, it will be difficult for the farmers to meet the huge local demand in the country.

    According to World-Fish Nigeria Strategy 2018-2022, Nigeria produces one million metric tonnes of fish annually, leaving a deficit of about 800,000 metric tonnes; which is imported.

    According to World-Fish Nigeria, fishery is a major economic sector, estimated to employ over 8.6 million people directly and a further 19.6 million indirectly; 70 per cent of whom are women.

    However, stakeholders believe the sector is under great threat if the authority fails to take urgent action.

    Challenges

    A Lagos-based aquaculturist, Mr. Amah Eteobong, identified capital intensiveness, increasing fish feed cost and poor expertise as some of the challenges facing aqua farming in the country; even before the outbreak of COVID-19.

    Mr. Eteobong, a marine farming entrepreneur, said the bottlenecks faced in the aquaculture system had hindered the growth of the sector in the country.

    He said, “The challenges currently plaguing aquaculture farming in the country include set-up capital, cost of fish feed and poor expertise.

    “Aquaculture is a capital-intensive venture; even if a farmer wants to start small, he is still going to put in a lot of money to start up a fish farm.

    “One major challenge in going into aquaculture business is the bottlenecks we face when it comes to accessing grants and loans. For instance, before a farmer is able to set up a farm and raise 1,000 fishes comfortably, you need to have nothing less than N1m to N1.5m. The farmer needs to invest extensively on the fixed assets on the farm like ponds and boreholes, hence the cost-intensiveness to start up.”

    The farmer also spoke on the increasing cost of fish feed which in turn does not allow local fish farmers to get returns on their investments.

    According to him, 50 per cent of farmers’ expenses are allocated to procuring fish feed and the cost of fuel in running boreholes.

    He said, “The problem is that the prices of fish feed keep increasing, but the price of cultured fish remains constant thereby, causing the farmers to run short. The cost of feed production is on the increase. Maize, soya beans, groundnut cake and fish meal have all increased.”

    He further said lack of expertise in aquaculture was another major challenge and therefore called for more people to learn aquaculture farming.

    He explained that, “We need people to be trained in aquaculture because climate change actually affects cultured fish. So fishermen are not catching enough fish from our seas or rivers, hence the fall back on cultured fish.

    “We have a lot of novices in aquaculture today. Some people get into the business just because a motivational speaker said they could put a fish into a pond and harvest a river after five months.”

    Therefore, the aquaculturist told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos that, “People need to be trained in aquaculture farming because according to experts, in a few years, one-third of protein consumed by humans will be gotten from farmed fish.

    Also, the National Fish Association of Nigeria (NFAN), at the weekend, called on the Federal Government to come to the aid of its members who were in distress due to losses incurred as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.

    NFAN said its members suffered huge losses during the first two months of the lockdown and were yet to recover from it.

    The President of NFAN, Dr. Gabriel Ogunsanya, said the industry required strong government commitment, particularly in terms of policy direction and funding, for fish importation to be banned in 2022 as assured by the Federal Government.

    Dr. Ogunsanya said, “As we carry on with the task to meet national fish demand threshold in two years, our farmers require palliatives and economic stimulus packages to remain in business as extended to others.

    “We, therefore, pray the Federal Government to consider declaring a state of emergency and implementation of a structured plan to revamp the struggling fishery and aquaculture sub-sector. We also urge the Ministries of Agriculture and Rural Development and Industry, Trade and Investment to bring attention of government, MDAs and funding bodies to the plight of hard working fish farmers and industry operators.”

    In a statement, the Publicity Secretary of NFAN, Mr. Chidike Ukoh, said, “We have serious concerns that in the midst of inadequate fish supply, production challenges and personal sacrifices, our farmers are currently facing unbelievable fish glut. They are equally facing abysmally low pricing and inability to harvest and evacuate ponds and other fish-holding water bodies.

    “These challenges are, therefore, preventing restocking to break the production cycle.”

    What must be done?

    Mr. Toyin Afolabi, another marine farming entrepreneur, urged the government to develop and implement a strategic plan for the sector which would allow interested fish farmers to access soft bank loans.

    Mr. Afolabi said, “Our extension service department should be strengthened so that more extension officers are recruited to train and guide intending fish farmers before venturing into the business. Effort should be made to encourage local production of maize, soya beans and other additives for the production of fish feeds, because as it is now, there is no way fish farmers can make it with the present high cost of feeds.”

    Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Sabo Nanono, had said plans were underway to stop fish importation in 2022.

    He said time had come for Nigeria to look inward to tap into the huge potentials in fisheries and aquaculture for local consumption and export.

     

    Source: allafrica.com

  • Nigeria receives US$890 million from Global Fund to tackle HIV, Malaria

    The federal government has received $890 million as grants from the Global Fund to fight HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria.

    The Minister of Health, Dr. Osagie Ehanire, said yesterday that the fund would be used to implement programmes aimed at eradicating the diseases over a three year period, from 2021 to 2023.

    Ehanire said that the Global Fund also approved a grant of US$21.9 million to support Nigeria’s COVID-19 response.

    He said: “The purpose of this press briefing today is to announce the receipt of a grant, made to the Federal Republic of Nigeria by The Global Fund to fight HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria, amounting to $890 million, over an implementation period of three years, beginning from 2021 to 2023.”

    The minister noted that the grant, which is the largest given to any country in this funding cycle, is sequel to a successful funding request made by the Nigeria Country Coordination Mechanism (CCM).

    The Global Fund for the fight against HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (GF) is an innovative international financing mechanism that was established by the United Nations in 2002, with its headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland.

    The fund is made up of global partnership of governments, civil societies and private donors and established for the purpose of attracting, leveraging and investing resources to fund public health interventions that would accelerate the eradication of HIV, tuberculosis and malaria in affected high burden countries to further goals of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

    The Global Fund has committed the sum of USD$2.586 billion since 2002 to operations in Nigeria, which are split into four program areas: HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria and the Resilient Systems Strengthening for Health, (RSSH).

    Nigeria has accessed $2.436 billion, which represented 94 percent of the committed amount.

    The minister said the grant would complement the investment of the government of Nigeria and of other Development Partners in HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria programmes, including the Resilient and Sustainable System for Health, over the period 2021-2023.

    He said the approval of the grant came following the review of the proposal that the CCM Nigeria submitted on March 23, 2020, which was adjudged to be technically sound and strategically focused by the independent Technical Review Panel of the Global Fund.

    Ehanire said: “This grant will support access to malaria prevention, diagnostic and treatment services in 13 states. The States include Adamawa, Delta, Gombe, Jigawa, Kaduna, Kano, Katsina, Kwara, Niger, Ogun, Osun, Taraba and Yobe States.

    “Access to HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis services across all the 36 states and the FCT; Improvements in our health system, particularly, provision of infrastructure for warehousing and distribution of health commodities, laboratory services, data management and capacity building for our healthcare providers, including support to community system.”

    The minister said the implementation of the grant would specially target the poor, the most vulnerable and disadvantaged, and those at higher risk of the target diseases, to promote equity in access to health care services.

    He further said: “With regard to Nigeria’s COVID-19 response effort, The Global Fund gave approval to repurpose the sum of US$6.2 million out of our on-going grants for HIV, tuberculosis and malaria to support the implementation of our initial Incident Action Plan (IAP) for COVID-19.

    Source: allafrica.com

  • Nigeria may lift ban on international flights before October – Aviation Minister

    The ban on international flights may be lifted before October, the Minister of Aviation, Hadi Sirika, has said.

    Although the minister denied claims that international flights were slated to resume October, Sirika added that the Nigerian Airspace Management Authority has issued a Notice to Airmen to this effect.

    He gave the hint today while refuting reports earlier circulated that .

    Sirika, who noted that international flights would restart in the country despite the ban placed on Nigeria by Europe and the United Arab Emirates, added that the date for the resumption would be announced after consultation with necessary stakeholders including the Ministries of Health and Foreign Affairs and the Presidential Task Force on Covid-19.

    Commenting on his verified Twitter handle on Tuesday, he wrote, “International Flight resumption date is not October. NAMA just issued a routine 90-day Notices to Airmen. In liaison with Health, Foreign Affairs, and PTF COVID-19, we will announce the agreed date, regardless of the ban by Europe, UAE, etc. May be earlier than October.”

    Source: mynigeria.com

  • Over 20 Nigerian soldiers killed by bandits in northern Katsina State

    At least 23 soldiers have been killed in an ambush in northwestern Nigeria.

    Armed militants opened fire on the soldiers as they walked through a forested part of the Jibia district in Katsina State, security sources said on Sunday.

    So far, the bodies of 23 soldiers have been accounted for while some are still missing. The toll could be higher as a search for missing soldiers is under way.

    Bandits involved in cattle rustling and kidnappings have stepped up their attacks on security forces with experts warning that they could be forging ties with hardline groups in the region.

    Katsina has seen a spate of attacks by armed militants. According to reports, since 2011 over 8,000 people have been killed, hundred of communities destroyed and over 200,000 people displaced.

    Source: africanews.com

  • Nigeria: Development Commission MD faints during corruption probe

    Professor Daniel Pondei, the acting managing director of the Niger Delta Development Commission, NDDC, fainted during a House of Representatives probe into the activities of the agency.

    He was immediately revived and ferried out of the venue where the investigation which is chaired by House Committee on Niger Delta, Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo held.

    Pondei was fielding questions from a panel on the budget of the NDCC between February to date under this watch when he slumped. N81 billion is alleged to have been misappropriated by the agency.

    The investigation was suspended for 15 minutes to enable the lawmakers to determine whether to continue or have it postponed.

    Watch the video below:

    Watch the video below:

    Source: mynigeria.com

  • Nigerian official collapses at corruption hearing

    A Nigerian government official answering questions on mismanagement of funds collapsed on live TV while facing lawmakers.

    Daniel Pondei, who is the acting managing director of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), was being questioned by a committee in the House of Representatives when he slumped forward in his chair.

    Source: BBC  

  • Nigeria records 643 new cases of coronavirus

    Nigeria, on Wednesday, recorded another 643 new confirmed cases of COVID-19 with six deaths bringing the total number to 34,259.

    According to the daily situation report of the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control, NCDC, no new state has reported a case in the last 24 hours.

    The NCDC updates read: “Till date, 34259 cases have been confirmed, 13999 cases have been discharged and 760 deaths have been recorded in 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory”

    “The 643 new COVID-19 cases are reported from 19 states of Lagos 230, Oyo 69 FCT 51, Edo 43, Osun 35, Rivers 30, Ebonyi 30, Kaduna 28, Ogun 27, Ondo 23, Plateau 20 Benue 17, Enugu 16 Imo 10, Delta 6, Kano 4 Nasarawa 2, Kebbi- 1 and Ekiti 1.”

    Source: vanguardngr.com

  • Two Nigerian kidnappers grabbed

    The Anti-Human Trafficking Unit (AHTU) of the Ghana Police Service (GPS) in the Central Region has arrested two Nigerians at Gomoa Pomadze on suspicion of kidnapping and human trafficking.

    According to police, the suspects, Paul Okafor and Duru Favour, are said to be engaged in kidnapping and trafficking of young Nigerians to perpetrate cybercrime and other criminal activities in the country.

    DSP Irene Oppong, Regional Police Public Relations Officer and Head of the AHTU, said 39 victims, all Nigerians in their twenties, were rescued in the process.

    She said on Sunday, July 12, at about 11:00 a.m., the Winneba District Police Command, acting on information, dispatched a police patrol team to Gomoa Pomadze where they met a 21-year-old Nigerian, Charles Ikorohk, in the company of three Ghanaians.

    She said Ikorohk told the police that he arrived in the country from Nigeria on Wednesday, January 22, to visit a friend but could not trace him.

    He said he got stranded in Accra where he met one Uzo at the Kwame Nkrumah Interchange area, who later introduced him to one Arisuezo, also a Nigerian.

    She said Arisuezo brought Ikorohk to Winneba and kept him in a walled house together with other young men from Nigerian.

    According to DSP Oppong, Arisuezo prevented his captives from leaving the compound and subjected them to all forms of inhuman treatment and also engaged them in cybercrime activities.

    She said Charles managed to escape on Sunday, July 12 about 8:00 a.m. when he was tasked to weed the compound of the house while their supervisors went out with one of the victims to a mobile money vendor to withdraw some cash fraudulently received.

    She said the police, after receiving a tip-off, quickly went to the house and rescued the 39 Nigerians and arrested the suspects.

    Thirty-six laptops were also retrieved from the house. DSP Oppong said the owner of the house was arrested and given a police enquiry bail, while investigations were ongoing to arrest Michael Arisuezo and his other accomplices.

    Source: GNA

  • Nigeria’s first female combat helicopter pilot dies

    Nigeria’s first ever female combat helicopter pilot has died from injuries sustained in a road accident, the Nigerian Air Force has announced.

    Flying Officer Tolulope Arotile died on Tuesday. The road accident occurred at an air force base in Kaduna state, although the date it happened was not specified.

    She was commissioned to the air force in September 2017.

    “During her short but impactful stay in the service, late Arotile contributed significantly to the efforts to rid the North Central States of armed bandits and other criminal elements by flying several combat missions under Operation GAMA AIKI in Minna, Niger State,” Nigerian Air Force tweeted.

    Source: bbc.com

  • One dies, six rescued as three-storey building collapses in Lagos, Nigeria

    One person was confirmed dead while six others were rescued alive, weekend, underneath the rubbles of a three-storey building which collapsed on Freeman Street, Lagos Island, Lagos State.

    The incident occurred at about 4.05 am as the building was said to have suffered total collapse leaving its occupants trapped as they were fast asleep due.

    The immediate neighbours of the victims were said to have alerted emergency responders about the incident but on arrival, the first victim to be recovered was a male child who could not withstand the situation and was pronounced dead.

    However, six other occupants of the building were rescued alive and medical treatment was administered on them by Lagos State Ambulance Services (LASSMBUS), while the casualty was deposited at a morgue.

    As at the time of filing this report, search and rescue operation was ongoing at the scene, thanks to Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA), Lagos State Ministry of Physical Planning, Nigeria Police and other relevant agencies.

    LASEMA Director-General Dr Olufemi Oke-Osanyintolu has confirmed the incident saying investigations will be conducted to unravel the cause of the incident.

    Source: vanguardngr.com

  • Nigeria’s imported fuel more toxic than black market supply

    Fuel imported into Nigeria said to be extremely toxic and of lower quality than what is produced on the black market, with serious health consequences the results of a laboratory analysis show.

    That dirty fuel, as in many African countries, is of lower quality than those from illegal refineries in the Niger Delta.

    This is the finding of the international resource monitoring group, Stakeholder Democracy Network; that oil stolen from rudimentary refineries is less polluting than the highly toxic diesel and gasoline that Europe exports to Nigeria.

    Source: africanews.com

  • CEPS intercepts 24 Nigerians at Dabala

    Customs Excise and Preventive Service (CEPS), Division of the Ghana Revenue Authority in the early hours of Tuesday arrested 24 Nigerians for allegedly entering the country through unapproved routes.

    The immigrants, that included; five females admitted entering the jurisdiction and were Nigerians but refused to give reasons for their entry.

    Chief Superintendent, Mr Shradrach Azangweo, South Tongu District Commander of the Ghana Immigration Service told the Ghana News Agency that the culprits would be moved to Aflao to assist in further investigations.

    “None of them has been able to give a good reason for crossing into the country having breached our immigration laws and we intend to send them to Aflao for further investigations,” he said.

    He said the immigrants had their temperatures taken with initial investigations and were likely to be quarantined at Aflao.

    Mr Azangweo said the Immigration service would not allow them to continue their journey and they would all be repatriated after their COVID-19 status so that they do not endanger the lives of other people.

    He said the culprits were assisted by ‘Okada’ riders and public transport drivers to the point of arrest.

    He warned the drivers and Okada riders of serious repercussions for them, as they continued to facilitate the movement of the West African nationals into the country saying “you will endanger your life and other members of the public for possible infection of the virus.

    “We will advise the public to support in this fight since the COVID-19 cases keep increasing, we ask everyone to be vigilant and report any suspicious characters of foreign extraction to us because we cannot do this alone.” he said.

    Source: GNA

  • Nigeria set date for resumption of domestic flights

    Nigeria has said that domestic flights will resume on July 8, 2020 but has not yet set a date for international air travel to restart.

    They had been stopped as part of efforts to curb the spread of coronavirus.

    Passengers have been urged to follow the guidelines given in airports to prevent Covid-19 infections.

    The government lifted an interstate road travel ban on Wednesday.

    Nigeria has recorded more than 26,000 cases of the virus.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Nigeria records 561 fresh coronavirus cases as total infections hit 25,694

    Nigeria has recorded 561 new cases of COVID-19, bringing the total number of infections in the country to 25,694.

    The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) made the disclosure on Tuesday through its official Twitter handle.

    NCDC said that the 561 new confirmed cases were from 19 states, with 17 deaths as at Tuesday.

    The health agency said that no new state reported a case in the last 24 hours. The NCDC said that Lagos reported the highest number of cases with 200 new cases and Edo was second with 119 new infections.

    Others were Kaduna-52, FCT-52, Niger-32, Ogun-19, Ondo-16, Imo-14, Plateau-11, Abia-8, Oyo-8, Bayelsa-7, Katsina-6, Kano-5, Bauchi-3, Osun-3, Kebbi-3, Borno-2 and Jigawa-1.

    The NCDC said that till date, 25,694 cases had been confirmed; 15, 358 were active cases; 9,746 cases treated and discharged; 134, 257 samples collected and 590 deaths recorded in 35 states and the Federal Capital Territory.

    Meanwhile, the NCDC said that three out of every five Nigerians who died from COVID-19 were more than 50 years old. It urged Nigerians to take precautions to protect their older relatives by wearing a face mask in public, practising hand and respiratory hygiene and maintaining a physical distance of two metres from others.

    “Ensure that if you do share a toilet and bathroom with others, they are cleaned after each use. Where possible, consider drawing up a roster for bathing, and you use the bathroom first at the start of each day.

    “Encourage frequent handwashing with soap and water by all other household members and disinfect frequently touched surfaces e. g door handles, light switches, TV remotes etc throughout the day.

    “Keep shared spaces well ventilated and minimise the time spent in shared enclosed spaces such as kitchens, bathrooms and sitting areas. “Where possible, sleep in a different bed and endeavour to maintain physical distancing even within the household.

    “Do not share towels and beddings or use commonly shared household items including cutlery, drinking cups etc,” the body stated. NCDC also said it does not own quarantine or treatment centres.

    The body said that this was the responsibility of the state governments or relevant teaching hospitals.

    The NCDC said it only provides guidance on set-up of standard isolation centres, national case management guidelines and training for health workers across the country.

    Source: vanguardngr.com

  • This Nigerian comic is getting a lot of love on TikTok with the ‘Don’t Leave Me’ challenge

    Celebrities like basketball star Giannis Antetokounmpo are using puns and making bad jokes on camera in the latest social media craze — the “Don’t Leave Me” challenge.

    The challenge, trending on social media, involves users playing around with puns on camera.

    Antetokounmpo, who plays for the Milwaukee Bucks of the National Basketball Association (NBA), is seen on the Chinese video-sharing social network TikTok using dry humour to join the challenge.

    In the video, the basketball player is asked by his camera handler to say something to the audience. He responds with a joke about Hannah Montana, a fictional music star in a Disney Channel series.

    “If you take Hannah Montana, and you put her in France, what do you have? French Montana,” he laughed in the video. French Montana is a Moroccan-American rapper.

    The challenge involving a lot of wordplay is the brainchild of Nigerian comic sensation Josh Alfred.

    In March, Alfred, also known as “Josh2funny,” posted a skit on Instagram, TikTok, and Twitter consisting of a series of puns.

    The 29-year-old’s skit went viral in June, with hundreds of social media users mimicking his play on words and employing dry humour in their uploads.

    Alfred told CNN that he has been making similar skits since 2018 but decided to do the now-viral one differently with added humour.

    In the skit, he is seen standing on leaves from a tree, and when asked by his friend and camera operator, Bello Khabir, to say something to the camera, he joked that he couldn’t because he was “on leave.”

    His friend’s chants of “Don’t leave me” as Alfred walked away at the end of the video is what gave the challenge its name.

    “I decided to add some more fun to my skits with puns. I didn’t want people to get tired so I tried to be dynamic and added stronger words,” he told CNN.

    “Someone later did a similar video like mine and that’s how it started trending,” he added.

    The funny play on words has been watched more than 500,000 times on Twitter and recreated multiple times by TikTok users from the United States, Japan, and Europe.

    Alfred says his skits are purposely designed with a play on words to astonish viewers, “I just want people to think, to wonder how I’m able to come up with things like that,” he said.

    Nigerian actors like Olu Jacobs and Kanayo O. Kanayo have also participated in the challenge. And, according to Alfred, videos relating to the challenge have received more than two billion views on TikTok so far.

    As a way to keep the challenge going, he says in July, he will release music around it.

    “‘Don’t leave me’ music is coming out in July. I put a lot of wordplay in the song and I hope people like it,” he said.

    Source: cnn.com

  • Nigeria condemns attack on embassy in Indonesia

    Nigeria’s government has condemned Thursday’s attack on its embassy in Indonesia’s capital, Jakarta, by its citizens living in the country.

    The Nigerian nationals stormed the embassy and vandalised vehicles in the compound. They accused embassy officials of not offering help when they are allegedly harassed by Indonesian immigration officials.

    They said a Nigerian national reportedly fell from a storey building while escaping from immigration officials.

    Foreign Affairs Minister Geoffrey Onyeama said those who destroyed property in the embassy’s premises would be tracked down and punished.

    “Absolutely deplorable and disgraceful criminal behaviour by Nigerian hooligans,” he said.

    A video of Nigerians at the embassy was shared online:

    Source: bbc.com

  • Gunmen kill 17-year-old barber in Nsukka community

    Confusion, apprehension has engulfed Owerre EzeOrba community in Udenu local government area of Enugu State over the killing of a 17-year-old barber of the community that shares an adjourning boundary with the University of Nigeria, Nsukka main campus.

    The 17-year-old barber simply identified as Kelechi Onah was shot on the throat after allegedly barbing one of his assailants.

    Investigations revealed that the deceased after barbing one his assailants who alerted his accomplices that stormed the salon with two motorcycles pulled a gun and shot the barber on the throat region and fled leaving their victim in a pool of his own blood.

    Vanguard gathered that residents of the community nearby the salon who were alerted by the gunshot, ran to the salon shop only to see Kelechi in a pool of his blood struggling between life and death.

    A reliable source close to Vanguard who would not want his name in print disclosed that the incident occurred around 4 pm when he noticed four young men patrolling the area with two motorcycles, alleging that as soon as he heard the gunshot and rushed out to the scene, the barber was almost lifeless.

    Chinekwu Onah, cousin of the deceased barber said, “I was outside playing draft game with others, few meters away from the scene of the incident and heard gunshot, all of us rushed to know what was wrong only to see my cousin Kelechi already covered by his own blood, I shouted and rushed to alert the chairman of the neighbourhood watch in my area Belushi Agbo who arrived at the scene and all of us joined hands in searching for the hoodlums ” he said.

    “On intelligent information from residents of the area who saw when the hoodlums fled, we were able to apprehend one of the suspected assailants of the barber, who on apprehension had a fresh haircut with bloodstains on his shirt.”

    According to Chinekwu, ” I touched his head and some particles of haircut stuck my hand as a result of its freshness, we apprehended him and handed him over to the police at Udenu Police Area Command for further interrogation over the alleged killing of the barber” he noted.

    Contacted for comments over the incident, Enugu State police public relations officer, PPRO Daniel Ndukwe ASP confirmed the incident at Owerre EzeOrba community, saying that one of the suspects has been arrested and handed over to the criminal investigation department, CID of the state police command for further investigation while manhunt efforts have been intensified to track down the other fleeing suspects.

     

    Source: vanguardngr.com

  • Ten killed in Nigeria’s Zamfara state

    At least 10 people have been killed by cattle rustlers in the north-western Nigerian state of Zamfara.

    Villagers said dozens of armed men arrived on motorbikes, shooting dead members of a vigilante group set up to guard the area.

    They made off with several cattle.

    Communities in the north-west live in constant fear of attack.

    Many have set up vigilante groups, saying the security forces are incapable of protecting them.

    Disclaimer : “Opinions expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the author(s) and do not in any way reflect those of backend.theindependentghana.com. Our outfit will hereby not be liable for any inaccuracies contained in this article.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Man runs amok in Nigeria kills his 2 children, injures father

    A 34-year old man, Mr Ifeanyi Apusiobi from Ogbunike in Oyi Local Government Area of Anambra State reportedly ran amok yesterday and killed his two children with a pestle and used the same object to inflict injuries on his 72 year old father.

    Anambra State Police Public Relations Officer, PPRO, Mr Haruna Mohammed, who confirmed the incident, said Apusiobi had been arrested by the police pending further investigation.

    According to him, corpses of the children, aged seven and five years, had been deposited at Iyienu Hospital mortuary, Ogidi for autopsy, while his father is receiving treatment at a private hospital.

    Haruna said: “At about 1 am on June 21, 2020, police operatives attached to Ogbunike Police Station arrested one Ifeanyi Apusiobi aged 34years of Azu Ogbunike in Oyi LGA of Anambra State.

    “The suspect allegedly ran amok in a circumstance yet to be ascertained and attacked two of his biological children namely, Chinecherem Apusiobi aged seven years and Obinna Apusiobi aged five years, with a wooden pestle on their heads while they were sleeping.

    “He equally used the same object and injured his father, Dominic Apusiobi, aged 72years on the head.

    “Police detectives visited the scene and rushed the victims to the hospital for medical attention where the two children were certified dead by a medical doctor, while his aged father is responding to treatment”

    The PPRO said the police recovered the pestle as an exhibit, adding that the case had been transferred to the State Criminal Investigation Department, CID, Awka for discreet investigation.

    Source: vanguardngr.com