Sunday, 10 May 2020

22-Years-Old Man Stabbed To Death Over Face Mask

What would have been mere enforcement of wearing of face mask in Anambra State on Monday turned into a tragedy as 22-year-old Cletus Chisom was stabbed to death by Mr. Ibuchi Nwoju, a security man.

According to a witness, the security guard was monitoring the use of face mask at the Coca Cola Market in Onitsha, Anambra State, when the ugly incident occurred.

Ibuchi Nwoju, from Asa village in Abia State, but resides in Onitsha Anambra State, allegedly killed the deceased following an argument over non wearing of face mask.

An eye witness, Chika Obiora, said the sister of the deceased was at the market with her mother to purchase some items when the security man stopped them from entering the market for failure to put on face mask.

According to the witness, the mother later bought a face mask for her daughter after the security man insisted she would only be allowed into the market with a face mask.

According to him, trouble started after the girl reportedly rushed home and returned with her elder brother, who confronted the security man for daring to stop his mother from going into the market.

The witness said it was during their argument that the security man drew out a knife and stabbed the deceased in the chest, and he was rushed to hospital where he was confirmed dead.

Also, another eye witness, Mrs. Nkechi Udeozo, said the incident was like a dream as everybody was asking the security man to allow the woman to go inside the market and make her purchases.

“In fact, we were all watching the argument, hoping that naturally the security man will allow the woman to go or the woman would just buy one of the local face masks and wear before she goes inside. Suddenly, the young lady with the woman rushed home and came back with her elder brother who tried to force the security man to allow the woman in,” she said.

According to her, what would have been a simple thing was taken too seriously and it claimed a life.

She said that if the girl had not gone to bring her brother, maybe the security man would have later allowed the woman or she would have just bought a N100 face mask and moved inside the market.

Confirming the incident, the Anambra State Police Public Relations Officer, SP Haruna Mohammed, said at about 8:45 am on Monday, the police operatives from Okpoko Division in Onitsha arrested a private security guard attached to Coca-Cola Market Onitsha, one Ibuchi Nwoju, aged 26 years for murder of Mr Cletus Chisom.

According to him, the Anambra State Commissioner of Police, Mr John Abang, has ordered for the immediate transfer of the case to the State CID Awka for investigation.


‪Re: Open letter to Fayemi - How Negligence, Lack of PPE and Oxygen killed my Mum at EKSUTH ‬

‪Re: Open letter to Fayemi - How Negligence, Lack of PPE and Oxygen killed my Mum at EKSUTH ‬

‪Dear John, ‬

‪Your open letter on the above stated was brought to my attention. First, I commiserate with the entire Oluwadero family on the demise of your mum, Mrs Oluwadero Deborah Bolanle at the Ekiti State University Teaching Hospital. Ado-Ekiti recently. Irrespective of the circumstances, the death of a parent is a difficult life event for most people and I pray for strength and fortitude for you all at this trying period of mama’s transition.‬

‪It is however a testimonial to your good upbringing that in spite of your personal pain, you are concerned about the systemic issues in Nigeria’s health sector as detailed in your open treatise. ‬

‪Before I try to address those concerns, let me let you know that I ordered an immediate investigation into the circumstances surrounding your mother’s death at the Ekiti State Teaching Hospital EKSUTH and I am convinced that contrary to the report you got, there were no deliberate acts of negligence in the management process. From her case file, she was attended to by 11:05am. That was within 35 minutes of her leaving home to present at the Emergency Room, including travel time, going by your timeline. ‬

‪My findings also showed that all patients coming to EKSUTH and other hospitals in the state, whether at the outpatient clinics or any of the admission points, are all checked for any symptoms to indicate their current status before admission. This standard, non-invasive procedure is not an indication that the patient is considered a COVID-19 case but rather to determine the level of self protection the team should adopt.‬

‪I can also confirm that there was no shortage of oxygen or PPEs before, during or after the sad incident at the ER and there was proof that all clinics were operational, even during the lockdown, as our health workers were exempted from the restrictions as essential workers. From the case evaluation, the continued and unmonitored glucose administration before her hospitalization appeared to have complicated the management. May her soul rest in perfect peace. ‬

‪As a health worker yourself, I believe  you have first hand experience of the personal risk your colleagues face daily in a pandemic situation hence the need to be extra cautious when admitting a new patient with symptoms similar to COVID-19. This may account for the perceived delays though still within standard stipulated response timing in an ER.‬

‪One cannot however fail to agree with your observations on the weakness of our healthcare sector as a nation in general and as a sub-national in particular. While the issues you identified are valid, the systemic re-engineering needed to change this narrative require enormous resources. ‬
‪For instance, the cost of maintaining an independent ambulatory service you recommended is too prohibitive for the average Nigerian. One ambulance visit in a developed country like the United States could cost as much as $3,000; that is over  N1million naira at today’s exchange rate! How many Ekiti Citizens can afford to pay N1million for an ambulance in an emergency? ‬

‪That is why many state governments have tried to procure ambulances for their healthcare centers. In Ekiti State, all our Secondary and Tertiary Healthcare centers have at least one functional ambulance for patient emergencies. While this may be inadequate, until we are able to adequately fund healthcare, probably through a health insurance scheme, such interventions would remain our only way to mitigate the circumstances.‬

‪As a nation, we have to master a difficult balancing act between dwindling resources and an increasing population, against a background of decades of low investment in infrastructure. Private sector investment may therefore be our most sustainable option to fund an efficient healthcare system and we are already exploring this at the level of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum, which I currently chair. ‬

‪On our part in Ekiti State, in spite of our excruciating financial challenges, my administration has always prioritized the safety, protection and well being of our citizens. EKSUTH alone has a recurrent grant of N2.6bn in the 2020 budget and that is separate from the Healthcare capital budget of almost N3bn. Health and Human Services sector is 12% of this year’s budget while we are targeting an increase to at least 18 percent of the total budget in subsequent years.‬

‪Since the beginning of the current COVID-19 pandemic, we have procured large quantities of PPEs, surgical masks, clinical gloves, Infrared thermometers, automatic dispensers of hand sanitizer, and Veronica buckets for hand washing, all of which are readily available at the various service points despite the very high cost of procuring these items.‬

‪Government will continue to ensure that the hospitals and all our health care centres work towards an improved and responsive health system, which will be of great benefit to the generality of the people. I particularly find your observation on the need to increase our efforts on prevention of non-communicable diseases as a policy shift worth considering and the State Government would be glad to work with your proposed family foundation and other non-governmental organizations in this area as it should reduce the pressure on our healthcare system. ‬

‪Let me assure you that all the points raised in the letter are well noted as it is within your inalienable right as a citizen to point out certain developments you consider unsavoury, with a view to ensuring the situation is redressed.‬

‪In closing, it gladdened my heart to read of your footprints in the global developmental economy from the humble beginnings of our sponsorship to attend the first event in South Africa less than a decade ago. Yours is a justification of my confidence in the ability of the Ekiti Youth which we are working very hard to unlock through our investment in the Knowledge Economy. 
‪Thank you for making a difference in your generation and making Ekiti State proud. Indeed, with young people like you, we are truly the Land of Honor. ‬

‪Again, please accept my condolences and my best regards to your family. ‬

‪Signed ‬

‪Dr. Kayode Fayemi‬
‪Governor.‬

Nigeria records 239 new COVID-19 cases, total rises to 4,151

The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) says it has recorded 239 new cases of the coronavirus (COVID-19) in the country.


In a tweet on Saturday night, the NCDC said that the new cases had taken the total number of infections in the country to 4,151. The 239 new cases are reported from 15 states.

It said: “239 new cases of #COVID19; 97-Lagos, 44-Bauchi, 29-Kano, 19-Katsina, 17-Borno, 7-FCT, 6-Kwara, 5-Oyo, 3-Kaduna, 3-Sokoto, 2-Adamawa, 2-Kebbi, 2-Plateau, 2-Ogun, 1-Ekiti.”

“On the 9th of May 2020, 239 new confirmed cases and 11 deaths were recorded in Nigeria. No new state has reported a case in the last 24 hours.

“Till date, 4151 cases have been confirmed, 745 cases have been discharged and 128 deaths have been recorded in 34 states and the Federal Capital Territory.”

Saturday, 9 May 2020

3.1m households will benefit from school feeding scheme during lockdown ―FG

The federal government has said a total of 3.1 million households in Nigeria will benefit from its Homegrown School Feeding programme during the lockdown period.

The revelation came as 520 people living with disabilities in Abuja village, Saturday, benefited from its ongoing palliatives following the lockdown declared to control the spread of coronavirus in the country.

Minister of Humanitarian Affairs, Disaster Management and Social Development, Sadiya Umar Farouq, speaking at the Disabled Colony, a settlement in Abuja for the PLWD and located at Karmajiji Village, along Musa Yar’Adua Expressway, said the government was going through state governments to reach the beneficiaries.

Handing over the palliatives to the 520 beneficiaries, the minister explained that the government’s gesture was aimed at cushioning the hardship they were facing as a result of the lockdown.

She said the government was also reaching out with palliatives to other vulnerable groups across the country through their respective state governments.

She said her ministry had convened a technical working group that would come up with actionable plans and strategies how to relate with PLWD, promising that “we will take the appropriate action as soon as the technical working group submits its report.” (Vanguard Newspaper)

COVID-19: FG To Probe Kogi, Cross River Zero Case Claims

The Minister of Health, Dr Osagie Ehanire, said on Friday at the daily rundown of the Presidential Task Force on COVID-19 in Abuja that the Federal Government would bulletin its technical teams to validate the claims by Kogi and Cross River states that they did not have COVID-19 cases.

He said the initial team conclude to Kogi had a failed mission because of “some differences” with the state authorities but that a fresh engagement would be carried out.

Ehanire said, “Kogi State is one of the two states that have said that they do not have COVID-19 patients. They seem to be sure of this. So, the agreement we have had with them after discussion with the governor is that we shall send a team in just to validate that fact and engage the authorities.

“Of course, we do that for national records and to be able to report to the world the situation in our country. We tried to send a team into Kogi on Thursday but there were some differences there. So, we need to engage the state governor again and state some conditions within which the ministry and NCDC can complete their jobs. We are going to send a team to Cross River next week also.”

The minister in his address also noted that a technical team deployed to Kano State by the ministry had trained 100 ambulance drivers and patient handlers as part of efforts in tackling the ravaging COVID-19 pandemic.

The minister said the government was also making efforts to build the “prowess of critical care doctors and nurses to make use of ventilators and other appliances being allocated to rigorous care hospitals nationwide.”

He added, “A ministerial technical team comprising of various specialists was set up and deployed to Katsina State to assess the situation and report on needed support. Also, calm has been reinstate in the Gombe State isolation centres.”

The minister also said government’s team was in Jigawa State on a fact-finding mission as the state resist with repatriated Almajirai, “of whom many have tested positive for COVID-19.”

Ehanire said, “On Friday morning, we deployed a multi-sectoral technical team on a fact-finding mission to Jigawa State at the request of the state governor. The challenges in Jigawa revolve around repatriated Almajiris, of whom many have tested positive for COVID-19.

“The team includes doctors and nurses, who will support the state Ministry of Health in setting up and authorize their isolation and treatment centres.”

Contractors are making progress on State Projects- Fayemi

Despite the lockdown order in Ekiti State as part of measures to contain Covid-19, construction works are ongoing at the projects initiated by the State Government as contractors are working hard to meet set deadlines.

The Governor of Ekiti State, Dr Kayode Fayemi  stated this on Friday when he inspected some of the on going projects in several parts of the State.

Governor  Fayemi, who inspected projects at the College of Agriculture and Technology, Isan Ekiti, Ikupeju- Ire- Ilumoba and Ado- Iyin road projects as well as the ongoing water project, described construction work as essential duty that must be allowed during the lockdown in order for the contractors to meet up with the deadline given to them.

He added that the contractors working on the state projects were working within the precinct of safety and security.

The Governor said: "we allowed them to work because for us construction is an essential duty. In order to meet the deadline they have been given, of course within the limit of safety and security."

Dr Fayemi who was accompanied on the inspection by the Commissioner for works and Transport, Mr Sola Adebayo, Special Adviser on Road infrastructure and Transport, Mr Sunday Adunmo, Senior Special Assistant on Public buildings and infrastructure, Arch Wale Ajayi and other government functionaries, also inspected  on going drainage work at Ilupeju-Ire-Iluomoba road where asphalt laying has commenced.
 
Expressing satisfaction with the pace and quality of work done in the places visited, Dr Fayemi said; "As you can see for yourself, they (the Contractors) were making progress on the projects we visited.

The Governor said infrastructure  development of the State would not be impeded by the war against the coronavirus.