Sunday, 31 August 2014

Like ISIS, like Boko Haram

Last week’s seizure of Gwoza community in Borno State and its subsequent designation as a caliphate, a development reminiscent of the activity of the dreaded ISIS in the Middle East is widely seen by many as a confirmation of the claim that the deadly Boko Haram insurgent group in Nigeria is drawing inspiration largely from international terrorist organizations particularly ISIS.

Boko Haram leader, Abubakar Shekau had in a video released last month declared his support for the leader of the Islamic State militants, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who in late June declared himself “the caliph” and “leader of Muslims everywhere. The pronouncement followed the declaration by the group of an area straddling Iraq and Syria a caliphate.

Like ISIS, Boko Haram is also believed to be in control of other areas near Gwoza in southern Borno. The group is also said to have foothold in some other areas in northern Borno and at least one town in neighbouring Yobe State. The development is fuelling the fear that the insurgents are closer than ever to achieving their goal of carving out a strict Islamic state across northern Nigeria, especially with the seeming ineptitude of the Nigerian Army to rise to the challenge.

Yet there are more reasons to believe that Boko Haram is fashioning its operation after the Middle East Jihadist group. Women, according to reports, are becoming convenient targets for sexual exploitation and violence by the group. Reports by women’s right organizations claimed that thirteen cases of rape by ISIS militants were recorded between June 9 and June 12, of which four resulted in suicide of the women.

 This disturbing development is emblematic of what many women in the troubled northern states in Nigeria face on daily basis in the hands of Boko Haram insurgents.

Reports in the recent months about the ordeals of women captives in Boko Haram’s den reeked out agonies, pains and trauma of many of the women who were sexually assaulted and exploited by members of the insurgent group.

Giving an account of her traumatic experience in the hand of the insurgents, Mrs. Rachael Oyeyinka who was taken captive for three months by the Boko Haram alongside her husband said the insurgents took turns to rape the women in their captivity. “I cannot count the number of times but every day, some of the women got pregnant and were given concoction to flush it out.

So many of the women who resisted were killed. If you are very pretty, they will initially reserve you for their leader. But as soon as he gets a replacement, he would push you out for general use,” Oyeyinka said in a recent interview.
In the Middle East, ISIS has in the recent weeks shown that it is increasingly becoming a ruthless and effective killing machine going by a recently released video where ISIS fighters were shown executing some people lying face down. A similar scene was reported to have been captured in a video released by Boko Haram insurgents last week.

The obvious similarity in the mode of operation of the two groups may have heightened the fear that Boko Haram may have a link with the deadly Middle East terrorists. Stephen Davis, Australian hostage negotiator voiced this much in a recent interview where he was reportedly quoted to have warned the Nigerian government that Boko Haram might establish links with ISIS if the activity of the sect is not effectively checked.

Davis who opined that going by the trend in Somalia, Southern Sudan and Egypt where militant groups team up, Boko Haram, according to him, might toe a similar path.
As a way of checkmating activity of the group, Davis suggested that government intensify efforts aimed at blocking the group’s source of funding and tracking down its sponsors. Identifying sources of funding for terrorist organisations as well as their sponsors have, however, proved to be one of the most difficult tasks in the war against terrorism.

More worrisome is the realization that while there has been concerted efforts in some quarters to unmask the faces behind global terrorism, such efforts are often whittled down by political wrangling as opposition political parties often trade blames with the issue in their war of attrition. Nigeria is no exception. However, with the suspicion that Boko Haram could establish a link with ISIS not a few observers are of the opinion that the sect’s brutality may receive additional impetus.

Recently, a report on Daily Bhaskar, an online news medium alleged that the rise of ISIS, is being ‘shaped and controlled’ out of Langley, Virginia and other CIA facilities in the States with the objective to spread chaos in the world’s second largest oil state Iraq.

The accusation which is credited to a Canadian think tank on international affairs and security, The Centre Global Research, questions the manner in which ISIS took control of the oil-rich city of Mosul, ‘without firing a single shot.’ Eyewitnesses’ accounts were said to have revealed Iraqi government soldiers abandoning their gears and ammunition ‘without any resistance’ to ISIS fighters.

Pictures of Iraqi government soldiers leaving behind bulletproof jackets and guns were reportedly splattered across the internet when ISIS entered Mosul.
CGR was quoted to have said, “A point worth mentioning is that much of the present Iraqi government has been armed with the US assistance.”

The report, it was gathered, mentions a certain General Ibrahim al-Douri as the mastermind of the recent ISIS military success in Iraq. Douri is said to be on the watch list of America since 2003 and his former Baath Party head and Saddam Hussein successor. He is believed to be the current head of the Iraqi rebel group Army of the Men of the Nagshbandi order.

The report further alleges that Douri had well-placed contacts in Washington, which enabled his return to Iraq, even after being present on US’ most wanted list.
The report, among myriads of other claims raised to support it’s allegation also quoted US State Department official, Andrew Doran claiming that several ISIS fighters hold US passports.

It concludes that lack of US action to halt the advancing ISIS as a further proof that the group’s advances were deliberately allowed if not instigated by Western countries.
In Nigeria, the politicization of Boko Haram insurgency has confined effort to unmask the forces behind the activity of the deadly sect into the realm of speculation. Will the hoods on the faces of the members of the insurgent group be ever removed? Only time will tell.

Source: Sun News

Like ISIS, like Boko Haram

Last week’s seizure of Gwoza community in Borno State and its subsequent designation as a caliphate, a development reminiscent of the activity of the dreaded ISIS in the Middle East is widely seen by many as a confirmation of the claim that the deadly Boko Haram insurgent group in Nigeria is drawing inspiration largely from international terrorist organizations particularly ISIS.

Boko Haram leader, Abubakar Shekau had in a video released last month declared his support for the leader of the Islamic State militants, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who in late June declared himself “the caliph” and “leader of Muslims everywhere. The pronouncement followed the declaration by the group of an area straddling Iraq and Syria a caliphate.

Like ISIS, Boko Haram is also believed to be in control of other areas near Gwoza in southern Borno. The group is also said to have foothold in some other areas in northern Borno and at least one town in neighbouring Yobe State. The development is fuelling the fear that the insurgents are closer than ever to achieving their goal of carving out a strict Islamic state across northern Nigeria, especially with the seeming ineptitude of the Nigerian Army to rise to the challenge.

Yet there are more reasons to believe that Boko Haram is fashioning its operation after the Middle East Jihadist group. Women, according to reports, are becoming convenient targets for sexual exploitation and violence by the group. Reports by women’s right organizations claimed that thirteen cases of rape by ISIS militants were recorded between June 9 and June 12, of which four resulted in suicide of the women.

 This disturbing development is emblematic of what many women in the troubled northern states in Nigeria face on daily basis in the hands of Boko Haram insurgents.

Ebola: US to conduct vaccine trial in Nigeria

Minister-of-Health-Professor-Onyebuchi-Chukwu
The United States health officials have said they are considering a trial test of the recently launched Ebola vaccine in Nigeria, as they also prepare to test the vaccine in The Gambia and Mali in mid-September.
The US National Institutes of Health announced in a statement on Thursday that it would launch the safety trial on the vaccine developed by the agency’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and GlaxoSmithKline.

The testing is expected to start on Tuesday with 20 volunteers to see if the virus is safe for use on humans.
The statement said in part, “The US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention has initiated discussions with Ministry of Health officials in Nigeria about the prospects for conducting a Phase 1 safety study of the vaccine among healthy adults in that country. The pace of human safety testing for experimental Ebola vaccines has been expedited in response to the ongoing Ebola virus outbreak in West Africa.”

Testing of the vaccine will be at NIH’s campus and involve a mixture that uses both the current Zaire strain and another strain, Sudan. In the second week of September, NIH and a British team will test that vaccine on 100 volunteers in the United Kingdom.

“Initial human testing of an investigational vaccine to prevent Ebola virus disease will begin next week by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health.
“The early-stage trial will begin initial human testing of a vaccine co-developed by NIAID and GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) and will evaluate the experimental vaccine’s safety and ability to generate an immune system response in healthy adults. Testing will take place at the NIH Clinical Center in Bethesda, Maryland,” the NIH noted.

The study is the first of several Phase 1 clinical trials that will examine the investigational NIAID/GSK Ebola vaccine and an experimental Ebola vaccine developed by the Public Health Agency of Canada.
According to the statement, these trials are conducted in healthy adults who are not infected with Ebola virus to determine if the vaccine is safe and induces an adequate immune response.
“There is an urgent need for a protective Ebola vaccine, and it is important to establish that a vaccine is safe and spurs the immune system to react in a way necessary to protect against infection,” the NIAID Director, Anthony Fauci, said.

Source: Punch

Ebola: US to conduct vaccine trial in Nigeria

Minister-of-Health-Professor-Onyebuchi-Chukwu
The United States health officials have said they are considering a trial test of the recently launched Ebola vaccine in Nigeria, as they also prepare to test the vaccine in The Gambia and Mali in mid-September.
The US National Institutes of Health announced in a statement on Thursday that it would launch the safety trial on the vaccine developed by the agency’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and GlaxoSmithKline.

The testing is expected to start on Tuesday with 20 volunteers to see if the virus is safe for use on humans.
The statement said in part, “The US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention has initiated discussions with Ministry of Health officials in Nigeria about the prospects for conducting a Phase 1 safety study of the vaccine among healthy adults in that country. The pace of human safety testing for experimental Ebola vaccines has been expedited in response to the ongoing Ebola virus outbreak in West Africa.”

Testing of the vaccine will be at NIH’s campus and involve a mixture that uses both the current Zaire strain and another strain, Sudan. In the second week of September, NIH and a British team will test that vaccine on 100 volunteers in the United Kingdom.

“Initial human testing of an investigational vaccine to prevent Ebola virus disease will begin next week by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health.

2015: 4m in S/South endorse Jonathan

The Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF),Chief Pius Anyim said yesterday that four million people in the six Southsouth states have endorsed  President Goodluck Jonathan for re-election next year.
According to Anyim, the people want the President to formally declare his retention to return for a second term, immediately.
The SGF  who stood in for the President at the third edition of the Transformation Ambassadors of Nigeria’s (TAN’s) rally in Port Harcourt  to drum up  support for Jonathan ahead of his declaration, said the Southsouth endorsement is the  strongest so far .
He gave the breakdown as follows: Rivers state – 1, 000,100; Akwa Ibom – 800, 000; Delta-750,000;Cross River-520,000; Bayelsa -516,000; and Edo-490,000.
He said: “It (number of persons who endorsed Jonathan) is a great record that has been broken. Something significant has happened. You have proven that President Jonathan has a base. His zone is solidly behind him.
“In my zone (South-East), we have been beaten by the people of the South-South zone. The registration is ongoing. If I return to my zone, the figure will double. South-South people have spoken. Other Nigerians will follow. I will take the message to Mr. President. At the appropriate time, Nigerians will hear from him.”
At the rally were Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan of Delta State; former governor of Rivers State, Dr. Peter Odili; Minister of State for Education, Chief Nyesom Wike; Culture and Tourism Minister Edem Duke; Works Minister Mike Onolememen and Sports Minister Tammy Danagogo as well as Federal and State legislators from the zone.
Odili  said  that Rivers state remains solidly behind  Jonathan and asked the people to ensure “their son and great in-law” returns to office next year.
The ex-Rivers governor (Odili) also lauded President Jonathan for the convocation of Uduaghan declared that the President “must” contest in 2015, having achieved much for the country.
Danagogo described President Jonathan as “Original Port Harcourt Boy,” saying: “For us in Rivers State, we will be thanking you for what you are doing. The President is one of us. Rivers people are so happy. We have never had it so good.
“Mr. President should declare for second term. We will vote massively for him. Not just because Mr. President is our own. He is an excellent product. Let us continue to support him. You are witnesses to his transformation agenda. Nigeria still needs President Jonathan’s brilliant performance to solve our national challenges.”
Wike, in his remarks, thanked TAN for bringing the South-South rally to Port Harcourt, stressing that if the non-governmental organisation had done otherwise, many people would have concluded that Rivers state was not for President Jonathan, especially with the defection of Governor Rotimi Amaechi to the All Progressives Congress (APC).
The minister of state for education said: “Rivers State is totally for President Jonathan. Everybody from the South-South is supporting President Jonathan. He is the first Nigerian President in 30 years to tackle the Almajiri menace, by giving the children basic education. The Federal Polytechnic of Oil and Gas in Bonny, Rivers State was also established by President Jonathan.”
Source: The Nation

2015: 4m in S/South endorse Jonathan

The Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF),Chief Pius Anyim said yesterday that four million people in the six Southsouth states have endorsed  President Goodluck Jonathan for re-election next year.
According to Anyim, the people want the President to formally declare his retention to return for a second term, immediately.
The SGF  who stood in for the President at the third edition of the Transformation Ambassadors of Nigeria’s (TAN’s) rally in Port Harcourt  to drum up  support for Jonathan ahead of his declaration, said the Southsouth endorsement is the  strongest so far .
He gave the breakdown as follows: Rivers state – 1, 000,100; Akwa Ibom – 800, 000; Delta-750,000;Cross River-520,000; Bayelsa -516,000; and Edo-490,000.
He said: “It (number of persons who endorsed Jonathan) is a great record that has been broken. Something significant has happened. You have proven that President Jonathan has a base. His zone is solidly behind him.
“In my zone (South-East), we have been beaten by the people of the South-South zone. The registration is ongoing. If I return to my zone, the figure will double. South-South people have spoken. Other Nigerians will follow. I will take the message to Mr. President. At the appropriate time, Nigerians will hear from him.”

Saturday, 30 August 2014

How Nigerians risk death by putting their hopes in roadside ‘pharmacists’

His days are mostly spent scraping and hammering nails into woods at the backyard of his grand-parents’ Agege residence, which serves as his workshop. Bayo Adeleke is a carpenter with tall dreams, but he prefers to be called a furniture maker.

He usually closes by 7pm, just about the time a peddler few streets away is out for the evening’s business. On most evenings, Mama Kudus, as she is popularly called in the area, sells to Adeleke drug combinations that usually include Indocid, paracetamol and ibuprofen tablets. A dosage of Lexotan is sometimes included to give Adeleke a deep night rest. Adeleke often boasts about the potency of Mama Kudus’ ‘prescriptions’. When he checks on Mama Kudus for his evening drugs, he tells her to ‘mix’ drugs for him.

“After work, I am always tired but when I take her drugs, I feel strong again. Her drugs work for me and that is why I go to her every day after work. My job is energy-sapping and by the end of the day, I am always tired but luckily for me, Mama Kudus is there to take care of me,” he said confidently.

Peddlers displaying drugs from roadside stalls, especially in the evening, are a common sight in Nigeria. Mobile drugs salespersons are also familiar faces in commercial buses in major cities, often with slick narrations of how their drugs have worked for many people and now in high demand.

Findings by Saturday PUNCH show that Mama Kudus is a secondary school certificate holder who has had some experience working as a salesgirl in a chemist.

Like Adeleke, the hopes of many residents in the area lie on Mama Kudus’ small shoulders and she appear to be carrying the weight around with some measures of confidence.

“I have experience because I have worked in a chemist before so I have been doing this for many years,” she boasted.

However, the President, Pharmaceutical Society of Nigeria, Olumide Akintayo, has described Mama Kudus’ activities as criminal. He said the Counterfeit and Fake Drugs Act prohibits the sale of drugs in certain places in Nigeria.

“So Section 2 (1) goes ahead to define in more specific terms drug sales. Drug sales are prohibited in drug markets, ferries, boats, buses, every form of transportation and including drug hawking. These drugs are meant to save lives but they become potent poisons the moment they are not handled properly,” he said.


The Vice-President of the Commonwealth Medical Association and former President of the Nigerian Medical Association, Dr. Osahon Enabulele, also described the trend as dangerous.

He said the regular consumption of Indocid without proper doctor’s prescription would have health implications for Adeleke.

“Imagine that people still consume Indocid with all the complications that we can think of. A lot of gastric ulcer has resulted from the consumption of such products and can result in all sorts of problems. It is a drug that is supposed to be used under strict guidelines and under prescriptions by the doctor,” he said.

But both Akintayo and Enabulele might as well be talking to themselves as findings show that many Nigerians find the peddlers more accessible than doctors and also find their drugs cheaper.

Poor access to health care

For instance, Tajudeen Ajadi, a mechanic in Egbeda area of Lagos stubbornly maintained that he would continue to patronise peddlers. He described visits to the hospital as a waste of his “precious time”.

Ajadi also recalled his last visit to a General Hospital, where he saw a mother and her young boy, who had convulsion, were turned back because of inadequate bed space.

“I felt sorry for the boy and the mother; that is the kind of thing people who put all their hopes in hospitals face. I always have to sit down for a long time whenever I visit the General Hospital close to my house and still have to spend more money.

“You know, I don’t need to collect any registration card before buying drugs from the drug sellers. How much time and money do I have that I will be wasting them in hospitals when I can get the drugs around?” Ajadi asked as he walked away from a peddler he had just consulted for drugs for back pain.

So our correspondent approached the same peddler, feigning to have developed tooth ache. The peddler, who did not disclose her name, showed concern akin to the one often displayed by doctors. She asked a few questions and then selected three drugs which she gave to our correspondent with instructions to take two tablets each morning, noon and night.

The drugs were: Kaka Forte (Paracetamol 500mg, Caffeine 30mg); Propon (Aspirin 300mg) and Mixanal (Paracetamol 500mg, Guaranine 30mg).

An interaction with an openly shocked Secretary-General of the Lagos State Medicine Dealers Association, Olua Uwandu, showed that the combination could be dangerous to health.

LSMDA has over 10, 000 members spread across Lagos State, who are licensed by the Pharmacists Council of Nigeria to sell patent medicine and ‘over the counter drugs’.

Uwandu, who has over two decades of experience as a patent medicine vendor, explained that a patient should not take more than one of the combined drugs given to our correspondent.

“Propon is aspirin, Kaka Forte contains Paracetamol 500mg while the third one also contains an equal amount of Paracetamol. You can only take one of this three with antibiotics. It is wrong for anyone to give a patient all three; it could be dangerous,” he said.

After our correspondent’s experience with the peddler, he decided to try other ones to find out what range of services they offer to their customers.

From a peddler, who identified herself as Funmi, in Agege, Lagos, our correspondent asked for contraceptive.

Funmi regretted that she had just sold her last Gynaecosid tablets, but said she had Postinor, which she described as “also potent”. She said she had Postinor 1 and 2 and went ahead to explain that one was to be taken by a woman before sex and the other immediately after sex.

Eventually, she realised that the Postinor 1 she had left was not enough to complete a dosage.

When our correspondent asked what happened to the missing tablets, she sheepishly said she had used them.

“But take Postinor 2 and tell your woman to use it immediately after sex. It works very well. If you still want to buy Postinor 1, you can come back tomorrow, I would have had it in stock by then,” she said.

Another peddler that our correspondent asked about Propanol and Lexotan said she had them. The drugs are controlled medicines that are supposed to be sold at Pharmacies to patients with prescription notes from doctors.

Meanwhile, investigation shows that those engaging in illegal sales of drugs are predominantly women who have worked as auxiliary nurses or salesgirls in chemists.

Comparatively, the situation in places like Europe, North America and even some African countries, the situation is different from what obtains in Nigeria.

For instance, a Nigerian who shared his recent experience in South Africa, Mr. Bunmi Aderibigbe, described drug control in the country as “very organised”.

Aderibigbe, who suffered food poisoning during a visit to South Africa, said he could not get antibiotics to buy on the counter like he used to do in Nigeria.

“I tried to go to a hospital there but it was too expensive. I had to call my friends in Nigeria who gave me the contact of a Nigerian doctor working in South Africa. I almost died, but the doctor came to my hotel room to administer the drugs I needed,” he said.

Experts speak

Akintayo said that peddlers also kill the potency of drugs by exposing them to direct sun rays, adding that the action could be deadly for consumers of such drugs.

He said, “Drugs for instance should normally be stored in a temperature range depending on what type of drug it is. It is supposed to be stored at between 8-15 degrees centigrade if you want to maintain the potency before it expires. Otherwise, if a drug is labelled that it will expire in three years, if it is not well stored and you are exposing it to direct rays of sunlight – like 30 degrees centigrade, it can have accelerated degeneration.

“If you are not storing at the right temperature. If it is an antibiotics for instance, you risk resistance strains. The microbes become resistant. You will also probably have under doses or less active drugs. Then there is the risk of death because there is a particular drug that if allowed to degenerate, the active metabolite becomes toxic. So if you administer such products when they expire, then you risk killing that patient- outright mortality.”

Speaking further, Akintayo blamed the increasing activities of peddlers on the proliferation of open drug markets in the country and a lack of political will.

He traced the increase back to the 1990s and the early 2000 when the country experienced an unprecedented expansion of open drug markets.

He said, “The peddlers sell everything under the sun. Nigeria is a country where everybody has access to medicine because of the huge and vast network in what we call open drug markets. Ours is a country where all the state capitals and major cities have thriving drug markets.

“There has been an increase in the number of open drug markets. As at 1988, we had a very firm regulation on sub-standard drugs in Nigeria with Decree 21 of 1988. At that time, there were only four major drug markets in Nigeria – one in Idumota in Lagos State; one in Onitsha, Anambra; one in Aba, Abia and one in Sabongari, Kano.

“From four, we now have in every state capital, so you can imagine the quantum leap from four. It shows that there is a ready incentive to embrace this criminality. Examples are the drug markets in Enugu State, Agbeni in Ibadan, Oyo State; Ganboru in Maiduguri; we have in Kaduna and so on. And weak regulations also contributed to it. There is also a lack of political goodwill on the part of the government.

“As far back as Year 2000, the erstwhile 20 local government areas of Lagos State had 112,000 illegal (drug) premises, when at this time, we had barely 800 registered premises in the state. You know what that transcends to in the ratio of registered to unregistered. And that is the prevalent situation in Nigeria.”

Enabulele called on the Federal Government to implement the “recently formulated drug distribution guidelines”.

He said, “The only professionals legally licensed to sell drugs which patients can procure are the registered pharmacists and the only people licensed to prescribe are medical doctors and dentists as well as vet doctors. But over the years, this has been largely abused.”

Enabulele also attributed the increase in the incidence of renal failure in the country to illegal sales of drugs and their patronage. He said there were no proofs that the drugs being peddled on the streets were authenticated and researched.

He said, “There is a rising incidence of renal problems in terms of chronic renal failure in the country and even liver problems. A lot of these are happening partly because of the abuse of drugs. The unregulated use of drugs, which exposes citizens to all sorts of toxic products.

“Some of the drugs we have in the open drug markets now and among the hawkers on the streets have not been researched and authenticated and so most of them are not licensed. People are exposed to unlicensed drugs which may be very inimical to their health and which may of course result in more fatal cases than if they had procured the drugs upon doctors’ prescription.”

He, however, called for more primary health care centres and an expanded health insurance programme in the country to improve citizens’ access to public health care.

He said, “Government should ensure that in each locality, there are some levels of health posts that people can access and ensure that the logistics needed are provided in such facilities to make them useful to the people who want to access them.

“They should also strengthen the linkages between the primary, secondary and the tertiary health system so that access will be more available to the people. Also, government needs to facilitate the expansion of the community-based health insurance scheme so that low income people can have some levels of health package extended to them. They will know they have a ready source they can access irrespective of availability of funds.”

Meanwhile, the public relations officer of the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control, Mrs. Christy Obiazikwor, promised that the agency would not relent its efforts to rid the streets of illegal drug sellers.

She appealed to Nigerians to stop patronising drug peddlers, saying their patronage contributes to keeping them in business.

She said, “We still carry out routine exercises every time and we will not relent. You are able to see them in the night because we have been arresting them, so many of them have now come out in the night. In spite of that, we still go out at night to raid and arrest them.

“You will hardly find them in buses now because we arrest them. But it is also important to let the public know the dangers inherent in patronising these people. We will not rest till we get rid of them, so anywhere you still sight them, notify us and our team will go there to get them arrested.”

Going by the health professionals’ assessment and the dangers inherent in patronising peddlers, Adeleke’s dream of owning one of Lagos’ biggest carpentry workshops may already be in jeopardy.

Source: Punch

How Nigerians risk death by putting their hopes in roadside ‘pharmacists’

His days are mostly spent scraping and hammering nails into woods at the backyard of his grand-parents’ Agege residence, which serves as his workshop. Bayo Adeleke is a carpenter with tall dreams, but he prefers to be called a furniture maker.

He usually closes by 7pm, just about the time a peddler few streets away is out for the evening’s business. On most evenings, Mama Kudus, as she is popularly called in the area, sells to Adeleke drug combinations that usually include Indocid, paracetamol and ibuprofen tablets. A dosage of Lexotan is sometimes included to give Adeleke a deep night rest. Adeleke often boasts about the potency of Mama Kudus’ ‘prescriptions’. When he checks on Mama Kudus for his evening drugs, he tells her to ‘mix’ drugs for him.

“After work, I am always tired but when I take her drugs, I feel strong again. Her drugs work for me and that is why I go to her every day after work. My job is energy-sapping and by the end of the day, I am always tired but luckily for me, Mama Kudus is there to take care of me,” he said confidently.

Peddlers displaying drugs from roadside stalls, especially in the evening, are a common sight in Nigeria. Mobile drugs salespersons are also familiar faces in commercial buses in major cities, often with slick narrations of how their drugs have worked for many people and now in high demand.

Findings by Saturday PUNCH show that Mama Kudus is a secondary school certificate holder who has had some experience working as a salesgirl in a chemist.

Like Adeleke, the hopes of many residents in the area lie on Mama Kudus’ small shoulders and she appear to be carrying the weight around with some measures of confidence.

“I have experience because I have worked in a chemist before so I have been doing this for many years,” she boasted.

However, the President, Pharmaceutical Society of Nigeria, Olumide Akintayo, has described Mama Kudus’ activities as criminal. He said the Counterfeit and Fake Drugs Act prohibits the sale of drugs in certain places in Nigeria.

“So Section 2 (1) goes ahead to define in more specific terms drug sales. Drug sales are prohibited in drug markets, ferries, boats, buses, every form of transportation and including drug hawking. These drugs are meant to save lives but they become potent poisons the moment they are not handled properly,” he said.


Boko Haram: Prove to us you are not a lame duck – Bishop Wale Oke dares Jonathan

Renowned cleric and founder of The Sword of the Spirit Ministries, Bishop Francis Wale Oke has called on President Goodluck Jonathan to prove his critics wrong if he’s not truly a weak and incompetent president in the fight against insurgents.

He urged him to let Nigerians known that they are not been led by weakling and lame duck by dealing decisively with the Islamic sect, Boko Haram for declaring a caliphate in Gwoza, Borno State.

The Apostle said it was shocking that since the insurgents captured Gwoza, the FG had not taken any decisive action in dealing with the situation and to make matters worse, about 480 soldiers escaped into another country.
The cleric said this ahead of the Holy Ghost convention, which begins on Sunday.
He stressed that the officers should not be blamed at all for their actions but the blame be put at the doorsteps of the authorities, adding that the incident was a big shame to the military and the nation.
“That some Islamic insurgents would be beheading Christians, take over 300 girls hostage, take over our churches and desecrate the sanctuary of God is totally unacceptable. You begin to ask the question, do we have a government in place? The government should show to us that it is capable of handling the situation”, he said.
As part of the church’s effort and men of God towards stemming the tide of insurgency in the country, he noted that Pastor Enoch Adeboye, Bishop David Oyedepo, Matthew Ashimolowo and other men of God would be at the convention to pray for the country so that God could smile on the country again.
He said, “The activities of the sect have shown that church is the primary target and as one of the leaders in Christianity, we say no. federal government should protest all its citizens especially the Christians who are being beheaded on daily basis by the hoodlums.
“If we, Christians are not posing any threat to the nation, then we deserve to be protected. For more than 48 hours, they had declared a caliphate and seized a portion of the entity called Nigeria and we are yet to hear any swift reaction from the government. This is very amazing,” he added.
sOURCE: DAILYPOST

Boko Haram: Prove to us you are not a lame duck – Bishop Wale Oke dares Jonathan

Renowned cleric and founder of The Sword of the Spirit Ministries, Bishop Francis Wale Oke has called on President Goodluck Jonathan to prove his critics wrong if he’s not truly a weak and incompetent president in the fight against insurgents.

He urged him to let Nigerians known that they are not been led by weakling and lame duck by dealing decisively with the Islamic sect, Boko Haram for declaring a caliphate in Gwoza, Borno State.

The Apostle said it was shocking that since the insurgents captured Gwoza, the FG had not taken any decisive action in dealing with the situation and to make matters worse, about 480 soldiers escaped into another country.
The cleric said this ahead of the Holy Ghost convention, which begins on Sunday.
He stressed that the officers should not be blamed at all for their actions but the blame be put at the doorsteps of the authorities, adding that the incident was a big shame to the military and the nation.
“That some Islamic insurgents would be beheading Christians, take over 300 girls hostage, take over our churches and desecrate the sanctuary of God is totally unacceptable. You begin to ask the question, do we have a government in place? The government should show to us that it is capable of handling the situation”, he said.
As part of the church’s effort and men of God towards stemming the tide of insurgency in the country, he noted that Pastor Enoch Adeboye, Bishop David Oyedepo, Matthew Ashimolowo and other men of God would be at the convention to pray for the country so that God could smile on the country again.

Friday, 29 August 2014

Breaking: Senegal Confirms first case of EBOLA Virus - BBC News

Senegal's health ministry has confirmed a first case of Ebola, making it the fifth West African country to be affected by the outbreak.

Health Minister Awa Marie Coll Seck told reporters on Friday that a young man from Guinea was confirmed to have contracted the virus.

The man was immediately placed in quarantine, she added.

The current outbreak, which began in Guinea, has killed more than 1,500 people across the region.

At least 3,000 people have been infected with the virus. The World Health Organization (WHO) has warned it could get much worse and infect more than 20,000 people.

Senegal had already closed its borders to neighbouring Guinea to try to stop the spread of the virus.

Source: BBC

Breaking: Senegal Confirms first case of EBOLA Virus - BBC News

Senegal's health ministry has confirmed a first case of Ebola, making it the fifth West African country to be affected by the outbreak.

Health Minister Awa Marie Coll Seck told reporters on Friday that a young man from Guinea was confirmed to have contracted the virus.

The man was immediately placed in quarantine, she added.

The current outbreak, which began in Guinea, has killed more than 1,500 people across the region.

At least 3,000 people have been infected with the virus. The World Health Organization (WHO) has warned it could get much worse and infect more than 20,000 people.

Senegal had already closed its borders to neighbouring Guinea to try to stop the spread of the virus.

Source: BBC

APC to Jonathan: TAN’s rallies negate Ebola control Measures

The All Progressives Congress (APC) has urged President Goodluck Jonathan to halt the rallies being organised across the nation by the Transformation Ambassadors of Nigeria (TAN) for his re-election.
The party noted that the rallies were jeopardising Nigeria’s efforts to control the spread of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD).

In a statement yesterday in Ilorin, the Kwara State capital, by its National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, APC said: “Mr. President, you said your ambition is not worth the life of any Nigerian. But the TAN rallies for your re-election are endangering the lives of thousands of Nigerians in these days of Ebola. Some things must simply transcend politics. This is one of them. Please, stop the rallies now.”

It urged the President to ensure that the rally slated for Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital, on Saturday, is stopped, because of the spread of the Ebola virus to the city and the fact that 100 people have been placed under surveillance there, following the death of a doctor from a suspected Ebola disease.

APC said: “If TAN goes ahead to organise its rally in Port Harcourt, can anyone guarantee that none of those who have had contact with the doctor will attend? It can only be better imagined the kind of danger that those who will attend the rally will be subjected to. Therefore, President Jonathan has a historic opportunity to put the well-being of his compatriots above politics, for once.”


The party reminded the President of the statement he made on August 8, when he declared the EVD in Nigeria a national emergency, thus: “Religious and political groups, spiritual healing centres, families, associations and other bodies should, in the meantime, discourage gatherings and activities that may unwittingly promote close contact with infected persons or place others at risk.”

It also reminded the President that his administration had postponed the resumption of private and public primary and secondary schools across the nation as part of the measures to curtail the spread of the virus.
APC wondered what message the same government was sending to Nigerians by allowing TAN rallies to continue.

It said: “Mr. President, add this to the fact that Nigeria’s economy is losing millions of dollars to the Ebola disease, and you will realise that the need to control the disease supersedes personal political considerations.”
The party said the TAN rallies in Awka (Anambra) and Ibadan (Oyo) and the forthcoming ones in Port Harcourt and elsewhere flout the advice by the President against large gatherings that could encourage the spread of the disease.

It described as untenable the argument that the rallies were not being organised by the government, hence the President has no control over them.
APC said: “Mr. President, you are the sole beneficiary of these rallies. Top officials of your administration, led by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Anyim Pius Anyim, have been attending the rallies. The signatures being collected by TAN are ostensibly to encourage you to run again. So, this is your show.”

The party wondered how Dr Jonathan could, on one hand, be complaining about the stigmatisation of Nigerians by other countries over the Ebola outbreak and, on the other hand, turning a blind eye when his supporters were flouting the Ebola control measures put in place by his administration.
It said: “The embassies of the foreign nations in Nigeria are seeing all that is happening.

They are seeing how the efforts of the Federal Government to control Ebola are being sabotaged by the supporters of the President. How then can we complain when our citizens are stigmatised abroad? How can we complain when the foreign governments issue travel advisories to their citizens coming to Nigeria? How can we complain when they start barring Nigerians from coming to their countries on account of the Ebola virus?

“This is why we are calling on President Jonathan to call his supporters to order today. We are also calling on all well-meaning Nigerians to prevail on the President not to endanger the lives of Nigerians simply because of his personal ambition.”

Source: The Nation

APC to Jonathan: TAN’s rallies negate Ebola control Measures

The All Progressives Congress (APC) has urged President Goodluck Jonathan to halt the rallies being organised across the nation by the Transformation Ambassadors of Nigeria (TAN) for his re-election.
The party noted that the rallies were jeopardising Nigeria’s efforts to control the spread of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD).

In a statement yesterday in Ilorin, the Kwara State capital, by its National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, APC said: “Mr. President, you said your ambition is not worth the life of any Nigerian. But the TAN rallies for your re-election are endangering the lives of thousands of Nigerians in these days of Ebola. Some things must simply transcend politics. This is one of them. Please, stop the rallies now.”

It urged the President to ensure that the rally slated for Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital, on Saturday, is stopped, because of the spread of the Ebola virus to the city and the fact that 100 people have been placed under surveillance there, following the death of a doctor from a suspected Ebola disease.

APC said: “If TAN goes ahead to organise its rally in Port Harcourt, can anyone guarantee that none of those who have had contact with the doctor will attend? It can only be better imagined the kind of danger that those who will attend the rally will be subjected to. Therefore, President Jonathan has a historic opportunity to put the well-being of his compatriots above politics, for once.”


REVEALED: How Boko Haram is funded and why Jonathan cannot arrest sponsor

A Perth-based international adviser, Dr. Stephen Davis, who survived months of extreme danger to try to rescue more than 200 schoolgirls kidnapped by terrorist group Boko Haram, has revealed that one of the primary sources of funding for the terror group is Nigerian politicians.

Davis has worked in Nigeria in the past with the Archbishop of Canterbury and Head of the Church of England, Justin Welby, to negotiate the release of kidnapped oil industry workers in the Niger Delta. Speaking yesterday in an interview on ABC News, an Australian television station, Davis, 63, said he had realised the only way to stop the kidnappings was to stop the sponsors of Boko Haram.

While Al Qaeda was involved in training Boko Haram recruits, Davis said one of their major sources of funding – aside from raiding banks – was Nigerian politicians. “That makes it easier in some ways as they can be arrested, but of course the onus of proof is high and many are in opposition, so if the president (Goodluck Jonathan) moves against them, he would be accused of trying to rig the elections due early next year,” he said. “So I think this will run through to the election unabated.

These politicians think that if they win power they can turn these terrorists off, but this has mutated. “It’s no longer a case of Muslims purifying by killing off Christians. They are just killing indiscriminately, beheading, disemboweling people – men, women and children and whole villages. “I would say it’s almost beyond the control of the political sponsors now.

Terror groups are linking up in Somalia, southern Sudan, Egypt and we have fairly strong evidence they are talking with ISIS members. “They will link up with ISIS and Al Shabaab and I think that what we are seeing in that region is the new homeland of radical Islam in the world,” he told his interviewer.


Davis, who returned to Australia after a four-month sojourn with rare footage of the intense fighting in Nigeria’s North-east, as Boko Haram stepped up efforts to establish an Islamic state, said he established extensive contacts with tribes and terrorist groups in Africa, including three small cells of Al Qaeda, while working as a troubleshooter for oil and gas company Shell in the Niger Delta.

When news broke in April about the girls’ kidnapping from a school in the village of Chibok, near the Cameroun border, Davis, who had recently moved to Perth from London, decided he could not sit on his hands. During the journey in North-eastern Nigeria, his life was threatened more than once, but his Australian passport saved him.

“When confronted by groups with an AK-47 in my face they’d say, ‘you are American, we have to kill you’,” Davis said. “When you say, no I’m not American, they think you are British, and say you will still die, but when I said I’m Australian, they said that’s all right. I have no idea why but it’s certainly been helpful.”

The devout Christian managed to smuggle out of the country footage of a handful of schoolgirls who escaped from Boko Haram. T“I made a few phone calls to the Boko Haram commanders and they confirmed they were in possession of the girls,” he said. They told me they’d be prepared to release some as a goodwill gesture towards a peace deal with the government, so I went to Nigeria on the basis of being able to secure their release.” Arriving in Nigeria, Davis quickly set up talks with commanders and he believed he had brokered a deal.

Fearing being arrested, the Boko Haram commanders – holding the girls across the border in Cameroun – had a list of conditions. They wanted the military to stand down and promised to drop the girls in a village before phoning to give their exact location. Davis said they lived up to their promise, but in a region ravaged by war and corruption, the rescue was sabotaged. “The girls were there, 60 girls, there were 20 vehicles with the girls,” he said.

“We travelled for four-and-a-half hours to reach them, but 15 minutes before we arrived they were kidnapped again by another group who wanted to cash in on a reward. The police had offered a reward of several million naira just 24 hours before we went to pick them up. “I understand, from the Boko Haram commanders I spoke to, the girls eventually ended up back with them. I don’t know what happened to the group that took them but I suspect it wasn’t good,” he disclosed.

Davis said a young man kidnapped by Boko Haram and used as a driver later helped a handful of girls to escape. One kidnapped girl, who managed to avoid having her mobile phone confiscated by turning it off and hiding it in her bra, managed to call her family while hiding in bushes, but had no idea where she was or which direction she should be heading.

After being told to walk west by following the sunset each evening, the four girls managed to cross the border from Cameroun and into Nigeria before being reunited with their families. So far they are the only girls to have escaped from a Boko Haram camp. When Davis later tried to contact, via text, the young man who helped them, he received a sobering reply. “The person you are trying to contact has gone on a journey from which there is no return,” the reply read. “He was an infidel.”

Davis said the longer he stayed in Nigeria the more it dawned on him the kidnappings would not end. “It became very clear that if I was able to get 50 girls released, then another group would kidnap 70 or 80 more. So by freeing 50 you were consigning 70 or 80 more to the same fate,” he explained. Davis said initially journalists from around the world including CNN, the ABC and BBC flocked into the country, but they concluded it was far too dangerous to send any crew into the North-east of the country.

 He said since then, the violence in North-east Nigeria and the threat of foreign journalists being kidnapped and beheaded, there has been limited coverage of the crimes being committed by Boko Haram. “Boko Haram used to telephone Nigerian journalists and give them a story, but that doesn’t happen anymore,” he said. They go straight to social media. They post their own material and they’ve learnt to become very savvy on social media and use it as an instrument to terrorise.”

Davis, who has a PhD in political geography, has worked as an adviser to former President Olusegun Obasanjo and the late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua. He also worked for Shell in Nigeria in an advisory capacity between 2002 and 2004.

Read more at: http://www.today.ng/news/revealed-how-boko-haram-is-funded-and-why-jonathan-cannot-arrest-sponsors/hey detail the atrocities they endured, including being raped almost on a daily basis.” Following media reports that nobody knew where the girls were, he decided to reach out to his contacts.

Source: Today.ng

REVEALED: How Boko Haram is funded and why Jonathan cannot arrest sponsor

A Perth-based international adviser, Dr. Stephen Davis, who survived months of extreme danger to try to rescue more than 200 schoolgirls kidnapped by terrorist group Boko Haram, has revealed that one of the primary sources of funding for the terror group is Nigerian politicians.

Davis has worked in Nigeria in the past with the Archbishop of Canterbury and Head of the Church of England, Justin Welby, to negotiate the release of kidnapped oil industry workers in the Niger Delta. Speaking yesterday in an interview on ABC News, an Australian television station, Davis, 63, said he had realised the only way to stop the kidnappings was to stop the sponsors of Boko Haram.

While Al Qaeda was involved in training Boko Haram recruits, Davis said one of their major sources of funding – aside from raiding banks – was Nigerian politicians. “That makes it easier in some ways as they can be arrested, but of course the onus of proof is high and many are in opposition, so if the president (Goodluck Jonathan) moves against them, he would be accused of trying to rig the elections due early next year,” he said. “So I think this will run through to the election unabated.

These politicians think that if they win power they can turn these terrorists off, but this has mutated. “It’s no longer a case of Muslims purifying by killing off Christians. They are just killing indiscriminately, beheading, disemboweling people – men, women and children and whole villages. “I would say it’s almost beyond the control of the political sponsors now.

Terror groups are linking up in Somalia, southern Sudan, Egypt and we have fairly strong evidence they are talking with ISIS members. “They will link up with ISIS and Al Shabaab and I think that what we are seeing in that region is the new homeland of radical Islam in the world,” he told his interviewer.


2015 gov: Can Lagos PDP break the jinx? by Kunle Oderemi

From the look of things, the politics of governorship tickets in Lagos State is becoming breath-taking in both the ruling party, All Progressives Congress (APC) and the opposition, Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), reports KUNLE ODEREMI,Nigerian Tribune
THE rank of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Lagos State is not lacking in influential figure. Such men are indeed plentiful in its list of members, going by their pedigree. They include former and serving PDP national officers, ministers, seasoned administrators and a legion of professionals.
During the build up to polls, especially governorship, the party usually renews a promise: to end the hold of the ruling party in Lagos. The leaders try to set aside personal differences, avoid ego trip, build a coalition and raise logistics with the sole intent of turning the apple cart against the hitherto Alliance for Democracy (AD), then the Action Congress and later the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), which has since transformed with three other parties into the All Progressives Congress (APC).
Now, the chorus among Lagos PDP chieftains as the 2015 election approaches is another promise that the PDP will form the next government in the state. But, has anything changed in the party to guarantee such dream this time around? Have a few of those black sheep behind the dismal performance of the PDP during past governorship elections been purged of their sins? What is it that the PDP in Lagos hopes to do differently now to guarantee its ultimate desire of displacing the APC administration through the ballot in 2015?.
These are a few of the teasers that some stakeholders in the PDP and in the state in general have raised as more party big wigs indicate interest in the race for the Lagos PDP ticket. Their foot soldiers have hit the ground running, deploying varying antics to curry favour for their individual principals.
The intense horse trading ahead the choice of the candidate of the party has also thrown up wide ranging issues from the real to the imagined or what some critics have termed fantasies. In concrete terms, they include the antecedents and clout of the contestants, provisions of the PDP constitution regarding membership and eligibility and age as well as other primordial sentiments that are gradually coming to the centre stage of Lagos politics in the current dispensation.
The list of the major contenders for the PDP is an admixture of old and new entrants. Each of the contestants parades a different background with a few of them coming from the academic world. The list of the aspirants includes the Minister of State for Defence, Senator Musiliu Obanikoro; Dr Ade Dosunmu; Mr Jimi Agbaje; Dr Segun Ogundimu; Salis Owolabi; Babatunde Gbadamosi; and others.
Musiliu Obanikoro
His first attempt in 2007 left the PDP with a bloody nose as he and a couple of other party chieftains took others to the cleaners over factors that led the PDP meeting its waterloo. Part of the major fallout of the acrimony was that Obanikoto became estranged to some influential Lagos PDP elders, who felt they did not deserve any form of insult from the camp of Obanikoro, after standing by him when some pary faithful had insisted on Mrs Hilda Williams, widow of the murdered Engineer Funsho Williams, as the declared winner of the Lagos PDP primaries. According to them, it was the PDP National Executive Committee, NEC, led by Dr Ahmadu Ali, that gave the ticket to Obanikoro against the popular wish of the party members in Lagos. Ironically, when the cold war simmered in 2009 through reconciliatory meetings, as the late president Umaru Ya’Adua named Obanikoro as Nigeria’s High Commissioner to Ghana. The appointment was part of the policy of the party of rewarding unsuccessful PDP governorship candidates after elections, though a similar gesture was not extended to Dr Dosumu, who flew the party’s flag in 2011 in Lagos.
When he embarked on his maiden chase for the soul of Lagos in 2007, Obanikoro informed he had actually prepared and done his homework painstakingly before coming out. He said he had commissioned experts to research and prepare a blueprint preparatory to his formal declaration. He said: “We need to know our past, where we are, how we got there and how we are going to get there.” He said this became imperative because the “best way to recover the soul of Lagos and find a remedy to its myriad of problems was to investigate, to the very fabric, the nature and complexion of what he saw as the “the depth of economic, social, and political rottenness” of Lagos. Accordingly, he said he had commissioned “different groups of professionals, committees and a highly research-oriented team to investigate Lagos and find why things have deteriorated so horribly.” Thus, he believed he was the man the PDP needed to boot out the ruling party out of the Oval House.
But, Obanikoro is coming into the race with some controversies trailing him. His critics say he is part of the establishment in Lagos that he now sees as evil. He and most of the major actors in the then AD were close allies, friends and associates. Besides, some have raised a couple of issues concerning his tenure as the chairman of the Lagos Island Local Government in the past. However, his associates say those raising such issues are ignorant and bent on giving dog a bad name in order to hang it.
Some critics and party members are also accusing him of trying to eat with both sides of the mouth. Some alleged that he influenced Abuja to give him a ministerial slot. To them, he should be content with the job and allow others to try their luck over the governorship ticket. So, in a way, some see his current venture as not only based on an inordinate ambition, but also egoistic. Their thinking is that he ought to allow the ticket to go to any other party member with necessary pedigree, charisma and sagacity, since he has elected to be a minister, after serving as Nigeria’s ambassador to Ghana.
Some have also raised the issue of age. He is said to be about 57 years old. They believe Lagos PDP needs a younger person to make hay in 2015, because of what is gradually become a fad in the Nigerian political environment. They cite Ondo, Lagos and a number of other states, whose governors were a little over 40 at the time they assumed office and are about to complete two-terms, while still under 60 years. Such critics believe Lagos should not be seen as departing from the new political culture that appears to have brought good tidings to the electorate in most states that had jettisoned ‘gerontocracy.’
Jimi Agbaje
A similar sentiment is being expressed by some commentators over the ambition of Agabaje, whose governorship campaign in 2007 tickled many, and whose wit and intellect during the pre-election debates created waves about his personage. No doubt, the entry of the pharmacist into the governorship race has changed the political calculation in the Lagos PDP. Before he joined the party in July, rumours doing the rounds were that he was in a quagmire. The talks in the political circle were that he was in a dilemma on if he should move to the PDP or settle for the Labour Party.
Beyond the euphoria among his admirers and supporters over his decision to ‘relocate’ to the PDP are what some pundits have described as some critical issues surrounding his membership of the party. He has come at a time the party is a flurry of activities designed to choose a standard bearer for the 2015 governorship. He will need a waiver to run for the ticket as the constitution of the PDP stipulates a minimum of two years for eligibility of a member. How the issue is handled by the party’s hierarchy will go a long way in shaping the destiny of the party ahead the real election, as a few party buffs are insinuating that Agaje might be acting the script of some influential party members, just as other critics claim that the man is actually on his own, as his camp might just be dropping names to place their principal on a better pedestal.
On the other hand, some observers say Agbaje should be prepared for a tough battle, especially from the camps and sympathisers of the other contestants whose body language in relation to the Lagos PDP ticket has not been salutary or in disguise. According to them, the possibility of a few of them teaming up to engage Agbaje in a fight to the finish cannot be ruled out. This is because of the belief in certain quarters that apart from having the pedigree to lead the party to the election, they have invested enormous resources in oiling the Lagos PDP machinery since 1999. To them, it will be a travesty of justice, if there is no level-playing ground for all the contestants. The coming of the candidate of the Democratic Party of Nigeria (DPN) in the 2007 election has created suspicion in some camps in the Lagos PDP with some alleging the perceived favouritism and sympathy by a few leaders for Agbaje. The party, had prior to this time, hoped to reap from a possible implosion in the ruling APC in the state over the choice of standard bearer, as some camps had introduced religious sentiments into the matter. Their contention is that it should be the turn of a Christian to govern the state in 2015. So, in the opinion of pundits, to exploit the acrimony to an advantage, the Lagos PDP will have to find a way round the likely opposition from contenders who might insist on the sanctity of the provisions of the party’s constitution on the issue of membership vis-a-vas eligibility.
Dosunmu
In the race for the PDP ticket then, the suave scholar, technocrat and administrator, won the PDP primary held on January 10, 2010, as he secured 431 votes out of the 872 , to defeat Tokunbo Kamson, who polled 182 votes, while a former minister of state for Defence, Mr Demola Seriki, was third with 120 votes. Dosumu, 51, came with an intimidating credential. Urbane and sagacious, he is a lecturer at the post-graduate school at the University of Lagos and has held various high-flying positions in the public establishments, including the director general/chief executive officer of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA). He revved up the campaign that preceded the 2011 election by raising the bar through issue-based campaign as opposed to mudslinging and shadow boxing by most political actors. He couched his ambition thus, “For over 24 years of my career life, I have been committed to giving service that makes a difference and I have interacted extensively with people of different cultures and nationalities. I have learnt to appreciate the fact that leadership is about service, and service is about selflessness which in turn guarantees a better life for a greater number.”
Other contenders
The remaining contenders are no less formidable, given their backgrounds and antecedents, coupled with experiences in both in the public and the private sectors. For example, Dr Segun Ogundimu was one of the leading lights in the defunct National Republican Convention (NRC). A vocal politician with oratory power, the interest of the former state Commissioner for Health in the Lagos PDP ticket is a climax to his political career. In a similar vein, Dr Adetokunbo Pearse, who is a senior lecturer in the Department of English at the University of Lagos, is also in the race for the (PDP) ticket, though with some critics saying his creating an upset is slim. Only time could tell if his political affinity with former PDP national chairman, Alhaji BamangaTukur could significantly count for him this time.
Another contestant, who has been in the political circle dating back to the aborted Third Republic is Akintoye Branco-Rhodes. He was the alter ego of the Nigerian Advance Party and gave a good account of himself against the plan by late Head of State, General Sani Abacha to transmute to a civilian president.
Last line
The heightened frenzy over the governorship race is already catching up with some caucuses within the Lagos PDP with one of them called Lagos PDP Patriots, led by Chief Jide Damazio, expressing confidence that the party would make a difference in 2015. Part of its objectives is to resist every attempt from whatever quarters to impose candidate(s) on the party at any level of electoral contest to avoid divisive tendencies, as well as work to ensure that whosoever must emerge as a candidate of the party at any level of electoral contest must be a known and committed party member who possesses the capacity to accommodate every interest within the party. “If we can achieve our basic objectives as we hope to do, then we would be really happy because we would be going in to the 2015 elections as a major contender for the Government House in Alausa. We are convinced that power will change hands in Lagos in 2015 as a matter of necessity to better serve the interest of the good people of Lagos.”
‘The Abuja factor is critical in the ongoing battle for the Lagos PDP ticket. But it will not be without the local inputs. The issue is, who will determine the local contents and through what process?’

2015 gov: Can Lagos PDP break the jinx? by Kunle Oderemi

From the look of things, the politics of governorship tickets in Lagos State is becoming breath-taking in both the ruling party, All Progressives Congress (APC) and the opposition, Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), reports KUNLE ODEREMI,Nigerian Tribune
THE rank of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Lagos State is not lacking in influential figure. Such men are indeed plentiful in its list of members, going by their pedigree. They include former and serving PDP national officers, ministers, seasoned administrators and a legion of professionals.
During the build up to polls, especially governorship, the party usually renews a promise: to end the hold of the ruling party in Lagos. The leaders try to set aside personal differences, avoid ego trip, build a coalition and raise logistics with the sole intent of turning the apple cart against the hitherto Alliance for Democracy (AD), then the Action Congress and later the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), which has since transformed with three other parties into the All Progressives Congress (APC).
Now, the chorus among Lagos PDP chieftains as the 2015 election approaches is another promise that the PDP will form the next government in the state. But, has anything changed in the party to guarantee such dream this time around? Have a few of those black sheep behind the dismal performance of the PDP during past governorship elections been purged of their sins? What is it that the PDP in Lagos hopes to do differently now to guarantee its ultimate desire of displacing the APC administration through the ballot in 2015?.
These are a few of the teasers that some stakeholders in the PDP and in the state in general have raised as more party big wigs indicate interest in the race for the Lagos PDP ticket. Their foot soldiers have hit the ground running, deploying varying antics to curry favour for their individual principals.

WHO Declares Ebola Outbreak Could Strike 20,000 People

The current Ebola outbreak in West Africa could infect more than 20,000 people, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said on Thursday in a bleak assessment of the deadly disease.

The United Nations health agency issued a strategic plan to combat the oubreak in four West African nations where it said the actual number of cases could already be two to four times higher than the reported 3,069. The death toll stands at 1,552.

"This roadmap assumes that in many areas of intense transmission the actual number of cases may be 2-4 fold higher than that currently reported. It acknowledges that the aggregate case load of Ebola Virus Disease could exceed 20,000 over the course of this emergency," the WHO said.

The deadly outbreak that began in Guinea in March and has spread to neighbouring Liberia and Sierra Leone as well as to Nigeria requires a massive and coordinated international response, the WHO said.

A separate outbreak of Ebola in Democratic Republic of Congo identified as a different strain, is not included in its toll.
"Response activities must be adapted in areas of very intense transmission and particular attention must be given to stopping transmission in capital cities and major ports, thereby facilitating the larger response and relief effort," the WHO said.


The virus is still being spread in a "substantial number of localities", aggravating fragile social and economic conditions and has already killed an unprecedented number of health workers, the agency said.

A wider U.N.-led plan being launched by the end of September is "expected to underpin support for the increasingly acute problems associated with food security, protection, water, sanitation and hygiene, primary and secondary health care and education, as well as the longer-term recovery effort that will be needed," the WHO said, reports Reuters.

Source: Reuters