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Minister Approves Establishment Of 500-Bed Medical Centre In Abuja

Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Malam Muhammad Musa Bello has given go ahead to the African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) to establish a world class 500 bed medical center in the city.

The minister, today, May 30, formally handed over the Certificate of Occupancy (C of O) of the Land to the Regional Chief Operating Officer of the Bank, Abdoulaye Kone. The first class medical cntre is billed to be constructed on a 5.1 hectre plot of land within the proposed Abuja Medical City Development Project in the Lokogoma District of Abuja.

The minister, who took a tour of the site with senior management staff of the FCTA said: “we feel highly honoured that the African Export-Import Bank has decided to establish this very important medical facility in Abuja, the centre of Nigeria’s unity. We also feel very humbled that God has chosen all of us here to be a part of the initial phase of this project.

“I want to assure the African Exim Bank that all the organs of the Federal Capital Territory Administration will give you its fullest support to make sure that this project sees the commencement, construction, completion and final commissioning by the grace of God Almighty.”

Muhammad Bello advised the bank’s management to commence work on the site as soon as possible, even as Abdoulaye Kone said: “we have already mobilized the workers and they are on standby. They would be here, by the grace of God, on Monday (1st June) to start clearing the place and the ground breaking is also planned for the last quarter of the year.”

The African Export-Import Bank which has its headquarters  in Cairo, Egypt, is a Pan-African multilateral trade finance institution.

We Were Spiritually Misdirected, Surrendered Boko Haram Fighter Confesses

File photo: Some previously arrested suspected Boko haram members

A top fighter in Boko Haram camp, who just surrendered to the military in Borno, has confessed that they were spiritually misdirected by the leadership of the group.

“I am not sure if our spiritual direction is correct,” he said, adding that because of the battle Boko Haram is fast losing, “more fighters are ready to surrender, but they are uncertain of what fate awaits them.”
The top terrorist fighter, who surrendered along with his wife on May 29, said that he joined ISWAP/Boko Haram in 2015 and took part in terrorist operations in Arege, Kangarwa, Metele and Mallam Fatori.

He said that his decision to surrender was as a result of constant artillery and air bombardments launched by the Nigerian army, adding that such attacks have greatly affected their plans and dampened their morale.

Saudi Arabia Bars Under 15 From Entering Mosques, In New Guidelines

Saudi Arabia Bars Under 15 From Entering Mosques

Authority of the Saudi Arabia has issued new guidelines as the country prepares to reopen Mosques after weeks of closure in the wake of coronavirus pandemic. A circular, signed by the Islamic Affairs Minister, Sheikh Abdullatif bin Abdul Aziz bin Abdul Rahman Al-Asheikh, said today, May 30 that when Mosques are opened from tomorrow, May 32, children under 15 will not be allowed to enter.
Under the guidelines, worshippers are expected to keep two meters apart and leave a row of space empty between each row.

The ministry insisted that worshippers must wear face masks at all times and to bring their own prayer mats and perform ablution at home before going to the Mosques, “as all toilets and places of ablution will be closed.

“The Ministry advised Imams to ensure that worshippers avoid crowding when entering and exiting the mosques. 

“Water coolers and the distribution of food and drinks are not permitted. Windows and doors must be open at all times and copies of the Qur’an and other reading materials must be temporarily withdrawn.”  

The ministry, which said that educational programs and workshops for memorizing the Qur’an would continue remotely online until further notice, stressed that smaller mosques can open 15 minutes before the call to prayer and should close 10 minutes after they finish. It said that on Fridays, Mosques with larger crowds can open 20 minutes before prayers and should close 20 minutes after they finish, and the sermon should not last more than 15 minutes.

The ministry said that Hajj and Umrah pilgrimages, which attract millions of travelers from around the world, will remain suspended until further notice.Meanwhile, the grand Mosque in Makkah will remain closed. 

Family Confirms That Kabba Chief Imam In Kogi, Is Coronavirus Positive


The Ejibunu Family has finally said that the Chief Imam of Kabba, Sheikh Ahmed Abubakar Ejibunu had been confirmed to be index case of coronavirus in Kogi State. 

Reacting on behalf of the family,  to what he called ‘series of discussions’ in social media about the index case of coronavirus in the State, the Obatebise of Oweland, Chief Tai Ejibunu said that Sheikh Ahmad Ejibunu was down with flu some few days back and he had to be hospitalised at the Specialist Hospital in Kabba. 

He said that medical attention was sought at the Federal Medical Centre (FMC) in Lokoja as the flu did not abate after some days.”At the FMC, he was referred to the National Hospital in Abuja and the text conducted on him by the NCDC showed that he was Covid-19 positive. The text conducted on one of his sons who had been with him since, came out negative. 

“The family would have come out to speak on the matter, but we were not comfortable with the ding dong game going on between the NCDC and the Kogi State government.

“The family is concerned about the well being of other Owes and we wish to confirm that Covid-19 has found its way sadly to our community and the State. “Therefore, no need for Kogi State government to deny the obvious.

We would like to stress that the Chief Imam, of recent, had never ventured outside Kogi State by way of travelling outside the State. So, the ‘virus’ could have been contacted within.

“We wish to advise our people to please abide by the protocols emplaced by the NCDC and play safe.

“The family is cooperating with the  Kogi State Government and the NCDC to stem the spread. This evening, contact tracing and testing of family members of the Chief Imam had began. 

“What we need from our people is empathy and no need for the acrimonious exchange of views and counter views.

“May God save our land and her people in particular and the state in general.”

NEWSFLASH: Immediate Past NNPC Boss, Baru Dies

The immediate past Group Managing Director (GMD) of the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Maikanti, is dead.

This was disclosed by Mele Kyari, the current GMD of the state-run oil company.

“My brother, my friend and my mentor, Dr Maikanti Kachalla Baru, immediate past GMD of NNPC died late last night.

“He was of exemplary character and disposition. May Allah forgive him and have mercy upon him.”

Baru was appointed NNPC GMD by President Muhammadu Buhari in July 2016, a position he held until 2019.

Source: TheCable.

Coronavirus: Nigerian Doctors Beg Buhari To Call Kogi Governor To Order

NMA President | Credit: Thepolitics

The Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) has appealed to President Muhammadu Buhari to call the governor of Kogi State, Alhaji Yahaya Bello to order as he is allegedly endangering the health of health workers and that of the people in the State.

The Association described the attitude and response of the governor to coronavirus pandemic as ‘ignorantly meddlesome and irresponsible.”

In a statement today, May 29, the President of the NMA, Dr. Francis Faduyile, recalled that on Wednesday, May 27, 2020, the disease was confirmed on two indigenes of Kogi State and that one of the patients said to be a known community and religious leader referred from the Federal Medical Centre Lokoja was diagnosed with coronavirus at the National Hospital Abuja.

“The Nigerian Medical Association has repeatedly called on all Nigerians to avail the Nigerian Centre for Disease Control, an agency of government established by an Act of the National Assembly, unimpeded access and assistance to render its duties.

“The Kogi State government stoutly resisted this advisory to the dismay of our Association. The State government need reminding that the NCDC is empowered to ‘prevent, detect, monitor and control’ activities and programs for the national response against infectious disease epidemics and other public health emergencies; and also, to ‘lead, develop, coordinate’ these activities in the country.

“Kogi State government especially has hardened its heart and ensured that the Kogi people remain in the dark, untested.

“The people are therefore undiagnosed and untreated even though COVID-19 epidemiologic pattern has 80 percent of cases that present with none or very mild symptoms yet shedding the virus in their airway and innocently infecting others who may become sicker and die. The identification of these cases is through testing, according to standardised protocols.

“We are incredibly disturbed by the response of the Kogi State government through the State Commissioner of Information.

“The Commissioner not only described the process of arriving at the diagnosis as fraudulent, but he also went on to smear the frontline Health workers and the NCDC on live national television.
“His use of profane words is capable of demoralising the exemplary gold-winning health workers and the untiring NCDC, which possibly can lead to a national catastrophe.

“The implied consequences of these unbecoming actions are what the Nigerian Medical Association condemns. The attitude of the Kogi State government is both ignorantly meddlesome and irresponsible. It is a demonstration of undisguised hatred against the people it swore to protect and nurture.

“The Association, therefore, appeals to President Muhammadu Buhari to call the State Governor and his officials to order immediately.

“He may issue an order granting unfettered access and protection to NCDC officials into Kogi State and do all that is necessary to contain COVID-19 which we believe is gaining a serious foothold in the State.

“This order may include citing testing facilities in the Army Barracks or any secured location free from the encumbrances posed by the State government.

“This advisory has become necessary even as the nation is considering the further easing of the lockdown given the fact that Kogi State borders eleven (11) other states of the Federation and Lokoja, the State capital, a significant road transport interchange.

“We restate that on no account should healthcare professionals at any health facility in Kogi state or elsewhere be harassed or intimidated on account of rendering avowed services as it relates to appropriate management of COVID-19 patients.

“We call on our time tested colleagues and other health workers to continue to perform their functions, and strongly advise them to protect themselves first before treating and saving others.”

I Am Making The Change Nigerians Voted Me For – President Buhari

President Muhammadu Buhari has said that he and his team are on the right track, making the Change for which he was voted in 2015 and 2019.

In a statement by his spokesman, Garba Shehu, to mark his fifth year in office today, May 29, President Buhari assured Nigerians that the mandate for change remains relevant and will be steadily followed to improve livelihoods.

He acknowledged that the campaign had been hard fought and that the mandate the people of this country gave him was decisive.

He recalled that he won the 2019 election with a distance of nearly four million votes or 15 per cent of the total votes cast over his closest opponent, adding that it was then – and is today – a mandate for change.

“For many years Nigerians have yearned for something different: less of the corruption and immoral greed of those who once governed; more decency in public life and fairness, and a chance to succeed. Nigerians yearned for improved security and end to terrorist bombings and for long-delayed infrastructure.

“Day by day, step by step, the President and his team are making the change that Nigerians have demanded. And it is a demand. Elected officials are servants, not masters. They govern at your discretion. The authority is yours to grant – and it is yours to take away.”

President Buhari recalled that since last year, he had strived to implement the plan Nigerians endorsed with their votes.

“He has overseen an increase in foreign investment; construction of new roads, bridges and rails, and put structures in place to improve employment, and accomplished the diversification of the national economy through a massive growth in agriculture. The President secured the long-overdue return of taxpayers’ monies from overseas, stolen in the 1990s, and put this to use in supporting citizens in dire need.

“Because of the coronavirus pandemic and lockdown measures implemented to stem and halt its spread, much of what the administration strives for and delivered may seem at risk. President Buhari realizes the burden so many citizens carry just to make ends meet, and the suffering they endure.”

The President assured Nigerians that this too shall come to pass, saying: “we are bolstering our capacity to contain the virus. Soon, when we overcome our present troubles, the work to build Nigeria will start anew. And as we do, we find ourselves before the gates to a new, post-Covid world.

“Thanks to reforms in governance, our war on corruption and the hard work and trust of the Nigerian people, we are better positioned as a nation than ever before to seize new opportunities that await us to trade, build, make and export with the world.

“I thank you, the people of Nigeria, for your wisdom and your determination for change. We go forward, together.”

Post-Coronavirus, Africa’s Manufacturing Moment, By Muhammadu Buhari

President Muhammadu Buhari

Across the world, as countries and economies slowly reopen, Africa lags behind. We were last to experience the coronavirus—and we expect to be the final continent to flatten the curve.

Some may say it is too early, that the crisis still too deep and the recovery too distant to dwell upon the future. But that is wrong. In times of global crisis it is critical to think of the life after, and how—through adversity—we can refashion the world around us.

In this new, post-coronavirus age, Nigeria—and Africa, more broadly—wish to benefit the world, not be a drag on its resources or seemingly forever in need of aid. At last, after years of poor governance, we have the people, the purpose and the political will for this to change.

What we need now is for the vision of others to match our own. And Africa is positioned to play a critical role in the remolding of a post-coronavirus world that centers around manufacturing.

Of course, for many lost decades, Africa’s manufacturing moment has been on the launch pad, but never leaving it. But this time, I am convinced, it can be different.

In our lifetime, we have seen the West transform to a service-based economy, with much of its factory production relocated primarily to Asia. This has led to the creation of home-grown consumer goods from countries such as South Korea and China that are enjoyed around the globe as widely as are their Western equivalents.

It is simply untrue that jobs that build the goods of today, once departed from the West to Asia, can never return. Indeed, we see already from “onshoring” trends that this is not the case. Factors of labor cost, transportation, location and availability of natural and energy resources will always come into play.

What is true is that no country or continent has a permanent monopoly on manufacturing jobs. Indeed, we see how Asian nations are themselves now offshoring manufacturing to their neighbors and, increasingly, to Africa.

My continent is positioned to seize the opportunity from these trends and, in turn, benefit the world. Our young population is increasingly well educated; governance reform, while not universal, is growing in strength in most African countries such as my own, where our sustained actions against the seemingly perennial scourge of corruption and malfeasance are well-recognized; and the energy, infrastructure and key natural resources needed to power and supply large-scale manufacturing facilities are in place.

In Nigeria, a major global oil producer, we have finally established our first private oil refinery—which is also one of the largest in the world. The Mambilla power plant, finally unlocked for completion after a successful decision by the International Court of Arbitration in Paris earlier this year removed impediments, will electrify the homes of some 10 million of our people.

And we can now move forward with road, rail and power station construction—in part, under own resources—thanks to close to a billion dollars of funds stolen from the people of Nigeria under a previous, undemocratic junta in the 1990s that have now been returned to our country from the U.S., U.K. and Switzerland.

That these friendly nations agreed to return these funds after so long is testament to the fact that, thanks to our governance reforms, Nigeria is rightly seen as an increasingly stable and beneficial place to transact and invest. It is much the same across the continent, with sub-saharan Africa now outpacing Asia, Europe and North America by some measures in terms of foreign direct investment inflows-to-GDP, perhaps for the very first time.

While that is good news for over one billion Africans, the greatest benefit to those who look to our continent as the brightest global manufacturing location is that we are not, and do not seek, to engage in geopolitical competition.

That is not to say that African countries do not have interests or preferences. Nigeria already has, and seeks to deepen further, our relations with other Commonwealth countries—particularly in the interests of trade. And the African Continental Free Trade Area Agreement, which I signed for Nigeria last year, seeks to bind our continent in mutual growth together for the first time.

We hold shared values in democracy, freedoms of speech and religion with the Western world—and admiration and determination to learn and follow the rapid economic growth and poverty reduction that has occurred across Asia.

But ultimately, Africa is an opportunity for all and a threat to no one. There will be no African armies or aircraft carriers in the future, roaming the sands of faraway lands or the straits of foreign seas. We do not seek to grow our manufacturing capabilities in order to grant ourselves a seat at the table of some new great geopolitical game—but merely to play our part as partners in development.

Muhammadu Buhari, President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, wrote in from Abuja.

America’s Trump Terminates Relation With WHO, Diverts Funds To Other Health Needs

U.S President, Donald Trump

President Donald Trump has announced that he is terminating the United States’ relationship with the World Health Organisation (WH0).

According to report by the Agence France Presse (AFP), President Trump today, May 29, said: “We will be terminating our relationship with the WHO and diverting those funds to other health needs around the world.”

Details later…….

Omotola Worried As Her Husband Flies Controversial Chinese Doctors Back To China

Nollywood actress, Omotola Jalade-Ekeinde has expressed worry over her pilot husband, Captain Matthew, flying the Chinese doctors who came into Nigeria back to their base in China.

The actress took to her instagram page to express her anxiety, saying that she did not know how to feel about the flight as her husband who only returned to work after two months had been saddled with the responsibility of flying the controversial Chinese doctors back home.

In her Instagram post, Omotola shared photos of her husband with the crew as well as the Chinese doctors who were all decked in protective covering such as the face masks, shields and even PPEs.

The actress captioned her picture post with: “Is this the New Normal? #TheCaptain went on his first Flight today in 2 months! Those are the Chinese ppl that flew in some time ago! Not sure how to feel…”

 

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