Kano State government has attributed sudden mass deaths that have been recorded since last week to hypertension, diabetes, acute malaria and not as a result of coronavirus infection. The State Commissioner of Information, Malam Muhammad Garba, reacting today, to insinuation that the deaths were as a result of coronavirus infection, said however that more investigations on the causes of the deaths are being carried out. He emphasized that preliminary investigation revealed that the mass deaths resulted from hypertension, diabetes, meningitis and acute malaria. Muhammad Garba, in a statement today, April 26, said that the preliminary reports were obtained from the state Ministry of Health. “The reports indicated that the deaths were not connected to the COVID-19 pandemic.” He said the Governor, Abdullahi Umar Ganduje had directed the state Ministry of Health to conduct a thorough investigation into the immediate and remote causes of the deaths. It was recently reported that over the last one week now, an unidentified ailment has been responsible for massive deaths in the State, especially in Dala, Fagge, Tarauni, Nasarawa, Gwale, and Kano Municipal areas.
Journalists and allied media professionals of Igede origin from Benue State have petitioned the Inspector General of Police over the gruesome murder of a 19-year-old girl, Miss Joy Okom Adole, by a Lagos couple that hired her as a housemaid.
The group, under the auspices of Association of Igede Media Professionals (AIMPs), in the petition, described the incident as the height of bestiality.
The group appealed the Police boss, Mohammed Adamu, to step into the matter and bring the perpetrators to book immediately without let or hindrance.
The petition, signed by its President, Mr. Egena Ode and Igede interest group, said that the murder of Miss Joy Okom Adole by her employers, Mr and Mrs Fortune Stephens, was an act fit only for the animal kingdom.
The petitioners called for urgent intervention in the matter by all relevant authorities to ensure that justice is done to the family of the deceased.
Part of the petition read: “Reports have suggested that Miss Joy Okom Adole was murdered by her employers, Mr and Mrs Fortune Stephens of No 13, Ogundola Street, Bariga, Lagos for the simple reason that the deceased who worked as a housemaid asked for her salary, having served them for months.
“We are at a loss as to what could have warranted her employers to take her precious life for merely making a legitimate demand.
“There’s a universal maxim that a labourer deserves his/her wages. It is therefore not for nothing that Miss Joy was killed by her employer for just asking for her salary. What has become obvious here is that there’s an underlying motive behind her killing which the police must strive to unravel.
“We cannot but ask: when has it become a crime to work.and ask to be paid. Not everybody was born with a silver spoon, so if the only option for the young girl to be able to further her education was to take up the lowly menial housemaid job, then she did not deserve to be killed in such a gruesome and violent manner. The laws of the land must catch up with her killers.
“Even if the salary had accumulated and was difficult to pay, her employers, like many callous ones had done, should have sent her away without the money or work out an arrangement to pay her piece-meal. Again, we ask: why take her life?
“We demand that the Inspector General of Police should activate all necessary procedures to bring Mr and Mrs Fortune Stephens to book. We are prepared to ensure that they answer for this dastardly and inhuman act.”
The group said as a body devoted to the defence of Igedeland and people: “we have resolved to take up this case to any level to ensure that justice is done in favour of the innocent deceased girl.”
It vowed to mobilize for civil disobedience in Benue and Lagos if the right steps are not taken by the authorities to teach the killer couple a lesson of their life.
It, however, thanked the DPO of Bariga Police Station and his team for their sound professional competence in quickly detecting the pranks of the murderous couple who attempted to foist suicide of the deceased by hanging her dead body with a rope.
The group called on Igede youth across the country to remain calm and not take the law into their hands but to be vigilant in piling pressure on the relevant authorities for justice to be done in this matter.
Recall that the said Joy from Ukpa in Oju Local Government Area of Benue State was said to have been taken to Lagos to work as a housemaid for Mr and Mrs Fortune Stephens by an agent who is said to be an inlaw to the deceased.
Reports said Joy who had worked for about four months demanded that her meager monthly salary of 15,000 naira be paid to enable her plan her return to school, but her employers turned a deaf ear and tortured her to death.
The most bizare part of the story, according to reports, was that Mr and Mrs Fortune Stephens tried to conceal their murderous act by stage managing the killing to look like a suicide as they hung the poor girl’s dead body with a rope in a room.
The World Health Organisation (WHO) has appointed Nigeria’s former Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, as a Special Envoy for the newly inaugurated Access to COVID-19 Tools (ACT) Accelerator.
She will serve alongside British business executive, Sir Andrew Witty in the same capacity, to mobilise international commitment to the initiative.
Director-General of the organisation, Dr. Tedros Ghebreyesus, made the announcement during the launch of the ACT Accelerator — via webinar from Geneva.
“I would especially like to thank Sir Andrew Witty and Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala for agreeing to act as Special Envoys for the ACT Accelerator,” Ghebreyesus said in his remarks.
The initiative is an international collaboration aimed at accelerating the development, production, and equitable distribution of COVID-19 drugs, tests kits, and vaccines around the world.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that this is the fourth international assignment given to Okonjo-Iweala in less than two months.
On March 7, President Cyril Ramaphosa of South Africa appointed her a member of the country’s Economic Advisory Council, which comprises indigenous and international economic experts.
Okonjo-Iweala is an internationally respected economist and development expert, who has served as Managing Director of the World Bank, among other assignments.
Borno State governor, Professor Babagana Zulum has constructed emergency barricade in each border to prevent inward and outward vehicular movement without necessarily deploying security personnel to enforce the coronavirus lockdown of the State.
Concerns are being raised in many quarters as prominent personalities died mysteriously today, April 25. Among those who died with no trace of the causes, amidst the raging coronavirus across the world is Professor Ibrahim Ayagi, chairman of the defunct Gidauniyya Kano and Chief Executive Officer of Hassan Gwarzo School. Others are former State Grand Khadi, Alhaji Dahiru Rabiu, Professor Aliyu Umar Dikko of the Physiology Department of Bayero University Kano, Dr. Nasiru Maikano Bichi and Captain Abdullahi Gyadigyadi of Ja’oji quarters. There were also the Editor of Triumph newspaper, Alhaji Musa Tijjanii, as well as Dr. Musa Umar Gwarzo, former chairman of the State Universal Education Board, Alhaji Adamu Isyaku Dal, Hajiya Shamsiyya Mustapha and Alhaji Salisu Lado. Others are Alhaji Garba Sarki Fagge, Hajiya Nene Umma and Alhaji Idi Mai Lemo Sheka. Except Professor Ibrahim Ayagi who was said to have died after a protracted illness, the causes of the deaths of others are still shrouded in mystery. Also early in the week, over 140 people were reported to have died in Kano city with the causes not identified. It would be recalled that the index of coronavirus, whose case was confirmed barely three weeks ago, had died even as confirmed cases of the virus contained to grow rapidly.
Like the Minister of Works and Housing Mr Babatunde Raji Fashola has pointed out, the inks will, for a long time from now, flow in tributes to Abba Kyari, the late Chief of Staff to President Muhammadu Buhari. And, the tributes will, of course, be written by those who loved and despised Abba Kyari, a man who, surprisingly, can be said to be more loved in death than alive. Abba Kyari, in death, seems to be, to most Nigerians, that man who was good, patriotic and humble but misunderstood and had his character disparaged and maligned. Now dead, we hear and believe that Abba Kyari was Spartan, quiet and reserved individual that many people did not know during his lifetime. As the inks flow, we read that Abba Kyari had many good and interesting sides to him, contrary to the widespread misconceptions of him. In reality, he was to many the simplest, most unassuming, humble and easy-going person. In fact, for Abba Kyari, it’s the time to harvest love even from his virulent critics. And this exposed the hypocrisy of people in this part of the world. People will hate you with a passion when you are alive and turn out to be your chief mourners in death. It is in this regard that I respect the view of my boss, mentor and big brother, Professor Farooq Adamu Kperogi. “In spite of who he (Kyari) was, especially the last five years of his life on earth, as a Muslim, I won’t speak ill of him in death,” Farooq Kperogi said in a piece on the death of Abba Kyari. “But I won’t write undeserving & deodorizing posthumous extolments of him, either. That would be as bad as, or even worse than, celebrating his death.” Indeed, it would have been surprising and hypocritical if Farooq Kperogi had done anything beyond that for he appears to be one of the most noticeable critics of the late Abba Kyari, especially on the existence of the much-talked-about cabal at the Presidential Villa purportedly holding the president to ransom. Of course, many people now wonder why Abba Kyari deemed it unnecessary to defend himself on many of the allegations levelled against him and, from the face of it, one is tempted to say the question was right to be asked. Abba Kyari, after all, was an appointee of the government who, like the others should, ideally, defend their names and actions if not on behalf of the government they serve but for posterity, family and need to bequeath good legacies. Abba Kyari, however, did not see it that way, probably believing he would, one day, have his say of the stories. That day, as we all know now, will never come. He also thought that he was not the real target of his critics and their allegations and that so long as he remained loyal, which he did, to his principal and maintained a clear conscience, people had their mouth and could say whatever they liked. The late Abba Kyari was one of the most generally misunderstood Nigerians with the reason majorly been his taciturn disposition. Another reason for the widespread misconception about who Abba Kyari was and what he represented could be his position against telling his own story or have someone else do that for him, to dispel vicious rumours and damaging stories put out against his person and office. But those who knew and related with him are not the least surprised, because that had always been his preferred way of managing his affairs. And after his death, Abba Kyari can now hardly, if ever, be blamed for the approach he adopted to deal with allegations made against him. Had he responded to the many allegations and joined issues with his traducers, he would have become unfocused and compounded some of the problems of the Buhari-led administration and, above that, exposed his principal to some forms of attacks never seen before made against any previous leader. Of course, this is the kind of loyalty shown by Abba Kyari to President Muhammadu Buhari that has now become a reference point and, perhaps, a thing of study for present and future ogas’ aides. Now that a good soul has passed on and a good man has gone, the attention of people and, especially, the president could, easily, move to a discussion about who succeeds Abba Kyari as Chief of Staff. The seeming immediate battle for his succession restates the vanity of man. Once one is no more, people rush to take over one’s most cherished valuable things – your wife, job/position, property and all that. Prominent figures like the former Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Mr Babagana Kingibe; Minister of Education, Mr Adamu Adamu; Minister of Water Resources, Mr Suleiman Adamu; and the Comptroller General of Nigeria Customs Service, Mr Hamid Ali, are being promoted as the likely successors of the late Abba Kyari. And we are not going to write about their biodata or dwell on their merits or demerits for the job. No! However, we will raise some fundamental issue thus: Although there cannot be another Abba Kyari, some semblance of the qualities of the late Chief of Staff can be considered in appointing a new occupant for the office. In fact, what President Muhammadu Buhari owes the deceased is appointing somebody who posses some of the qualities of Abba Kyari, many of which have been highlighted in the torrent of tributes to him. Some of these qualities include his simplicity, reserved nature, nationalistic approach to issues, broad-mindedness, abhorrence for corruption, and vast knowledge of politics, economics, philosophy and social development, among others. Abba Kyari’s disdain for material enrichments was legendary. No doubt, among the reasons why Abba Kyari enjoyed negative publicity was his abhorrence for corruption. He blocked the thieving elite from pilfering the nation’s resources and fought corruption in many fronts. One of his initial actions in office was to stop the N200 million monthly direct cash advance to the Office of the Chief of Staff while refreshments and other things were taken care of from his purse. His signature policy initiatives were also remarkably outstanding. To borrow the words of the outgoing Permanent Secretary of State House, Mr Jalal Arabi, the deceased’s many interventions “include the National Council on Food Strategy; Presidential Fertilizer Initiative; Presidential Infrastructure Fund; Presidential Artisanal Gold Mining Initiative; Completion of Second Niger Bridge; Initiation for the Funding of 18 Key Road projects across the country; Rehabilitation of Abuja-Kaduna-Kano Road Network; Presidential Power Initiative – Siemens; 10MW Grid Solar Power Project In Kano; Planting of 26 Million Trees to address Desertification; Establishment of 16 Federal Science and Technical Schools in the States; Creation of Special Public Works Program to provide part-time employment to 40,000 Nigerian Youths across eight (8) states on a pilot basis; and Federal Government’s COVID-19 palliatives; etc.” Perhaps, we should add that the greatest things the President and Nigerians owe Abba Kyari are: fixing the country’s infrastructure, sustaining the fight against corruption, promotion of unity among the diverse components making up the country, and ensuring general wellbeing of the people. These are the values he lived to accomplish and died in the process of realising them.
*Gulloma is the Presidential Villa correspondent of Blueprint newspaper*
The Director-General of the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC), Dr. Chikwe Ihekweazu, has said that Kogi and other States are yet to send in samples for testing to confirm if they had cases of coronavirus.
Ihekweazu, who spoke in an interview on Channels Television, said that stressed that it is worrisome that some states have not sent in samples for testing, adding: “it is a bit like pretending like the problem does not exist because you are not looking for it.
“In every state, we expect a certain number of people to fit the case definition of an acute respiratory infection without an underlying cause.
“If you take away contacts with travellers and with confirmed cases, the third part of our case definition which says anyone with an acute respiratory infection for which there is no underlying cause should have a sample collected to know whether they have this disease or not.
“So, we expect every state to submit a certain number of samples for testing every day. We have seen that some states have not submitted a single sample.
“We are doing an analysis on the number of samples we have received from some states, which we will share with all the governors.
“We are going to send it back to them for them to look at their data and be honest with their people that there are no cases in their states.”
Dr. Ihekweazu said that NCDC had so far conducted 9,522 tests as of April 22 and that 26 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) had confirmed cases of coronavirus.
File photo of President Muhammadu Buhari receiving gift from Archbishop of Canterbury, Archbishop Justin Welby at the Abuja House in London
The Archbishop of Canterbury, The Most Reverend Justin Welby, has defined the correct role of an ideal Chief of Staff which he said late Abba Kyari played very well.
In a condolence letter to President Muhammadu Buhari, expressing his sadness over the passage of Abba Kyari, the senior world religious leader said: “the Chief of Staff is a role on which one depends more than almost any other.”
According to the Archbishop, in the letter dated April 21: “occupants of that strategic position need to be trusted…and willing to have your interests most closely at heart.”
The Archbishop, who is a personal friend of the President, told Buhari: “the fact that you entrusted Abba Kyari with your messages to me and to others demonstrates the faith you have in him.
“I am sure that his death is a significant blow to you personally, as well as to your government.
“This letter therefore brings my condolence at the loss of a man who struck me as remarkably intelligent and thoughtful…”
This was even as the pioneer Director-General of the National Intelligence Agency, Ambassador Albert Korubo Horsfall, also sympathized with President Buhari on the loss of his Chief of Staff.
Also the Oil and Gas Trainers’ Association of Nigeria (OGTAN) in a condolence letter signed by its President, Dr Mayowa Afe to President Buhari, described Mallam Kyari as “a trusted friend, dependable ally and a man of uncommon loyalty…”
The Association while also acknowledging his contributions to strengthening the “economy and the Oil and Gas Industry.”
A male police Sergeant, Bitrus Osaiah, attached to Rivers State Task Force on Decongestion, is reported to have shot and killed a female officer, Ms lovender Elekwachi.
The incident, according to the spokesman of the Force in the state, Nnamdi Omoni in a statement today, April 24, occurred on Wednesday.
The statement said that the deceased was serving at Eneka Police Division, Port Harcourt. She was shot while on traffic duties at the Eneka roundabout.
The statement by Nnamdi Omoni, a deputy superintendent of police, did not give details of what led to the shooting. The suspected assailant, Osaiah and two other members of the task force have been arrested by the police.
“The Hilux vehicle belonging to the Task Force has been impounded and the corpse of the Woman Sergeant deposited in the mortuary.
“The Commissioner of Police, Joseph Mukan, has ordered investigation into the matter with a view to unraveling the circumstances that led to her death and has appealed for calm, pending the outcome of the investigation, promising that the interest of justice must be served in the circumstance.”
file photo: Coronavirus patient in critical condition
The death toll from the new coronavirus reached 50,000 in the U.S., now the epicenter of the global outbreak, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.
New York City has suffered the most, with more than 16,000 deaths. About 870,000 people in the U.S. have been infected, with about 20,000 new cases added yesterday, April 23.
Still, some states have begun planning to roll back social-distancing restrictions, facing the dilemma of how to restart the economy without sparking a second wave of infections. Some European countries, including Germany and Austria, are already taking cautious steps toward reopening.
U.S. lawmakers overwhelmingly passed a $484 billion aid bill, which President Donald Trump is expected to sign today, Friday, April 24. The bill includes funding for hospitals, virus testing and small businesses.
Some advocates fear it won’t be enough to prop up small businesses affected by the lockdown.
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Abba Kyari’s Death And Succession Battle, By Abdullahi M. Gulloma
Like the Minister of Works and Housing Mr Babatunde Raji Fashola has pointed out, the inks will, for a long time from now, flow in tributes to Abba Kyari, the late Chief of Staff to President Muhammadu Buhari.
And, the tributes will, of course, be written by those who loved and despised Abba Kyari, a man who, surprisingly, can be said to be more loved in death than alive. Abba Kyari, in death, seems to be, to most Nigerians, that man who was good, patriotic and humble but misunderstood and had his character disparaged and maligned.
Now dead, we hear and believe that Abba Kyari was Spartan, quiet and reserved individual that many people did not know during his lifetime. As the inks flow, we read that Abba Kyari had many good and interesting sides to him, contrary to the widespread misconceptions of him. In reality, he was to many the simplest, most unassuming, humble and easy-going person.
In fact, for Abba Kyari, it’s the time to harvest love even from his virulent critics. And this exposed the hypocrisy of people in this part of the world. People will hate you with a passion when you are alive and turn out to be your chief mourners in death.
It is in this regard that I respect the view of my boss, mentor and big brother, Professor Farooq Adamu Kperogi. “In spite of who he (Kyari) was, especially the last five years of his life on earth, as a Muslim, I won’t speak ill of him in death,” Farooq Kperogi said in a piece on the death of Abba Kyari. “But I won’t write undeserving & deodorizing posthumous extolments of him, either. That would be as bad as, or even worse than, celebrating his death.” Indeed, it would have been surprising and hypocritical if Farooq Kperogi had done anything beyond that for he appears to be one of the most noticeable critics of the late Abba Kyari, especially on the existence of the much-talked-about cabal at the Presidential Villa purportedly holding the president to ransom.
Of course, many people now wonder why Abba Kyari deemed it unnecessary to defend himself on many of the allegations levelled against him and, from the face of it, one is tempted to say the question was right to be asked.
Abba Kyari, after all, was an appointee of the government who, like the others should, ideally, defend their names and actions if not on behalf of the government they serve but for posterity, family and need to bequeath good legacies.
Abba Kyari, however, did not see it that way, probably believing he would, one day, have his say of the stories. That day, as we all know now, will never come. He also thought that he was not the real target of his critics and their allegations and that so long as he remained loyal, which he did, to his principal and maintained a clear conscience, people had their mouth and could say whatever they liked.
The late Abba Kyari was one of the most generally misunderstood Nigerians with the reason majorly been his taciturn disposition. Another reason for the widespread misconception about who Abba Kyari was and what he represented could be his position against telling his own story or have someone else do that for him, to dispel vicious rumours and damaging stories put out against his person and office.
But those who knew and related with him are not the least surprised, because that had always been his preferred way of managing his affairs.
And after his death, Abba Kyari can now hardly, if ever, be blamed for the approach he adopted to deal with allegations made against him. Had he responded to the many allegations and joined issues with his traducers, he would have become unfocused and compounded some of the problems of the Buhari-led administration and, above that, exposed his principal to some forms of attacks never seen before made against any previous leader.
Of course, this is the kind of loyalty shown by Abba Kyari to President Muhammadu Buhari that has now become a reference point and, perhaps, a thing of study for present and future ogas’ aides.
Now that a good soul has passed on and a good man has gone, the attention of people and, especially, the president could, easily, move to a discussion about who succeeds Abba Kyari as Chief of Staff.
The seeming immediate battle for his succession restates the vanity of man. Once one is no more, people rush to take over one’s most cherished valuable things – your wife, job/position, property and all that.
Prominent figures like the former Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Mr Babagana Kingibe; Minister of Education, Mr Adamu Adamu; Minister of Water Resources, Mr Suleiman Adamu; and the Comptroller General of Nigeria Customs Service, Mr Hamid Ali, are being promoted as the likely successors of the late Abba Kyari. And we are not going to write about their biodata or dwell on their merits or demerits for the job. No!
However, we will raise some fundamental issue thus: Although there cannot be another Abba Kyari, some semblance of the qualities of the late Chief of Staff can be considered in appointing a new occupant for the office.
In fact, what President Muhammadu Buhari owes the deceased is appointing somebody who posses some of the qualities of Abba Kyari, many of which have been highlighted in the torrent of tributes to him. Some of these qualities include his simplicity, reserved nature, nationalistic approach to issues, broad-mindedness, abhorrence for corruption, and vast knowledge of politics, economics, philosophy and social development, among others.
Abba Kyari’s disdain for material enrichments was legendary. No doubt, among the reasons why Abba Kyari enjoyed negative publicity was his abhorrence for corruption. He blocked the thieving elite from pilfering the nation’s resources and fought corruption in many fronts. One of his initial actions in office was to stop the N200 million monthly direct cash advance to the Office of the Chief of Staff while refreshments and other things were taken care of from his purse.
His signature policy initiatives were also remarkably outstanding. To borrow the words of the outgoing Permanent Secretary of State House, Mr Jalal Arabi, the deceased’s many interventions “include the National Council on Food Strategy; Presidential Fertilizer Initiative; Presidential Infrastructure Fund; Presidential Artisanal Gold Mining Initiative; Completion of Second Niger Bridge; Initiation for the Funding of 18 Key Road projects across the country; Rehabilitation of Abuja-Kaduna-Kano Road Network; Presidential Power Initiative – Siemens; 10MW Grid Solar Power Project In Kano; Planting of 26 Million Trees to address Desertification; Establishment of 16 Federal Science and Technical Schools in the States; Creation of Special Public Works Program to provide part-time employment to 40,000 Nigerian Youths across eight (8) states on a pilot basis; and Federal Government’s COVID-19 palliatives; etc.”
Perhaps, we should add that the greatest things the President and Nigerians owe Abba Kyari are: fixing the country’s infrastructure, sustaining the fight against corruption, promotion of unity among the diverse components making up the country, and ensuring general wellbeing of the people. These are the values he lived to accomplish and died in the process of realising them.
*Gulloma is the Presidential Villa correspondent of Blueprint newspaper*