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  • Dangote Cement in Tanzania now runs on gas turbines

    Management of Dangote Cement has revealed that its Pan African sales increased by 2.7 per cent to nearly 4.7 million tons for the six month ended on June 30th 2019.

    To the delight of its investors, the company also revealed that its Tanzania Plants now runs on gas turbines, just as sales volumes from its Senegal Plants are more than 100% of its rated capacity.

    All in all, these surely are good signs of better days ahead for the company’s investors. It would be recalled that the company paid a whopping N272.6 billion as dividends to its shareholders last financial year, translating to N16 per 50kobo share,, an increase of 52.4 per cent against total dividend of N178.9 billion or N10.50 per share paid by the company for 2017 financial year.

    Chairman of the company, Aliko Dangote had recently said its cement terminals in Lagos State and Onne, Rivers, would be concluded before the end of 2019, as a way of further improving its market share.

     He promised that the terminals, which were delayed by equipment suppliers, would rake in about $700 million in foreign exchange through cement exportation to sub-Saharan Africa.

    He said the company would be opening export facilities within the terminals to export clinker and cement to its existing facilities both in Cameroun and other African countries.

    According to him: “Later in 2019, we will open export facilities in Lagos and Port Harcourt that will enable us export clinker initially to our grinding facility in Cameroun and then to new grinding plans we are building in West Africa…Not only will these generate useful foreign currency for Dangote Cement to support other expansion projects outside of Nigeria, they will also help to increase the output of our Nigerian plants,” he said.

    He further revealed that the company would be exporting cements through the terminals to Ghana, Cameroun, Sierra Leone and Congo, among others and as such make Nigeria the biggest exporter of cement in sub-Saharan Africa.

    Noting that the project will improve job creation and increase prosperity of the country, he said the company’s capacity will also increase on the completion of the terminals.

    Dangote Cement is Africa’s leading cement producer with nearly 46Mta capacity across ten countries in Sub-Saharan Africa. A fully integrated quarry-to-customer producer, it has a production capacity of 29.25Mta in Nigeria. Its Obajana plant in Kogi state, Nigeria, is the largest in Africa with 13.25Mta of capacity across four lines; its Ibese plant in Ogun State has four cement lines with a combined capacity of 12Mta, while its Gboko plant in Benue state has 4Mta.

    Through its recent investments, Dangote Cement has eliminated Nigeria’s dependence on imported cement and has transformed the nation into a net exporter, serving neighbouring countries that lack the limestone necessary for cement manufacturing.
  • Catholic Archbishop tasks new Ministers on diligence, patriotism and selflessness

    (FLOWERBUDNEWS) The Catholic Archbishop of Lagos,  Most  Rev  Dr  Alfred  Adewale  Martins  has

    admonished the newly sworn-in Ministers of the Federal Republic to serve the nation

    with utmost diligence and deep sense of patriotism in their various Ministries in

    other to help the President move the nation to greater heights.

    In a press release made available to newsmen through the Acting Director of Social

    Communications, Lagos Archdiocese, Rev Fr Anthony Godonu, Archbishop Martins,

    while congratulating the new ministers on their appointments, reminded them that

    they have a great responsibility ahead of them as the country was going through

    very difficult times in all facets.

    He challenged them to rise up to the demands of their offices by hitting the ground

    running and being alive to the yearnings of all segments of Nigerians who have been

    clamoring for a better lease of life irrespective of their religion, political party or

    ethnic affiliations.

    “There have been varying analysis and evaluation of the appointments but what is

    beyond contention is that the challenges  before the new ministers  are enormous.

    They are coming in or being re-appointed at a time when there is so much distress,

    anger and dissatisfaction among the people. The expectations of Nigerians are high

    since their desire for no more than the barest minimum of good living has been left

    unfulfilled for far too long. So, we hope that the Ministers would hit the ground

    running. Their two-day gathering or retreat should have helped them to identify the

    various ways their ministries can impact meaningfully on the lives of the people. The

    ruling Party has made a lot of promises and Nigerians hope that the Ministers would

    work to ensure that the promises would not go the way of similar promises in the

    past that were not satisfactorily discharged. It is only by making the lives of people

    manifestly better that they would be able to justify their appointments to these

    high offices.”

    The Prelate also called on President Muhammadu Buhari and his Ministers to avail

    themselves of  wise  counsel  from  all  well-meaning  Nigerians  irrespective  of  the

    source of counsel. He advised the President to use his second term in office to make

    amends for all  the  shortfalls  of  his  first  tenure,  namely:  security  of  lives  and

    property, supply of  constant  and  stable  power  (electricity),  fixing  the  dwindling

    economy  as  well  as  consolidating  on  the  construction  and  provision  of  social

    infrastructure in country.

    While praying God to imbue the President with wisdom and all the virtues needed for

    his office, he implored him not to discountenance the growing agitations coming from

    the  different  corners  of  this  country  calling  for  the  restoration  of  the  Federal

    character of the country, often referred to as restructuring of the country.

    The  Archbishop  noted  that  President  Muhammadu  Buhari,  as  the  father  of  the

    nation,  should  be  prepared  to  make  every  sacrifice  needed  to  rebuild  and  make

    Nigeria a peaceful nation, united and prosperous. We have for too long been the butt

    of jokes and cynical remarks and we hope the tides would change very soon.

  • 2023: Only S/West, S/East Disagreement Can Keep Power In North – Ahamba

    (FLOWERBUDNEWS)  Elder statesman and Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Chief Mike Ahamba, has cautioned that the deteriorating security situation in the country could force Nigerians to employing private armies to protect themselves. In this interview, he spoke on several national issues.

    There is no contention that the greatest challenge facing every Nigerian today is that of security to his life and property. At the moment, no state is free from the deteriorating security situation. How do you feel as a Nigerian today?

    It is very worrisome and everywhere you see two people sitting together, all you hear them talk about is the deteriorating security situation in Nigeria. It looks like the government has lost grip on security and they have to do something about it. If it means changing the service chiefs, let them be changed and let others try. The situation is horrible.

    Today ( Friday 23), I went to Port Harcourt and we were delayed a long time by armed robbers in the Owerri/Port Harcourt road. The officers of the Nigerian Customs Service came and the people ran away.

    And between Owerri and Port Harcourt, they have more than 20 checkpoints but the armed robbers took over one of the checkpoints and mounted their operation in that place. I do not want us to get to the stage of South America at a particular time when people had to have private armies in order to survive. May God not allow us get to that level! Insecurity is everywhere and it is terrible. Wherever you see two responsible Nigerians sitting now, what they are certainly discussing is the insecurity situation.

    From your vantage position, do you think it is the failure of government to properly address it or there is more to the ugly development. All manner of conspiracy theories have been used to interpret the situation but do you think, it is the government that should be blamed for not doing its job? 

    I do not think the government has done all it can do. They have to consider the personnel who are in charge of the different sectors whether they will be sacked or retained. That is how governance is done. I do not believe that anybody is perpetrating the insecurity from outside the country. What is happening in Nigeria is local. People who are into kidnapping do that because of the bad state of the economy and it is dangerous. The government in charge should take care of the situation.

    Aside the issue of security, how do you feel about the atmosphere of hopelessness and despondency among the people in the country?

    The problem is the economy. There are many people who ought to be comfortable today but they are not. There is an Igbo proverb that says that all lizards are lying with their belly on the ground and you do not know the one that has bellyache. There are many prominent people in Nigeria today who like the lizards are lying down with their belly on the ground and you do not know among them who have bellyache. So, when the people who can help the poorer ones are in trouble, you know that there is calamity coming. The problem should be addressed as a serious issue. It should not be politicized or ethnicised at all.

    Are you comfortable with the slow pace of government considering that most sectors need quick and urgent action? I ask this question because of the length it took the government to constitute the new cabinet. And looking at the cabinet, how do you feel?

    I think that is what the president wants. He has the discretion to choose who he wants, so let us see how it works.

    The divide between the North and South seems to be widening by the day; what is the problem and when are we going to achieve real unity in the country? It depends on what you mean by the North. Already, the Middle Belt people have said they are not part of the North. So, the configuration has changed a lot in the country but the conflict between the northernmost North and the rest of the country, something should be done about it because creating dichotomy is not good at all. Everybody must be realistic and objective, otherwise, the calamity will overtake all of us.

    People are complaining everywhere and nobody should pray for an armed conflict in this country. It will be devastating. I have said it that if it happens again in Nigeria, what happened in Rwanda will be a joke considering the depth of anger in the country now. May God not allow it to happen and government should be conscious of it.

    What are your projections ahead of 2023 especially with regards to the position of some prominent Northerners that power should remain in the North after President Buhari’s second term? 

    It is unfortunate if they insist that it should remain in the North. I think there is a gentleman agreement among the parties on this issue that power should alternate between the North and South even though there is no such thing in our constitution.

    If the people you are talking about insist that it must remain in the North, it means they do not believe in the unity of this country. And if the Southerners accept it, that is their own business. They cannot enforce it if the South says no. The problem is that if the East and West start fighting over the whole thing, the North should take it. Fairness demands that the North should relinquish power in 2023 to the South, and this time, the East should have it. This is my humble opinion about the matter.

    Do you think politicians in the East are prepared enough to take the opportunity when it calls? The question comes against the backdrop of the disagreements that usually characterize politics in that zone. A recent case in point was the deluge of criticisms that trailed the emergence of Peter Obi as vice to Atiku Abubakar in the last presidential election.

    Where has there been a consensus on that in Nigeria? There have always been disagreements and eventually an agreement. Many people will come out; you do not expect that one person will shoot out from somewhere and be acceptable to everyone.

    A lot of interested parties will come and what we are saying is that when that time comes, from the nature of the popularity of that person, acceptability should I say from other parts of the country, one person will emerge from there. The last time, we left power to the North. In PDP, people challenged Atiku but in the APC, nobody challenged Buhari. In 2011, he was challenged. So, this question of the Igbo not speaking with one voice, where is it that people always speak with one voice? I do not know why this thing is associated with the Igbo and unless somebody shoots out from somewhere and he is accepted by all, then the Igbo cannot speak with one voice.

    There are many people who would consider themselves qualified but only one would emerge and that is democracy. I do not see where it is stated as a rule that the Igbo do not agree on anything. We agree on things in democratic circumstances but we are republican in nature.

    The recent assigning of portfolios is currently generating controversy following what appeared like the lopsided nature of it. What is your take on that?

    Your paper just published my interview about not obeying the geographical spread that is in our constitution. All I can say is that in the National Assembly, you do not have only people from the North West alone.

    The composition of the people in the legislature is more important than the person sitting in the executive position. Members of the National Assembly should begin to know when infractions begin to arise and know how to go about it. So, if the National Assembly allows such a thing to occur, Mike Ahamba as an individual cannot do anything about it.

    With the mood of hopelessness and uncertainty in the country, do you agree with those who suggest that Nigerians should organize another dialogue again when several of such efforts in the past did not yield any fruits? The conference we had in 1977/78 yielded results and we had the 1979 constitution. What we should do now is for the National Assembly to sit down and enact an act that would provide for a Constituent Assembly or a national conference.

    That body when it makes a proposed constitution, it can then be sent for a plebiscite as provided in the Constituent assembly act and we may take it from there.

    But if we just go for jaw jawing as we did last time, it will end there and everyone goes on. If the purpose of the National conference was to send an amendment to the constitution or to do a new one, and an act enacted to back up that responsibility, I do not think the waste of time people are talking about would have happened. So, before we go jaw jawing again, there must be an act backing up that situation.

    Without an act, it is another waste of time and that act must make provision that whatever decision there, as properly made, must be subjected to a plebiscite.

    Some people believe that only the rotational presidency arrangement can stabilize the nation. Do you subscribe to that position?

    I have never agreed with rotation but it appears that most Nigerians think that it is the only way out. We are only looking for an easy way out and not a comprehensive way out.

    Now, when you restate it, it appears that whoever comes out from that arrangement, you are bound to accept him whether he is competent or not.

    I do not know whether people realize that point but we now have a mental rotation in this country; if the fact that power should alternate between the North and South has been mentally agreed by Nigerians, why don’t we go that way. Now, it has been to the South and the South West and South South have had their chance. It has also been to the North and the North West has had its chance, and if it comes back to the South, it is only natural that the South East should take their chance.

    If only we agree that we are brothers and should be our brother’s keeper, it is only fair that the South East should take their chance when power comes back to the South.

    It is just that people who are interested in positions want it the way it would favour them for their own personal interests. Nobody is thinking about our children and grandchildren. It is unfortunate but my view is this, let us for now leave it as it is because we cannot go and make a special law, saying it should rotate. That will be a major constitutional amendment. I will continue to say it.

    So, what we do is, it has gone to the North and after President Buhari, it should come to the South and the East should have it. Even though candidates of other zones could come out but the voters should vote them out for fairness and justice. When you know that if you go against the people’s wish, people will vote against you, the effort to do that in future will diminish. In Nigeria, we apply quick solutions to create new problems.

    As an elder statesman from the South East, how do you feel with the attack on Ekweremadu by those alleged to be IPOB members in Germany?

    I feel very bad about it. We must accept that out there, assaulting politicians publicly is nothing new. What I am bothered about is the threat that any political leader who traveled out should be attacked. As far as I am concerned, that is a terrorist statement and IPOB members should take care that they do not embarrass those who have been defending them.

    Two, if they think they are talking about the interest of the Igbo, I think it is anti-Igbo to go and attack a man who came to associate with you on invitation.

    Did you invite him there to have him killed? Three is that the leaders should now warn themselves that all that glitters is not gold. Did Ekweremadu not go to pay courtesy call on Nnamdi Kanu when he came back from detention? We have to be circumspect when we take positions if we know that we are political leaders; but in all, I think it was most unfortunate. It was anti Nigeria and anti Igbo and a disgrace to our national image abroad.

    With the threat that nobody should come, I know that a well organized intelligence agency in the West would take care of the situation.

    People would not stop asking questions on the anti corruption war of President Buhari’s administration. Do you expect an intensification of the war in this second term of Buhari?

    Let us hope there would be an intensification of the war against corruption but when you make people who are standing trials ministers, what do you expect people to say? So, let us hope for the best. Some people may have been accused falsely; even, I have been accused falsely and anybody could be accused falsely and that should not be the disqualifying factor. Until you get the person convicted, you cannot stop him.

    I believe that there should be improvement and across the board fight against corruption. It should not be a fight against only PDP members and other parties to the exclusion of the APC.

    What significant difference do you expect President Buhari to make in this second term? Anybody without expectation or hope for the better is dead and I am not dead. I can only expect that tomorrow will be better than today.

    The economy is not looking good at all and Nigeria has not been able to achieve the much talked about diversification of her economy. What is your view on the state of the economy especially against fears that the nation may still go back to recession again if care is not taken?

    I tell you that so long as we depend on one aspect of our economy for survival, we continue to run the risk of poverty. I said it before that those days we used to produce groundnut and hides and skin in the North; in the South West, we had cocoa which led to the tarring of roads, free education and all that, and in the East, palm oil led to industrialization. But when oil came, people abandoned all those areas.

    It will take one or two governors going back to the mentality of Okpara and Awolowo to solve these problems. It is not an issue of national debate. Anambra State is already doing that; thanks to a man like Peter Obi who laid the foundation when he was the governor of the state. If others do it, all these things would end. It is not a question of debate; it is deciding what to do and doing it. That starts by electing the right persons.

    You are one of the foremost lawyers in this country; what do you think are the major challenges facing the judiciary in this country?

    First of all, we must have a better way of selecting the people who enter it in the first place. You know that when you appoint a High Court judge, you have appointed a potential Supreme Court Justice. Therefore, the search for confidence must start from there. So, we must not just look at the 10 years experience but how the person spent the 10 years. So long as we make mistakes in the appointment, some would bring bad image to the majority. In my book that will soon come out, I discussed these things. I made it a point of campaign when I was running for the presidency of the bar.

    We have to look at the source of our problems before looking at the solutions; we treat effects and not cause. That is one major problem that we have in Nigeria.

    What is your view on the killing of Nigerians in several parts of the world particularly in South Africa? Do you think we are doing enough as a nation to discourage this ugly development?

    It is very unfortunate. First of all, I want you to think about the statement of a higher security official in South Africa. He said that most of the killings of Nigerians were done by Nigerians. That is a very serious point we must not ignore. Remember that recently, somewhere in Anambra State, a quarrel or disagreement in South Africa was taken to a church and resulting in many deaths.

    We also have to ask ourselves, what type of businesses are our people engaged in? We must find out how we are carrying out our businesses in that place and whether we are doing it under internationally accepted standards.

    Why are we rushing to South Africa and coming back with large wealth? That wealth belongs to some people who are being deprived of their resources and in such a case, some people may take revenge. That is the possibility of what could happen.

    What are your greatest fears for this country?

    My greatest fears are that people do not appreciate the consequences of their actions and the consequences of their actions may not be what they anticipate.

    And when such a thing happens, everybody would be a victim. Anarchy is nobody’s friend. Our people say that you do not throw a pebble into the market because you do not know who it would hit. It could be your mother even.

    That statement came when the average community was just a village. We can expand it to mean the whole country. What you do today, you may not know whether it would be against you tomorrow. I think that the solution to our problems in Nigeria is to be less parochial and more patriotic.

    Once we do that, I can assure you that 80 per cent of our problems in this country would disappear. These things happen as a consequence of human nature and disagreements. What makes a nation is how they handle the problems that confront them. So, for every incumbent administration, when there is a problem, they should confront it no matter who is involved even if he is your father or brother. That is the only way out, otherwise, the country would not move forward.

    As President Buhari settles down for a second term, what is your advice to him? 

    Let him find out what he did wrong in his first tenure and correct them. Let him not repeat what he did that was wrong. First of all, he must have to take care of the massacring of human beings in villages in some parts of the country including the North. It does not speak well of an administration. An administration that cannot protect the lives of its citizenry is not a good one. Security is the main issue and he must do something about it and everybody should support him to do something about it.

  • Picketing on South African companies in Nigeria will not stop xenophobic attacks – activist

    A human rights activist, Mr Alexander Orji, has urged Nigerians to stop picketing South African companies in Nigeria.

    He said picketing would not stop the killing of Nigerians in South Africa, but worsen the rivalry among citizens of the two nations.

    Orji, Director-General of Centre for Protection of Nigerians in Diaspora, made the appeal following threats of attack on South African businesses in Nigeria by the National  Associations of Nigerian Students (NANS).

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the association, had on Aug. 8 in Yola, Adamawa State, picketed South African businesses, warning them to leave the country within seven days.

    Also, the students association in Ogun State have picketed South African companies such as MTN, DSTV and Stanbic Bank.

    Orji said that there was a lot of risk in picketing and this would not favour anyone, while violence had never settled any dispute, but ignited the fire.

    He said that violence on South African companies could not be the right approach as it would not stop the killings, but rather add to the sufferings of Nigerians there who were mostly  employees.

    “Although  Xenophobic attacks on Nigerians in South Africa is very wrong and condemnable, the picketing approach is also very condemnable.

    “Do not forget that  their presence has brought solutions to many gap in goods and services where Nigerians are the employees, doing that will leave some youths jobless.

    “Picketing of South African businesses may be tantamount to theft in the name of trying to destroy properties because while doing that miscreants and thugs can use the opportunity to cart away valuables and most times, lives are lost.

    “Why most people believe in protest, whether peaceful or not, but I think the best way to resolve issues is peaceful means or roundtable dialogue.

    “We need each other, which is why Nigerians leave their country for another, this is because we need something from them and they too do same,” Orji said.

    He said a roundtable by the two countries would be the best approach to bring normalcy to the issue.

    “We, therefore, urge the National Association of Nigerian Students not to adopt violence or  take laws into their hands as these can be hijacked by unscrupulous elements and cause harm beyond repairs, especially to our people and land.

    “Sometimes, chanting war songs does not make one victorious,” he said.

    NAN

  • N-Power: FG empowers 11, 000 graduates with N8.94bn in Plateau

    The Federal Government has empowered more than 11, 000 graduates in Plateau State with N8.94 billion under the N-Power programme.

    Dr Sumaye Hamza, the Executive Assistant to Gov. Simon Lalong on Social Investment Program (SIP), disclosed this on Tuesday in her opening remarks at a 4-Day Sensitisation Workshop organised for N-Agro beneficiaries in Plateau.

    Hamza, who is also the state Programme Focal Person on National Social Investment programme (NSIP), said the amount did not include N-power Build where skills were provided as well as start-up tools and monthly stipends to over 900 youths.

    According to her, some of the components of the NSIP initiated by President Muhammudu Buhari administration and supported by Gov. Lalong include: Job creation, Home grown school feeding, Conditional Cash Transfer and Enterprise Empowerment Programme.

    “Government is committed to ensuring that the citizens of Nigeria are supported to boost Agricultural activities and subsequently get out of poverty.

    “This is the more reason why the programme seeks to also boost productivity especially amongst the marginalised and vulnerable women and youths.

    “It also aims at stimulating economic activities, creates jobs, improve livelihood and reduce inequality and gender stability in communities.

    “The more than 11, 000 N-Power graduates in Plateau are benefiting in the area of NTech, NHealth and NAgro right from inception from the N8.94 billion injected by the government in the state.’’

    The focal person tasked the 200 participants of the workshop to be attentive, idealistic and focused to launch themselves into self-reliance and be employers of labour.

    She also urged the participants to emulate the conveyor of the workshop, Mr Badi Emmanuel of GIZ Nigeria, whom she described as a “motivator and role model” to be committed, determined and focused beneficiaries.

    Earlier, Emmanuel, the workshop conveyor, said that the workshop was to sensitise the N-power Volunteers Start-ups under GIZ designated to Green Innovation centers for food and Agricultural sector.

    “This workshop is to ginger you, therefore, you should endeavour to share your experiences with each other to be equipped in self-economic decision making and understand the context of start-ups,’’ he said.

    NAN

  • Pension verification; Business centre operators make brisk business in Enugu

    By Stanley Nwanosike
    Business centre operators, who have photocopy machines, are currently making brisk business in two centres where Pension Transitional Arrangement Directorate (PTAD) pension verification is ongoing in Enugu.

    A Correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), who is monitoring developments at the centres on Tuesday, observed that many of the retired senior citizens being verified throng photocopy centres to duplicate most of their credentials as demanded by PTAD.

    NAN recalls that PTAD commenced a hitch-free biometric verification of retired civil servants, who served in federal agencies, corporations and institutions, in two centres in Enugu metropolis on Monday.

    A business centre operator, Mrs Ngozi Okenwa, said that business of making photocopies had improved, adding that she made over N6,000 alone from making photocopies on Monday.

    Okenwa, whose business centre is located at the Good Shepherd Cathedral Hall, one of the centres for the verification, said that her experience today (Tuesday),  was same as Monday.

    “It seems today, I will make more sales since the number of customers for photocopy duplicates keep increasing and I have been attending to them since morning,”she said.

    Another business centre operator, Mr Chibuike Onyema, said that the gain of over N7,500 he made from making photocopies on Monday was unprecedented in his two-year experience.

    Onyema, whose business centre is close to Ingrace Event Centre, another venue of the verification in Enugu, said that he had to temporarily engage his brother to assist him today [Tuesday].

    “Since 8 a.m. all we have been doing is to attend to elderly people that came to duplicate their documents.

    “Although, it is a bit stressful not sitting for over five hours now but the profit from this endeavor is worth it,”he said.

    NAN learnt that the ongoing nationwide exercise was to enable PTAD to have a comprehensive, accurate and reliable database for pensioners under the Defined Benefit Scheme.

    The database would also be used to address some irregularities in the system, including ghost worker syndrome, duplicate payments, over and under payments, among other needs.

    It was also learnt that 270 agencies, including universities, tertiary institutions , health institutions and the defunct Power Holding Company of Nigeria, were expected to be covered by the exercise.

    Other agencies included are: Nigeria Railway Corporation, Nigeria Postal Service, Aluminum Smelter Company of Nigeria, Nigeria Aviation Handling Company, Nigerian National Shipping Line and Assurance Bank, among others.

    NAN

  • 30 per cent of children in the north-west out of school, UNICEF says

    Alhaji Muntaka Muktar, Field officer, United Nations Children Education Fund (UNICEF), has said that more than 30 per cent of children that should be in school in six states of the north-west are not in the classes.

    Muktar spoke on Tuesday in Kano at a Media Dialogue on School-based management committees organised by UNICEF.

    He listed the states to include Niger, Kano, Katsina, Sokoto, Zamfara and Kebbi, leaving out Kaduna, one of the states in that geo-political zone..

    “Primary education is officially free and compulsory, but the reality is different. Nationwide, about 10.5 million of the country’s children, aged 5-14, are not in school.

    “Our records show that only  61 per cent of 6-11 year-olds regularly attend primary school, while only 35.6 per cent of children aged 36-59 months receive early childhood education.”

    Muktar explained that states in the north-east and north-west had a female primary net attendance rates of 47.7 percent and 47.3 percent respectively, meaning that more than half of the girls are not in school.

    He blamed the education deprivation in northern Nigeria on economic barriers and socio-cultural norms and practices that discourage formal education, especially for girls.

    The UN official said that UNICEF had consistently campaigned against situations that deny children the right to education, and regretted that most government-funded schools had practically collapsed over the years because of poor funding.

    “Because the public schools have collapsed, children from poor homes with nowhere to go are left on the streets,” he said.

    He said that UNICEF’s interventions had gone beyond providing funds and other interventions to providing technical support and the improvement of the capacity of implementing partners in ministries, departments and agencies.

    The field officer advised the state governments to tap from UNICEF’s available expertise in different areas affecting the growth, protection and development of children, urging policy makers to come up with a child protection intervention for implementation.

    “UNICEF has deployed child protection specialists to the state to assist in that regard; government must take full advantage of that,” he said.

    NAN

  • Recycling company transforms waste into domestic use in Kaduna

    By Hassana Yakubu

    The Chairman, Shehu Plastic & Company Nigeria, Alhaji Shehu Usman, on Tuesday said the Company had transformed many Kaduna Street waste to useful domestic materials through recycling.

    Usman said this when African Climate Reporters paid a courtesy visit to the recycling plant in Kaduna, Kaduna State.

    According to him, waste recycling is a major component of waste management that involves the conversion of waste to reusable products for both domestic and office use.

    ”This is one of the biggest recycling plants in the North where plastic bottles, rubber and other waste materials are collected and transformed to various domestic uses.

    ”We buy these plastic bottles, rubbers and other waste materials from scavengers and waste commercial sellers and transform them to various uses.

    ”The machines grind the waste materials into pieces, after which we take the pieces to where they design new products.

    ”The pieces are turned into buckets, cups, rubber kettles and basins which can be used for domestic purposes and even in the gardens,” he said.

    Shehu said that the company transformed about five tonnes of plastic rubber waste to useful domestic materials monthly, adding that the finished products were sold in Kaduna and other parts of the country.

    He said that waste recycling helped in “conserving natural resources, save the environment from pollution and other environmental challenges.”

    The Chairman maintained that recycling was an alternative to conventional waste disposal and help to lower greenhouse gas emissions into the atmosphere.

    He stated that recycling was an important business in developed countries, adding that it was only of recent that African countries were coming up with plans to recycle waste.

    According to Shehu,  recycling helps in cleaning the environment and also generates income for many unemployed youths engaged in the business.

    Shehu said that there were shortage of recycling companies in the region, adding that epileptic power supply and insecurity were crippling development of many companies in the North.

    He said that dirty environment affect the standard of living, aesthetic sensibilities and health of the people as well as the quality of their lives.

    Shehu said that producing new products from recycled materials was a cost effective way of managing production cost.

    Dr Piman Hoffman, the Director African Climate Reporters, said that the Federal Government should encourage more recycling companies across the country.

    He said that these would help in tackling waste causing various diseases and other environmental challenges in the society.

    According to him, the economy also benefits from recycling as it reduces the cost to clear dump sites.

    He stated that government could save additional millions of naira when such dump sites were reserved for other revenue generating purposes.

    Hoffman said that there was need to support recycling companies financially, adding that residents could also benefit by selling recycling materials to cover the cost of disposing waste.

    NAN

  • Katsina Govt. Recruits Additional 1,000 Health Workers – Masari

    (FLOWERBUDNEWS) Katsina State Government has recruited one thousand (1,000) additional healthcare workers as part of efforts to improve healthcare service delivery in the state.

    Gov. Aminu Masari made the disclosure on Monday in Dutsi during the launch of campaign for Maternal, New Born and Child Health Week.

    He said the measure was aimed at addressing the critical shortage of health workers in government hospitals.

    Masari said the government had rehabilitated and upgraded some hospitals to enhance healthcare delivery.

    According to him, in 2019 budget, the government made adequate provision  for the rehabilitation and upgrading of one Primary Healthcare Centre per each political ward.

    The governor said the campaign was planned for August 26 – 30, across the state.

    He said the services to be provided during the period included, immunisation against the child killer diseases, deworming, Vitamin A supplementation, screening for malnutrition, birth registration, HIV testing and counseling among pregnant women.

    Others were child spacing and health education on preventive measures on how to improve peoples health status.

    He, therefore, urged parents to present their children for the vaccination.

    Masari also urged people to allow their wives to receive the services.

    In his remarks, the permanent secretary, state ministry of health, Dr Kabir Mustapha, commended development partners for their continuous support to health related issues.

    He said  the health week was organised with the aim of promoting preventive and curative health in the state.

    Mustapha said  the health personnel had been trained and vaccines distributed to all  designated centres across the state.

    He also urged parents to allow their children to receive the services. (NAN)