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  • LASG seeks support of residents as Third Mainland Bridge undergoes test from August 23 To 26

    LASG seeks support of residents as Third Mainland Bridge undergoes test from August 23 To 26

    The Lagos State Government has said that the Third Mainland Bridge will be temporarily shut down for from midnight of August 23 to midnight of August 26, 2018 for Investigative Maintenance Test to be carried out.

    The State’s Commissioner for Works and Infrastructure, Mr Ade Akinsanya,in a statement on Sunday appealed for the cooperation, support and understanding of all motorists and residents during the closure.

    He said the decision for the four-day closure was reached after consultations with the Federal Ministry of Power, Works and Housing.

    The four-day closure, according to Akinsanya, will enable the contractors assess the true state of the bridge after which works would commence by the end of the year or early in 2019.

    He said that the Federal Government had earlier announced plans to shut the bridge in July, but postponed it in order to have wider consultation with the state government and other relevant stakeholders to avert gridlock.

    Akinsanya said: “The 3rd Mainland Bridge which was opened about 30 years ago by the then military government has had haphazard maintenance and repairs in the past which the present Federal Government is committed to correct by carrying out proper and continuous maintenance and repairs on it.”

    The commissioner said that all traffic management agencies had been mandated to ensure smooth
    flow of traffic on all alternative routes across the metropolis to ensure free flow of traffic. (NAN)

  • Paediatrician advises parents against enrolling children under 2 years in school

    Paediatrician advises parents against enrolling children under 2 years in school

    Dr Adaugo Onyedinma, a consultant paediatrician, has advised parents  to always enroll  their babies  in school after they have attained at least two years of age.

    Onyedinma, is a staff member of Samaria Hospital in Ago-Lagos, with special interests in newborn health and infant nutrition.

    He told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos that enrolling children in school when they were not matured enough usually had more negative impacts than positive ones on such children.

    “The summer holidays are coming to a close and children are heading back to the classrooms, parents are also preparing to register their babies.

    “I always advise parents to delay school enrollment to at least two years when the child must have developed to an extent.

    “From age two, a child has developed some level of independence and confidence to move around unaided, he has been toilet-trained and has also developed some cognitive abilities to learn,” she said.

    The expert said that the brain of a child who started school early would not be allowed to develop at its own pace.

    He said that this is because he would be subjected to rigorous learning activities that were beyond his capacity.

    According to her, this may eventually affect his ability to cope with school work.

    Onyedinma urged parents to develop a bond with their children until they were old enough to start school.

    He said that the person a child spends his time with in those early and formative years of his life mattered most.

    She advised parents who felt they would not be available to take care of their children, to get trusted adults to take care of them at home.

    The medical expert also said a child would be at risk of contracting different diseases that spreads through contact at school.

    She observed that very young children have low immunity such that they could not fight infections like older children and adults.

    Onyedinma advised parents to immunise their children so as to protect them from catching or passing on infections when they join their friends at school.

    She urged parents to ensure that the schools they intended to register their children had adequate facilities to care for young children and the sanitary conditions were satisfactory.

    She, however, said that the only positive result of early school-start was that a child would be able to interact and relate with other people early enough. (NAN)

  • Sallah: another large turnout of passengers besieged terminus to board free train ride

    Another large turnout of passengers travelling to celebrate Sallah in Osun State besieged Iddo Railway Terminus on Monday to board the free train ride of Gov. Rauf Aregbesola of Osun State.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that large turnout of passengers was also witnessed on Sunday when the exercise began for this year’s Eld-el-Kabir celebrations.

    Gov. Aregbesola began the free train ride programme on his assumption of office as governor about seven and half years ago.

    The free trains ferry Osun indigenes in Lagos to Osogbo to celebrate the annual celebration.

    Some of the stranded passengers, who spoke to NAN correspondent, said that it was painful missing the trip.

    Mr Jerry Oche, the Lagos State District Manager of NRC, said that the passengers were more than available coaches could carry.

    Oche said that two special trains were available to convey the travellers to Osun to accommodate those who were left behind on Sunday.

    He said that the corporation would run two trips on Monday to take stranded passengers.

    “We are running two trips today with 10 coaches each and each coach will carry 96 passengers.

    “The first trip leaves by 10.00 a.m., while the second trip moves by 12 noon to 1.00 p.m. to ensure that many people benefited from the gesture as arranged by the Gov. Rauf Aregbesola,’’ he said.

    NAN reports that hundreds of Osun-bound passengers, who had gathered at the Iddo Terminal of the NRC in Lagos for the free train ride of the Osun Government for Sallah, were also stranded on Sunday.

    Many of the travellers had pleaded with the state government to provide more coaches or extend the days of the exercise.

    NAN reports that the Federal Government had declared Aug. 21 and 22 as public holiday for Sallah celebration. (NAN)

  • Eid-el Kabir: Police deploy 1,200 personnel in Zamfara

    Eid-el Kabir: Police deploy 1,200 personnel in Zamfara

    The Zamfara Police Command has deployed 1,200 policemen across the state to provide security during the Eid-el Kabir celebrations.

    The Public Relations Officer of the command, SP Muhammad Shehu, disclosed this in a statement in Gusau on Sunday.

    Shehu said that the deployment was aimed at ensuring the effective provision of security before, during and after the celebration.

    He said policemen were deployed to cover all the praying grounds, shopping malls and recreational centres across the state.

    “In view of this, the command reinforced and adjusted its personnel deployed to vulnerable communities particularly in Anka, Maru, Maradun, Shinkafi and Zurmi local government areas.

    “We reinforced crime fighting logistics for effective high visibility patrols, stop and search as well as raiding criminals hideouts.

    “Deployment of safer highway patrol teams to all major roads in the state to ensure security and safety of travellers and commuters.

    “Utilizing other relevant platforms to ensure all security agencies are able to deal with any security threat,” he said.

    The command spokesman urged people of the state to be security conscious while celebrating the Sallah festivals.

    Shehu further said that the personnel deployed for the assignment were under strict instructions to be civil and polite while discharging their duties.

    He added that the Commissioner of Police, Mr Kenneth Ebrimson, wishes the Muslim faithful in the state happy Eid-el Kabir celebrations. (NAN)

  • Ram sellers in Zaria decry low patronage

    Ram sellers in Zaria decry low patronage

    Barely two days to Eid-el-Kabir, ram sellers in Zaria, Kaduna state have continued to groan over low patronage and sales.

    A survey conducted by the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in the ancient city shows that ram markets in different locations of the city are experiencing low turnout of customers.

    A ram seller at Veterinary, Kofar Doka, Zaria, Malam Nasiru Aliyu lamented that people only came to enquire about the prices without buying.

    He attributed the low patronage to lack of money and non-payment of August workers’ salaries by the state government.

    Another ram seller at Tudun Wada, Malam Isyaku Muhammad, said that the prices of the rams range between N25,000 to N125,000.

    On his part, Alhaji Datti Mai-Rago at ‘Yan Azara market, Tudun Wada lamented the low sales but expressed optimism that the market would pick up, noting that some prefer to buy “a day to or on Sallah day’’.

    However, Malam Ali Gwamnati, a ram seller at ‘Yan Awaki expressed satisfaction with the level of patronage but complained that the ram were not many compared to last year.

    Reacting to the low patronage, a prospective buyer, Malam Nuhu Muhammad-Tukur bemoaned the exorbitant prices when compared to previous years.

    Muhammad-Tukur attributed the development to low supply of the animals as a result of many factors, especially civil unrest in the Northeast and Northwest of the country.

    “People are willing to buy but high cost of ram had become a source of concern to customers. Again, the ram are not supplied in large quantity as before.

    “This can be attributed to so many factors such as civil unrest in some places like Zamfara, Katsina and Sokoto states as well as Niger Republic.

    “All these places used to be major suppliers of the ram on annual basis, but as it is today, most of the villagers of these areas have now become refugees in other places,” he said. (NAN)

  • Niger Govt. releases N77m for completion of Dangana collapsed bridge

    Niger Govt. releases N77m for completion of Dangana collapsed bridge

    Niger state government has released N77 million to Soject Nigeria Limited, for immediate completion of collapsed Dangana bridge in Lapai Local Government Area of the state.

    The Commissioner of Finance, Alhaji Zakari Abubakar, disclosed this to newsmen when the state Deputy governor, Alhaji Ahmed Ketso inspected the bridge on Friday.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) report that the bridge collapsed in 2017 and an alternative diversion created got flooded during a heavy rain on Thursday night leaving communters including vehicles conveying for burial the corpse of the late mother of Mr Jonathan Vatsa, Former Commissioner of Information stranded.

    Zakari said that already the state government had made payment to the contractor, adding that the sum of N77 million was released  to enable the contractor complete the construction of the bridge.

    Ketso said that the reconstruction of the bridge was part of the state government intervention to fix the collapsed bridge to ease vehicular movement.

    He directed the contractor to create a temporary diversion for motorists and appealed to communters to exercise patience, adding that measures have been taken to hasten the construction work.

    ” We want to appeal to the road users to be patient as we are doing everything possible to fix the bridge to reduce the hardship being experienced by our people plying the road.

    “Though the road is a federal road, we cannot just seat and watch our people going through hardships that is why we are intervening before the federal government assistance comes, ” he said

    Meanwhile, Mr Milad Jarbanda, Contractor, Soject Nigeria Limited, said that the contract for the reconstruction of the bridge was awarded to the company at the cost N470 million.

    He gave assurance that the construction of bridge would be completed within the next few weeks.

    Malam Kabiru Umaru, a motorist who spoke to NAN, expressed dissatisfaction with the quick intervention of the state government over the rehabilitation of the bridge that collapsed on January 2017.

    “I am a regular user of this road, because I convey passengers from Lapai to Munye, a boarder town between Niger and Kogi, This bridge collapsed since last year and yet the reconstruction is at slow phase.

    “This is the only closer route to Kogi and most of the drivers prefer the route. We are calling on the state government to as a matter of urgency to intervene to reduce our hardship,”he said. (NAN)

  • President Buhari mourns former UN Scibe, Kofi Annan

    President Buhari mourns former UN Scibe, Kofi Annan

    President Muhammadu Buhari has commiserated with the government and people of Ghana over the passing of former UN Secretary General, Kofi Annan, in the early hours of Aug. 18.

    A statement issued by Mr Femi Adesina, the President’s Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, in Abuja on Saturday, said Buhari had earlier called President Nana Akufo-Addo of Ghana from London, to register his condolence.

    President Buhari said all Nigerians and ECOWAS member countries share in the deep loss, considering the strategic influence of the former scribe in global affairs and his vision for repositioning the West Coast and Africa.

    The President acknowledged that Annan was the first UN staff to lead the organisation, he was also a co-recipient of the 2001 Nobel Peace Prize with the UN.

    He noted that Annan’s humility, nobility and love for humanity set him apart for global greatness, achieving recognition and commendation for the reform of the UN’s bureaucracy and multiple interventions to bring peace to the world.

    President Buhari said Annan’s origin and home will always be traced to Ghana, but his exceptional leadership roles, humanitarian spirit and contributions to global peace and development will remain indelible in the history of the entire world.

    He particularly lauded his efforts to combat HIV/AIDS in Africa as well as the launch of the UN Global Compact.

    The President also sent condolences to the wife of the diplomat, Nane Maria Annan and his family members, staff of the UN and the global organisations he was heading, like The Elders, which was founded by Nelson Mandela.

    President Buhari prayed that the almighty God would comfort his family and all his loved ones.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Annan, who was born on April 8, 1938, was a Ghanaian diplomat, who served as the seventh Secretary-General of the UN, from January 1997 to December 2006.

    He was the founder and chairman of the Kofi Annan Foundation, as well as chairman of The Elders, an international organisation,

    Born in Kumasi, Annan went on to study Economics at Macalester College, U.S, International Relations from the Graduate Institute, Geneva and Management at MIT, also in the U.S.

    Annan joined the UN in 1962, working for the World Health Organisation’s Geneva office.

    He went on to work in several capacities at the UN Headquarters including serving as the Under-Secretary-General for peacekeeping between March 1992 and December 1996.

    He was appointed the Secretary-General on Dec. 13, 1996 by the Security Council, and later confirmed by the General Assembly, making him the first office holder to be elected from the UN staff itself.

    He was re-elected for a second term in 2001, and was succeeded as Secretary-General by Ban Ki-moon on Jan. 1, 2007. (NAN)

  • https://flowerbudnews.ng/kawu-explains-wh…ioned-jay-fm-jos/

    By Prudence Arobani

    Victims of the UN building bombings in Baghdad, Abuja and others cities around the world have been remembered by the United Nations to commemorate the 2018 World Humanitarian Day.

    Remembering 22 colleagues killed by the “horrific terrorist attack” on the UN headquarters in Baghdad 15 years ago, Secretary-General António Guterres called on all staff to pay tribute to the fallen by “continuing their mission,” and going to “dangerous places with the aim of making them safer”.

    In a wreath-laying ceremony at the UN headquarters in New York, Guterres reminded the people of the UN core commitment to stand “with those who are suffering, to bring them the relief they need”.

    The UN chief  said the attack, which was the first time the UN was deliberately targeted on a massive scale, “was traumatising for the whole organisation, and we learned some very difficult lessons”.

    “Before and since that day, United Nations staff have been targeted by those who would like to weaken us and make us afraid to do our jobs. From Algiers to Kabul to Mogadishu, Abuja and beyond, terrorists have attempted to silence and to banish us,” Guterres said.

    The Abuja UN building was attacked with a car bomb  on Aug. 26, 2011. Twenty one people were killed  and 60 wounded.  Boko Haram  claimed responsibility.

    The car  broke through two security barriers, and its driver detonated the bomb after crashing it into the reception area, causing devastation to the building’s lower floors.

    Then Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Prof. Viola Onwuliri, said: “This is not an attack on Nigeria but on the global community. An attack on the world”, while then UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon described the attack as an “assault on those who devote themselves to helping others”.

    In September 2011, the Nigerian Department of State Security alleged that Mamman Nur was the mastermind behind the attack and offered a 26 million naira bounty, while  four men appeared in an Abuja magistrates’ court charged with organising the bombing.

    After observing a minute’s silence, Guterres  said the fallen UN staff had “made the ultimate sacrifice for the values and the Charter of the UN.

    Addressing the audience, which included families and colleagues of the deceased, he said “this was a huge personal loss to so many of us. And an even greater blow to the families of those who were killed”.

    However, Guterres regretted that “the mechanisms in place to look after survivors and the families of victims were inadequate, and it has taken too many years to improve them”.

    While restating that the work of the UN “will never be free from risk,” the Secretary-General stressed that he was “committed to improving security for all United Nations staff”.

    “The blue flag of the United Nations flies high because of the brave women and men who carry it to the farthest corners of the world,” he said, adding that “the legacy of the humanitarian workers, the peacekeepers, the military and civilian staff who have given their lives is lasting and will be ever-present in our hearts”.

    The Nigerian Ambassador/Deputy Permanent Representative, Amb. Samson Itegboje, represented Nigeria at the event, while some victims of the bombings from Nigeria and other countries, some of whom preferred their identities to be protected, were present at the event.

    Itegboje, who regretted the unfortunate bombing, however, noted that Boko Haram terrorists had been driven out of Nigeria’s territory since 2015 when the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari came on board,  and were now restricted to carrying out suicide bombings on unsuspecting citizens.

    The Nigerian envoy said credit must be given to Buhari for providing leadership in ensuring that the terrorist group, which hitherto held territories and hoisted flags in many local government areas across three Northeast States, and frequently attacked cities including Abuja, had been largely decimated. (NAN)
    APT/

  • Osinbajo signs 3 bills into law

    Osinbajo signs 3 bills into law

    The Acting President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, has signed into law three Bills transmitted by the National Assembly, which are now Acts of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    A statement issued on Saturday by Laolu Akande, Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, Office of the Acting President, said the Bills were signed on Friday.

    Akande listed the Acts as Acts as the Federal Capital Territory Civil Service Commission (Establishment) Act, 2018; the Forestry Research Institute of Nigeria (Establishment) Act, 2018; and the Federal School of Medical Laboratory Technology (Science) Jos (Establishment) Act, 2018.

    The Federal Capital Territory Civil Service Commission (Establishment) Act, 2018 provides the framework, as envisaged by Section 303 of the Constitution, for the administration of the Civil Service of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    The Commission established under the Act will, without prejudice to the powers of the President, be responsible for the appointment and disciplinary control of staff in the Civil Service of the FCT.

    The Forestry Research Institute of Nigeria (Establishment) Act, 2018 establishes the Forestry Research Institute of Nigeria for forestry research, education and training.

    The Institute, with its Headquarters in Ibadan, will have outstations and colleges in each of the six geo-political zones of the Federation.

    The institute will, among others, conduct research into the development of agro-forestry systems for the integration of forest trees of economic importance into farming systems; ecology of pests and diseases and their control; and the control of desertification, soil erosion and deforestation.

    The Federal School of Medical Laboratory Technology (Science) Jos (Establishment) Act, 2018 establishes the School of Medical Laboratory Technology (Science) Jos, a diploma and certificate-awarding Institute, for training and research in Medical Laboratory Science and other related fields.(NAN)