Tag: Kano

  • UNICEF loses top official in Kano

    Malam Rabiu Musa, Head of Communications in the Kano Field Office of UNICEF, is dead.

    His son, Musa Rabiu, who comfirmed the death to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Kano, said that the UNICEF official died on Saturday at the age of 60.

    “My dad died at about 3 a.m on Saturday, after battling with a sickness for a few days.

    “Although, we noticed symptoms we suspect to be of Coronavirus, but the result of the test conducted is not yet out.

    “A week ago, he complained of sore throat and malaria, but after few days of medication, he became normal.

    “Few days later, he complained that he was finding it difficult to breath.

    “He also complained that no matter how short he walked, he loses breath. So, he was taken to the National Orthopaedic Hospital in Dala, on Friday where he gave up,”the son said.

    At about 2 p.m. when NAN contacted the son, he said: “we are now at the hospital with the officials of the National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) for his burial”.

    NAN reports that the deceased is survived by seven children and one wife.

  • [Video]Tahir Fadlallah evacuated to lebanon, on suspicion of covid 19 infection

    [Video]Tahir Fadlallah evacuated to lebanon, on suspicion of covid 19 infection

    Tahir Fadlallah, the owner of Tahir guest hotel in kano has been reportedly evacuated from kano state to Beirut Lebanon, on suspicion of covid19 infection, through an air ambulance.

    In a video that surfaced online, the Lebanese was surrounded by health workers wearing Covid-19 protective equipment

  • Kano becomes Nigeria’s hotbed for Covid-19 with 92 new cases recorded in one day

    Kano becomes Nigeria’s hotbed for Covid-19 with 92 new cases recorded in one day

    Kano State is now one of Nigeria’s hotbed for Covid-19 after recording 92 new coronavirus infections in one day alone (Friday).

    This development brings the number of confirmed infections in the state to 311.

    This is the highest number of cases to be recorded by any state in Nigeria within 24 hours.

    The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control made this known via its website on Friday.

    Data from the NCDC’s website showed that Kano has recorded no recovery since Nigeria reported its first COVID-19 case on February 27.

    However, three patients have died from coronavirus-related complications in the kano, making it has 308 active cases.

    The breakdown of the cases recorded by states showed that Kano has recorded the second-highest number of infections with 311 cases in Nigeria.

  • Nigeria’s Coronavirus cases exceeds 2,000, with 238 new infections

    Nigeria’s Coronavirus cases exceeds 2,000, with 238 new infections

    Nigeria’s Coronavirus infections have surpassed 2,000, with 238 new cases recorded on Friday.

    According to the figures released by the Nigerian Centre for Disease Control, NCDC, Nigeria now has 2,170 confirmed cases of Coronavirus.

    The virus is seriously spiking in Kano, which recorded 92 new cases, with Abuja having 36 cases and Lagos, 30 cases.

    Kano, with 92 new infections has broken the record set by Lagos as the state with the highest number of daily infections. Lagos previous has 87, which has been the highest recorded in a single day.

    The virus has also increased in Abuja, with 36 new cases, with Lagos having 30 and Gombe posting 16 fresh cases, while Bauchi ramps up another 10 new infections.

    Delta has eight new infections; Oyo, six; Zamfara and Sokoto, five each; Ondo and Nasarawa, four cases each; Kwara, Edo, Ekiti, Borno and Yobe have three new cases each, with Adamawa, two cases; while Niger, Imo, Ebonyi, Rivers and Enugu have one case each.

    How States Stand in Friday’s infections

    92-Kano
    36-FCT
    30-Lagos
    16-Gombe
    10-Bauchi
    8-Delta
    6-Oyo
    5-Zamfara
    5-Sokoto
    4-Ondo
    4-Nasarawa
    3-Kwara
    3-Edo
    3-Ekiti
    3-Borno
    3-Yobe
    2-Adamawa
    1-Niger
    1-Imo
    1-Ebonyi
    1-Rivers
    1-Enugu

    However, Friday’s new cases are the highest reported in a day since the NCDC started compiling the pandemic data in February.

    The number of deaths from the virus also moved up from 58 on Thursday to 68 while 351 patients have now recovered.

  • Kano: Ganduje appeals Buhari to relax lockdown amidst mysterious deaths, increasing COVID-19 cases

    Kano: Ganduje appeals Buhari to relax lockdown amidst mysterious deaths, increasing COVID-19 cases

    Governor Abdullahi Ganduje of Kano State has urged the Federal Government to relax lockdown imposed on the state.

    The governor said the lockdown relaxation was essential to ease the hardship on the residents of the state.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports that President Muhammadu Buhari had ordered a 14-day total lockdown in Kano due to the rise of COVID-19 cases and records of strange deaths in the state. TNG reports that Lagos, Ogun and the FCT had earlier been on such presidential lockdowns to contain the spread of the virus.

    According to The Cable, the governor on Thursday during the inauguration of experts to support Kano state Taskforce said residents of the state were running out of food.

    “We would engage the Presidential Task Force on COVID-19 to seek permission to relax the total lockdown imposed on Kano.

    “We are making this appeal on behalf of our people who are presently running out of food items. We would love the federal government to relax the lockdown for a period of time to enable people stock their homes, especially now that majority of us are fasting. It will also ease the economic hardship in the state,” He said

    However, in a recent update by the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC), Kano jumped to second after Lagos in the number of confirmed COVID-19 cases with a total of 219 cases.

  • Kano Conundrum: Why It Matters – Azu Ishiekwene

    Azu Ishiekwene

    Following a string of suspicious deaths in Kano last week some have said the state, arguably Nigeria’s most populous, could be Nigeria’s Italy.

    They are wrong and right. They are wrong because healthcare in Kano and what obtained in any region in pre-COVID-19 Italy is not comparable. Like night and day, they’re not even close.

    But they are right because leaving Kano, a state with a population of over 14million people unattended as is presently the case – a serious mistake which Italy made early on – is like playing with fire. It would be Campania and Lazio (in Southern Italy) multiplied by Wuhan.

    And you would be mistaken to think that because it happened elsewhere and so recently, we would not repeat the same mistakes here. Kano has more than enough supply of fodder to feed the virus fire and set the whole country aflame.

     

    Up till last week, there was a viral video of hundreds of protesters, enabled from upstairs, waving leaves and crying in the streets of Kano that COVID-19 was a scam. Then, the clouds gathered.

    At least 15 persons, mostly high profile and over 60 years old, died within two days, forcing an eerie silence on the city. There has been no official explanation, raising serious concerns that coronavirus may be far more widespread in the state than thought.

    There is limited data on annual death rates in the state. A 2010 study by Iliyasu Abubakar of in-hospital mortality at the Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital, Kano, showed that between 2005-2008 out of 51,975 patients admitted in the hospital 4,029 died.

    That is a yearly average for that hospital alone of 1,343, with HIV, septicaemia, cerebrovascular disease, chronic renal failure, chronic renal disease and chronic liver disease being the main causes of death, according to the study.

    If the state is now recording 15 deaths in two days, then that’s not just a problem, it’s a big problem.

    Kano has the densest population in the North. At seven persons per average household, the state (along with Kebbi) has the second highest number of persons-per-household in the country.

    The demographics get even more interesting. Forty-five per cent of the state’s population, according to data from UKAid (some estimate 50 per cent) is 60 years of age and above – the group that commonly harbours pre-existing conditions and is most vulnerable to the current pandemic.

    If sanitation can help to keep the virus at bay, then water supply – a basic requirement for hygiene – is still a pipe dream in Kano. Hand washing is a luxury because water is scarce.

    About 10 years ago, when the state’s population was far less than what it is today, the government could only provide one quarter of the daily demand of 400 million litres of water. The situation has not improved significantly.

    With the population exploding since and residents struggling with shortages of all kinds, not to mention poor infrastructure, any lethally contagious disease not contained in its early stages will spread.

    Add the large informal sector in the state and cultural/religious practices which promote clustering and large gatherings, with an estimated 300,000 almajiris left to their own devices, and you will have the picture of a perfect storm coming.

    Let me be clear. Shambolic infrastructure and prevalence of poverty are not peculiar to Kano. Even in its poverty, Kano is the richest, most industriliased and politically consequential state in the north. It is Nigeria’s number one political bride.

    The state’s problem, however, is compounded not just by poor infrastructure, growing population with a large aging group and high population density, among other things. Kano has also been brought to its knees by a preexisting disease guaranteed to make COVID-19 even more deadly: tribal politics. And this time, it’s playing big.

    Apart from the bitter governorship elections last year, a number of influential citizens are still very upset by the humiliation and dethronement of the former Emir, Muhammad Sanusi II, Sarkin Kano. They believe that it was for a time like this that Sanusi was meant to be emir.

    Not that he would have provided a vaccine or mounted a royal horse to charge against the virus on the streets of Kano. But his relentless, pesky voice would not have waited five or six days after the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) ran out of reagents and closed down its testing office, before crying out.

    At a point, it was as if Governor Abdullahi Ganduje was confused, missing or both. The man perhaps often unfairly teased for his rare gift of taking and yet not appearing to have taken, was strangely unable to ask for, much less take a lifeline to benefit citizens. It was the BBC that finally bailed him out of his misery by granting him an interview.

    By which time the combined forces of his enemies – old and new, home and abroad – were all over him.

    The new emir, Aminu Ado Bayero, did his bit to rescue the governor and maybe also to douse the impression that his reign was starting on an inauspicious note, but it didn’t help much. Not because he didn’t try but because he couldn’t do for the governor what only common sense and capacity could have done for the man.

    Emir Bayero’s statement that the state Ministry of Health informed him that the deaths were not COVID-19 related even when investigations were still ongoing, reminded me of the quandary the late Alake of Egbaland, Ademola II, found himself.

    Mrs. Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti led a revolt of women in Abeokuta against unfair taxes. But the revolt soon turned into rebellion against the Alake for “terrorising the women with his penis” and causing salt scarcity, forcing the Oba into exile.

    Of course, his hands were clean. His only crime was being Alake when the unpopular taxes were levied by a colonial government that he had no control over. To avoid even the remote possibility of the Alake’s fate, Emir Bayero had to speak up, for his own sake, and for the sake of the governor.

    Yet, maybe Ganduje deserved some of the beating. I disagree, however, with those who think their pound of flesh would not be complete until they have taken a kilo or two of meat from the hide of Ganduje’s daughter, Amina, who was a member of the state’s COVID-19 team. She is a medical doctor. At a time of emergency like this, it was right and patriotic of her to offer to help.

    If the committee failed, as woefully as it did, it was not Amina’s fault. It is the governor and the leadership of the NCDC that should be held to account. How can Kano – or any state for that matter – record such unusual number of multiple deaths within such a short time and the people are left to speculate whether it was caused by “meningitis” (an unusual occurrence in March) or “other weather-related” factors?

    It is also noteworthy that while Ganduje was trying to find his mojo and NCDC officials from Abuja were fleeing the state following speculations that some of them had been infected, we kept getting daily countrywide figures of infections, with no explanation about what was happening in Kano. Where were the figures coming from when the only test centre in the state had closed and the staff dispersed?

    The public deserves to know. The public also deserves to know the cause of death of scores of citizens who passed on during this time and what might have been done to save them. That’s the only way to prevent more from dying and to honour the memory of the dead.

    It’s also the way to avert the dangerous insinuations that while the governor was playing for the money at the expense of an early solution, his political adversaries were playing for his head. And now, one fanatical professor is fueling the fire by playing the religious card, as if COVID-19 wears a collar.

    The extension of the lockdown in Kano by President Muhammadu Buhari will mean nothing if the unfortunate deaths of last week are not properly investigated and the outcome published. It would mean nothing if more test centres are not opened and testing, tracing and treatment are not aggressively pursued.

    It would also mean nothing if the inter-state lockdown is not being implemented. In spite of the lockdown, widespread breach of inter-state travels, mostly aided by security men, was already being reported well ahead of Buhari’s broadcast on Monday night.

    For the primary benefit and safety of residents, the daily figures of new cases should be published on the state and NCDC websites on a local government by local government basis across all 44 local governments of Kano. The same should apply to all states with confirmed cases of 10 or more patients.

    Also, the lockdown extension in Kano would mean nothing without aggressive messaging about social distancing, mandatory use of face masks, penalty for breach and collaboration for testing and treatment with some private hospitals or laboratories.

    As the relative success in Lagos and Ekiti so far has shown, the private sector, individuals, NGOs and corporates must also step up to the plate. And they will if the governor inspires confidence and provides leadership.

     

    In short, without a significant improvement in transparency and a more determined approach to solve the problem, the one-week extension could be too little, too late. Kano could drag Nigeria to pot in a hand cart.

     

    Ishiekwene is the MD/Editor-In-Chief of The Interview

     

  • HIGHEST SINGLE DAY RECORD: Nigeria announces 195 new Covid-19 cases, Lagos, Kano top list

    HIGHEST SINGLE DAY RECORD: Nigeria announces 195 new Covid-19 cases, Lagos, Kano top list

    The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) has announced 195 cases of coronavirus in Nigeria on Tuesday taking the new total to 1532.

    The centre for disease control also announced no new discharge or death.

    “195 new cases of COVID-19 reported; 80-Lagos, 38-Kano, 15-Ogun, 15-Bauchi, 11-Borno, 10-Gombe, 9-Sokoto, 5-Edo, 5-Jigawa, 2-Zamfara, 1-Rivers, 1-Enugu, 1-Delta, 1-FCT and 1-Nasarawa.

    “As at 11:50pm 28th April- 1532 confirmed cases of COVID-19 reported in Nigeria. With 255 discharged and 44 deaths.

    Meanwhile, President Muhammadu Buhari is continuing with the partial lift of lockdown in Lagos, Ogun and FCT.

    On Tuesday, the Presidency said in the light of the presidential directive, during the nationwide broadcast on Monday, it is essential that attention be drawn to the reported large number of food trucks that are being delayed at various checkpoints around the country or prevented from crossing state borders, as a result of the various curfews and lockdowns in different states.

    “The restrictions of movement as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic do not apply to vehicles transporting essential goods such as food.

    “The country cannot afford a situation where agricultural products are being left to rot in trucks held at various checkpoints, when millions of Nigerians across the country need food. COVID-19 or no COVID-19, Nigerians need to eat.

    “Other essential items that can be transported despite the ban on movement as prescribed by the Presidential Task Force (PTF) include: pharmaceutical and sanitary supplies, personal care items, agro chemicals and agricultural machinery, electrical products and electronics, oil and gas, courier services, health supplies and protective garments.

    “Vehicles transporting essential items must not convey any commercial passengers. In addition, the occupants must not exceed three, i.e. the driver, spare driver, and conductor.

    “The drivers must have basic protective and sanitary items, including: face masks, hand sanitisers, and tissue paper to and from their destinations. Once these conditions are satisfied, they must be allowed to travel freely to and from any part of Nigeria”.

  • Mysterious deaths: Kano loses another prominent lecturer

    Mysterious deaths: Kano loses another prominent lecturer

    A prominent lecturer at the Kano State University of Science and Technology, Dr Ghali Umar is dead.

    He was said to have died on Monday, in the spate of mysterious deaths that have hit Kano, fuelling speculations that the deaths were traceable to the deadly Coronavirus.

    Dr Ghali Umar was of the Department of Architecture at the Kano State University of Science and Technology.

    A statement issued by the Vice-Chancellor of the institution, Professor Shehu Musa, regretted the death of Umar.

    ”We regret to announce the death of Arch. Dr. Ghali Kabir Umar, of the Department of Architecture.

    “Ghali, until his death, was a Head of Department and a Senior Lecturer in the department of Architecture, Kano University of Science and Technology, Wudil,” Musa said.

    Musa therefore prayed for Allah to forgive the shortcomings of Umar and reward him with Jannatul Firdaus.”

    Umar is the fifth prominent scholar to die in Kano in the last 72 hours, The Nation reports.

  • Pioneer female Kano Hisbah Commander dies at 55

    Pioneer female Kano Hisbah Commander dies at 55

    Mrs Halima Shitu, a pioneer female Hisbah Commander in Kano state, died at the age of 55 on Monday, a family source has said.

    Mrs Maimuna Shitu, one of the sisters of the deceased told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Tuesday, that she died after a brief illness in Kano.

    “She left behind a husband who is a prominent Islamic Scholar Sheikh Abdulwahab Abdullah and six children to mourn her.

    “Her eldest son is Malam Abdullah Abdulwahab, a system analyst at Bayero University Kano,” she said.
    Shitu contributed greatly to the development of the Kano Hisbah Command.

    She contributed to Islamic scholarship among women in Nigeria and Africa at large, being the Chairperson of Association of Muslim Women in Africa(AMEWA).

    She featured in several radio and television programmes targeted at teaching Islam especially during Ramadan fast.

  • BREAKING: Buhari orders immediate lockdown of Kano over mysterious deaths

    BREAKING: Buhari orders immediate lockdown of Kano over mysterious deaths

    Sequel to the mysterious deaths and the rising coronavirus cases in Kano State, President Muhammadu on Monday during his live nationwide broadcast on the coronavirus development update ordered the immediate lockdown the state.

    “These revised guidelines do will not apply to Kano State. The total lockdown recently announced by the State Government shall remain enforced be enforced for the full duration. The Federal Government shall deploy all the necessary human, material and technical resources to support the State in controlling and containing the pandemic,” Buhari said.

    More details later…