Tag: kogi

  • Covid-19: Health workers in Kogi are in great danger – NMA

    Covid-19: Health workers in Kogi are in great danger – NMA

    The Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) in Kogi State has lamented that lack of enough testing for COVID-19 is putting the doctors and other health workers in the state at great risk.

    Its chairman, Dr Kabir Zubair, while speaking with journalists on Thursday in Lokoja, said such challenge affects other clinical issues as well.

    He stated this while responding to inquiries on the report of the National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) that only one sample had been sent in for test by the state which returned negative. R

    He said that the challenge had trigger agitation from members of the Association of Resident Doctors (ARD), who are among the first to attend to suspected cases, a number of which have been received at the Federal Medical Centre (FMC), Lokoja in recent times.

    “Although, no confirm case have been reported in Kogi State till date, but a number of suspected cases have been attended to at FMC Lokoja and members of ARD are among the first to attend to these patients and as such they might be exposed to the highly contagious COVID-19,” he noted.

    He said ARD are among the most exposed healthcare workers to patients with suspected COVID-19 in the hospital settings.

    He explained that FMC Lokoja is the only functional tertiary health institutions in the State and attends to a wide range of patients, adding that the ever present danger of being exposed to patients with COVID-19 is a major source of worry.

    “As a clinician, standard practice demands that the moment you have clinical suspicion of an infectious diseases, the ideal thing is to carryout laboratory confirmation.

    “COVID-19 is a highly contagious infectious disease responsible for the ongoing global pandemic.

    “In Nigeria, new cases are reported daily and community spread is accelerating. “This is the reason why members of ARD are agitated as testing for COVID-19 has remained a challenge in the state,” he contended.

    The NCDC revealed on May 18 that Kogi and Cross River states have the lowest figures of samples tested since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic in the country in February, 2020. The two states are yet to record any confirmed case.

  • Kogi doctors cry for help, says Gov. Bello sabotaging efforts to test Covid-19 suspects

    Kogi doctors cry for help, says Gov. Bello sabotaging efforts to test Covid-19 suspects

    Worried about their fate in the hands of untested Covid-19 suspects, the Association of Resident Doctors, Federal Medical Center, Lokoja, Kogi State, has accused the administration of Governor Yahaya Bello of sabotaging efforts to test patients, who have COVID-19 symptoms in the state.

    President of the Association, Dr Nnanna Agwu, in a statement on Tuesday, urged the Federal Ministry of Health and Presidential Task Force on COVID-19 to rally all relevant stakeholders in Kogi State to ensure that tests are being done.

    He said, “Many patients with symptoms suggestive of COVID-19 have been seen severally in the hospital but efforts to get them tested were frustrated by the state government authorities.

    “There is palpable fear at the Federal Medical Centre, Lokoja, as medical doctors and other health workers raise alarm of imminent danger posed by the COVID-19 pandemic to their lives.

    “This was against the backdrop of the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control report issued on 17th May 2020 that only a single COVID-19 test has been conducted in Kogi State since the disease was recorded in the country about three months ago.

    “The doctors fear that they are at a high risk of contracting the disease and transmitting same to their families and other unsuspecting patients. It is a known fact that without COVID-19 tests, physicians cannot properly categorize and treat the patients coming into the hospital in accordance with the management protocols.

    “One cannot underestimate the impact of this disease on the lives of the families who have lost loved ones to it. As at today across the country 603 doctors have been exposed, 149 confirmed positive and seven deaths recorded. We in FMC Lokoja do not wish to be joined in these statistics.”

    The NCDC in its May 18 situation report revealed that Kogi and Cross River states have the lowest figures of samples tested since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic in the country in February, 2020.

    According to the report, Kogi submitted only one sample while Cross Rivers submitted seven.

  • Only one Covid-19 test carried out in Kogi – NCDC

    Only one Covid-19 test carried out in Kogi – NCDC

    A situation report released by Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) has shown that only one tested sample was carried out in Kogi State.

    According to the report, there are 35,983 samples tested in 36 states and the federal capital territory (FCT) so far.

    Of all the tests carried out in the nation, Kogi and Cross River states have the lowest figures of samples tested.

    While Kogi has only tested one sample, Cross River has tested seven samples, all of which returned negative for COVID-19.

    This revelation was released in the May 18 situation report by the NCDC on Tuesday.

    The NCDC data also revealed that Lagos has tested the highest number of persons with 14,886 samples tested, followed by the FCT and Kano with 4,688 and 2,653 samples tested, respectively.

    Recall that NCDC had visited Kogi in the first week of May, but the state claimed the agency’s officials “fled” the state when they were asked to undergo tests for COVID-19.

  • 111 people test negative for Coronavirus in Kogi

    111 people test negative for Coronavirus in Kogi

    Kogi Government said on Tuesday said that 111 people it tested for coronavirus had returned negative.

    The state Commissioner for Information and Communication Strategy, Mr Kingsley Fanwo, made the disclosure in a statement in Lokoja.

    Fanwo, however, said that the Coronavirus tests were conducted on the persons without the supervision of officials from the National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC).

    The commissioner said that the testing kits procured by the state were used to conduct the tests, and that those tested were picked randomly.

    “Kogi State got testing kits independently but followed NCDC guidelines.

    “One hundred and eleven COVID-19 rapid tests were conducted in Kogi State yesterday and all results came out negative,” he said.

    The commissioner noted that the state still remained COVID-19-free.

    “We shall not go to streets to pick people to be tested for COVID-19, but hospitals where people with similar symptoms are found and also based on any information of suspected cases,” he stated.

  • Of Wike, Yahaya Bello and toxic governance – Mideno Bayagbon

    By Mideno Bayagbon

    Just when we thought Nigeria has reached the very bottom, the nadir of political perfidy, of gross governmental incompetence of the lowest low, Governors Nyesom Wike of Rivers state and Yahaya Bello of Kogi spring new brands of political rascality on the land. And it is all so annoying.

    Let’s start with the garrulous and seemingly power drunk Nyesom Ezebunwo Wike, Governor of Rivers state.

    True, we have been treated to his theatrics, lack of decorum, lack of respect for any and everybody; true, we have all been witnesses to his obsession with power as an absolute, acting like a motor park tout attempting to Lord his ego over his gang of felons. But he is a lawyer, a man on whom fate has been very kind. From being a Local government chairman, to joining In the fight that brought Rotimi Chibuike Amaechi as Governor, to being Chief of Staff, Minister, and in the last five years, Governor, Wike has surprisingly epitomised the worst of our politics.

    Parading an elephantine ego, and a half digested messianic complex, Governor Wike in an attempt to completely dominate Rivers state politics, has constituted himself into a public threat. His most recent, brash actions are examples. What makes a Governor think he has the constitutional right to abrogate the laws of the land, the fundamental rights of the citizens and trample on their lives and properties with such reckless impunity? Where does Wike get the power to destroy the properties of Rivers state citizens because of a perceived breach of COVID19 lockdown in the state?

    Even if for arguments sake, we agree that the owners of the two hotels, destroyed by Wike on Sunday, breached the lockdown rules, and if we even also assume that there is a state law, unknown to the public somewhere, to back up his actions, did such a law, which is definitely at variance with the constitution, also empower him to constitute himself into the accuser, the judge and the executor, summarily?
    In a broadcast yesterday, Governor Wike, said the following as justifications for his ill advised actions:

    “We acted against the hotelier because, apart from using the facility to jeopardise the lives of our citizens in violation of the extant law, the owner audaciously unleashed thugs led by the Eleme Local Government Youth Leader of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and inflicted severe injuries on our task force members who went to enforce the law against the continued operation of the hotel. As we speak, nobody knows the fate of the lives of most of the victims of that brazen and deadly attack given the severity of the head injuries they sustained.
    And so, we have done no wrong as all our actions were taken in good faith and justified by, under and within the purview of the Executive Orders which have neither been challenged nor set aside by any competent court of law.”

    The question he failed to answer, however is, is an executive order superior to the constitution of the land, and or to the fundamental human rights of the citizens?

    Among the many voices which have come out to condemn the condemnable action of the governor, my friend and former colleague, Richard Akinnola paints a lucid picture of the many infractions of the demi-god of Port Harcourt. They include, but definitely are not limited to:
    • the demolition of hotels;
    • Threat to auction impounded vehicles that violated the lockdown;
    • Publicly insulting senior Rivers state traditional rulers;
    • Talking to PDP party leaders like a headmaster talking to pupils;
    • Insulting and fighting every Commissioner of police posted to the state;
    • Insulting and fighting military commanders posted to the state.
    • Personally effecting arrest of Carverton helicopter pilots and getting a Magistrate court to remand them in prison.
    • Etc.
    Not a few people agree with Richard when he concludes that Governor Nyesom Wike is
    • crude, rude, saucy, indecorous and abrasive.
    • That he is so inebriated with power that is transient.
    • That he is deluded that he is a law unto yourself.
    • That he conducts himself like an “agbero”, with no finesse.
    • He is a senior lawyer, in fact, a life Bencher and his wife is a judge. But these have not reflected in his public conducts.
    Shame!!!

    Among the deluge of other condemnations poured on the governor, Femi Falana, SAN, sums them up thus: “It is unfortunate that these events are happening in Port Harcourt where the Governor of the state is a senior lawyer and not just a lawyer, l am even informed that he is a member of the Body of Benchers; that is an embarrassment. A colossal embarrassment to the Nigerian Bar Association.

    “Under our law, an emergency situation under the Quarantine Act (1926) does not permit the demolition of a house of an alleged offender. Whoever has breached the law will have to be tried and convicted by a Court of Law before a sentence can be pronounced.
    “There is no provision for even the President to take the law into his hands and then begin to mete out punishments to citizens without recourse to the constitution. We hope the Governor will be properly advised to reverse his decisions, publicly apologise and restore the properties of those that have been destroyed. Everyone will have to go through a judicial process. That is what the rule of law is all about…
    “The right to property, fair hearing and liberty are constitutional rights. No governor has the power to dismiss these rights under the pretext of enforcing the COVID19 regulations.”
    Nothing more to add, except to remind Governor Wike not to forget that power is transient, that his tenure is not in perpetuity, that come 2023, he will be out of that office and become the ordinary, powerless, feet of clay Rivers state citizen that he is. l suspect history will be harsh on this governor.
    ===========================================================================================================

    THE GADFLY AT KOGI GOVERNMENT HOUSE

    Also toeing the path of perfidy and odium, like Nyesom Wike, is a young man fate sprung from the backwaters of Kogi’s to government house. Young and brash and exhibiting surprising arrogance, Yahaya Bello, the Governor of Kogi state is making himself an odium on the campaign for youths to be given a chance at governance at all levels.
    Yahaya Bello is reputed as the youngest governor in Nigeria currently. He assumed office as governor, his first foray into governance, at age 40. This is after the rightful winner of the election, Prince Abubakar Audu died mysteriously. Since then his inexperience and excessive youthful exuberance has made him and the state the butt of jokes. The ground is whet from the bloodshed of his re-election, while the people cower under his heavy handed rule. Poverty, disease, hopelessness walk naked on the frightened faces of the people while their young emperor plays kalokalo with their destiny.

    Not a few were stunned by his contrived bravado when officials of the National Centre for Disease Control, visited the state to take charge of the coronavirus situation in the state. To their gesture, Governor Bello, ordered that they be quarantined for 14 days before they will be allowed to confront the pandemic, which the governor wants the world to believe is non-existent, in the state. As he boastfully posits, COVID-19 is just an attempt by some smart alecks to steal billions of Naira from the public purse. He says there is nothing like COVID-19, at least not in Kogi state.

    Nigerians will perhaps remember a viral video, exclusively sourced by TNG (TheNewsGuru.com), where a seemingly athletic Governor Bello, in his private gym, displayed so much laughable childishness. Those who watched the video were truly baffled how a man of such intellect managed to become a governor. But then they remember that he never really contested for and won the first election. The courts curiously handed it to him on a platter of unearned gold.

    Governor Bello’s grouse was simple. People were rightly worried for him after it was confirmed that the late chief of staff to President Muhammadu Buhari, the powerful Abba Kyari, had tested positive to the deadly virus which eventually took his life. Recall that when the late Abba Kyari returned from the trip that shortened his life, one of the few things he did before the virus manifested its fangs, was a condolence visit to Governor Bello who had just lost his mother.

    After it became known that Governor Bello had very close contacts with Kyari, speculations were rife that he too might have been infected by the still rampaging Coronavirus disease. No one knows if he did the test but he came out smoking, pouring curses on, and wishing all the speculators and well wishers who feared for his health, a deluge of HIV/AIDS infection! Since then he has never hidden his disdain for the pandemic which has ravaged and shut down Nigeria and indeed the world. He has told all, and stood firm on his belief that Kogi state is COVID-19 free. it is therefore, in his attempt to wish away the coronavirus infection, that he harangued, harassed and chased away officers of the National Centre for Disease Control, NCDC, from the state. What infantile bravado.

  • Our mission to support Kogi’s Covid-19 response failed – Health minister

    Our mission to support Kogi’s Covid-19 response failed – Health minister

    The federal government’s effort to support Kogi State in its response to the COVID-19 pandemic has failed, the Minister of Health, Osagie Ehanire, said on Friday.

    Mr Ehanire, while speaking at the daily Presidential Task Force on COVID-19 briefing, said the team sent to the state returned to Abuja without accomplishing its mission.

    He said new efforts will be made to engage Kogi authorities for a resolution of differences.

    “We tried to send a team of the Ministry of Health and the NCDC into Kogi yesterday but there were some differences there to processes,” he said.

    “This will mean that we need to re-engage the state governor again and work with him and his team to create the conditions to which the Ministry of Health and the NCDC can complete their job.”

    Kogi is one of the two states yet to confirm any case of the virus since the country recorded its index case in February. The other state is Cross River. Both states are believed to be discouraging tests for people with symptoms of COVID-19.

    On Thursday, a delegation comprising officials of NCDC and the Department of Hospital Services of the Federal Ministry of Health had to flee the state for fear of being quarantined by the Kogi State Government.

    The delegation, which set out on the mission to ascertain the claim by the state to be COVID-19 free and to boost its testing capacity, was reportedly not received with open arms.

     

  • NCDC Officials flee Kogi State to avoid being tested for COVID-19

    NCDC Officials flee Kogi State to avoid being tested for COVID-19

    The official of the National Centre for Disease Control NCDC, Dr Andrew Noah ordered to be isolated by the Kogi State Governor Alhaji Yahaya Bello have fled the state to avoid being subjected to COVID-19 test.

    This was disclosed Thursday night by the State Commissioner for Information Kingsley Fanwo in a statement issued late Thursday night.

    Governor Bello had ordered the leader of the NCDC delegation to proceed on isolation for shaking hands with the Director of Protocol, Sunday Ayenibe after taking the microphone from him.

    The governor had also explained that Dr Andrew had contravened the rules and regulations of NCDC and so should be tested for COVID-19 since he was coming from the epicenter of the disease.

    “It was drama today at the Kogi State Government House as officials of the National Center for Disease Control sent to ascertain the COVID-19 status flee the state ” Fanwo stated.

    It would be recalled that Kogi is one of the two states that are yet to record a single COVID-19 case in the federation.

    “The Officials of the NCDC said they were sent to the State to assist the state in responding to the challenges posed by the pandemic.

    “The Officials said they were not ready to be tested for COVID-19 and went back to Abuja.

    He said that why the NCDC Officials feared being tested was a matter of concern to the Government of Kogi State.

    The Commissioner said that NCDC should come hard on its Officials for violating its rules.

    “Today, the Governor showed the statesmanship in him once again by appreciating the support of the NCDC and defending the health interests of his people.

    “NCDC quarantined the Chinese professionals that came to give them technical support and also took their samples for test. It is a normal practice and protocol set by NCDC.

    “So NCDC will have a lot to explain as to why its officials refused to test for COVID-19. How can we be sure of their status? What are their fears? Why did NCDC sent people who are afraid of test to our State? What was their intention?

    “The officials that came have done an integrity blow to the works of the NCDC. Is there something they are hiding? It is time NCDC opened up and apologize to the good people of Kogi State.

    “How will they encourage people to test when its own officials are afraid of the test? This is sad”.Fanwo noted.

  • Kogi Gov. Yahaya Bello, orders visiting NCDC officials to go on 14-day Isolation

    Kogi Gov. Yahaya Bello, orders visiting NCDC officials to go on 14-day Isolation

    Kogi State governor, Yahaya Bello, has ordered visiting officials of the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control to go into isolation at a quarantine centre for 14 days.

    Bello gave the directive on Thursday night when the NCDC officials led by Dr Andrew Noah showed up at the Government House, in Lokoja, the state capital.

    The agency had sent a delegation of rapid response team to ascertain the true status of Kogi as a COVID-19-free state.

    The governor said that the step was to ensure that the laid down procedure of checkmating the scourge by NCDC was strictly followed.

    Presenting a letter titled: “Deployment of Rapid Response Squad to help in fighting COVID-19,” Dr Noah explained that the mission of the NCDC was to provide logistics to all states of the federation of which Kogi could not be left out.

    He said two members of the team would be left behind to help the state and support efforts already in place.

    Speaking shortly after receiving the letter, Bello outlined steps taken so far by the state to fight the COVID-19 pandemic.

    He then asked that the NCDC officials be subjected to testing and isolated in the state quarantine centre or leave the state immediately if they refused.

  • Gov. Bello tackles NCDC, says Covid-19 app working, insists no case in Kogi

    Gov. Bello tackles NCDC, says Covid-19 app working, insists no case in Kogi

    The Kogi State Government has insisted that the State is free from the ravaging Coronavirus and accused Dr. Chikwe Ihekweazu, the Director General of National Centre for Disease Control, NCDC of an unfair attempt to discredit, shame and defame her records.

    The government berated the NCDC boss oover recent unsavoury comments he allegedly passed on states which are yet to report any case of the virus. This is the content of a statement by Kingsley Fanwo, the State Commissioner for Information and Communication.

    Ihekweazu had in reports allegedly insinuated that states which are yet to record cases of COVID-19 are either negligent in testing and tracing, or actively hiding, the disease within their territories. But Fanwo wondered if states are in a competition on who harbours the highest infection of the lethal virus

    The statement reads in part:
    “Kogi State confesses that she is not aware the Covid-19 pandemic in Nigeria is a one-legged race to see which state can put as many cases as possible into the national incident basket, and even if such were to be the case, the current administration in Kogi State does not play such games with the lives and psychology of her people.

    “The Governor of Kogi State does not believe that increasing the burden on the overwhelmed NCDC and the other agencies cum resources labouring in the frontlines of our response to this deadly pandemic, when neither case nor cause for such has genuinely risen in the state, is helping the country in any way.

    “Kogi State has religiously followed all the NCDC and World Health Organization (WHO) CoviD-19 advisories, both for identifying cases and preventing spread.

    “We have also adhered strictly to the various guidelines from, and directives of, the Federal Government, customised to improve both efficiency and efficacy within the peculiarities of our own circumstances.

    ‘While we are not surprised that they have worked for us so far in keeping our state CoviD-19 free, we do find it disconcerting that the lead agency in the fight is possibly expressing doubt in their efficacy while simultaneously denouncing us for following her own guidelines.

    Fanwo reiterated that the state built a “self-assessment app hosted at kogicovid19.gov.ng around the NCDC’s checklist for ‘suspected and high risk’ cases and as at last week it has been visited nearly 200,000 times with over 14,000 completed self-assessments out of which only about 60 presented cause for further investigation which then failed to meet the Covid-19 spectrum.

    “As of today we insist that Kogi State has no confirmed case of Covid-19, or any case to the knowledge of our vigilant medical structures across the state which matches the suspected or high risk factors for it. If the situation changes at this very moment we shall not hesitate for a second before alerting the NCDC.

  • Kogi places 48-hour embargo on sale, consumption of beef over alleged poisoning of cows

    Kogi places 48-hour embargo on sale, consumption of beef over alleged poisoning of cows

    The Kogi State Government on Friday said it is investigating what led to the death of about twenty cattle that died while grazing on the premises of the Kogi State Polytechnic, Lokoja, on Thursday.

    The government in a statement issued by the Commissioner for Information and Communication, Mr. Kingsley Fanwo, said it had put in place measures at ensuring that meat from the cows, believed to have died from poisoning does not get to the market, for which reason the government said it has placed a 48-hour ban on the sale of beef in the metropolis and sorounding areas.

    A herd of twenty cows reportedly collapsed and died on a field at the Felele main campus of the Kogi State Polytechnic, Lokoja, on the previous day.

    The cows were said to have entered into the farm to graze, where they died of suspected herbicide poisoning.

    Meanwhile, a lecturer in the Department of General Studies of the state polytechnic however said that about twelve cows grazing close to the school fence died.

    “Yes, I was told that twelve cows died on a farm close to the school fence. You know that we are not allowed on the campus right now; the school is closed. It will be a problem between the farmers and the Fulani. I’m not in school,” he had said.

    The government said it was adopting proactive measures at ensuring that the meat from the poisoned cows does not find their way into the open market.

    It read: “We wish to inform the people of the state, some of the proactive measures taken by government to find out the cause of the death of those cows and to also ensure their beefs do not find their way into our markets.

    “There have been a coordinated security and scientific investigations into the death of the cows. The investigations are being handled by security agencies through the office of the State Security Adviser, as well as veterinary doctors in the ministries of agriculture and environment.

    “Security agencies and the affected government ministries and departments have been mandated to form strong institutional walls that will stop the beefs from getting into the market as it is detrimental to health.

    “The Kogi State government has also placed a ban on the sale of beef in Lokoja and its environs for the next 48 hours.

    “The state government has committed to briefing members of the public on findings about the incident. We also urge our people to volunteer intelligence that will help us unravel the mystery behind the death of those cows.”