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Election Stakeholders Task Nigerian Media on Responsible Journalism

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KADUNA, Nigeria (28/01/2015) – Nigeria’s electoral body, the Independent Electoral Commission (INEC) has tasked the country’s media to employ professionalism in its coverage and reporting on the 2015 general elections.

The Resident Electoral Commissioner of INEC in Kaduna, northwest Nigeria, Haliru Tambuwal who made the plea at a one-day media training on Election Coverage, tasked the media not to compromise on their code of professional practice and principles of social responsibility.

Represented by Hajiya Fatima Bande of the Corporate Affairs Unit of INEC, the Commissioner stressed that the media was expected to exercise good sense of judgement in election coverage, adding that “fairness, accuracy and balance are key as the media strives to report only fact-based electoral information”.

He also called on the media to accommodate views and perspectives of marginalised groups, especially the youths, women and people leaving with disability.

In the key paper, a media expert, Joseph Edegbo stressed the need for truthful reportage based on factual and verifiable information – tasking the journalists to be objective while reporting electoral issues. This according to him is the role of the media which will ensure that results from the process is termed Credible.

Edegbo stressed the need for journalist to always work toward de-escalation of violence and conflicts during the elections, adding that the media must show equity by providing opportunities to all contesting parties to ensure a level playing field.

“As the watchdog of the society, we must ensure that reports are devoid of elements capable of inciting the public…. Journalists should be conscious in reporting figures and identities of casualties of violent conflicts and desist from the use of offensive images capable of raising tension and conflicts.”

Also speaking, Amina Kazaure of Vision Trust Foundation, an NGO, asked journalists to adhere to professionalism, saying journalists should not be obligated to deliver an artificial report.

She tasked journalists to be conscious of their environment while on coverage to avoid any form of harassment. she cautioned them against unguided utterances and keeping wrong company, adding that, “as journalists, your information and views are held with high esteem.”

Strike Paralyses Health Services in Nigeria

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By Iliya Kure

A strike by health workers has left public hospitals in Nigeria closed, denying citizens access to basic health care services – this has paralyzed and compounded challenges to the fragile health system in Africa’s biggest economy.

The strike is by a union comprising of Pharmacists, radiotherapists, medical record officers and other cadre of health workers in the federal and state government owned hospitals

In hospitals, in both cities and villages, the sick were not attended to, no matter the condition of illness of the person visiting the hospital.

People at the villages suffer the most, because the rural areas hardly have the presence of private/commercial health services available.

Nigeria has the highest cases of polio in the world. It also records the second highest cases of maternal deaths; only next to India.

The workers commenced the strike on 6th November 2014 on reasons related to their salaries and allowances.

They are also against government actions of not appointing their members into key positions in hospitals and their non-promotion to the position of consultants – a privilege that medical doctors enjoy.

A citizen, Arinze Amos is worried that the strike has lasted long, calling on concerned authorities to meet with the union leaders to sort out issues at stake.

Amos said, “Government must sit down with these medical workers to find a lasting solution to the problem of incessant strike in the country’s health sector. In fact, we are now afraid that because of the coming general elections, government officials may not have time to meet with the striking health workers.”

The Government has appealed for calm, but it said the issues raised by the heath workers were not so strong to warrant a strike action.

An official of Nigeria’s Health Ministry, Dr. Taiwo Lateef Shiekh said, “Government believes that all the issues will be resolved in a short period of time and has directed all the Tertiary Hospitals to continue to render services to Nigerians, and must not allow anybody to turn the patients back from the Hospitals.”

The statement is coming on the heel of striking workers who stand by the gate of hospitals and ask sick persons to go back home. The government has also issued out a ‘No Work, No Pay Rule’ to workers of the Tertiary Hospitals.

Nevertheless, Nigeria has only 53 tertiary hospitals, all located in the state capitals, and cannot meet the needs of its teeming populace of over 160 million citizens.

Dr. Sheikh also called on the striking union workers to kindly return to work, adding that before the commencement of the strike, government had set-up a Presidential Committee of Experts on Inter-Professional Relationships in the Public Health Sector to address the concerns raised by the striking health workers.

Felix Faniran, President of Nigerian Union of Allied Health Professionals, an affiliate of the striking union, said the strike would continue due to the failure of the Federal Government to meet their demands.

Faniran told reporters “We have been overly patient, but long suffering has its limits. We have now arrived at a decision. This industrial action is indefinite and it will not end until the authorities meet our demands.

The members had embarked on fasting and prayers on 20th of January 2015 for God to intervene on their behalf.

AMDF Holds Media Sensitization on Election Coverage

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AMDF Logo

KADUNA, Nigeria (26/01/2015) – Africa Media Development Foundation (AMDF), a Media Development Organisation with support from its partner will sensitize journalists in Kaduna, northwest Nigeria, this week on the coverage of Nigeria’s 2015 general elections.

The meeting will highlight the need for journalists to be objective, fair and maintain balance in the coverage and reporting of activities surrounding the 2015 elections – mobilizing voters, the voting process and announcement of results by the country’s Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

Organisers of the event say participants of the meeting will also be exposed to using the social media to cover elections, as well as time tested safety tips for journalists covering elections.

A statement by Grace Maikano, Admin & Finance Advisor of AMDF say “the Nigerian media has been blamed for sending out messages that misguided, or heated up the polity as against civic education in 2011 general elections.”

The Organisation strongly believes that “if journalists are sensitized properly on how to handle election issues, things will change for better and Nigeria will have a peaceful 2015 general elections.”

Child Spacing: A Strategy of Reducing Nigeria’s Maternal Deaths

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nurhi git logo 1
nurhi git logo 1

KADUNA, Nigeria (22/01/2015) – A recent survey by UN and World Bank reveals that Nigeria loses about 166 women daily because of pregnancy and childbirth complications. This is an increase from the 144 recorded in 2010.

This brings to fore the position of experts that if women in the country would embrace modern child spacing methods, more than 35% of the cases would reduced.

Modern child spacing methods adopted by many countries to reduce these deaths are however not too common in many communities in Nigeria – it goes against many people’s beliefs – they think it is contrary to the teachings of their religions and traditional views.

This view has however not been supported by some religious leaders including a Kaduna based Islamic cleric, Imam Musa Tanimu.

Mrs. Mercy Ayuba, a mother of two is among Nigerian mothers who believe that child spacing method is a strategy of reducing the country’s maternal deaths burden.

Mrs Ayuba recently visited a heath facility to access the services – arriving at that decision was not easy, she had to discuss with her husband – in many northern Nigerian communities, women needed permission from their husbands to visit health centres, especially when it has to do with exposing her body to a male health service provider.

In her words: “I decided to come for the child spacing because my husband is scared of making love with me. This is actually my first time of coming to access the facility. I got to know about it through my friends who have done it and they described the method as good. I decided to come for it because my first son is only 1 year plus when I took in and gave birth to the one in my hand. The child in my back is 5month old and so my husband is afraid of coming close to me because once he comes I will take in.

“So, I’m here to be enlightened on the child spacing and which method or how to go about it,” she stated.

A Gates Foundation funded project, Nigerian Urban Reproductive Health Initiative (NURHI) has since 2009 been promoting child spacing in various places including villages, market place and motor parks to create awareness on the need for Nigerian women to adopt the practice – their aim is to reduce the country’s high maternal deaths.

NURHI did not leave any stone unturned as it has also trained and equipped child spacing service providers at the various primary health care centres to enable the women access the services in six Nigerian cities of Abuja, Benin, Ibadan, Ilorin, Kaduna and Zaria.

A trained health provider at the Kabala Primary Health Care Centre in Kaduna, northwest Nigeria, Mrs Esther Monday Kazah said the NURHI training had placed her in a better position to offer quality child spacing services to women, noting an increase of 80% to 90% compared to 2008 figure.

According Esther, “Before I only knew two methods of child spacing – the pills and the injection method, but with the NURHI training we were taught the various different methods, now I know so many other methods like the implant, insertion, natural method, barrier methods among others. In this area, the women mostly go for the insertion and injection methods.

“The way and manner the women are accepting child spacing these days is very high. They are now coming for the service more than before. The turn-up now is as a result of the training we received; we take time to educate and enlighten them.

“Many of the women come to access the service because they hear their neighbours or friends talk about it. Before many of them have little knowledge about it, but they are opening up to because of the awareness being created by NURHI,” Mrs. Kazah said.

An official of NURHI, Malam Kabir Mohammed Abdullahi said the organisation would not relent in its advocacy effort to minimize maternal deaths in the country.

He called for creation of budget line for child spacing commodities at the states and local governments’ level.

Group Tasks Kaduna Government on Women’s Health

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By Editor

KADUNA, Nigeria (21/1/2015) – Barely a year after Kaduna State Government says it had reached over five million patients with its Free Maternal and Child Health Services Programme, a group of civil society organisations is asking the State Government to enact a law that will strengthen the system.

The group, Maternal and Child Health Civil Society Partnership (MCH-CS Partnership), said in a meeting in Kaduna that the free maternal child health care service as rendered in the state was not yielding the desired result due to several factors, among them, absence of law, drug stuck out syndrome in health facilities, inadequate skilled personnel and weak management system.

Chairperson of the group, Mrs. Dorcas Adeyemi, told the forum that a research conducted by the partnership revealed that the Programme had suffered from many challenges.

Adeyemi added that “lack of FMCH guidelines, stock-out syndrome, irregular supply of drugs, supply not based on needs and poor referral system’’ were preventing the smooth implementation of the programme.

She commended the state government for the establishment of State Primary Health Care Agency (SPHCA), but called for the full implementation of the Agency’s structure to address administration and funding challenges of PHCs in the State

Vice Chair of the group, Malam Garba Muhammad, said the group, comprising of 10 different civil society groups that work on several thematic areas was set up in 2009 to advocate for improved FMCH in the State.

Muhammad said the group had since its establishment focused on advocating for affordable and quality health care delivery services.

The FMCH Programme was flagged off in 115 PHCs and 30 General Hospitals in the state in 2007. It was meant to cover all the public health facilities by 2009, but no single facility was added since its introduction in 2007.

 

African Water Facility Tackles Sanitation in Seychelles

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ABIDJAN, Côte d’Ivoire, (21/01/2015) – African Water Facility (AWF) has announced an approved of €1.07-million grant for the development of an Integrated Comprehensive Sanitation Plan for the Seychelles.

According to AWF Coordinator, Akissa Bahri, the 10-year plan will follow an integrated approach, looking at the synergies with related sectors such as waste, energy, water supply and stormwater. It will also promote innovative water re-use technologies.

A diagnostic study of the sanitation sector of the Seychelles will be conducted which will include economic, environmental and societal impact assessments. The design of the plan shall include participation of communities and stakeholders to ensure that it is demand-driven, sustainable and impactful. The Public Utilities Corporation will be the Implementing Agency.

“The fast pace of urban growth coupled with dysfunctional sanitation systems are threatening the fragile environment of the islands which depend heavily on tourism. The development of a sanitation plan will in particular look at using reclaimed water for irrigation, landscape and industry, reducing waste and improving people’s livelihoods,” he said.

Approximately 15% of all households in the Seychelles are served by piped waterborne sewerage systems, while the remaining population depends on on-site sanitation facilities in the form of septic tanks and pit latrines.

Sanitation in the Seychelles is very much linked to the water supply, energy and waste sectors. The AWF-funded Water Supply Master Plan (2011) estimated that the water deficit will reach 30,000 m3 to 40,000 m3 in 2030. It also identified investments (including desalination plants) and demand management measures amounting to €100 million to cope with the shortage. Any future reclaimed water reuse project is estimated to be potentially profitable.

 

SOURCE: AfDB WEBSITE

Nigeria’s Maternal Death Still High – Expert

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Mal. Kabir Abullahi.
Mal. Kabir Abullahi. Team Leader, NURHI Kaduna

KADUNA, Nigeria, (January 20, 2015) – Over 1,800 women die annually in Kaduna State, northwest Nigeria in pregnancy and childbirth delivery related cases.

This was stated by the Kaduna State Team Leader of a Gates Foundation funded non-governmental organisation, Nigerian Urban Reproductive Health Initiative, NURHI, Malam Kabir Mohammed Abdullahi.

He announced this in a chat with AFRICAPRIME NEWS reporter in Kaduna.

Abdullahi who expressed dismay with the figure however said collaborative efforts are on by governments and NGOs to address the cases of maternal deaths.

He called on governments at all levels to invest in family planning, a time tested strategy that reduces the figure by more than 30% in many countries.

Rotary Donates US$8mn to Fight polio in Nigeria

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LAGOS, Nigeria, January 20, 2015/ — As Nigeria marks six months without a new case of polio, Rotary has announced $8.1 in grants to help the country in its final push to eradicate the disease within i borders. The funds will be used by the World Health Organization (WHO) and UNICEF to support polio immunization campaigns, research and surveillance in the country.

Nigeria, the last polio-endemic country in Africa, reported the highest number of polio cases in the world as recently as 2012. However, the country showed remarkable progress in 2014, when it reduced its polio case count by nearly 90% over the previous year. The funding commitment from Rotary (http://www.rotary.org) comes at a critical time, as the country has a prime opportunity to take advantage of these gains and end the disease for good.

“Nigeria has made incredible progress against polio this past year and I’m proud to see our country reduced cases by nearly 90% in 2014,” said Funke Akindele, Nollywood actress and Rotary polio ambassador. “With funds from Rotary, the continued support of Rotarians in Nigeria and around the world, I believe there will be a day when no child in Nigeria will be at risk of this disease.”

“Nigeria has managed an incredible feat,” said Dr. Tunji Funsho, Rotary’s National PolioPlus Chair for Nigeria. “Our country has gone six months without a new case of the disease. However, now we must be more vigilant than ever, as our progress is fragile.”

Commitment from all levels of the Nigerian government to ending the paralyzing disease has proved crucial to the country’s recent progress. Experts urge political leaders to maintain this focus, even amidst Nigeria’s upcoming national elections next month.

Recent polio outbreaks the Horn of Africa and Central Africa stemmed from poliovirus that originated in Nigeria. These outbreaks appear to have been effectively stopped in 2014; however, the continued presence of the virus in Nigeria puts countries in Africa at-risk for renewed outbreaks. In addition to the $8.1 million in funds for Nigeria, Rotary has committed $18.5 million to be divided amongst an additional seven countries in Africa. The grants include $1.6 million, Cameroon: $2.5 million, Chad; $3.3 million, Democratic Republic of Congo; $1.1 million, Ethiopia; $250,000, Kenya; $2.8 million, Niger; and $7 million, Somalia.

Outside of Africa, Rotary also announced grants of $1.1 million for Pakistan and $6.7 million for Afghanistan. Together with Nigeria, Pakistan and Afghanistan are the two other countries in the world where polio has never been stopped.

Rotary provides grant funding to polio eradication initiative partners UNICEF and the World Health Organization, which work with governments and others in polio-affected countries to plan and carry out immunization activities. Mass polio immunizations must continue until global eradication is achieved.

To date, Rotary has contributed more than $1.3 billion to fight polio. Through 2018, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation will match two-to-one every dollar Rotary commits to polio eradication (up to $35 million a year). In 2014, there were only 350 confirmed polio cases in the world, down from about 350,000 a year when the initiative launched in 1988.

Distributed by APO (African Press Organization) on behalf of Rotary International.

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