Connect with us

News

BUHARI’S SILENCE ON ALLEGATIONS AGAINST INEC DANGEROUS – SMBL

Published

on

LEADERS of thought, elder statesmen from four of the six geo-political zones of the country, on the platform of Southern and Middle Belt Leaders Forum, SMBLF, have said President Muhammadu Buhari’s silence in the face of allegations of irregularities and compromise against the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) was dangerous.

In a statement, the leaders of the Middle- Belt, Ohanaeze, Pan Niger Delta Forum, PANDEF, South-South, and Afenifere, the groups said that it became more disturbing when President Buhari had to embark on an international journey soon after the elections, when there were complaints.

In the statement by the PANDEF leader, Chief Edwin Clark; Afenifere, Chief Ayo Adebanjo; Dr. Pogu Bitrus, President, Middle Belt Forum; Dr. Chukwuemeka Ezeife – former Governor of Anambra State and Ambassador Okey Emuchay, Secretary General, Ohanaeze Ndigbo Worldwide, SMBLF took a swipe at the open declaration by President Buhari through a statement issued by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, that he will inaugurate President-elect, Bola Tinubu as President of Nigeria on May 29, 2023, and that there will not be a repeat of the June 12, 1993 presidential poll saga, saying that Nigeria as a country is in a democracy and not a military Junta.

According to the leaders, the President has no right whatsoever to determine who would be sworn into office on May 29, 2023, against the backdrop that the case was currently with the judiciary, and the President has no known powers to determine for the Judiciary who will win the case before her.

The leaders urged the President to allow the Judiciary to do its job, without interference, and relieve Nigeria from any political crisis.

They said that his utterances are prejudicial and are in contempt to a fair hearing, adding that it is offensive to the law of the land and it is obstruction of justice and an intimidation to the Lord Justices who are to hear the case.

The leaders said that statements by the Presidency should be regarded as an indirect attempt at directing the Court as to what it should do on the case.

The letter is titled, “POST 2023 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION AND STATE OF THE NATION”.

The letter read in part: “It’s hoped that Mr. President will carefully reflect on the issues raised herein and act accordingly, not only in the interest of Nigeria’s unity and stability, but the sustenance of our democratic journey as well.

“Your Excellency, across Nigeria, voters of all ages and groups, consider the conduct and outcome of the February 25 presidential election as fraudulent. Likewise, many foreign and local observers concluded that the conduct of the election failed to meet the expectations of Nigerians and that the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) failed to follow the Electoral Act 2022, and even its own guidelines in the conduct of the poll.

“This was in spite of the humongous amount of tax payers’ money spent by INEC and the promises of free, fair and credible elections given to Nigerians and the international community, ahead of the elections, by Mr. President and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

“Indeed, there’s palpable tension in the country and Nigeria would have been sweltering now were it not for the appeals for calm by well-meaning Nigerians, particularly the presidential candidate of the Labour Party in the election, Mr. Peter Obi, and most of us, who are elders and statesmen across the country.

“Unfortunately, while we are imploring for peace and calm on the part of all who are dissatisfied with the conduct and outcome of the polls, and to hold forth for the judiciary to dispense justice on the matter, it seems Mr. President and the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, do not appreciate the mood of the country.”

For news and events coverage, photo features, contributions and adverts contact us via:
Phone: +2348029115783
WhatsApp: +2347037611903
Follow us via:
Facebook: @Words and Shots
Instagram: @words_and_shots
Twitter: @wordsandshots

News

APPEAL COURT SETS ASIDE OSUN TRIBUNAL JUDGEMENT IN ADELEKE, OYETOLA’S CASE

Published

on

The Appeal Court sitting in Abuja on Friday set aside the judgement of the Osun State Election Petition Tribunal that annulled the victory of Ademola Adeleke of the Peoples Democratic Party during the July 16, 2022, Osun State governorship election.

The Osun tribunal had annulled Adeleke’s victory and affirmed Gboyega Oyetola of All Progressives Congress as the authentic winner of the poll.

The PUNCH reports that the Independent National Electoral Commission had returned Adeleke as the winner of the poll.

INEC said Adeleke polled 403,371 votes to defeat then-incumbent Governor Adegboyega Oyetola of the APC, who got 375,027 votes

But Oyetola and the APC rejected the result of the poll and headed for the tribunal.

In its January 27, 2023 majority verdict, the Justice Tertse Kume-led tribunal annulled Adeleke’s victory and declared Oyetola the winner of the poll.

However, a minority judgment by Justice B. Ogbuli affirmed Adeleke as the winner of the poll.

Displeased, Adeleke and the PDP headed for the Court of Appeal.

The Court of Appeal heard the appeal on March 13 and reserved its judgment.

But the court of Appeal on Friday set aside the tribunal judgement.

Meanwhile, the court proceeded on five minutes break and will deliver its final judgement after it reconvenes.

For news and events coverage, photo features, contributions and adverts contact us via:
Phone: +2348029115783
WhatsApp: +2347037611903
Follow us via:
Facebook: @Words and Shots
Instagram: @words_and_shots
Twitter: @wordsandshots
Continue Reading

Health & lifestyle

NIGERIA’S TB CASE FINDING RISES BY 50%, SAYS WHO

Published

on

The World Health Organisation said Nigeria had significantly increased its national Tuberculosis case finding by 50 percent in 2021 using innovative approaches.

The WHO Regional Director for Africa, Dr. Matshidiso Moeti, made this known in her message in commemoration of World TB Day.

World TB Day is marked yearly on March 24 to raise public awareness about the devastating health, social and economic consequences of this preventable disease and call for accelerated action to end it.

This year’s theme, ‘Yes, we can end TB’, highlights the need to ensure equitable access to prevention and care, in line with the drive towards Universal Health Coverage and Sustainable Development Goals.

Dr. Moeti said it was important to find and diagnose cases of TB so that the patients can be treated, and their contacts offered preventive medication.

“Nigeria is an example of a country that managed to significantly increase national TB case finding by 50 percent in 2021 using innovative approaches such as the expansion of the daily observed treatment protocols, use of digital technologies, Community Active Case Finding, and enlisting Public Private Mix initiatives.

“TB requires concerted action by all sectors: from communities and businesses to governments, civil society, and others,” she said in a press statement.

She said the African Region was on the threshold of reaching a 35 percent TB death reduction as there had been a 26 percent reduction in TB deaths between 2015 and 2021.

“Seven countries — Eswatini, Kenya, Mozambique, South Soudan, Togo, Uganda, and Zambia—have reached a 35 percent reduction in deaths since 2015,” she noted.

She, however, decried the challenges in TB prevention and control.

Old TB vaccine works better when injected into a vein —Researchers

“First, the delayed diagnosis and testing. There is still a notable gap between the estimated number of new infections and case notifications of TB: 40 percent of people living with TB did not know of their diagnosis or it was not reported in 2021. One million people are living with TB in the region and have not been detected.

“Second, the link between TB and HIV. Approximately 20 percent of people newly diagnosed with TB are also living with HIV infection.

“Third, the multi-drug resistant TB. In the African region, only 26 percent of all people living with multi-drug resistance are receiving the appropriate treatment.”

Meanwhile, she hailed the member states for the increasing uptake of new tools and guidance recommended by WHO, resulting in early access to TB prevention and care, and better outcomes.

“In the African Region, the use of rapid diagnostic testing has increased from 34 percent in 2020 to 43 percent in 2021, which will improve countries’ ability to detect and diagnose new cases of the disease.

“We must work together to develop innovative approaches to reach vulnerable populations and ensure that they have access to quality TB care and management.

“The second UN High-level Meeting on TB in September 2023 will provide a rare opportunity to give global visibility to the disease and mobilize high-level political commitment to end TB.

“Ending TB is feasible with the decline in TB deaths and cases, and the elimination of economic and social burdens associated with it.

“Especially today, I urge leaders, governments, partners, communities, and all stakeholders to urgently foster the resilient health systems required to accelerate the TB response so that we can reach the Sustainable Development Goals targets by 2030. Yes, we can end TB in our lifetime,” she added.

For news and events coverage, photo features, contributions and adverts contact us via:
Phone: +2348029115783
WhatsApp: +2347037611903
Follow us via:
Facebook: @Words and Shots
Instagram: @words_and_shots
Twitter: @wordsandshots
Continue Reading

News

TRAGIC LAGOS TRAIN-BUS COLLISION REKINDLES CALLS FOR RAIL TRACK SAFETY, ADVANCEMENT

Published

on

LAGOS TRAIN-BUS COLLISION

“This life is not fair,” said a wailing woman, as victims of the recent tragic Lagos train-bus accident at the Public Works Department (PWD) Busstop along Agege Motor Road, Lagos, were moved to a triage at the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH), Ikeja on Thursday, March 9, 2023.

Next

Stay

It was a moment of pain and agony for the families of those who didn’t survive and 79 other victims who suffered severe injuries and had their plans either cut short or altered.

There is the 28-year-old Juliana Aina Oreoluwa, a youth corps member with Lagos State Ministry of Education, who was to finish her service in May 2023, who died with her dreams of pursuing her master’s degree abroad, while 59-year-old Ganiyat Salawudeen, who worked with the Ministry of Finance, the State Treasury Department, on her part would have retired in January 2024.

Lamenting his daughter’s demise, Femi Aina, father of Oreoluwa, said: “I used to tell her that she took the job like she was already a staff member of the state government. She was a very nice girl with visions and ambitions.

“She was preparing to go to the United Kingdom for her master’s programme after her youth service in May, but unfortunately, all her plans had been dashed.”

The incident occurred barely two months after residents of Chikakore, Byazhin, in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), watched helplessly as an oncoming train crushed to death, a middle-aged woman, whose name was given as Hajia Selimat Idowu, along rail track.

The late Idowu, according to eyewitness account, was trying to cross the rail track, the only access road in and out of the community, when the accident occurred.

It was said that her vehicle got stuck and sadly, the train rammed into the car, killing her on the spot.

IN the last few years, it has been a catalogue of mishaps on rail tracks. After the COVID-19 lockdown in 2020, an accident involving a moving train, a bus and a Toyota Sports Utility Van (SUV) happened near the Nigerian Army Shopping Arena in Oshodi.

In the SUV were a trader and his son, who parked beside the tracks, waiting to enter Oshodi Shopping Complex, Arena, for business.

Unknown to him, metres away from the parking spot, a train had collided with a bus and was dragging it along the tracks. Unfortunately, before the man could move his car to a safe distance, the train had hit it and carried it along the bus and SUV on the tracks before coming to a complete stop. The trader lost his life, and his son was seriously injured in the accident.

Also, on January 10, 2019, at the Ashade railway crossing around Agege-Ikeja, Lagos, a train skidded off its tracks, killing one person and leaving others injured. The railway corporation responded almost immediately to re-rail the train and repaired the track, but if regular maintenance had been carried out in the first place, that accident could have been avoided in the first place.

In March 2018, also around Ikeja, a National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) member, Nneka Odili, on her way back from the Secretariat, lost her life in a train accident.

The young lady was walking on the rail track with her headphones plugged in and couldn’t hear the horns from the approaching train. She didn’t survive the injuries sustained in the accident.

WHILE it is worrisome that precious lives are being lost due to what experts term negligence on the part of those saddled with safety responsibilities, train accidents have raised the need for a complete overhaul of rail transportation in the country.

According to a 2023 survey by Statista.com, in 2018 alone, over 500 train accidents were recorded in the country. Of these numbers, loss of control/locomotive failure, accounted for 222 cases, detachment- 113, derailment-101, miscellaneous-36, wash out-32, collision-12, with broken rail/damage on track, accounting for seven cases.

Executive Secretary of the Nigerian Institute for Industrial Security and a security expert, Dr. Wilson Esangbedo, pointed to reasons such incidents occur despite warnings and caution signs displayed along rail tracks.

Sanwo-Olu visit

According to him, a change in value orientation is central to preventing these avoidable train mishaps. “We need to start changing our orientation to driving and understanding how the rail tracks work and know when a train is too close to a car on a rail track, there is a magnetic effect which affects the movement of the vehicle.

“The railway corporation needs to build proper demarcation to protect vehicles and pedestrians crossing the railway. There should be more publicity on safety precautions at the railway intersection.

“Government has not done enough and Nigerians should approach railway intersections with caution to remain safe,” Esangbedo said.

Former chairman of Apapa Branch of Nigerian Society of Engineers (NSE), Ombugadu Maikasuwa Garba, said the recurring train accidents in Nigeria has proven that there is need for a state of emergency in the sector.

He said: “It is very worrisome that precious lives are lost owing to negligence of those saddled with such responsibilities.”

According to him, “train tracks should be routed away from human/vehicular interference to reduce accidents, especially in areas where human activities and vehicular crossing is frequent.”

He also said: “Train tracks should be properly barricaded to prevent unnecessary human and vehicular interaction. This will ensure restrictions of movement along the corridor.

“Further more, in the event of train tracks on roads, electrically controlled barriers manned by competent personnel should be installed appropriately to prevent the entry of humans and vehicles when a train is passing.

“It is the responsibility of NRC to ensure that the needful is done appropriately. The state ministry of transportation and states where they have State Safety Agencies (such as the Lagos State Safety Commission —- LASSCOM) and engineering bodies should be alive to their duties so as to ensure safety of life and property.”

Also, former National Chairman, Nigerian Institution of Highways Transportation Engineers, Dayo Oluyemi, said ideally the intersection between a rail line and a roadway should be a grade-separated intersection.

“However, for economic reasons, we have them usually on same level in Nigeria. Drivers, who often are in a hurry to pass through the junction, usually cause the accidents. If our drivers are disciplined, we will not have these accidents.

“Auto controlled gates are required to be provided at sections where the roadway is intersecting a rail line at the same level,” he said.

For Ibrahim Aledu, a fellow of Nigerian Institution of Mechanical Engineers and Apapa Inspectorate Chief of Council for the Regulation of Engineering in Nigeria and Engineering Regulation and Monitoring, the long neglect of the sector has made Nigerians forget the existence of rail transportation.

For the Chief Executive Officer Bethlehem Rail, London, Mr. Roland Ataguba, there is enough blame to go round, though it appeared that the bus driver was primarily at fault.

He pointed out that between Ebute Metta Junction and Agbado, there will be the Lagos-Ibadan standard Guage rail, Lagos-Kano NGR and the Red line LRMT.

“So, how can anyone fathom that level crossings could be appropriate in that corridor?” He wondered.

According to him, level crossings are an accident black spot and Lagos needs total grade separation and the right of way fenced all through otherwise, they should prepare for more of the same as traffic grows.

Ataguba said: “The strategic issues are that a private operator would think differently and act proactively to preempt and mitigate losses. Unfortunately, the sloppy civil service culture of the NRC ensures we are reactive, and no one is held accountable.”

Chief Executive Officer, West Atlantic Cold-Chain and Commodities Limited, Henrii Nwanguma, said since rail is still being reintroduced, provisions must be made for such, because elsewhere, more mature industry exists, there are still incidents and accidents.

Former Dean of the School of Transport and Logistics, Lagos State University (LASU), Prof. Samuel Odewumi, said there are normally different types of rail crossing barricades. It could be human, mechanical or electrical. The one in place at the time of the accident was human.

Late Oreoluwa

According to Odewumi, witnesses on site testified that there was a man waiving a red flag for vehicles to stop. While others obeyed, the bus driver refused and the train ran into it. From the railway authorities, there was a physical barrier, but was removed because of the ongoing construction work at the site. The construction is for total separation of rail and road by making an overpass for the road.

“We hope it will be a wakeup call, especially, since it occurred not so long after the fatal Abuja crossing accident. There must be reawakening from all the stakeholders. There must be continuous enlightenment and education. Let the media, especially radio and television, dedicate some air time for this,” he said.

On what plans Lagos State has to ensure that rail tracks are shielded from pedestrians, vehicles and other straying bodies to ensure safety of lives and property, the Managing Director and CEO of the Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Authority (LAMATA), Mrs. Abimbola Akinajo, said from their Strategic Transport Master Plan (STMP), they have six rail lines, and one monorail.

She said: “We are currently implementing two of the lines – Blue and Red. On the Blue Line (Marina to Okokomaiko), there will not be any interaction between train and vehicular traffic. From Orile to Okokomaiko, the train system will sit in the middle of the Lagos Badagry Expressway with no interaction at all with vehicular traffic. The entire corridor will also be fenced off with a palisade fence, made of steel pales, which are attached to horizontal rails connected to sturdy vertical joists or ‘posts’.

“On the Red line, we are sharing tracks with the Federal Government through the NRC. The NRC currently has fenced off the rail corridor. All authorised level crossings are to be closed and replaced with overpass bridges, or flyover to eliminate interaction between vehicular and train traffic. There are 10 authorised level crossings between Agbado and Oyingbo. They are at Jonathan Coker (Fagba), Pen Cinema, Asade, Ikeja, PWD, llupeju bypass. Ogunmokun (Mushin), Fadeyi, Yaba and Oyingbo.

“Lagos State was tasked to construct five and Federal Government to be responsible for the remaining five. Lagos State government has completed the Pen Cinema section with the construction of the Pen Cinema flyover bridge. The other four are located at Ikeja, Ogunmokun (Mushin). Yaba, and Oyingbo are at about 90-95per cent completion.

“The Federal Government is expected to begin the construction of its sections of four overpass bridges having completed the Asade flyover. The four are Jonathan Coker (Fagba), PWD, Ilupeju bypass and Fadeyi.

“However, we plan to work with the Federal Ministry of Transport through the NRC to put temporary barriers at level crossings, where construction of Overpass Bridge is yet to start when we commence operation shortly due to the fact that rail traffic will increase along the corridor.”

Speaking with The Guardian, Managing Director, NRC, Fidelis Okhiria, cautioned motorists to be more careful, while driving on railroads.

Okhiria said modernisation has taken care of the barriers, adding that there should not be rail and road crossing. “We have about 11 overhead bridges that will turn from, and there will be an overpass. There is going to be an overhead bridge at the PWD crossing.”

He said: “You can see that government is putting barriers first, but because there is what we call the level crossing, which at the time the government has developed a policy on modernisation, we had to have separate grades.

The late Salawudeen

“I mean the road and rail will somehow not cross their path. That is what you see at Agege, after Agege, you see the underpass coming from Guinness, same thing you can see construction going on in Oyingbo and Yaba trying to separate the road, but it’s going to be at Jibowu, we cannot do all at the same time not to cause too much traffic jam. However, before this is done, what we have resorted to is a little bit of using communication and human.

“When a train leaves the next station, we inform all the level crossing keepers who happen to man where the road and rail intersect. By doing so, they inform the men there and before the train gets there, they will ensure the road is clear from the rail, and that is what happened that fateful day. All the road vehicles had been stopped, but this bus came from nowhere and the train came and there was a collision.

A crushed vehicle in Kubwa

“Five years back, we developed light and alarm so that when the train is getting close by, an alarm will be raised. This was also vandalised. We did that four times consecutively but were still vandalised. So we now have phones to communicate and make sure that our men are there at the level crossing.

“What people don’t know is that it is not the responsibility of the rail to keep the level crossing, by international standards the rail always have the right of way because it is a permanent way, everybody is expected to know that there is a rail track there and train don’t shift position unlike the road that you turn the steering you don’t have a steering that you turn on the rail, it is the tracks that directs the rail.”

Speaking on why the country is lagging in terms of attaining respectable global standards in rail service, he said: “It is just the level that we have found ourselves. All these things happen in America. Even in India, it is still happening, and China is happening. All we have to do is to change our attitudes and our ways.”

For news and events coverage, photo features, contributions and adverts contact us via:
Phone: +2348029115783
WhatsApp: +2347037611903
Follow us via:
Facebook: @Words and Shots
Instagram: @words_and_shots
Twitter: @wordsandshots
Continue Reading

Trending