Mpox is under control: Depart of Health


The Department of Health has assured South Africans that the current Mpox outbreak remains under control.

‘However, this does not mean people should become complacent because we have learned from the COVID-19 pandemic that viruses are unpredictable as they mutate from time to time.’

According to the department, South Africa remains on high alert in case of a surge in Mpox cases and the emergence of new contagious strains.

The department has since called on citizens to play their part and support the country’s response efforts to prevent the spread of Mpox by maintaining nonpharmaceutical measures, including personal hygiene.

Meanwhile, various pharmaceutical interventions, including additional treatments and vaccines, are being considered. The decision will be based on epidemiological data, the department added.

The department also clarified that both the declarations by the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC) and the World Health Organisation (WHO) do not translate into trade
and travel restrictions.

This is after the ongoing outbreak of Mpox has been officially declared a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC) by the WHO.

The department said this serves as a clarion call for Member States, including South Africa, to work together, fast-track approval of Mpox vaccine and treatment while maintaining strict safety protocols, and ensuring these life-saving vaccines reach the most vulnerable populations to prevent the further spread of this infectious, but treatable disease.

South Africa is also working with various stakeholders, including the WHO County Office, National Institute for Communicable Diseases (NICD) and Border Management Authority (BMA) to intensify epidemiological and surveillance, contact tracing and health screening activities for case investigation and early detection of new positive cases in the country.

The total number of positive cases recorded in the country as of Sunday, 18 August 2024, stands at 24 including three deaths, 19 recoveries an
d two active cases undergoing home isolation.

Twelve cases were reported in Gauteng, 11 in KwaZulu-Natal and one in the Western Cape.

‘The department will keep the public updated on the situation and response efforts, including as and when there are new developments.

‘We encourage businesses and organisations with operations in the affected countries to ensure [they] put measures in place to ensure their employees who regularly travel to and from South Africa, are well informed of Mpox; and are fit to travel.’

Symptoms

In addition, travellers experiencing Mpox-like symptoms should seek immediate medical attention and if possible, delay their travel until they are diagnosed or fully recovered to prevent possible cross-border transmission.

‘We also urge all people who experience any of the Mpox symptoms, with or without international travel history to present themselves to a health facility for clinical observation and confine themselves to one place until their test results are available.’

The departmen
t stated that anyone can contract Mpox regardless of age, gender, sexual orientation and race.

‘The current epidemiological data suggests that people living with HIV and men who have sex with men (MSM) are vulnerable to Mpox,’ the department said, adding that those living with chronic medical conditions such as tuberculosis and diabetes are also at risk.

Some of the common symptoms of Mpox include a rash which may last for two to four weeks, fever, headache, muscle aches, back pain, low energy and swollen glands.

According to the department, the painful rash looks like blisters or sores and can affect the face, palms of the hands, soles of the feet and groin.

Source: South African Government News Agency

18 years admission benchmark: Is Nigeria on the right path?

The event played out like a rowdy parliamentary session, though, without a gavel to punctuate ruling or proclamation on a contentious educational issue.

The occasion was a policy meeting, organised by the Joint Admission Matriculation Board (JAMB) recently in Abuja, which had in attendance the Minister of Education, Prof. Tahir Mamman and stakeholders in the education sector

The Minister reiterated the government’s position that only applicants who were 18 years and above were eligible for admission into tertiary institutions in the 2024 admission process, and going forward.

The minister’s pronouncement, however, ignited a lot of concerns among the stakeholders who could not hide their resentment to the decision.

Since the pronouncement in April during a Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examinations (UTME) monitoring exercise in Bwari, Abuja, the minister has received both commendation and condemnations.

However, to calm frayed nerves and bring the meeting to normalcy, Mamman, like a presiding officer in
a parliamentary plenary, had asked, ‘Are we together?’, while the participants chorused in unison, ‘No no no’

After the meeting was called to order, the minister took time to explain to the participants that the position of government on the 18 years admission benchmark was not novel.

He said, by the provisions of the educational policy of the nation, a child is required to be at 18 years before securing admission to tertiary institution, having attended six years in primary school, three years in Junior Secondary School and three years in senior secondary school.

Mamman explained that the policy aimed at addressing key issues within tertiary institutions, particularly universities.

However, in response to the intense protest, the Minister conceded to set the 2024 admission age at 16, while the law would apply from 2025.

Many have commended the minister for shifting ground and conceding to allowing students who participated in the 2024 UTME but were under 18 to gain admission.

However, the question many
observers and stakeholders in the sector are further asking is, whether the one year respite by the federal government is adequate or is the policy in any way, in the interest of the education sector?.

The Federal Government introduced the 6-3-3-4 system of education in 1983 with the primary focus of meeting the educational needs of its citizenry and equipping the youths with sellable skills that would make them to be self-reliant.

More than two decades later, a modified system, Universal Basic Education (UBE) also known as the 9-3-4 was introduced, with curriculum expected to meet the global best practices.

Experts have, however, observed that the implementation of the education policies had led to the menace of admitting underage children into secondary schools.

The trend of parents pushing their children to finish their education at a very tender age has become alarming.

It has been observed that parents propel their children into skipping primary five and six and ‘jumping’ into the Junior Secondary S
chool.

This is also applicable to Senior Secondary schools as some parents push their children into taking the West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) while in SS 2.

This development has led to many students graduating from secondary schools at ages 14, 15 and 16 years, and getting admissions into tertiary institutions in the country.

The consequence is a younger, immatured candidates who ought to be in controlled space of their parents, finding themselves unrestrained, in a vibrant tertiary school environment

The minister had said that the development was responsible for some challenges in the higher institutions and vowed to enforce the law mandating the admission age for entry into tertiary institutions as 18 years.

Mamman had also directed the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) to admit only students who have attained the age of 18 years into tertiary institutions.

‘This pronouncement is a reminder and if you look at all the policy documents on the schooling system i
n Nigeria; the UBE Act for instance, you’ll find that the entry age into primary school is six.

Age three to five years are all pre-primary school stages. Early childhood education is what they are meant for.

‘When you add up the rest of the period, you find that a child is supposed to be finishing about 17 and a half years. So that’s just about the period we’re talking about.

‘We’re just reminding people. It’s not a new policy we are coming up with.

‘We also remind parents that jumping your children through their period of education is not very helpful. There’s no need to put a child of four years in primary school,” he said.

The minister explained that once a child had not attained a particular age for schooling, such a child must not be allowed to skip.

When asked if there will be any sanction for failure to obey the policy, the minister said there would be no sanction, but the child would simply not be admitted.

He noted that other examination bodies like NECO and WAEC would, henceforth, implement
the age at which a student could take their examinations.

However, many Nigerians have continued to oppose the government’s decision on the 18 years entry age into tertiary institutions.

They are of the opinion that the decision was harsh, as many students in this current generation don’t graduate from secondary school at the required age to enable them to proceed for higher education.

Mrs Victoria Chimezie, a parent and civil servant, called on the government to consider the implications on children who graduated at 15 and 16 years and be made to stay at home for another two years before admission.

Chimezie said that this would only encourage the children to get into different social vices, capable of destroying their lives, adding that ‘ an idle mind is the devil’s workshop’.

She urged the government to retrace its steps by finding solutions from the bottom before implementing the admission age.

Dr Lovelyn Anabogwu, Facilitator at the National Teachers Institute(NTI) said 16 years is an ideal age for
students to gain admission to tertiary institutions because they were already mentally, physically, psychologically and emotionally suitable, at the age

She equally submitted that exceptionally brilliant students, who left secondary school at 15 years old, could also be considered for admission.

A parent, Mrs Alice Etuka said that in an age of advanced technology, savvy and vibrant youths Nigeria is endowed with, it is retrogressive for a minister to propagate 18 years benchmark for entry into higher institutions

Etuka noted that technology had helped greatly in making children grasp faster because they had many resources to help them understand their studies better.

She, therefore, called on the government to reconsider the age limit and allow entry age into tertiary institutions to be pegged at 16 years.

‘Times have changed and curriculum has been improved upon. Nowadays, both parents are working and as such enrol their children in school at a very young age.

‘Topics like addition and subtraction whic
h were learnt in Primary schools in those days, are now being taught in Nursery and the children are coping.

‘Also, children in private schools can read as early as five years, so why do you want to delay their education because of a retrogressive policy?

‘I call on the Minister to rethink this pronouncement so that we will not drive our education system and vibrant youth population backward,’ she said.

To the contrary, the Proprietor, ChiedField School, Mr Joshua Oluwole, emphasised the importance of the 9-3-4 policy in getting things done right in the sector.

Oluwole advised parents to get their children engaged in skills that would impact positively on them by the time they get into higher institutions.

He advised private school owners to avoid accepting age falsification, rather be strict in admitting students with the right birth certificate.

According to him, this will go a long way in checking the excesses of some parents who might want to enrol their underage children in the various classes.

Si
milarly, Sylvester Onoja, Former Commissioner for Education, Kogi State, blamed the government for rot in the educational system, for failure to implement the policy all the while.

Onoja also emphasised the need for a complete character formation of students before getting into tertiary institutions.

He explained that character building was necessary to shape the personality of the students for the country, hence, the need to get the student matured before their higher education.

‘Judging by the 9-3-4 system of education, 18 years is the year of maturity. A child is admitted into primary school at age six; spend six years in primary school and transit into secondary school.

‘Such a child spends another six years in secondary school and you can see that by the time such a child is graduating from secondary school, he/she would have turned 18.

‘Nobody goes to the university to form any character and as a result you cannot really bring character to closure, until you are 18-years-old,” he said.

Also, Haji
a Mariam Magaji, National Deputy President, Association of Private Schools Owners of Nigeria (APSON), pledged the readiness of the association to enforce the age policies in schools.

‘On our part, we are supporting the government in providing quality education to Nigerian children.

‘We are also supporting that decision of admission age, and this starts from the basic and secondary schools.

‘We believe in doing that and supporting the government, we will be giving the best to the children and they can then move to tertiary institutions at that age,” Magaji said.

Mohammed Musa, National President, All Nigeria Association of Principals of Secondary Schools (ANCOPPS), commended the federal government for taking the bull by the horn in its decision.

Musa encouraged parents to begin to think outside the box for their underage children, stressing that, any child not up to 18 years should not be allowed into tertiary institutions.

‘The issue of age when it comes to education is very important, and the 6-3-3-4
system of education is very nice, and can help our sector.

‘ The 6-3-3-4 system comprises skills acquisition. If a child is not capable of proceeding to senior secondary school, at least such a child would have learnt a skill.

‘Because it has not been properly followed, that is why you have children coming to school skipping a grade, and this is very bad for the system.

‘The child that is not psychologically and mentally prepared,, getting into the tertiary institution will be a dangerous game because he/she will be opened to manipulation,” Musa said.

No doubt, the intention of the framers of the 9-3-4 policy is to ensure a child attains maturity age of 18, form good character, before leaving the controlled space of their parents.

This will go a long way in curtailing vices of cultism, drug addiction, prostitution and many more which is believed that many were lured into, on getting to unrestrained and vibrant tertiary school environments.

However, the policy has been left unimplemented for decades, to
the extent that the adopted age for admission had been 16 years and even below.

The concern is, will tertiary institutions get the required number of students in the next two to three academic sessions if this policy is implemented?

Source: News Agency of Nigeria

SA journalists scoop two awards at SADC Media Awards


Government has congratulated the two South African journalists who won in two categories in this year’s Southern African Development Community (SADC) Media Awards.

Fikile Necter Marakalla was the second prize winner in the Photo Category with her pictures that were published in SA News and Diplomatic Informer.

Marakalla’s winning entry highlighted the strong fraternal, historical as well as social relations between South Africa and the United Republic of Tanzania during the State visit of her Excellency Dr Samia Suluhu Hassan.

Meanwhile, Tshimologo Benjamin Moshatama from Channel Africa Radio was the second prize winner in the Radio Category with his entry on the importance of shared water resources in the SADC regional integration and development as well as the contribution of the Kingdom of Lesotho in the management of shared water resources.

The SADC Media Awards present a unique opportunity for the SADC region’s journalists to be celebrated and recognised by their peers.

‘The media plays a critical
role in promoting regional integration in the region. We encourage more South African journalists to cover stories that promote regional integration,’ Government Communications and Information System (GCIS) Acting Director-General Nomonde Mnukwa said on Monday.

Government has called on media practitioners in South Africa and the region to share their stories that focus on economic well-being, improvement of the standard of living and quality of life, freedom and social justice, peace and security for the people of Southern Africa.

‘Media practitioners are encouraged to continually ensure that we popularise projects that are underway in the SADC region. Africa and the region must tell her own stories. It is important that we hear from a range of voices from our diverse nations. By telling our own stories, we will bridge divides between SADC nations,’ GCIS said.

The SADC Media Awards are aimed at promoting excellence in the fields of Print Journalism, Radio Journalism, Television Journalism and Photojournali
sm.

‘The SADC Media Awards serve as a link for coordination and synchronization between formal structures of SADC member states and media. They further seek to bring and enhance partnership between media and government institutions. South Africa’s participation at SADC is guided by the SADC Treaty. The SADC Treaty guides all Member States within the regional bloc,’ GCIS said.

The Treaty encourages the people of the region and their institutions to take initiatives to develop economic, social and cultural ties.

GCIS is responsible for the implementation of the SADC Media Awards on behalf of South Africa.

‘GCIS would also like to acknowledge the excellent work done by the judges who make up South Africa’s chapter of the SADC Media Awards in our National Adjudication Committee (NAC).

‘These members are drawn from seasoned and experienced media professionals who give freely of their time and expertise to ensure that we can confidently submit entries of the highest standard to the regional competition,’ the G
CIS said.

Source: South African Government News Agency

TopBrand 2024 Top 500 Global Brands List released, with Apple as defending champion

The 18th China Brand Festival was held during August 7th-10th, 2024 in Guangzhou. The theme of this brand festival is ‘New Quality and Breakthrough’. More than 8,000 guests gathered in the business capital over a millennium, to participate in parallel forums, brand expositions, entrepreneurial sports events, brand leader meetings and various activities. Nearly 3,000 people have attended the opening ceremony.

During this period, the ‘TopBrand 2024 Top 500 Global Brands List’ was unveiled by the TopBrand Union. This List was released for the third time: Apple ranked as defending champion with a brand value of $1021.728 billion; Microsoft and Amazon ranked second and third with a brand value of $966.932 billion and $808.415 billion, respectively; Nvidia rose from 8th to 4th, with a brand value of $804.279 billion; Alphabet, Saudi Aramco, Walmart, Berkshire Hathaway, Meta, and UnitedHealth Group ranked 5th-10th.

In terms of countries, the United States has the largest number of companies (187) on the list, acc
ounting for 37.4% with a total brand value of $16.80 trillion. The Top 10 brands are all American brands except for Saudi Aramco, and ExxonMobil, JPMorgan Chase, Eli Lilly, Costco, and Tesla have also entered the Top 20.

China, the runner-up, has 99 companies on the list with a total brand value of $6.29 trillion. Among them: Sinopec ranked 12th with a brand value of $289.77 billion, followed by PetroChina, State Grid, and TSMC, ranking 13th-15th; the Top 50 also included technology companies such as Tencent, Huawei, and Alibaba.

Japan has ranked third with its 37 companies at a total brand value of $1.68 trillion. Among them: Toyota has ranked 15th with a value of $222.470 billion, Mitsubishi Corporation and Honda have also entered the Top 100, and Sony, Hitachi and SoftBank are on the list among others.

In addition, France has 25 companies such as LVMH Group, AXA, and L’OrĂ©al, among which: TotalEnergies has the highest brand value; 24 British companies are on the list, with Shell, BP, and AstraZeneca ent
ering the Top 100; 22 German companies are listed with solid performance from Volkswagen, BMW, Siemens, etc.; India has 13 companies such as Reliance Industries Limited on the list; Australia has 6 listed enterprises such as BHP Billiton.

In terms of industry, the medical and pharmaceutical field represented by Eli Lilly, CVS, Novo Nordisk has taken the lead, ranking first with 41 companies; the science and technology field has ranked second with 40 companies; the energy field and banking field are both the second runner-ups with 35 companies.

According to Dr. Wang Yong, founder and chairman of the China Brand Festival and chairman of the TopBrand Union, the List takes 43,590 brands from 83 countries and regions around the world as the research sample and measures the brand value based on the market value method from the dimensions of revenue scale, premium ability, internationalization degree, team building, reputation, and core competitiveness.

Lists such as ‘TopBrand 2024 Top 500 Chinese Brands’ and ‘To
pBrand 2024 Top 500 Chinese Innovative Brands’ were released meanwhile.

Source: News Agency of Nigeria

Letter to Wada Maida: A Tribute

By Ali M. Ali

‘Every soul will taste death’

Quran (3:185)

‘If you love and care for me, tell me while I’m alive. Don’t send me flowers and write a poem when I’m dead.’ -Allen Lazar

Dear Sir,

Salam Alaykum. I don’t know how to begin this letter. It has been a little over four years since we spoke. Unless my memory fails me, the last time we did was when I called to express my condolence over the sudden death of Malam Isma’ila Isa Funtua, who passed on exactly four weeks before you also answered that clarion call all mortals must heed, at the appointed time on Aug. 17th, 2020.

Late Isa passed away on Monday Aug. 3, 2020 in the evening and was buried the following day after funeral prayers were held at the Shagari Mosque Abuja. He was 79. He betrayed no inkling of his imminent passage. He bubbled with life. A nephew of his, now late, confirmed to me that he actually drove himself to the salon where he had a hair cut within the hour of his exit.

Four short weeks later, on a Monday evening, your appointed
hour arrived and you followed suit in almost identical manner.

The only inkling you gave, according to your bosom and childhood friend, Sen. Ibrahim Ida, the current Wazirin Katsina, of your imminent passage, was lack of enthusiasm to renovate your residence in your home state of Katsina asking rhetorically ‘how much time do I have left to live?’

Sir, I am truly at a loss as to how to address you. I had trouble settling on the formal and impersonal ‘sir’. I wanted to address you ‘Dear Uncle Wada’, or ‘ Dear big brother Wada’ if not outright ‘Dear Baba Wada’.

I know you will take exception to anything other than what I used to refer to you, ‘Malam Wada’, as chairman of the Board of Peoples Daily. You were all four and more rolled into one, to so many of us you mentored in the Newsroom and in the Boardroom.

Even in death, we continue to learn from the enduring lessons you left behind. In your final moments after the exit of Isma’ila Funtua, all of us, following in your footsteps, were unanimous that you wer
e the rightful bearer of the torch of leadership from our part of the country in the national media space.

Your media profile was towering. Pioneer staff of News Agency of Nigeria(NAN), London Bureau chief, Editor-in-Chief for almost a decade, Managing Director for nine years and chairman of the Board for three years. Your media trajectory is truly inspirational. Under your watch, the agency broke new grounds, boosted operations at home and abroad with offices across the continent and parts of Europe.

Ranka ya dade, the Abuja Headquarters of NAN whose construction you supervised, is now named after you. It was the federal government’s way of appreciating your contribution to the growth of the agency in particular, and the media in general.

Since September 2021, the building at Plot 394 Independence Avenue, Central Business District, is known as Wada Maida House.

Let me bring you up to speed, or to use a more contemporary language favoured by the Gen Z and even millennials, let me give you an ‘update’.

Yo
ur ‘twin’, Sen. Ibrahim Ida, is now the Wazirin Katsina. You knew him as the Sardaunan Katsina, while your other close friend, Prof. Sani Abubakar Lugga held the tittle. Aminu is now at the helm in Nigeria Communication Commission. I am now calling the shots at the Agency as Managing Director, 20 years after you.

I am almost a year in the saddle and it still feels surreal each time I walked into the office and sat in your ‘chair’. Everyday, as I sat to face the business of the day in that office, I recall how you advised me to remain in the Triumph as a very young editor of the weekly broadsheet, while wanting to join the Agency way back in 1996.

When I made the overture, you declined, saying at the time that I was more valuable to the Triumph than I would be in the Agency. I was anxious to leave the company, I made a go at the New Nigerian Newspaper where my university teacher, Dr Abubakar Rashid, was the boss.

He was more graphic in why he wouldn’t give me a job not so much for lack of skills because he
wouldn’t do that to his friend, Garba Shehu, who was then Managing Director of the Triumph, by taking me away before full bloom.

Both of you saved my career actually by refusing to give sanctuary because, years later, I joined the Lagos-Ibadan Press as it was then called and there, I had my skills further honed by such media greats as Nduka Obaigbena, Ted Iwere and late Doyen Mahmoud.

Sir, you seemed to live all your life mindful of this Quranic verse-that ‘Every soul will taste death’ Quran (3:185)

And you chose your flavour very well. You chose the flavour of tolerance and patience. In surah Al Baqarah, Allah (SWT) said ‘O you who have believed, seek help through patience and prayer. Indeed, Allah is with the patient.’ [2:153]

In words and in deeds sir, you were a man of patience and prayer.

In the nearly 30 years I have known you before you left this side of life, you came across as a man with an inelastic tolerance and patience. You were Supremely mild mannered, and lived, for the years I have known
you, mindful that one day you will exit and so chose to be a man of peace and mild disposition.

My Chairman, you were an unusual media leader. Your exit is a personal loss especially now that I am at NAN calling the shots.

You were not just the chairman of the Board of Peoples Media Limited publishers of Peoples Daily where I headed management for half a dozen years, you were a father figure to so many of us journalism ‘orphans’.

This would have been the best time for me to have you as ‘my go to genie” if I hit a brick wall. In NAN, we say no one knows Nigeria better, I say no one knows NAN better than you sir !

I find it exhilarating each time, old hands in the Agency recalled how they were recruited by your leadership without having a godfather except their respective competencies.

Sir, we intend to plod that path too. In Peoples Daily, you never failed to nudge me in the right direction. It is de javu all over again.

Your legacies in the Agency are giving us direction and goals. You were a profoundl
y decent human being. A dye-in-the-wool journalist and media manager, you made a rebuke or a reprimand looked so tender, it would be a shame to go before you again. I am trying to be as mild mannered and as soft-spoken, and try to emulate your kindness in not mouthing an unkind word that would disparage anybody’s self worth.

Like you know I have worked with several highflying media leaders across five newsrooms nationwide, none came close to you in putting a leash on their emotions.

In temperament and in disposition, it was impossible to picture you hurting a fly. If ever there was an ‘ice king’, you were it!

I will regret, forever, not penning a tribute when late Maida turned 70 in March 2020. I merely sent you a text and wished more years in good health to which you characteristically replied almost immediately. I did, however, tell you that I was going to write one when I became more collected, to which you were neither excited nor indifferent.

Sir, permit me to say you were the very definition of ‘tol
erance’ and ‘mentorship’. Your 70-year-old life trajectory represents to me and a host of others in NAN, Peoples Daily and elsewhere in the media world, a profound lesson in humility and kindness.

When I was hired to lead the management, there wasn’t really a ‘formal’ interview. Garba Shehu, my other mentor, who persuaded me to join People Media merely, asked me to see you. I first met you in 1991 at a workshop organised by the Centre of Democratic Studies (CDS) in Bwari, in conjunction with the Nigeria Guild of Editors (NGE). You had just been elected president after Onyeama Ugochukwu of Daily Times. You were 41 and also the Editor-in-Chief of NAN. I was among a dozen handpicked reporters drawn from several media outlets nationwide. I was a wide-eyed twenty something year old. Your lanky frame decked in a suit will forever linger in my mind. You flawlessly delivered an opening address that arrested my attention.

I pledged to myself that one day I would become the president of the Guild and the editor in ch
ief of NAN. None of the two in my wish list ever materialised.

I came one step short of being President of the Guild of editors. I am one step ahead of the Editor-in-Chief !

Let me refresh your memory sir about the Board of Peoples Daily. It was peopled by the likes of late Abba Kyari, late Halita Aliyu, late veteran journalist Rufai Ibrahim, Garba Shehu, Bilya Bala, Abdulmumuni Bello, Ibrahim Ismail and the late Isma’ila Isa Funtua. You chaired this group of eminent persons. Abba Kyari and Garba Shehu had to resign when they got into government in 2015.

It was this Board that hired me not just as an employee, but also one with a stake – a condition I set before I took the job and one which you graciously agreed to, gladly.

I reported only to you. Board meetings can be stormy. Peoples Daily wasn’t different. Most times, management would be whipped silly; you were ever sympathetic and understanding to the chagrin of some of the Directors. Your approach in dealing with Management was fatherly.

One year, th
e ever-censorious Board was so impressed that a formal commendation letter signed by you was given to Management. The other Directors finally appreciated what you long saw in us.

You were effortlessly scholarly without being gaudy, you were the sort that would nudge one in the right direction imperceptibly without claiming credit.

Ranka ya dade, there are so many ‘updates” but for time. I hope, Insha’Allah, to keep you abreast next year if I have not answered the call. May your soul continue to nestle in jannah. Adieu my chairman, till we meet again.

Ali M. Ali is the Managing Director/CEO of the News Agency of Nigeria

Source: News Agency of Nigeria

Hunters rescue kidnapped siblings, nab hoodlums in Anambra

The National Commission for Refugees, Migrants, and Internally Displaced Persons has partnered with the Cormode Cancer Foundation to address cancer in Nigeria’s IDP camps and host communities.

The partnership is aimed at establishing Cormode Cancer Champions Clubs in secondary schools across the country to educate young people about cancer prevention and early detection.

The Federal Commissioner for the Commission, Mr Tijani Aliyu, in a statement issued by the partners on Sunday in Lagos, said that the initiative also aimed to improve the health and wellbeing of displaced persons.

Aliyu also said that it would help to reduce the stigma associated with cancer and empower young people as advocates for cancer awareness.

‘We are delighted to partner with Cormode Cancer Foundation to address the critical issue of cancer awareness in our IDP camps and host communities.

‘This initiative aligns with our commitment to improving the health and wellbeing of displaced persons.

‘By educating the youth about cancer,
we aim to foster a healthier future and reduce the stigma associated with this disease.

‘We are excited to endorse the launch of the first 150 Cancer Champions in September, a milestone that we believe will attract potential donors to expand this vital programme.’

Also, Dr Denise Ejoh, founder of the Foundation, explained that the project was dedicated to making a difference in the lives of those affected by cancer, particularly in vulnerable communities.

Ejoh emphasised the importance of addressing the emotional and psychological impact of cancer, especially in vulnerable communities.

‘We are honoured to collaborate with the National Commission for Refugees on this vital initiative.

‘We commend the Honourable Commissioner, Hon. Tijani Aliyu, for his passion and dedication to ensuring that the camps are cancer-free and well-educated.

‘Through this partnership, we hope to educate and empower young people, providing them with the tools and knowledge to prevent and detect cancer early,’ he said.

He explai
ned that the programme would address the emotional and psychological aspects of cancer and displacement, offering grief and trauma education to build resilience and hope.

Mrs Ndidi Odia, Club Coordinator and daughter of a cancer survivor, highlighted the need for educating caregivers and providing support to those affected by cancer.

Odia said, ‘As someone who understands the challenges of living with cancer through my mother’s experience, I recognise the importance of educating people, especially caregivers, about this disease.

‘Our efforts will focus on providing accurate information and support to those in the camps and host communities.

‘We aim to ensure that everyone understands the importance of early detection and the resources available to them.’

According to her, the initiative marks a significant step toward improving cancer awareness and education in Nigeria’s most vulnerable populations.

‘The Cormode Cancer Champions Clubs will serve as a platform for disseminating critical information, prov
iding emotional support, and fostering a community of informed and proactive individuals, she added.

She explained that the endorsement of the launch of the first 150 Cancer Champions in September by the Commission was anticipated to draw support from donors, facilitating the expansion of this crucial programme.

Also, Mrs Noni Okocha, of ‘I Am the Future of Nigeria Youth Initiative’, a partnering NGO, said: ‘It is crucial to educate not only the internally displaced persons but also future generations on the importance of cancer awareness.

‘By doing so, we can create a more informed and health-conscious society.

‘We are proud to be a part of this initiative and look forward to seeing the positive impact it will have on these communities.’

Source: News Agency of Nigeria