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University Of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital Bringing Hope to Resident of Northeast Nigeria

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University Of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital Bringing Hope to Resident of Northeast Nigeria

University Of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital Bringing Hope to Resident of Northeast Nigeria

September 2021 will mark the third year of the Chief Medical Director (CMD), Professor Ahmed Ahidjo on the saddle as Chief Executive of the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital UMTH.

He is not a man known for too much celebration amidst mounting problems considering the fact that he came in from the academic background as the Provost of the College of Medical Sciences. There is no department without its own problems but this piece which emanated from an interview with the CMD, and many others in the facility, spells out his doggedness in trying to fix the Kidney Center which like others has not enjoyed the best of times since the inception of the lingering insurgency.

University Of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital Bringing Hope to Resident of Northeast Nigeria
Professor Ahmed Ahidjo CMD

The report was put together by Sam Kayode our Northern correspondent.

In the myriad of renal problems affecting the residents of Borno State, the commencement of the extension of the kidney Centre of the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital UMTH marks a big milestone in the history of the North – East region of Nigeria.

All things being equal, the center should be ready to bring hope back into the lives of many patients before the end of this year and beyond.

BACKGROUND WITH INITIAL OBJECTIVES OF THE CENTER

Indeed, the current extension of the kidney Center of the UMTH is a big plus to the management led by Professor Ahmed Ahidjo, a consultant Interventional Radiologist. As a matter of fact, it is one of the greatest achievements that has ever happened in the history of the institution since its inception in July 1983. The advent of the lingering Insurgency into the North East region however has brought to the front burner the need for the current extension going on in the center. Many watchers on the development of the institution and stakeholders who spoke with this reporter on the development in the institution cannot wait to benefit from it.

It is an achievement to humanity says Professor Babatunde Omotara, a Don of Community Medicine who started his career in the hospital and witnessed the first transplant supported by some experts in UMTH and Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospital OAUTH.

But its growth has not been very smooth from then because, from the eyes of other partners in the health sector like the Head of nursing in the facility, Innocent Mamza, enough attention has not been given to the training of
nurses with nephrological background over the decades which is why their number is negligible years after the first transplant.

He commends the center but warns that there are only sixteen nephrological nurses in the center now making it grossly inadequate. This is why it is heartwarming that the administration of Professor Ahidjo has come around to update the facilities in the institution including that of the kidney center that was almost running into a comatose state.

Before the assumption of Professor Ahidjo in September 2018, there were lots of setbacks in this center but it is obvious now that there is light at the end of the tunnel. It is expected that by the time the extension is completed, the synergy which Mamza is praying for between the partners in the sector will be enhanced and a bigger headway will be opened in the process of management of the sick.

Commenting on the extension, the coordinator of the center, Professor Ibrahim Ummate, a Nephrologist in an exclusive interview told this reporter that he has been waiting patiently for the completion of the physical structure so that vital equipment can come in.

With the completion of the physical structures, he expects a lot of collaboration with colleagues from all over the world during his tenure as Coordinator so he can implant his expertise on patients. He is also looking forward to transplants and researches which have been long overdue.

This reporter recalls that Governor Babagana Zulum of Borno state had challenged the experts in the region to produce a practicable solution to the prevalence of kidney challenges in the region. By the time the funds for the research are released and the results start trickling in, there would be an urgent need for the setting up of an institute to train nurses who will complement the doctors in bringing succor to the people.

LIMITATIONS AND CHALLENGES OF THE KIDNEY CENTRE

Presently, the major challenge of the entire facility is a severe shortage of manpower and modern equipment for operations. And this was occasioned by the massive exodus of trained personnel in the last decade of insurgency as regretted by the Chairman Medical Advisory committee CMAC Prof Mala Bukar Sandabe in one of our chats with him.

Sandabe who is also a problem solver believes that this matter can be sorted out as soon as the new extension comes on stream. The center has two Nephrologists, three Urologists, and Resident doctors ready to take it beyond just dialysis and some tests which are carried on in the side laboratories. There is also a workshop for engineering technologies that supports the sophistication of dialysis machines. Repairs of the machines are done locally now to keep the service going and to avoid regular invitations of the manufacturers when they malfunction.

However, to transit from this present status of needs to the expectations of transplant centers, there is a dire need to increase these consultant specialists to stand up to the daily challenges that go with such a modern center, said Professor Ummate. This is a lacuna that must be handled by the management team led by Ahidjo and supported by CMAC Professor Sandabe.

University Of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital Bringing Hope to Resident of Northeast Nigeria
UMTH isolation center

With the present financial stress, the Hospital is going through, spiced with choking insurgency which has led to a lack of electricity to power these machines it’s obvious that management needs quite a lot of support from its proprietor, the Federal Government. To ensure that lack of electricity does not continue to act as a clog in the wheel of progress, they are spending as much as Ten Million Naira on diesel on a weekly basis to keep services going on serving the very humanity it was meant for.

MOVES TO OVERCOMING THE CHALLENGES IN THE CENTRE

These are trying times indeed says Professor Bashir Tahir, Deputy Provost of the College of Medicine, a former CMAC who is now involved in training doctors. No matter how many they train yearly as long as there is insurgency, most of them move out to greener pastures. And that affects the center badly too.

For Prof Ahidjo, this project should be commissioned today and Nigerians should begin to benefit from the structure since he is a man who seems to be running faster than his generation noted one of his nurses in the facility who took this reporter round the old structure. As a matter of fact, this is just one of the myriads of structures that Ahidjo has been able to use his influence also to bring into existence in the UMTH Community since he assumed duty.

The CMD has shown from the first day he stepped into the institution’s Chief Manager’s seat that he had one mission, and that was to move this tertiary facility to the next level in terms of infrastructural developments. A feat, sources say he must have inherited from his father who was a mortgage businessman. Before the CMD, the facility had suffered from almost thirty years of infrastructural deficit. Indeed, the UMTH which has been involved in several kidney management issues such as dialysis with only thirteen functional machines left out of an initial eighteen will soon join the league of big tertiary facilities involved in kidney transplants.

EXTENSION OF THE CENTRE

The extension of the center has been seen as a blessing not only for the staff like the Head of Department Professor Ummate whose office looks like a makeshift facility to get more space to operate with staff and residents. It’s a leeway to bring increased professionalism in the current training going on in the facility.

Also commenting on the extension further, Professor Omotara concerned about the prevalence of kidney complications particularly in the entire Borno community described the introduction of the extension of the kidney center this way: “The kidney Centre is the first in the northeast region. The purpose of its existence was to provide treatment for patients with kidney disease to reduce its prevalence and severity.

The first kidney transplant was carried out at the center over a decade ago. The new extension will help to improve services and increase the number of patients that would benefit from the services.” It is also expected that the contractors who would be involved with the sale of drugs and components for dialysis would be much more comfortable and organized in serving the people. Patients will come directly to the center as a one-stop shopping port and leave satisfied.

Although the consultant engineer to the project could not be seen on-site during the visit of this reporter, a physical examination of the building shows that it has been roofed and windows space created. The building is plastered and is almost completed.

When completed, the center will have eighty-four-bed spaces, two adult female and male Nephrology wards, a sludge and sterilization center, scrub area, nursing section, adult and Pediatrics (consisting of male and female Urology and Nephrology) wards, conference room, library, a massive records section, and an impressive reception. Others will include counselor’s office and waiting room, several offices for medical workers, two big theatres for advanced operations.

The dream of the Kidney Center Extension was actualized as a result of efforts made by Senator Mohammed Ali Ndume representing Southern Borno and Chairman House Committee on Army. We gathered that in the past he assisted the hospital with many other projects.

EQUIPPING THE CENTRE

The building when completed will house sophisticated equipment worth N750m from TET fund obtained through the assistance of Kashim Imam. It is also believed that kidney treatments handled by the surgery unit of the hospital already would be more improved with the new equipment supplied by the efforts of Alhaji Kashim Imam, who is the chair of the TET fund.

Kidney stones with a high prevalence here would soon be nipped in the bud because several researches would be launched to investigate further the intricacies of this vital body organ. Some of the equipment that are already waiting to be installed are 100 watts Lithotripsy laser machine, a complete set of Upper and Lower Endoscopic equipment, -86 degrees centigrade freezer, four fully equipped Operating Theaters 2 of which are for transplant, basic diagnostic laboratory including a chemistry analyzer, a fully equipped HLA typing laboratory, consumables, etc. Professor Ibrahim Ummate who is very happy that Alhaji Kashim Imam, a Borno son has contributed to the equipping of the Kidney Center.

TRAINING OF STAFF IN THE CENTRE

On the training of doctors, head of center Ummate said that the exercise is ongoing.

“We have a consultant that has been trained here too. His name is Dr. Suleiman Mohammed Maina. We have two senior registrars currently training under us. Their names are; Dr. Umar Loskurima and Dr.Mustapha Lawan. There is no serious challenge with the training of doctors.” He posited. On the training of desperately needed nurses to complement the extension, he went on: “We have trained nurses that are currently rendering services in Federal Medical Centre Yola,

Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University Teaching Hospital Bauchi, State Specialist Hospital Maiduguri and Federal Medical Centre Nguru. We will continue to train nurses that will render service to us and other centers in need.” He assured.

Read Also: Over 50 pastors, members reacts to demolition of EYN Church in Maiduguri

The head of Center, however, regretted that the challenges they are facing with the training of nurses is getting accreditation from the nursing council which he maintained will be pursued in due course. It is the accreditation that would enable UMTH to join the league of Teaching Hospitals already with an accredited institute on Nephrology.

“The only kano, Abuja and Lagos have such full-fledged accredited one-year training institutes for nurses in the country as at present.” Noted one of the staff of the center stressing that it is high time management fights for the desired accreditation for Maiduguri to join the list. “Despite that, we are still training our nurses in-house. We
have competent hands to train nurses. Biomedical Engineers in our center also train our technicians in-house. They are also competent.” He stressed.

The Chief Medical Director informed us that the Extension and Equipping of the Kidney Center come along with training of staff both within and outside the country.

MOUNTING KIDNEY PROBLEMS IN BORNO AND NORTH-EAST NIGERIA

The extension of this facility is coming at a time when kidney complication issues have become a major challenge of the people of the northeast corner of Nigeria. In as much as kidney dialysis is about 30,000 naira per session averagely in the region and a patient with a failed kidney may need treatment about three times a week, it is high time the preventive therapeutic emphasis is placed on the front burner so that a lot of people do not have to go through that path before they lose their lives ultimately due of lack of a compatible
kidney to bring them back to normal life.

KIDNEY TRANSPLANT SUPPORT FUNDS

Professor Ummate noted that other centers have a pool of support through one foundation or the other but they do not have it in UMTH. He hopes equally that they do get access to funds from philanthropists to be able to support residents who cannot afford the cost yet need the services. Such a facility, if approved, would be known as a Kidney transplant support fund. And it would be another first for UMTH and the North East region of Nigeria.

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Features/Analysis

UMTH: A need for assistance due to Maiduguri’s terrible flood

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UMTH: A need for assistance due to Maiduguri's terrible flood

UMTH: A need for assistance due to Maiduguri’s terrible flood

By: Dr. James Bwala

Those who recently visited the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH) expressed dissatisfaction with the flood-soaked equipment and the enormous amount of money required to restore it to operational condition. This is particularly true of the machines in the radiology department, the cancer center, the hospital stores, the child institute, the trauma center, the burn center, and numerous other centers. The largest hospital in sub-Saharan Africa, with a capacity of over 1300 beds, takes pride in it. These have exacerbated the management’s efforts to devise a plan to restore UMTH to its pre-flood pedestrian status and ensure that it regains its position as a behemoth on the West African pride stage

In fact, the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH), which has been badly damaged, has made urgent appeals for help in response to the recent flooding in Maiduguri, Nigeria, after the Alau Dam, a vital water supply for the city, collapsed, Maiduguri was hit by unheard-of flooding that flooded half of its land and impacted more than two million people. Due to significant damage to its infrastructure and equipment, the hospital—which is essential for medical services in Borno State, Nigeria, and west Africa—was shuttered for two weeks. Basic services will soon restart, but full operational capacity is still questionable. As a result, the government, as well as motivated individuals and organizations, must take the necessary actions to make full operationality a reality.
Beyond just providing healthcare, the humanitarian crisis has made pre-existing issues like food shortages and displacement among vulnerable groups worse. Around a million people have been affected by the floods, and there have been reports of a rise in family separations, gender-based violence, and illness epidemics that need immediate medical attention. As a result, UMTH, which offers incalculable assistance to families attempting to restore their health in the face of tremendous destruction, needs immediate support.

Read Also:https://newsng.ng/special-report-umth-professor-ahmed-ahidjo-a-historic-shift-in-hospital-management/

This circumstance emphasizes how urgently governments and international organizations must coordinate their assistance efforts. For the purpose of meeting urgent needs in Maiduguri and the adjacent areas, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) is actively looking for more resources. To guarantee proper healthcare service returns at the UMTH, the UN agencies and other INGOs should also concentrate on the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital. The long-term recovery prospects for people and healthcare facilities like UMTH remain dire in the absence of prompt action and consistent support from multiple stakeholders.

It is crucial that government agencies and motivated citizens work together to support organizations like UMTH in the face of frequent flooding. In addition to displacing people, floods destroy livelihoods, resulting in a vicious cycle of poverty from which it is difficult to break. This poverty raises the likelihood that healthcare services will collapse, especially when diseases are spreading. All hands must be on deck to specifically look into the needs of health institutions at this time to lessen the impact of disease outbreaks as Maiduguri has started to experience, as a breakdown in medical equipment will further short-lived efforts in managing such epidemics.

In order to prevent the degradation of vital medical services, UMTH management has called for safe collapsing equipment due to flooding. Government agencies and concerned citizens must unite to offer the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH) immediate support and resources in their fight against flood damage. As we have seen at the UMTH, the teamwork may act as a beacon of resilience, demonstrating the effectiveness of shared accountability and group efforts in reducing the effects of disasters.

In addition to guaranteeing the continuation of vital healthcare services, this united front promotes a culture of readiness and adaptability that goes beyond the current crisis management of healthcare services at the UMTH due to equipment shortages. Furthermore, UMTH’s ability to withstand future flood events can be greatly increased by addressing its infrastructure vulnerabilities through targeted interventions. This will protect public health and minimize medical service disruptions, which is especially important for the people of Borno State at this time.

In order to do this, government organizations must give top priority to financial and policy measures to strengthen UMTH’s infrastructure against flood threats. In addition, enthusiastic people can help by participating in community-based projects and fundraising campaigns that directly benefit UMTH, thus enhancing governmental actions. We can establish a sustainable framework that not only tackles current issues but also establishes the foundation for long-term resilience against future calamities by cultivating a strong collaboration between governmental programs and community-driven initiatives.

Dr. James Bwala, PhD, writes from Abuja

UMTH: A need for assistance due to Maiduguri’s terrible flood

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Features/Analysis

My Binoculars: Of the ten-day protests, the health sector, malnutrition, and the failure of the government to care for the ordinary and vulnerable in Nigeria

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My Binoculars: Of the ten-day protests, the health sector, malnutrition, and the failure of the government to care for the ordinary and vulnerable in Nigeria

By: Bodunrin Kayode

A recent critical debate within a platform of journalists of like minds prompted me to peep into my binoculars after a long absence. I usually enjoy such healthy debates, especially when we are trying to set an intricate agenda for ourselves to get the government at all levels to work harder for the people to whom we have sworn allegiance. work for and make comfortable. My attention was drawn to the fact that the Borno state government had to rush to take care of a vulnerable family whose breadwinner had virtually lost financial control and was unable to feed his family, leading to acute malnutrition affecting his kids. It was a pitiable sight if those grim pictures of Kwashiorkor I saw were the exact impression of what happened to the family. It was a clear indicator that food itself is medicine, and hunger can threaten and destroy the very health sector in Borno State and Nigeria if caution is thrown to the wind. Food is spiritual to Africans, so do not use it as a political weapon. get people to submit to you. They will surely fight back in due time.

Such sights are really not new in Borno within the last decade of my reporting of insurgencies and the health of the people. This is because the Boko Haram scourge actually gave rise to many of these ugly sights, which I have seen myself while hobnobbing with the health emergency. sector at the World Health Organization (WHO) center by the eye clinic on Damboa Road, Maiduguri. But this sight I saw, which led to our debate, was likely driven by the recent economic policies of the federal government against the masses of the country. One of the policies
which I have nothing against except for bad implementation, is the removal of subsidies on petroleum products, especially premium motor spirit (PMS). I believe the removal was done in the interest of the masses to torpedo the ruthless power of the petrodollar cabal, which has been feeding fat on the Commonwealth of the people. As much as the intention of removing it was good, the government’s fatal mistake, however, was that it was too sudden. It could have been done in a planned in a staccato manner so that the common man and the poorest of the poor will not have to be so devastated as to lose their economic powers to feed their families. Many pensioners who could not buy drugs for terminal illnesses have gone to the great beyond in Northern Nigeria because of the sudden hike in drugs. A retired teacher and widow I knew directed her grown-up kids to take her home when the doctors told her of the failure of both kidneys and that she would have to undergo dialysis to stay alive. She has since been buried. because the traditional herbs she resorted to to fix her kidneys could not help her advanced case of failure. Such cases should have been funded by the federal government without batting an eyelid.

The second unnecessary slap on the ordinary resident and the poorest of the poor is the weakening of the naira by a shark-like fiscal policy called flotation induced by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank, who feel that development economists in Nigeria advising previous governments to resist it were so naive not to know that our naira is overvalued. One wonders how much these foreign “economy killers” know of Nigeria that they will need to guide our fiscal engineers on such a devilish policy that is virtually killing people, which is why there was a need for a ten-day protest to send a message to the federal government to reverse some of these corrupt-laden policies they have unleashed on our common purchasing power. Within the fiscal rhetoric of development economists in the All Progressive Congress (APC)-controlled government, the constant importation of petrol into an oil-rich country like Nigeria itself
cripples the naira. Swap deals of crude oil with powerful cartels, which have been estimated to be beyond three billion dollars, are a major clog in the wheels of economic progress. It is one of the reasons why the Dangote refinery is not receiving enough crude to pump. into the system and bring down the price of premium motor spirit (PMS). The argument of some of the big players in the industry is that Dangote is a newcomer, and he must wait for his turn to be lined up in the queue like every other person. I find such arguments myopic and insulting the common man whose relatives died in the cause of the last protest. Sadly, so many questions have been bugging the minds of helpless, right-thinking people in the country concerning the myriad mistakes of the federal government. Questions like, Why go further to float an already weak currency due to fiscal mistakes to achieve a target that aims to destroy the foundation of the country? Who are those angry with Nigeria for having one of the cheapest pump prices within the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) block? Are we sure some people somewhere have not sat down to plot to torpedo the biggest economy in By pulling the rug under the economic intelligence agencies, who should give contemporary Intel on blue-chip companies like NNPC to the government? And why are the young people so angry with this government?
which campaigned to be better than that of its predecessor? What is the role of too much party politics and the alleged insulating of the leaders from the economic reality on the ground?

Contribution of the partisan politicians and their party mechanisms to the impoverishment of their people

Since 1999, the political party machinery has always been the spoiler and hater of the middle and lower classes of people everywhere. They make so much free money from the weak institutions in the system that only those who can sing “dangerous songs” while looking into the eyes of
The political powers that be may be allowed to save the situation. That is, if they are not punished for daring them like they did to Senator Ali Ndume, a teacher turned politician, for speaking the truth to power. Most watchers of the polity were bewildered by the decision of the APC recently, who never saw anything right in a fearless politician making a fair comment against perceived wrongs of his party in sorting salient issues in the polity, including hunger. It is my opinion that
He only wanted his president to free himself from the “Lagos paddy paddy” cage they locked him in and come out to see the litany of economic woes that even his own people suffer from. That is my perception of what happened, surely not the mundane way they perceived it. It was an anti-party outburst in his criticism of wrongs in the “Arise” interview. The presidency should not start and end on the desk of the chief of staff, Oga Femi, who is a Lagos man like President Tinubu. Nigeria is far bigger than Lagos and the paddy’s of Lagos put together.

Let’s ponder some unfortunate credibility issues affecting the APC, which is why former President Obasanjo posited recently that, left to him, some of the leaders walking inside the corridors of power should
be in jail by now. By the way, who is the head of the ruling party, and what are his antecedents now? They cannot claim to be saints far different from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) after the maladministration of the last eight years, in which corruption was celebrated in another big way. They have now decided to unleash a chairman. of their party, who had suffered from well-reported grievous credibility issues himself when he was a governor of Kano State known to polity watchers in the country. Now we hear that the hoodlums who infiltrated the ten-day protest in Kano have stolen the record of evidence of corruption against the former governor turned party chair. President Obasanjo indeed cannot be extricated completely from the wrongs of some of these leaders who have held sway in power, like former President Goodluck Jonathan, whom he single-handedly chose to be deputy to President Yaradua but who was too weak to stop the open stealing practiced under his watch. The litany of woes orchestrated by corruption continued and stank heavily under President Mumamadu Buhari, while Betta Edu announced it under President Tinubu and received a suspension. Obasanjo is well aware that neocolonialism is real and may not be the only solution to a system that has been completely destroyed by the self-aggrandizement of the commonwealth of the nation by a few hawks who have now formed a shark-like petro-cabal already strangling over 200 million Nigerians to death with sudden lack and increased poverty through Petro politics.

Open stealing of palliatives by some ruling party stalwarts in Borno

I have a neighbor of mine who is regarded as the “woman leader” of the APC in Maiduguri and who gets several bags of palliatives each time they are declared by President Bola Tinubu or Governor Babagana Zulum to ease hunger. I would withhold her name for now because, even though she’s half-illiterate, it’s her wrongdoing that one is bothered about. She often sells some of the grains and keeps some in her home for consumption. Mark, food sharing in Maiduguri started long ago as a result of insurgencies, surely not due to economic reasons. And that is
Why, when sharing This middle-aged woman gives only those in her area loyalty, regardless of which party you belong to. Especially those who can lick her dirty boots. A generation of people in this area on the outskirts of Maiduguri who have nothing to do but wait only for Palliatives from the party and non-governmental organizations rely on her support, which she gets from prominent party leaders like Kakina, who is the mother of all women in the party. Sadly, this Chibok-born woman got her connections from stalwarts she grew up with and still
interacts with making it look like it’s her personal efforts that are feeding the vulnerable. She even named one of her sons after one of the party buffs to cement her loyalty within the corridors of the Borno APC power space. These kinds of perverse people also wait for non-governmental organizations (NGOs) who come around sharing food.
tickets through their Bulama, who residents say is as dangerous as a fox, having sold most of the lands and houses in the area with the support of one of the influential sons of the powers that be in the land. That is how far some people in party politics can go in the enslavement of their fellow residents using food that should be shared freely to assist rather than to entrench the scourge of hunger.

Party stalwarts like Senator Kaka Shehu, who used to fight for the poor through these kinds of people, would be shocked at the number of people that have been stripped bare of their livelihood by the current economic policies, yet they can’t get palliatives of seeds to even farm. during the rains if they are not related to the party. We are talking of the same party that brought the full weight of the dangerous conditionalities of the IMF to Nigerians. Sometimes one wonders who told them that our naira is so overvalued that it must be floated to reach their target of at least 5000 naira to a dollar or more. The floating of the naira by the central bank may have had its good and bad sides against residents. But I believe the bad side is higher because even the hard drug sellers destroying the young people of their party on Baga Road now complain of a bad market due to the naira devaluation. Party Tugs now ration the rate at which they buy weeds in the open market.

Why was there increased violence in some areas of the Borno capital?

It was quite clear that Borno had its fair share of violence during the protests, and sadly, eighty percent of those who jumped into the streets were kids who may not know even the reasons for the protests in the country. It was unfortunate that some people had to die considering the fact that Borno is battling with insurgency, which is
yet to come to an end. I don’t live in Bulunkutu, but I can tell you that one of the reasons why the recent protest against the government in Bulunkutu was so intense was because some stalwarts allege that the same party has not been fair to most residents there. As a matter of fact, even up to Ngomari since the death of an APC woman leader in June 2023 who died after a crash inside a Keke napep. Of course, she died while seeking medical treatment at Umaru Shehu Hospital under under the watch of Dr. Emmanuel Philibus, the Gwoza-born, strong man who the governor vowed would be sanctioned but is still there with no public explanation for his misdemeanor.

Intel sources stated that 90 percent of the palliatives meant for people in the hinterlands of Bulunkutu never got to them, and the people have been very bitter with the APC ward and local leaders out there. Even some party leaders beyond the old railway areas inside Bulunkutu were livid with rage when the party suggested that the very first palliative sharing for them last year should be done at the Bakasi idp camp, very far from “yan nounou” or the deep hinterlands, where 200 naira for the “Akara” snack is no longer enough for breakfast like before. That was why, at the instigation of the young people, the governor It was easy to start from there. When other wards in the metropolis saw this, hell was let loose even after the governor had called them into the multipurpose hall in the government house to beg for peace to reign and then the 24-hour curfew. And this window dressing was done by renting a home for the Kwashiorkor kids and their parents in Shuari. But are they the only ones suffering from malnutrition? The answer is no. The truth is that the party leaders are the very ones who unleashed this frightening malnutrition on their own. It’s a garbage-in and-out situation. You cannot vote for an ex-convict like
The Americans are trying to do it simply because he has a party card and expect him to behave in the right way when he gets into office. You don’t expect known thieves, based on the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission’s (EFCC) record, to behave any differently from what they know how to do, which is to steal. Which is why I agreed with one of the debaters that the stalwarts and party leaders should take the blame for any wrong done to the people at the bottom. If they don’t, they should be seen as insensitive to the plight of their people. Now
The party wants to window dress just one family for the world to see instead of doing the right thing and refusing to scapegoat anyone who does the right thing. The way to help the vulnerable is to cut the party system out of these palliative tasks and allow religious
organizations like the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) and (JNI) and the civil society to do the job of sharing raw food stuffs when it is necessary. It is obvious Governor Babagana Zulum may not fully trust his own party machinery when it comes to sharing food stuff, which is why he does most of the sharing himself instead of allowing what should go to the common man to pass through the depraved minds of some party tugs who are regarded as leaders in the 27 council areas of the state.

Pre-empting the next protest with solutions, not tough talking speeches

As for the ten-day protest, I would say its aims were partially achieved in the sense that those who were not telling President Tinubu the untruths of the flotation of the naira and what it had done to the country were silenced. The president and his wife, Remi, would have I watched these protests live from their living room inside Aso Rock, and I can imagine Aunty Remi telling him to do something different from what the fiscal engineers like Wale Edun packaged by the West are saying. I don’t believe President Tinubu can be caged because he is an old businessman who understands all the intrigues behind the controversial oil industry. He is also coming from the home of a market woman and a wife who understood the price of gari before 2014, and now that it is about N1500 and more for a small paint cup in some states.   Above all, he does not have a docile woman in his life as a housewife. Remi was and still is a senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. She only stepped aside to assist in the supervision of his life in the State House, considering the critical nature of his health. She is a Senator of the Federal Republic on leave who would dare get to the market for herself to buy stuff, but for the overprotection of some indolent security details who would remind her of her kitchen staff. But I believe she knows how much a cup of gari is in Saki, Abeokuta, Dutse, Okigwe, or even in the Okumagba area of Warri. She
should be telling his excellency the truth about the anger of Nigerians over the high cost of food or drugs to patch their health as a result of the devaluation of the naira. She should be advising him on how to avoid offending the young people so that they will not shut down the country for a second time. That will not be.
pleasant at all.

One is happy, however, that one of the aftermaths of the protests was the announcement by the government that very soon, all graduates of tertiary institutions would be given a stipend until they got a job. That is an exciting development that should have started long ago. In fact, it should have gone side by side with the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), but it is not too late. We would also suggest that the health insurance scheme be adjusted to cover free of charge all seniors from the age of 70 and above. As a matter of fact, a special fund should be created to take care of the healthcare of seniors over the age of 65. There is no need for any contribution; just show up at the hospital with your national ID card, and you are registered. As long as one is a senior, treatment should be free and on the account of the government in all 36 states. That would extend the life expectancy.
of residents in the country.

Obvious solutions to hunger and homelessness in the land

As for food security, nobody should be allowed to go to bed hungry if they possess a national ID card. Billionaires in the country should be called upon to urgently contribute to building “soup kitchens” all over the country. We can start with 500 of them for a start in the
country, but we need at least a thousand kitchens scattered in the 36 states of the federation to kill hunger and malnutrition. That is an average of about 27 outlets per state, regardless of the council areas and the population. Rich states like Lagos can have more, depending on the council areas. The intention is to make sure that every child of vulnerable age can branch, stay in line, eat a good meal, and go home. Soup kitchens should be open till midnight daily and by 5 a.m. for breakfast, so they eat before going to school. As a matter of fact, the building of soup kitchens for the vulnerable to go eat daily till the end of the first tenure of the government would be a welcome development. At least that has always been the advocacy of Senator Ali. Ndume for a long time before now. Hunger doesn’t know shame, race, tribe, or creed. The founders of the United States knew this long ago, which is why they now have support for any form of vulnerability or disability. With the help of more than 61,000 food pantries and soup
kitchens, food banks provide some 46 million people with free food each year in the US. Tens of millions of volunteers regularly support the system by donating time and money. Our population is over 200 million now. If we don’t have food kitchens, pantries, or banks to supply people with food, then we will be damned in the near future. This is a path Nigeria must follow to avoid young people feeling cheated and deprived of their common wealth by a few criminal minds stealing billions annually yet flaunting the same ostentatiously to their faces. This was the same issue that affected Kenya before the last straw fell to the ground. From what happened in Kenya, our political class should know by now that these young people know exactly where their treasuries and hearts are stored. When the food
kitchens are cooking the meals, the idea of homelessness can easily be assessed, and special hostels can be built where young people will begin to squat until they can get a decent job and rent their own
houses.

My Binoculars: Of the ten-day protests, the health sector, malnutrition, and the failure of the government to care for the ordinary and vulnerable in Nigeria

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Nigeria Protest: Deaths, Arrests, and Injuries: The blood must stop dripping.

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Nigeria Protest: Deaths, Arrests, and Injuries: The blood must stop dripping.

Nigeria Protest: Deaths, Arrests, and Injuries: The blood must stop dripping.

By: Dr. James Bwala

August 1, 2024, will remind many families, friends, and colleagues of the bitterness of losing loved ones. Those arrested or injured will live with certain regrets for failing their nation as a result of their participation in the uncalled protest. Those who bear evil marks will continue to urge other misguided youths on why they should continue on the path of destruction. And some mothers would wail again. Protest, as I know from my years of living, has never been peaceful, even though protesters have always creamed it with the salty test that it was going to be peaceful. They said it in their announcement for August 1, 2024. But it was not peaceful in the end. 

I ran my eyes through some online reporting last night and went through some videos sent to me. It was another sad saying. The youths have lost their future again to some old, unmannered, and de-interested crocks who never meant well for the youths. These aged fathom killers stay in their comfort zones, and their children are living abroad, while the poor mother, who is struggling to make ends meet, was receiving the sad news of her dead child, who either left home as a protester or a security personnel to cause mayhem or to defend the integrity of the nation. 

From Maiduguri to Damaturu and from Kano to Kaduna, going forward to Katrina, and down the Niger blood flows. These are the blood of the promising Nigerian youths wasted in a broad day light for another man’s greed and not sincerely for corn flour, as they tag hunger to the protest. As a Nigerian youth, I have participated in protests in the days of ignorance, and when I look back, it means nothing to me. Those we have protested for have gotten what they wanted, and we have been forgotten. That is why I have advocated for the youth to see reasons not to protest. But in life, there are numbers that they can only learn by experiencing, and I hope the injured and the arrested will learn from this. 

READ ALSO: https://newsng.ng/borno-residents-raised-concern-over-plans-to-return-idps-after-iswap-attacked-governor-zulum-convoy-in-malam-fatori/

When I add up the death toll from this unfortunate turn of events in our country from the few states I was able to get my hands on figures, Nigeria has lost thirty-two (32) young and promising leaders of tomorrow, as we often say. And now that they are gone, who will take their place tomorrow? The youths and all of us should learn something from the August 1, 2024 #Endbadgovernaceprotest or #hungerinthelandprotest, or whatever name it comes. Truth be told, these bad governance or hunger issues did not begin with the current administration. If Nigerians had been patient, especially the northern youths, for eight years under the Buhari regime, I see no reason why they are venting anger on the same issue against the Tinubu administration, especially since the move by this government has shown a positive light for an ailing country like Nigeria, as they would say. 

I believe from what I have seen, heard, and read that the Tinubu/Shettima administration was able to achieve, and with what they are trying to achieve, there is hope, biblically speaking, for a tree that is cut at the drop of water. No Nigerian today would argue that the steps that make it possible for the local government to have autonomy are bad governance, after all. No one would argue that the signing of the Northwest Development Commission and Southeast Development Commission was not a positive note to bring development closer to the people of those regions owing to the negative issues impacting those regions. It did not look as if the government was not trying to find solutions to the cry of the people. Was the free import duty for food and drugs an attempt to frustrate Nigerians? The government has come to understand the conflict between NNPC and Dangote, and the president has given the marching order for the sale of crude oil to the Dangote refinery. Should I call this move #badgovernce? Or should I condemn the move that created the Livestock Ministry, which hopefully would end the farmer-herder conflict, and tag it #badgovernance?

Not to mention the successes achieved by our military, police, DSS, and other security agencies. These mentioned in the above paragraph are a few that come in handy as I build the lines in this piece, but I believe that for those who want peace for this country, these are enough evidence to say that the Tinubu/Shettima administration means well and is living in the renewed hope agenda-setting mantra. Bad citizenship is what I saw on videos sent to me from FTC, Maraba, Kano, Potiskum in Yobe State, and Maiduguri, my home state. I saw my brother and colleague Jesse Tafida taking a full length of his legs to escape to safety around Bullumttu, where bad citizens are attacking security operatives, and the sound of guns began to rent the air in a movie-like atmosphere. 

That is Maiduguri, which is also the home state of Vice President Kashim Shettima. I had thought that the last place to experience such a horrendous outing was Maiduguri, the Borno state capital. But I was not surprised knowing the Bullumttu area is a gathering of multitudes from different backgrounds because a true son or daughter of Borno would appreciate the fact that with the coming of Kashim Shettima as the vice president, Borno stands to gain more. In fact, Borno has no reason to join in violent protests whatsoever. Our governor, Professor Babagana Umara Zulum, has never hidden palliative, and he never stayed in the government house to allow others to share the palliative. He is always on the field, even in the mine field of Borno, to ensure his people have the experience of good governance. 

It is not uncommon in a classical place like Bullumttu to experience such unholy appreciation for the governor or the vice president. Nigeria’s northeastern state has been in conflict for over a decade, and the resultant is what was experienced on August 1, 2024, with the loss of four lives when elements of the Boko Haram were said to have infiltrated the protesters in order to cause chaos in the state. This was the reason for the government to take measures to ensure safety by imposing a curfew. But far away from Borno and in the Arise TV studio, a certain professor was trying to say that if he were to be the vice president, he would demand an explanation for the multiplier effects of the protest in the state. I think this political analyst and professor of strategic management, Okey Ikechukwu, has missed something about the content the protest in Borno State carried. 

More than what is being traded in other states, for Borno State, it is about the terrorists and the fear of their infiltration, which unfortunately happened. 

Terrorism or fighting terrorism, as he would want the VP to make demands, is not a classroom idea that is tailored to what the students must do to get it right or perhaps to pass an exam. It is an idea born of sudden and creative ills that focuses only on the destruction of life and property without recourse to what the end may be. So, Professor Okey Ikechukwu needs to undertake more research on issues regarding happenings in northeast Nigeria and first add to his knowledge before dishing out on what he knows practically nothing about or very little to gullible Nigerians who may believe that what a professor said is always right. 

We should not be seen as condescending over matters of national interest; we must preach healing whenever and wherever we are faced with issues, particularly when we sit before cameras to speak to millions of people. Our youths have missed it, and it is our duty to educate them about the protest that many of them got into, knowing nothing of its meaning but destruction. These lives that have gone are minuses to our numbers, and killings, destruction, and all manner of evil perpetrated in the name of protest is not poetic and should be discouraged by all well-meaning Nigerians. 

Dr. James Bwala, PhD, writes from Abuja.

Nigeria Protest: Deaths, Arrests, and Injuries: The blood must stop dripping.

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