NEWS
How SOAR Initiative is Changing SGBV Narratives in Abuja Community
Pigba Kasa community in Apo District, Abuja, says the intervention of Sexual Offences Awareness and Victims Rehabilitation Initiative (SOAR Initiative), an NGO, is changing the narratives on Sexual and Gender-Based Violence (SGBV) in the community.
The community members stated this during the graduation of beneficiaries of the NGO’s ‘Right to be a Girl’s Project’ in the community on Monday.
Reports says that the project, a nine-month intervention, is being supported by Mundo Cooparente, a Spanish humanitarian aid organisation.
The project is designed to empower 240 vulnerable adolescent girls from ages 10 to 16 with the right information and life-skills to protect themselves from violations, improve their ability to speak out against SGBV and forced marriage.
The Chief of Pigba Kasa community, Ayuba Kulobi, described the project as a game changer in addressing the challenges of SGBV in the community.
Kulobi said that prior to the project, the incidence of SGBV was high,but now on a downward trend due the NGO’s intervention.
He particularly said that the Right to be a Girl’s Project has empowered adolescent girls with the needed information on how to protect their rights and seek redress when violated.
He added that the NGO helped the community to set up a Community Protection Committee (CPC) centre, where community members meet monthly to share ideas and advise families on how to address SGBV.
“More so, we now have access to the police, and we can call them anytime we have issues of SGBV. Gladly, the police intervened promptly and made arrests.
“Due to these interventions, we now hardly record cases of SGBV in our community,” he said.
The Deputy Chairperson of CPC in the community, Ms Christiana Manji, said the community members were now speaking out courtesy of the project.
“Hidden issues are now being exposed because people now know their rights and can seek redress,” she said.
Similarly, the committee’s secretary, Mr Ibrahim Idris, said that several persons have been arrested over alleged domestic and sexual abuse.
Some of the beneficiaries of the project thanked SOAR Initiative for the gesture, saying it broadened their knowledge on the rights of the girl-child among others.
One of them, a 13-year-old Jessica George, said she now knows a lot about sexual abuse, dangers of early marriage and self-esteem.
The story was the same for Mary Ayuba, a 10-year-old, who said that the project has empowered her to defend herself against SGBV.
“I am so empowered that I can now help other girls to overcome SGBV and enlighten them on how to seek help,” the girl said.
The Youth Advocate of the NGO, Miss Lolade Ipele, expressed satisfaction on how the adolescent girls embrace the 12-week project.
“I saw them grow from timid girls to intelligent girls with confidence to face the future,” Ipele said.
The Project Officer, Mr Yakubu Levi, said that the project was implemented in two communities – Chafuyi and Pigba Kasa, leveraging four public schools serving the communities.
Levi said that the girls were trained on safe spaces and other life skills, including access to case management, psycho-social counseling, and legal-aid services.
For sustainability, the project officer said that the NGO would support the establishment of a girls’ club in the four benefiting schools in collaboration with FCT Education Secretariat. (NAN)
NEWS
National grid collapses again, twelve times in one year.
From Attah Ede, Makurdi
The National Grid has again collapsed on Wednesday, bringing it to eleven times it would collapse this year 2024.
It would be recalled that, within one week in October, the national grid went down three times with its attendant blackouts, sparking reactions from Nigerians.
A tweet via the official handle of Nigeria’s National Grid confirmed that the grid collapsed at about 2:09 pm on Wednesday.
“The major grid setback has occurred and the restoration is to commence,” the handler wrote.
This collapse makes it 12 times this year that the grid has collapsed.
The development was also confirmed in a statement by Jos Disco to its customers.
The utility company, however, said the grid collapsed around 1: 33 PM today, leading to the loss of power supply to its feeders.
“We hope to restore normal power supply to our esteemed customers as soon as the grid supply is restored back to normalcy,” Head Corporate Communications, Jos Disco, Dr Friday Elijah told its customers.
Part of the statement reads: “The current outage being experienced within our franchise States is a result of loss of power supply from the national grid. The loss of power supply from the national grid occurred this afternoon at about 13.33 hours of today, Wednesday, 11th December 2024, hence the loss of power supply on all our feeders.
“We hope to restore normal power supply to our esteemed customers as soon as the grid supply is restored back to normalcy.”
Meanwhile, the Abuja Disco in a statement disclosed, “Dear Valued Customers. We wish to inform you that a system disturbance occurred on the national grid at 1:32 pm today causing a power outage across our franchise areas.
“While gradual restoration of power supply has commenced, be assured that we are coordinating closely with relevant stakeholders to restore power fully as soon as the grid is stabilised”, Dr. Adakole stated.
NEWS
Mutfwang Reassures Plateau Business Community of Favourable Environment
From Jude Dangwam, Jos
The Executive Governor of Plateau State, Caleb Manasseh Mutfwang, has assured the business community in the state of a more favourable business environment across the state in the coming year 2025.
He said his administration has embarked on a holistic approach to further consolidate on the successes recorded in the last one year through legal reforms and infrastructural development across both urban and rural areas to boost businesses and improve the investment opportunities and the lives of citizens of the state.
Mutfwang gave this assurance at a dinner hosting the Plateau Business Community on Tuesday at the New Government House Banquet Hall, Little Rayfield, in Jos the State capital.
“Plateau State has the economic potential of becoming a nerve centre in northern Nigeria. Your confidence in Plateau State will not be taken likely.
“We have embarked on reforms in the energy sector and we are going to have various power plants that will serve as a catalyst for economic growth especially in the agric sector,” he stated.
Mutfwang further assured the business community of government’S resolve to sit with the private sector on the new tax bills by the federal government and come up with a position based on the peculiarity of the state.
The Commissioner for Justice and Attorney General of the State, Philemon Dafi, disclosed that law reform establishment is one important step taken by the Mutfwang administration towards reforming all laws in the state meeting global standards and enhancing businesses on the Plateau.
“The laws of the state are generally obsolete, so the institution that will drive civilization, development and business structured in a civilized manner is going to be through the law reform commission.
“There is a law reform commission in place in addition to the law reform committee working in synergy to reform all the laws of the state to bring it to civilization.
“The second law is the electricity management law in place and the energy operation law in place which establishes the regulatory body of the electricity market.
“Another milestone in record time is that Plateau State Citizen Mediation Centre law where issues affecting businesses is negotiated and agreed upon in a meeting rather in Court where you spent a lot on litigation and ends as enemies,” he explained
The Attorney General further explained that there are four other laws in the offing, calling for the establishment of Office of the Public Defendant.
“There is this law that we need to urgently have it which is the establishment of the Office of the Public Defendant which, if passed into law, will defend businesses and other small and medium scale business (SMEs) because they have so much issues but they don’t have people that will defend them and these are people that aggregate catalyst and drives our economy.”
Some Chief Executives of various private establishments in the state, such as the former governorship aspirant, Chief Kefas Ropshak of Kefiano Autos, urged the state to address the issue of capital flight and should harnessed the maize potentials among other farm produce to further create jobs opportunities and boost the economy.
The Chief Executive Officer Dilkon Group of Companies (DG), Leo Dilkon, also urged the state government to also look inward and identified local investors that can drive the economy by pulling billions of naira in to the state economy while tracking other revenues especially in the mineral sector for the common good of Plateau people.
The business community commended the governor for the various reforms recorded under his administration in the last one year which has propelled businesses to grow and stressed that they look forward to having more of such reforms in the coming year.
NEWS
Nigeria Recorded 467,000 TB Cases in 2023 – Tinubu
By Laide Akinboade, Abuja
The wife of President, Senator Oluremi Tinubu, on Tuesday, revealed that Nigeria recorded approximately 467,000, Tuberculosis, TB, cases in 2023. Oluremi stated this while declaring open the three days 2024 National conference on TB, organized by Stop TB Partnership Nigeria’in Abuja.
She lamented that TB still remains the leading cause of death, as Nigeria ranks 6th highest burden globally and there has been a steady increase in the number of people diagnosed and treated for TB. The theme is ‘Public-Private Partnership and Integrated Service Delivery: Panacea to End TB in Nigeria.’According to her, “I want to appreciate the organizers of this event especially Stop TB Partnership Nigeria and the Federal Ministry of Health and Social Welfare under the leadership of the Honourable Coordinating Minister, Prof. Muhammad Ali Pate, CON. Your commitment to the Renewed Hope Agenda of His Excellency, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR, especially the health and well-being of Nigerians is commendable.”We are here today because despite the progress we have all made in the fight against the disease, the global burden of TB still remains alarming, particularly in low and middle-income countries like ours.”Globally, and according to the 2024 World Tuberculosis Report by the World Health Organization (WHO), an estimated 10.8 million people developed TB in 2023, with 1.6 million people losing their lives, and 12% of the global burden affecting the most vulnerable – the children and young adolescents”.She lamented, “Tuberculosis is still a leading cause of death in Nigeria. The country ranks as the sixth highest burden country across the world and first in Africa. The World Health Organization (WHO) Global Tuberculosis Report 2024 also reveals that Nigeria recorded approximately 467,000 TB cases in 2023”.She said, “Despite these challenges, I am encouraged by the progress that has been made so far. Thanks to the commitment of the Tinubu administration, civil society organizations, healthcare providers, and international partners. Subsequently, we have seen a steady increase in the number of people diagnosed and treated for TB.”However, as we celebrate our successes, we must also acknowledge that there is still much work to be done. We cannot afford to be complacent, and I assure you that the Federal Government, remains fully committed to achieving the global TB targets by 2035.”To achieve this, we will require sustained investment, innovative strategies, and a renewed focus on breaking the barriers that prevent people from accessing the care and support that they desperately need”.Mrs Tinubu, noted that, as the Global and National Stop TB Champion, she is committed the collective fight against TB.” I believe that the solution to ending TB lies in the strength of our partnerships both public and private, and in the integrated delivery of services that leave no one behind.”I am glad that the money I donated earlier this year has been used judiciously to procure more TB diagnostics tools which will help to increase TB diagnosis and case finding”.She stressed that the conference will provide the platform not only to share experiences and knowledge but also to recommit to the common goal of ending TB. “The discussions, the partnerships, and the strategies that will emerge from this conference will serve as the foundation for the actions we must take in the coming years”, she noted.She commended all the stakeholders for their unwavering commitment towards ending TB in Nigeria, “I also appreciate the efforts of Stop TB Partnership Nigeria, Stop TB Partnership Global, and our development partners especially the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), and the Global Fund, for your continued support.”To the health workers, community leaders, activists and TB survivors who are tirelessly working on the frontlines, you are the true heroes of this fight, and we are grateful for your dedication.”I am confident that, united in our efforts, we can and will end TB in Nigeria and contribute to the global fight to eradicate this devastating disease”.In his keynote address the Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare, Professor Ali Pate, said yes, Tuberculosis affects millions in Nigeria , especially the vulnerable populations, including women, mothers, and grandmothers and tackling the disease requires an inclusive, rights-based, and gender-responsive approach that leaves no one behind.”Through this initiative, the Nigerian private sector has committed up to $25 million over time to support TB-related activities. Private sector engagement is critical, as these organizations employ large numbers of workers in industries such as banking, oil and gas, cement production, and telecommunications. By integrating TB control into workplace health programs and expanding health insurance coverage, the private sector is playing a pivotal role in our fight against TB”, he said .In his goodwill message at the occasion Dr. Walter Kazadi Mulombo the World Health Organisation,WHO, Country Representative (WR) to Nigeria, lamented the 60% funding gap in the country, which has affected undiagnosed and untreated cases.He said though Nigeria is one of the 13 countries estimated to have achieved a reduction of 50% or more in number of deaths caused by TB between 2015 and 2023. He added that Nigeria has seen an increase in TB case detection and treatment success rates with TB treatment coverage increasing from 59% in 2022 to 74% in 2023. He said, “Despite advancements, TB remains a significant public health challenge in Nigeria. The TB burden in Nigeria is characterized by large numbers of undiagnosed and untreated cases and huge funding gaps (60% gap in 2023). The dual burden of TB and HIV further complicates our response, while multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) continues to rise, requiring more complex and resource-intensive treatment strategies. Additionally, stigma and socio-economic barriers—such as poverty, malnutrition, and limited access to health services continue to worsen the burden of TB in the country”.