Brain drain: Nigeria must increase capacity to train more doctors – Hamzat

The Deputy Governor of Lagos State, Dr Obafemi Hamzat, says medical colleges in Nigeria must develop the capacity to train more doctors to bridge the brain drain gap in the sector.

Hamzat spoke with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos on Sunday while reacting to the issue of the brain drain of medical experts in Nigeria.

He said since many medical practitioners had decided to leave Nigeria for other developed countries, it had become necessary for Nigeria to increase its capacity to produce more doctors to serve the nation.

The deputy governor said that human migration was inevitable, adding that people moved around the world all the time.

“Human migration is normal. People would leave, and people would come. But as a country, we can train more doctors.

“I am not against the brain drain of medical doctors, but what we need is to create a pipeline to train more doctors instead of complaining that medical personnel are leaving the country.

“If we train 5,000 doctors yearly, let us increase the numbers to 15,000, by doing so, the country benefits.”

Hamzat said the government could not stop people from going wherever they wanted to go.

According to him, in 2022, 197 Americans threw away their passports and became Singaporeans, so people will continue to move around the world.

“The Nigerian government should rather, look for a way to benefit from the countries our doctors are moving to.

“For example, if 1,000 doctors go to the United Kingdom, the UK Government must pay us something back in return.

“Therefore, our medical colleges need to increase their capacity by training more people.”

On Gov. Babajide Sanwo-Olu-led second term administration, Hamzat said that the T.H.E.M.E.S Agenda of the first tenure would continue.

The acronym stands for :Transportation and Traffic Management; Health and Environment; Education and Technology; Making Lagos State a 21st Century Megacity, Entertainment and Tourism; and Security and Governance.

He said the ‘Plus’ added to the agenda for the second term was to enhance more social inclusion.

“There are many people that we need to lift out of poverty.

“We need to make sure that people can at least run a business no matter how small, based on their skills, and interests.

Hamzat said the administration would also focus on youth engagement, and gender equality, adding that they would try to access women in the rural areas.

“It is necessary that we bring them in and elevate everyone so that they can be part of the Lagos Agenda.”

Source: News Agency of Nigeria

Plateau: Sabongida residents, animals fight for dirty water in ponds

Acute shortage of water is forcing residents of Sabongida community in Langtang South Local Government of Plateau into constant battles with animals for drinking water from dirty ponds.

A correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), who visited the community on Sunday, found that there was no source of potable drinking water in the area.

NAN found that water had become a scarce commodity, particularly during the dry season.

With the scarcity worsening by the day, residents usually travel many kilometres in search of ponds where they fight with cows, goats and dangerous reptiles in water ponds.

“We take basins and move to far away areas; we keep looking around for streams and ponds.

“Very often, we have to wait for cows to finish drinking the dirty water before we scoop whatever is available. Unfortunately, that is the only option available to us,” a resident, Mrs Christie Ndam, told NAN.

She said that some journeys take four to five before one could sight a stream or pond as the few available ones keep drying up in view of pressure.

Ndam described the situation as “appalling and unfortunate”, and expressed regret that the water scarcity issue keeps getting worse.

She said that the absence of potable water was affecting the quality of food they consume, making the people vulnerable to waterborne diseases.

“We are vulnerable to waterborne and other communicable diseases here.

“We sometimes spend hours around a dry well to get water. Herders struggle with us as they also have to care for their cattle. The competition for every drop is usually stiff.

”For years now, we have been suffering in Sabongida; it has lingered for long without any meaningful help.

”As you can see, we spend hours here just to fetch this dirty water. We try to purify it with chemicals before drinking.

”Our hospitals, schools, and other public places don’t have water and this is affecting our personal hygiene and environmental sanitation.

”As a community, we have made efforts toward addressing this challenge, but it has not yielded much result; sometimes we dig the grounds in search of water,” she lamented.

Miss Jennifer Nimfa, a secondary school student, scooping water from one of the ponds in the community.

Miss Jennifer Nimfa, a 16-year-old secondary school student, told NAN that the situation was affecting the education of children in the community.

“Very often, children spend school hours in search of water.

”I have been around this well since 4 a.m. and it is 10 a.m. already.

“I haven’t fetched water yet. I am no where any close. It means I can’t go to school today again because school time has past.

”Water is life; we need it to take our bath, cook and carry out other domestic activities before going to school.

”But majority of children can’t go to school because we spend hours in search of water. Sometimes, we go to school without taking our bath and brushing our teeth, but for how long can we keep doing this?

”We call on government and public-spirited individuals to come to our aid, particularly to safeguard our future as young people because if this continues, our educational journey is already bleak,” she fumed.

Another resident, Fabong Miri, decried the effect of the situation on farming and other agricultural activities.

He said that the absence of potable water is a general problem in the locality, adding that all the communities in Langtang South were suffering acute water shortage.

”We are basically farmers; we need water for irrigation and other use in the farms, but we don’t have.

”This dirty water you see people struggling with animals to fetch is here because of the rain that fell few days ago. Without the rain, all the wells and dams would get completely dried.

”This is why we are calling on government to come to our aid by dredging some of the dams here so that they can retain water for longer period and ameliorate our sufferings.

”We heard that the dredging of this dam has been captured in the budget, so we are appealing to goverment to expand and make them deeper.

“We want to say bye bye to water scarcity in Sabongida and environs,” he said.

Mr Goyil Maikarfi, another resident, decried the alarming water scarcity problem in the entire locality, insisting that the situation calls for a national emergency.

“The situation in Sabongida is scary; people here struggle with animals over the untreated water from the Mabudi and other dams.

”The rural dwellers urgently need intervention to provide good water in the area.

”The problem of water scarcity in the entire Langtang South needs a holistic approach; the problem needs government intervention with good political will to address the hardship faced by our people.

”We call on the new government at the state and federal levels to address our plight by finding lasting solution to the perennial water scarcity in our community,” he appealed.

The community leader of Sabongida, Mr Ponzing Durfa, who also spoke with NAN, described Langtang South as the most backward and underdeveloped local government area in the state.

Durfa decried the absence of not just potable water, but all critical social amenities, adding that successive administrations had only paid lip service to the provision of the amenities.

”This community and, indeed, the entire local government area, produce varieties of agricultural products in large quantity.

“Our people are basically farmers. We produce yam, maize, cassava, groundnuts, among other crops, in commercial quantities.

”Unfortunately, the local government area doesn’t have any source of good water. It lacks other basic amenities like road network, electricity, healthcare facilities, among others,” he lamented.

Worried by the hardship people are passing through, Mr Timkat Peter, the National Coordinator, Economic Freedom Fighters-Nigeria, recently petitioned the state and federal government to urgently address the problem.

Peter copied his petition to Sen. Nora Daduut who represents Plateau South Senatorial District, and Dame Pauline Tallen the immediate past Minister of Women Affairs.

Other notable government functionaries who reveived the letter included Idris Wase, the current Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives, and Beni Lar who represents Langtang South/Langtang South in the House of Representatives.

Source: News Agency of Nigeria

Insecurity: Group hails military, security agencies over enhanced synergy

Awareness Initiative (AI), a civil society group, has commended the current leadership of the Armed Forces of Nigeria for promoting synergy towards restoring peace and stability in the country.

The group said the enhanced synergy was in line with President Bola Tinubu’s directive to the military and other security agencies to work in synergy towards ending the nation’s security challenges.

This is contained in a statement by the Convener of the Group, Adeshida Bankole, on Sunday in Abuja.

The group also expressed optimism that the jointness in dealing with the security threats will remain a constant feature in the AFN.

They said the Chief of Defence Staff, Gen. Lucky Irabor,, on assumption of office in 2021, emphasised the importance of collaboration between the military and other security agencies in defeating security threats.

The group said the services had worked harmoniously in tackling the security challenges across the country since 2021.

“Without doubt, the successes recorded across the various theatres of operation can be linked with the enhanced synergy under the present leadership of Gen. Irabor.

“The leadership has drawn a template for cooperation in dealing with the challenges; this falls in line with the current demands of President Tinubu.

“We are very sure this template will be maintained and serve as modus operandi for future operations.

“We also note the successes been recorded by the armed forces in the fight against crude oil theft in the Niger-Delta, this indeed is another area that the president was particular about.”

The group said the military had done well in combating the menace of economic saboteurs in the Niger Delta.

They urged the military to continue to maintain the template on synergy and anti-crude oil operations.

The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) recalled that Tinubu had during his first meeting with the service chiefs directed them to work together to strengthen the fight against insecurity.

The president also mandated the security agencies to develop a blueprint to deal with the issue of crude oil theft.

Source: News Agency of Nigeria

I did not assault my wife – Ondo D’gov

The Deputy Governor of Ondo State, Mr Lucky Aiyedatiwa has denied allegations of physically abusing his wife, describing it as taking politics too far.

A statement issued on Sunday in Akure by his media aide, Mr Kenneth Odusola-Stevenson, quotes Aiyedatiwa as stating that the allegations were baseless and the imagination of a faceless group.

It would be recalled that there was news making the rounds on social media that the deputy governor allegedly assaulted his wife.

The statement, which noted that the deputy governor reserved the right to privacy particularly with respect to his family, said there had never been any issue of domestic violence as alleged, as his wife, Mrs Oluwaseun Aiyedatiwa, was at the moment outside the shores of the country.

“It has come to the attention of the Office of the Deputy Governor of Ondo State, Hon. Lucky Aiyedatiwa, that a baseless and false report credited to a faceless group alleging the deputy governor of domestic abuse and assault on his wife.

“This falsehood and its peddlers would have ordinarily been ignored at this time but the need to halt further negative reports and rumours capable of creating needless tension in our state has necessitated this response.

“The said allegation of domestic abuse against the person of the deputy governor is a figment of the imagination of those behind it and their ungodly intentions to cause crisis in the state had been known for weeks and therefore such falsehood did not come as a surprise.

“It is not a secret that Mrs Oluwaseun Aiyedatiwa has lived and worked in the United Kingdom for many years before her husband became an elected public official in Nigeria.

“And since then she has been shuttling between the United Kingdom and Nigeria to take care of the home and the children who are also in the United Kingdom.

“Therefore, any report of alleged domestic issues within the family should be taken as the handiwork of the enemies of the state who are bent on causing crisis where there is none.

“And we therefore warn those spreading such falsehood to desist or face the consequences,” the statement said.

According to the deputy governor, he has been busy with official duties of his office and performing duties delegated to him by his boss, Gov. Rotimi Akeredolu, while on leave.

“It is, therefore uncharitable for anyone to claim that the deputy governor has in that period carried out “multiple assaults” on his spouse who is out of the country.

“This is nothing but political blackmail taken too far.

“We urge the good people of Ondo State to ignore such falsehood as those behind it may just be plotting further attacks on the deputy governor to promote their sinister agenda,” the statement concluded.

Source: News Agency of Nigeria