Kano Gets N3.8bn Medical Centre
Kano State Government and Pfizer Inc of the United States are to build a N3.8 billion medical centre in Kano in furtherance of the duo’s out-of-court settlement deal over the 1996 controversial Trovan clinical test in the state.
Chairman of the Board, Professor Shehu Galadanchi told reporters in Kano yesterday, that an important follow up from the negotiation between the state government and Pfizer Inc. is a large funding to the tune of $25.5 million (N3.8bn) for the building of an ultra modern medical centre, the first of its kind in Nigeria and indeed the West African sub-region.
Fresh Polio Fear Hits Kano, Sokoto, Katsina
As Nigeria and the international community continue to celebrate the success recorded in the fight against the dreaded poliomyelitis scourge, there are fears of a possible resurgence of cases in three states in northwestern Nigeria .
One case each of the Wild Polio Virus (WPV3) has been suspected to have occurred in Kano , Sokoto and Katsina States.
Our correspondent gathered exclusively that as at yesterday, health officials in the federal and state governments were making frantic efforts to investigate the case suspected to have occured in Dambatta, Dambatta local government area of Kano State.
Suspected Islamists kill two in Kano: police source
KANO, Nigeria — Suspected Islamists killed two people in northern Nigeria on Tuesday, a police source said, the latest attack by gunmen on motorbikes blamed on a sect that launched an uprising last year.
The killings occurred in an area of the city of Maiduguri where the sect had its headquarters before a brutal assault put down the uprising and destroyed the enclave last year, the officer said on condition of anonymity.
"Two people were killed in the Gwaidomari neighbourhood, and one of them turned out to be a local chief," the officer said.
"From eyewitness accounts, the modus operandi of the attackers was similar to that applied in previous attacks. The fact that the assailants came on a motorbike, opened fire on their victims and sped away gives rise to some suspicion that the attackers were Boko Haram members."
A series of such attacks have occurred in Nigeria's mainly Muslim north in recent months, with authorities saying they suspected the Islamist sect known as Boko Haram, which means "Western education is sin" in local Hausa dialect.
Suspected sect members also used machine guns and homemade bombs to attack a prison in Bauchi this month, freeing more than 700 prisoners. Around 100 alleged Boko Haram members were among those who escaped.
Last year's uprising began with attacks on police posts, and police have been among the victims of the recent killings by motorcycle-riding gunmen in northern Nigeria.
The attacks come ahead of presidential elections early next year and have been an ominous sign in a country where ballots have often been tainted by violence.
Controversy trails murder of SSS officer and family
Lying in their own blood within the compound were Garba Bello, 54; Habiba Garba, 40; Khalifa Garba, 14; Hafsat Garba, 15 and; Murjanatu Garba, 5.
Son Admits Killing SSS Officer, Mother, 3 Siblings
It was rude shock at the Kano State Police Command yesterday as one of the surviving children of Alhaji Garba Bello, the murdered operative of the State Security Service (SSS) confessed that he was the assailant of his parents and three younger siblings who were killed last Monday.
Late Garba Bello was until his death an assistant director of the State Security Services serving in Sokoto State. He was said to be suffering from liver-related diseases which led to him being granted a sick leave to pursue treatment.
Flood devastates six northern states
Scores of people have been killed by flood in several states of northern Nigeria where unusually heavy rains have swollen rivers and streams across the region in the last two weeks. Whole villages and farmlands in Sokoto, Katsina, Kano, Jigawa, Zamfara and Kebbi states have been submerged.
Last Tuesday, an executive member of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) in Katsina State, Surajo Audu, drowned while crossing a river to his village, Gwanamarde, from Yammama after a heavy rainfall. The councillor representing the late Mr. Audu’s ward, Mainasara Abubakar, who confirmed the deaths on Thursday, added that dozens of houses collapsed as a result of the inundation. Elsewhere, a woman identified as Lubabatu Umar from Kurmin-Sarki village and a two-year-old child were also killed when a house collapsed on them.
The flood overran villages in about seven states, with increasing number of deaths and loss of cattle reported across the region, and thousands of people displaced. Although flooding has become more or less an annual environmental disaster for the region in recent years, especially during the peak of the rainy season, this year has recorded some of the worst cases. Dutsema Local Government Area (LGA), which is the largest LGA in Kastina State, has recorded over 1700 displaced people. Hundreds of houses were also destroyed by the rainfall.
Thousands of people were also displaced following the flood which swept through Goronyo local government of Sokoto State, while more than 2,000 houses were destroyed in the four villages of Kagara, Boye Kai, Balla and Giyawa. Property worth millions of naira was lost to the rising waters. In addition, farm produce and farmlands were washed away.
The governor of Sokoto State, Aliyu Wamakko, yesterday ordered the immediate release of N200 million for the rehabilitation of victims of the flood disaster in the state. Mr Wamakko, who spoke while on a visit to the victims of the flood disaster in four villages in Goronyo, also promised more support for the victims. He said another N30 million will be released to the council for the purchase of essential commodities for the victims.
A great threat
The flooding in Goronyo, according to reports, was as a result of attempts by some of the villagers to expand the water channels of Goronya dam to prevent it from bursting. The vice chairman of the local government, Faruk Rimawa, said the dam posed a great threat to the people of the area because of the likelihood that it could burst at anytime. The displaced people in the four villages have been relocated to a temporary camp at the Adamu Mu’azu Model Science Secondary School, Goronyo.
In Jigawa State, about 25 villages were reportedly submerged after a river burst its banks owing to the torrential rainfall, displacing about 7,000 people and washing away 3,000 hectares of crops in the last two weeks. Umar Kyari, the government’s spokesperson, said the state government was working hard to mitigate the impact of the flood.
A cross-section of residents in Kastina State called on the state government to construct more drainage. They, however, commended the state governor, Ibrahim Shema, for diverting the Ashada Lafia river that passed through Malumfashi town, otherwise the devastation would have being worse.
In Zamfara State, over 2000 acres of farmland was washed away in Gummi Local Government Area while 3,000 people are displaced in Kano State, with Shanono and Gadasawa local government areas being the worst affected.
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