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Lagos shuts Agege Central Mosque over attack on COVID-19 Taskforce

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Lagos shuts Agege Central Mosque over attack on COVID-19 Taskforce

The Lagos State Government has shut the Agege Central Mosque after some worshippers attacked members of the State COVID-19 Taskforce mandated to monitor and enforce compliance against public gatherings exceeding 25 people. Executive assistant to Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu on public relations and new media, Olusegun Fafore, confirmed this on Thursday afternoon.

Lagos shuts Agege Central Mosque over attack on COVID-19 Taskforce
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Stay away from military, Congress warns ethnic bigots

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…Lauds COAS, Buratai’s patriotism

The Progressive Yoruba Youth Congress (PYYC) has warned ethnic bigots to steer clear of the military and avoid politicizing its internal administrative matters.

PYYC’s caution trails the manner the recent reshuffling of senior officers was interpreted in some quarters despite being an obvious routine exercise.

In a statement signed by president, Mr. Kola Salau, the Yoruba youths said it is “disappointed that certain interests are attempting to incite the Yoruba nation to take offence” at the redeployment of commander Operation Lafiya Dole.

PYYC wondered why the same group didn’t put in similar energy when one of them, Lieutenant General L.O. Adeosun, was given an accelerated promotion.

The Yoruba youths, however, expressed its support for the military, the Army, in particular, under the leadership of Lt. Gen TY Buratai.

According to PYYC, the Army chief has shown exceptional patriotism and passion for competence and capacity over personal interest.

Read full statement below:

The Progressive Yoruba Youth Congress has noted with alarm the attempt to politicize what should otherwise be internal routine administrative matters in the military. Our sense of alarm arose out of our concern for the consequences that such unbecoming trend have for the long-term stability of the country.

The most recent of this ill-advised impugning of political meaning into military matters are the faulty reactions from some quarters to the routine reshuffling of senior officers that is now being interpreted as punitive when that is not the case.

Some ethnic bigots are alleging that the immediate past Theatre commander of Operation Lafiya Dole, General Olusegun Adeniyi, was redeployed because he spoke out about operational challenges. Whereas we are aware that General Adeniyi was sent to be a research fellow at Nigerian Army Resource Centre (NARC) in Abuja, where he would be able to share his field experiences with others and therefore make the institutional knowledge readily available to others.

The Progressive Yoruba Youth Congress is disappointed that certain interests are attempting to incite the Yoruba nation to take offence at this redeployment when the assignment of commanding Operation Lafiya Dole is not the birthright of any ethnic group. Commanders from other ethnic nationalities had occupied the position in the past and more from other ethnic nationalities will still man the position until the terrorism is wiped out from the northeast of the country.

We wonder why these same interests did not mobilize the Yoruba nation to protest when one of them Lieutenant General L.O. Adeosun was given an accelerated promotion to his current rank, which by the way places him on the same rank as the Chief of Army Staff. This was in recognition of his gallantry and is consistent with the Yoruba drive for competence and excellence.

The Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lieutenant General Tukur Buratai has demonstrated similar passion for competence and capacity, which gives us the impression that he must be a Yoruba son to have such preferences. We are pleased with his stature as a detribalized statesman whose actions are guided by patriotism at all times and will never descend low as to vilify any officer.

The Congress therefore wholeheartedly supports the Nigerian military, particularly the Army under the able leadership of Lt. Gen TY Buratai while urging Nigerians to continue to give him their support.

We however warn detractors of the military to stop giving ethnic slant to internal workings of the military. Those behind the campaign of calumny against the military should learn to give up because all their previous and ongoing attempts to infiltrate the military have failed and will continue to fail because of the detribalized leadership that is in place in the military. We warn these ethnic bigots to stay away from the military as it is not an institution that is open to their interference.

COVID-19: Nigerian finance ministry deletes tweet begging Elon Musk for ventilators

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The Federal Ministry of Finance, Budget and National Planning has deleted its tweet requesting for ventilators from South African billionaire, Elon Musk.

Mr Musk, who is also a citizen of the US and Canada, had on Tuesday said his company, Tesla, would distribute ventilators to hospitals worldwide within the company’s delivery regions.

The ministry late Wednesday then tweeted in response, saying Nigeria needs about 100 to 500 ventilators to help with the fight against the coronavirus.

“Dear @elonmusk @Tesla Federal Government of Nigeria needs support with 100-500 ventilators to assist with #Covid19 cases arising every day in Nigeria,” it said.

READ ALSO: Nigerians embarrassed as Ministry of Finance begs Elon Musk, Tesla for ventilators on Twitter

However, a statement on Thursday by the Special Adviser, Media and Communications, to the Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Yunusa Abdullahi, said the tweet was ‘unauthorised’ and had been pulled down.

“An unauthorised post was made on the verified Twitter handle of the Federal Ministry of Finance, Budget and National Planning,” he said.

“The fact of the post is regrettable because of which it is brought down.

“We have made sure our internal processes are strengthened that such doesn’t happen again. The error is highly regrettable.”

Nigerians have been dragging the ministry on Twitter, saying it should have made a formal request to the billionaire for ventilators.

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IGP cautions officers against trampling on rights of Nigerians during lockdown

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By Bukola Olasanmi

The Inspector-General of Police, Mohammed Adamu, has cautioned officers and men of the Nigeria Police Force currently deployed for the enforcement of the lockdown and social restriction orders to ensure that the rights of Nigerians are not infringed upon under any pretext.

Also, persons on essential duties duly exempted from the restriction orders should be accorded due courtesies and unfettered access to and fro their places of duty, Adamu said.

In a statement by Force Public Relations Officer, DCP Frank Mba, Adamu said all police officers deployed for the enforcement of the restriction order must be professional, humane and tactful and must show utmost respect to the citizenry.

The statement reads, “To this end, the IGP has directed Command Commissioners of Police to immediately commence conduct monitoring of police officers deployed on enforcement duties in their areas of responsibilities.

“The IGP has equally charged Zonal Assistant Inspectors-General of Police across the nation to ensure adequate supervision of personnel under their watch, as well as due compliance with the standard operating procedure guiding this special task.

“The AIGs and CPs are also to ensure robust anti-crime patrols and surveillance around vulnerable targets such as medical facilities, shops and markets, residential areas, financial institutions and Automated Teller Machines points, amongst others so that criminals do not take undue advantage of the current COVID-19 challenge to perpetrate crimes against the citizenry.”

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COVID-19 Lockdown: IGP warns Policemen against trampling on citizens rights

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**Orders tight security around vulnerable targets

Avoid social visits to stations, don't make unnecessary arrests, IGP cautions Nigerians, officersIGP Mohammed Adamu

By Kingsley Omonobi – Abuja.

The Inspector General of Police, IGP, Mohammed Abubakar Adamu has cautioned officers and men of the Nigeria Police Force currently deployed for the enforcement of the lockdown and social restriction orders to ensure that the rights of Nigerians are not infringed upon under any pretext.

Also, persons on essential duties, duly exempted from the restriction orders, should be accorded due courtesies and unfettered access to and fro their places of duty.

A statement by Force Public Relations Officer, DCP Frank Mba said, “The IGP notes that the global community is now in extra-ordinary times, with the lockdown taking its tolls on every component of our national life.

ALSO READ: COVID-19: Avoid social visits to stations, don’t make unnecessary arrests, IGP cautions Nigerians, officers

“Therefore, all police officers deployed for the enforcement of these restriction orders must be professional, humane and tactful and must show utmost respect to the citizenry.

“To this end, the IGP has directed Command Commissioners of Police to immediately commence conduct monitoring of Police Officers deployed on enforcement duties in their areas of responsibilities.

“The IGP has equally charged Zonal Assistant Inspectors General of Police (AIGs) across the nation to ensure adequate supervision of personnel under their watch, as well as due compliance with the Standard Operating Procedure guiding this special task.

“The AIGs and CPs are also to ensure robust anti-crime patrols and surveillance around vulnerable targets such as medical facilities, shops and markets, residential areas, financial institutions, and Automated Teller Machines (ATM) points, amongst others so that criminals do not take undue advantage of the current COVID-19 challenge to perpetrate crimes against the citizenry.

“Meanwhile, the IGP has expressed profound gratitude to Nigerians for their resilience and voluntary compliance with the social restriction orders and cooperation with the Police at all times.

“He urges citizens to continue to observe all precautionary measures issued by relevant health authorities in order for the nation to defeat this pandemic.”

Vanguard News Nigeria.



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COVID-19: Global Physician leaders call for urgent action to protect health professionals

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COVID-19: Global Physician leaders call for urgent action to protect health professionals

By Chioma Obinna

Leaders of the World Medical Association, WMA, have described as ‘deplorable’ the fact that even in the world’s most affluent countries, health care professionals have to deal with the coronavirus pandemic with insufficient personal protection.

The physician leaders opined that when the pandemic ends, there must be a political investigation into the availability and effectiveness of supply chains.

In a press statement made available to Vanguard, in Lagos,  jointly signed by the President of the WMA, Dr. Miguel Jorge and Chair of the WMA Council, Dr. Frank Montgomery mourned the loss of physicians and all health care professionals, describing it as ‘a bitter toll’.

READ ALSO: COVID-19 Lockdown: IGP warns Policemen against trampling on citizens rights

“We express our solidarity with the physicians and all the health professionals, care workers, and informal caregivers who are looking after patients every day. Much of the time they are doing their work without minimum standards of personal protection. It is deplorable that even in the world’s most affluent countries the simplest standards of protection cannot be maintained and health care professionals are sent defenseless into the burning fire of infection.

‘Furthermore, there are not enough staff, not enough equipment, and not enough places in intensive care units’.

The WMA leaders urge governments across the world and the World Health Organisation, WHO, to urgently provide all health care units in need with the necessary protective equipment (PPE), and to set up sustainable supply chains for PPE.

The duo in the statement also called for action to build and distribute a sufficient number of ventilators to care for ailing patients and for an assurance that there is a sufficient amount of beds in intensive care units to treat all patients without compromising ethical decisions.

READ ALSO: COVID-19: LASTMA warns motorists against flouting movement restriction

They further demanded that at the end of the pandemic there should be a political investigation into the availability and effectiveness of supply chains and the risks of globalization in world-threatening pandemic situations.

The WMA had in January issued an urgent call to governments and the WHO to set up an international supply chain for medicines and supplies to help health professionals fight the spread of coronavirus.

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Ejigbo coronavirus cases rise to 16

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The number of those infected with the coronavirus in Ejigbo, Osun State has risen from 12 to 16 in 24 hours, reports say.

Those infected are indigenes of the town who returned from Côte d’Ivoire last week.

They were quarantined at Wole Soyinka Government High School, Ejigbo.

“Six more people have tested positive, bringing the total number to 18 out of 106 tested.

“The result of the remaining 21 cases is being awaited,” a source told QED on Thursday afternoon.

The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) confirmed on Wednesday that Osun had 14 confirmed cases of coronavirus infection.

Twelve of the 14 were traced to Ejigbo.

With six new results confirmed positive, the total in Osun State now stands at 18.

The NCDC was yet to release the official result at the time of filing this report.

Speaking through a message by his chief press secretary, Ismail Omipidan, Governor Gboyega Oyetola on Wednesday said the surge in number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in Osun was due to the state’s indigenes who returned from Côte d’Ivoire on Saturday.

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COVID-19: LASTMA warns motorists against flouting movement restriction

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Chris OlakpeLASTMA personnel on parade in Lagos

The Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA) on Thursday reminded motorists that they are not exempted from the government’s restriction of movement.

The agency advised motorists to comply with the government’s directive and desist from any action that could bring regret to them if caught on the road.

President Muhammadu Buhari had on Sunday ordered the cessation of movements in Lagos, Ogun and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) for an initial period of 14 days with effect from Monday.

Buhari said the step was aimed at halting the spread of coronavirus.

The LASTMA General Manager, Mr. Olajide Oduyoye, who commented on the directive, said the level of compliance by motorists in the state was pretty good.

He,  however, advised motorists not to defy the order, warning that those caught violating it would regret their action.

Oduyoye said: “I think the compliance level to the movement restriction is still within the region of between 90 percent and 95 percent.

“You may feel you want to take a risk and you think you will get away with it but note that once you are caught, you will regret that action because there is a purpose for everything.

“The government has said to the people: stay-at-home; keep your vehicles at home, there is no need for you to be on the road.”

The LASTMA chief, who advised those still defying the order to have a rethink, said the government directive was for the good of all residents.

“The enforcement agencies – LASTMA, the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC), police and others are on the road to ensure compliance by the public.

“When they catch any motorist on the road and he does not have an identity card to explain the purpose of your journey, or the reason why you are on the road, you will regret that action.

“The good thing for all is to try not to do anything that we will regret,” Oduyoye said. (NAN)

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COVID-19: Registrar calls for 21 days nationwide lockdown

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A Nigerian newspaper and Online version of the Vanguard, a daily publication in Nigeria covering Nigeria news, Niger delta, general national news, politics, business, energy, sports, entertainment, fashion,lifestyle human interest stories, etc

COVID-19: Registrar calls for 21 days nationwide lockdown

Mr. Segun Ogunyannwo, Registrar, Institute of Chartered Mediators and Conciliators (ICMC), has called on the Federal Government to impose 21 days nationwide lockdown to ensure proper tracking and treatment of persons with COVID-19.

Ogunyannwo, also the Chief Executive Officer of ICMC, made the call on Thursday in Abuja while presenting face masks to the Nigeria Union of Journalist (NUJ), FCT Council.

He commended President Muhammadu Buhari for the 14-day lockdown of Lagos, Abuja, and Ogun adding that this was not enough to fight the dreaded coronavirus.

READ ALSO: Covid 19 – FMN reiterates its commitment to feeding the nation

According to him, the best thing to do is to have a nationwide lockdown for 21 days.

”This will enable us to track those who have been infected and provide them with the attention that they need.

”If they will infect others within the period, it will be limited to their immediate family members.

”If we allow the virus to spread in the other 34 states, by the end of the 14-days lockdown period in Lagos, Ogun and the FCT, the situation will be worse than when we started.

”This is the truth Mr. President, the whole truth and nothing but the truth.

“It is known that the gestation period of COVID-19 is 14 days. It is possible that a family member can be infected within the first two or three days of the lockdown.

”With the cycle of 14 days completing in two or three days afterward, if we adopt 14 days only, we may be going back to square one. It is safer to have 21-days nationwide lockdown,” he said.

Ogunyannwo also called on the Federal Government to provide sustenance for the jobless and daily-paid workers across the country within the Nationwide lockdown period.

READ ALSO: COVID-19: Why number is still low in Nigeria — Delta Monarch

He urged the Federal Government to activate the State Emergency Management Agencies (SEMAs) to respond to this immediately to avoid another type of calamity.

Ogunyannwo said that SEMAs could liaise with Local Governments to deliver on the welfare package to this category of people.

He said that the role of well-meaning individuals and organisations would also be needed to augment what the government would be doing.

Responding on behalf of the NUJ FCT Council, the Secretary of the council, Comrade Ochiaka Ugwu, pledged its member’s commitment to curb the COVID-19 through proper reporting.

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As shutdown extends, Rwanda’s poor confront further hardship

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RwandaRegine Murengerantwari (2nd L) who rents her rooms for income sits with her sons at home in a suburb of Kigali, Rwanda, on April 1, 2020. – After the lockdown, with no payments from the tenants, she has no income and no food for her four children returned from their boarding school by the closure. She hasn’t eaten for a few days now. (Photo by Simon Wohlfahrt / AFP)

Out of work, with prices soaring and police on the streets, life for many Rwandans has become immeasurably harder under coronavirus lockdown, and the pain looks only set to deepen.

Traders have warned of food shortages in the tiny landlocked nation, and parents are struggling to put food on the table, as the shutdown gutted the local economy on which lower-income Rwandans depend.

“To feed my family, I have to go hungry myself,” said Regine Murengerantwari, a widow and mother of four in Kigali, whose income dried up when the new restrictions took effect on March 21.

As the coronavirus took hold, Rwanda swiftly imposed one of Africa’s first total shutdowns, banning all “unnecessary movements” outside the home for two weeks to try and curb the spread of the disease.

Shops were closed, schools shuttered and public transport ground to a halt as the number of confirmed cases in Rwanda climbed to among the highest in mainland East Africa.

Other countries in the region have followed suit and with the number of cases still climbing — now at 82 — Kigali announced Wednesday the restrictions would remain in place another fortnight, until April 19.

Murengerantwari, a slum dweller who lost her income suddenly out of a job, does not know how her family will make it through.

– Shortages –


Her meagre income disappeared overnight when the lockdown was imposed.

The 48-year-old had rented two small rooms in her home, one to a hairdresser and the other to a motorcycle taxi driver. When their businesses were banned, neither tenant could pay Murengerantwari her dues.

“I have no income at all, and no idea what the future holds now,” she said.

The government has extended assistance to some of Rwanda’s poorest, delivering food like maize, also called corn, and beans to roughly 20,000 of the country’s most vulnerable.

“It was important to me, since my family has no source of income now,” said Papias Gahungu, a motorcycle taxi driver, who received four kilograms (8.8 pounds) of foodstuffs under the government relief program.

READ ALSO: COVID-19, threat to food security-Experts

But the need is great. Almost 40 percent of Rwandans live in poverty, according to the World Bank, and some like Murengerantwari said they missed out.

To compound the hardship, prices at local markets have soared amid fears of shortages and restrictions on truck movements slowing deliveries.

“Because delivery drivers are not bringing goods as normal, we have little choice but to raise prices. We are afraid of a scarcity of food,” said Emiliene Musabyemariya, a trader at a market in Kigali, who said tomatoes were selling at nearly double the usual rate.

Some businesses are operating on the side. One alcohol retailer, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said he was doing a roaring trade despite the order for his shop to close.

“I have customers, and business is doing very well, surprisingly. I have to survive, but secretly… I deliver liquor to my customers’ homes at night,” the Kigali retailer said.

– ‘I have nothing’ –


For those with cars and money, trips to buy goods from supermarkets are still permitted, as is ordering delivery food from restaurants via mobile app.

But the suspension of public transport has forced poor Rwandans to walk long distances to buy food and seek work. Some in Kigali have even journeyed on foot to markets beyond city lines to try and source affordable staples.

Tensions have boiled over, and the rules flouted in parts.

Some areas of Kigali remain busy, and police have manned checkpoints and warned of arrests for those not obeying the restrictions.

Last week, police arrested 12 people for refusing to return home when ordered to do so. They had “turned violent” when instructed to leave a trading area, police said.

In Nyanza district, southwest of Kigali, two men were shot dead by police who said they fired in self defence when the deceased refused to stop at a checkpoint and attacked the officers. An investigation is underway.

Now on the breadline, Murengerantwari prepares a single pot of porridge in the morning and scoops each of her four children — who are normally fed at school — just one cup to last them a day.

“I hope my children go back to school soon, because I have nothing for them here,” she said.

VANGUARD



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