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AfDB approves $440,000 relief for flood victims in South Sudan/Sudan

AfDB approves $440,000 emergency relief for flood victims in South Sudan and Sudan
AfDB approves $440,000 emergency relief for flood victims in South Sudan and Sudan

AfDB approves $440,000 relief for flood victims in Sudan/South Sudan

The African Development Bank Group (www.AfDB.org) has approved an emergency assistance relief package of $440,000 to fund ongoing humanitarian and emergency relief efforts in areas recently hit by flood in South Sudan and Sudan.

The package, from the Bank’s Special Relief Fund, will be split nearly equally between the two countries and will be used to purchase food items and water, and to cover the implementation costs to be incurred by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

The funding is part of a multinational emergency response to provide relief to flood victims in both countries, where torrential rains have caused rivers to overflow their dykes and banks, disrupting trade routes, damaging crops, killing livestock and submerging houses.

By the end of September, the Food Security Technical Secretariat reported that heavy rains and flooding had affected more than 860,000 people (over 480,000 of them children) in Sudan. Over 125,000 refugees and internally displaced people are among those affected in that country since the start of the rainy season in July. The states most affected by floods are Khartoum, North Darfur, Blue Nile, West Darfur and Sennar. More than 100 people have reportedly died as a result of the flooding.

In South Sudan, the UN has estimated that more than $80 million is needed for the overall flood response, including $46 million for immediate assistance to 360,000 people until the end of the year. Vast areas of the country along the River Nile are now under water, affecting more than 600,000 people since July in Jonglei, Lakes, Unity, Upper Nile, and Central and Western Equatoria. Entire communities have fled to higher ground to escape the rising waters.

African Development Bank Country Manager for South Sudan, Benedict Kanu, said more than 100 people died through the disaster in the country, with about 25,000 internally displaced.

“The situation is particularly critical given the COVID-19 preventive measures in place, insecurity in some of the affected states and the financial constraints faced by the government and humanitarian agencies, despite the growing needs of the flood-affected communities,” Kanu said.

The FAO, the implementing partner for the Bank’s emergency relief assistance operation, already has a well-established network and long-standing operational presence in both countries for food relief assistance.

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Dead Nkurunziza was to step down in two months after 15 years rule

 Dead Nkurunziza was to step down in two months after 15 years rule
Dead Nkurunziza was to step down in two months after 15 years rule

Dead Nkurunziza was to step down in two months after 15 years rule

If President Pierre Nkurunziza hadn’t died, he would have stepped down in August after 15 years of his rule for the inauguration of new President, Evariste Ndayishimiye, who won the last month election.

But Nkurunziza died on Tuesday, four days after he took ill and was moved to a health facility. He was admitted to hospital on Saturday after feeling unwell, his condition improved but on Monday he had a cardiac arrest and efforts to revive him were unsuccessful, officials say.

In 2015, the announcement that he would run for a third term plunged the country into chaos. It sparked anger as some questioned the legality of a third-term bid.

After a change in the constitution, he was able to run for a further term in last month’s election but he decided to retire and was to be known as the “supreme guide to patriotism”.

He was also due to receive a $540,000 (£440,000) retirement pay-out and a luxury villa.

When the former rebel leader took office in 2005, at the age of 40, the country that had been brutally torn apart by an ethnic conflict that had killed about 300,000 over a decade.

Young, optimistic and charismatic, he managed to live up to everyone’s expectations by uniting people and rebuilding the economy. Between 2006 and 2011, the president – known for his preaching and love of football – received seven international awards for his peace-building efforts.

But after a decade in power, his reputation took a nose dive and the unity he had built collapsed when he organised a referendum to allow him to stand for a third term. Deadly protests erupted, there was a coup attempt and hundreds of thousands of people fled the country.

After this he only left the country officially once – by car to neighbouring Tanzania. The UN accused him of oppressing the opposition and killing and abducting opponents, accusations vehemently denied by Burundi’s government.

Despite suspicions that he planned to stay on for a fourth term, he did not stand in elections in May, which were held despite coronavirus.

He and his wife Denise, who had five children together and adopted several others, regularly organised prayer gatherings – and the man who was to become Burundi’s “supreme guide to patriotism” put all his successes down to God, including what he said the country’s success against Covid-19.

The official statement announcing the president’s death said he was taken ill in the evening after helping out at a volleyball match in Ngozi, northern Burundi, on Saturday.

He went to hospital, but appeared to be recovering on Sunday and was able to communicate with the people surrounding him, the government says.

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Africa will escape terrible COVID-19 predictions, says UN’s Guterres

African will escape terrible COVID-19 predictions, says UN’s Guterres
African will escape terrible COVID-19 predictions, says UN’s Guterres

 

Africa will escape terrible COVID-19 predictions, says UN’s Guterres

Horrific predictions that COVID-19 will ravage Africa so badly that corpses will liter on the streets may end in the world of permutations and imaginations, recent comments from world leaders have suggested.   The West made some heartbreaking predictions about how COVID-19 will ravage Africa to desolation. However, two months down the line after report of first cases in Africa, African countries are doing better than the west in the management of the virus.

US President, Donald Trump and the United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres have praised African commitment and unity towards the fight. UN chief praises continent for responding swiftly but says millions could be pushed into extreme poverty.

The relatively low number of confirmed coronavirus cases in Africa has “raised hopes that African countries may be spared the worst of the pandemic”,  United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said, while praising the continent for responding swiftly to the pandemic.

54 African countries have recorded the following as of Monday, May 18, 2020, according to the Africa Center for Disease Control: 84,872 cases, 2,771 deaths and 32,646 recoveries. Total cases confirmed in 54 African countries is less than the number of deaths recorded in United States of America, alone.

Also read: Coronavirus: Africa report 84,872 cases, 2,771 deaths and 32,646 recoveries

Guterres, however, warned that millions of people in Africa could be pushed into extreme poverty due to the pandemic.

“The pandemic threatens African progress. It will aggravate long-standing inequalities and heighten hunger, malnutrition and vulnerability to disease,” Guterres said.

Since the pandemic is still in its “early days” in Africa, Guterres stressed that “disruption could escalate quickly”.

“African countries should also have quick, equal and affordable access to any eventual vaccine and treatment, that must be considered global public goods,” he said.

Among his recommendations, Guterres urged “international action to strengthen Africa’s health systems, maintain food supplies, avoid a financial crisis”.

It is also necessary, he added, to “support education, protect jobs, keep households and businesses afloat, and cushion the continent against lost income and export earnings”.

UN: Sub-Saharan Africa AIDS deaths could double due to COVID-19

He said he was also advocating “a comprehensive debt framework – starting with an across-the-board debt standstill for countries unable to service their debt”.

The UN report said the low numbers of cases in Africa could be linked to minimal testing and reporting, pointing to a World Health Organization (WHO) warning that the pandemic “could kill between 83,000 and 190,000 people in 47 African countries in the first year, mostly depending on governments’ responses”.

WHO also warned that “the socioeconomic impacts could ‘smoulder’ for several years”, the report said.

Coronavirus: Africa report 84,872 cases, 2,771 deaths and 32,646 recoveries

Central (7,758 cases; 293 deaths; 2,321 recoveries): Burundi (42; 1; 20), Cameroon (2,954; 139; 1,553), Central African Republic (336; 0; 13), Chad (503; 53; 117), Congo (391; 15; 87), DRC (1,455; 61; 270), Equatorial Guinea (522; 6; 13), Gabon (1,320; 11; 244), Sao Tome & Principe (235; 7; 4).

Eastern (8,711; 261; 2,759): Comoros (11; 1; 3), Djibouti (1,401; 7; 972), Eritrea (39; 0; 39), Ethiopia (352; 5; 116), Kenya (912; 50; 336), Madagascar (322; 1; 119), Mauritius (332; 10; 322), Rwanda (292; 0; 197), Seychelles (11; 0; 11), Somalia (1,455; 57; 163), South Sudan (236; 4; 4), Sudan (2,591; 105; 247), Tanzania (509; 21; 167), Uganda (248; 0; 63).

Northern (27,342; 1,422; 11,268): Algeria (7,019; 548; 3,507), Egypt (12,229; 630; 3,172), Libya (65; 3; 35), Mauritania (62; 4; 6), Morocco (6,930; 192; 3,732), Tunisia (1,037; 45; 816).

Southern (16,820; 283; 7,402): Angola (48; 2; 17), Botswana (25; 1; 17), Eswatini (203; 2; 73), Lesotho (1; 0; 0), Malawi (70; 3; 27), Mozambique (137; 0; 44), Namibia (16; 0; 13), South Africa (15,515; 264; 7,006), Zambia (761; 7; 192), Zimbabwe (44; 4; 13).

Western (24,241; 512; 8,896): Benin (339; 2; 83), Burkina Faso (796; 51; 652), Cape Verde (328; 3; 84), Cote d’lvoire (2,109; 27; 1004), Gambia (23; 1; 10), Ghana (5,735; 29; 1,754), Guinea (2,658; 16; 1,133), Guinea-Bissau (990; 4; 27), Liberia (226; 21; 120), Mali (874; 52; 512), Niger (904; 54; 698), Nigeria (5,959; 182; 1,594), Senegal (2,480; 26; 973), Sierra Leone (519; 33; 148), Togo (301; 11; 104).

*Africa numbers are taken from official RCC and Member State reports.

 

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“If you love Buhari, your sins are forgiven”—Adesina Says in Tribute to Abba Kyari

“If you love Buhari, your sins are forgiven”—Adesina Says in Tribute to Abba Kyari
“If you love Buhari, your sins are forgiven”—Adesina Says in Tribute to Abba Kyari

 

“If you love Buhari, your sins are forgiven”—Adesina mourns Kyari

Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to Nigeria’s President, Muhammadu Buhari, Femi Adesina, has said anyone that loves Buhari always has his sins forgiven.

In a tribute to the late Chief of Staff to Buhari, Mallam Abba Kyari, which Adesina posted on his Facebook handle, he said that Kyari had his own weaknesses too and immediately noted: “And for me, if you love Buhari, all your sins are forgiven. If they are like scarlet, they become white as snow. If they are red like crimson, they become white as wool. That is me, no apologies”.

In the tribute titled, My Last Contact with Abba Kyari, Adesina narrated his last moment with the late Chief of Staff including how he dreamt that Kyari appeared to him to say a final goodbye to him and President Buhari.

Mallam Abba, as he was fondly called who died from complications of COVID-19 and has been buried in a cemetery in Abuja, has been widely described as a super public servant.

The following is Adesina’s post:

MY LAST CONTACT WITH ABBA KYARI

He told us he would be back at his desk soon. I believed it. But now, it would never happen. Not tomorrow, not next week, not forever. Chief of Staff to the President, Mallam Abba Kyari, has gone the way of all flesh.
Our last contact was on Friday, March 20, 2020.President Muhammadu Buhari was scheduled to meet with the Chairman of Ecowas Commission, Jean-Claude Kassi Brou, by 3 p.m. Such meetings hold in the diplomatic room of the presidential office complex.
The protocol is that aides invited to attend any meeting must be seated 15 clear minutes before the President walked in. I was in the diplomatic room at the required time. A seat had been designated for me, next to that of the Chief of Staff.
Few minutes later, Mallam Abba (as he was often called by us) walked in. I rose to greet him.
“Femi, how are you? They have said we should not shake hands again,” he responded. Rather jocularly, he extended his right foot. I touched his foot with my own, and we both laughed. Leg-shake, instead of handshake.
At the dot of 3 p.m (he does it like clockwork, the grand old soldier) the President walked in. We all rose to welcome him, as we would normally do.
The Ecowas Commission boss had come to discuss the ensuing constitutional crisis in Guinea Conakry, which was to hold election that weekend. After 10 years in office, and at 82 years of age, President Alpha Conde, had insisted on running for another term in office, and he tinkered with the country’s Constitution to make himself eligible. The opposition was having none of it, and there was civil disobedience, in which some lives had been lost.
President Buhari is the immediate past Chairman of Ecowas Authority of Heads of State and Government, and a highly respected figure in the sub-region. The Ecowas Commission boss had come to consult him on the way forward for Guinea Conakry.
The meeting lasted for about 30 minutes, during which the situation in Guinea-Bissau had also come up briefly.
When we rose, I had my opinion on what to do about the matters discussed. I consulted with Mallam Abba, and he agreed completely with me. I took my leave, headed back to my office.
Walking right behind me was the Chief of Staff, flanked by Director General of the National Intelligence Agency, and my colleague in the media office, Mallam Garba Shehu. They were chatting.
After I passed through the security screening point that would see me turn off to my office, I looked back instinctively. Why did I do it? I didn’t know, still don’t know. But it turned out to be my last view of Kyari. He was laughing as he talked with the two people beside him.
That glance I took turned out to be the very final. About 72 hours later, Mallam Abba was diagnosed with the deadly Coronavirus, which sent him sadly on a journey of no return.
Catching COVID-19 (as the inelegant virus has been elegantly codenamed by World Health Organization) is not supposed to be a death sentence. I had no doubt that Mallam Abba would beat the infection, and be back at his desk soon, as he had promised. I prayed for him a number of times in the following three weeks.
On Tuesday, April 15, the President was billed to receive a delegation from the European Union by noon. As I walked into the Presidential Villa, I met a personal staff of the Chief of Staff.
“How’s Chief?” I asked.
He told me he was doing well. And that was what we believed.
I’m not much of a dreamer. At least, not dreams with significance. Dreams come from a multitude of business, as the Good Book says, so if a man drinks a bowl of garri before going to bed, and he dreams of swimming in a pond or river, he actually started swimming right from inside that bowl of garri.
On Thursday night inward Friday, I dreamt. The President and myself were in a corridor in the Presidential Villa, and he was talking with me. Suddenly, by my right, I saw a figure waiting for me to finish with the President. It was Mallam Abba, clad in his usual white native attire, with the trademark red cap. But this time, there was no flowing Agbada, which I found rather odd. He never (or rarely) appeared without the flowing robe. He was heavily bearded, another surprise, and the beard was all white. I rounded off discussion with the President, and yielded space for the Chief.
I made nothing of the dream, but after he died, I shared my experience with my friend, Mallam Garba Deen Mohammed.
“He came to say goodbye to you, and you didn’t know it,” my friend said. I didn’t know till then that Garba Deen had the uncommon gift of interpretation of dreams. Well, I now know where to go the next time I dream.
On Friday, April 17, I uncharacteristically went to bed after listening to the 8 p.m news. And off I went, for “He giveth his beloved sleep.” No dream, no kakiri kakiri (wandering) in my sleep. Till my phone fetched me from a far distance, out of that deep sleep. It was 12. 05 a.m.
At the other end of the line was a senior aide of the President. He told me he was there with two other very prominent personalities, whom he named. Then he dropped the bomb.
“Mallam Abba is dead, and we need you to issue a statement informing the public.”
I sprang from the bed, with my head almost touching the ceiling. Sleep fled completely from my eyes. Abba Kyari dead? How? When? Where? But he promised us he would soon be back at his desk. This was sad, sad, sad.
I put the statement together. And in the process, I had a feeling of deja vu. I remembered that day in September 2014, as I had typed the press statement announcing the death of Dimgba Igwe, my boss, my friend and brother, who had got knocked down by a hit and run driver, as he jogged on the road in Okota area of Lagos. I had worked under Igwe as a reporter for years, and as editor of The Sun Newspaper, while he was Deputy Managing Director/Deputy-Editor-in-Chief, before retirement.
As I typed the announcement of Kyari’s death, I remembered that day in August 2015, when I’d been directed to announce his appointment as Chief of Staff. Ironically, the lot to announce his death also fell on me. The job of a spokesman!
From the time I issued the statement about 12.30 a.m Friday, my phone never stopped ringing for hours. In this era of fake news, people want to reconfirm everything from source. Despite signing the statement, and putting it in different platforms of traditional and digital media, everybody who had access to me must call. My two phones rang simultaneously and ceaselessly, just as there was no let up on email, Facebook Messenger, Skype, and many other platforms. It was a burden I had to bear. Not a wink of sleep till the very next night.
I was home, planted in front of the television as Kyari was being buried at Gudu Cemetery. It all looked surreal. Yes, the man had a frail health at the best of times. But death? It didn’t sound probable, though nobody actually knows when the Grim Reaper could come calling.
As I watched Mallam Abba being consigned to Mother Earth, my childhood thoughts came roaring back. What if he had only lost consciousness, and he regained it after sand had been heaped on him? What if he felt so much heat, and he could not move or shout? Oh, the lot of mortal man. Doomed to die, whether he liked it or not.
I thought of Mr President. I knew his pain, his torture, but which he would bear stoically, with equanimity. I’d seen him respond to the news of death of his allies, one of the most recent being that of Professor Tam David-West last November. I saw the silent pain, the grief, the total submission to the perfect will of God. That of Mallam Abba was not different, if not more poignant. A friend of about 42 years, and Chief of Staff for about five years. Now gone!
Mallam Abba headed the bureaucracy of the Presidential Villa, and we constantly had things to do together. Almost daily. He had his strengths, and his weaknesses. We all do. But my greatest plus for him was his loyalty to our principal. It was never in doubt. And for me, if you love Buhari, all your sins are forgiven. If they are like scarlet, they become white as snow. If they are red like crimson, they become white as wool. That is me, no apologies.
I have read majority of the things written about Kyari. Positive and negative. I love the balanced one by Works and Housing Minister, Babatunde Raji Fashola: “I bear testimony to his dedicated execution of the Presidential Infrastructure Development Fund (PIDF) initiative, which guaranteed funds to cash-strapped projects like the Second Niger Bridge, the Abuja-Kano Highway, the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, the Mambilla Hydro Project, and the East-West Road…
“Like all of us, Abba was flawed but he was not conceited. We disagreed but I never found Abba disagreeable.”
Infrastructure would be one of the strongest achievements of the Buhari government by the time it exits in 2023. There’s no way those great projects would be counted, without the name of Kyari being mentioned. Or the rice and fertilizer revolution, and agriculture generally. He was the moving force behind most of them, translating the vision of the President into action. The good he did will live after him. The weaknesses have been interred with his bones.
Some people, particularly on social media, have rejoiced about the passage of the Chief of Staff. They are of all men most miserable. Really to be pitied. I recommend to them the poem, The Glories of Our Blood and State, by James Shirley:
“There is no armor against Fate;
Death lays its icy hands on kings;
Sceptre and Crown
Must tumble down,
And in the dust be equal made
With the poor crooked scythe and spade.”
Those gloating are mere mortals. We all have our different appointments with death. May it only be in the fullness of time is our prayer. But nobody has control over it.
I also point those misguided minds to the Good Book, in Psalms 62:9: “Surely men of low degree are vanity, and men of high degree are a lie. In the balances they will go up; they are together lighter than vanity.”
Rejoice not at any man’s death, because all men, whether of low or high degree, are vanity and a lie.
Abba Kyari sleeps, till the great day of awakening, after what Shakespeare calls “life’s fitful fever.” He contracted the deadly virus on an official trip abroad. So, he died in the line of duty. He has done his own. You too, do your own. For God, for country, and for humanity.

.Adesina is Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to President Buhari

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Kim Jong Un is stable after heart surgery—SK Officials dispel ‘grave’ rumours

North Korean leader, Kim Jong Un had a heart surgery few days ago and he has not been seen in the public
North Korean leader, Kim Jong Un had a heart surgery few days ago and he has not been seen in the public

 

Kim Jong Un is Never Seen in Public After Heart Surgery

South Korean sources have dispelled rumours that the leader of the Communist state of North Korea, Kim Jong Un, might be in grave danger after his heart surgery. But Jong Un has not been seen in public since the surgery. However, there has been no comment about Jong Un’s health issue from North Korea which is highly repressive of press freedom.

“We have nothing that could substantiate that [Kim Jong Un] has a health situation,” a senior South Korean foreign ministry official told VOA.   

A South Korean presidential spokesperson earlier said Seoul has detected no unusual activity in North Korea and has “nothing to confirm” regarding the reports about Kim, who was absent from a key public celebration last week.    

VoA quoted the Daily NK, a South Korea-based online publication with a network of contacts in North Korea, on Tuesday reported Kim was in stable condition after a heart operation.  

The report cited unnamed “sources” who speculated the surgery was due to “a number of factors, including [Kim’s] obesity, prolific smoking habits, and ‘overwork.’”    

CNN, the U.S.-based television news network, later quoted unnamed U.S. officials who said they are “monitoring intelligence” that Kim is in “grave danger” after the surgery. The nature of the alleged intelligence was not clear.   

Another unnamed U.S. official quoted by Bloomberg News said, “the White House was told that Kim underwent surgery last week and took a turn for the worse.” That report said Kim was in critical condition.     

Western countries are believed to have very few, if any, intelligence assets in North Korea, one of the most secretive and oppressive countries in the world. North Korea has not commented on the matter.  

Rumors about Kim’s health have spread since the 36-year-old leader was absent from last week’s public celebrations of the Day of the Sun, North Korea’s most important political holiday. The holiday marks the birth anniversary of Kim’s grandfather, the country’s late founding leader, Kim Il Sung.    

Kim Jong Un’s last public appearance was April 11 at a meeting of the Korean Workers’ Party. The next day, Kim skipped a key session of North Korea’s rubber-stamp Parliament.  

“All we know at this point is that he did not show himself at the April 15 ceremony, and there must be a good reason for that,” says the South Korean foreign ministry official. “And we are not sure what that is.”  

Since Kim’s absence from the Day of the Sun festivities, there has been a comically wide range of rumors about his health. He was rumored to have had wrist surgery, ankle surgery, and heart surgery. Some rumors said he was brain dead. 

“None of that has been backed up by any substantive information,” said the South Korean official. 

Others have speculated that Kim’s absence may be related to the coronavirus. North Korea insists it has had no infections, but observers widely dismiss the claim.  

According to the unconfirmed Daily NK report, Kim underwent surgery on April 12 at the Hyangsan Hospital in North Pyongan Province. The facility is “exclusively for the use of the Kim family,” the paper reported.   

“Kim is reportedly under the care of doctors at the Hyang San Villa, which is near the hospital,” the report added.   

But a source close to the South Korean government disputed the report, telling VOA the facility is not likely set up for major operations like heart surgery.   

“They have three major medical facilities in Pyongyang to deal with the leader and upper crust guys. I really doubt he’d have heart surgery there [Hyang San Villa],” said the source, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk publicly about the matter.  

The source also pointed to a Sunday statement from North Korea’s foreign ministry, which denied Kim had recently sent a letter to U.S. President Donald Trump.  

“If something had happened to Kim, the foreign ministry would probably not issue a statement like that, which means up until Sunday, Kim was in control,” the source said.  

A European diplomat based in Seoul also was skeptical.   

“As of right now, I wouldn’t take these rumors too seriously,” the diplomat told VOA. “But of course, who knows. Even though he’s very young, he’s clearly overweight.”     

It isn’t the first time that Kim Jong Un has been absent from major events or state media coverage. In 2014, Kim disappeared from state media for more than a month, before eventually appearing in public using a cane.   

“Kim Jong Un’s poor health and premature death was always a wild card in potential North Korea scenarios,” said Jung Pak, a former North Korea analyst for the CIA. She now works at the Brookings Institution.     

“At 36, Kim is obese and has a family history of heart disease. His reported ill health since summer might explain why his sister has been issuing statements in her own name in recent weeks,” Pak adds.   

Kim took power after the unexpected death of his father, Kim Jong Il, in 2011. Kim, who suffered a massive heart attack, had been dead for days before the rest of the world became aware of his death

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Couple waited ‘on God’ for 43 years before twins came at 68

Couple waited ‘on God’ for 43 years before twins came at 68
Couple waited ‘on God’ for 43 years before twins came at 68

 

Couple waited ‘on God’ for 43 years before twins came at 68

Faith and commitment have no greater virtue than this. The husband of a 68-year-old woman who delivered twins in Nigeria has told the BBC it took 43 years and three unsuccessful IVF procedures before conceiving their babies.

Noah Adenuga said their search for children had taken them to the UK and back to Nigeria and that their faith kept them going through the many years of childlessness.

As we reported on Monday, Margarett Adenuga gave birth to the twins on 14 April.

Ms Adenuga and the babies are doing well and have been discharged from the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital. #LUTH

The 70-year-old father said he had received messages from a group of fertility doctors who have called his decision to go through IVF reckless. He insisted that the decision was private and what not the doctors’ concern.

The attending physician Dr Adeyemi Okunowo called the birth “a miracle” but was also quick to point that the couple took a huge risk going ahead with the pregnancy due to their age.

The hospital management said it wouldn’t have conducted the IVF on the 68-year-old due to her age and had only admitted her because it was a medical responsibility. (BBC)

 

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Abba Kyari is most influential African who has died yet of COVID-19

Late Abba Kyari having a handshake with President Muhammadu Buhari
Late Abba Kyari having a handshake with President Muhammadu Buhari

 

Abba Kyari is most influential African who has died yet of COVID-19

On Friday, April 17th, 2020, one of the most prominent Nigerian and now former Chief of State to President Muhammadu Buhari, Abba Kyari, died in a private hospital in Lagos, South-West region of the West African country following complications from coronavirus infection.

Currently, there have been about 1,000 deaths and almost 19,000 infections across Africa, with Algeria having the highest number of deaths of about 364 so far. Among all victims so far in Africa, Kyari is the most influential victim of the virus so far.

See Where COVID-19 IS SPREADING 

Mallam Abba, as he was fondly called by his associates was so influential in the government of Buhari that he was referred to as the de facto President. At a point, President’s wife, Aisha made remarks, complaining that some very powerful people had hijacked power from her husband. She was referring to Abba Kyari. But Buhari never listened to his wife because he had a very interesting relationship with Kyari.

At the on-set of his second term in office last year, Buhari made it clear that no minister should have access to President Buhari without going through Kayri.

Sources at the corridor of power confirmed that Buhari did only those things that Mallam Abba wanted him to do.

“Buhari depended so much on Kyari. And he trusted him. Mallam Abba reviewed all memos that went to Buhari and, summarises it in few lines and made recommendations to Buhari. The President never veered of from the recommendations of Mallam Abba”, the source said.

Nigerians knew that Mallam Abba was such powerful and they respected him to that extent.

Buhari confirmed this position in his tribute to Mallam Abba on Thursday. Buhari noted that Kyari was a loyal friend for 42 years. The following is Buhari’s tribute:

TO MY FRIEND, MALLAM ABBA KYARI

Mallam Abba Kyari, who died on 17th April, 2020, at the age of 67 from complications caused by the Coronavirus, was a true Nigerian patriot. My loyal friend and compatriot for the last 42 years – and latterly my Chief-of-Staff – he never wavered in his commitment to the betterment of every one of us.

He was only in his twenties when we first met. A diligent student, soon after he was blessed with the opportunity to study abroad – first at Warwick and then law at the University of Cambridge. But there was never any question Abba would bring his first-rate skills and newly acquired world-class knowledge back to Nigeria – which he did – immediately upon graduation.

Whilst possessing the sharpest legal and organisational mind, Abba’s true focus was always the development of infrastructure and the assurance of security for the people of this nation he served so faithfully. For he knew that without both in tandem there can never be the development of the respectful society and vibrant economy that all Nigerian citizens deserve.

In political life, Abba never sought elective office for himself. Rather, he set himself against the view and conduct of two generations of Nigeria’s political establishment – who saw corruption as an entitlement and its practice a byproduct of possessing political office.

Becoming my Chief of Staff in 2015, he strove quietly and without any interest in publicity or personal gain to implement my agenda.

There are those who said of him that he must be secretive – because he did not have a high public profile. But Abba was the opposite: he simply had no need, nor did he seek, the cheap gratification of the crowd; for him, there was nothing to be found in popular adulation. He secured instead satisfaction and his reward solely and only from the improvement of the governance of this great country.

Working, without fail, seven days each and every week, he acted forcefully as a crucial gatekeeper to the presidency, ensuring no one – whether minister or governor had access beyond another – and that all those representing and serving our country were treated equally.

He made clear in his person and his practice, always, that every Nigerian – regardless of faith, family, fortune or frailty – was heard and treated respectfully and the same.

Mallam Abba Kyari was the very best of us. He was made of the stuff that makes Nigeria great. Rest In Peace, my dearest friend.

To his loving wife and doting family who survive him, I extend my heartfelt sorrow at your loss.

Muhammadu Buhari
President, Federal Republic of Nigeria
April 18, 2020

The UN Economic Commission for Africa  has warned 300,000 could die of COVID-19 in Africa. The agency called for a $100bn (£80bn) safety net for the continent, including halting external debt payments.

The WHO says the virus appears to be spreading away from African capitals.

It has also highlighted that the continent lacks ventilators to deal with a pandemic.

More than a third of Africa’s population lacks access to adequate water supplies and nearly 60% of urban dwellers live in overcrowded slums – conditions where the virus could thrive.

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Kenyan Archbishop who told ‘a single lie in his lifetime’ buried today

Archbishop Mwana a'Nzeki, a political activist admitted to telling one lie in his ‘long and colourful life as a cleric who campaigned for justice and peace in Kenya’
Archbishop Mwana a’Nzeki, a political activist admitted to telling one lie in his ‘long and colourful life as a cleric who campaigned for justice and peace in Kenya’

 

Kenyan Archbishop, a’Nzeki who told ‘a single lie in lifetime’ buried

 

Kenyan Archbishop of the Catholic faith, Ndingi Mwana a’Nzeki, has been laid to rest on Tuesday following his death at the age of 89. He would also be remembered for his position against the use of condoms in the society.

Archbishop Mwana a’Nzeki, a political activist admitted to telling one lie in his ‘long and colourful life as a cleric who campaigned for justice and peace in Kenya’

“It was when he helped Nobel Peace laureate Prof Wangari Maathai evade the security forces during a brutal government crackdown on human rights activists in the early 1990s.

Archbishop Mwana a’Nzeki was part of the plan which saw Prof Maathai disguise herself as a sick Muslim Somali woman, before being driven some 200km (125 miles) through several security force checkpoints to his home in Nakuru town in Kenya’s famous Rift Valley region.

Prof Maathai, a prominent human rights and environmental campaigner, wore the Muslim hijab, and stared blankly at security officers after her driver – a priest – was forced to stop at a roadblock.

“Is she sick?” the officers asked. The priest replied in the affirmative, and the officer allowed them to drive on.

Prof Maathai then emerged alongside the archbishop to address a meeting the next day”, said the BBC.

The report said the authorities blocked the meeting from going ahead but the archbishop was undeterred – their political guile and defiance had gained huge publicity, to the embarrassment of then-President Daniel arap Moi’s government.

Bishop Maurice Crowley, who knew the cleric for 40 years, remembers him as a man “who took on the powerful people of the earth, fearlessly and without rancour”.

“He always remained friends with those who he would have regarded as doing wrong in order to correct them, and people listened to him,” Bishop Crowley adds.

To his followers, Archbishop Mwana a’Nzeki will be most remembered for the help he gave them when ethnic violence swept through the Rift Valley in the early 1990s.

Tens of thousands of people were displaced, and he hired lorries to take them to churches where they were given refuge.

Archbishop Mwana a’Nzeki remained outspoken, accusing the-then ruling party, Kanu, of fuelling the violence in an attempt to drive out opposition supporters and retain its grip on power.

“I have information that youths are being trained to cause mayhem and eject anti-Kanu supporters… The government must uphold the constitution by providing security,” he once said at a church service.

His friends warned him that he risked death, but he brushed aside their concerns by saying: “You die only once.”

In an interview in 2000, Archbishop Mwana a’Nzeki said that was the most difficult period in his life.

“I saw innocent people being persecuted… and killed. Houses were burnt while people denounced the comments I made,” he said.

Other than his credentials as a fighter for justice and peace, Archbishop Mwana a’Nzeki also championed African culture and customs within the Catholic Church.

He often wore a distinctive cap that had been given to him by an Ethiopian colleague. Its appearance was unlike the skullcap normally worn by Catholic bishops.

Father Lawrence Njoroge, who worked with him, says the bishop enjoyed “African and classical music, with a special liking for Fadhili William, Fundi Konde, W Amadeus Mozart and Ludwig van Beethoven”.

Archbishop Ndingi was also known for his strong opposition to the use of condoms, despite the World Health Organization (WHO) encouraging the use of contraceptives to tackle the HIV/Aids pandemic.

Aids… has grown so fast because of the availability of condoms,” he told his congregation in 2003, causing an outcry among activists who said they had been prevented from distributing condoms because of the Church’s opposition.

Archbishop Mwana a’Nzeki, born on Christmas Day in 1931, was the lastborn of a family of five children. He was ordained as a priest in 1961, serving the Church until his retirement in 2007.

He died on 30 March of health complications related to old age, and will be buried at the crypt in Nairobi’s Holy Family Minor Basilica.

He celebrated mass at the basilica, but it is now shut because of the coronavirus outbreak.

With the funeral restricted to 100 people, his tens of thousands of followers will have no choice but to follow proceedings on television.

The Kenya Conference of Catholic Bishops (KCCB) has promised them that the archbishop will still receive a “befitting church send-off”.

 

 

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Paralympic medalist, Nwosu, dies of injury sustained at power-lifting

Nigerian Paralympic medalist, Nwosu dies of injury sustained during power-lifting
Nigerian Paralympic medalist, Nwosu dies of injury sustained during power-lifting

Paralympic medalist, Nwosu, dies of injury sustained at power-lifting

Ikechukwu Nwosu, husband of Nigerian Paralympic medalist, Ndidi Nwosu has said the power-lifter has died of injury she sustained from the 2018 Commonwealth games in Australia while power-lifting.

The renowned power-lifter was a star at the 2016 Paralympic Games in Rio De Janeiro.

The death of Nwosu was confirmed by Queen Uboh, the former President of the Nigeria Powerlifting Federation.

According to Ms Uboh, the husband of the late powerlifter Ikechukwu Nwosu, called her to convey the sad news of the demise of the world champion.

She said: “Ndidi sustained an injury from the 2018 Commonwealth Games in Australia. She was a heavyweight powerlifter. I had actually assisted by paying for two of the surgeries she had in Owerri but after the surgery, she was never the same again.

“She had been off and on in the hospital and that was why she couldn’t take part in this last World Cup.

“Even before she died, she appeared to me in the dream. She told me not to leave her family and that I was still her mummy despite not being the Powerlifting President anymore. So when the husband called me to inform me of her passing, I knew already because she had appeared to me in the dream”.

The former official further revealed that after her surgery, she sent some money to Nwosu to start a petty business but she couldn’t manage it with her poor health.

“She called me to say she couldn’t sustain the business because she couldn’t move about anymore and moreover, she was using the money to buy drugs.”

Ms Uboh described the late Nwosu as very humble and easy-going.

“She was a very quiet powerlifter and that’s why many people really didn’t know her. Ndidi became a professional powerlifter in 2008 and won gold in the Rio Paralympic Games in 2016 and also at the 2018 Commonwealth Games It was at the Commonwealth Games that she sustained an injury which affected her spine.”

Meanwhile, the federal government has expressed sadness over the death.

While expressing his deepest condolences and sympathy with the family of the iconic powerlifter, the Youth and Sports Minister, Sunday Dare, recalled and extolled the podium performances of Nwosu, “which etched and ranked the name of her fatherland- Nigeria- amongst the countries parading great para powerlifters on the international scene.”

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Wahab Gbadamosi: Farewell Jolly Good Fellow, By Kelechi Okoronkwo

Wahab Gbadamosi: Farewell Jolly Good Fellow, By Kelechi Okoronkwo
Wahab Gbadamosi: Farewell Jolly Good Fellow, By Kelechi Okoronkwo

Wahab Gbadamosi: Farewell Jolly Good Fellow, By Kelechi Okoronkwo

In the coming days or even months, I would still be living in denial of the passing of Wahab Gbadamosi. It’s been days now after his sudden demise at the National Hospital in Abuja. I saw his body before he was interred. But deep down inside me, I still feel that there is a distortion of reality somewhere.

I find it difficult to pin my experience of Wahab in one narration because he gave me an overload of experiences. I accept the fact that Wahab gave similar experiences to everyone who had an interaction him, but I feel that my relationship with him was extra-ordinary.

When I joined the FIRS from the newsroom a couple of years ago, I was hiding myself. One of my supervisors in the newsroom had advised that I should rather be flying under the radar in my new office than show-off that I was coming from the newsroom. He gave me some insights about civil service. So, I was hiding. Wahab was the Head of Department. One afternoon, he came into the large hall which was Corporate Communications Department and announced that he was looking for Mr. Kelechi Okoronkwo who was a journalist with The Guardian newspaper. My heart sank in the inside of me. More than 110 staff were in the office that afternoon. I felt like disappearing. He called my name the second time and I stood up. He said to me, “You should have come to introduce yourself to me”. He called me into his office and we had a discussion about work and life. That was the beginning of a special relationship I had with Wahab until the day he breathed last.

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Wahab had this hunger to impact the world positively. He built relationships across the walls of faith and ethnicity. This manifested on his last birthday, the 11th of November. His staff members organized a surprise birthday for him. Everyone that knew about the party lurked quietly to show Wahab a surprise love. We all celebrated him almost the first of its kind without knowing that would be his last birthday celebration.  People responded to him with love because, with every minute he had, he used them to impact knowledge to whoever that was around him. He also assisted the needy with resources at his disposal. Even when he left active journalism for Public Relations, Alhaji Wahab saw the tool in his hands, which was journalism skill, as a veritable means of expression. So he wrote and encouraged other people to write.

Wahab Gbadamosi: Farewell Jolly Good Fellow, By Kelechi Okoronkwo
Wahab Gbadamosi: Farewell Jolly Good Fellow, By Kelechi Okoronkwo

He was a Jolly Good Fellow who never forgot relationships. In the course of his career, he made new friends. But he never forgot his old friends especially those from the newsroom. He had a strong bond with journalism profession and anyone identified as a journalist. He once told me that journalism was the noblest profession in the world because journalists had the capacity to turn around the world in the positive direction. He could accept any excuse from anyone but not from a journalist. If you were a journalist, he would tell you that he expected you to know better.

Some of the times he was less busy, he had us discuss some topical issues on the pages of the newspaper. He offered insightful opinions and advice on how to live and how to fix Nigeria. He was never stingy with sharing his knowledge, his life experiences and his ideas. He wanted to make the best out of everyone he came in contact with.

Wahab lived minding the future. He had a philosophy that if you do good, good fortune awaits you in the future. And if you do bad, bad fortune awaits you in the future. So he chose to do good at all times to the best of his ability.

Wahab gave me a part of him which has shaped my life. He was easygoing, simple, hardworking, creative, caring, humble and intelligent. He was a man of ideas.

I know that Wahab was a boss to many people. And numerous people gladly called him their boss. But I like to address him as my personal boss because of a special relationship I had with him.

Today, we say farewell to him. I feel sad because Wahab died in his prime; at the time he is most needed by his family, friends and colleagues. However, since it is the will of God Almighty that he be called to rest at this time, we mortals have to accept it in good faith.

May God forgive him his sins and count all his good deeds on earth as righteousness for him. May God strengthen his family members and loved ones and give his soul everlasting rest. Amen.

Kelechi Okoronkwo is staff of Communications and Liaison Department of the FIRS
Kelechi Okoronkwo is staff of Communications and Liaison Department of the FIRS
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