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NDLEA declares Abba Kyari member of international drug cartel

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Nigeria’s National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) on Monday said the suspended top police officer Abba Kyari is a member of an international drug cartel.

NDLEA also declared Kyari, a deputy commissioner of police and former head of the Intelligence Response Team (IRT), wanted for pushing illicit drugs.

NDLEA explained that “Kyari initiated a call to one of the NDLEA officers in Abuja at 2:12 pm. When the officer returned the call two minutes later, Kyari informed him he was coming to see him, to discuss an operational matter after the Juma’at service.

NDLEA said it has invited Kyari for questioning since concluding its investigation but the suspended police chief is yet to respond.

ASUU begins four-week warning strike nationwide

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The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has commenced a four-week nationwide strike.

ASUU announced the strike on Monday after a long meeting that started on Sunday evening at the University of Lagos (UNILAG).

Federal University of Technology Akure (FUTA), for instance, is billed to commence first semester examinations by the end of this month.

Also, UNILAG students were preparing to start their examinations after hosting the National University Games Association (NUGA) in March.

The latest strike action is a continuation of a nine-month strike that grounded academic activities 2020 for the same reasons.

The lecturers threatened to embark on another round of industrial action following the alleged “government’s unfaithfulness” in the implementation of the Memorandum of Action it signed.

It’s Official, ASUU Declares Nationwide Strike Immediately

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The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) on Monday declared a nationwide strike and ordered all its members to vacate the classrooms immediately.

The union at a news conference said the strike was to compel the federal government to meet its demands.

ASUU’s President, Prof. Emmanuel Osodeke, said the industrial action would last for an initial period of four weeks.

He said the union do not want students to be at home and would not want the academic calendar disrupted, but lamented that the demands of the union was not yet met by the government.

According to Osodeke, the government should call the Vice-Chancellor of Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Prof. Eyitope Ogunbodede, to order over the unpaid Earned Academic Allowances of its members in the university.

He said ASUU had an agreed template with the federal government, but that Ogunbodede refused to pay, stressing that failure to pay using that template is a misappropriation.

 FG sets up committee to curb strike, brain drain in health sector

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The Federal Government has set up a committee on health sector reform to look at issues in the sector such as strikes and brain drain, the Chief Medical Director of Federal Medical Centre in Abuja, Prof. Saad Ahmed, has said.

Ahmed described brain drain in the sector as a threat to the provision of healthcare services to the public.

According to him, the committee is already calling for memoranda from the public to help in its assignment.

Ahmed spoke in an interview with journalists in Abuja on Friday.

Read Also: Guild warns Nigerians against patronising unregistered physicians

He said the FMC, Abuja had lost many staff members to brain drain in the last one year, adding that the development is affecting the hospital’s services.

He said, “The issue of brain drain is of serious concerns, which as Committee of CMDs, we were able to raise. I can tell you that the government has already set up a committee at the moment on health sector reform to look at the sector, to see areas where it needs to reform in order to stop restiveness and also the brain drain that we currently have.

“At the moment, that committee is calling for memoranda from members of the public and other stakeholders in order to help it in its assignment.

“Brain drain is one of the serious challenges that Federal Medical Centre, Abuja, is facing because I know the number of doctors, nurses and pharmacists that left this place within the last one year. They are quite a number.

“I think it is part of the things the reform committee is going to look at because we, leaders of the health sector, should be given some leverages to replace those that are leaving in order not to break services.”

Speaking also on medical tourism, Ahmed said the hospital has modern equipment at the moment to treat health issues that have been forcing Nigerians to seek help abroad.”

Ahmed said the attitudes of some health care workers were contributing to low patronage in most hospitals.

NHIS: Corps Members To Enjoy Health Insurance Cover

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The National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) unveiled the enrolment of corps members into the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS), under the NYSC Group Individual Family Social Health Insurance Programme on Friday.

The organization said, the health initiative had been designed as a holistic health insurance scheme, covering the periods of pre-orientation.

The NYSC said six Health Maintenance Organisations had been selected from each of the six geopolitical zones to drive the process and ensure effective implementation of the NHIS.

The NYSC urged corps members to register under Health Care Practitioners in their localities.

The Director-General of the NYSC, Major General Shuaibu Ibrahim, during the event, said “the health scheme was the culmination of the presidential directive issued in 2016, which arose as a result of the unfortunate deaths of three corps members deployed to Kano, Zamfara, and Bayelsa States orientation camps.”

He said the loss of any corps member provoked sadness in the NYSC, saying it leaves the scheme “highly diminished.”

Zimbabwe Suspend Teachers Who Are Striking Over Poor Pay

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Zimbabwe’s education ministry has suspended staff who did not turn up for the start of the school term, February 7.

A large number of government-employed teachers are on strike over poor wages.

The ministry said, the absent teachers were suspended for three months without pay with immediate effect while investigations into misconduct took place.

The academic year started on Monday after a month-long break because of Covid lockdown restrictions.

The average teacher earns just under $200 (£150) a month using the official exchange rate, and less than $100 at the black-market exchange rate used widely for goods and services.

The unions are calling for a minimum wage of $540.

Meanwhile on Tuesday, the government announced a 20% wage rise for all civil servants, including a payment in foreign currency of $100 a month.

Gov Obaseki Seeks To Review, Improve Adult Education In Edo

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Governor Godwin Obaseki of Edo State has said that his government is reviewing strategies to improve adult education with the introduction of evening and weekend classes in primary schools across the state.

He stated this weekend while addressing members of the newly-elected officials of the state chapter of the Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT), who were on a courtesy visit at the Government House, Benin City.

“I want us to work together to align our educational policies. There is a whole generation who are not privileged as some of those you are teaching now to receive the kind of quality education you are impacting on the children under your care. What do we do about adult education?

“Is it possible to bring them back to evening or weekend classes so that we can train them? Considering the role of adult education, should we just leave them like that?” he queried.

The Governor gave assurances of his administration’s commitment to the welfare of teachers in the state, as well as strengthening security in schools across the state.

“It is only a good parent and teacher that will be concerned about the security of students in schools.

“Those are the issues that are bothering us now. So, we are going to try to do as much as we can under our school improvement programmes to fence as many of our schools and those ones that we can’t fence, we will not only use the constabularies, we will now include the vigilantes to help secure the schools.”

The State Chairman of NUT, Bernard Ajobiewe, commended the Governor for the prompt payment of salaries to all the workers in the state’s civil and public service.

He called for increased partnership between the government and teachers to guarantee the provision of quality education to students in the state.

GCE/WASSCE Result Set To Be Release

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The West African Examinations Council (WAEC) has announced that the results for 2021 General Certificate Examination (GCE) will be released today.

This is contained in a tweet posted via the WAEC official account on Sunday night.

It read “@waecnigeria is set to announce the release of results of WASSCE for Private Candidates, 2021- Second Series tomorrow, Monday, February 14, 2022. Stay tuned for more details!”

Usually written in November/Dember, the GCE/WASSCE is a private examination that doesn’t require uniforms, but biometric registration is compulsory.

The examination is usually taken by secondary school leavers who want to correct deficiencies in their results.

JUST IN: ASUU Opts For 1-month Warning Strike

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A member of the National Executive Council (NEC) meeting of the Academic Staff Union who attended the just-concluded meeting of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) told News correspondence that the union resolved to embark on a one-month “comprehensive and total” strike.

According to the source, the union took the decision despite interventions by many prominent Nigerians.

He said the decision was to save Nigeria’s university system considering what he described as the deteriorating state of Nigerian universities.

He said the government’s recalcitrance made the position unavoidable.

 “The indefinite and total strike is for four weeks. We hope the government would do the needful within the next four weeks,” the source stated on Monday morning.

However, ASUU is yet to issue an official statement concerning the strike.

More details later.

NNPC Assures Petrol Supply to Stations Will Normalize in Coming Days

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The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC Limited) has assured consumers that ongoing petrol shortages would end in the coming days, as new vessels berth and trucking of product intensifies.

The corporation also said all contaminated petrol has been recalled and are being replaced.

The Group General Manager, Group Public Affairs Division, Garba Deen Muhammad in an update chat with news correspondent noted that the situation was a national emergency and called for the cooperation of all stakeholders and understanding of all Nigerians.

He said: “While it is difficult to give a definite date (when the situation will normalize) but within the next few days because more vessels with clean fuel are coming through but the distribution logistics take some time, so very soon it will return to normal.

“The more PMS that comes in, the shorter the time frame but the distribution logistics also have its time frame. You can see that more filling stations are dispensing only that there are queues but the more filling stations that are receiving new supplies the less the concentration of the queues.

“I am expecting that within the next week we will be seeing the receding of these queues”, he added.

The NNPC spokesman explained that the situation was unforeseen and took quick response of the Corporation to ensure that it did not escalate.

He said: “Four vessels (with the off-spec petrol) came in but only one discharged and even that one not all entered the supply chain. If all the four had entered the supply chain it would have been worst”.

He pointed out that the NNPC management has nothing to hide and has been transparent in its management of the issue, saying “this is no time for partisanship, it is time for patriotism”.