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Monday, August 18, 2014

Ebola: Two Lagos doctors, nurse, woman discharged


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Four more people who had been undergoing treatment for the Ebola Virus Disease were on Monday discharged from the Lagos treatment centre after being certified free.
The Minister of Health, Prof. Onyebuchi Chukwu, made this known in a statement that was issued on Monday after   Natural Solutions Foundation, the manufacturers of Nano Silver,claimed that the drug was the only one capable of curing the deadly   virus.
Chukwu said in the statement by   his Special Assistant on Media and Communication, Mr. Dan Nwomeh, that the four discharged persons   comprised two male medical doctors, a female nurse and a female patient.
He explained that the three medical personnel participated in the treatment of the Liberian-American, Patrick Sawyer, who was the first person to die of the disease in Nigeria.

Dora Akunyili for burial August 28


The formal burial rites for the former Minister of Information and Communications, Prof. Dora Akunyili, will start on Monday, August 25 with a night of tributes in Abuja at the International Conference Centre.

According to the programme of events released to the press by her husband, Dr. Chike Akunyili, there will be a mass on Tuesday, August 26, at Our Lady Queen of Nigeria Cathedral, Garki.

The burial train will move on Wednesday, August 26, to Enugu where she spent a good part of her life for a burial mass at the Holy Ghost Cathedral.

Monday, August 11, 2014

US ‘to send’ untested Ebola drug to Liberia


Liberia has said it will receive doses of an experimental Ebola drug to treat infected doctors in the West African country.
A statement, published on the Liberian presidency’s website on Monday, said the United States had approved a request from Liberia’s President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf to ship the medicine, ZMapp, after a direct appeal to US President Barack Obama on Friday.
However, a spokesperson for the US Health and Human Services (HHS) Department said US authorities had simply assisted in connecting the Liberian government with the drug’s manufacturer.
“Since the drug was shipped for use outside the US, appropriate export procedures had to be followed,” the HHS spokesperson said, adding the drug company had worked directly with the Liberian government.
The Liberian statement said the head of the WHO, Margaret Chan, had authorised the dispatch of additional doses of the experimental drug to Liberia to support the treatment of affected doctors. Those doses will be delivered by a WHO expert this week.

2015 won’t break up Nigeria – Jonathan

 

President Goodluck Jonathan
President Goodluck Jonathan on Monday said contrary to the predictions of those he described as doomsday prophets, the 2015 general elections would not break up the country.
The President the elections next year would rather strengthen the country and make it stands stronger.
Jonathan gave the assurance while declaring open a conference organised by the Interfaith Initiative For Peace, in Abuja.
The conference with the theme, “The imperative of interfaith understanding and cooperation for responsible politics” was co-initiated by the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Sa’ad Abubakar III; and the Catholic Archbishop of Abuja, Cardinal John Onaiyekan.
The President said he was aware of some prophesies indicating that Nigeria would catch fire as a result of the aftermath of the 2015 general elections.
He said the predictions would not come to pass because his administration would continue to conduct transparent, free and fair elections.

Court adjourns alleged fraud suit against Adenuga

Court adjourns alleged fraud suit against Adenuga

ASUU wants socialist state, genuine workers’ party


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Officials of the Academic Staff Union of Universities are advocating for a socialist state in Nigeria, noting that only ‘a socialist welfare state’ could solve the country’s social and economic problems.
At a press conference on Monday after its National Executive Council meeting in Calabar, Cross River State, the union also said it would push for the formation of a genuine people’s workers party that will meet the challenges of forging the building of a free Nigeria.
The National President of ASUU, Dr. Nasir Isa, who read the position of the union, argued that the socialist welfare state will creatively reconstruct Nigeria’s economic and political institutions to serve the welfare needs of the populace.
The meeting was attended by the national officers of the union, past presidents of ASUU, including, Prof. Assisi Asobie; Dr. Oladipo Fashina; Dr. Sule-Kano Abdullahi, and Chairman of ASUU, University of Calabar branch, Dr. Charles Okpiliya, among others.

Ebola: Jonathan summons govs as another nurse tests positive

President Goodluck Jonathan
President Goodluck Jonathan has summoned all the 36 state governors and their health commissioners   to an urgent meeting on the outbreak of the Ebola Virus disease in the country.
Jonathan, who made this known during a conference organised by the Interfaith Initiative For Peace in Abuja on Monday, said it was “unfortunate that one mad man” brought the virus to Nigeria.
Before he spoke, the Minister of Health, Onyebuchi Chukwu, had disclosed at a news   conference that Nigeria had recorded another   Ebola case, the 10th so far.
The case involves   a nurse, who is one of the health workers that managed Patrick Sawyer, the Liberian-American in a Lagos hospital that brought the deadly virus to Nigeria on July 20. He died on July 25 and is the first known Ebola index case in the country.
The matron of the Lagos hospital   died last week at the Infectious Diseases Hospital, Yaba, Lagos where the   seven other   known Ebola cases are being managed by experts.
The meeting between Jonathan, governors and health commissioners   will hold at the Presidential Villa, Abuja on Wednesday.