Tag: World

  • UN envoy urges support for Great Lakes amid rising hostilities

    A UN special envoy, Huang Xia, has appealed to the international community to increase support in resolving the escalating hostilities in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and the mounting tensions in the wider Great Lakes Region of Africa.

    Mr Xia, the UN Special Envoy for Africa’s Great Lakes Region, made the appeal on Tuesday while briefing the Security Council at the UN headquarters in New York.

    The envoy expressed deep concern over the worsening security situation and the potential for a direct conflict between the DRC and Rwanda, who have accused each other of supporting armed groups within each other’s territory.

    Mr Xia highlighted the resurgence of large-scale hostilities in the restive eastern DRC alongside the worsening relationship between the DRC and Rwanda.

    “The military build-up of the two countries, the absence of direct, high-level dialogue, and the persistence of hate speech are all worrying signs that we cannot ignore,” he said.

    The humanitarian situation in eastern DRC is equally dire, with a growing number of displaced people sounding the alarm. The UN envoy urged the international community to provide more substantial humanitarian assistance and facilitate the return of displaced people to their homes, underlining the importance of education for children as essential to the region’s future.

    Mr Xia has undertaken efforts to promote peace in the region by visiting several countries, including Angola, Burundi, DRC, Rwanda, and Uganda, aiming to build trust and mobilise partners for a peaceful solution to the region’s challenges.

    He stressed the importance of revitalising the 2013 Addis Ababa Framework Agreement, laying the groundwork for the region’s peace and security.

    Mr Xia called on all armed groups to lay down their weapons and urged Congolese armed groups to participate in a disarmament and demobilisation programme adopted by the DRC in 2022.

    The UN has a comprehensive Strategy for the region, consisting of flagship initiatives designed to address the root causes of instability. However, the envoy pointed out that it lacks the necessary funding. He urged all partners to fill this financing gap, emphasising the strategy’s proven effectiveness.

    Mr Xia also highlighted the importance of implementing a regional strategy on artisanal gold, which includes a traceability mechanism. He explained the strong connection between the illicit exploitation and trade of gold and the financing of the many armed groups operating in eastern DRC, calling for the trade to be shut down.

    (NAN)

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  • Jada Pinkett Smith says she was ‘shocked’ Will Smith called her his ‘wife’ during the Oscars slap

    “Keep my wife’s name out your f— mouth,” were the eight words Will Smith screamed after slapping Chris Rock at the 2022 Academy Awards.

    Jada Pinkett Smith was not expecting to hear those words that night — especially “wife.”

    The “Set It Off” star recently shared that last year’s heated exchange between Smith and Rock surprised her in more ways than one during an interview with the “Today” show’s Hoda Kotb. “First of all, I’m really shocked … we haven’t called each other ‘husband’ and ‘wife’ in a long time. What is going on right now?” Pinkett Smith recalled the moment to Kotb.

    Earlier this week, while promoting her upcoming memoir “Worthy,” Pinkett Smith revealed that she and Smith have been living separate lives since 2016. The former couple, who have gone through the official divorce process, share kids Jaden, 25, and Willow, 22.

    Speaking to Kotb for an NBC News special set to air Friday at 8 p.m. Pacific time, Pinkett Smith revisited the infamous Oscars moment. She claimed that after the slap, comedian and Oscars host Rock apologized for his comment about her shaved head. Pinkett Smith lives with alopecia, which causes temporary or permanent hair loss.

    “I’m just out of it ’cause I really worried about Will,” Pinkett Smith said. “Will’s still talking … now he’s mad because Chris is talking to me. And I go, ‘Chris, this is about some old s—.’”

    On “Today,” Kotb explained that Smith invited his ex-wife to the Oscars because he thought it would be his “crowning moment.” Smith was a frontrunner for the actor in a leading role category for his work in “King Richard.” Smith ultimately won the award — but the Academy later decided to ban the actor from attending any Academy events or programs for 10 years.

    In the years following their separation in 2016, Pinkett Smith, 52, and the “Bad Boys” actor, 55, faced rocky moments — including her “entanglement” with 31-year-old musician August Alsina. The former couple also kept up appearances at public events, including red carpets and awards shows.

    The “Red Table Talk” host said, in another interview teaser shared Wednesday, that they did not want to go public with their separation as they were unsure how to present themselves to people.

    When asked about why their marriage came to an end, Pinkett Smith told Kotb that after nearly 20 years of marriage, “We were just exhausted with trying.

    “I think we were both just kinda stuck in our fantasy of what we thought the other person should be.”

    “Worthy” hits shelves Oct. 17.

    ___

    © 2023 Los Angeles Times

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • FACT CHECK: Claims About Overpricing Of Aba- PH Road Project By Otti’s Govt False, Misleading

    In an opinion piece by one Comrade Phils, he had claimed that the Port-Harcourt-Aba contract recently awarded by the government of Dr Alex Otti to the construction giant Julius Berger was overpriced.

    Specifically, he claimed that when compared with the cost of Port- Harcourt Ring Road project awarded to the same company by the Rivers State Government last July, the contract awarded by Otti was inflated.

    THE CLAIMS

    According to Phils, the Governor of Rivers State, Sim Fubara awarded the Port Harcourt Ring Road to Julius Berger, which will have six flyovers, one river-crossing bridge, and 19 rotary intersections and roundabouts spanning over 51.15KM, for N195bn.

    He further claimed that with all the bridges, many still lambasted the figures of this project.

    In his analysis, he claimed that Abia State has a better terrain for road construction than Rivers state. He further pushed his argument by stating that the 6.7km road awarded by governor Otti to Julius Berger in Aba for N30bn should have cost the government less than the N30bn contract cost.

    “I canvassed and voted for LP in all strata and even celebrated the flag off of that project by Otti after 20 years of abandonment by previous governments. While I still celebrate him for the courage to take on that project, we will not overlook symptoms of recklessness by any government in the name of we ‘supported you during elections.’

    “Again, that project is overpriced unless proven otherwise with facts and details of the add-ons that would make it worth that huge sum, ” he had stated in his claims

    THE FACTS

    Let’s delve into the issue and provide the facts of the matter.

    First, THE WHISTLER understands that the Port Harcourt Ring Road alluded to by Phils is a double lane dual carriageway of 50.15 km long.
    This length, includes the total length of all the bridges, and it was awarded at a cost of N195.3bn.

    This, according to THE WHISTLER analysis gives a contract cost of N3.89bn per km.

    However, on the other hand, the Port-Harcourt- Aba road is 6.8 km long. Findings by THE WHISTLER showed it comprises of a triple lane dual carriageway of 5.7 km, and a double lane dual carriageway of 1.1km.

    This gives an equivalent length of double lane dual carriageway of: (5.7 x 1.5) +1. = 9.6km.

    It must be noted that the road was awarded at a cost of N30bn, which, according to THE WHISTLER analysis showed that cost per km based on a double lane dual carriageway of Port-Harcourt Ring Road is N3.11bn.

    It is also important to note that in July, 2023 when the Port-Harcourt Ring Road was awarded, the Naira was exchanging at N750 per dollar. But in October 2023 when Port-Harcourt Road to Aba was awarded, the exchange rate was at over N1,000 to the dollar.

    THE WHISTLER findings further revealed that in the contract awarded by the government of Otti to Julius Berger, the Port-Harcourt Road-Aba, is to be lined all through its length on both sides with huge concrete drains, including over 300 meters of drainage outfall that will safely discharge the storm water collected from the road.

    When all these are put into consideration, the amount of savings made in the procurement of Port-Harcourt road to Aba by the Otti’s administration is huge.

    In conclusion, this reduction in the contract cost would not have been possible without the goodwill which Otti, enjoys with Julius Berger. This was what paved the way for a substantial reduction in rates.

    VERDICT:

    The claims made by Phils about overpricing of Aba- PH Road Project by Otti Government is false and misleading. Based on the above analysis, it is very obvious that the the governor got the best deal from Julius Berger.

    In conclusion, the reduction in the contract cost would not have been possible without the goodwill Otti, enjoys with Julius Berger, which paved way for a substantial reduction in rates.

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  • UN Security Council rejects Russian resolution condemning Israel but not comdemning Hamas

    US-Hamas war: UN Security Council rejects Russian resolution condemning Israel but not comdemning Hamas

    The UN Security Council has rejected a Russian resolution denouncing the escalating bloodshed in the Middle East because it did not specifically blame Hamas for its surprise attack on Israel that claimed at least 1,400 lives.

    The UN Security council had a meeting as Israel prepares for an anticipated ground invasion of the Gaza Strip following air and artillery assaults that, according to officials, have killed at least 2,750 people.

    The UN move also came as the White House said President Joe Biden would visit Israel on Wednesday, in a visit that is designed to show support for a key ally and also call for restraint in its operations in Gaza.

    Russia’s UN ambassador, Vassily Nebenzia, said despite the failure of the council to adopt Russia’s resolution, the resolution had spurred the council to action.

    “It has contributed to launching a substantive discussion in the Security Council on this topic. Without our encouragement, everything would probably have been limited to empty discussions,” he said.

    The United Kingdom, which joined the US in voting down the Russian proposal, criticized Moscow’s lack of consultation, and accused Russia of not making a serious attempt to find consensus.

    “We cannot support a resolution which fails to condemn Hamas’ terror attacks,” Barbara Woodward told the council.

    Israel has cut off supplies of water and power to the isolated Gaza strip, and warned more than a million people to leave the north of the densely populated enclave.

    The UN agency supporting Palestinian refugees has warned that the Gaza Strip faces an “unprecedented human catastrophe” if water and other vital supplies are not restored.

     

    Israel’s representative, Gilad Erdan said the Security Council, which has not adopted a resolution on the situation in Israel and the Palestinian territories since 2016, stood at “one of its most pivotal crossroads” since its founding in the aftermath of World War II.

    “Will the council support the fight for civilization? or will it incentivize the genocide of Jihadists who aim to murder all the infidels?” he said.

     

    “For a body dedicated to security, this shouldn’t even be a question. The first step this council must take before any calls for aid, calm or restraint is to designate Hamas as the murderous terror organization that it is.”

    Palestinian ambassador Riyad Mansour said the council had a moral duty to act in a bid to restrain an Israeli assault on the Gaza Strip he said was claiming 12 lives every hour.

    “Don’t send the signal that the Palestinian lives don’t matter. Don’t dare say Israel is not responsible for the bombs it is dropping over their heads. What is happening in Gaza is not a military operation. It is a full-scale assault against our people. It is massacres against innocent civilians.” he said

     

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  • Nigerian Foreign Missions Officials Say They Are In Debts, Face Eviction As Tinubu Government Fails To Release Funds For Four Months

    The mission and embassies officers are worried that they are going to be stranded and worse still face eviction embarrassment as Service Providers are threatening court actions against them.

     

    There is disquiet at some Nigerian foreign Missions and embassies after the President Bola Tinubu-led government failed to release their capital and overhead votes to offset labilities and conduct diplomatic businesses barely two weeks to their departure.

    The mission and embassies officers are worried that they are going to be stranded and worse still face eviction embarrassment as Service Providers are threatening court actions against them from their house and chancery of those on rented houses.

    The officials lament the failure to meet their payment obligations and their inability to handle some logistics challenges arising from the non-remittance of their overhead costs for four months by the Federal Ministry Of Foreign Affairs.

    Sources close to one of the Foreign Missions told SaharaReporters that some Nigerian ambassadors have been running the affairs of the Nigerian Missions since June 2023 till date under what he described as Out of Pocket Expenditures and on credit bases.

    The source noted that for four months, no tranche of the overhead cost due to Foreign Missions has been released to them till date and according to him “this has caused difficulties that some of the ambassadors may not be able to handle some logistics problems including some indebtedness to service providers consequently risking court action by the creditors” and backlogs of officers entitlements.

    But a public affairs analyst, Prof. Olawale Olubanjo blamed the current travails of the Nigerian ambassadors on corruption.

    Olubanjo reasoned, “How can overhead cost which is provided in the budget not be released to those it is meant for four months counting? lt is possible the cabals in the Foreign Affairs Ministry are waiting for the Ambassadors to exit office before they would do the cleanup “but how can they exit when four months’ indebtedness been cleared?”

    Recall that the President Tinubu had recently recalled the Nigerian Ambassadors serving in Nigeria Foreign Missions which deadline set for October 30, 2023.

    According to the source, many embassies officials risk being thrown out from their residences by their landlords if nothing is urgently done and recalled principal representatives of Mr President will face untold hardship settling at home without collecting the monies owed them by mission and embassies.

    Efforts by SaharaReporters to get a response from the Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs proved abortive as of the time of filing this report.

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  • England secure Euro 2024 qualification with Italy win

    The Three Lions of England have secured qualification for the 2024 European Championships billed to be hosted by Germany.

    England, who finished second in the last edition of the tournament after losing to Italy in the final, qualified for next year’s competition after beating Italy 3-1.

    England only needed a point to secure their place but it was Italy who first scored at Wembley as Gianluca Scamacca scored from close range after 15 minutes.

    Read Also: France, Portugal, Belgium qualify for Euro 2024

    The Gareth Southgate side then came from behind to take all three points, starting with a 32nd-minute penalty converted by Harry Kane.

    Kane scored his 60th goal for his country after Jude Bellingham ran through and was fouled by Giovanni di Lorenzo.

    Bellingham then set up Marcus Rashford to cut inside and beat Italy keeper Gianluigi Donnarumma in the 57th minute before Kane scored the third late on for England.

    With the defeat, Italy are third in the group and will play Ukraine in their final qualifier in what will be a decisive match to determine who finishes second.

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  • Israel says Hamas misfired rocket killed over 500 civilians in Gaza hospital

    The Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) said the explosion in Baptist Hospital, Al-Ahli, in northern Gaza was a result of a failed rocket launch towards Israel from Gaza. 

    In a post made on X on Tuesday, the IDF wrote that its analysis concluded that the Islamic Jihad terrorist organisation is responsible for the failed rocket launch that hit the hospital. 

    “Following an analysis by the IDF’s operational systems, a barrage of rockets was launched toward Israel, which passed in the vicinity of the hospital, when it was hit.

    “According to intelligence information from a number of sources we have, Islamic Jihad terrorist organisation is responsible for the failed rocket launch that hit the hospital,” the post read. 

    Israel’s military position, which was echoed in a statement by Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, came shortly after the Hamas terrorist group that runs Gaza said it was Israel that bombed the hospital. Neither side of the unfolding incursion in Gaza has offered conclusive evidence about what transpired, with different videos circulating online that appeared to favour the argument of both sides.

    The Palestinian ministry of health confirmed within the first moments of the explosion that more than 500 civilians including already injured patients, hospital staff and Gaza residents who are taking shields in the hospital were critically injured. Middle East tabloid, Al Arabiya, has updated that over 500 people have died from the explosion and 800 are critically injured, bringing the number of casualties to well over a thousand. 

    The hospital was one of 20 hospitals in the area facing evacuation orders from the Israeli state, orders that the World Health Organisation (WHO) has condemned as impossible. 

    The United Nations human rights office also said on Tuesday that Israel’s “siege” of Gaza and its evacuation orders could amount to an international crime of forcible transfer of civilians. 

    Israel has insisted it was doing its best to avoid civilian casualties, and issued a warning over the weekend for residents to leave northern Gaza, where bombardments were being planned by Israeli operatives.

    While the international community is paying attention to the escalating violence against the civilian population in Gaza, countries that are closely monitoring the conflict have condemned the explosion which they described as Israel’s continued aggression against humanity. 

    “I condemn in the strongest of terms Israel’s bombardment,” Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi said in a statement. He described the explosion as a “clear violation of international law.”

    Abu Dhabi said in a statement also that the United Arab Emirates (UAE) “strongly condemns the Israeli attack that targeted Al Ahli Baptist Hospital in the Gaza Strip resulting in the death and injury of hundreds of people.”

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  • Piper Laurie, Oscar-nominated actor who starred in ‘Carrie’ and ‘The Hustler,’ is dead at 91

    Piper Laurie, the Oscar- and Emmy-nominated actor who earned distinction in films such as “Carrie” and “Children of a Lesser God” and cult status in the quirky mystery drama series “Twin Peaks,” has died.

    Laurie’s career spanned six decades, taking her from perky starlet roles during Hollywood’s golden era to a three-time Academy Award nominee who — despite the honors and accolades — repeatedly criticized what she saw as Hollywood’s superficiality.

    Still acting until late in life, Laurie died Saturday morning in Los Angeles, her manager, Marion Rosenberg, confirmed. She was 91. An exact cause of death was not given.

    “Ms. Laurie was one of the great talents of her generation, a true polymath and a very special human being,” Rosenberg said.

    Born Rosetta Jacobs in Detroit on Jan. 22, 1932, she was painfully shy as a child but nevertheless knew she wanted to act. At 15, she lied her way into an acting class in Hollywood, then landed her first role at age 17 when someone from Universal spotted her. Thus began her early career as a token bombshell in one low-end picture after another.

    In her first big role, 1950’s “Louisa,” she played the daughter of Ronald Reagan, whom — in real life —she later dated. (He was more than 20 years her senior.) Her character, Cathy Norton, was “ a caricature of a teenager,” she said.

    Similar unremarkable roles kept coming her way — “Francis Goes to the Races,” “Son of Ali Baba” with Tony Curtis and “Ain’t Misbehavin’” with Rory Calhoun, among them. But she grew dissatisfied with the factory films the studio was churning out. As glamorous as the studio PR bosses tried to make her seem — posing her in swimsuits for publicity photos, telling the media her flawless skin was a result of eating flower petals and bathing in milk — she balked at being cast as a sex symbol.

    “At the time I felt demeaned,” she said in a 1991 interview with United Press International. “But I was young, naive and frightened. I knew someday I would be a serious actress, but I didn’t know how. I was too shy to assert myself.”

    She told the New York Times that she was told by the studio never to go outside without makeup, out of fear she wouldn’t look like a movie star. She also said the studio had simply given her a new name without consulting her.

    At 23 she rebelled, breaking off her engagement to a man she said she realized she didn’t really want to marry and asking the studio to let her out of her contract.

    “I was rebelling against everything I knew,” she told the L.A. Times in 2010. “My agent sent me a script, and it was a Western and the part was stupid and I said, ‘I can’t do it.’ I walked to the fireplace and dropped it in. I called my agent at home and said, ‘They can’t jail me. I don’t care what they do. I am not going to do this.’”

    A week later, Universal let her out of her contract.

    It proved more difficult to free herself from her sex-symbol status and the critics who berated her for turning her back on Hollywood. So she turned to theater and live television at a time when variety shows were coming into their own.

    She set out for New York and got her break with a small part on “Robert Montgomery Presents” in 1955. She went on to appear in “The Glass Menagerie” on Broadway, the original “Days of Wine and Roses” with Cliff Robertson on “Playhouse 90” and “General Electric Theater.”

    In 1961, she was cast as Paul Newman’s fragile girlfriend in “The Hustler,” which resulted in Oscar nominations for both. Though the film was heralded, Laurie said she found herself quickly typecast again.

    “I got offers to play more girls like I played in ‘The Hustler,’ crippled and emotionally crippled girls,” she told the New York Times. “I started to turn things down, and after a while I realized nobody was offering me anything.”

    So she turned her back on Hollywood again.

    She married journalist Joe Morgenstern, moved to upstate New York and became a full-time homemaker and mother. She became politically active, campaigning for George McGovern’s presidency among other causes, and pursued her passion for sculpting, a hobby she continued until late in life.

    “I became a mother. I sculpted. I baked a lot of bread. The Vietnam War started, and I just lost my interest in acting. I didn’t have my heart in it,” she told the L.A. Times. “It seemed so irrelevant.”

    When director Brian De Palma called her about taking the role of the neurotic mother in his film “Carrie,” Laurie agreed to end her 15-year hiatus.

    “I didn’t feel the life-or-death pressure I had put on myself,” she told the L.A. Times. “That’s not bad for a young actress to have, but being a mother and having some perspective about the world changes you and your values.”

    Laurie earned an Oscar nomination for her performance in “Carrie” and then another for 1986’s “Children of a Lesser God.”

    In 1981 she was cast as Magda Goebbels, the wife of Nazi Germany’s propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels, in “The Bunker,” a made-for-television war movie that starred Anthony Hopkins as Hitler. She said, being a woman of Jewish descent, the role was difficult.

    “I had a knot in my stomach the whole time I was reading [the script],” she told Pop Matter in 2012. “I had, even as a child, a violent response to Hitler as, I suppose you can call him a ‘human being,’ though I really don’t think he deserved that title. He was alive at one point, he was a person, but I just had nightmares about him when I was a little girl. It was kind of treacherous getting into this material and trying to empathize with such people.”

    In 1986, she won an Emmy for supporting actress for her role in the miniseries “Promise” opposite James Garner and James Woods.

    Her performance as Catherine Martell, the impervious lumber mill owner in director David Lynch’s “Twin Peaks,” also earned her a Golden Globe Award in 1991 and two Emmy nominations. When Martell disappeared from the series’ storyline, Laurie’s cast mates assumed the actress had been dropped from the series. But she later reemerged in the edgy show, unrecognizably, as the mustachioed Japanese businessman Fumio Yamaguchi.

    “It was horrible. I couldn’t tell my friends or family what I was doing. David insisted it be kept a tight secret,” she told United Press International. “When Yamaguchi’s identity was finally revealed, everybody on the show, except for the six or seven in on the plot, was totally astounded.”

    She was nominated for eight Emmys in all for her work on “Twin Peaks,” “St. Elsewhere” and “Frasier,” among others. She also made a guest appearance on “Will & Grace” and played George Clooney’s mother on “ER.”

    She said the awards and nomination over the years were appreciated but ultimately meant little.

    “I really didn’t care,” Laurie said in a 2015 interview with the Archive of American Television. “I just didn’t believe in awarding performances or judging performances, this job is better than that.”

    In her candid 2011 memoir, “Learning to Live Out Loud,” which she wrote herself, the actress outlined her transformation from a withdrawn child into an outspoken woman. She revealed that her parents put her and her sister in a children’s asylum and that she lost her virginity to Reagan, and provided insight about a young Mel Gibson, who played her young lover in 1979’s “Tim.”

    Later in life, she wrote and directed the short film “Property” and directed Jim Brochu’s one-man drama “Zero Hour” in 2011.

    Asked if there was anything she missed about her early studio days, Laurie paused only briefly.

    “There was a great salad in the commissary,” she said. “That’s the only thing I miss.”

    Laurie is survived by her daughter, Anna Grace Morgenstern.

    ___

    © 2023 Los Angeles Times

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Nigeria Secures 6m HPV Vaccines, To Rollout Supplies In 7 Days

    Faisal_Shuaib

    The Federal Government has secured over six million doses of the Human Papillomavirus Vaccine and other essential supplies for the public.

    The government also said it is prepared for the rollout of the vaccination for girls aged nine to 14 years on October 24, 2023.

    The Executive Director and Chief Executive Officer of the National Primary Health Care Agency, Dr Faisal Shuaib disclosed this on Tuesday at a press briefing in Abuja.

    Shuaib said the vaccine will help to prevent HPV infection and reduce the risk of cervical cancer.

    HPV is a common sexually transmitted infection that has a silent harbinger of several types of cancers, including cervical cancer.

    Cervical cancer is the second most common cancer among women aged 15 to 49 years. Nigeria contributes an estimated 12,075 new cases of global cervical cancer annually.

    HPV infection has been identified as a high-risk factor, implicated in 95 per cent of cervical cancer cases. With 12,000 new diagnoses and 8,000 lives claimed each year, it translates to 33 new cervical cancer cases and 22 deaths every day in the country.

    HPV is caused by a DNA virus belonging to the family Papillomaviridae. The virions are non-enveloped and contain a double-stranded DNA genome.

    Dr Faisal noted that while vaccination is the most potent prevention measure against HPV, women are encouraged to undergo regular screening tests for early detection and treatment.

    “Over the past several months, the NPHCDA, in close collaboration with the Federal Ministry of Health and our dedicated partners, has diligently executed a comprehensive plan to introduce the HPV vaccine.

    “We have bolstered the capabilities of our frontline healthcare workers, ensuring they are adept in administering the vaccine. Alongside our partners and donors, we have secured over six million doses of the HPV vaccine and essential supplies.

    “We have conducted numerous forums to raise awareness among stakeholders, including parents and caregivers regarding the pivotal importance of HPV vaccination.

    “To address any concerns or misconceptions, have engaged with communities and established a robust monitoring and evaluation framework to measure the impact and progress of the vaccination campaign.

    “This vital vaccine introduction will occur in two phases. The first phase will encompass 16 states, including Abia, Adamawa, Akwa Ibom, Anambra, Bauchi, Bayelsa, Benue, Enugu, Jigawa, Kano, Lagos, Nasarawa, Ogun, Osun, Taraba, and the Federal Capital Territory.

    “The second phase is scheduled for the first quarter of 2024 and will encompass the remaining states: Borno, Cross River, Delta, Ebonyl, Edo, Ekiti, Gombe, Imo, Kaduna, Katsina, Kebbi, Kogi, Kwara, Niger, Ondo, Oyo, Plateau, Rivers, Sokoto, Yobe, and Zamfara,” he said.

    The Gardasil HPV vaccination has been granted approval by the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration to be distributed as a one-shot vaccine.

    In her statement, the Director General of NAFDAC, Professor Mojisola Adeyeye emphasised the agency’s dedication to guaranteeing the safety, quality, and effectiveness of the Gardasil vaccine within the country.

    Adeyeye explained that Gardasil is a vaccine designed to safeguard against HPV and is suggested for girls and boys between the ages of 11 and 12, but it can also be administered as early as nine years old or as late as 26 years old.

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  • Maria Chike shares her experience as a new mum

    Maria Chike shares her experience as a new mum

    Maria Chike Benjamin, has taken to X to share what it’s like being a new mum. 

    The Big Brother Naija reality star welcomed her son earlier this month. 

    Updating her followers, she wrote on Twitter, “Omo fear Igbo boys o! Dey can eat for Africa! My poor breast. #BabyLenny.”

     

    Maria Chike shares her experience as a new mum

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