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Down, down plunges Nigeria’s aviation sector
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After a long period of crisis, Nigeria’s aviation industry is in danger of total collapse, write ADEOLA BALOGUN, ’NONYE BEN-NWANKWO, BOSEDE OLUSOLA-OBASA and COMFORT OSEGHALE
The ill fated Dana Air plane crash of June 3, 2012 in Iju-Ishaga, Lagos, which killed all the 153 passengers and crew on board has only served to expose the larger rot in Nigeria’s aviation industry.
Today, air travellers in Nigeria are experiencing a torrid time in their bid to get to their destinations. As a result of the widespread rot in the sector, travelling domestically by air has become an expensively painful habit, since passengers, even with their hard-earned money, are left to jostle for the few available seats on the surviving airlines to get to their destinations.
Sometimes, they try for hours without any success. As a result, riotous scenes – which don’t even happen at bus termini – have come to be associated with airports around the country.
Today, many travellers can’t say with certainty that they will be able to reach their destination by air, especially outside the economically and politically viable Lagos-Abuja route.
For example, Niiamarh Amareufo, a Ghanaian and one of the organisers of the Miss ECOWAS beauty pageant, complained about unnecessary delays and failure on the part of the staff of domestic airlines to explain the lateness as well as the high cost of flying Nigerian airlines.
In an interview with VISTA at the local wing of the Murtala Muhammed International Airport in Lagos on Tuesday, Amerufo said, “I could connect from Ghana to Aero Contractors. We got here around 10 am in an effort to connect an Arik flight to Port Harcourt and we’re still here. We’re still trying to get our tickets. The most frustrating aspect is that the flights are often delayed and nobody is willing to explain why this is happening. You ask people what happened, but they don’t care.
“Last week, we flew from Port Harcourt to Abuja and our flight to Accra was delayed for more than an hour. Nobody was ready to tell us anything. I don’t want to mention the airline. I don’t know whether it has to do with their years of experience. They don’t care and leave you with the option of accepting your fate or ignoring it. It’s just not fair.
“In terms of cost, I don’t know why some airlines are more expensive than the others. Yesterday when we were coming from Accra to Lagos, we booked Aero Contractors business class for $338, while Arik charged $358. I don’t understand why it is so. But from Lagos to Port Harcourt, they charged the same for business class and I don’t know why it was so.
“About six months ago, the airfare from Ghana to Lagos was around $248 for economy class, while those travelling in business class had to pay between $258 and $270. Now, it’s very expensive and I read in one of the magazines that the airlines are complaining about the high cost of aviation fuel. I don’t know why because I want to believe that since Nigeria has oil, the product should be cheap.”
In spite of the current hike in domestic airfares in Nigeria, many travellers feel they are left with no choice other than adjust to the constant new price regimes being introduced by airlines.
At the local wing of the MMIA on Tuesday, it was business as usual for airline operators. In fact, a member of staff of IRS Airline told VISTA on condition of anonymity that business had improved and the increase in airfares did not affect the daily sales of flight tickets.
“Everyday our planes are filled with passengers. People still fly and no matter what happens, they simply don’t have any choice,” the official said.
To travel economy class a few years ago from Lagos to Abuja, the average traveller was required to pay about N18,000 to obtain a flight ticket. But that era seems to be gone and forgotten. A prospective passenger on that route today will not spend less than N30,000 on a one-way ticket, and this could rise to almost N40,000 at weekends, depending on the direction you are headed.
An Abuja-based lady, Nkechi Agbara, describes her flight from Abuja to Lagos during last weekend as nightmarish.
She says, “I paid N61,980 for a return ticket. The crowd I saw at the airport in Lagos and Abuja was mad. I had to tip somebody an extra N2,000 in both cities to check me in.
“I contemplated going by road, but I was scared after learning that the roads had become very congested. I’m not happy because I had to cough up so much money to travel and for the fact that I would be travelling to Lagos only once or twice in a year instead of five times.”
But Agbara is just one among many Nigerians that are worried about the high cost of air travel in the country.
Laide Thomas, a Lagos-based lawyer, told VISTA that she had paid a ‘ridiculous’ amount of money to travel by air since the “terrible increment,” as she put it.
“I flew Aero Contractors the other day and the amount I was charged was totally ridiculous,” says Thomas. “They said the economy class was filled up and I had to buy business class. It was a crazy trip. Even if I was going to Jamaica, would I have paid that much?
“The service that we get is not commensurate with the money we pay as fare. If we had better alternatives like good roads and good rail system, some of us would not be bothered even if they increasedtheir fare by 100 per cent.”
Another traveller, who introduced himself as Malik, blamed the rising cost of air travel on the high cost of aviation fuel.
“The cost of living in Nigeria has gone up. I also learnt that the Central Bank (of Nigeria) has stopped giving out loans to some companies. This could also be a problem and at the same time, it is not proper to borrow money from the bank and not repay it.
“I paid N34,000 to fly to Kano. You don’t know how I was able to get this money. The situation is unbearable. I even feel that the number of travellers has reduced,” Malik says.
Also, Kehinde Umaru said he parted with N30,000 in exchange for a ticket to fly to Abuja from Lagos.
“It is crazy. But for the fact that I have an interview to attend in Abuja tomorrow, I wouldn’t have bothered. How do we continue like this? Is this not disheartening?
“Nothing has ever gone up and come down in Nigeria. This fare will be static now. If only we can have more airlines, I think it will help a bit. In a country where you have less than four airlines in operation, these people will assume a monopoly of the business and increase their fares at will.
“People cannot even travel by road again. Look at what happened in Lokoja. Flood overtook the city, people travelling to Abuja and even coming from Abuja became stranded and had to find alternate routes. I feel so sad,” he says.
He is not as sad as Charles Nwagbara, the publisher of High Society magazine, who complained bitterly about the situation in the aviation industry.
“I flew IRS from Abuja to Lagos. It was meant to be a 4.45 pm flight. It didn’t take off till 8 pm. You can then imagine when we got to Lagos. It is not only IRS. Other airlines cancel their flights without bothering about their passengers. Now, the fare of a 50-minute flight is now between N32, 000 and N34, 000. This is totally ridiculous,” he says.
Those who have been in the sector for some time are also lamenting the turn of events.
One of them is Capt. Yakubu Okatahi, a senior pilot with Arik Air, who has had over 30 years of flying experience. Before he joined the privately-owned airline, he had worked with the defunct Nigeria Airways after training at the Flying School in Zaria, Kaduna State.
Okatahi has had stints with virtually all the major airlines that have graced the aviation industry in Nigeria. He actually pioneered the local operations of the defunct ADC Airlines, another privately-owned concern that ran into trouble after one of its planes crashed.
Since he witnessed the growth and development of the aviation industry over the past 30 years, Okatahi is deemed to be in a position to comment on the challenges facing the sector.
Having been in the thick of the operations of most airlines in the country, past and present, the soft-spoken pilot, no doubt, has also observed the steady decline of the sector.
When he was contacted for his reaction to this, especially with regard to the fact that only about three airlines are operating domestic flights in the country at present, he could not help but shake his head in disappointment.
“Nigeria has the resources and the knowledge to run an efficient aviation system. God has blessed this country,” Okatahi begins. “In fact, there was a time that the technical know-how of aviation rested with the old Bendel State. At that time, Bendel State had the manpower to run the entire aviation industry in Nigeria.
“As at 1978, Nigeria bought DC10 planes with cash. In 1980 or so, it bought two brand new Boeing 727 planes. Also in 1983, it bought four Airbus 8310 and six Boeing 737 300 series with cash. I am sure you understand what it means to buy all the planes with cash.
“By now, Nigeria should have been in the forefront of the aviation industry in Africa. We were the first African nation that had an all-black crew in the 1970s and 1980s. In those days, whenever we landed in a city like Nairobi and filed out, the people marvelled and stared at us in awe. The entire West Coast used to see us doing something out of this world.
“So, how did the decline in the aviation sector come about? Well, I will say that there was no effective management. If the Federal Government did not dabble so much into the aviation business, we probably would not be where we are today. If the government can buy five per cent into one local airline and leave the rest for the management to run, the story will be different. Because of mismanagement, all the aircraft we had are gone.
“Government interference will not help in any way if we want to revive the aviation sector. See the British Airways, what stake does the British government have in it? Probably one per cent. Yet the government hardly interferes. Or is it Lufthansa? All of them carry their countries’ flags and they are doing very well.”
An industry analyst, Emmanuel Adeogun, urges Nigerians to take another look at the $6.5bn that wealthy Nigerians reportedly spent on private jets in the country, while noting that the financial burden borne by owners of the private jets may have compelled some of them to acquire their own aircraft out of necessity rather than luxury.
Adeogun says, “Because of the nature of their business, some of our rich men may have acquired private jets to move around at a very short notice, a service that is no longer possible with the present airlines.”
Investigations by VISTA show that over the last five years, some of Nigeria’s wealthiest people have spent about $6.5bn on the purchase of new private jets, thereby making the country Africa’s biggest market for private planes.
In a report published recently by The PUNCH, the number of privately-owned aircraft in the country has risen by 650 per cent between 2007 and 2012.
The report said that in 2007, there were a total of 20 private jets in the country. Now, the number has risen to about 150.
Citing documents sourced from various aviation agencies in the country, the report said that over 130 new private planes had been acquired since 2007 at the average cost of $50m per plane. It said that the rich are struck by the luxury syndrome because of the need for privacy, fear of insecurity, and the urgency required to compete in the modern business environment.
The scramble among the rich to acquire private planes over the last decade has been unprecedented. Between March 2010 and March 2011, this class of Nigerians spent about $225m on private jets.
There is an indication that more private jets are on the way, ordered as usual by some of the country’s wealthiest people. While some of the aircraft will be delivered this year, others will arrive between 2013 and 2014.
The increasing expenditure on private aircraft means that Nigeria is currently rivalling China as one of the two fastest growing markets for private jets in the world, and airplane manufacturers across the world are beginning to take notice of this fact.
Investigations by VISTA showed that insecurity, the rot in the aviation business, and the bad – and dangerous – road network in Nigeria might be the other reasons why many businessmen would continue to spend a sizeable percentage of their resources to acquire private airplanes.
However, despite the release of bailout funds meant to save Nigeria’s failing airlines, the fortunes of air travellers in the country are yet to improve.
Instead, the number of commercial airlines dwindled recently, first, from five to four after the ill fated crash of a Dana Air plane on June 3, 2012.
Then early last month, things got worse as the number plunged from four to three when Air Nigeria, the offshoot of Virgin Nigeria (itself the offshoot of Nigeria Airways), suddenly suspended its operations despite being the largest beneficiary of the bailout fund to the tune of N35.5bn.
When VISTA sought the reactions of the various airlines over the ordeal being suffered by air travellers in the country, the Managing Director of Aero Contractors, Capt. Akin George, said the airline had already made an arrangement to take care of the spill-over arising from a reduction in the number of local airlines operating in the country.
George said, “In the next one month, additional 3,000 seats will be added to Aero Contractor’s schedule to reduce problem of insufficient seats. Our customers should also expect better days; our loans are being refinanced by the banks as a result of the bailout fund which we have received. We also expect a reduction of interests on our loans.
“Concerning flight delays, these have been partly caused by the amount of rainfall being experienced all over the country. It has affected our ability to maintain flight schedules.
“When it comes to maintenance, Aero is known for strict adherence; we also undertake third part maintenance as well. Our planes are quite safe; we have gone through over seven audits from different professional organisations in the last two months and have passed every one. We don’t skip on maintenance but ensure we carry it out as stipulated by the manufacturer.”
The spokesperson for Dana Airlines, Mr. Tony Usidamen, however, declined making any comment. He said, “I cannot make any statement at this time because Dana Air is presently undergoing recertification with the NCAA. A statement will be issued when we are through with the process and ready to commence commercial operations.”
Air Nigeria’s spokesman, Mr. Samuel Ogbogboro, was not available for comments as his phone indicated it was switched off.
Efforts to get the reactions of some aviation regulatory agencies proved abortive. Despite promising to respond to the issue, comments from the General Manager, Public Relations, Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority, Sam Adurogboye, were not received as at the time of going to the press.
He did not respond to the email sent to him or answer subsequent phone calls to his phone to follow up on an earlier discussion.
On his part, the General Manager, Public Affairs, Federal Aviation Authority of Nigeria, Mr. Akin Olukunle, said that he was not in the capacity to speak on behalf of FAAN because of an ongoing restructuring which may bring another officer into his office.
As flood sacked many schools in Kogi State, stakeholders have expressed worry about the impact of school closure on pupils, SUCCESS NWOGU writes
Kogi State Commissioner for Education, Mrs. Grace Elebiyo, tutors and pupils in Lokoja, the state capital, have said the current flooding of about nine local government areas and about 332 communities in the state is negatively affecting education in the state.
Elebiyo, in an interview with our correspondent on Thursday, said though she could not categorically give the exact number of schools and pupils affected by the flood disaster, about 54,000 pupils in about 270 schools in the councils would have been affected by the closure of schools.
She added that the flood would affect the performance of some of the pupils eligible for the West African Senior Secondary Certificate Examinations next year. She, however, stated that the diligent ones would still be reading at home and might not be so much adversely affected.
She stated that for the West African Examination Council registration, the principals of the affected schools already have the number of pupils moving into SSS3 for the WAEC registration. She added that the number could easily be ascertained through the transition examination as the pupils had done their last tests.
“The flood has adversely affected education. About nine local government areas are being affected by flood. Many schools have been closed down because of the flood, while we have some schools being used as relief camps for the flood victims. There are many affected schools but I have not got the accurate number of the closed schools. But in each council, we have about 30 schools. I cannot say the accurate number but there is no way we would not have about 200 pupils in each of the schools,” she said.
Elebiyo, who said that by December the schools would be re-opened, added that the state government had provided relief materials to the affected pupils to cushion the effects of the disaster. “For now, we want to make sure that the affected schools are closed down temporarily; it appears that there is no solution for now.
“Some of the pupils of the affected schools will sit for the same examination with their counterparts who are not affected. Therefore when this problem is over, there will be extension of school programme. That is the only way we can solve the problem,” Elebiyo said.
In separate interviews with our correspondent on Wednesday, the tutors and pupils stated that the flood had put candidates sitting for WASSCE in precarious situation. They added that even for those whose schools had not been shut down, both the teachers and pupils especially in Lokoja were subjected to great hardship owing to gridlock on the roads. They said this situation had made many of them to come late to schools.
The Principal, Government Day Secondary School, Adankolo, Lokoja, Mr. Edward Olorundare, said pupils in the affected areas planning to sit for the WASSCE might fail as they would be forced to stay off the schools for many months.
He added that some of the pupils in a bid to pass WASSCE might cheat. According to him, many of the teachers, other workers and pupils in areas not yet affected by the flood in Lokoja are now forced to come to school late due to long queues of vehicles, especially trailers.
“The flood is seriously and negatively affecting education. There are many schools especially in the submerged councils that have been shut down. Those children are disadvantaged, especially those sitting for the WASSCE. WAEC organises international examination. Ghana and some other West African countries are writing it. If they are not affected by the flood, it means that their schools would be in session. But here, where the flood is affecting people, the pupils are disadvantaged.
“It has affected us seriously in the school. It has even affected our punctuality and attendance. Most of the people who are displaced are leaving far away. The few roads have been taken over by trailers.
“It will affect the pupils’ performance because by the time the school is closed down and when pupils are coming back, it might be for exams and we are talking about examination malpractice and we are not doing anything to prevent it. How will a pupil who is sitting down at home for three months and is to take exam not fail or engage in examination malpractice in a bid to pass? Definitely, he will cheat,” he said.
Olorundare, whose school is also being threatened by flood, said it was unfortunate that the school did not have accurate information on the flow of the flood.
He stated that though the school had made contingency arrangement, it might be forced to temporarily close if the flood eventually submerges it.
The Vice-Principal, Administration, St. Lukes UBE J.S.S, Lokoja, Mrs. Mary Iselewa, said since some schools in the state had been closed because of the flood, many pupils were no longer serious with their studies.
She stated that some of the pupils now prefer to watch films and play football. “Some schools in the state have been closed down because of the flood. The flood has actually negatively affected education in Kogi State because when schools are even in session, some of the pupils are not even ready to face their studies seriously. They prefer watching films and playing football. When they are in the school, at least they will read their books and when assignments are given to them, they will do them. But now that they are free, since many schools have been closed down because of the flood, many of the pupils now go and watch the flood to see the extent of the damage it has caused victims.
“Also, some of them will say ‘we are no longer in school, there is no need to read and nobody will give us assignment. It is only when we are in school that we need to settle down and study but when we are not in school, we are free,” Iselewe said.
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Another school administrator in Lokoja who pleaded anonymity, urged Nigerian leaders to be more proactive and to implement policies that would advance education and reduce the hardship in the land.
He claimed that the major problems facing Nigeria were lack of foresight and poor planning by its leaders. He said many times, the nation’s leaders went abroad and failed to show that they had learnt something useful in the area of governance.
According to him, Many Nigerians are sad and angry, noting the need for a rethink and change of attitude by the nation’s leaders. “What we are saying is that our leaders should be more proactive. They should plan ahead. There was a time that the late President Umaru Yar’Adua came to inaugurate the dredging of the River Niger in this state. After he died, that effort stopped.
“Assuming that the river was well-dredged, the water level would have been deep and this disaster would not have happened. It is after the havoc has been done that the Federal Government is sending construction giants to dredge the River Niger. Do you know that this volume of water that is wasting could be harvested and used for irrigation? If Israel had the type of water we have, in fact it would be the highest producer of food in the world. But look at how we are wasting it and it is even causing havoc to the people,” he said.
A pupil, Ahmed Kabir, said pupils in the state were not happy because of the flood had made some of their schools to either close down temporarily or converted to relief camps for flood victims.
Another pupil from St. Lukes UBE JSS, Adankolo said many of the pupils were no longer in school. She called on the government to build relief camps for the displaced people and return their classrooms to them so that they could continue with their studies.
Another pupil, Maryam Usman, said many homes had been devastated because of the flood while many pupils lost their books and uniforms to the flood. “I am not happy because of the flood. It has destroyed many homes and affected our education,” she said.
MAUREEN AZUH writes on the unique advantages of hand-held scanners
Like many other devices that now come in portable models, scanners have also been designed in handheld form that is less complicated for the end-user.
Compact scanners are good for many purposes, which include items such as business contacts, expenses, travel claims, contracts and checks. As pcworld.com notes, portable scanners offer scanning clarity in different format options, and are convenient for use both at home and work.
There are also different types to choose from. IRIScan, for instance, is one portable scanner which offers a user the option of scanning documents without a computer.
According to pricerunner.co.uk, it scans to memory, which means one can scan and upload to a computer later. That puts it less in competition with portable sheet-fed scanners. It eliminates the need to carry a computer along, when on the go. It looks much like any other manually fed portable scanner, at 1.7 by 10.6 and 2.3 inches (HWD), and weighs slightly less than one pound.
It is also easy to set up, as all a user needs to do is to simply open the box, connect the scanner to a computer with the supplied USB cable, and let the battery charge. There is no scan driver to install, because the scanner does not scan to a computer. Instead, in addition to charging when plugged, the device appears like USB memory to the computer, so the user can copy the scanned files to a hard drive. Once copied, the files can be opened anytime using any software.
When a photo, sheet of paper, or business card is slotted into the input slot in front, the scanner will automatically feed and scan it, and then save the results to a file. The scanner itself includes 512MB of internal memory. When a user is ready to upload the scanned files to a computer, he can simply move the USB key or MicroSD card to the computer and copy or move the files to a hard disk.
The Plustek MobileOffice is another scanning device that offers portability and speed. Although it is a little bigger than the others, it makes up in speed and has the ability to scan both sides of a page at once. The features lead to a larger, heavier scanner, but for most purposes, the extra capability is worth it.
It measures 3.8 by 11.4 by three inches and weighs 2.9 pounds. But in addition to its 20-page ADF and duplexer – the ability to scan both sides – it offers a 600-pixel-per-inch (ppi) optical resolution, while its rated speed in grayscale mode is nine pages per minute for simplex (single-sided) scanning at 300 ppi and 18 images per minute (ipm) for duplex scanning.
The Xerox Mobile Scanner on the other hand, as pcadvisor.co.uk notes, offers a few extra features that make it portable in a way that some other models cannot match. It also does not require a computer to function.
The battery-operated Xerox can be used in almost any situation. The battery is rated for 300 shots, which gives plenty of scanning time before it runs out. Included in the bundle is a 4GB Eye-Fi card. This device doubles as both storage card and as an 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi adapter, allowing a user to connect to a laptop via a wireless network.
Xerox is also capable of sending scanned files through the ether, and a user can wirelessly divert scans to sites like Evernote, Picasa, Shutterfly or Facebook. The device can also communicate with most mobile devices, and an Airplane Mode button allows a user to switch off the Wi-Fi radio. And for traditionalists, the Xerox can still be hooked up with a good old-fashioned USB cable.
Apart from portable scanners, one can also use a smartphone through an application called CamScanner Free, to do almost the same that scanners do. Just run this app, aim the device’s camera at any text or graphics, and then press the “Capture” button.
The app will suggest a part of the image for cropping and the image is enlarged with little loss of detail. Depending on the device, a user can also adjust details, brightness and contrast of the image. After editing, the pictures can be saved into a document which acts like an album, with tags.
One interesting feature of the app is that a user can export documents into PDFs and share them in many ways, either by uploading it to a Google account, email or fax. The app charges to use the fax function though while the exported PDF is usually the size of the scanned image.
The campaign organisation of Ondo State Governor, Dr. Olusegun Mimiko, on Thursday accusing the Action Congress of Nigeria of causing the death of one of the governor’s supporters, Mr. Adeniyi Oyen.
The Mimiko Campaign Organisation in a statement by its Director of Media, Kolawole Olabisi, said he was shot dead when suspected ACN thugs invaded the venue of the campaign rally organised by the governor’s Labour Party in Akungba Akoko on Wednesday evening.
Olabisi alleged that several people who were also shot are now receiving treatment at the Federal Medical Centre in Owo and other undisclosed hospitals in Ikare Akoko.
The Commissioner of Police in the state, Mr. Danladi Mshelbwala, confirmed the death of the deceased, noting that Oyen and two others were shot by suspected cult members after an LP campaign rally at Holy Trinity Primary School play ground, Akungba Akoko.
But the camp of ACN governorship candidate, Rtomi Akeredolu (SAN), “challenged the LP and Governor Olusegun Mimiko to explain to the whole world what resulted to a free for all at Akungba Akoko after his campaign visit.”
A statement by the Director Media, Publicity and Strategy of ACO, Mr. Idowu Ajanaku, “called on security agents to investigate the cause of the fight which was alleged to be over the sharing of the campaign loot that Mimiko has delivered to his party men at Akungba during the campaign visit.”
The Lagos State Local Government Election Petitions Tribunal headed by Justice Dolapo Akinsanya on Thursday declared Jide Obanikoro of the Peoples Democratic Party winner of the October 22, 2011 council poll in Ikoyi/Obalende Local Council Development Area of the state.
The tribunal nullified the declaration of Adewale Adeniji of the Action Congress of Nigeria as the winner of the election by the Lagos State Independent Electoral Commission.
Jide is the son of Nigeria’s former High Commissioner to Ghana, Musiliu Obanikoro.
The tribunal held that Obanikoro won with 3,780 votes while Adeniji got 3,248 votes.
The tribunal said the ACN and its candidate “failed to rebut the burden of proof that was shifted on them by the quantum of evidence provided by the petitioners.”
It noted that the respondents did not dispute Obanikoro’s claim that there was no collation of results after the poll was conducted.
The tribunal therefore concluded that it had the power to collate the results via the valid votes as entered into the appropriate LASIEC FORM 9A which is the only form acceptable for chairmanship results for local government elections in Lagos and the petitioners had brought same before the tribunal.
More details later.
President Goodluck Jonathan on Thursday appointed Vice Admiral Ola Ibrahim as the new Chief of Defence Staff.
A statement by the President’s Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, said Ibrahim (Kwara State), who until his elevation was the Chief of Naval Staff, took over from Air Chief Marshal Oluseyi Petinrin, who has retired from service.
Jonathan also appointed Rear Admiral Dele Joseph Ezeoba from Delta State as the new Chief of Naval Staff and Air Vice Marshal Alex Sabundu Badeh as the new Chief of Air Staff.
He, however, retained Lt.-Gen. Azubuike Ihejirika (Abia) as the Chief of Army Staff.
More details later.
A landslide buried 18 children at a primary school in the south-western Chinese province of Yunnan
on Thursday, state media said.
The landslide hit Zhenhe village in Yunnan’s Yiliang county about 8.00 a.m. the semi-official China News Service reported.
It engulfed the school building and two nearby homes in an estimated 10,000 cubic metres of debris, the agency said.
Eighteen children were missing at the school and an adult was buried in one of the neighbouring homes, it quoted local officials as saying.
It said government rescue teams had reached the mountainous area, which was hit by a series of earthquakes that killed 81 people and injured some 800 people on September 7.
Imo Commissioner for Health, Dr. Joe Obi-Njoku, has said that it will cost the state more to maintain the existing 19 hospitals in the state than to build 27 new ones.
Obi-Njoku said this on Thursday in Owerri in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria.
He explained that on assumption of office, the administration assessed the health sector and found that the state had suffered a drastic degradation of infrastructure and facilities due to poor management.
He said that, based on the findings, the administration collapsed the 19 general hospitals into 10 and granted their management to the British Health System Management Consortium for 15 years.
NAN reports that the policy attracted criticisms from some residents who felt that it would be so expensive to have access to the hospitals because the proprietors would only be interested in making profits.
Obi-Njoku, however, insisted that it was in the best interest of the people to allow the British consortium to invest in and run the dilapidated hospitals for 15 years while government built new ones.
“Our people go to India, Germany, Britain, Israel and other countries for treatment; such people spend between N10 million and N20 million for some treatment that, with the right equipment, diagnosis and drugs, would cost only N500,000 here.
“Doctors don’t manage hospitals; it will be a waste of manpower; we are bringing in hospital management professionals so that doctors will actually do the job they are trained to do,” he said.
The commissioner said that the state government had embarked on a comprehensive health insurance scheme to ensure that the poor had access to health care.
He gave an assurance that the new hospitals would be completed by the end of the year, adding that government was already making plans to equip them.
The commissioner also pointed out that a professional management team was being assembled to run the new hospitals.
“Our goal is to make Imo State a health tourism destination.
“Health tourism cannot be done in dilapidated buildings and if you must do it, you must offer the best in terms of infrastructure, equipment, management and services,” he added.
The winners of the 2012 Nobel Prizes are to be announced next week, with no clear frontrunners yet seen for the much-talked about Peace and Literature prizes and suspense and speculation mount.
Betting sites have become a popular feature of the Nobel guessing game in recent years, with gamers sometimes surprisingly accurate, even suspiciously so.
Chinese author Mo Yan and Japan’s Haruki Murakami share the top spots on two Swedish betting sites a week ahead of the expected announcement of the Nobel Literature Prize, while Coptic Christian Maggie Gobran of Egypt who helps the poor in Cairo’s slums tops the one Swedish site taking bets for the Peace Prize.
Here are the dates for this year’s prize announcements:
- Monday, October 8, 0930 GMT at the earliest: Nobel Medicine Prize
- Tuesday, October 9, 0945 GMT at the earliest: Nobel Physics Prize
- Wednesday, October 10, 0945 GMT at the earliest: Nobel Chemistry Prize
- Thursday, October 11: Possible date for the Nobel Literature Prize. The Swedish Academy only announces the date of the announcement a few days in advance, but it is traditionally on a Thursday at 1100 GMT.
- Friday, October 12, 0900 GMT: Nobel Peace Prize
- Monday, October 15, 1100 GMT at the earliest: Nobel Economics Prize.