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  • Edo orders autopsy over death of 10 persons

    Edo orders autopsy over death of 10 persons

    Adeyinka Adedipe

    The Edo State Government has pledged to unravel the cause of death of 10 persons whose corpses were discovered in Ibillo/Lampese, Akoko-Edo Local Government Area of Edo State.

    The Edo State Commissioner for Communication and Orientation, Chris Nehikhare, gave the assurance while briefing journalists after the weekly Executive Council meeting chaired by Governor Godwin Obaseki at the Government House in Benin city.

    Describing the incident as saddening, the commissioner said the government had ordered that an autopsy be carried out on the corpses to unravel the circumstances surrounding the mysterious deaths.

    He said, “The collaboration between the vigilante group, the hunters, and the police led to the discovery of corpses of 10 young men, aged probably between 23 and 25, along a bush path.

    “They were killed and there were no identifying marks to identify them or even know the cause of death of these young men as there are no signs of trauma or anything to determine how these men were killed or how they died.”

    Nehikhare added, “The Edo State Government is very saddened with this occurrence and has ordered that an autopsy be carried out to determine the cause of death and for the police to investigate to find out who they are, how they got there, and what happened because the government is not pleased with the news.”

    Copyright Reportr Door

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  • Controversial monkey study reignites animal testing debate

    Controversial monkey study reignites animal testing debate

    Mother monkeys permanently separated from their newborns sometimes find comfort in plush toys: this recent finding from Harvard experiments has set off intense controversy among scientists and reignited the ethical debate over animal testing.

    The paper, “Triggers for mother love” was authored by neuroscientist Margaret Livingstone and appeared in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in September to little fanfare or media coverage.

    But once news of the study began spreading on social media, it provoked a firestorm of criticism and eventually a letter to PNAS signed by over 250 scientists calling for a retraction.

    Animal rights groups meanwhile recalled Livingstone’s past work, which included temporarily suturing shut the eyelids of infant monkeys to study the impact on their cognition.

    “We cannot ask monkeys for consent, but we can stop using, publishing, and in this case actively promoting cruel methods that knowingly cause extreme distress,” wrote Catherine Hobaiter, a primatologist at the University of St Andrews, who co-authored the retraction letter.

    Hobaiter told AFP she was awaiting a response from the journal before further comment but expected news soon.

    Harvard and Livingstone, for their part, have strongly defended the research.

    Livingstone’s observations “can help scientists understand maternal bonding in humans and can inform comforting interventions to help women cope with loss in the immediate aftermath of suffering a miscarriage or experiencing a stillbirth,” said Harvard Medical School in a statement.

    Livingstone, in a separate statement, said: “I have joined the ranks of scientists targeted and demonized by opponents of animal research, who seek to abolish lifesaving research in all animals.”

    Such work routinely attracts the ire of groups such as People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, which opposes all forms of animal testing.

    This controversy has notably provoked strong responses in the scientific community, particularly from animal behavior researchers and primatologists, said Alan McElligot of the City University of Hong Kong’s Centre for Animal Health and a co-signer of the PNAS letter.

    He told AFP that Livingstone appears to have replicated research performed by Harry Harlow, a notorious American psychologist, from the mid-20th century.

    Harlow’s experiments on maternal deprivation in rhesus macaques were considered groundbreaking but may have also helped catalyze the early animal liberation movement.

    “It just ignored all of the literature that we already have on attachment theory,” added Holly Root-Gutteridge, an animal behavior scientist at the University of Lincoln in Britain.

    – Harm reduction –

    McElligot and Root-Gutteridge argue the case was emblematic of a wider problem in animal research, in which questionable studies and papers continue to pass institutional reviews and are published in high-impact journals.

    McElligot pointed to a much-critiqued 2020 paper extolling the efficiency of foot snares to capture jaguars and cougars for scientific study in Brazil.

    More recently, experiments on marmosets that included invasive surgeries have attracted controversy.

    The University of Massachusetts Amherst team behind the work says studying the tiny monkeys, which have 10-year-lifespans and experience cognitive decline in their old age, are essential to better understanding Alzheimers in people.

    Opponents argue results rarely translate across species.

    When it comes to testing drugs, there is evidence the tide is turning against animal trials.

    In September, the US Senate passed the bipartisan FDA Modernization Act, which would end a requirement that experimental medicines first be tested on animals before any human trials.

    The vast majority of drugs that pass animal tests fail in human trials, while new technologies such as tissue cultures, mini-organs and AI models are also reducing the need for live animals.

    Opponents also say the vast sums of money that flow from government grants to universities and other institutes — $15 billion annually, according to watchdog group White Coat Waste — perpetuate a system in which animals are viewed as lab resources.

    “The animal experimenters are the rainmaker within the institutions because they’re bringing in more money,” said primatologist Lisa Engel-Jones, who worked as a lab researcher for three decades but now opposes the practice and is a science advisor for PETA.

    “There’s a financial incentive to keep doing what you’ve been doing and just look for any way you can to get more papers published because that means more funding and more job security,” added Emily Trunnel, a neuroscientist who experimented on rodents and also now works for PETA.

    Most scientists do not share PETA’s absolutist stance, but instead say they adhere to the “three Rs” framework – refine, replace and reduce animal use.

    On Livingstone’s experiment, Root-Gutteridge said the underlying questions might have been studied on wild macaques who naturally lost their young, and urged neuroscientists to team up with animal behaviorists to find ways to minimize harm.

    (AFP)

  • 2023 budget most important to Ogun people

    2023 budget most important to Ogun people

    The Ogun State governor, Dapo Abiodun, has said that the 2023 budget is more important than the previous ones in the state.

    Abiodun said in the 2023 budget, the state requires a holistic constitution of the people’s needs and judicious application of the limited resources to areas that bear on the welfare of the citizenry.

    He however said that no fewer than 203 inputs representing 95 per cent of demands made at the citizens’ town hall meetings held across the four divisions of the state have been incorporated into the budget proposal for the year 2023.

    Abiodun stated this on Wednesday at the Treasury Board meeting held at the Obas’ Complex, Oke-Mosan, Abeokuta.

    He posited that the Town Hall Meetings, apart from being avenues to reach out to more citizens in harnessing their inputs into the 2023 budget.

    He said the Town Hall meeting also served as an important aspect of his administration’s inclusive governance in budget preparation.

    Abiodun further explained that the Medium Term Expenditure Framework was not meant to produce a budget, but how to develop good policies through the retooling of the budget.

    He said, “it is important to think of each stage of the budget process in terms of roles in developing and implementing the state policies.

    “It is imperative that adequate funds are located in areas that would have a direct impact on the socio-economic well-being of the people.

    “The  2023 budget is more important than the previous ones in the state. It  requires a holistic constitution of the people’s needs and judicious application of the limited resources to areas that bear on the welfare of the citizenry.”

    The governor, however, promised that his administration would work to sustain all the developmental projects spread across the state that have a significant impact on the people, while all the ongoing projects would be given the desired attention towards completion.

    Abiodun stated that his administration had introduced the Medium Term Revenue Strategy, which is an improvement from the traditional expenditure to a revenue-driven budget by identifying and working on the major revenue-generating agencies with a view to enhancing and sustaining revenue mobilisation, collection and enforcement.

    “An important legacy of this administration is the establishment of best practices in the way of public finance management which we are running. We aimed to consolidate on the global best practices in public financial management reforms that we embark on since 2019”, he pointed out.

    The governor maintained that “the state fiscal is based on providing the enabling business environment for private and public sectors partnership through improving the efficiency and effectiveness of key processes including land administration, business registration, construction permit, land titling and the provision of key infrastructure and incentives to attract more investors to the state.”

    While assuring that the 2023 budget would be all-embracing, Abiodun submitted that his administration had internalised policies to ensure efficiency and value for government spending as well as maintain an optimal balance in capital and recurrent expenditure in order to achieve microeconomy stability and sustainable development.

    In his welcome address, the Commissioner of Budget and Planning, Olaolu Olabimtan, said the state was committed to a better atmosphere for businesses to thrive, while the government would continue to deliver quality services to the people.

    He said the Treasury Board meeting was to consider how much is needed, how to raise it, and allocate and account for the funds, urging all stakeholders to be active participants in ensuring a budget that would be people’s friendly.

    The Economic Adviser and Commissioner for Finance, Dapo Okuboyejo, in his remarks, said the budget was meant to stimulate the post-COVID-19 state economy by upscaling infrastructure and other sectors that would engender sustainable growth in the state.

    Highlights of the meeting are the presentation by heads of ministries, agencies and departments, and their budget estimates for 2023.

  • New naira notes to be printed locally, says CBN

    New naira notes to be printed locally, says CBN

    CBN Godwin Emefiele

    •Policy targeted at opposition, says Obaseki

    There is no plan to print the proposed new naira notes outside Nigeria, a Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Board member has said.

    “All the new currency notes are printed in Nigeria by the Nigeria Security, Printing and Minting Company (NSPMC), so I do not envisage printing outside the country,” the Board member told The Nation in confidence.

    He, however said that he has no idea of the cost for printing the new currencies for now. But he assured that the cost is “something that can be accommodated in view of the expected benefits of the re-designed notes”.

    According to CBN Governor, Godwin Emefiele, the N1000, N500 and N200 are to wear new looks soon.

    Shedding light on the communication or lack of it between the CBN and the minister of finance on the decision to redesign some denominations of the naira, the CBN Board member insisted that “the CBN Governor did not take the decisions on currency redesign alone”.

    According to the Board member, “at present, the Board of the CBN has not been inaugurated even though the Senate has confirmed the re-appointment of the members. Until the Board is inaugurated, it cannot sit”.

    He went on to add that “in the interim, the President who is the Supervisor of the CBN, acts on behalf of the Board. This is why the Governor went directly to the President for approval of the redesign.

    But Edo State Governor Godwin Obaseki yesterday read political meaning to the proposed naira redesign.

    He claimed that the move was a ploy by the All Progressives Congress (APC)-led Federal Government to sway voters ahead of the 2023 general elections.

    Obaseki spoke at the inauguration of Edo State Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP’s) Women Campaign Council at the presidential campaign secretariat of the party on Sapele Road, Benin, the state capital.

    He said: “The redesigning of the nation’s currency should not be a priority, as the majority of citizens are suffering from hunger, poverty and economic hardship.

    “They say we should all bring our naira and give it to them, because they want to change it for us. Is that our priority now?

    Read Also: Naira redesign: Any implications for the economy

    “Does changing of currency reduce the price of food in the market? They say they want to change our currency, and dollars are going higher every day. We cannot even see dollars again.

    “I am an economist and I can tell you categorically that this policy by the CBN and Federal Government has no basis in Nigeria’s economy. There is no reason to do this. The move is purely political, as there is no urgency in changing our currency.”

    Edo governor was of the opinion that putting food on the table of Nigerians ought to have been given priority attention by the Muhammadu Buhari’s administration.

    He said: “The urgency is on how to get food for our citizens to remove starvation and hunger from the land. The urgency is on how to maintain discipline in our monetary policy. So that we can manage our foreign exchange rate, because we are import dependent.

    Former CBN Deputy Governor Prof Kingsley Moghalu said the CBN did no wrong by not personally informing Finance, Budget and National Planning Minister, Mrs. Zainab Ahmed.

    Moghalu said: “The CBN only needs the approval of President Muhammadu Buhari for this particular exercise. There are only three issues on which, in the CBN Act of 2007, the CBN should obtain external authorisation, and only from the President of Nigeria, for its operations: any alterations to the legal tender (the naira); any investment of the bank’s funds outside Nigeria; and the Bank’s annual report.

    “Outside of these, the only approving authorities for CBN operations are its Committee of Governors consisting of the Governor and the four Deputy Governors, and the Board of Directors of the CBN, which includes the Governor, the four Deputy Governors, and seven  external members which include the Permanent Secretary of the Federal Ministry of Finance and the Accountant-General of the Federation.”

    Moghalu alleged that Emefiele was politicising “the central bank by routinely subjecting its operations to the whims and caprices of the Presidency far beyond what is the appropriate relationship, and compromised the independence of the CBN as a result. That is why the finance minister erroneously feels entitled to be informed or consulted”.

    He called on the apex bank to “focus hard on the implementation of this policy. It will impose huge pressures on the banking system.

    “How can the woman frying bean cake in the rural area, who keeps most of her cash under her pillow, be aided to come into the banking system under this new policy? There are others as well whose monies are outside the banking system for reasons that are not negative”.

  • Telcos earn N1.92tn from calls, data

    Telcos earn N1.92tn from calls, data

    MTN and Airtel made N1.92tn from calls and data between January and September, 2022.

    This is according to data from the financial results of MTN Nigeria Communications Plc and Airtel Africa’s Nigeria subsidiary.

    This is an 18.27 per cent increase from the N1.62tn that was earned by the telcos on calls and data in the corresponding period of 2021.

    MTN Nigeria revealed that its customers spent N753.78bn and N549.66bn on calls and data respectively while Airtel Nigeria customers spent N342.71bn ($780m) and N274.61bn ($625m) on calls and data, respectively.

    In its result, MTN stated that inflation, supply chain uncertainties and foreign exchange scarcity were putting financial pressure on consumers and businesses.

    It said, “Our operating environment remained challenging in the first nine months of 2022. The ongoing global macroeconomic and geopolitical volatility continued to drive up energy, food, and general inflation, with the annual inflation rate in Nigeria rising to a 17-year high of 20.8 per cent in September 2022.

    “Supply chain uncertainties were exacerbated by the availability of foreign currency needed for capital expenditure. These headwinds continue to put severe financial pressure on consumers and businesses.”

    MTN’s result disclosed that data traffic grew by 70.6 per cent y-o-y, while Airtel revealed that data usage per customer increased to 4.8 GB per month (from 3.9 GB in the prior period).

    Commenting on the growth of voice and data revenues, MTN Nigeria Chief Executive Officer, Karl Toriola, said, “Voice revenue grew by 4.4 per cent, maintaining a steady recovery as more customers are reactivated, and gross connections continue to ramp up.”

    All rights reserved. This material, and other digital content on this website, may not be reproduced, published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in whole or in part without prior express written permission from PUNCH.

    Contact: [email protected]

  • Tinubu, Shettima are ‘anti-business’, says Atiku’s aide

    Tinubu, Shettima are ‘anti-business’, says Atiku’s aide

    Paul Ibe, the media adviser to the presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, Atiku Abubakar, has described the All Progressive Congress presidential candidate, Bola Tinubu, as ‘anti-business’.

    Ibe slammed Tinubu and his running mate, Kashim Shettima, for stating that other candidates lacked the antecedent and experience to rule the country.

    Tinubu and Shettima spoke while presenting his action plan before the business community and the organised private sector in Lagos on Tuesday.

    But in a statement made available to The PUNCH on Wednesday, Ibe blasted the duo, stating that their remarks showed “gross irresponsibility and disrespectfulness.”

    Ibe said, “It is with utter dismay that we listened to the presidential candidate of the APC, Bola Tinubu and his running mate talk condescendingly about other presidential candidates at a gathering that they invited members of the private sector to on Tuesday.

    “The remarks from the candidates of the APC show gross irresponsibility and disrespectfulness.

    “It is indicative that the Tinubu-Shettima administration will be anti entrepreneurship and business.

    “One would have thought that the duo would use the advantage of such a gathering to talk about solutions that their party, APC, has foisted on the country. Rather, they went on the ultra highway of political indecency.”

    He further called on Shettima to apologise for his comments at the event.

    Ibe said, “Shettima should apologise to Nigerian workers, especially the thousands that benefit from Atiku’s businesses for his irresponsible statement.

    “Politics does not confer on anyone the license to make irresponsible statements.

    “A gathering of the top echelons of the private sector was supposed to be an avenue for laying out serious policy choices. For Tinubu and Shettima on the contrary, they chose to embarrass their guests, using their audience to play vile political games.

    “For someone who self-appoints as the APC national leader, it is ridiculous that the presidential candidate of the APC failed to proffer solutions to the economic woes that his party has foisted on Nigerians in the past seven years.”

    Highlighting Atiku’s achievements in comparison to Tinubu, Ibe added, “Even during the COVID-19 pandemic, Atiku pioneered the private donor relief funds, which opened the gateway for other Nigerians of means to follow suit in providing succor to people who were worst hit by the attendant self isolation regulation in the management of the pandemic.

    “Tinubu, who has been in hibernation mode for the seven years that his party unleashed the worst moment of economic hardship on Nigerians, has suddenly found a voice because, as it is usual with the APC, the time is here again to hoodwink the people with sugarcoated promises.

    “We, therefore, wish to remind the APC and their presidential candidate that, unlike them, the PDP and Atiku are promise keepers.

    “Unlike the APC and Tinubu, Atiku has not waited for when election is around the corner to espouse solutions to the challenges facing the country.

    “Unlike APC and Tinubu, Atiku’s position on the pathway to economic recovery of Nigeria has remained consistent ditto his views about restructuring, education, national inclusivity and engendering healthy national security.

    “Unlike Tinubu and his APC, Nigerians know that Atiku and the PDP are more believable to deliver on their manifesto.”

  • As Ebola spreads in Kampala, WHO urges Uganda’s neighbours to prepare

    As Ebola spreads in Kampala, WHO urges Uganda’s neighbours to prepare

    The World Health Organisation warned on Wednesday that Ebola’s arrival in the Ugandan capital highlighted the high risk of further spread of the deadly virus, calling on neighbouring countries to boost their preparedness.

    Since Uganda’s health ministry first declared the outbreak on September 20, the country has registered over 150 confirmed and probable cases, including 64 deaths, WHO said.

    And since the deadly disease spread to Kampala last week, 17 cases have been confirmed there, WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told reporters.

    “Although these cases are linked to known clusters, the very fact that there are cases in a densely populated city underscores the very real risk of further transmission,” he said, speaking from WHO headquarters in Geneva.

    There is a “very urgent need for increased readiness in districts and surrounding countries,” he warned.

    Ebola is spread through bodily fluids, with common symptoms being fever, vomiting, bleeding, and diarrhoea, and combatted through time-honoured ways of tracing, containing, and quarantining.

    Outbreaks are difficult to contain, especially in urban environments.

    “Ebola in a complex, urban city like Kampala is not easy, and we have to do everything possible to pull every chain of transmission,” the WHO’s incident manager Abdi Mahamud told reporters.

    Tedros said the UN health agency had on Tuesday released an additional $5,7 million from its contingency fund for emergencies, in addition to the $5 million previously released to address the Uganda crisis.

    WHO, he said, was working closely with the Ugandan government and partners to respond to the outbreak, and was calling for “a strengthened global response and increased donor investment.”

    Uganda’s last recorded fatality from a previous Ebola outbreak was in 2019.

    The particular strain now circulating in Uganda is known as the Sudan Ebola virus, for which there is currently no vaccine, although several candidate vaccines are heading toward clinical trials.

    (AFP)

  • ‘Biosecurity threats cost Africa over 0bn’

    ‘Biosecurity threats cost Africa over $420bn’

    The Deputy Regional Director of the United Nations Environment Programme, Dr. Richard Munang, has said that Biosecurity threats cost Africa over US$ 420 billion.

    Munang disclosed this on Tuesday in Lagos at the 8th African Conference on Health and Biosecurity, with the theme: “Strengthening Health Security and Mitigating Biological Threats in Africa”.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that the Lagos State Government, through its Ministry of Health, partnered with a non-governmental organisation, the Global Emerging Pathogens Treatment Consortium, to organise the conference.

    He said that the urgency for solutions is at an all-time high and the urgency for one-health cannot be overemphasized.

    He also disclosed that Africa’s biosecurity and biosafety capacity is scored at only 32 per cent.

    The Deputy Regional Director said that the One Health approach, which integrates human, environmental, animal, planet, and health, were critical to averting, managing, and treating biosafety risks on the continent.

    He said that climate change, pollution, and Environmental degradation are aggravating infectious diseases in Africa and globally.

    He said that the solution was One Health, an integrated approach complementing human medicine.

    According to him, “our UNEP work on climate action nature action, and pollution action offers a strategic pathway for One Health.”

    He said the contribution of the environment as a solution to biosecurity threats cuts across controlling temperatures which catalyse the growth of pathogens, restoring degraded areas to minimise the impact of habitat loss that increases the risk of pathogens transfer to humans.

    Prof. Akin Abayomi, the Lagos State Commissioner for Health, said that the conference is the fourth in a series of conferences organised by the Lagos State Government in partnership with GET.

    Abayomi said that the conference seeks to develop a biosecurity roadmap and increase the African continent’s resilience toward building the capacity to deal with pathogens of high consequence.

    He said that the conference would ensure that the continent strengthens its health security to mitigate biological threats and consolidate the gains made in tackling different emerging infectious diseases.

    “A city like Lagos is vulnerable to biological threats making it important for us to improve its preparedness against biological threats and build appropriate infrastructure to manage and mitigate dangerous pathogens of high consequence,” he explained.

    According to him, the continents have continued to work to build the appropriate infrastructure, train and improve the capacity of appropriate personnel to be able to manage dangerous pathogens such as Ebola, Lassa Fever, COVID, Yellow Fever, Marburg Fever and any agent that is considered to be a pathogen of high consequence.

    Dr. Ayodotun Bobadoye, Chief Operating Officer of GET Consortium, said the conference brought together policymakers, scientists, academia, non-governmental organizations, and security experts both within and outside the country.

    Bobadoye said that the conference discussed how the continent can effectively mitigate the impact of emerging biosecurity threats.

    He called on governments to take the issue of biosecurity very seriously.

    He said that with the increase in frequency and intensity of biological threats in infectious diseases in recent years, there is no better time to have the conference to discuss mitigating biological threats than now.

    NAN recalls that no fewer than 400 global health, security, and environmental experts, including policymakers and researchers in various fields from Africa and continents around the world, attended the conference.

    The conference has been organized in different cities in Africa in the last eight years; in Accra-Ghana, Freetown-Sierra Leone, Dakar-Senegal, and in Abuja-Nigeria. 

    (NAN)

  • ‘Why I floated Kiraa TV three years ago’

    ‘Why I floated Kiraa TV three years ago’

    Currie Franklin Oluwasegun

    Founder of Kiraa Television, Currie Franklin Oluwasegun has explained that he established the wave-making television outfit three years ago because of his passion to promote contents that puts the Nigerian culture on the map.

    He recalled that he delved into the business a few years back after he attended Lagbaja’s show in Lagos and jokingly his friends were hailing him in Yoruba language ( e Kira fun baba ) from where he derived the name of the television channel.

    “This is because my dad started a movie cinema back in the early 70s in Abeokuta, that’s where the passion came from,” he said.

    Read Also: El Clasico to take centre stage on DStv, GOtv

    According to him: “We appreciate the historical heritage of Africa at large and Nigeria in particular. Thus, we create and promote mind blowing and sensational contents from an exciting viewpoint.

    Continuing, the Ijebu-Ososa, Ogun State born businessman said: “We believe theatre started from Ososa, and I feel starting Kiraa TV from the existing protocol of where it started from is a good thing too, that’s the reason we choose Ososa as our favourite location to operate. So far, we have produced series of movies. “We are working on a project at the moment that will promote our art and culture. People should just wait for It, I promise you it’s going to be nice. My dream is to see Kiraa TV one of the biggest TV platforms that showcase great movies, indigenous art and cultures”.

  • Patoranking to perform at Qatar 2022 FIFA World Cup

    Patoranking to perform at Qatar 2022 FIFA World Cup

    PATORANKING-

    Popular, reggae-dancehall musician Patoranking, has been chosen as one of the performing musical acts at the Qatar 2022 FIFA World Cup.

    The World Cup which begins on November 20 will have the “Celebrate Me” singer perform on the global football stage alongside Hassan Shakosh and DJ Aseel.

    The 2022 Headies Award winner, will perform before a large crowd and viewers from around the world at the FIFA Fan Festival at one central location at Al Bidda Park in Doha.

    Read Also: Pogba to miss Qatar World Cup over injury

    Aseel is billed to perform on December 2, Shakosh on December 12 and will be joined by groups like, Gims, Julian Marley and the Uprising, and the Miami Band at both events.

    Davido, was also listed among musicians from all over the world to perform this edition’s theme song, despite the Super Eagles’ failure to qualify for the World Cup.