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Expert charges Nigerians on routine diabetes checks

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A diabetes specialist  has charged Nigerians on the need to go for routine diabetes checks to ensure early detection of the disease. The expert, Dr Yakubu Lawal, who is a diabetes specialist in the University of Abuja Teaching Hospital, Abuja gave the counsel in an interview in Gwagwalada, Abuja on Sunday, 29 January.

He noted that many diseases can be prevented or their consequences minimized through regular tests and early detection or change to a healthy lifestyle. According to him, complications from diabetes can cause cardiovascular disease, kidney diseases, eye damage, hearing impairment and depression to an individual if not properly managed.

“Diabetes mellitus is a global pandemic while the prevalence is increasing at geometric rate because of the poor awareness among the populace… Some people don’t know when to go for a medical check-up in the hospital to know whether they are diabetic or not, or to associate with diabetic patients.” he said.

“ The awareness is very poor and that is why the prevalence has increased in our society today because of the paucity of the enlightenment…There are people, when you tell them their sugar level is high and they should come to the hospital for check-up, they tell you there is nothing wrong with them.” he added.

He further said that there is a need to encourage people to promote and adopt a healthy lifestyle to help reduce the prevalence in the society. “Changing your lifestyle could be a big step towards diabetes prevention, and it’s never too late to start. Regular check-up and healthy lifestyle also goes a long way in preventing type 2 diabetes mellitus,” he said.

NAN/ Wumi/S.S

Ivory Coast raises leprosy awareness

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Dan Izzett has lived with leprosy’s effects on his body for 70 years, and has lost much to what he calls an “ancient, fascinating, very unkind disease”.

The Zimbabwean former civil engineering technician and pastor was diagnosed at the age of 25 in 1972, but first contracted the disease when he was just five.

That long incubation period gave the bacteria that causes leprosy, Mycobacterium leprae, lots of time to spread through his body.

His right leg was amputated in 1980 in Zimbabwe’s capital Harare, now 75, Izzett has no feeling above his elbows, below his knees or in 70 percent of his face.

That lack of feeling poses a “constant danger,” Izzett said in a phone call from his home in southwest England.

In October 2020, “I put my hands on a hot plate and hadn’t noticed it until I could smell my flesh burning,” he said, leading to the amputation of the middle finger of his right hand.

The following year, the little toe on his left foot was amputated. Last month, he lost another toe.

Izzett said he chose to speak out about his experience because millions of survivors who were less well-off were unable to, partly because of the stigma and discrimination that still surrounds the disease.

Leprosy, also known as Hansen’s disease, has been haunting humanity for at least 4,000 years, often affecting the poorest communities.

It is a considered a neglected tropical disease by the World Health Organization, and remains under researched and little discussed compared to many other illnesses.

In 2021, more than 140,500 new cases were detected worldwide, nearly three quarters of them in Brazil, India and Indonesia, according to the WHO.

However pandemic-related disruptions have led to nearly 40 percent fewer cases being detected a year, with fears that tens of thousands have gone undiagnosed.

Even before the pandemic, the official numbers likely did not reflect reality.

“We know the number of patients who have been tested, but we do not count the forgotten, undetected patients,” said Bertrand Cauchoix, a leprosy specialist at the Raoul Follereau Foundation in France.

This is in part because the disease’s incubation period can last up to 20 years.

Testing and diagnosis also takes time, during which patients could potentially infect their family members.

Before he received his diagnosis, said Izzett, “my wife got the disease from me”.

Back in the 1970s, Izzett was given the antibiotic Dapsone, which was then a lifetime treatment.

In the mid-80s, a combination of drugs including Dapsone known as multidrug therapy (MDT) became available.

It can cure leprosy over a 12-month course though nerve damage and other remnants of the disease remain.

Mathias Duck, a former chaplain in Paraguay’s capital Asuncion, only needed six-months of MDT after being diagnosed with leprosy in 2010.

“I consider myself the luckiest person affected by leprosy because I was diagnosed and treated in time and so I have no impairments whatsoever,” the 44-year-old said.

The WHO provides MDT to patients worldwide for free, with Swiss pharmaceutical giant Novartis donating doses since 2000.

However, there has been little progress for new treatments.

“There is no money for leprosy, only charitable donations,” Cauchoix said.

Alexandra Aubry, a specialist at the Centre for Immunology and Infectious Diseases in France, evaluates whether every new antibiotic developed for other illnesses could also be used for leprosy.

Her laboratory is one of the few in the world able to carry out tests on the leprosy bacteria, which does not survive in a petri dish.

They are trying to find a way to “simplify” treatment so it can take less than six months, she said.

There are also a couple of vaccines being developed, though they remain in early phases of human testing.

“It is very complex to get funding for this,” Aubry said.

“To assess the effectiveness of a vaccine, you have to follow the vaccinated population for 10 to 15 years,” with the timeframe extended further by the disease’s long incubation period, she said.

In comparison to how swiftly the world responded to Covid, leprosy efforts are “a drop in the bucket,” Duck said, calling for far more research and political action.

But he added that there is something everyone can do for World Leprosy Day on Sunday stop using the word “leper”.

“We call it the ‘L word’,” Duck said, describing it as discriminatory.

“It’s a little step that most people can do,” he added, “to give people affected by leprosy”the dignity they deserve”.

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Ankara might accept Finland into NATO – President Erdogan

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Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has signalled that Ankara could accept Finland into NATO before taking any action on the membership of its Nordic neighbour Sweden.

Erdogan spoke just days after Ankara suspended NATO accession talks with the two countries after a protest in Stockholm where a far-right politician burned a copy of the Quran. “We may deliver Finland a different message [on their NATO application], and Sweden would be shocked when they see our message. But Finland should not make the same mistake Sweden did,” Erdogan said in a televised speech aired on Sunday.

Sweden and Finland applied last year to join NATO after Russia invaded Ukraine, dropping their longstanding military nonalignment. Every member of the 30-nation alliance needs to approve their membership, and Turkey and Hungary are the only countries yet to have done so. The Hungarian parliament is expected to approve the bids in February.

Erdogan’s main complaint has been Sweden’s refusal to extradite dozens of people that Ankara has linked to the banned Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) and a failed 2016 coup attempt.

He is facing an election in May and has dug in his heels over Sweden’s NATO membership as he tries to energise his conservative and nationalist supporters. On Sunday, Erdogan repeated his demand for Sweden to hand over some 120 alleged suspects.

“If you absolutely want to join NATO, you will return these terrorists to us. You will send these terrorists to us so that you can join NATO,”  Erdogan said. Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson has said his country wants to restart NATO dialogue with Turkey.

Late on Saturday, the Turkish foreign ministry issued a travel warning for European countries over anti-Turkish demonstrations and what it described as Islamophobia. The notice cited an increase in anti-Turkish protests by groups with links to terror groups, a reference to the PKK, which took up arms against the Turkish state in 1984.

Pro-Kurdish groups have waved the flags of the PKK, and its affiliates during protests in Sweden organised in response to Sweden and Finland’s promise to prevent PKK activities in their countries to secure Turkey’s approval for them to join NATO. As part of that memorandum, Erdogan said Turkey had provided a list of 120 people it wants to be extradited from Sweden.

 

Al Jazeera/S.O

Enugu PDP Guber candidate promises wealth creation

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The PDP governorship candidate in Enugu State, Dr Peter Mbah, has assured the electorate that his administration would engage youths and transform them from job seekers to wealth creators.

Mbah gave the assurance during a Town-Hall meeting at Ojebe-Ogene and Ezedike Development Centres in Udi Local Government Area on Sunday.

He said that unemployment would be a thing of the past as he had already mapped out strategies to tackle the menace by making youths also employers of labour.

The governorship candidate who outlined his development plans for the people of the area, stressed that agro-allied processing industries, special economic zones, building of world standard skills acquisition would be given adequate attention.

He also added that vocational centres and upskilling the capacity of the youths with 21st century digital know-how that will industrialize the state would be built.

Mbah, who said he had a special interest in the empowerment of young people and women, promised that agriculture would be commercialized to create a value chain and multiple employments for the people.

Rural Economy
He noted that infrastructure is critical to unlocking the rural economy, growing the economy seven-fold, and making the state a hub for investments and tourism.

The PDP standard bearer further added that the major link roads in the development centres should not be taken for granted as they were adequately captured in his manifesto.

He said that they would be given urgent attention that would expedite their construction, maintaining more industries that would encourage productivity, generate huge revenue and put the state on the roadmap to prosperity.

Mbah equally re-emphasised his commitment to provide a N100 billion naira revolving capital for young entrepreneurs, declare a state of emergency on rural water scheme for easy reticulation of water in every household.

He said he would upgrade healthcare centres with modern facilities and qualified health workers and ensure that other social amenities would be provided.

Speaking earlier, the administrators of the two development centres, Mr Simeon Egwu, and Mr Joe Anieze, as well as the chairman of the council area, Philip Okoh, commended Mbah for his outstanding development plans.

According to them, Mbah represents a pathfinder and pacesetter who is coming from the private sector with a rich experience that will add value to the state.

Meanwhile, leaders and representatives of the various communities in the development centres, while presenting their prime needs, hailed Mbah for the laudable town-hall meetings.

They stressed that his government would spur quantum leap in rural and urban integration even, promising their votes for him are intact.

The leaders which include Dr Sam Ugwuozo, Tahil Ochi, Uche Agu, Prof. Edwin Nwobodo, Mrs Gloria Agu, Mrs Ify Igbochi, Hon. Bibian Anekwe, Prof. Pascal Okorie, among others, said they would take the project as their own and would continue to mobilize for Mbah through their door-to-door tours.

Ochi, while describing the business mogul as a divine project on a rescue mission, expressed confidence that he would steer the state away from the challenges of insecurity, unemployment, dwindling revenues from the federal government.

On his part, Dr Ugwuozo described Mbah as a humble, simple, courageous, compassionate man with a sense of justice to redefine governance in the state.

The people, however, appealed to the gubernatorial candidate to construct their 12-kilometers Awhum – Nkana – Nike link road; Awhum – Egede and Ukana – Ebe link roads in order to promote agriculture and expand their market base in the area.

They also requested that the Adaukwu, Amagu and Ebe roads be constructed with drainage against erosion.

 

NAN/N.O

2023: Governor Bello kickstarts campaign in Kogi-East

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Governor Yahaya Bello of Kogi on Sunday began the Tinubu/Shettima Presidential/National and State Assembly campaign in Anyingba, Kogi East amidst tumultuous crowd and assurance of victory.

The governor, who said the APC was a strong united family in Kogi State, gave assurance of an outstanding outing at the February and March general elections in the state.

During rally in Anyigba, the governor received scores of returnees amidst loud cheers and ovations from the supporters of the party.

Bello said that the attendance at the Kogi East rally alone, was a testimony that “APC is one and united family ready to sweep the votes for Tinubu/Shettina Presidency in the state.”

Presenting the APC flags to all the party’s candidates in Kogi East amidst an enthusiastic crowd, Bello reiterated that Bola Ahmed Tinubu and his running mate Mr. Kassim Shettima, remained the Presidential/Vice Presidential candidate Kogi was rooting for.

Today, we are declaring to the world that Kogi APC is committed to coming up with the highest percentage amongst the entire 36 states for the Presidential, Senatorial/House of Rep and State Assembly elections.

“It’s in the records that In 2019, you did deliver 100 per cent because you are trustworthy people and I believe this time around, similar feat will be repeated across board.

“Of course, such result will give Kogi a vintage advantage to demand for certain dividends from the central government after its emergence, ” he said.

The governor, however, urged party supporters to reach out to their families, friends and associates to vote again for the ruling APC for outright victory.

Earlier, the Deputy Director General, Kogi APC Campaign Council and Deputy Speaker, Kogi State House of Assembly, Mr. Alfa Momoh-Rabiu, thanked the governor for giving the level playing ground for the emergence of credible candidates, which had made the council’s work easy.

Momoh-Rabiu said that all the candidates presented by the APC for the 2023 general polls were generous, popular and acceptable and declared that the party structure would galvanise support for them and guarantee their victory.

Sen. Jibrin Echocho, the Kogi East Senatorial candidate, said governor Bello’s developmental strides in Kogi East had done 80 per cent of their campaign work while the remaining 20 per cent was for each candidate to work on for outright victory.

 

NAN/N.O

Moroccan National Finery Museum reopens

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The Bizmoun necklace is the oldest piece of jewellery in the world.

It’s on display at the National Finery Museum in Rabat, Morocco, a building which has reopened its doors after years of renovations.

The necklace, made of 32 perforated shells, was found in 2019 in the Bizmoun cave near Essaouira.

“The oldest piece displayed here is the Bizmoun necklace, which is the oldest jewellery in the world, not only in Morocco, and it dates back 150,000 years. It was discovered in recent excavations in the Bizmoun cave near Essaouira. Thanks to it, we can start the investigative path and learn about the development of historical jewellery,” says Fatima Zahra Khlifi, curator, National Finery Museum.

The museum has artistic, cultural, and also historical value.

Before hosting exhibitions, it was a princely residence in the 17th century.

The building has been a museum since 1915, and it was called Oudaya museum until 2006.

The renovation works started in early 2020 and ended in late 2022.

Now called National Finery Museum, the building was inaugurated in early January.

After it opened, Morocco’s King Mohammed VI gifted 350 items from his collection to the museum.

“The goal of the restoration and rehabilitation of the building was to meet all the appropriate standards for the approval of the museum displays and receive offers, both at the national and international levels, while respecting the characteristics of the building. Then, there were workshops through which the selection, inventory and maintenance of the contents took place in order to enrich these exhibitions, without forgetting King Mohamed VI’s gift that he made available to us,” says Zahra Khlifi.

In total, 8,000 objects are on display in the museum, from jewellery to costumes, bags, belts and shoes.

“The museum contains different and diverse jewellery in its global concept, and it does not only include jewellery that was used for decoration, but there is also clothing, men’s jewellery, in a varied exhibition divided into five parts through which we can learn about the history of jewellery, the tools of jewellery-making and their development, the history of Moroccan costumes and the most important locations where they were made, as well as men’s and women’s urban and rural jewellery and their regional characteristics,” says Zahra Khlifi.

Since its reopening, the museum has welcomed more than 11,000 daily visitors.

“I see that the place is really representing Moroccan art, especially metallurgy and Caftan. It’s a nice place and interesting place to visit for people who want to know about the Moroccan heritage,” says Hassan Belfakir, visitor.

Rabat residents are also proud of this place and have noticed the facelift.

“This museum has made a great addition to the city of Rabat and has changed a lot,” says Abdelfattah El Aoufir, visitor.

According to Mohamed Es-Semmar, historian, the National Finery museum will play its part in preserving the Moroccan cultural heritage.

“We cannot understand the tangible heritage without adding to it the intangible heritage that is displayed in museums, and the added value that museums provide is that it complements what the Moroccan people in general do and Rabat in particular, for example, with regards to the city’s museums,” he says.

“It also gives the tourist who is interested in cultural tourism a general idea of the daily life of those past centuries.”

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New Zealand prepares for more heavy rains

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New Zealanders in the flood-hit country are bracing for more heavy rains this week with more severe weather alerts.

New Zealand’s prime minister Chris Hipkins confirmed that at least four people have died, and an emergency order in Auckland continues. On Friday, it experienced its worst downpour on record. About 350 people needed emergency accommodation.

He added there had been significant damage across Auckland and the north island. The newly appointed PM also highlighted climate change’s role in extreme weather events. “It’s a 1-in-100-year weather event, and we seem to be getting a lot of them at the moment. I think people can see that there’s a message in that…Climate change is real; it’s with us,” Mr. Hipkins said.

READ ALSO: New Zealand’s largest city calls for state of emergency

He told national broadcaster TVNZ: “We will have to deal with more of these extreme weather events in the future. We need to be prepared for that. And we need to do everything we can to combat the challenge of climate change,” he added. Mr. Hipkins also acknowledged criticism from locals that communications over the floods had been too few and far between.

With the unprecedented rainfall Auckland has seen since Friday, even “ordinary” torrential rain in the days ahead could cause more flooding and damage than it would usually, the city’s mayor said in a tweet on Monday. “In parts of the city, the weather looks a bit better – but, don’t be fooled, our region is not out of the woods yet,” Wayne Brown said.

A home that was knocked off its foundations during the floods. Many factors contribute to flooding, but a warming atmosphere caused by climate change increases the intensity and frequency of extreme rainfall. The world has already warmed by about 1.1C since the industrial era began, and temperatures will keep rising unless governments around the globe make steep cuts to emissions.

The National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, the country’s climate science body, said Friday was the wettest day on record for several locations in Auckland. Footage and images online showed people trapped in waist-deep floodwater, rescuers carrying out evacuations on kayaks, and grocery items floating down the aisles of several flooded supermarkets.

Auckland Airport, temporarily closed due to damage from heavy flooding, has since reopened. New Zealand media have identified two individuals who died in the floods. Daniel Newth, a 25-year-old arborist, died while kayaking near his North Shore home, and Daniel Mark Miller, 34, was found dead in a ditch in the Auckland suburb Wairu Valley.

 

BBC/S.O

Italy, Libya sign $8 billion gas deal

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Italian energy giant Eni signed an $8 billion gas deal with Libya’s state-run National Oil Corporation as Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni visited Tripoli.

European governments have been scrambling to find alternatives to Russian gas since last year’s invasion of Ukraine saw deliveries slashed to less than half their pre-war levels, sending prices soaring to record highs and triggering costly state subsidies to protect consumers.

Eni said it was the first major project in Libya since early 2000 and involved the development of two offshore gas fields.

“The combined gas production from the two structures will start in 2026 and reach a plateau of 750 million of standard gas cubic feet per day,” Eni said in a statement.

“Production will be ensured through two main platforms tied in to the existing treatment facilities at the Mellitah Complex,” 80 kilometres (50 miles) west of the capital, it added.

“The project also includes the construction of a carbon capture and storage (CCS) facility at Mellitah, allowing a significant reduction of the overall carbon footprint,” the company added.

“The overall estimated investment will amount to $8 billion, with significant impact on the industry and the associated supply chain, allowing a significant contribution to the Libyan economy.”

Eni has an 80 percent share of Libya’s gas production.

The agreement was signed in the presence of Meloni and her host Abdulhamid Dbeibah, who heads the UN-brokered Government of National Unity which is contested by a rival administration in the east.

Her visit is the first by a European leader to war-battered Libya since her predecessor Mario Draghi’s visit in April 2021.

Meloni also visited Algeria this week seeking supply deals from Africa’s top gas exporter.

During her trip to Libya, she was expected to discuss the issue of migration amid rising numbers of irregular migrants from Libya to Italy.

Libya is a conduit for thousands of people each year fleeing conflict and poverty across Africa, seeking refuge across the Mediterranean in Europe.

Meloni’s far-right government took office in October, vowing to stop migrant landings in Italy, which reached more than 105,000 in 2022.

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Lassa Fever: death toll rises to 37, NCDC reveals

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The number of confirmed Lassa fever cases in Nigeria rose to 244 in the first three weeks of 2023. With a record of 18 new deaths from the viral infection from January 16 to 22, the total death toll rose to 37. This report was obtained from the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) on Sunday. The Lassa fever situation report for week three confirmed cases in 16 states and 50 Local Government Areas with a Case Fatality Ratio of 15.1 per cent. Meanwhile, the number of suspected cases of the infection is now 939, which is higher than the suspected cases for the same period in 2022.

READ ALSO:Lassa Fever: Ondo Records 106 Cases, 8 Deaths

 

The NCDC report read in part, “In week three, the number of new confirmed cases increased from 77 in week two, 2023 to 137 cases…these were reported from Ondo, Edo, Taraba, Benue, Nasarawa, Bauchi, Ebonyi, Plateau, Kogi, Anambra, Delta, FCT, Adamawa, and Enugu States.

“Cumulatively from week one to week three, 2023, 37 deaths have been reported with a CFR of 15.1 per cent which is lower than the CFR for the same period in 2022 (18.8 per cent).

“In total for 2023, 16 states have recorded at least one confirmed case across 50 Local Government Areas.

“Seventy-nine per cent of all confirmed Lassa fever cases were reported from these three states (Ondo, Edo, and Bauchi), while 21 per cent were reported from 13 states with confirmed Lassa fever cases.”

 

The Edo State Commissioner for Health, Prof. Akoria Obehi, disclosed that 40 persons, including 26 adults and 14 children, who were confirmed with the Lassa fever disease are still on admission at the Irrua Specialist Teaching Hospital. Akoria stated on Sunday that the patients are currently receiving medical care and are responding to treatment. She said the state has now recorded a total of 115 confirmed cases and 13 deaths from the disease, adding that the confirmed cases are spread across 11 local government councils in the state.

 

 

 

S.S/Healthwise

Toyota Maintains top automaker title, sells 10.5m vehicles in 2022

Toyota Motor Corp sold 10.5 million vehicles in 2022, it said on Monday, defending its title as the world’s top-selling automaker for a third straight year.

 

Global sales for the group, including truck unit Hino Motors and small-car maker Daihatsu, inched down 0.1% as record overseas sales of 8.6 million vehicles helped offset a 9.6% dip in its home market to 1.9 million.

 

Second-ranked rival Volkswagen Group earlier this month reported its lowest sales in over a decade, of 8.3 million vehicles, as COVID-19 lockdowns in China and the war in Ukraine upended supply chains.

While some chip-related supply constraints remained for Toyota as well, the Japanese automaker said strong demand in Asia and an increase in the production capacity and optimisation in Asia and North America helped it boost global production by 5% in 2022.

 

Toyota in November revised its production forecast for the current financial year through the end of March, to 9.2 million vehicles from 9.7 million.

 

 

 

 

Reuters/Hauwa Abu