Friday, 29 August 2014

ENUGU STATE DEPUTY GOVERNOR IMPEACHMENT SAGA: SOME ANIMALS ARE MORE EQUAL THAN THE OTHERS by Isaac Oluyi


Nigeria, in recent times, has become a good stage for various dramas. From the comedy of error to the theatre of the absurd, Nigerians are being entertained daily. As interesting as the entertainment has been, it is also very worrisome. It is ominous of a gloomy and bleak future for the nation. From unprincipled defection from one party to the other to the running away of the nation’s military personnel to Cameroon for refuge as well as the continued hostage of over 200 school girls by the Boko Haram, the country has indeed become a veritable source of unpalatable story. The latest of such is the Enugu State Deputy Governor impeachment saga over the keeping of poultry in his official residential quarters.

When the news first filtered out I found it amusing and petty. What is the relevance of this to good governance? I queried. But the news refused to go away. What I considered petty became a serious issue, attracting informed and uninformed opinions. Accusations and counter-accusations took the centre stage. ‘If I keep poultry, the governor is also into piggery. So, what is the fuss about?’ But while it is condonable to rear pigs in the government house, it is a taboo to rear chickens there. In fact, it is an abomination given the fact that chickens are lesser animals compared to pigs. So why will anybody bring ridicule to the government house by rearing chickens when big ruminants such as cattle, pigs, and so on are there? Without doubt, that ignoble act is impeachable and Sunday Onyebuchi must go! Welcome to the world of George Orwell’s Animal Farms where some animals are more equal than the others!

It was as if Orwell had Nigeria in mind when he penned his evergreen piece Animal Farms. What just played out in Enugu state has an unmistakable semblance with the events in the novel, particularly how big animals systematically edged out the small animals. Initially, they thought they were all equals, until greed for power and selfishness took over the reign of the farms. Like Animal Farms, like Enugu state as politics has put asunder the governor and his deputy, who I believe started out as two jolly friends. No one could have made his enemy his deputy. It takes ‘like minds’ to come together with the sole aim of achieving a common good for the people. Two equals are no longer equal. Onyebuchi has been taught a bitter lesson of politics: NEVER OUTSHINE YOUR MASTER! Why will Onyebuchi keep poultry when the governor is into piggery? Chickens grow faster than pigs and more people seem to like chickens than pigs.

Despite the pettiness of the issue at stake, it is imperative to draw out serious lessons from the saga. In fact, some questions must be asked?
  1. When are we going to start placing emphasis on developmental issues in governance?
  2. When will governors start seeing their deputies as partners in progress, not just appendages?
  3. When will the Houses of Assemblies and the National Assembly stop using impeachment as a tool of oppression, repression and self-enrichment?


I can go on and on. Impeachment tool has been used and misused in the land. In fact, since 1999, heads have rolled in the country’s political dramatic interplay. Impeachment is a good check of excesses of political office holders, but it can spell doom for our democracy if we continue to use it arbitrarily. Onyebuchi may have gone for rearing chickens in the government house, but the end of this drama has not been seen. It’s just the end of part one. I know other parts will soon unfold. After all, the animals are still alive and they will definitely reproduce. Like in human kingdom, proliferation is a hallmark of the animal kingdom.


Stealing Is Not Corruption: Why Nigeria Is a Case Study in Absurdity (Part Two)


In my last post, I started giving reasons why I think Nigeria is a case study in absurdity. The first reason I gave was the way our politicians change parties without caution. They even seem to get a kick out of their actions. I cited the examples of Nuhu Ribadu, Atiku Abubakar, Femi Fani-Kayode, Rotimi Amaechi and many others. I mentioned the governor of Ondo State, Olusegun Mimiko and likened him to Nicolas Anelka due to the way he has been hopping from one party to another. And to justify this name I gave him, the governor last week decamped again. He has returned to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). In a related development, former governor of Plateau State, Joshua Dariye has revealed he is also returning to PDP. With the rate at which defections are taking place now in Nigeria, it seems the political transfer window is now open and the political clubs with the biggest offers are likely to sign on new players for the 2015 political season. Didn’t our president go for medicals in Germany recently? I am not insinuating that he wants to transfer to another political club but maybe his current club wants to be sure of his fitness in order to avoid a very costly mistake it made some seasons, sorry, years, ago when it fielded an obviously physically unfit person as its presidential candidate.
In this post I will be exemplifying another phenomenon which makes our country a case study in absurdity. A senior friend had suggested that instead of ‘absurdity’ in the title of the last post I should have used ‘wrong norm’. His argument was that I can only call a situation ‘absurd’ if I can provide counterfactual evidences. He posited that what we have in Nigeria is the acceptance of wrong norms. That is, we have come to acknowledge the wrong norms as right. So anyone who attempts to observe the right norms will be seen as the abnormal person. But I am sticking to ‘absurd’ in the title of this post because it’s a continuation of the last post. So my second reason for saying Nigeria is a case study in absurdity is because in Nigeria we celebrate questionable characters, corruption and criminality. I present below instances to substantiate my assertion.
A few years ago, a chieftain of Nigeria’s ruling political party, the Peoples Democratic Party, who was sentenced to two years in jail for corrupt charges left the prison, after his time in prison ended, amidst fanfare. It was a mammoth crowd that was waiting for him outside the prison gate. He was driven straight to church in a long line of cars accompanied by great jubilation. The church service was attended by a former president, serving and former governors, members of the ruling party and many others. The icing on the cake was the presence of a then serving minister who represented the sitting president at the occasion. A report said the thanksgiving service was shown live on a national TV. After the church service a lavish reception was held. In a surprising development two years later, the Supreme Court of Nigeria overturned his conviction.

What can be more bizarre than organising a birthday celebration for an ex-governor who is serving time in a jail in the United Kingdom? This onetime governor had been convicted by a UK court for money laundering but this did not deter his supporters and kinsmen from organising an elaborate birthday programme for his 55th birthday. The birthday programme lasted three days. Billboards celebrating him were put up in some towns in the state where he had been governor. A church service was held for him, where about seven first class traditional rulers, businessmen and politicians were present. The minister who officiated at service was said to have asked those in attendance to emulate the convicted former governor. At the reception organised in his honour, musicians and comedians performed, and the celebration ended with a football match on the third day.
Do you remember the story of a former governor who was arrested and detained in London on charges of money laundering while he was still a governor in Nigeria but jumped bail and found his way back to Nigeria dressed as woman? He was impeached by his state’s legislature and was the first ex-governor to be convicted of corruption, though he was released two days after receiving a two-year sentence. He was later granted government pardon and today, he is heavily involved in the politics of the country. It is interesting to know that today he is in the same party with the former police officer and corruption fighter who secured his conviction and who was said to have made the following comments after he was granted the pardon: "I'm really sad. I'm sad for my country. There's not anything people can do to bring the people who are corrupt to justice. "It's a terrible development. I can't understand how leaders will sit down and come up with an unbelievable action like this.”
What about the former minister who was accused of being less truthful about the qualifications she claimed to have had but nothing was done about? The same minister was accused of misappropriation of funds by the nation’s House of Representatives but she stayed in her post for over four months before she left. In Nigeria, persons undergoing trial and in incarceration win elections despite the moral burden and even without campaigning.
It has been said that in Nigeria, a corrupt officer should make sure he steals so much money, as he will only be asked to return a fraction later and then he can go ahead and enjoy the rest of his loot. The president himself was reported to have said on national television that “Over 70 percent of what are called corruption, even by EFCC (Economic and Financial Crimes Commission) and other anti-corruption agencies is not corruption, but common stealing. Corruption is perception, not reality.”

(To be continued)

Thursday, 21 August 2014

Nuhu Ribadu's Defection and Other Reasons Why Nigeria Is a Case Study in Absurdity (Part One)


Could it have ever occurred to Hillary Clinton to defect from the Democratic Party to the Republican Party when she lost her presidential bid to Barack Obama? I am almost certain it couldn’t because theirs is a rational society where decisions are taken based on principles. So, former Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, recently defected from the All Progressives Congress (APC), the party that emerged from the merger among some political parties including the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) which fielded him as its presidential candidate in the last presidential election in Nigeria and some Nigerians are still reacting to his action. While the legality of Ribadu's action is not in question, I am not totally sure about the morality.
When a senior colleague asked me what my take on the defection was, I told him I had come to a point where I didn’t allow anything to surprise me about Nigeria's politics. Yes, I don’t allow anything to surprise me again in this nation just like I cannot be surprised by developments in the football transfer market. The day David Beckham left Manchester United – despite the circumstances that surrounded his exit – was the day I ceased to allow myself to be surprised by football transfers. So as a fan of Arsenal FC, I was not surprised when the legendary Thierry Henry left Arsenal for FC Barcelona or when the hugely talented Cesc Fabregas left the club, also for Barcelona. But I must confess that though I still have huge respects for Henry, it is not the same about Fabregas. I still admire Cesc though because of his undeniable talent but within me, I am wishing that he does not ‘click’ at Chelsea FC.
Come to think of it. Are we sure Nigerian politicians do not see Nigerian politics like a football league? That if they feel they are not given a prominent role in their team, they can decide to leave for another club? To Nigerian politicians, our politics is like a football league and our political parties are like football clubs. So if a club, sorry, party comes with a mouthwatering offer, an offer better than what they have in their current club/party, they won’t hesitate to jump ship. It is becoming clearer every day that our political parties are the same or how does one interpret Mallam Ribadu’s statement? “In Nigeria, especially in politics, you can’t say that this is an exclusive party for the people who are thieves or this is for good people. “It’s just like saying that all Yorubas are this or all Igbos are this. In every group of people, there must be good people and there are bad people. Of course, the good may be more than the bad or the bad may be more than the good in any group. “But there is no any party that is exclusively for the good people or for the bad people.”

Ribadu’s defection to PDP is not the first in Nigeria and probably will not be the last. The earliest high profile defections I can remember were those of Senators Wahab Dosumu and Adeseye Ogunlewe from Alliance for Democracy to PDP. Just recently, former Governor Olagunsoye Oyinlola crossed from the PDP to APC. Who could have believed that, knowing how bitter the fight between him and Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola some years ago? But who also could have believed that Christiano Ronaldo, Cesc Fabrgas or Samuel Eto’o could ever play for Jose Mourinho? And who would have believed that Nuhu Ribadu would one day be in the same party with James Ibori (I didn’t hear that Ibori has been expelled from PDP)? Or that Ribadu will be in the same party with Dimeji Bankole or any of those persons he hunted down as chairman of EFCC? Or who can ever think that it is possible for Chief Segun Osoba to contemplate ever abandoning his ‘progressive’ friends as it is being rumoured? For those who may be asking, “What about Reuben Abati?” I do not have an answer to that. But between you and me, who could have thought Abati would ever work for President Jonathan? 

Alhaji Atiku Abubakar has crisscrossed parties more times than a newborn baby changes diapers in one day. He went from PDP to ACN, from ACN back to PDP, and lately from PDP to APC. What about Chief Femi Fani-Kayode who jumped from PDP to APC only to jump back to PDP? Doesn’t that remind one of Didier who left Chelsea for some years before returning to the club? Current governor of Ondo State, Olusegun Mimiko left the Alliance for Democracy for PDP and from the PDP, he went to Labour Party all in a bid to realise his ambition to become governor. He is probably the Nicolas Anelka of the Nigerian Political League. Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi was voted governor of Rivers State twice on the platform of PDP but today he is in APC. I know some may say he had no option but to leave the party but did Thabo Mbeki leave the ANC when he was forced out of power by Jacob Zuma or did Tony Blair leave the Labour Party when he was forced out of power by Gordon Brown?

Governor Theodore Orji was voted into power when he was in prison through the help of then Governor Orji Uzor Kalu on the platform of the Progressive Peoples Alliance (PPA) but today he is in PDP. The story is the same for former Governor Ikedi Ohiakim. What about Rabiu Musa Kwakwanso? What about Ibrahim Shekarau? What about Senator Ali Modu Sherriff or Bukola Saraki? What about Engr. Segun Oni? What about Diepriye Silva, Gbenga Daniel, Alhaji Isiaka Adeleke, Aminu Masari, George Akume, Audu Ogbe, Kawo Baraje, Abiodun Akinlade? The list is indeed endless.
Our politician’s shamelessness and inability to stand for an ideology are some of the many reasons why I came to the submission that Nigeria is a case study in absurdity. In my next post, I will give other instances to substantiate this submission that Nigeria is a case study in absurdity.

Wednesday, 20 August 2014

Alfred Ajani, the young Nigerian who employed a radical approach in his job search


Alfred Ajani has been inundated with offers of interviews after taking a radical approach to job hunting.
Alfred Ajani, 22, has applied for over 300 positions since getting a degree in marketing earlier this summer – but says he has struggled in the crowded graduate labour market. Determined to land his dream job, he decided to hand out CVs to company bosses commuting into the City of London through Waterloo Station this morning. Alfred stood at the entrance to the busy station holding a sign stating: ‘Marketing graduate (BA Hons 2:1 Coventry Uni) Ask for CV.’

His direct approach received a warm response from commuters, with many stopping to discuss potential positions. Alfred, who lives not far from the station, said: ‘I graduated in May and have been applying for jobs ever since, but it’s very difficult at the moment. ‘The only ones that have come up have not really been what I wanted, I’m interested in marketing and advertising. ‘I realised that there are thousands of students out there using the same old methods of applying for jobs online and through recruitment agencies and so I thought I’d try something different.

‘I got up early and went to the station. At first people just looked at me but after about 10 minutes people starting stopping and talking. They said they’d never seen anything like it before and were really impressed. ‘One woman worked in advertising and took a CV and another guy ran back from his train and said he’d walked past but had started thinking and might have something for me.’ Alfred added: ‘I’ve already had some phone calls and have got an int erview booked for later today. The support was great, one man even bought me a cup of tea and told me “good luck”.’
Alfred has worked as a waiter while studying and has taken positions as an intern in the music industry in a bid to boost his job prospects. He asked friends to help him hand out his CVs, but thinks they were put off by the early start. A photo of him giving his phone number to a passing commuter circulated on Twitter this morning, with website users offering their support.
After seeing the photo, one Twitter user wrote: ‘Good on him for putting himself out there!! Time waits for no man!! Love it!!’
Another added: ‘It’s a good idea. I would’ve hired him into my business straight away if I saw him.’
Olympic medallist Kelly Sotherton retweeted the photo, and motivational speaker Gavin Ingham wrote: ‘He will no doubt get interviews and offers whilst others sit at home moaning. Good on him.’

Tuesday, 19 August 2014

21 Reasons Why the Government Must #BringBackOurGirls NOW!


Four over months now, more than a hundred schoolgirls have been abducted from a school in Chibok, Borno State and there are no signs of them returning anytime soon. Some parents of the girls have died, with other apparently going through untold pains but the government seems to be at a loss as to how to secure the freedom of the innocent girls. What the girls are going through in captivity is best imagined. The deprivations they must be experiencing and the reality of being forcefully separated from their loved ones must be overwhelming for the girls and this is the reason for this post.

21 reasons why the government must #BringBackOurGirls NOW:
  1. It is long overdue.
  2. The girls have done nothing wrong by going to school.
  3. The girls’ morale would have been totally destroyed
  4. The girls may become brainwashed and dangerous to the society.
  5. The temptation to abuse or rape the girls by the abductors increases every day.
  6. It will show that the government still places some value on human lives.
  7. It will demonstrate that the government is still in charge of every part of Nigeria.
  8. The parents of these girls have been through serious emotional turmoil and psychological stress.
  9. The parents of the girls (and even the girls) can enjoy sound sleep.
  10. Girls in the northern part of Nigeria will not be afraid to go to school.
  11. Failure to secure their release will have negative consequences for the Peoples Democratic Party.
  12. It will save the president’s face a little in the forthcoming presidential election.
  13. It will send a strong signal to Boko Haram that they can’t get away with abductions.
  14. Everyone who has been involved in the agitation for the release of the girls will be able to divert their time and energy to thinking about ways to move our country forward.
  15. It will restore our pride before the international community.
  16. Government will stop spending money on efforts geared towards securing the release of the girls.
  17. Malala’s visit to Nigeria would have been a success.
  18. The First Lady’s tears would not be in vain.
  19. The president and his wife will no longer be bound by their promise not to sleep until the girls are found.
  20. Government spokespersons will have no reasons to misinform Nigerians about the girls’ situation.
  21. Law enforcement officers will no longer have a crisis of conscience since they will no longer be asked to arrest innocent #BringBackOurGirls campaigners.



What are the other reasons why the government should #BringBackOurGirls now? Please advance them in the comment section. Thank you.

Monday, 18 August 2014

WHY PRESIDENT GOODLUCK JONATHAN WILL WIN THE 2015 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION by Isaac Oluyi


Dear President Goodluck Jonathan,

For the second time in less than one week, I am resorting to the use of epistolary style of writing to comment on the happenings in Nigeria. This is neither because there is a craze for this style of writing of late in Nigeria nor because I am a fan of Mariama Ba, the writer of ‘So Long a Letter’. Far from the two reasons! In fact, this letter will be very brief as it seems Mr. President is very busy taking the country to the next level. If I am not blind to the happenings in Nigeria, the country seems to be on top of its game under your rulership. You were able to bring back our girls from their abductors within 24 hours of their abduction. Do not mind the mischievous people still clamouring for their release. They don’t seem to understand your ways of doing things. The Ebola virus is another antic of discrediting your working government. In fact, there is no Ebola in the land. And even if there is, I know you have the cure. It is just that you want the number of the casualties to increase before releasing the cure.
How about the siege on the country by the Boko Haramists? I am sure you laugh each time they strike, as when you are ready to deal with them it will not take you more than 24 hours to put an end to their actions. How many people have they killed that you will be bothered? 1000? 2000? 10,000? 30,000? What is 50,000 in a land of over 170 million people? Mr. President, don’t lose any sleep over this unnecessary noise from your detractors. All you need do is to encourage us as a nation to keep replenishing the earth with more babies! You are doing very well and I have no doubt in my mind that you are poised to win again in the 2015 presidential election, with your good works!
Mr. President, you have demonstrated that you are not an apostle of ‘do or die’ election. Don’t mind those complaining about your deployment of armed security men to Anambra, Ekiti, Ondo, Osun, among other states. In fact, your latest action in Osun and the attendant defeat have confirmed your kind of politics. It looks like ‘ohun owo mi o to ma fi gogo fa’ kind of politics (translated literally to mean ‘what my hand cannot reach I use stick to pull it politics), but it is not. After all, your party lost in Osun state and heaven did not fall. Am I saying you will lose in 2015? Far from it, the best President Nigeria has ever produced can never lose! Your recent suspension of residency programme for medical doctors is another plus for you . You keep warming yourself into the hearts of Nigerians.
I admire you so much, as you are surrounded with the best publicists in the land – Abati, Okupe, Marilyn Ogar, and of late the articulate Femi Fani Kayode. They will not find it hard to sell you to Nigerians. With all your achievements – terrorism via Boko Haram, epileptic supply of electricity, terrible economy, paralysis of almost all sectors of the country’s economy, corruption, epidemic of diseases, among others - , Aso Rock is all for you! Did I actually write the preceding sentence? I am sorry, Mr. President. It was a ‘slip of writing’! Who will not want to associate with a Ph.D. holder as the President of Nigeria? After all, we have never had such an eminently educated, sorry lettered person at the helm of affairs in Nigeria. Oga President, I beg remember me in your kingdom, come 2015. 

Yours,
Isaac Oluyi

Note: Isaac Oluyi is a change agent, entrepreneur and entrepreneurship educator.

Friday, 15 August 2014

OPEN LETTER TO MS. MARILYN OGAR ON THE CHANNELS TELEVISION INTERVIEW WITH HER ON OSUN STATE GOVERNORSHIP ELECTION by Isaac Oluyi


Dear Ms. Ogar,

I started this letter with ‘dear’, but you are not in any way dear to me. I have never heard you speak, until yesterday on Channels Television.  Your face was not familiar, as I doubt whether I had seen your face anywhere before. But I decided to listen to the interview because it bordered on the recently conducted election in Osun State and because I saw ‘DSS Spokesperson’ under your name. Why these two reasons? Osun State election because I am from the state and have been itching to know why the hooded DSS personnel were brought into the state, as their looks were not only scary but the hoods made them look like armed robbers. The second reason was that I was hoping to hear well-articulated views, logical thoughts and superbly crafted expressions from you because of the appellation ‘DSS Spokesperson’. Did I get what I bargained for? No! Rather, madam, you grossly disappointed me!

So by now, you should know why you are not dear to me. But for formality sake, I will still give the word ‘dear’ to you. Your conduct on Channels Television yesterday reminded me of ‘Oga at the top’ saga on the same channel a couple of months ago. You were so unprofessional and unethical with some of your reckless utterances that I wondered how on earth you attained such an enviable position! Could it be that you got to the position through the back door? Or the rot in the Public Service that has relegated merit to the background helped you to the position? Whatever factor was responsible for your elevation to the post, I make bold to say that you have brought the name of your organisation into a serious disrepute.

Madam, I need you to tell Nigerians what you found amusing in the way Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the National Publicity Secretary of All Progressive Congress (APC) party, reacted to his arrest by the men in hoods. Your illustration that an average Nigerian runs his or her mouth in a free environment, but becomes lily-livered when the environment is tensed leaves much to be desired. Are you saying that Lai Mohammed should have been dancing before your men? Does a sane man argue with guns? Who will see those terror-personified men of yours and will not shiver? I saw them a day after the election in front of my church and screamed that armed robbers were on rampage! I am still in sixes and sevens over your position as regards the conduct of your men in Osun state, particularly the arrest of APC’s National Publicity Secretary. What precisely is your point? You took your comedy too far by standing logic on its head when you opined that APC may have been responsible for all the bomb blasts in the North-East! Haba, madam! To substantiate your claim you gave this dumb argument: APGA won in Anambra; there was bomb blast. PDP won in Ekiti; there was bomb blast. Labour party won in Ondo; there was bomb blast. Now APC won in Osun, but there was no bomb blast. Therefore, APC has been responsible for all the bomb blasts in the country! What a warped and illogical argument! Madam, you need to quickly enrol for a course in Logic. You are such a disappointment to the body you represent. You have mixed politics with professionalism. This is not acceptable and needs to be roundly condemned.

To assuage my nerves and convince me you still have some shame left in you, I will personally want you to do the following as a matter of urgency and necessity:
1.      Relinquish your position as the Spokesperson of DSS.
2.      Apologise to Nigerians for occupying a post you are not fit for.
3.      Pay back whatever you had collected as allowances for occupying this post.
4.      And go back to school to sharpen your knowledge in the art of public speaking.
Madam, I am sure you may find the first three difficult to do, but try to do the fourth one. Otherwise, your mouth will keep putting you in trouble. Whether you do the first three or not, posterity will never forget how you ran your mouth on a national television without thinking about the gravity and implications of your utterances. The choice is yours, madam.

Yours,
Isaac Oluyi

Note: Isaac Oluyi is a Change Agent, Entrepreneur and Entrepreneurship Educator.

"Nighties" by Daniel Odeyemi

(Provoked by night scenes on a University Campus)

Nighties,
Under the cover of darky
Perpetuate themselves in twos
Same and opposite
Didn't know men can be animally seen
Let's leave that for now.

Nighties,
Under the cover of darky
Perpetuate themselves
Beside
Behind
At the side
Under covers where lighty dare not saunter.

Their deeds are dark fruits of their hearts
Perverse
To Mother Earth

Nighties
Are friends and foes.


Thursday, 14 August 2014

English Football Gossip


  • Hull are ready to make a club record-breaking move for Manchester United striker Danny Welbeck, 23. (Daily Mirror) 
  • Southampton midfielder Morgan Schneiderlin, 24, says that he has a verbal agreement that he will be allowed to join Tottenham. (Daily Mail) 
  • Daily Mirror
  • Daily Mirror back page
  • Arsenal are continuing to pursue their interest in Paris St-Germain striker Edinson Cavani, 27, despite the player suggesting he will stay in France. (Metro) 
  • The Gunners are also considering a shock move for midfielder Stephane Mbia, 28, who is a free agent after leaving Queens Park Rangers. (Daily Star) 
  • Inter Milan are demanding Tottenham pay £10m and swap striker Roberto Soldado, 29, for their 28-year-old midfielder Fredy Guarin. (TalkSport) 
  • Southampton midfielder Jack Cork, 25, is poised to become the latest player to leave the Saints after the club accepted a £3m bid from Crystal Palace. (Daily Mail) 
  • Liverpool are interested in making Fiorentina's former Manchester United forward Giuseppe Rossi, 27, their ninth summer signing. (Caughtoffside) 
  • Midfielder Sami Khedira, 27, is set to join either Arsenal or Chelsea after being left out of Real Madrid's Uefa Super Cup squad against Sevilla. (Daily Express) 
  • Argentina defender Marcos Rojo, 24, who wants to join Manchester United, has been disciplined by Sporting Lisbon for handing in a transfer request. (Guardian) 
  • Swansea face a fight to keep hold of midfielder Jose Canas, 27, who is attracting interest from a number of clubs across Europe. (TalkSport) 
  • Edison Cavani
  • Edinson Cavani continues to interest Arsenal
  • Aston Villa are keen to take Arsenal's Serge Gnabry on loan. Southampton, Newcastle, Sunderland and Crystal Palace have also expressed interest in the 19-year-old midfielder. (Daily Mirror) 
  • West Ham have ended their interest in Sunderland striker Connor Wickham, 21, after a final £5m bid was turned down. (Sky Sports) 
  • Atletico Madrid have opened talks with Chelsea over a deal to bring German forward Andre Schurrle, 23, to the Spanish capital. (Daily Mail) 

OTHER GOSSIP
  • Top scout Tor-Kristian Karlsen on Costa, Markovic, Sanchez, Mangala & Herrera
  • Manchester United have hired the world's first football coach who is a wheelchair user. (Metro) 
  • Meanwhile, the agent of United goalkeeper Anders Lindegaard, 30, has revealed he is looking for a new club for the Dane, who wants regular first-team football. (Inside Futbol) 
  • Former Tottenham defender Ledley King says the club's new manager, Mauricio Pochettino, can improve the fortunes of the England team. (Daily Star) 
  • Newcastle United players and backroom staff are no longer allowed to claim free tickets for St James' Park after owner Mike Ashley withdrew the offer. (Daily Mail) 

GLOBAL GOSSIP (sourced by BBC Monitoring)
  • Manchester United are ready to make a final push for Real Madrid's 26-year-old Argentina midfielder Angel di Maria. (AS) 
  • Inter Milan have joined West Ham and Schalke in the race for Parma's 26-year-old French forward Jonathan Biabiany. (Lefigaro) 
  • Liverpool have initiated transfer talks with Sampdoria for 27-year-old Argentina goalkeeper Sergio Romero. (Tuttosport) 
  • Southampton are on the verge of signing Steaua Bucharest defender Florin Gardos, 25. (Lefigaro) 

BEST OF SOCIAL MEDIA
  • New West Ham arrival Diego Poyet has patched things up with team-mate Andy Carroll  after a tweet he made earlier in his career about the England striker being "the most expensive sub ever".

AND FINALLY
  • Cristiano Ronaldo was forced to stand on his tiptoes in order to get himself in the picture as his Real Madrid team-mates lined-up for a photo before the Uefa Super Cup final against Sevilla. (Metro) 
  • Ramires unwound with some of his Brazilian team-mates with an impromptu barbeque at his London house. The Chelsea midfielder was joined by the likes of Oscar, Luis Felipe and Willian. (Daily Mail) 
Retrived from: http://www.bbc.com/sport/0/football/gossip/

What Osun Poll Further Reveals by Olusegun Adeniyi

The Verdict By Olusegun Adeniyi; Email: olusegun.adeniyi@thisdaylive.com
Last Saturday's gubernatorial election in Osun State was fought almost like a war and at the end only the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) came out looking good. Despite all the provocations from the All Progressives Congress (whose officials kept churning out one disgraceful propaganda after another), and the desperation by the Peoples Democratic Party (whose candidate was inciting his supporters to roast, not the corn that became part of his campaign menu but whoever would "rig" him out), Prof. Attahiru Jega and his men never lost sight of what their main objectives were and they delivered.
However, despite my misgivings about the conduct of the key actors in the election, I still consider it appropriate to congratulate Governor Rauf Aregbesola on his victory. Any dispassionate follower of Osun politics cannot claim to be surprised that O'Rauf won because most people from the state believe that the governor, by virtue of his achievements in office, deserves re-election.
Yet there are issues that must be dealt with about what transpired in the course of the election beginning with the conduct of the military and security personnel which again came under spotlight. The allegation that some of these men deployed on the streets of major towns in Osun State were hooded and behaved more like licensed thugs should be investigated. Beyond that, it should also worry us that elections can no longer be conducted in our country without deploying as many troops as can successfully take out the Boko Haram insurgents assuming we have our priorities right.
However, as we disaggregate the Osun gubernatorial election result, there is an emerging pattern that should be of interest to those who are desirous of credible elections next year. The question being thrown up is: Are the figures in the Voters Register the true count of those eligible to vote in Nigeria or have they been grossly padded? My bet is that the figures are cooked while it would seem that the Permanent Voters Card (PVC) recently introduced by INEC has become a game changer.
That the Osun gubernatorial poll and that of Ekiti State before it witnessed massive turn-out of voters is not in contention. But there is also an embedded message for keen observers. Except we want to deceive ourselves, in states like Osun and Ekiti, what is usual is for majority of the registered voters to exercise their franchise. In most villages, and I should know as someone who comes from a village, the actual percentage turn-out usually ranges from between 80 to 100 percent as almost everyone is encouraged to vote. Therefore, whenever massive turn-out was recorded everywhere in such a state like Ekiti or Osun, we can easily extrapolate that majority of those who were eligible to vote and were duly registered came out to cast their ballots. Yet at the end of the two elections, the percentage of the actual voters to the number of registered voters raised more questions than answers.
Even before the introduction of PVC, any rudimentary study of stand-alone gubernatorial elections since 1999 would reveal the same pattern about the difference between the actual turn-out of voters and the figures in the voters' register. For instance, in Anambra State where 1,776,167 voters were registered by INEC, only 442,242 votes were cast to elect the Governor in March this year. That represents just about 25 percent "turn-out" and we are talking of an election that not only recorded impressive number of voters but also included an additional day for supplementary voting! And in case we have forgotten, the Ondo State gubernatorial election held last year similarly recorded a massive turn-out yet by the time the ballots were counted, the real voters were only slightly above 40 percent of the numbers in the register. It was the same with the 2012 Edo State gubernatorial election which produced massive turnout yet could not yield as much as 45 percent of the number of voters in the books.
The implication of the foregoing is that it should give INEC ideas about what has been happening in all those areas where between 90 to 100 percent "turn-out" of voters were usually recorded, especially in presidential elections. In those places, it is safe to conclude that there were no elections and that some people simply sat down to write the results.
The bigger message is that there is too much dishonesty in our system and that perhaps explains why Nigeria is what it is today. We game figures so easily whenever it confers some political advantage or economic benefits as is the case with Voters' Register and the Census. That was the message Chief Festus Odimegwu probably meant to pass across before he was sacked as chairman of the Nigeria Population Commission; although where he got it wrong was to have assumed that such manipulation is an exclusive preserve of a particular region or ethnic group. The fact of the matter is that it is a Nigerian malady.
Of course this is an issue we must come back to interrogate another day but as INEC takes stock of their operations in Osun State, it is important for the commission to begin to plan how to checkmate those who use the spoof in the voters register to perpetrate electoral heists. That is a critical challenge for the 2015 general elections. However, as stated earlier, Professor Jega and his men in INEC deserve all the kudos they get from Nigerians for the management of Osun State gubernatorial polls. May the honeymoon last.
Retrieved from: http://www.thisdaylive.com/articles/what-osun-poll-further-reveals/186246/

Youth Inclusion in Political Leadership in Nigeria: Hindering Factors and Possible Solutions by Oladayo Ogunbowale



It is no mistake of either man or nature that the major people who have in time past, shaped the course of history in several countries around the world and even those that shook the world itself, have been noted to begin as Vibrant Youths. From Napoleon Bonaparte to Adolf Hitler, from Martin Luther King to our very own trio of Obafemi Awolowo, Nnamdi Azikwe and Abubakar Tafawa-Balewa who all bravely engaged the colonial masters and successfully gained us freedom... all at their late 20's and very early 30's. 

It is however saddening to note that the same soil upon which youths were once treasured as the strength of the nation is now trodden upon with the current youths being paraded as touts and political machineries. 

Some of the factors that have hindered youth inclusion in political leadership in Nigeria with possible solutions are as follows;

1. Sit-tight attitude of aged leaders: It will be observed that majority of the people occupying most of the leadership seats in the country at present are the same set of people who have been ruling in the last 30 - 40 years! This act of selfishness automatically excludes youths from occupying such positions as the seats are not vacant. The best possible solution to this issue is for senior citizens (60 years upwards) who are currently in government, to humbly vacate their positions while adequately mentoring young minds into such offices.

2. Party structure: It is a known fact that no one can assume any meaningful position without going through the political party institution. However, it is bad news from the quarters of the political parties within the country as regards youth inclusion. Years ago, the ruling party elected a man above 60 years as the party youth leader and recently the main opposition party appointed a 52-year old as its youth leader! The simple solution here is this, (i)Youth affairs should be strictly youth led and youth-managed (ii) Youths should not only be relegated to occupying positions in the Youth wing but effectively included in general party decision making and leadership structure.

3.Youth restiveness: In a country with over 10 million unemployed (graduate)  youths, it is not out of place to observe youths getting involved in several social vices, taking up arms and being restive in different parts of the country. This has over the years created a gap in the handing over process of leadership positions from the ageing generation to the younger but hardly maturing youthful generation as the older ones see the majority of the younger crop as unserious, immature and unfit to handle resources. There is only one way to curb this and that is for the government of the day to ensure that there is gainful employment for the average youth on the street and also for the youth to grow up and live up to responsibility by seeking knowledge and expertise instead of taking to idleness and restiveness and thus waste away.

Other factors include lack of appropriate civic education, non creative and innovative government institutions amongst others.

*Read up other insightful writeups on my blog: ogunbowaledayo.blog.com and follow me on twitter: @mog_dayo

Wednesday, 13 August 2014

Football Gossip from BBC Sport

TRANSFER GOSSIP

Manchester United are set to spend £80m on Real Madrid winger Angel di Maria, 26, Sporting defender Marcos Rojo, 24, and Ajax utility man Daley Blind, 24, as manager Louis van Gaal builds a team to challenge for the Premier League title. (Daily Mail) 

England wingers Andros Townsend, 23, and Aaron Lennon, 27, are among 11 players who new Tottenham Hotspur boss Mauricio Pochettino is willing sell. (Telegraph) 

Manchester City's Spanish midfielder Javi Garcia, 27, is set to join Zenit St Petersburg for £13m after falling behind new-signing Fernando, 27, in the pecking order at the Etihad Stadium. (Guardian) 

Southampton have agreed a £12m fee with Hull for Republic of Ireland striker Shane Long, 27, after Manchester United's Javier Hernandez, 26, rejected a move to St Mary's. (Daily Mirror) 

Manchester United winger Wilfried Zaha, 21, could rejoin his former club Crystal Palace on loan this season. (London Evening Standard) 

Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger is readying an £8m bid to land 28-year-old Newcastle United midfielder Cheick Tiote. (Caughtoffside) 

The Gunners also want Olympiakos defender Kostas Manolas, 23, as cover for Per Mertesacker, 29, and Laurent Koscielny, 28. (Daily Mail) 

Everton and Southampton are both keen on £6m-rated Parma winger Jonathan Biabiany, 26. (Daily Express) 
Colombia international Carlos Sanchez, 28, is set to fly to Birmingham today to have a medical at Aston Villa prior to a £4.5m transfer from Elche. (Birmingham Mail) 

Artur Boruc, 34, is likely to quit Southampton after being replaced by £10m signing Fraser Forster, 26, as the club's first-choice goalkeeper. (Daily Star) 

Spanish striker Alvaro Negredo, 28, is set to be omitted from Manchester City's Champions League squad, because Manuel Pellegrini can only include 16 of his 17 foreign players. (Daily Mirror) 

Leicester City striker David Nugent, 29, is hoping to add to his solitary England cap now he is back in the Premier League. (Independent) 

Chelsea goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois, 22, who spent three years on loan at Atletico Madrid, has been told he could be dropped from the Belgium team unless he becomes first choice at Stamford Bridge. (Sun) 
Newcastle manager Alan Pardew thinks his new Dutch forward, Siem de Jong, 25, is the new Teddy Sheringham. (Daily Star) 

Former Tottenham chairman Lord Sugar says the club blew the £85m they received from Real Madrid for Gareth Bale "like a kid in a sweet shop". (Daily Mirror) 

Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers says 19-year-old Raheem Sterling's pre-season form has reminded him of Barcelona great Lionel Messi. (Liverpool Echo) 

French club Metz are ready to lodge a complaint with Uefa after their proposed £3.5m deal with West Ham for Diafra Sakho, 24, collapsed. (Daily Mail)

BEST OF SOCIAL MEDIA
The Secret Footballer has tweeted a video on Vine  of Anderlecht coach Besnik Hasi taking out his frustrations on a bin bag in the corridor.

Southampton striker Jay Rodriguez posted a clip of his training regime  in his rehabilitation after knee surgery, and says he is "feeling really strong now!"

Zlatan Ibrahimovic has donated £30,000 to help Sweden's learning difficulties national team travel to the World Cup. (Daily Mail) 

Cristiano Ronaldo's match-winning brace in Real Madrid's Uefa Super Cup victory over Sevilla clearly impressed Uefa president Michel Platini, who tried to give the Portuguese two medals for his efforts. (Metro)

Source: http://www.bbc.com/sport/0/football/gossip/

Iranian woman wins maths' top prize, the Fields medal

A woman has won the maths world's "Nobel prize" for the first time. She is Maryam Mirzakhani of Stanford University, California, 
The medal is awarded once every four years to at most four recipients, who must be aged under 40 at the start of that year. All the previous 52 Fields medallists, dating back to 1936, have been male.
Mirzakhani, who is Iranian, studies the geometry of moduli space, a complex geometric and algebraic entity that might be described as a universe in which every point is itself a universe. Mirzakhani described the number of ways a beam of light can travel a closed loop in a two-dimensional universe. To answer the question, it turns out, you cannot just stay in your "home" universe – you have to understand how to navigate the entire multiverse. Mirzakhani has shown mathematicians new ways to navigate these spaces.
Mirzakhani first attracted international attention as a high-school student in 1995, when she was the first Iranian student to achieve a perfect score in the International Mathematics Olympiad.
"She is very, very well known in Iran, where she is held out as an example for younger students," says Ingrid Daubechies, the president of the International Mathematical Union, which selects the Fields medallists.
"Speaking as a woman myself, it is a wonderful thing to see her win," Daubechies adds. "It will lay to rest the often-quoted fact that a woman has never won." In future, she says, the idea of a woman winning the top maths award will no longer seem exceptional.
The three other winners are Brazilian-born Artur Avila of Denis Diderot University in Paris, France, who studies how chaotic systems evolve when constrained by certain rules; Manjul Bhargava, a number theorist at Princeton University; and Martin Hairer, an expert in partial differential equations at the University of Warwick, UK.
Source:http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn26044-iranian-woman-wins-maths-top-prize-the-fields-medal.html#.U-tJleNdU1M

Tuesday, 12 August 2014

DO NOT FEAR THEIR FEAR! by Dr Jesutola Adewumi

These days, it has become fashionable to say things like "only God can keep one safe in this country", "first it was Boko Haram, now it is Ebola", "where can one run to?", "no one is safe in this Nigeria", "if it is not a plane crash or car accident, it's a bomb blast" etc etc. While some sound like faith and some sound like statements of the harsh realities of our time, the truth is that they almost always stem from a root of fear that has gripped the hearts of many Nigerians...
Read more at http://www.tolaadewumi.blogspot.com/

Saturday, 9 August 2014

EBOLA VIRUS DISEASE: Frequently Asked Questions and Their Answers

1. What is Ebola virus disease?

Ebola virus disease (formerly known as Ebola haemorrhagic fever) is a severe, often fatal illness, with a death rate of up to 90%. The illness affects humans and nonhuman primates (monkeys, gorillas, and chimpanzees).
Ebola first appeared in 1976 in two simultaneous outbreaks, one in a village near the Ebola River in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and the other in a remote area of Sudan.
The origin of the virus is unknown but fruit bats (Pteropodidae) are considered the likely host of the Ebola virus, based on available evidence.

2. How do people become infected with the virus?

In the current outbreak in West Africa, the majority of cases in humans have occurred as a result of human-to-human transmission.
Infection occurs from direct contact through broken skin or mucous membranes with the blood, or other bodily fluids or secretions (stool, urine, saliva, semen) of infected people. Infection can also occur if broken skin or mucous membranes of a healthy person come into contact with environments that have become contaminated with an Ebola patient’s infectious fluids such as soiled clothing, bed linen, or used needles.
More than 100 health-care workers have been exposed to the virus while caring for Ebola patients. This happens because they may not have been wearing personal protection equipment or were not properly applying infection prevention and control measures when caring for the patients. Health-care providers at all levels of the health system – hospitals, clinics, and health posts – should be briefed on the nature of the disease and how it is transmitted, and strictly follow recommended infection control precautions.
WHO does not advise families or communities to care for individuals who may present with symptoms of Ebola virus disease in their homes. Rather, seek treatment in a hospital or treatment centre staffed by doctors and nurses qualified and equipped to treat Ebola virus victims. If you do choose to care for your loved one at home, WHO strongly advises you to notify your local public health authority and receive appropriate training, equipment (gloves and personal protective equipment [PPE]) for treatment, instructions on proper removal and disposal of PPE, and information on how to prevent further infection and transmission of the disease to yourself, other family members, or the community.
Additional transmission has occurred in communities during funerals and burial rituals. Burial ceremonies in which mourners have direct contact with the body of the deceased person have played a role in the transmission of Ebola. Persons who have died of Ebola must be handled using strong protective clothing and gloves and must be buried immediately. WHO advises that the deceased be handled and buried by trained case management professionals, who are equipped to properly bury the dead.
People are infectious as long as their blood and secretions contain the virus. For this reason, infected patients receive close monitoring from medical professionals and receive laboratory tests to ensure the virus is no longer circulating in their systems before they return home. When the medical professionals determine it is okay for the patient to return home, they are no longer infectious and cannot infect anyone else in their communities. Men who have recovered from the illness can still spread the virus to their partner through their semen for up to 7 weeks after recovery. For this reason, it is important for men to avoid sexual intercourse for at least 7 weeks after recovery or to wear condoms if having sexual intercourse during 7 weeks after recovery.
Generally, a person must come into contact with an animal that has Ebola and it can then spread within the community from human to human.

3. Who is most at risk?

During an outbreak, those at higher risk of infection are:
  • health workers;
  • family members or others in close contact with infected people;
  • mourners who have direct contact with the bodies of the deceased as part of burial ceremonies.
More research is needed to understand if some groups, such as immuno-compromised people or those with other underlying health conditions, are more susceptible than others to contracting the virus.
Exposure to the virus can be controlled through the use of protective measures in clinics and hospitals, at community gatherings, or at home.

4. What are typical signs and symptoms of infection?

Sudden onset of fever, intense weakness, muscle pain, headache and sore throat are typical signs and symptoms. This is followed by vomiting, diarrhoea, rash, impaired kidney and liver function, and in some cases, both internal and external bleeding.
Laboratory findings include low white blood cell and platelet counts, and elevated liver enzymes.
The incubation period, or the time interval from infection to onset of symptoms, is from 2 to 21 days. The patients become contagious once they begin to show symptoms. They are not contagious during the incubation period.
Ebola virus disease infections can only be confirmed through laboratory testing.

5. When should someone seek medical care?

If a person has been in an area known to have Ebola virus disease or in contact with a person known or suspected to have Ebola and they begin to have symptoms, they should seek medical care immediately.
Any cases of persons who are suspected to have the disease should be reported to the nearest health unit without delay. Prompt medical care is essential to improving the rate of survival from the disease. It is also important to control spread of the disease and infection control procedures need to be started immediately.

6. What is the treatment?

Severely ill patients require intensive supportive care. They are frequently dehydrated and need intravenous fluids or oral rehydration with solutions that contain electrolytes. There is currently no specific treatment to cure the disease.
Some patients will recover with the appropriate medical care.
To help control further spread of the virus, people that are suspected or confirmed to have the disease should be isolated from other patients and treated by health workers using strict infection control precautions.

7. What can I do? Can it be prevented? Is there a vaccine?

Currently, there is no licensed medicine or vaccine for Ebola virus disease, but several products are under development.

Ways to prevent infection and transmission

While initial cases of Ebola virus disease are contracted by handling infected animals or carcasses, secondary cases occur by direct contact with the bodily fluids of an ill person, either through unsafe case management or unsafe burial practices. During this outbreak, most of the disease has spread through human-to-human transmission. Several steps can be taken to help in preventing infection and limiting or stopping transmission.
  • Understand the nature of the disease, how it is transmitted, and how to prevent it from spreading further. (For additional information, please see the previous questions about Ebola virus disease in this FAQ.)
  • Listen to and follow directives issued by your country’s respective Ministry of Health.
  • If you suspect someone close to you or in your community of having Ebola virus disease, encourage and support them in seeking appropriate medical treatment in a health-care facility.
  • If you choose to care for an ill person in your home, notify public health officials of your intentions so they can train you and provide appropriate gloves and personal protective equipment (PPE) (gloves, impermeable gown, boots/closed shoes with overshoes, mask and eye protection for splashes), as well as instructions as a reminder on how to properly care for the patient, protect yourself and your family, and properly dispose of the PPE after use. N.B. WHO does not recommend home care and strongly advises individuals and their family members to seek professional care in a treatment centre.
  • When visiting patients in the hospital or caring for someone at home, hand washing with soap and water is recommended after touching a patient, being in contact with their bodily fluids, or touching his/her surroundings.
  • People who have died from Ebola should only be handled using appropriate protective equipment and should be buried immediately by public health professionals who are trained in safe burial procedures.
Additionally, individuals should reduce contact with high-risk infected animals (i.e. fruit bats, monkeys or apes) in the affected rainforest areas. If you suspect an animal is infected, do not handle it. Animal products (blood and meat) should be thoroughly cooked before eating.

8. What about health workers? How should they protect themselves while caring for patients?

Health workers treating patients with suspected or confirmed illness are at higher risk of infection than other groups. During an outbreak a number of important actions will reduce or stop the spread of the virus and protect health workers and others in the health-care setting. These actions are called “standard and other additional precautions” and are evidence-based recommendations known to prevent the spread of infections. The following questions and answers describe the precautions in detail.

Should patients with suspected or confirmed Ebola virus be separated from other patients?

Isolating patients with suspected or confirmed Ebola virus disease in single isolation rooms is recommended. Where isolation rooms are not available, it is important to assign designated areas, separate from other patients, for suspected and confirmed cases. In these designated areas, suspect and confirmed cases should also be separate. Access to these areas should be restricted, needed equipment should be dedicated strictly to suspected and confirmed EVD treatment areas, and clinical and non-clinical personnel should be exclusively assigned to isolation rooms and dedicated areas.

Are visitors allowed in areas where patients suspected or confirmed Ebola virus disease are admitted?

Stopping visitor access to patients infected with EVD is preferred. If this is not possible, access should be given only to those individuals who are necessary for the patient’s well-being and care, such as a child’s parent.

Is protective equipment required when caring for these patients?

  • In addition to standard health-care precautions, health-care workers should strictly apply recommended infection control measures to avoid exposure to infected blood, fluids, or contaminated environments or objects – such as a patient’s soiled linen or used needles.
  • All visitors and health-care workers should rigorously use what is known as personal protective equipment (PPE). PPE should include at least: gloves, an impermeable gown, boots/closed shoes with overshoes, a mask, and eye protection for splashes (goggles or face shields).

Is hand hygiene important?

Hand hygiene is essential and should be performed:
  • before donning gloves and wearing PPE on entry to the isolation room/area;
  • before any clean or aseptic procedures is being performed on a patient;
  • after any exposure risk or actual exposure with a patient’s blood or body fluids;
  • after touching (even potentially) contaminated surfaces, items, or equipment in the patient’s surroundings; and
  • after removal of PPE, upon leaving the isolation area.
It is important to note that neglecting to perform hand hygiene after removing PPE will reduce or negate any benefits of the PPE.
Either an alcohol-based hand rub or soap and running water can be used for hand hygiene, applying the correct technique recommended by WHO. It is important to always perform hand hygiene with soap and running water when hands are visibly soiled. Alcohol-based hand rubs should be made available at every point of care (at the entrance and within the isolation rooms and areas); running water, soap, and single use towels should also be always available.

What other precautions are necessary in the health-care setting?

Other key precautions are safe injection and phlebotomy procedures, including safe management of sharps, regular and rigorous environmental cleaning, decontamination of surfaces and equipment, and management of soiled linen and of waste.
In addition, it is important to ensure safe processing of laboratory samples from suspected or confirmed patients with EDV and safe handling of dead bodies or human remains for post-mortem examination and burial preparation. Any health-care workers and other professionals undertaking these tasks in connection with suspected or confirmed patients with Ebola virus disease should wear appropriate PPE and follow precautions and procedures recommended by WHO.

9. What about rumours that some foods can prevent or treat the infection?

WHO strongly recommends that people seek credible health advice about Ebola virus disease from their public health authority.
While there is no specific drug against Ebola, the best treatment is intensive supportive treatment provided in the hospital by health workers using strict infection control procedures. The infection can be controlled through recommended protective measures.

10. How does WHO protect health during outbreaks?

WHO provides technical advice to countries and communities to prepare for and respond to Ebola outbreaks.
WHO actions include:
  • disease surveillance and information-sharing across regions to watch for outbreaks;
  • technical assistance to investigate and contain health threats when they occur – such as on-site help to identify sick people and track disease patterns;
  • advice on prevention and treatment options;
  • deployments of experts and the distribution of health supplies (such as personal protection gear for health workers) when they are requested by the country;
  • communications to raise awareness of the nature of the disease and protective health measures to control transmission of the virus; and
  • activation of regional and global networks of experts to provide assistance, if requested, and mitigate potential international health effects and disruptions of travel and trade.

11. During an outbreak, numbers of cases reported by health officials can go up and down? Why?

During an Ebola outbreak, the affected country’s public health authority reports its disease case numbers and deaths. Figures can change daily. Case numbers reflect both suspected cases and laboratory-confirmed cases of Ebola. Sometimes numbers of suspected and confirmed cases are reported together. Sometimes they are reported separately. Thus, numbers can shift between suspected and confirmed cases.
Analyzing case data trends, over time, and with additional information, is generally more helpful to assess the public health situation and determine the appropriate response.

12. Is it safe to travel during an outbreak? What is WHO’s travel advice?

During an outbreak, WHO reviews the public health situation regularly and recommends any travel or trade restrictions, if necessary, and may inform national authorities to implement it. WHO is currently reviewing its recommendations for travel and expects to issue advice in the coming days.
While travellers should always be vigilant with regard to their health and those around them, the risk of infection for travellers is very low since person-to-person transmission results from direct contact with the body fluids or secretions of an infected patient.

Is it safe to travel with persons who have Ebola?

As with any illness or disease, it is always possible that a person who has been exposed to Ebola virus may choose to travel. If the individual has not developed symptoms (see FAQ #4), they cannot transmit EVD to those around them. If the individual does have symptoms, they should seek immediate medical attention at the first sign they are feeling unwell. This may require either notifying the flight crew or ship crew or, upon arrival at a destination, seeking immediate medical attention. Travellers who show initial symptoms of EVD should be isolated to prevent further transmission. Although the risk to fellow travellers in such a situation is very low, contact tracing is recommended under these circumstances.

Is it safe to travel to West Africa on business or to visit family and friends?

The risk of a tourist or businessman/woman becoming infected with Ebola virus during a visit to the affected areas and developing disease after returning is extremely low, even if the visit included travel to the local areas from which primary cases have been reported. Transmission requires direct contact with blood, secretions, organs or other body fluids of infected living or dead persons or animal, all of which are unlikely exposures for the average traveller. In any event, tourists are advised to avoid all such contacts.
If you are visiting family or friends in the affected areas, the risk is similarly low, unless you have direct physical contact with a person who is ill or who has died. If this is the case, it is important to notify public health authorities and engage in contact tracing. Contact tracing is used to confirm you have not been exposed to EVD and to prevent further spread of the disease through monitoring.

WHO’s general travel advice

  • Travelers should avoid all contact with infected patients.
  • Health workers traveling to affected areas should strictly follow WHO-recommended infection control guidance.
  • Anyone who has stayed in areas where cases were recently reported should be aware of the symptoms of infection and seek medical attention at the first sign of illness.
  • Clinicians caring for travelers returning from affected areas with compatible symptoms are advised to consider the possibility of Ebola virus disease.