Friday 6 November 2015

Aisha Buhari Visits Rev. Fr Mbaka

Aisha Buhari Visits Rev. Fr Mbaka

Politics and Religion!
Aisha Buhari was at Enugu State to hold her women health initiative project tagged “Aishatu Buhari women health initiative”  the health screening programme took place at the queens school Enugu and over 2000 women were screened for free.
Mrs. Buhari was accompany by Mrs. Dolapo Osinbajo the wife of the Vice President, they were received by the wife of the governor of Enugu state Mrs. Monica Ugwuanyi and other dignitaries. The State governor, Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi was also there to welcome the President's wife to the state.
While addressing the women at queens school Enugu. Mrs. Buhari said all hands must be on deck in the fight against seven ailments that severely affect women which include cervical and breast cancer, diabetes, hypertension and more.
She also paid a courtesy visit to Enugu Catholic priest and the founder of Adoration Ministry, Rev Fr. Ejike Mbaka.

South South, North East have Nigeria’s highest rates of abortions

nigeria-women


Incidences of induced abortions are more prevalent in the South-South and the North-East regions of Nigeria, a new report says.
The study, conducted by US-based Guttmacher Institute, and Ipas, a nongovernmental organisation that focuses on female reproductive rights, puts the South-South in the lead, and the South West at the bottom.
The report shows that besides insurgency, the North East region of Nigeria is also plagued by a high rate of abortions – second only to the South-South.
“The proportion of abortions is lowest in South West, at 11 per cent, and highest in the South-South at 17 per cent, and 16 per cent in the North East,” the report says.
It adds that at least 1. 2 million induced abortions take place in various parts of Nigeria every year.
Olutosin Owolude, a consultant lecturer are the department of gynaecology at the University of Ibadan, who presented the report Thursday in Abuja, said increased rates of abortions, done mostly through unsafe methods, have further heightened maternal mortality in the country.
“As we all know, Nigeria has one of the highest maternal mortality rates in the world, presently put at 560 per 1000 births,” he said.
Mr. Owolude said the study, which was conducted in 2012, went through series of checks before its publication in 2015.
“These involve scientific methods that you have to rigorously follow,” he said. “It takes a long time to do this kind of study and to make sure that we do our analyses in a way that we are very confident of the findings,” said Mr. Owolude.
“We typically do not want to reveal the results until we have the study peer reviewed and get expert opinion that we have done all we need to do to have a scientific finding,” he added.
According to him, the number of induced abortions nationwide doubled from a previous report in 1996, which gave the number as 610, 000 nationwide.
He associated the reason for the increase to poor economic conditions which he said has led to an increase in the desire for smaller families.
He said Nigeria’s growing population, was another notable factor.
Mr. Owolude said the report also showed that about 40 per cent of women who engage in induced abortions suffer complications serious enough to require treatment.
He called on the government to salvage the situation by creating family planning programs as well as increasing sex education.
He said the government should provide equipment and manpower to meet the health needs of women suffering from complications resulting from abortion, as well as introduce programs focusing on improved use of contraceptive products.
Ipas country lead and senior advisor, Hauwa Shekarau, said the program was aimed at exposing the challenges of women and highlighting their reproductive rights, stressing that the life of one woman is as important as that of every woman.
“Because of the restrictive nature of the law regarding abortion in Nigeria, many women suffer, due to fear for stigmatization, among others. Yet every day the numbers of abortion continue to rise,” she stated.
She called on the Nigerian government and people to face the challenges posed by incidences of abortion in order to avoid an increase in mortality rates in the country.
SOURCE: Premiuntimesng


Last Single Honourable In House of Assembly Gets Married

The last single honourable in Lagos state House of Assembly, Moji Lawal is finally married.

Moji was the first ever female aspirant in Apapa constituency, and emerged their first female representative on May 29, 2015. There were over 100 delegates in the primaries before she emerged her party – All Progressive Congress (APC)’s candidate.

Her husband, John Paul, is a businessman. In an interview conducted with Punch earlier this year, Moji stated she was up to the challenge of entering marriage with a demanding career.

A progressive to the core, Mojisola Lasbat Lawal was a member of the defunct Alliance for Democracy (AD) which transformed to the Action Congress (AC) which also emancipated to Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) and now to All Progressive Congress (APC) party. A dynamic political team player, Mojisola Lasbat Lawal served as a Senior special assistant on intervention and inter-governmental relation in Apapa local government. Got elevated to serve as the supervisory coucilor for health in the same local government and has been a team player in the day to day health care delivery programmes in the local government till date.
Congratulations to the couple.