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Ebola Alert! FG flags 21 states on lockdown watch, Lagos, FCT, Rivers, Akwa Ibom, Borno, others in high risk zones
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The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (NCDC) has placed several states on high Ebola preparedness alert after a fresh risk assessment classified Nigeria’s chances of importing the deadly disease as high amid regional outbreaks.
Dr Jide Idris, Director-General of the NCDC said this in a Thursday statement, stressing that Nigeria had not yet recorded any confirmed Ebola Virus Disease case linked to the outbreak.
He explained that the World Health Organization’s Public Health Emergency of International Concern declaration and increasing Ebola cases in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda required intensified surveillance and preparedness activities across Nigeria immediately.
Idris stated that the NCDC conducted a dynamic risk assessment to guide anticipatory and response measures, concluding that Nigeria faced a high Ebola importation risk because of international travel and regional population movement.
He added that uncertainty surrounding the outbreak’s magnitude and the possibility of delayed recognition were heightened because Ebola symptoms closely resembled common endemic diseases such as malaria and Lassa fever in Nigeria.
According to him, all states and the Federal Capital Territory must maintain Ebola preparedness, although readiness efforts should reflect varying importation and transmission risks identified through the NCDC’s recently developed preparedness classification system.
The agency categorised Lagos, the FCT, Rivers, Kano, Enugu, Borno, Akwa Ibom, Cross River, Taraba, and Adamawa as high-risk states because of international airports, porous borders, and active trade or travel routes.
Idris also identified Ogun, Nasarawa, Kaduna, Plateau, Kogi, Niger, Jigawa, Katsina, Bauchi, Ebonyi, Abia, and Bayelsa as moderate-risk states requiring sustained preparedness efforts against possible Ebola importation and transmission threats.
He said that the WHO declaration underscored the seriousness of the regional threat and highlighted the urgent need for Nigeria to strengthen preparedness measures before detecting any suspected Ebola case domestically.
The NCDC boss explained that national preparedness efforts aimed to ensure every state and the FCT could quickly detect, contain, and respond to suspected Ebola cases while protecting health workers and sustaining healthcare services.
Idris reiterated that Nigeria currently had no confirmed Ebola case linked to the outbreak but warned that increasing regional transmission significantly elevated the country’s importation risk because of population movement and extensive travel networks.
He explained that airports, seaports, porous land borders, informal crossings, trade routes, and overlapping Ebola symptoms with malaria and Lassa fever increased the likelihood of delayed recognition and possible disease spread nationally.
According to him, health authorities in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda had reported 1,077 suspected Ebola cases and 247 deaths, while people aged between 14 and 45 years remained most affected.
He said the outbreak’s case fatality rate stood at 24.6 percent, while both regional and national Ebola risks remained high because of continuing transmission and the absence of approved vaccines for the outbreak sstrain.l
Idris stressed that no approved vaccines or specific treatments currently existed for Bundibugyo Ebola virus disease, making rapid public health interventions critical for containing infections and preventing widespread transmission across vulnerable communities.
He explained that outbreak control depended largely on early detection, prompt isolation of suspected and confirmed cases, strict infection prevention measures, effective contact tracing, safe burials, community engagement, and strong surveillance systems nationwide.
The NCDC Director-General disclosed that suspected Ebola cases had also been reported in India, while Canada suspended travel applications from residents of the DRC, Uganda, and South Sudan because of the outbreak situation.
He added that Uganda recently announced border closure measures, while Nigeria faced significant implications because the current Bundibugyo Ebola virus outbreak lacked licensed vaccines or approved targeted therapeutics for treatment and prevention.
According to him, existing Ebola vaccines and monoclonal antibody treatments primarily targeted the Zaire ebolavirus strain and should not be relied upon as effective countermeasures against the current Bundibugyo outbreak affecting neighbouring ccountries.l
Idris clarified that Ebola Virus Disease was not airborne, explaining that transmission occurred through direct contact with blood, body fluids, contaminated materials, or infected animals associated with symptomatic or deceased infected persons.
He said the Ebola incubation period ranged from two to 21 days, making recent travel and exposure history within the preceding three weeks essential when assessing any suspected infection or potential outbreak case.
According to him, early Ebola symptoms often appeared non-specific and included fever, fatigue, muscle pain, headache, sore throat, vomiting, diarrhoea, abdominal pain, rash, hiccups, unexplained bleeding, bruising, and signs of shock.
Idris warned health workers against waiting for bleeding before suspecting Ebola in patients presenting compatible symptoms alongside relevant travel or exposure histories connected to affected countries experiencing active transmission of the vvirus.l
He added that the absence of strain-specific vaccines and approved therapeutics for Bundibugyo Ebola virus disease made early, aggressive, and optimised supportive care especially important in improving patient survival and treatment outcomes significantly.
The NCDC boss explained that clinical management should include rapid assessment, fluid and electrolyte management, glucose monitoring, treatment of malaria or bacterial co-infections, symptom control, shock management, and humane care in isolation facilities.
He disclosed that the NCDC had activated its national Emergency Operations Centre, currently operating in alert mode while coordinating preparedness activities with relevant federal and state institutions across the country to strengthen response capacity.
According to him, state governments and Commissioners for Health must ensure immediate operational readiness across public and private health systems to effectively manage any suspected Ebola case and prevent possible widespread community transmission.
Idris emphasised that preparedness measures should prioritise early detection, immediate isolation, supportive care, infection prevention and control, safe sample handling, contact tracing readiness, referral systems, workforce protection, and adequate medical countermeasures nationwide.
He urged commissioners to provide leadership for coordinated Ebola readiness efforts across their respective states and the Federal Capital Territory, assuring them of continued technical guidance and national coordination support from the NCDC.
The Director-General also requested commissioners to activate state public health coordination structures for Ebola preparedness and conduct rapid risk assessments focusing on population movement, high-density settings, and facilities receiving suspected cases.
He further advised states to engage public and private healthcare providers to ensure early suspicion, safe separation of suspected cases, immediate reporting through approved channels, and identification of functional isolation or holding facilities.
Idris stressed the importance of strengthening facility readiness for screening, infection prevention, ambulance transfers, safe sample movement, decontamination, and waste management while ensuring frontline workers received adequate protection and psychosocial support during operations.
He also urged intensified traveller monitoring and surveillance in states with airports, seaports, transport hubs, land borders, and migrant corridors while encouraging calm public communication to discourage stigma and promote verified information sharing.
The NCDC boss directed states to maintain essential health services without disruption and submit readiness updates within seventy-two hours while immediately reporting suspected cases, high-risk exposures, unusual febrile clusters, or major preparedness gaps.
(Credit: NAN)
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Asylum Seekers To Pay £10,000 Before Settlement In UK
The United Kingdom government has unveiled new immigration proposals that could require some former asylum seekers to repay up to £10,000 (approximately ₦18 million) in public support they received while awaiting decisions on their asylum applications before they can qualify for permanent settlement.
The proposed changes, contained in a new immigration bill introduced to Parliament on Tuesday, would give the Home Office legal authority to recover the cost of accommodation and financial assistance previously provided to asylum seekers who later become financially stable.
Under the proposed legislation, eligible individuals who have secured employment or acquired sufficient financial resources after being granted protection may be required to reimburse part or all of the support they received during the asylum process. Repayment would become one of the conditions for obtaining indefinite leave to remain in the UK.
The new rules would also extend to former asylum seekers who leave the United Kingdom and subsequently apply to return, ensuring they meet any outstanding repayment obligations before being granted settlement rights.
According to the Home Office, the measure is aimed at reducing the growing financial burden of the UK’s asylum system on taxpayers while ensuring that those who are capable of contributing do so once they are financially established.
Defending the proposal, the Home Secretary, Shabana Mahmood, said the government had already made significant progress in cutting asylum-related expenditure but believed it was reasonable to expect beneficiaries who can afford it to help repay public funds.
She said the cost of providing accommodation and other forms of support to asylum seekers remains substantial and places considerable pressure on public finances.
According to Mahmood, while access to asylum support is an important humanitarian commitment, individuals who later achieve financial stability should be expected to contribute towards the costs incurred on their behalf.
Official Home Office figures show that accommodating an asylum seeker currently costs an average of £23.25 per person each night in standard dispersal accommodation. However, the cost rises sharply to around £144 per person per night for those housed in hotels, which have been widely used because of accommodation shortages.
In addition to housing, asylum seekers receive weekly subsistence payments ranging between £9.95 and £49.18, depending on their personal circumstances and the type of support provided.
Government employment data cited by the Home Office indicate that many refugees eventually become economically active after being granted asylum. Around one in four people aged between 16 and 64 who received refugee status between 2015 and 2023 entered employment within the same year they were granted protection.
The proportion increases significantly over time, with about half of refugees securing employment within two years of being granted asylum.
Among refugees who had lived in the UK for eight years after receiving refugee status, 37 per cent were working full-time, earning a median annual salary of approximately £23,000. The figures also show that around 40 per cent earned above the national minimum wage.
The Home Office said the proposed legislation reflects the government’s intention to make the asylum system more financially sustainable by requiring those who are able to repay some of the public assistance they once depended on, while continuing to provide protection for individuals fleeing persecution and conflict.
News
Ataoja Hosts Olubadan as Adeleke Commissions Overhead Bridge, Roundabout at Lameco, Osogbo
By Kayode Sanni-Arewa
The Ataoja of Osogboland, Oba Jimoh Oyetunji, Larooye II, on Wednesday hosted the Olubadan of Ibadanland, Oba Rasheed Adewolu Ladoja, Arusa I, as Governor Ademola Adeleke officially commissioned the new Lameco Flyover Bridge and roundabout in Osogbo, the Osun State capital.
The five-span overhead bridge, which has a total length of 672 metres, was constructed to solve the perennial traffic congestion along the Lameco axis and boost economic activities in the metropolis.
The Olubadan performed the ribbon-cutting ceremony at the event, which was attended by traditional rulers and key stakeholders.
Speaking at the commissioning, Governor Adeleke praised the project as proof of his administration’s local content policy. “The high quality of this flyover confirms the workability of our local content model.
We have proven to the whole world that our local engineers can perform to world class standards,” he stated.
The governor also disclosed that his administration has completed over 27 kilometres of intra-city roads in Osogbo and more than 300 kilometres across the state.
He charged residents to protect the infrastructure, warning against street trading and vandalisation of the bridge’s railings and lights.
In his goodwill message, the Ataoja of Osogbo, Oba Jimoh Oyetunji, Larooye II, described the project as strategic.
He noted that it would ease human and vehicular movement and enhance socio-economic activities within the town.
The commissioning marks the start of a series of project inaugurations across the state.
News
Insecurity: Gunmen kidnap popular pastor, members in Benue
By Kayode Sanni-Arewa
Samuel Gbinde, pastor of the Universal Reform Christian Church (URCC), also known as Nongu u Kristu u i Ser u sha Tar (NKST), and two members of his congregation have been abducted by gunmen in Benue State.
The incident happened on Tuesday at the pastor’s residence located within the NKST Church premises in Andyar, Ishan Classis, Benue State.
The church’s General Secretary, Titus Targba, announced the incident in a statement, saying the victims were taken by armed men from the pastor’s residence.
He appealed to church members and the public to pray for their safe return while efforts continue to secure their freedom.
The church also called on security agencies, the Benue State Government and the Federal Government to move quickly to rescue the three victims and arrest those behind the kidnapping.
It further urged the authorities to step up efforts against kidnapping and other violent crimes across the state by taking stronger action to stop criminal groups before they strike instead of responding only after attacks have taken place.
The latest abduction has added to growing worries over insecurity in Benue State, where communities have continued to face repeated attacks despite ongoing security operations and peace efforts.
Only a few days earlier, the chairman of the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria (MACBAN) in Benue State, Ardo Risku, and his associate, Yakubu Isa, were killed after attending a peace meeting in Ohimini Local Government Area.
Police later confirmed the arrest of 10 suspects in connection with the killings.
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