20 per cent of Nigerian children living with sickle cell ⁠— NDHS Report

The 2018 Nigeria Demographic and Health Survey (NDHS) report says 20 per cent of Nigerian children of between ages 6 and 59 months are living with sickle cell traits.

Mrs Bimbola Salu-Hundeyin, Acting Chairman, National Population Commission (NPC), disclosed this at the launching of the Taraba State report of NDHS in Jalingo on Thursday.

Salu-Hundeyin, who was represented by the Federal Commissioner in the commission, Malam Sani Sale, said that Nigeria, for the first time in the world, piloted the genotype testing of children of between ages 6 and 59 months for the sickle cell disease.

Also read: FG declares Dec 25, 26, Jan 1, 2020 as public holiday

 According to her, genotype testing is carried out in a sub-sample of more than 11,000 children, adding that the prevalence rate of sickle cell disease is above two per cent with Oyo, Lagos, Osun and Kano states topping the list of highest cases of sickle cell in the country.

She said that 41, 821 women of between ages 15 and 49 years in 40,427 households and 13,311 men of between ages 15 and 59 years in one third of the households were interviewed.

The acting chairman expressed hope that the Taraba Government and other data earned users would find the report useful for the development of the state and the country.

Also read: Aisha Buhari cry for help

Earlier, the State Director, National Population Commission (NPC), Mrs Shirley Yurma, said the report provided an up-to-date estimate on the basic demographic and health indicators in the country, urging relevant agencies to use the report judiciously for the good of the country.

Yurma said that the 2018 National Demographic and Health Survey report was the sixth conducted in the country since 1990 and was conducted every five years.

 News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Alhaji Haruna Manu, the state Deputy Governor, unveiled the Taraba NDHS report at the event. (NAN) VANGUARD

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FG declares Dec 25, 26, Jan 1, 2020, public holidays

The Federal Government has declared Wednesday, December 25,  Thursday, December 26 and Wednesday, January 1, 2020, as public holidays for the Christmas and New Year celebrations.

The Minister of Interior, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, announced this on Thursday in Abuja through a statement issued by the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Interior, Mrs Georgina Ehuriah.

Also read: Aisha Buharis cry for help

Aregbesola, who made the declaration on behalf of the Federal Government, felicitated Christians and all Nigerians both at home and abroad on the 2019 Christmas and New Year celebrations.

He enjoined all Christians to live by the virtues and teachings of Jesus Christ.

According to him, those virtues hinge on compassion, patience, peace, humility, righteousness, and love for one another.

The minister said living by them would guarantee an atmosphere of peace and security in the country.

Aregbesola said the determination of the government to ensure peace and security would engender inflow of foreign direct investment, thereby revitalising the nation’s economy.

Also read: 2023: nobody will use my name to canvass for votes – Buhari

He said it would also improve employment opportunities for the teeming youths in the country.

The minister expressed confidence that 2020 would be a breakthrough year for all Nigerians.

He assured Nigerians that the Federal Government, under the “visionary leadership’’ of the President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), would make life more meaningful for all Nigerians.

“With love for one another, hard work, selfless service, patience and patriotism, Nigeria will sooner than later join the league of developed nations,’’ Aregbesola said.

He wished Nigerians a happy and peaceful Christmas and New Year celebrations. Punch.

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IBM’s new battery design taps seawater as alternative mineral source

International Business Machines Corp on Wednesday said it has come up with a new battery technology that uses materials extracted from seawater and requires no cobalt, as the race to find alternative sources to the expensive mineral intensifies.

IBM said it has partnered with the research wing of Daimler AG’s Mercedes-Benz, battery electrolyte supplier Central Glass, and battery manufacturer Sidus for the commercial development of the new design.

Also read: Netflix data reveals how foreign markets are fueling its growth

The goal would be, within a year or so, to have the first working prototype (of the battery),” said Jeff Welser, vice president at IBM Research.

IBM may not necessarily end up making a product using the design, Welser added.

The move comes as top battery makers are scrambling to reduce cobalt content in lithium-ion batteries, and as the expansion of the electric vehicle market is expected to result in shortages of the mineral mainly found in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

IBM said its technology has proven to outperform lithium-ion batteries in cost, charging time, and energy efficiency. Vanguand.

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Netflix data reveals how foreign markets are fueling its growth

Netflix released three years’ worth of revenue and subscription data this week that show just how fast the streaming giant is growing internationally.

More than 57 percent of Netflix’s 158 million streaming subscribers and nearly half its revenue so far this year have come from outside the US and Canada, according to the breakdown filed with the Securities and Exchange commission.

The Asia-Pacific region is Netflix’s smallest but fastest-growing market, the figures show. The number of paid members there has more than doubled since the end of 2017 to about 14.4 million as of Sept. 30, while revenue has jumped more than 82 percent to about $1 billion.

Those are much steeper increases than in the US and Canada, where revenue has grown 10.7 percent and subscriptions have increased 14.8 percent in the same period. Netflix had 67.1 million subscribers and $7.3 billion in revenue in the two countries this year as of Sept. 30, the company said.

“In light of the Company’s growing number of memberships and revenue from outside the United States, this regional reporting is consistent with how the Company reviews and manages its membership and revenue trends,” Netflix wrote in a Monday SEC filing.

More than half or some 47.3 million of Netflix’s 91.2 million subscribers outside the US and Canada are in Europe, the Middle East and Africa, where revenue has risen 68.4 percent to nearly $4 billion since late 2017, according to the numbers.

Latin America boasted 29.3 million subscribers and about $2 billion revenue at the end of this year’s third quarter, up 49 percent and 24.7 percent, respectively, from the end of 2017, the filing shows.

The numbers came ahead of Netflix’s January earnings report for the fourth quarter of this year, which will reportedly be the first to include a regional breakdown of revenue and subscriber numbers. Vanguard.

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Aisha Buhari’s cry for help

AISHA Buhari, wife of the president, aka Nigeria’s First Lady, has always been in the news. The only difference now is that since she returned from her last extended vacation in the United Kingdom, she has dominated the news more than has been customary with her predecessors as first ladies.

She has been in the news with as much regularity as any high-profile public officer if not her husband, the president. This media blitz has not always been for the right reasons nor free of controversy.

 Which is the very reason her critics would think her romance of the media has not been in the overall interest of her husband’s administration. But this is apparently not her design nor her intention.

Also read: FG releases new national broadband plan

Yet, one thing is sure: Nigeria’s first ladies tend to see themselves as the female versions of their husbands.

In other words, if their husbands are the country’s leaders, the first in the pecking order, the first ladies see themselves as their husband’s deputies.

 In order of precedence, they like to be placed and treated with more respect, even reverence, than the person who ranks next to their husbands. Say the vice president in a civil administration or the chief of staff under the military.

If possible, those of them whose husbands have held office since 1999 would not mind to be addressed as Madam President who should be able to wield as much executive power as their husbands.

Such is the importance these women attach to their position and the seriousness with which they want to be taken.

It would not be saying too much to describe them as vain, for which reason Nigerians’ perception of their conduct may not always be flattering.

Which is not necessarily the case with what many may perceive as Aisha Buhari’s latest “antics”, her increasingly controversial weighing-in on public discourse.

For a Nigerian woman, particularly one from the very conservative north, Aisha is quite a mouthful. She has not been too shy to air her views.

The point is that she has been more inclined to do that more frequently and more controversially than in the past. I want to restate that this is not necessarily because she wants it so. Nor does she appear to do so to undermine her husband, court controversy or power. Yes, she may not be averse to wielding more influence (read power) in her husband’s administration.

 She, however, appears to have been pushed to the wall in the present circumstances and has scarcely any better option than to take her case directly to the Nigerian public. Aisha’s main adversaries, perhaps, enemies are her husband’s extended family members and his friends. Her grouse is that these categories of Nigerians have taken over the control of not just her husband’s life and their marital or family life.

Her complaint against this cabal that carries on in the shadows of Aso Rock Villa is that they are not only ruining her husband’s administration and thus his goodwill among Nigerians. But they, she is saying to Nigerians and anyone attentive enough to hear her, these close family members and associates of her husband’s, are destroying Nigeria.

Her problem is that her husband who famously said (not minding the irony, considering he was then with Angela Merkel, the German President) that her place is confined only to the kitchen and the “other room” has been wrapped tightly round the fingers of these power mongers and is not listening to her one bit.

Also read: nobody will use my name to canvass for votes – Buhari

Hers is the cry of an anguished woman for understanding and Nigerians will do well to listen to her. Her mortal worry which accounts for her apparent hysteric comments is that when the blowback comes, it is her family, maybe her husband, that would be left to bear the burden.

Which is already happening in the aftermath of the series of extra-judicial actions, lawlessness and authoritarianism of elements within the Buhari administration,all of which came to a head with the DSS invasion of the court session of Justice Ijeoma Ojukwu, in their bid to re-arrest Omoyele Sowore and Olawale Bakare.

Aisha has long ago warned about some unelected Nigerians, who were nowhere to be seen in the build-up to her husband’s electoral victory, suddenly showing up to start calling the shots after he was sworn-in to office.

She worried about these people and famously threatened to withdraw support for her husband in his re-election bid.

 At the time, she would appear to be opposed to the side-tracking of the likes of Bola Tinubu and company by her husband’s new-found friends and family. This woman, in veiled remarks, warned about these people.

 She is only now calling them by their real names after the attempts to humiliate her even while her husband is being held hostage to power by them. Aisha gave enough warning and tried to warn off her adversaries, but her husband is too far gone and beholden to the antics of those she labelled “evil people”, and has accused of trying to take over the country from her husband.

Her criticism is not just against opposition elements in the PDP. No, Aisha has in mind the people surrounding her husband who have used their positions, traditional and social media, to undermine her.

Also read: FG resolves to digitize the economy – Pantami

These are the likes of Garba Shehu, one of the President’s spokespersons, Mamman Daura and his children, particularly his so-called favourite daughter, Fatima, that openly confronted Aisha and aimed to lock her out of her own home.

Let’s be clear, how many of us Nigerians can endure what Aisha has had to endure from the people that have taken over control of her home, controlling her through her husband? What is an adult female like Fatima, probably older than Aisha, doing in Aso Villa and living at tax payers’ expense for four years? It has become evident that much of what goes on in the regime of President Buhari is the handiwork of the shadowy people operating around him.

Buhari is a mere figurehead of a leader who reigns. His extended family members and friends led by Mamman Daura and Abba Kyari govern his home and by extension Nigeria.

Hers is the cry of an anguished woman for understanding and Nigerians will do well to listen to her. Her mortal worry which accounts for her apparent hysteric comments is that when the blowback comes, it is her family, maybe her husband,that would be left to bear the burden.

Which is already happening in the aftermath of the series of extra-judicial actions, lawlessness and authoritarianism of elements within the Buhari administration, all of which came to a head with the DSS invasion of the court session of Justice Ijeoma Ojukwu, in their bid to re-arrest Omoyele Sowore and Olawale Bakare.

Aisha has long ago warned about some unelected Nigerians, who were nowhere to be seen in the build-up to her husband’s electoral victory, suddenly showing up to start calling the shots after he was sworn-in to office.

 She worried about these people and famously threatened to withdraw support for her husband in his re-election bid. At the time, she would appear to be opposed to the side-tracking of the likes of Bola Tinubu and company by her husband’s new-found friends and family.

This woman, in veiled remarks, warned about these people. She is only now calling them by their real names after the attempts to humiliate her even while her husband is being held hostage to power by them.

Aisha gave enough warning and tried to warn off her adversaries, but her husband is too far gone and beholden to the antics of those she labelled “evil people”, and has accused of trying to take over the country from her husband.

 Her criticism is not just against opposition elements in the PDP. No, Aisha has in mind the people surrounding her husband who have used their positions, traditional and social media, to undermine her.

 These are the likes of Garba Shehu, one of the President’s spokespersons, Mamman Daura and his children, particularly his so-called favourite daughter, Fatima, that openly confronted Aisha and aimed to lock her out of her own home.

 Let’s be clear, how many of us Nigerians can endure what Aisha has had to endure from the people that have taken over control of her home, controlling her through her husband? What is an adult female like Fatima, probably older than Aisha, doing in Aso Villa and living at tax payers’ expense for four years? It has become evident that much of what goes on in the regime of President Buhari is the handiwork of the shadowy people operating around him.

Buhari is a mere figurehead of a leader who reigns. His extended family members and friends led by Mamman Daura and Abba Kyari govern his home and by extension Nigeria.

The insight Aisha provided about how the office of the First Lady was scrapped, the elaborate plan to scuttle her interview with the NTA and find another wife for the president, all in a bid to spite her, should not be dismissed offhand.

This is the reason she is directly reaching out to Nigerians and it is the lens through which we should, as Nigerians, view the Buhari presidency. Ultimately, her fight is against the tyranny of patriarchy which is extended to the rest of Nigerians in the crude attempts to silence opposition all of which have now reduced Nigeria to a police state. Vanguard

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