Rivers
NEMA Offers Journalists Fresh Roles
As part of efforts to ensure that emergency cases are promptly identified and tackled, the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), South/South zone, has inaugurated a body called the Journalists Against Disaster (JAD).
The South/South Zonal Coordinator of the agency, Mr. Emenike Umesi who disclosed this during a chat with The Tide in his office in Port Harcourt, said the body was charged with the responsibility of reporting and educating the public on emergency management related issues.
Describing journalists as watchdogs of the society, Umesi said the body which is made up of journalists who are interested in emergency related issues would partner with the agency in ensuring that emergency cases are adequately tackled as well as reducing the level of its occurrences in the zone.
He said “journalists are the watchdogs of the society. They are there in every part of the environment and so in the case of any issue of emergency they will alwas report. We need to partner with them because we are not everywhere but they are.”
Umesi stated that the JAD had been in existence at the National level of the agecy adding that the zone inaugurated it following its positive impact on the activities of the agency.
“These journalists are being invited for training and retraining all in the bid to nip emergency issues in the bud and tackle it accordingly,” he said.
The South / South Coordinator of NEMA who noted the progress of the agency in the zone regretted however, that most states in the zone are yet to establish State Emergency Management Agency (NEMA).
In his words: “so far only Delta and Akwa-Ibom States have an established SEMA. In partnership with UNICEF, we will soon embark on an advocacy visit to Rivers, Bayelsa and Edo States with the essence of getting SEMA formally established and backed by law.”
Umesi maintained that the issue of SEMA was a new idea which would take the different state governments some times to understand the system stating however, that the governments were becoming receptive to the idea and would soon have no problem establishing SEMA in their states.
He further revealed that the zone has acquired a warehouse, but faced with the challenge of fund to get the entire process completed.
Lady Levi Usende
Rivers
UNIPORT Moves To Tackle Insecurity … Inducts Security Experts
The University of Port Harcourt, has taken a significant step towards addressing the issue of insecurity in Nigeria by producing security experts through its Institute of Niger Delta Studies (INDS), with the institute inducting its first graduating students into the Nigerian Institute For Industrial Security (NIIS), with the General Officer Commanding (GOC) of the 6 Division of the Nigerian Army, Major General E E Emekah, delivering a quality lecture on the topic, “Promoting Blue Economy In The Niger Delta: The Place Of Security”.
In his lecture, Major General Emekah emphasised the importance of security in promoting the blue economy in the Niger Delta region.
He noted that the activities of the Joint Tasks Force (JTF) are geared towards maintaining peace on Nigerian waterways and promoting productivity, and also stressed the need for a non-kinetic approach to security operations, winning the hearts and minds of the communities, and collaborating with security personnel to fight insecurity.
The GOC charged the inductees to ensure that their study/training provides practical solutions to the pressing security challenges facing the Niger Delta and Nigeria as a whole.
He emphasised the significance of their studies in UNIPORT, given the prevailing security threat to lives and property, especially on Nigerian waterways.
The Acting Director of INDS, Dr. Chukwu-Okeah, expressed satisfaction that the occasion marks a new milestone in the history of the institute, noting that the Niger Delta has been besieged with environmental and security challenges, and it is time to rise up and build the region through the blue economy ideology.
The blue economy, he explained, emphasises the sustainable use of ocean resources for economic growth, improved livelihoods, and job creation while preserving the health of the ocean ecosystem.
He described the blue economy as the new oil well, with the potential to drive economic diversification, job creation, food security, and climate resilience in the region.
One of the inductees, Ayuba Tanimu noted that security is dynamic, and continuous learning and research have equipped them to serve their communities and Nigeria well.
He described the Nigerian Institute For Industrial Security (NIIS) as a body of security professionals that meets annually to craft security policies for the country.
The programme, which attracted prominent individuals from the academia, security, and other sectors had the 7th Vice Chancellor of the University of Port Harcourt, Prof Joseph Ajienka, as its chairman.
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