Politics
Lawmaker Explains Oversight Functions
The National Emergency Agency (NEMA) has called for the establishment and legal backing for Local Emergency Management Committee (LEMC) at the 774 Local Government levels throughout the country.
This is contained in a communiqué issued at the end of a one-day workshop in Lafia organised by the agency.
According to the communiqué, the LEMC is necessary to strengthen mechanisms for effective disaster management policy in view of the prediction by NIMET on imminent floods in 2013.
The workshop has the theme, “2013 flood prevention, mitigation, preparedness and strengthening mechanism for community-based disaster early warning system’’.
It said that the legal backing if granted would enable the local governments to set up local emergency management committees, which would be responsible for handling disaster-related issues at that level.
“This measure will strengthen the mechanism for disaster management across quotas with NEMA at the Federal level, State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA), at the state and the LEMC at the local level.
“It will also ensure effective awareness campaign on prevention, mitigation and disaster management generally through holistic community participation”.
The communiqué said that establishing the LEMC would encourage the full participation of youths and children in disaster management, particularly in respect of early warning system.
“The committee will help in identifying vulnerable communities, creation of waterways, awareness and sensitisation campaigns to flood-prone areas,” the communiqué noted.
It added that it would also facilitate the clearing of gutters and proper disposal of waste at safe dumping sites at the local government level.NEMA Seeks Establishment, Legal Backing For LEMCThe National Agency for Food, Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), said it has arrested a suspected leader of a drug cloning syndicate in Lagos.
Mr. Garba Macdonald, NAFDAC Director of Enforcement, told newsmen in Lagos that the suspect was arrested in his house at Orile-Iganmu with various fake drugs worth over N20 million.
Macdonald said that the syndicate specialised “in cloning several fast moving drug products, including locally manufactured anti-malaria and pain relieving medicines”.
He said that the syndicate had perfected its cloning act in China and, thereafter, imported the cloned drugs into the country.
Macdonald said that the suspect had been placed under NAFDAC’s watch list of fake drugs importers for about two years.
He said the agency had begun investigations to unravel his China-based partners.
The NAFDAC official said that the agency was determined to take advantage of its collaboration with the Chinese Government in the fight against fake drugs.