Politics
How My Father Died At Private Hospital -Sen Umahi
The Senate Deputy Major ity leader, Senator Dave Umahi, say he lost his father due to negligence at a private hospital.
Umahi spoke on Monday on the floor of the upper legislative chamber while posing a question to Mairiga Mahmud, a ministerial nominee from Kano, who was being screened for confirmation.
Senator Umahi, who did not disclose the name of the hospital, said his father died at the medical facility because he was left unattended to.
“I’m very concerned about a particular programme in the health sector. This programme is a situation that the medical association has allowed,” he said.
“It’s a situation where you will be a medical doctor in a public institution and you also have your private clinic. There will be a competing interest.
“I have a very bad experience of this. My father had surgery in Enugu and he was seen by a very good surgeon who did a wonderful work and was made alive.
“When the same problem came out again, he went back to the same hospital. The consultant told him to rather come to his clinic.
“Being satisfied with the work of that consultant, he went to his clinic and the consultant did a beautiful work and then put an infusion and went home.
“In the night, there was a reverse — blood was coming into the infusion rather than the water going into the body”, he explained.
The Senator said there was nobody to attend to his father, adding that both the doctor and nurses were unavailable.
“These clinics, most of the time, they have a very slim number of workers and so you find out that there is very competing interests.
“My father died because of the negligence of that private hospital”, he said.
Umahi said when he was governor of Ebonyi State, he implemented a policy barring doctors working in government hospitals from operating private medical facilities to avoid a conflict of interest.
He said urgent measures must be put in place to tackle medical negligence in hospitals.
Politics
LP Crisis: Ex-NWC Member Dumps Dumps Abure Faction
Mr Ojukwu, who recently returned to the interim National Working Committee led by Senator Esther Nenadi Usman, noted that the party had 34 elected members in the House of Representatives, eight Senators, and 80 members at the state Houses of Assembly after the 2023 general elections.
“Now we lost all of them,” he said. “I don’t think we have as many as five members in the National Assembly.”
The former national officer of the LP talked to journalists in Abuja and said he chose to join the caretaker committee led by Senator Nenadi-Usman because they are now the officially recognized leaders of the Party.
“I chose to work with the caretaker committee to help save the Labour Party, for the benefit of the party. I also want to use this chance to ask my colleagues at the national, state, and local government levels to come together and help rebuild our party.
“Another election is around the corner. We lost everything we have. They have left to other political parties. So I’ll reach out to all my friends in the other group to get together and work on making this party stronger again.
“The caretaker committee has formed a reconciliation committee. Let’s come together and talk so that we can restore the first opposition political party in Nigeria.”
Mr Ojukwu, who was part of the Julius Abure’s group, said there are no more factions in the LP.
He added, “There is a court ruling, and since it is valid, the right people are in the correct positions.”
He urged Barr Abure and others to drop the legal cases they have filed because they are not helping the party.
“Litigations are killing political parties”, he said. “They’ve seen many political parties disappear because of legal battles, and the Labor Party is losing support every day, which makes me feel sad.”
Mr Ojukwu said he did not think joining the Senator Nenadi-Usman’s NWC was a betrayal of the Abure group, describing himself as “the oxygen” of that faction.
“I’m with this group because of the verdict. But I never betrayed anybody. Rather, I was betrayed,” he added.
