Opinion
Declare Malaria Emergency In Nigeria
The report in some national dailies and social media platforms that the World Health Organisation (WHO), has declared Cape de Verde malaria- free is heart-gladdening, poses a challenge and is instructive to Nigeria’s leaders.This declaration by the global health organisation is very cheery and means so much to me considering the economy, size and polity of the country. Unlike Nigeria with more than 44 mineral resources spread across the 36 States of Nigeria and its Federal Capital Territory and the 774 Local Government Areas, Cape de Verde, has no natural resources. Its developing resources is mostly Service-oriented with growing focus on tourism and foreign investment.Cape de Verde is considered a developing country and is included on the list of the United Nations’ Small Island Developing states. In 2007, the United Nations graduated Cape de Verde from the Category of Least Developed Countries. Since the early 1990s, Cape de Verde has been a stable representative democracy and has remained one of the most developed democracies in Africa.
My worry is that even with abounding natural and human resources of unimaginable quantity in Nigeria, her citizens still wallow in the orgy of leadership-induced pain, poverty and sorrow more than 63 years after political independence. Malaria that is alien to the natural resources-barren Cape de Verde is endemic in Nigeria and is one of the leading causes of death of children under the age of six and pregnant women. Malaria is an household name in Nigeria so much so that its drugs and treatment have skyrocketed like a phoenix and outrageously outside the reach of the teeming less privileged citizens of Nigeria. The situation was so alarming that the National Assembly, some time last year urged the Federal Government to declare Malaria an emergency in Nigeria as a matter of urgent national interest. Because it is an ailment that only the poor and vulnerable suffer, that motion is treated with levity and perhaps consigned to the trashcan of not-feasible declarations.
Without any iota of doubt, Nigeria has the resources to fight and conquer malaria. If Cape de Verde could, Nigeria can as well, if the leadership of the country is committed to do so.I have always said that Nigeria is rich but its people are abjectly poor because of the abysmally poor leadership that has characteried governance in the country since the inception of self-rule.If the millions of public funds stashed in private and foreign accounts, misappropriated and or embezzled are judiciously used, no doubt, the issues of malaria, unemployment, decaying and dilapidated infrastructure and marginal underdevelopment with the attendant multi-dimensional socio-economic challenges, would have since been
Addressed. How will Nigeria ascribe to herself ,”Giant of Africa” when she has not been able to achieve the healthcare demands and requirements of Nigerians? How can Nigerian leaders audaciously lull its citizens to believe that they are working for the welfare of Nigerians when the seeming little things that matter are not attended to. Even welfare-oriented programmes are being truncated by greed and inordinate desire to amass wealth at the expense of the public.
About N585 million meant for “vulnerable groups of Lagos, Ogun, Cross River and Akwa Ibom” as claimed by the Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Alleviation under Betta Edu, on transit to private accounts beats my imagination and only reveals how some public officers rip off the public of their commonwealth. Such anomaly of diversions, misappropriation, outright embezzlement, and several others are the reasons Nigeria’s present and successive governments could not win the fight against malaria which health and medical practitioners say poses the greatest threat to life than the dreaded HIV/AIDS. This suggests to me that the mortality rate caused by HIV/AIDS is grossly disproportionate to deaths caused by malaria. Malaria is commonly believed to be caused by mosquitoes which breed in dirty environment, especially where there is stagnant water. A lot of communities in Nigeria, even the Sandfilled area of Borikiri in Port Harcourt, is so mosquito-infested that residents cannot sleep without nets. It is a nightmare to sleep without a net.
The Federal, State, and Local Governments should initiate programmes to end malaria scourge in the country. They should intentionally and proactively channel the people’s money to their welfare. Malaria eradication is a public welfare-oriented programme, so government at all levels must prosecute it with adequate funding that must be supervised and accounted for, to avoid the unfortunate incidents of the Humanitarian Affairs Ministry and several other Ministries, Departments and Agencies that have used programmes and projects as smokescreen to siphon public funds. While there should be a dedicated funds to fight malaria and defeat it over a period of time, environmental sanitation exercises, to clear the drains, gutters and grass should be stepped up. This consciousness should be cultivated and imbibed by all. The legitimacy of any Government is derived from the people, so Government exists for the people. No amount of money spent on the welfare of the people is too much for them. After all, the people remain the benefactors that those in Government, who in an ideal situation are stewards, are supposed to be accountable to.
I look forward to seeing Nigeria certified free from Malaria by the World Health Organization (WHO). The administration of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu should ensure that no stone was left unturned in achieving this lofty and laudable project.
By: Igbiki Benibo
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