Friday, June 14, 2013
REVEALED!! Government Plans To Ban smoking in Nigeria
The Federal Government has
said it was determined to ban
smoking in Nigeria. Minister of
Health, Prof. Onyebuchi
Chukwu, said this in Abuja
yesterday at the Ministerial
Platform where he briefed the
media on his two-year
leadership of the ministry.
He said smokers would look for where they will continue to
smoke should the Anti-Tobacco Bill at the National Assembly
is passed into law.
The minister, who has, in recent weeks, been emphasising on
the need to ban public smoking in the country, said the
Federal Government could no longer condone smoking as he
asked rhetorically: “Why are you smoking? Why are you
taking what will kill you? What benefit do you derive from
smoking? You may continue to smoke, but not in this
country.”
He listed his achievements in the ministry to include the
establishment of the National Trauma Centres in the
University of Abuja Teaching Hospital and the National
Hospital, Abuja; the completion of the Federal Staff Hospital,
Jabi, Abuja; completion of laboratory and administrative
building of the Nigerian Institute of Pharmaceutical Research
and Development, NIPRD, Abuja, and the rehabilitation and
equipping of several teaching hospitals in the country.
Chukwu noted that President Jonathan doubled the funding of
polio eradication activities to N4.7billion and in 2013 made a
further commitment of N2.5billion with a Presidential Task
Force on Polio Eradication constituted to help in the fight
against the disease.
“Today, in Nigeria, seven of our teaching hospitals can do
kidney transplant. This month, we are expecting the
International Certification Team on the Elimination of Guinea
Worm in Nigeria,” the minister said. He also informed that
there would be a presidential summit on health coverage in
the country, soon.
In his contribution, Minister of State for Health, Dr Ali Pate,
said the ‘Save-One- Million-Lives’ project recently launched
by the President would help save more than the target figure
as according to him, the logistics, professionals and
infrastructure on ground in the country would help achieve the
result. “Maternal mortality dropped by 50 percent between
2009 and 2012,” he said.
Pate added that 25 cases of polio were recorded since January
this year, which he said was as a result of the security
challenges in Yobe and Borno States, where the cases were
reported.
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