The federal government has
disclosed that cases of monkey pox virus which broke out in Bayelsa
State a fortnight ago has spread to more states in the country with 74
suspected cases being examined.
The Minister of Health, Professor Isaac
Adewole, who disclosed this to journalists after the Federal Executive
Council (FEC) meeting at the State House, Abuja without stating in
concrete terms what the government is doing to treat or tame the
disease, said laboratory test conducted in Lagos showed that four cases
tested negative.
He listed the 11 states ravaged by the disease as Akwa Ibom, Bayelsa, Cross River, Delta, Ekiti, Enugu, Imo, Lagos, Nasarawa and Rivers.
Adewale also said 12 of the suspected
cases in Bayelsa State tested negative while three of them tested
positive, adding that further tests are ongoing to identify the true
nature of the disease.
“We received an update from the public
health of the nation. We informed council about the latest development
with respect to the monkey pox virus outbreak. So far, as of today,
(yesterday), there are 74 suspected cases in 11 states of the country.
We have confirmed three in Bayelsa State, and 12 of the Bayelsa
suspected cases tested negative, four suspected cases from Lagos tested
negative. We are still expecting the results of other ones,” he said.
Adewole also dispelled the insinuation
making the rounds that the military was carrying out vaccination in some
states of the federation and consequently spreading monkey pox in such
areas.
According to him, the military is not involved in any vaccination exercise, explaining that the federal government cannot carry out any vaccination exercise without collaborating with state governments.
He said the federal government was only carrying out vaccination campaigns in Kwara and Kogi States on Yellow Fever and Cholera diseases in Borno State.
The minister also said the government was planning to conduct a vaccination exercise on measles.
“We are also doing advance test in Ede, the African Centre of Excellence for Genomics and Infectious Disease, to really understand the genomics of this virus. Even when they are negative, the laboratory attendance should be able to tell us what exactly they are. We will also be able to locate and identify the origin so that we can take adequate precaution.
“We are also doing advance test in Ede, the African Centre of Excellence for Genomics and Infectious Disease, to really understand the genomics of this virus. Even when they are negative, the laboratory attendance should be able to tell us what exactly they are. We will also be able to locate and identify the origin so that we can take adequate precaution.
“It is also important to use this
opportunity to dispel the rumour circulating in the country that the
military is vaccinating people and trying to spread monkey pox across
the country. The military is not involved in any vaccination exercise
and I must also really educate the Nigerian people about how vaccination
campaigns are done. “Federal government will take the lead but we do
not conduct campaign without working with states.
So, there is no way we
will do campaign for states without working with the states and it is
the states that will be in front and we will provide support. The rumour
that federal government is doing vaccination campaign is not true. And
as of today, we are only doing vaccination campaign in three states.
“We are doing vaccination campaign
against yellow Fever in Kwara and Kogi States because of the outbreak in
some parts of the country. We are also doing cholera vaccination in
Borno State and so, anybody carrying the rumour, please help us educate
Nigerians that it is not true.
“We are not vaccinating anybody. We plan
to do measles campaign very soon and we will also do Yellow Fever
campaign before the end of the year and we will let you know.
“You will never find federal staff
conducting vaccination campaign without the support and active
participation of the state Ministry of Health. This is just to correct
the misconception,” he said.
The minister further warned Nigerians to be cautious about the ongoing illegal harvests of some organs of the body, notably the kidney by traffickers as he advised them to seek proper advice and patronise accredited institutions when necessary.
He emphasised that whereas the military
is always involved in health campaigns as a number of soldiers are
medical doctors, such campaigns do not include vaccination as
erroneously conceived.
In his own briefing, the Minister of Water Resources, Suleiman Adamu, said FEC approved N280 million for the completion of an irrigation project started since 1997.
Meanwhile, palpable tension yesterday
enveloped the ancient town of Omu-Aran in Irepodun Local Government Area
of Kwara State and Akwa Ibmo State as parents and guardians stormed
schools in their hundreds to withdraw their wards over rumour of alleged
killer vaccines in the area.
In Omu-Aran, parents had besieged both
private and public schools in the area as early 9a.m. as the rummour of
the presence of the said vaccine injection team allegedly accompanied by
soldiers in the town spreads like wild fire.
Some of the parents, mostly traders, commercial motorcyclists had to abandon their businesses in a bid to withdraw their wards from schools to prevent them from being injected with the alleged vaccines.
But the state Ministry of Health in a
statement clarified that the ongoing Reactive Vaccination in the local
government area and other neighbouring communities, was to prevent the
spread of yellow fever.
The state Commissioner for Health, Dr.
Suleiman Atolagbe Alege, explained that the vaccination exercise has no
connection with the Nigerian Army and is not dangerous to children’s
health as it has been rumoured by certain individuals.
In Akwa Ibom State, distressed calls by
parents and students around schools across the state reportedly
generated pandemonium which caused children to flee from school to their
houses while some ran into the bush to hide in other to escape the
alleged vaccination.
It was gathered that while police vehicles were seen visiting the schools, plain-cloth detectives were also seen going from school to school to interrogate the school-heads because of the development.
But the state Commissioner for Education, Mr. Paul Udofia, the police and army, all condemned the rumours saying they were calculated to cause confusion in the state.
The state Police Public Relations
Officer (PPRO), Bala Elkana and his colleague of the Nigerian Army,
Headquarters 2 Brigade, Uyo , Major Umar Shuib, said the romour was
misleading.
The PPRO said since the news got to them
during the school period police patrol teams were dispatched to the
schools to authenticate the truth and source of information.
He said: “It’s a mere rumour which unfortunately led to closure of some schools quite early today (Wednesday)
“Our officers have been on surveillance since morning, they have been going round schools but no one is really able to trace where the information originated from and which school was affected. The rumour came in from Anambra where such was reported to have occurred.”
The Nigerian Army, Headquarters 2
Brigade, Uyo in their reaction said “The attention of Headquarters 2
Brigade Nigerian Army has been drawn to some rumours making the rounds
that some army personnel are going round schools in Akwa Ibom State
dressed in military camouflage uniforms with the intention of forcefully
vaccinating students with an unknown substance.
“The callous and unpatriotic rumours
spread by these enemies of state are, to say the least, despicable,
deplorable and highly condemnable as they are intended to cause
pandemonium among the general public.
“The authorities of 2 Brigade Nigerian
Army wishes to inform the public that the Brigade is currently involved
in Operation Crocodile Smile II, which is yielding tremendous successes
especially in curbing the excesses and activities of criminals, cultists
and other miscreants in Akwa Ibom State.
“For emphasis therefore, the 2 Brigade
Nigerian Army does not and will never carry out its medical outreaches
or vaccination exercises for that matter in schools.
“We therefore wish to inform the public
that the on-going rumours about army personnel in military camouflage
going round schools in any part of Akwa Ibom State to forcefully
immunise school children is false and should therefore be disregarded,”
he posited
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