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FEC Approves Construction of New N34bn Gboko Airstrip In Benue

The Federal Executive Council (FEC) has approved the construction of an airstrip in Gboko, Benue State, to strengthen security operations in the state and across the Middle Belt.

The council also approved the upgrade of the snake-bite treatment centre in Kaltungo, Gombe State, to the National Snake Bite Research and Medical Centre, with an expanded mandate for clinical services, research and training.

The approvals were granted at the cabinet meeting presided over by President Bola Tinubu at the Council Chamber of the Presidential Villa in Abuja.

Briefing State House correspondents after the meeting, Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Festus Keyamo, SAN, said the Gboko airstrip would serve as a base for security agencies to confront bandits and terrorists operating in Benue State and neighbouring areas.

“For us in aviation, we just had one memo. We sought council’s approval for the construction and development of the Gboko airstrip in Benue State, and it was graciously approved by council,” he said.

He said the contract was awarded to CCECC Nigeria Limited at a cost of ₦34,398,211,538.64.

Keyamo explained that Gboko is an important hub for agricultural activities in the Middle Belt and also serves as a strategic location for security agencies seeking operational bases to tackle insecurity in the region.

“It will also be a base for humanitarian activities and services and emergency medical services. That is how important that area is, and we thought it was important to put an airstrip there to confront and address these challenges we are facing around the axis.”

Also briefing correspondents, the Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare, Prof. Ali Pate, said the council considered four major health-related memos and approved them.

He said: “First was the upgrade of the snake-bite treatment centre in Kaltungo, Gombe State, into the National Snake Bite Research and Medical Centre in Kaltungo, Gombe State, with an expanded mandate for clinical services, research and training to respond to the need that exists in our country for adequate attention to snake bites.

“Snake bite remains a significant yet neglected public health challenge, particularly in our rural communities here in Nigeria, in the savannah regions, but also across the subregion. It is especially hard on vulnerable populations — farmers, herders, hunters, women and children — whose livelihoods and daily activities expose them to encounters with snakes.

“We do have a large burden: over 43,000 snake bites annually occur, many of which result in death, disfigurement, disability and psychological trauma, with severe socioeconomic consequences.

“This new centre will be an important institution that will address the challenge, particularly in the Northeast, Northwest and North Central geopolitical zones of Nigeria, where the issue is most dire.

“The new centre will provide comprehensive, specialised care for snakebite and related envenomings, undertake research on snakebite epidemiology, prevention, diagnosis and treatment, ensure sustainable access to quality antivenom, and have full clinical and medical departments to improve patient care and specialist services, among other things.

“It will also partner with international institutions. This is a major step that brings an institution that will be the first of its kind in this country and in our subregion.”

The minister said the second approval granted by FEC was for the procurement of 10 compressed natural gas-powered blood-donation medical clinic vans for National Blood Service zonal activities.

He said the vans would facilitate the collection, movement and distribution of blood across the country’s geopolitical zones.

“Approximately, we require 1.8 million units of blood donations annually. At the current rate, we only get about 25 to 30%. These blood-donation vehicles can be deployed to mobilise donors so that we enhance the collection of blood that is critical for pregnant women who may require caesarean sections, for trauma victims, for surgery patients, or for those being treated for cancers who require repeated transfusions or other blood components. It is part of the effort to build the infrastructure comprehensively for emergency medical services dealing with maternal health, and these 10 blood-donation vehicles will be procured at the cost of about ₦6.9 billion.”

“The third approval was for the procurement of tuberculosis commodities by the Ministry of Health, at the sum of ₦62 billion. The reason is because Nigeria is among the countries that run among the highest burdens of tuberculosis.

“Tuberculosis is a socially determined disease linked to poverty, malnutrition, comorbidities and poor housing, and we have one of the largest borders,” he said.

He added that while treatment for tuberculosis had largely depended on external partners, the Federal Government was now taking steps to procure the commodities directly and pave the way for local production.

“Now the Nigerian government is stepping in to procure those commodities and put us on a path to manufacture them locally. We don’t manufacture them at the moment, so the federal government’s procurement effort will ultimately lead to local manufacture of anti-tuberculosis drugs.”

Prof. Pate said the final approval was for the procurement of reproductive health drugs and commodities worth ₦25 billion through the Primary Health Care Development Agency.

He said the objective was to provide family-planning and maternal-health commodities for those who choose to use them for birth spacing.

According to him, the commodities will be distributed through primary health-care centres across the country.

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