The Federal Government has said that the oncoming phase in battle
against COVID-19 in Nigeria will be handled solely by the states,
community leaders, religious leaders and others.
This was made known by the Chairman of the Presidential Task Force
(PTF), Boss Mustapha after he and members of the task force met and
briefed President Buhari on Sunday, May 31.
Speaking to state house correspondents, Mustapha said the Federal
Government will henceforth only provide supervision and coordination.
“The ownership of the next stage will be the responsibility of the
states because we have gone into community transmission. Where are the
communities? The communities are in the states. So, the ownership of the
next stage will be the responsibility of the states, the local
government, the traditional institutions, the religious leaders at the
different levels of our communities, because that is where the problem
is.
Like we’ve kept saying, 20 local governments out of 774, account for
60 per cent of confirmed cases in Nigeria today. So where are these 20
local governments? They are in communities. It means we have reached the
apex of community transmission and we must get the communities
involved.
So, the issues of places of worship, the issues of schools, the
issues of some certain businesses that were not opened hitherto are part
of the packages that we have looked at and we have made the appropriate
recommendations, but you know that Mr. President is the only one that
can take decisions in respect of these.
In the framework, the states are sub nationals, they have their own
responsibilities too, so it is in the exercise of those responsibilities
that they had meetings with those religious bodies and agreed on the
guidelines and protocols on how they can open up, but in the framework
of the national response, we are taking that into consideration” he said
According to him, Nigeria had reached the critical stage of community
transmission, adding that communities were under the supervision of the
council areas, under which structure the communities fall. He said
there would also be the full involvement of traditional and religious
institutions, adding that managing the health crisis at this point had
melted down into the more complex community level.
The PTF Chairman added that Nigeria is winning the war against the
novel virus. According to him, the number of COVID-19 cases to the rate
of deaths from the viral disease in Nigeria is quite small when compared
with the data from other climes.
”We are winning. As a matter of fact, you juxtapose the rate of cases
with our fatality rate, which is basically about three per cent, in
other countries and other climes, it’s over 10 per cent, but the most
important thing that you will realise, when we started this exercise, we
had only five testing stations, now we’ve ramped it up to 28, without
correspondent increase in the number of deaths. We’ve gone beyond 60,000
tests now, that reflects in the number of confirmed cases
We’ve not reached the peak yet and I won’t want to fool Nigerians by
telling them that we are out of the woods. No, we are not out of the
woods. As we even open up and accommodate more enterprises, because we
are trying to have a balance between livelihoods and life, there’s a
likelihood of increase in transmission in cases.
But that should not be a source of despair. Like we’ve always said, the experts will tell you over 80 per cent will contact Coronavirus
and will not even notice that they have and that accounts for what is
happening at the isolation centres when you see young men saying they
are not sick and asking why they are being kept there. They are
asymptomatic, they don’t show symptoms and they will wear it out.
There’s a 20 per cent that is critical by virtue of certain factors,
indices: age, underlying health conditions and vulnerability.
That’s the percentage we are trying to protect and if we don’t do
something in terms of management, in terms of putting in
non-pharmaceutical intervention and guidelines to protect that 20%,
about five per cent of them can fall critically ill and eventually
become fatalities in the numbers and that’s what we are trying to avoid.
So everything we are emplacing is to ensure we protect this
vulnerable 20 per cent. Eighty per cent will wear it out so the figure
isn’t a thing of major concern.
Yesterday when I saw the 553 I called the governor of Lagos, I
thought he was going to be under intense pressure, but surprisingly, he
said no, that it was expected because testing has been ramped up and as
you ramp up your testing, it reveals what is happening in your community
that prepares better for the kind of management care you will put in
place. We are not worried about it as to whether the numbers will
increase? They will increase” he said
Mustapha also stated that he is not yet certain if the next phase of
the ease of the lockdown will be communicated by the President via a
national broadcast or by the Presidential Taskforce as they did two
weeks ago.

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