/ Jul 01, 2026
/ Jul 01, 2026

Abia State government revamps 200 health centres, reclaims public school assets

Published on

By

The Abia State Government has said it has concluded plans to renovate and retrofit 200 existing Primary health centres across the state before the end of this year.

The state Commissioner for Information, Okey Kanu, revealed this while briefing journalists on the outcome of this week’s State Executive Council meeting presided over by the state governor, Alex Otti on Monday.

Kanu said that the project which is to be executed by the Ministry of Health in partnership with the Abia State Primary Healthcare Development Agency has a delivery period of one hundred days with effect from September 2024.

“It is a bold step being undertaken by the Ministry (Health) and work will commence across the State in those 200 Primary Health Centres in the first week of September and the delivery of those projects will be somewhere around December.

“All the 184 wards of the state will benefit from this project. I believe that will turn out to be some form of Christmas gift to Abians.” Kanu stated.

READ ALSO:

Increase in death rate a result of poor primary healthcare – FG

He also announced that the state recorded 13 suspected cases of Monkey Pox within Isiala Ngwa, noting that 9 out of the cases returned negative with one positive whereas the remaining three are still unconfirmed.

On the recovery of public lands taken over by private individuals, Prince Kanu announced that the committee constituted to that effect has swung into action, starting with recovering lands belonging to Government College Umuahia, assuring that the government will not back out from the exercise no matter the pressure.

“They (the committee) were in Government College Umuahia where they retrieved the land that has been compromised there.

“The government will not back out from the program of recovering all the lands illegally acquired by unscrupulous individuals in our schools. The committee will not back out no matter the pushback from those who may have engaged in this selfish take over of school lands in the State.” Kanu noted.

He also informed that as part of the ongoing reforms in the education sector, the verification of those private schools that were closed down will commence soon. The training of both Primary and Secondary teachers in the state by Educational Consultants, ERIT will soon be concluded while all the examinations conducted by the Education Development Center were successful.

On the road infrastructural development agenda of the state government, the Commissioner said a total of 108 roads have so far been maintained and rehabilitated across the state through direct labour.

He said that the design work for Ntigha – Mbawsi – Umuala Road is ongoing while the design for Onuimo-Tower of Peace Road has been completed. He added that the design for the Onuinyang – Okporoenyi -Oboro-Ikwuano road is almost completed while work is ongoing on many strategic roads across the State.

The Commissioner for Tertiary Education, Prof. Uche Emeh Uche explained that the government is not demolishing the buildings illegally erected on the land of Government College Umuahia.

Uche said, “This government is against the destruction of property, especially when it is not on the way. What the Recovery Committee demolished last weekend at Government College Umuahia were structures at the foundation level and the rest of them.

“Those properties, the government will not demolish them but will put them to proper use. It would be wasteful to demolish those properties.

Answering questions on the outbreak of epidemics in the state, the Special Adviser to the Governor on Health, Dr Ngozi Azodo, said that contrary to speculations, the state had only two cases of Cholera while various isolation centres are being strengthened to contain any suspected cases of the outbreak.

Also, the Special Adviser to the Governor on Media and Publicity, Mr Ferdinand Ekeoma said that the state government has concluded the identification of houses to be demolished along the Umuikaa- Owerrinta road expansion, adding that compensation for the affected structures will commence soon.

You May Like

3 thoughts on “Abia State government revamps 200 health centres, reclaims public school assets

  1. Regards, A lot of facts!
    casino en ligne
    Lovely posts, Cheers!
    casino en ligne
    Thank you, Awesome stuff.
    meilleur casino en ligne
    Superb material, Thanks!
    casino en ligne
    Fine information Thanks a lot!
    casino en ligne
    Regards! I appreciate it!
    meilleur casino en ligne
    Amazing a lot of wonderful data!
    casino en ligne
    This is nicely said. !
    casino en ligne
    Many thanks! Ample forum posts!
    casino en ligne
    You made the point!
    casino en ligne

  2. No long roads.
    No overexplaining.
    Only what matters, when it matters.

    Fresh signals.
    Clear mechanics.
    Moments that feel right — not forced.

    This is where rhythm meets timing,
    and timing quietly turns into advantage.

    You scroll — you get it.
    You stay — you feel it.

    https://t.me/s/portable_1WIN

    Slide in.
    Catch the flow.
    Stay where momentum lives.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Most Popular

Must Read

US President Donald Trump addressing reporters in the White House briefing room during a statement on the US-Iran peace agreement announcement.

Trump loses Supreme Court bid to end US birthright citizenship

The US Supreme Court has rejected President Donald Trump’s attempt to end automatic birthright citizenship, ruling that children born on American soil remain entitled to US citizenship regardless of their parents’ immigration status.   In a 6-3 decision delivered on the final day of its term, the court upheld the long-standing interpretation of the 14th Amendment’s Citizenship Clause, which grants citizenship to nearly everyone born in the United States. The ruling marks another significant legal setback for Trump’s immigration agenda. According to AFP, the case centred on an executive order Trump signed on the first day of his second term, seeking to deny automatic citizenship to children born in the United States to parents who were in the country illegally or on temporary visas. Lower courts had previously blocked the order, finding it inconsistent with the Constitution. Writing for the majority, Chief Justice John Roberts said children born in the United States to parents who are unlawfully or temporarily present are “subject to the jurisdiction” of the country and are therefore citizens at birth under the 14th Amendment. Trump personally attended oral arguments before the Supreme Court in April, an unusual move for a sitting US president. His administration argued that unrestricted birthright citizenship encourages illegal immigration and so-called “birth tourism”, where foreign nationals travel to the United States primarily to give birth. The administration also contended that the 14th Amendment, adopted after the American Civil War, was intended to guarantee citizenship for formerly enslaved people rather than the children of undocumented migrants or temporary visitors. However, the Supreme Court reaffirmed the constitutional interpretation established in the landmark 1898 Wong Kim Ark case. In that ruling, the court held that a man born in San Francisco to Chinese immigrant parents was a US citizen by birth despite later immigration disputes. The latest judgment reinforces that precedent and preserves the constitutional guarantee of birthright citizenship. The decision is the third major defeat for Trump at the Supreme Court this term. Earlier this year, the justices struck down most of his global tariff measures and also blocked his attempt to remove Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook.
Read more

Editor's Pick

Trending News

Newsletter

Enter your email address and receive notifications of news by email.

You have been successfully Subscribed! Ops! Something went wrong, please try again.

© 2026 GongNews. All Rights Reserved.