Posts

Showing posts from December, 2024

Public Service Reform Initiatives: Ignoring the Highfaluting; Igniting the Low-hanging

Image
  Being a paper presented by Dr Adetolu Ademujimi at the Maiden investiture of Rotarian Royal Bunmi Alade, FCTI, FCA, Permanent Secretary, Ondo State Ministry of Physical Planning & Urban Development by Rotary Club of Akure Royals on Friday 21st December 2024 at SITA Hall, Akure Protocols Compliments of the yuletide season to everyone in the room. It’s heartwarming to be here to felicitate Rotarian Royal and Chief Bunmi Alade, a distinguished bureaucrat whom I have been privileged to be acquainted with for about a decade as one our admired “Ogas” in public service of Ondo State. It is also a spec of honour for my humble self to have been requested to deliver a lecture on a burning topic of public governance at his maiden investiture by Rotary Club of Akure Royals. If efficiency, transparency, accountability and adaptability are the expected outcomes of Nigeria’s bureaucratic machinery – the public service, then the subject in consideration is necessary and urgent, but wit...

Local Production for National Possession - Of HIV Medications and Tests Kits in Nigeria

Image
On this 2024 World AIDS Day, please tell your neighbours, friends, family members, work colleagues and all other Nigerians that HIV is now like hypertension, diabetes mellitus, osteoarthritis – a mere chronic disease! Thanks to the efficacy of the Anti-Retroviral drugs externally sourced by Nigeria’s HIV program development partners and freely offered to Nigerian beneficiaries, with United States President’s Emergency Plan For AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) bearing the largest funding portfolio, trailed by the Global Fund, and then others. Apart from flickers of input-financing effort through salary payment to healthcare workers who man the HIV clinics and purchase of some units of condoms (and rarely, test kits), the national and subnational governments of Nigeria collectively contribute a meagre percentage to the overall annual financial burden of the program to cater to the estimated 1.63 million Nigerians on treatment for HIV. Overall, the unsaid words appear to accentuate a silent interpret...