FCT news
COVID-19: JCI Aso Donates Palliatives to Toge Community In Abuja

Inline with its mandate towards reaching out to indigent Nigerians, Junior Chamber International JCI Aso has donated food items and face masks to Toge community in Abuja.
The local Organization president of Junior Chamber International JCI Aso Ayodeji Ojo said the palliatives is aimed at cushioning the effect of the lockdown directive aimed at curbing the spread of the deadly Coronavirus (COVID 19) pandemic.
According to Ojo the palliative is distributed to people to ameliorate the suffering of these helpless but industrious people in the community, who can no longer sell their market.
“We need to cushion the effect of this Convid-19 on people, especially people in our rural areas, I mean in our local communities where we know that it has not been easy for them. And they have been sitting down at homes now for almost two months that people have been in their houses and you know people have not been working”.
“These are the people we see in our markets, people that we see in all those low income areas, where we get our food, we get our item and it it is better that we come here to sensitise them and you know we can’t come here to sensitise them without cushioning the effect of Convid-19 that is why we brought palliative with us”.
“Actually, the idea behind this is sensitisation and to distribute face mask but the overall effect of the Corona Virus is what made us to bring food for them and at least these food, an average family can consume it at least for three weeks before they start entering markets and doing business and all that.”
“You know, ours is a local organisation and we brought about these with our own money. Every member of the local organisation contributed money. So, the reason why we actually brought all these to Toge community, when we were doing needs assessment of the project, we had three communities in mind but, when we came to Toge, could you believe that out of every fourty-five people that were surveyed, it was only two people that had a face mask on and we that these are the people that go to our markets to sell food. So, we have to come here to sensitise them and you can’t just sensitise Nigerians empty handed and that is why we have to bring some foods”.
He also urged the people to join the government in combating the COVID 19 in obeying the lockdown rule and taking precautionary measures, while calling on well meaning Nigerians to support the JCI Aso as to put smiles on the faces of the people living the other communities.
“As money keeps coming in and as our members are capable, we will extend these sensitisation to other communities. It’s not a government thing, it’s our hard earned money we put it together on a project purse and whatever we think we can do, we pack it and buy things and do all that we can do and that is if we have money and we move from one community to another”
“Today, we are targeting 100 families for the food and more than five hundred face masks he concluded.
FCT news
FCT Cleaners Urge Minister Wike to Intervene Over Months of Unpaid Salaries

Over 4,500 cleaners working across Nigeria’s Federal Capital Territory (FCT), including city cleaners, hospital sanitation workers, satellite town cleaners, and security personnel, have made a passionate appeal to the FCT Minister, Nyesom Wike, over the non-payment of their salaries for the past six to eight months.
The affected workers, who play a critical role in maintaining cleanliness and hygiene across the FCT, including hospitals and public spaces, expressed their deep frustration and hardship due to the prolonged delay in their payments.
Despite working tirelessly under harsh weather conditions to ensure that Abuja and its environs remain clean and habitable, they say their efforts have gone unrewarded.
Speaking on Tuesday in Abuja, the cleaners voiced their disappointment, describing the situation as dire and unsustainable.
Many of them are reportedly struggling to meet basic needs, including food, medical expenses, school fees, and loan repayments.
“We are using this medium to appeal to our amiable FCT Minister, Nyesom Wike, to urgently intervene and ensure our outstanding salaries are paid.
“We are going through untold hardship. We work day and night, even in dangerous and unhygienic conditions, yet we are not being paid.”
Another affected worker, who asked to remain anonymous, tearfully shared her experience: “We may be doing a ‘dirty job,’ but we do it with all our hearts. It is unfair that we are left unpaid. We are dying in silence—no food for our children, no money for healthcare. We beg the Honourable Minister to come to our aid.”
The cleaners, in their numbers, emphasized that their appeal was not just a demand but a desperate cry for help from workers who feel neglected despite their vital contributions to the FCT’s public health and cleanliness.
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