INDIAN BILLIONAIRE GAUTAM ADANI CHARGED IN U. S. FOR ALLEGED BRIBERY, FRAUD. (PHOTO).

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  Indian billionaire Gautam Adani charged in US for alleged bribery, fraud Gautam Adani, the chair of Indian conglomerate Adani Group and one of the world’s richest people, whose business empire extends from ports and airports to renewable energy,has been indicted in New York over an alleged multibillion-dollar fraud scheme, United States prosecutors have said. The authorities on Wednesday charged Adani and two other executives at Adani Green Energy, his nephew Sagar Adani and Vneet Jaain, with agreeing between 2020 and 2024 to pay more than $250m in bribes to Indian government officials to obtain solar energy supply contracts expected to yield $2bn in profits. Prosecutors said the renewable energy company also raised more than $3bn in loans and bonds during this period based on false and misleading statements. Shares of Adani Enterprises, the group's flagship firm, closed down 22% on Thursday. Other group firms also closed in the red. Adani Green Energy, which is the firm at the c

WE GET MORE DEAD BODIES THAN PATIENTS CAN'T PAY MINIMUM WAGE- MEDICAL PRACTITIONERS. (PHOTO).


 We get more dead bodies than patients, can’t pay minimum wage – Medical Practitioners


The Association of Nigerian Private Medical Practitioners, ANPMP, says private hospitals in Nigeria are folding up due to the ravaging economic downturn.


It also revealed that the nation’s economic situation has forced several Nigerians into self medication, resulting in organ failure and subsequently, death.


ANPMP’s Chairman, Dr Odia Festus Ihongbe in an exclusive interview with DAILY POST, weekend, in Abuja, said that morgues were being filled up with dead bodies, while hospital beds were empty.


According to him, “people come only when it becomes critical and they just want you to do magic. And some want to die in the hospital, maybe because of confusion in their families.”


Dr Odia revealed that Nigerians now google their symptoms and buy “drugs from chemists until it gets to the terminal stage.


“Sometimes, we keep them outside and issue death certificates because if you don’t do that, they will come in and dump the body in your hospital and say they are going to look for money for burial”.


Odia further lamented that private hospitals cannot afford to pay the N70,000 minimum wage recently approved by the federal government, owing to poor revenue.


He said, “How will the private sector pay the N70,000 minimum wage?


“Meanwhile the private sector employs 80 percent of doctors and nurses and other scientists, so we are more in number.


“If you have like eight to ten cleaners in your hospital, that’s already about N800,000. Who will pay that money?”


“We provide services to 80 percent of healthcare services in Nigeria yet the government does not show concern about developing the private sector.


“They do more lip service than giving us required attention. Whatever affects health, affects the private sector more.


“You have to provide accommodations for your workers, pay salaries like any other businesses.”


He lamented that prices of essential drugs and hospital equipment have skyrocketed due to the forex crisis.


“We buy drugs and other heavy equipment and the prices of all these things are galloping everyday.


“For instance, the oxygen machine that we used to buy for N25,000 some years ago, went to about N100,000 and we raised the alarm.


“Now the same machine is over N1.5 to N2 million. How do we survive it? These are even minor pieces of equipment.


“Now, the interest rate in banks is something else and no bank wants to help us because it’s not a ‘sharp sharp’ business”, he lamented.


He further stated that the only way the Nigerian medical system would work effectively was through the national health insurance, which according to him, collapsed 20 years ago.


He said, “Where the Nigerian medical system would have worked is through national health insurance. This has been destroyed for over 20 years.


“For over 20 years, they could only cover 4 percent of the Nigerian population. Recently they said the insurance has increased from N500 to N700, how can N700 treat a person for a whole month?


“They know the truth, but they are acting like they are ignorant. Some months ago, we said we are not treating again, then they added N400.


“You can see that there is no seriousness. Between now and December, we will stop treating them. They should go and look for how to treat their patients.


“The way Nigerians are dropping dead every day is alarming. If we have resolved as a country to reduce the population of Nigerians through negative health index, let us come out openly and say it.


“Because Nigerians can no longer access healthcare. Paracetamol that used to be N250 is now N7000. I don’t know how they want Nigerians to survive.


“Ordinary syringe of N250 is now more than N7000 per pack. We are all confused. People are just dying and mortuaries are filled up”.


On the issue of minimum wage, Odia stated that “if health insurance is working and the government is paying when they are supposed to pay, the hospital will be able to settle these bills."

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