Category: City Beats

  • ‘Our India story, by dog-bite victim’s father

    ‘Our India story, by dog-bite victim’s father

    It is a tragic story with a happy ending. When four-year-old Omonigho Abraham was almost devoured by two Alsatian dogs last November, many thought the worst had happened.

    The dogs chewed off the boy’s scalp and almost left him for dead in his father’s apartment in Igando, a Lagos suburb.

    Last December, he was flown to India for further treatment.

    Little Omonigho returned home last Thursday hale and hearty.

    His highly-elated father Odia Abraham said the treatment the boy had  in India could  not be compared to what he was getting here before being flown out.

    During a thank you visit to a private broadcast station, Television Continental (TVC), monitored in Lagos, Abraham said Nigeria has a long way to go to meet modern-day health challenges.

    According to him, there seems to be dearth of medical personnel to attend effectively to patients.

    Omonigho and his elder brothers were playing in their compound before he was attacked by the dogs. His brothers escaped.

    He was admitted at the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH) before being moved to India.

    In India, Abraham said his boy was monitored thrice daily, but in LASUTH, it was twice weekly.

    “While one physician was attached to him in Nigeria, six physicians were attached to him in India. We really need to upgrade our health institution,” he said.

    Abraham thanked the Lagos and Delta state governments for their assistance towards the Indian trip.

    He also appreciated non-governmental organisations and the media for their support.

    Omonigho’s mother, Mrs Helen Abraham could not hide her joy seeing her son back hale and hearty.

    The boy, she said, is due back in India in a few weeks for check-up. She thanked Nigerians for their prayers.

  • Fire victims get relief materials

    Fire victims get relief materials

    The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) has donated relief materials to the Iwaya, Yaba, Lagos Mainland fire victims.

    General Manager, Lagos State Emergency Agency (LASEMA)  Dr Femi Oke-Osayintolu, who presented the materials to the about 507 Internally Displaced Persons (IDP), expressed government’s determination to return them to their homes.

    The items included clothes, mattresses, foodstuffs, beverages, among others.

    While thanking NEMA’s coordinator, Southwest Zone Dr Bandele Onimode, Oke-Osayintolu promised that the victims would be given vocational training so as to start living a decent life.

    He said: “We appreciate the gesture shown by NEMA to complement the efforts of the state government. Of the 653 persons that were affected, 507 are in the camp and we have been taking care of their needs. We have doctors who are taking care of them.

    “We provide transportation to take those who are working among them to their work places in Iwaya and they are brought back in the evening. Before we could harvest them back to the society, we would have trained them on some vocational training and given them some financial assistance.

    “We are collaborating with general hospitals to attend to those who need specialised treatment. The state’s ministry of education will assist us in placing the children to schools that are not far from the camp.”

    Some of the IDPs appealed to government to provide transportation for their children, who had stopped attending schools since the incident happened on January 14.

    One of them, Mr Israel Olori, said he and his family would have turned destitute but for the timely intervention of the state government.

    “We thank Fashola for providing this place for us. We were moved here on January 17. Some of us might have been sleeping on the streets if not for this gesture.

    “Some of our challenges here include prompt medical assistance for our sick children. We also need buses that will be taking them to and from school. This requires a lot of expenses which we cannot afford for now,” he said.

    Oluwo Oladiji (54) said the camp accommodated his two wives and five children, adding that its ambience was relatively conducive for them.

    “We came here with only dresses we were putting on. All my property was lost to the fire but I thank God this camp takes care of us to some extent,” he said.

  • UNIBEN alumnus Oganufa for burial

    UNIBEN alumnus Oganufa for burial

    A departed alumnus of the University of Benin, Chief Sunday Azuka Patrick Oganufa, who died January 12, will be buried on Saturday.

    In a statement jointly signed by Kehinde Omo Oisemaye (Branch Chairman) and Amerika Ebiotu, Public Relations Officer yesterday, the University of Benin Alumni Association (Warri Branch), said the late Oganufa, popularly called S.A.P, was a distinguished alumnus and past chairman of Warri Branch of the association between 2001 and 2003.

    He was the zonal coordinator of the NNPC Zone of the association at a time; a true leader that believed so much in team spirit, whose wonderful contributions and leadership quality were unparalleled, the statement said.

    His remains, it added, will be buried in his home town, Umuchime-Uno I Quarters, Ogume in Delta State on Saturday by 11 am.

    Service of Songs will to hold at 35H, Refinery Drive, NNPC Housing Complex, Ekpan-Warri by 4 pm on Thursday.

  • Market leader urges support for APC

    Market leader urges support for APC

    The Babaloja of Aswani Market in Lagos, Alhaji Taoridi Faronbi-Alado, yesterday said the All Progressives Congress (APC) has all it takes to dislodge the   Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) at the centre in the general election this month.

    He urged Nigerians to support the candidate of the APC, General Muhammadu Buhari, saying he is the solution to challenges facing Nigeria at the moment.

    Alado, on Saturday, said president Jonathan is the worse president Nigeria has ever produced.

    According to him, the shortcomings of his administration include his inability to provide adequate security for citizens, dwindling economy threatening the future of the nation and the high level of corruption in the system.

    Alado, who doubles as the APC’s political godfather in Mushin constituency, added that the party made an apt choice by presenting Buhari as its presidential candidate.

  • Council chief, party leaders, transporters meet

    Council chief, party leaders, transporters meet

    To seek the votes of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) and its affiliate union, Motorcycle Riders’ Association (commercial motorcyclists), otherwise called Okada riders, in next month’s general elections, leaders of the All Progressives Congress (APC), in the Ojokoro Local Council Development Area (LCDA) in Lagos State, have met.

    The meeting, which held at the premises of the union’s chairman, discussed various issues bordering on the critical roles that members of the union can play in the election and the need for them to vote massively for the ruling party in the state in all the elections.

    The Chairman, APC in the area, Mr. Adewale Bello, said his party has high regard for the motorcyclists and urged them to vote for his party.

    He said Lagos State Government and APC consider the operators as critical players in the development of the state, adding that their contributions to revenue generation, employment and transportation were remarkable.

    Executive Secretaryof the Ojokoro LCDA, Alhaja Fausat Hassan-Olajoku, praised the union for its support and contributions to the development of the area, assuring its members that she would channel their complaints to the state government for action.

    Alhaja Hassan-Olajoku said she would meet with police divisions in her domain with a view to urging them to addressing contentious issues relating to their operations, by talking to their subordinate officers and men to exercise caution when dealing with commercial motorcyclists.

    She urged them to exercise their civic duties by registering and collecting their Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs).

    Mr. Rasheed Makinde, the Lagos State House of Assembly APC candidate in Ifako Ijaiye Constituency, promised to seek the support of other APC leaders in the area to address some of the challenges facing the Okada riders in the zone, adding however, that the government’s restriction order had drastically reduced accidents’ rates, and their fatalities, including deaths, over the years.

  • ‘Bad’ friends lured me into robbery, says suspect

    ‘Bad’ friends lured me into robbery, says suspect

    A robbery suspect has blamed those he called “bad friends” for luring him into the underworld.

    Suraju Ismaila, 21 said the friends he mingled with when he moved from Ajangbadi to Ajegunle suburbs, led him into the world of crime.

    He belonged to a five-man gang whose members include: Small (23); Pepper (27); Akiri (25), an Ojota-based driver, and Yusuf, a bus assistant (conductor) at Ketu.

    Ismaila, who said he started off as a furniture maker whose workshop was at Afro Media in Okokomaiko on Lagos/Badagry Expressway, stated: “I lived in Ajangbadi with my uncle, a proficient carpenter, who is married with a child. I became a bus conductor to a driver called Onyeka. I later got another bus that plied Agbara-Okoko-Mile 2 route with 22 passengers. My story changed when Onyeka told me that he wanted to relocate to Ajegunle and asked if I was interested in following him and I accepted. It was there I saw people engaged in all sorts of businesses to make a living. To them, stealing was fun.

    “There was a day I had no money on me and I called Small who asked me to meet him and his friends at a place called Alafia via Orile at about 7pm. When I got there, I was asked to sit down by the roadside pending when they would join me. They later came back with phones and laptops. They gave me N2,000 and asked me to meet them the next day.”

    “When I met them the next day,” the suspect continued, “Pepper showed me a gun and asked me to follow them to go and work. I told them that I could not do such work, but they threatened to shoot me dead if I refused to follow them. They pointed the gun at me and I was forced to follow them.

    “We went, operated and came back with five phone sets and N30,000 cash. We used to operate with one motorcycle. I later travelled to Ibadan to see my mother. I left Ajangbadi Secondary School in 1999. My father died and I had nobody to sponsor my education further. While in Ibadan, my friend, Onyegbuchi called to inform me that the police had arrested Small. I spent extra three months in Ibadan to allow the storm to subside. I was arrested where I went to relax in Ajegunle and sent to Ajeromi Police Station.”

    Ismaila, who said he was later transferred to SARS, added: “I urinated in my trousers when I was asked for the whereabouts of other members of our gang who are still at large. I participated only in three operations. At the Mile 2 operation, we got N50,000 with phone sets. We were three on the motorcycle owned by Pepper with the gun. The second operation was at Orile. We got phone sets and laptops which we sold for N75,000. I was given N15,000 only.

    “I was arrested inside a public toilet at the Mile 2 garage where I went to bath. I also participated in stop-and-search armed robbery operations on major roads and streets in Lagos. Our major receiver is Poopo, who lives in Ajegunle; he is still at large. My role in every operation is to search victims and collect their money, phone sets and other valuable things.

    “Our leader is Pepper. If I am released, I will seek for scholarship to complete my education. My life ambition is to become a gallant, intelligent and most feared police officer. I will make life horrible for armed robbers and other violent criminals.”

  • Suspected stowaway teenager arrested at airport

    There was anxiety yesterday at the Lagos Airport as a suspected stowaway teenager was arrested at a private terminal where he attempted to gain entrance into the tyre compartment of an aircraft.

    Officials of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN), confirmed the incident, but pleaded not to be named.

    The officials said the teenager gained entrance through the Nigeria Air Force section of the airport.

    According to sources, the male teenager allegedly breached security to stowaway into the aircraft parked at a hangar near the international wing of the airport.

    Investigations revealed that the teenager was discovered yesterday afternoon when pilots of the aircraft were carrying our routine inspection before starting the aircraft engine.

    The commanding pilot of the aircraft was said to have detected the boy in the tyre compartment of the aircraft.

    Two mobile phone sets without SIM cards were also found at the tyre compartment of the aircraft.

    A source hinted that the teenager told the police that he entered the hangar through the facility of Air Defence Corp of Nigerian Headquarters located next to the Presidential/VIP Lounge at the weekend with the connivance of a person he identified as ‘a brother.’

    The teenager, the source said, crossed the L18 runway over to ExecuJet facility at the international wing, a distance of about one kilometre, at night when he noticed there was no flight landing or taking off.

    The aircraft operated by a charter company was said to have flown a former Minister of Petroleum into Lagos airport on Saturday night and parked at the private hangar, where it was expected to take off before the incident happened.

    Military officials could not be reached for confirmation of the incident.

    It was learnt that military authorities and the terminal operators are already trading blames over the ugly development over what a source described as security lapses.

    Investigations, it was learnt has commenced on the incident.

  • Residents to council: repair our culvert

    Residents of Gloryland Community in Isheri-Olofin, Egbe-Idimu Local Council Development Area (LCDA) of Alimosho in  Lagos have appealed to the newly appointed Executive Secretary of the LCDA, Sanyaolu Olowoopejo, to urgently attend to the abandoned culvert project in the community to reduce their suffering.

    The community said the immediate past administration headed by Waheed Bello left the project uncompleted despite several pleas by the residents through their representatives.

    The Chairman, Gloryland Community Development Association, Olumide Adewale, made the call while speaking on the major request of the people of the community.

    Adewale, who lamented the plight of motorists and residents as a result of the abandoned project, noted that the project was the only thing the community benefited from the Egbe-Idimu LCDA in the last six years under the immediate past administration.

    He recalled that Bello embarked on the project a month before his exit from office when much pressure was brought to bear on him.

    He said that the residents’ fears came to pass as the project later became abandoned and, therefore, called on the new council boss, to come to their aid.

  • ‘Raped’ teenager delivered of baby

    ‘Raped’ teenager delivered of baby

    A 13-year-oldgirl allegedly raped by a 41-year-old man has been delivered of a baby in Lagos.

    The man was said to have threatened to kill the girl if she told anyone that she was raped.

    But she was over five months gone before the mother got to know that she was pregnant.

    The woman was jolted when a doctor told her: “Madam, your daughter is carrying a five months, two weeks’ pregnancy!”

    A dejected Mrs Mary Oboh looked helpless, wondering who could have put her first child in the family way. “Who is responsible for this?” she asked her daughter.

    When the girl opened up, the disconsolate mother could not believe her ears: Her fellow worshipper in  church was responsible.

    The girl was delivered of the baby last Saturday at a general hospital in Lagos through Caesarean Section.

    When The Nation visited the hospital, she was in pains. She nodded her head in response to greetings and found it difficult to speak.

    Mrs Oboh told The Nation she met the man and his wife in church and became friends.

    The wife usually keeps cooked food in the Obohs’ freezer, which the man fetch on returning from work.

    “Sometimes in March, I asked my daughter to take the food to their house when the man called that he was around. On getting there, the man locked the door, raped her and told her not to inform anybody. He said if she said anything, she would die,” Mrs Oboh said.

    “I have been noticing her for some time. I even asked her when last she saw her period, when her response was not convincing, I took her to a medical centre where we were told that she was not only pregnant but was carrying five months, two weeks old foetus. That same week the man’s wife gave birth. The police later arrested him a day after his child’s naming. Since then, he has been in police custody before he was transferred to Kirikiri because he could not raise fund for his bail,” she said.

    The grandmother hopes her daughter would recover soon to return to school.

    “She is a brilliant girl whose desire is to become a medical doctor; she missed the Junior West African Examination Council (WAEC) due to the pregnancy. I pray she recovers quickly to return to school while I take care of the baby,” said the mother of four.

    A lawyer and National Coordinator of Women Empowerment and Legal Aid (WELA), Mrs Funmi Falana, who is helping the Oboh family to pursue the case in court blamed the girl’s mother for negligence.

    “How could you have a girl under you and you couldn’t notice she was pregnant for such a long period. I think the woman is very careless,” she said, adding that the case was already at the Family Court in Ikeja.

    She said the man’s action may not be unconnected to the general moral laxity in the society.

    She noted: “If you go out, especially along Allen Avenue, you see nude girls there every night hawking their bodies. We also cannot take it away from the general violence in the society.”

    The WELA coordinator said most rape perpetrators got away with it because of the technicality involved in prosecuting the case.

    She explained: “You must be versed in this area of the law before you can get a conviction for an offender. From the time the girl is raped, she should not wash herself or her underpants. The first step is to take her for medical examination and because it must be established that there was penetration, the private part must be examined and a record of it must be taken. But the first thing they (victims) do is go and wash up and that destroys the first evidence.

    “After records have been taken, you report to the police. Usually, for an underage, it becomes more difficult. The police on the other hand, in the course of taking statements, several times created conflicts especially if the victim is an underage girl, there is no way she can comprehend what was happening. There is no way you can give a version of event two or three times without conflict and when there is conflict, the girl would be pressed again.

    “There was a case of a seven-year-old girl that was allegedly raped by her stepfather. The police took the statement of the girl about seven times and as a result, there was conflict in her statements because she could not understand what she was doing. She was too minor for such a thing and did not even know why she had to make the statements and because of that, the case was destroyed.

    “There is also a rule which has made its way into the criminal code now which is the Rule of Corroboration. It talks about the evidence of the victim by a third party as if the case of rape is a dinner that you invite someone to. So, usually, there is nobody to corroborate because such an offence is perpetrated in secrecy.”

    Mrs Falana blamed the society for stigmatising rape victims.

    She appealed to people to speak out on rape cases. “If the person is not your daughter, she may be the daughter of somebody close to you next time,” she said.

  • Newspaper distributors back Ambode

    Newspaper distributors back Ambode

    The Newspapers Distributors/Vendors Association of Nigeria (NDAN) has declared its support for the All Progressives Congress (APC) governorship candidate, Mr Akinwunmi Ambode, in next month’s election.

    The group made its stand known after a stakeholders’ meeting with management of Vintage Press Limited, publishers of The Nation titles.

    NDAN National Publicity Secretary and Lagos State Coordinator Deacon Banji Kujenya said APC has made positive impact on their business, hence their decision to go for the party.

    “This is not the first time we would be doing this. We did it for Asiwaju (Bola Ahmed Tinubu) and Governor Babatunde Fashola. The promises they made have been met. If you look at the infrastructural development in Lagos, it has affected our vendors positively and though, there are still some areas to be improved upon, we are satisfied and we want them to continue in Lagos,” he said.

    The decision to vote for Ambode and Gen Muhammadu Buhari in the presidential election, Kujenya said, was taken by all.

    “It has been concluded among our members. We are going out to give all our votes to APC in Lagos State and national; we need a change in Nigeria. So many people are unemployed and graduates are joining us due to unemployment. That is one of the reasons we want APC to win the elections so that they can create more jobs and re-empower our people.”

    With over 25,000 members in the state, Kujenya expressed hope that 80 per cent  would vote for APC.

    He said the association has done a lot to enlighten its members to collect their Permanent Voter’s Card (PVC).

    “We are not unaware of its usefulness during election, we have been organising sensitisation visits to various local governments on the importance of the PVC and our members are responding well,” he said.

    To NDAN National Coordinator Chief Nicholas Okereke, the 16 years of Peoples Democratic Power (PDP) in power has not improved human and economic activities.

    “APC is a good alternative to PDP’s misrule. I want them to consolidate on what they have done in Lagos at federal level. The party (APC) is caring and has a future. They can improve the economy of this country more than the PDP is doing because we have been rule for 16 years by the government of PDP and there has been no change. APC would do things that would turn the economy round.

    “We want a change from the presidency down to the governors and legislators. We want matures people that can make things happen. That is why we are mobilising our members for support.  All the vendors and agents would come out en masse to vote for APC; we want change and with over 25,000 members in Lagos and we are coming out to give our votes to APC,” he said.