Category: Saturday Magazine

  • Porn star, others remanded in Osun 

    Porn star, others remanded in Osun 

     Toba Adedeji, Osogbo 

     

    AN Osun State Magistrates’ Court sitting in Osogbo on Monday remanded a 27-year-old porn star identified as Tobiloba Jolaoso and five other in Ilesha Correctional Centre for allegedly making sex movie at Osun Osogbo grove.

    The Nation reports that Jolaoso was arrested by police following complaints from a traditional worshipper Amoo Awosunwon.

    Jolaoso, Ladiva Aije, Juliet Semion, Ahmed Olasunkanmi, Adeniran Eritosin and Tunde Jimoh were arraigned before the magistrate on eight-count charge of conspiracy, publication of obscene film, an insult to religion, breach of peace, and damage of police station window.

    Read Also: Porn nation (1)

    Prosecutor John Idoko told the court that the accused persons and others now at large, on July 25, 2020, took pictures at Osun Osogbo shrine with half-naked young girls which they published in a manner that insulted their religious belief.

    The defendants pleaded not guilty and were remanded.

    The magistrate, Mr Isola Omisade adjourned the case to September 17, 2020.

  • Inside story of separation of Bayelsa conjoined twins

    Inside story of separation of Bayelsa conjoined twins

    By Duku Joel

    • COVID-19 nearly frustrated process, says lead surgeon
    • Why it took only three hours to conclude operation

    In December 12, 2019, a young woman went into labour at the Nembe General Hospital in Bayelsa State. As young couples who were expecting their first child, they were in high spirits as they prepared to welcome their bundle of joy, particularly as the scan earlier conducted on the pregnancy had revealed that the woman would be delivered of twins.

    There was, however, a twist to the story when the unemployed secondary school leaver, Godsgift Ibiyyefa, was operated upon only to be delivered of a set of conjoined twins. The shock and disappointment that stared in the face caused her to faint immediately.

    “When I was told that the babies were conjoined twins after I had undergone an operation, I was scared and I fainted,” she said.

    But her hope was rekindled with the news of a possible solution to the dire condition of her babies after she was revived.

    Godsgift might have gone into coma, but not her husband, Raphael Ayebaiemi, who works as an okada (commercial motorcycle) operator. But while Ayebaiemi’s faith was unshaken by the unseemly sight that confronted him, he could not help wondering how he would muster the funds needed for a surgical operation that would separate the conjoined twins.

    By what magic, he wondered, would a poor okada rider like him fund an operation that would cost millions of naira and still fend for the family in this season of serious economic crunch?

    Looking back now, the 27-year-old secondary school leaver has nothing else to do than give thanks for the divine intervention that saw her conjoined lovely babies successfully separated at the Federal Medical Centre in faraway Yola, Adamawa State.

    “It was a miracle, and I give God Almighty the glory,” he said.

    Asked whether he lost hope at any point about the separation and survival of the babies, Ayebaiemi said: “I was never hopeless. All I was thinking was how to get the money needed for the separation. But I know that God has a purpose for doing anything, so I knew there was a reason for this to happen,” he said.

    From Yenagoa to Yola

     

    In spite of the ultra sound scan that was done on the pregnancy, the much it could reveal was that Godsgift was pregnant with twins. The fact that they were Siamese twins was not revealed.

    So, immediately they were delivered at the General Hospital in Nembe, doctor wasted no time referring them to the Federal Medical Centre (FMC) Yenagoa, according to the lead surgeon and Chief Medical Director of the medical centre, Prof. Auwal Mohammed Abubakar, who presented a situation report on the operation.

    Upon arrival at the FMC Yenagoa, the babies were carefully managed and stabilised within the first 28 days, which, according to child development process, are very critical, as the babies had to be kept warm to prevent infection.

    According to Prof Abubakar, the management of Federal Medical Centre Yenegoa contacted them at the FMC in Yola where they also expressed the willingness to receive the babies.

    With the FMC Yola agreeing to receive the babies, the challenge became how to transport them from Yenagoa to Yola. It was a task that almost frustrated the entire process.

    Abubakar said: “Moving the children on the road was a difficult option because of the civil strife on the highways. The option of a commercial flight was so expensive and would attract undue attention and pose psychological problems to the family of the babies. Using an air-ambulance was completely out of reach and out of the options.”

    However, with just one phone call to the Air Force, the Chief of Air Staff, Air Mashal Sadiq Abubakar, approved the airlifting of the babies with the parents and three other medical personnel—a neonatologist, a pediatric surgeon and a nurse from FMC Yenegoa—who accompanied them to Yola on January 4, 2020 when the conjoined twins were 23 days old.

    The COVID-19 challenge

    The babies, according to Prof. Abubakar, were scheduled for separation when they were between three and four months old, but the entire process was put on hold by the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic.

    He noted that while the pandemic and the consequent lockdown lasted, his team seized the opportunity to carry out more precise investigations to determine if the babies did not share major body organs.

    Abubakar also explained that the outbreak of the pandemic in Nigeria also made it difficult to activate the surgical team from different locations for fear of transporting the virus from different locations to Yola or taking it from Yola to other places.

    He said: “We activated the team in July but it didn’t work. We also picked August 10, 2020 but again because of COVID-19, we still had issues. We had other members of the team from other parts of the country, including the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital, Federal Medical Centre Gombe and also a professor of Anesthesia from Ife (Obafemi Awolowo University).”

    To find a way out of the problem, the team had to embark on virtual meetings for debriefing until finally they agreed to carry out the surgery on the 10th August, 2020. He added that all COVID-19 protocols were observed during the operation through live projection.

    “We had a live projection of the separation to our conference room downstairs. Members of the team were called to the theatre any time their attention was needed,” he said.

    Happily, he said, no member of the team had so far manifested any symptoms of the virus three weeks after the operation.

    Duration of operation

    Although the operation lasted three hours, it did not pull through within such a short time without certain challenges involving human management, modern technology and the less complicated nature of the conjoined.

    According to the lead surgeon, Abubakar, having previously worked together as a team in separating five conjoined twins (two at the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital and three in Yola) made the work of the team easier.

    Abubakar said that from past experience, most of the members of the team knew exactly what was required of them, which he noted had a very significant impact on time management and proficiency.

    He also said that technology and modern equipment contributed in no small measure in managing organ separation and blood loss during the operation.

    He said: “Experience and technology prevented a waste of time in this operation. It lasted only three hours. This is something we have been doing as a team for a very long time. So, that helped a lot.

    “The use of modern equipment also helped. The contribution of the machine we got from Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) and the Sir Emeka Offor Foundation helped in the division of the liver, because the babies had only one liver. That reduced the amount of blood lost and the division was more precise.

    “Another important thing to note is the nature of the conjoining. This one was less problematic as they had separate organs except their liver. So the duration for the operation was less.

    “Don’t forget that some separation can last five days or more, depending on the nature of the conjoining.”

    Recovery process of separated twins

    The recovery process of the separated twins, Grace and Mercy, was very rapid and speedy.

    According to Abubakar, the recovery rate of the babies was dramatic as they were discharged from the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) three days after operation, and within five days, they had started playing and were discharged to residential.

    SGF excited with operation in home state

    During the unveiling of the conjoined twins at an elaborate event held at the premises of FMC Yola, the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Mr. Boss Mustapha, who was the Special Guest of Honor at the occasion, expressed his excitement over the successful separation of the babies at a medical facility in his home state of Adamawa.

    He said: “When I saw on the national network news the evacuation of these twins, Mercy and Grace (what a wonderful set of names) being flown all the way from Yanegoa to Yola, as an indigene Adamawa State and a true son of Yola, the first feeling I had was a sense of pride that in spite of our being stuck at the boundary with the Cameroon, we still have enough to offer this nation.

    “If not, why transport these girls from the coast of the Atlantic to a distance of over an hour, crossing major states and cities, only to be brought to Yola for medical attention?”

    Mustapha also extolled the sterling medical feat of Prof. Abubakar with respect to five successful separations of conjoined twins in his career and still counting.

    The SGF promised to do everything in his capacity to uplift the standard of FMC Yola into a world class medical centre of competitive standard.

    He said: “Doing this exercise for the fifth time is not a mean feat. It is not a joke. It requires diligence, precision, application of intellect and the management of men and resources. Prof. Auwal, you have demonstrated that.

    “On behalf of the President, I must thank you and your team for doing this over and over again. I believe FMC Yola will take the spotlight.

    “We will not lose the opportunity of the moment. We will do everything to ensure that all the necessary support that you require to build an edifice that will compete internationally in terms of the provision of medical services is attained in Federal Medical Centre, Yola.”

    He also praised the intervention of the Nigerian Air Force for evacuating the babies from Bayelsa to Adamawa and back to Bayelsa after a successful operation.

    “It’s my personal delight and honour to be invited to be the special guest of honour. Today, FMC Yola is recording another milestone.

    “I truly want to commend the Medical Director, Prof Abubakar, for yet achieving another feat in the separation of these conjoined twins that came all the way from Bayelsa, the Niger Delta,” he said.

    Mustapha described the operation of the babies in Yola as a unique demonstration of the bond that Nigerians share in spite of differences in ethnic backgrounds, creed and beliefs.

    He commended the Chief of Air Staff for deploying his official aircraft to airlift the babies from Yenagoa to Yola.

    Show of love for twins

    It was indeed a red carpet treatment and huge show of love for Grace and Mercy as they were set for their journey back to their home town in Nembe, Bayelsa State after staying almost eight months in Yola for their operation.

    Members of the hospital community, the medical staff and dignitaries struggled to outdo one another for group and individual pictures with the babies after their unveiling at the Federal Medical Centre Yola.

    After the group picture with the Special Guest of Honour, Mr. Boss Mustapha, the Chief of Staff to Adamawa State governor, Prof. Maxwell Gidado and other dignitaries, the babies were almost missing in the arena as they kept moving to different groups and individuals who never wanted to miss the chance of photographs with the babies.

    Our correspondent observed that the photo extravaganza had to be abruptly ended to enable Grace and Mercy embark on their journey back to the Niger Delta as the Air Force plane was waiting to fly them home.

    Appreciation, appeal for support

    The father of the babies, Raphael Ayebaiemi, fought back tears of joy as he thanked everyone who contributed to the successful operation on his babies.

    He said: “I am grateful to the Chief Medical Director of FMC Yola Prof. Auwal Abubakar, and the management and staff of Federal Medical Centre Yola for all that they have done for me and my family in separating these babies.

    “I did not pay a dime for the operation, and since we came to Yola, the hospital has been taking very good care of us, my wife and children.

    “I thank the Nigerian Air Force for bringing us to Yola for the operation. Left for me alone, I would not have made it. I understand that they are taking us back to Bayelsa and I can’t thank them enough.”

    He, however, appealed for further support in taking care of the babies, saying that he is only an okada (commercial motorcycle) operator, while his wife is a complete housewife.

    He said that both of them are secondary school leavers who would have loved to further their education to enhance their standard of living.

    He said: “My major priority right now is not even about me, but for me to be able to take care of these children so that they can become better people tomorrow.

    “I am appealing to my state, Bayelsa, and the Federal Government and any individual to come to my aid so as to enable me take care of my children.

    “I am just an okada rider and my wife does not have any work, so it will be difficult for us.

    “I hope to further my education, but the arrival of these children now is a problem.”

  • ‘Why I’ll ever be grateful to Gowon’

    ‘Why I’ll ever be grateful to Gowon’

    Abuome Olu Edeki, an exploration and production geologist and integrated auditor, reflects on the factors, circumstances and issues that have retarded development Nigeria. The successful entrepreneur, who recently clocked 70 years, also told MIKE ODIEGWU how he overcame diabetes after fighting the disease for more than 30 years and how a gesture by former Nigerian Head of State, Gen. Yakubu Gowon, restored hope to his penurious life.

    What was childhood like and what would you say has changed about life between then and now?

    I grew up under the most ideal conditions anybody can have. My mates always said I grew up with a silver spoon. I was born in 1950 in the premises of St Stephens Church/Primary School in Inolende, Ibadan, where my mother, Mrs. Olufemiwa Edeki, was quartered as a head teacher. I grew up as the son of the principal of a secondary school. My father, Rev. Imevbore Edeki (M.A. University of London 1956 and B.A. Classics 1952) later became a minister in Western Nigeria and  also a foundation minister in Midwestern Nigeria. He was a Reverend of the Anglican Communion.

    I was a privileged kid, who grew up under strict educational and Christian discipline in the era of Awolowo educational scheme in the western part of Nigeria. I was always the youngest in my class. I entered secondary school at age 11 in 1962. There was strict discipline in the secondary school. I took advantage of mentorship from senior students and this made a difference to how well I performed as a student in a particular class. I started secondary education in Victory College, Ikare but finished in Edo College Benin City after the creation of the Midwest Region.

    In growing up, I took advantage of all of the above and I passed with Grade One in my WASC examination of 1966. Then I took Prelim Entrance and passed to become a Science undergraduate of the University of Ibadan in September 1967, at the age of 17. I repeated Part One in the university as I did not pass one subject in which I had a reference. I obtained a Second Class Lower Degree in Geology in 1972. This was before the NYSC (National Youth Service Corps) started. I was then 22 years old.

    Educational experience in the 1960s and 1970s was a very serious matter, as obtaining your degree was equated to you having your meal ticket for life. Every degree holder had a job waiting for him or her. One chose out of several options in our time. Teaching in the secondary school was the most common. Becoming a university lecturer was for the privileged few, who graduated with upwards of Second Class Upper division. First Class was extremely rare.

    In my time, it was those who could not get admission into Nigerian universities that travelled abroad to study, notably in the USA, USSR, West Germany and East bloc countries. The reverse is the situation today.

     What do you think has gone wrong in the educational system?

    The intervention of the military in governance in Nigeria slowly eroded all the high educational and moral standards that were bequeathed by the British to Nigeria at independence. In my time, there were only four universities whose high standards were recognised all over the world. The number of foreign students in them was very high. The meals we had equalled what you get in a five-star hotel today. Non-academic programmes in the University of Ibadan where I attended were very vibrant. There was no cultism of any kind. The rebels named Ahoys were some of the most brilliant students on campus. That Group was initiated by Wole Soyinka, the Nobel Laureate.

    External examiners came from top universities all over the world. Many selected their brilliant favourites and gave them scholarships straight away for post graduate studies in their own universities abroad.

    Now, Nigeria has over 100 tertiary institutions and international recognition of awarded degrees is at the lowest ebb for most of these Nigerian institutions. It is very shameful. The average Nigerian graduate of today has a low esteem of himself and does not believe in integrity, talk less of wanting to acquire leadership qualities or go for postgraduate studies abroad straight from completing the first degree. The opportunities are not there.

    In my time, the universities produced leaders. We had social clubs from where you learned organisational skills to achieve notable objectives on campus. The Sigma Club, was the most elitist, and they organised the Havana Night once a year from where they raised money to maintain their high life style. I was a member of the Embassy Club which invited Ambassadors of foreign countries to Nigeria to talk on campus about issues of international importance at the time. We learnt the diplomatic way to speak. This club later produced Joe Keshi, and the late Adefuye, to name a few, who became notable Ambassadors of Nigeria.

    In order to improve education in Nigeria, a few universities should be selected and heavily funded for specific specialties. Lecturers in those universities should consist of Nigerian lecturers and professors who have retired from Institutions abroad and who can be enticed home with provision of equipment with which they worked abroad. Those universities should operate only on merit and not on quota as it is in most institutions in Nigeria today. Government can use one of such professors to set up each specilised institution and leave them alone to be self-sustaining.

    For example, the person who started the Indian Atomic Agency was enticed back from New Zealand by an Indian Government official, who in 1958 visited New Zealand for something else.

    What would you say has been your most memorable experience?

    My most memorable experience has been getting married to my wife, former Florence Williams, who had the attributes my father advised that my future wife should have: to be highly educated and to hail from the Midwest. I have been diabetic for over 30 years and yet my sugar level is in the expected normal range.  Florence was a British trained HR professional, who met me at my work place, and we have been very close soul mates since then. She took care of my health through what she gave me to eat, some of which she researched from the internet. I am a survivor of prostate cancer. She gave me comfort and encouragement when I went through surface beam radiotherapy. We go on long walks together and we are both active golfers, even at age 70. I have very good friends, some of who contributed to my cancer treatments abroad.

    What has been the most challenging period in your life?

    I have had many challenging experiences in my life. One challenge came when my father died in June 1970 and there was no means of paying for my university education after his death. Before he died, he reminded the Almighty how he had helped poor students with scholarships meant for us his children. He asked the Almighty to help me and my immediate elder brother through our university education. He died a few days later. My father’s prayer before his death was answered through General Yakubu Gowon, who in November 1970 gave scholarships to all indigent students in the four Nigerian universities. He ordered that first year fees paid by each student be returned to them. I instantly went overnight from a poor and sad student to a ‘rich’ and happy one. We thanked and praised the Almighty for getting us through the eyes of the needle to be able to complete our university education.

    My bosom friend, Olu Dania, was home on holiday from the UK when my father died in 1970. New and interesting information from him was that I could purchase a used car in the UK for £50. I used this information between July and September 1971 when I used the bonanza from General Gowon to go abroad on summer holiday. I did three jobs in one month, saved £70 and bought a Morris Minor which I brought back to Nigeria and used as a Taxi in Benin City while still in the university at the time. I was 21 years old at the time. This was how I learnt at an early age that one could become well off through entrepreneurship and the grace of the Almighty. This is one of the memorable events in my life.

    Do you have any regrets?

    One remarkable regret and disappointment I have was in my career when I discovered that hard work, innovation and integrity could not carry me to top management in the company where I worked. You required a godfather to who you would give damaging information about your colleagues at work, particularly to superiors, and be disloyal to our country in order to make it to top management. Hard work and innovative abilities enabled me to work for my employer abroad, where I made outstanding contributions that increased the company’s profit. On returning to Nigeria, hard work enabled me to obtain the highest meritorious rise in the company for many years up to July 1995, only to be laid off in February 1996. How come? I said to myself. I felt betrayed.

    Another challenging experience was the unwarranted resignation of my wife from the company where we both worked. The European head quarters of our company had arranged that my wife and I would interchange with an expatriate couple coming to work in Nigeria. In the last minute, the boss of my wife substituted my wife’s name with that of his friend. This led to the cancellation of the whole plan. We were very disappointed. This is why I was adamant to take my family abroad when the opportunity later came for me alone to go to work abroad without my wife. This led to my wife learning industrial sewing, which later metamorphosed into our company, Sister & Twins International Ltd. This company produced men’s underwear which was marketed all over Nigeria through the Leventis Group, UTC Stores and other national outlets.

    The company also produced coveralls for nearly all in oil majors and the biggest oil service companies including uniforms for the major security companies with headquarters in Port Harcourt and Warri in the 1990s till 2011. Proceeds from this company built our house in Port Harcourt and in our village and enabled the university education of our three children in the USA. The wickedness of my wife’s boss led to our success in business later in our life. My character of always pursuing integrity and innovativeness, which disabled my getting to top management in the company for which I worked for 20 years, enabled our success in our private company.

    Is this the Nigeria you dreamt about while growing up?

    I was 10 years old when Nigeria became an independent nation, and as son of a secondary school principal, who read newspapers every day, I was very exposed. We expected Nigeria to be a nation where education and economic progress would be our focus as a new nation. It was so for the first two years until political divisions based on tribal sentiments took control of everything we did, just as it is in the South Sudan of today.

    The military interventions compounded the problems. The northern part of Nigeria thought that taking over the federal systems would make them narrow the gap between the north and the south. The gap arose because at Independence, the south was 40 years ahead of the North in western education and in western economic systems. For example families in the south would contribute money to send one male to secondary school and even to the university. My mother funded my father’s education from financial contributions from Otuo community.

    Northern peoples were comparatively less interested in western education. They preferred Koranic education. Only the children of the northern elite were programmed for western education, and the Northern Nigeria regional government sponsored them. Their wives were on government subvention while their husbands studied. Development of artisans grew very fast in the south. Awolowo’s 10-year educational plan for the western region of Nigeria increased the gap, putting the West far ahead of the other two regions. I, for example, was one of two Awolowo protégés who could enter the university at 17 in 1967. There were many older entrants in their early 20s. Before this time, over 90% of entrants were old married men and very few women. Of course, a job was waiting for you once you obtained your degree. A few very old graduates like my father could become politicians in addition to their primary vocation. It was legally permitted at that time.

    The Nigerian civil service had plans for every facet of Nigerian life, based on the strong advantage of each of the regions. Government under the total control of the centre, which the military introduced in 1965, markedly slowed down Nigeria’s economic development. Unfortunately, the military from 1965 gradually put an end to the efforts put into meticulous economic planning and development of Nigeria. It speedily got worse when a head of state of northern descent assumed the head of the affairs of Nigeria. Well-trained civil servants were sacked and one of them diminished the powers of the permanent secretary by introducing directors-general to each ministry who he personally selected. All the civil service systems just died thereafter. Occupation of strategic position was based on quota and no longer on performance. That is where we are today. We are just a drifting nation controlled very much by outside forces. What a shame!

    How do we solve the problems in this country?

    To solve our national problems will require putting integrity foremost in everything we do in Nigeria. It will take many years to be so. The politicians with their heavy salaries and allowances will delay Nigeria to reach her full potential and take its rightful position in the world. Nigeria in 1965 trained Malaysians, Indonesians, etc in the economic use of palm oil in WAIFOR (West African Institute for Oil Palm Research) near Benin City. Those nations have moved forward. We who trained them have moved backward. What a pity! To solve these problems, we have to accept our failures before agreeing the way forward. Let each part of Nigeria develop at their own pace by consolidating their local strengths.

  • Aisha Lawal: I still attract men despite being married with child

    Aisha Lawal: I still attract men despite being married with child

    Aisha Lawal is not a newbie in the film industry, having been featured in over 100 flicks in the last 10 years. The actress and film producer might not even come across as a lawyer, but she studied Law at the Lead City University, Ibadan, aside from being an actress and businesswoman. The award-winning actress in this interview with ASSISTANT ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR GBENGA BADA talks about her career, marriage, and how she handles advances from men.

    You studied law, would you at any point decide to take it up and defend cases in the courtroom?

    Never say never you know; but for now, I like my job because it’s like being paid for your hobby. It can be stressful but it gives me joy though Law gives me joy too, I will stick to acting for now. Maybe later in the future, at a particular age, I might return to law as an academician to teach but not appear in court.

    You were recently named as one of the casts of Biodun Jimoh’s forthcoming film, Luwo Gbagida, what do you look forward to seeing on the set?

    The truth is that there is a difference between an epic movie, a traditional movie, and a historical film. When it becomes historical, it becomes challenging because you are wearing another person’s shoes in another era far different from yours and the good thing is that it’s a story many people don’t know about.

    For instance, if I was acting Efunsetan Aniwura, a lot of leading actresses have taken up the role and you will be compared to this or that or those who have read book will have a picture of who they feel Efunsetan should be and you might not meet their expectation, and that is the major challenge. But again, I started as a stage actor, which has made me more flexible to take up any challenge. It’s easier when it comes to historical or traditional films, so I look forward to surmounting the challenges with my mind and focus all on achieving a great result.

    How supportive has your husband been?

    Ah, men, always claiming they are supportive but it’s the other way round, but we thank God. He knows the nature of my job but once in a while he just calls to say I’m taking too long on the set or what have you, but I try to find a way of balancing it so that no side lacks the attention needed.

    Tell us your love story and how you met your husband

    There’s no love story and I am not romantic. I don’t discuss my husband in the media. It’s a no go area for me. I apologise, no comment on that.

    How do you manage advances from men despite being married?

    It’s always been like that and even the fact that you are married attracts so many people more to you because when I wasn’t married and had not had my daughter, I think some people might be afraid of you tying them down with pregnancy but now, the society is corrupt and it’s a general thing not even a film industry thing. Dating a married woman kind of gives some men peace of mind because they feel she won’t leave her husband to come and disturb yours and the act is so aggressive these days. I get compliments from men saying I look so beautiful even after having a daughter and I just mock them. I ask them to inform my husband that they want to marrry me, and they simply back off.

    Would it be right to say you reside in Ibadan, Oyo state?

    No, I grew up in Ibadan and after my marriage, I relocated to Lagos, so I shuttle between Lagos and Ibadan especially when my husband isn’t in town. I stay in Ibadan so my mum can help with my daughter when I have to go on set or my mother-in-law can stand-in.

    So, how do you cope with a long-distance marriage?

    That has never been a barrier, flying is my hobby. The reason we haven’t seen for a while is because of the lockdown occasioned by the pandemic. Once international flights resume, we are just a flight away from each other. I like flying a lot and I could travel like five times in a month just to be with my husband.

    Can you share the names of some of the directors you respect their work and wish to work with in the nearest future?

    The first director that I yearn to work with is Niyi Akinmolayan. I have seen his movies and they are awesome. I saw The Set Up on an international flight and I was wowed. I had to send him a DM to appreciate his effort. I also like Kemi Adetiba, she’s doing a fantastic job and the fact that she’s a female makes me appreciate her more. Kunle Afolayan is another person. He’s a brother but I have not worked with him yet. There are other people, but I like people who go out of their ways to do great things because we know how harsh it can be working in this environment and not get accolades for your efforts. But these people go out of their comfort zones to break new grounds. Same thing I like about Abiodun Jimoh.

    Looking back now, what would you say has changed significantly in the industry?

    The acceptability from viewers has changed and is more encouraging. We have wider and broadened viewership from different spectrums of life. The complaints they had about the quality of the movie and some non-reasonable make-believe scenes are no more there because we see Jackie Chan or other actors do things we all know aren’t possible and people don’t crucify them but when we do, they say Nigerian films or Yoruba films, you people don’t do big movies.

    If we have to say, for instance, Africa Magic premium that takes big-budget Yoruba films, we would be made to work harder. But when you do a movie of N60 million and you want to rate it with a N600K movie, there would be a big difference. Again, there’s a language barrier, it’s your fault and mine. My kid speaks English and these kids grow up to young adults and working-class and when they have to see a film in the cinema or at home, they won’t opt for a Yoruba movie because they don’t even speak the language, so why would they go and see the movie? And the cinemas won’t even take it. Some renowned filmmakers have tried it and they saw the outcome.

    I tell people to stop sitting in the corners of their rooms and criticise without coming into the sector to see exactly how things are being run. It goes way beyond all the talks, I know we are not giving it all that is expected to take but we need more market and bigger challenges. When you see the Survival of Jelili on Netflix, then you can be assured that you can do this too.

    So, personally, what has changed about you significantly since you began acting?

    I am wiser. I learned a lot in the past, I am still learning in the course of my career. I have learned and still learning from the media, you guys have taught me a lot. I learn from friends, family, and colleagues. It’s a journey into oneself, it’s a discovery of yourself because you are actually on your own. You don’t get to attend family functions as expected, you don’t get to visit friends often and if you are not careful, you will get lost. And you have to also cut down on the job you do.

    Would it be right to say you decided to keep your family away from the public because of your career?

    Yes majorly and then they don’t like it even my siblings. Recently, my brother had his birthday and I posted his picture just to celebrate him and just before we could say jack, someone had already gotten all my family pictures and my brother didn’t like it. So much that he had to tell me not to put up his pictures again, it was not my fault but he doesn’t like it and for my husband, he doesn’t have a social media account. I am in the midst of such people. One time my husband wondered how I got into acting because I’m not a social media freak and I try to keep my personal affairs away from prying eyes. It’s so bad that I even forget to post pictures on my social media accounts.

    How has it been after COVID-19?

    It’s like new dawn, like we are evolving. You know when the westerners came to teach us new things we didn’t know about, that is the way I see it because it’s becoming a default setting with nose masks, hand sanitisers, and all that. I see everything new like we are all starting again. Then I think things more seriously, my horizon has become wider and my perspectives and views on things have changed greatly and I am more attentive to things in my surroundings and grateful for life.

    What did you fall back on as COVID-19 ravaged the land?

    I have a business. I have always been business-oriented aside from the obvious fact that I studied law and public relations before I joined the film industry. I have always been selling fabrics in wholesales, tailor materials, interior decors, and all sorts. And during COVID-19 lockdown, it was a blessing for the society because I did my quota for the people without attracting attention. After all, it’s not my style.

  • ‘How bandits murdered our relatives in our presence’

    ‘How bandits murdered our relatives in our presence’

    Insecurity in the northern parts of the country appears to be taking a turn for the worse as banditry assumes a more worrisome dimension. Besides their penchant for killing for no justifiable reasons, bandits have added kidnapping for ransom to their ungodly trade. Worse still, they are killing their victims after receiving ransoms for them, INNOCENT DURU reports.

    If the battle against banditry is ever won, one woman whose memory will retain the menace of the hoodlums is Ramatu Abdullahi, an indigene of Zungeru, Niger State.

    She recently had one of her sons brutally murdered by bandits in her presence.

    The incident, she said, has left an indelible scar in her heart which even time cannot heal.

    “Tears freely roll down my eyes each time I remember how my son was bestially murdered by bandits. They move from house to house attacking and killing people. Besides my son, I have lost an in-law and several others,” she said.

    Ramatu and other survivors are presently taking refuge in a camp without any amenities.

    Some of the people who narrowly escaped being killed by the bandits were said to have died of snakebites while escaping through the bush.

    Ilyasu Musa, another native of Zungeru village, would also not forget in a hurry the terror unleashed on his family by the bandits. He recalled that they started attacking his village about five years ago and it has been a frequent occurrence since then.

    Musa said: “I have lost my blood brother, an in-law and many relatives to the attacks.

    “I am a farmer and virtually all of us are farmers, but it has been long we went to farm because bandits are occupying our farmlands.

    “Before now, the government used to provide food for us in the various camps. But as I am talking to you, they have not given us any food in the past two weeks.”

    Recalling how he survived bandits’ attacks, Musa said: “I escaped being killed in the attacks because I know the terrain more than the bandits. Because of my knowledge of the terrain, I always knew where to hide each time they struck. I took the same advantage to shield my family members from the assailants.

    Musa, who said he was not happy about his continued stay in the camp, added: “Unfortunately, there is no definite time for us to go home, because the problem is not abating.

    Once the security situation improves, we will go back home. But going back home now would mean putting our lives on the line.”

    Musa’s kinsman, Isiaku Wakai, is also saddened by the loss of his family members to banditry. His predicament is worsened by the conditions in the camp he said is unfit for human habitation.  “I am living a very miserable life here,” he said. “We don’t have sufficient food and basic amenities are also lacking.

    “The IDP camp was not prepared for human habitation. We are taking refuge in a primary school where we sleep on bare floor most times. The whole place is hot and unhygienic. It is disgustingly untidy; a breeding ground for all manner of sicknesses,” the father of 10 said.

    Bandits kidnap for ransom

    The Co-convener of Concerned Shiroro Youths, Sani Abubakar Kokki, told of how he had to pay a ransom to secure the release of his brother who was kidnapped by the bandits.

    He said: “I have paid ransom to secure the release of some of my brothers. On a number of occasions, I have lost my brothers and had our valuables destroyed.

    “Yes, we pay ransom to the criminals. My biological brother once took the ransom to them around the Zamfara axis to secure the release of one of our brothers. The fact that I have not been personally kidnapped does not mean I have not been directly affected.”

    He continued: “I have lost quite a number of people. Some months ago, there was attack on our village during which some of my kinsmen volunteered to go and confront the bandits. In the process, some of them lost their lives.

    “They have also abducted a number of my kinsmen. People no longer sleep in their houses and are consequently exposed to myriads of dangers in the bush where they are taking refuge. They are exposed to excruciating weather conditions.

    “Some months back, they attacked our village and burnt down some of our houses. As I speak to you most of the people have deserted their homes.

    “Recently when there was an attack in a neighbouring village, people from Grumana decided to run for their lives by crossing to the other side of the river. In the process, the canoe they boarded capsized and five people drowned. Up until this moment, their bodies have not been found.”

    Kokki said the menace started like a child’s play before it snowballed into the monster it is now. “It started like pockets of attacks here and there before it escalated. It is over a year and the attacks have got worse. IDPs are scattered everywhere.

    “The bandits attack at any time of the day. There is no slightest resistance from government, so they attack us at will.”

    Also furious about the intractable state of banditry is Kokki’s colleague, Jibrin, who said he had lost a lot of relations to banditry.

    He said: “Recently, my brother was caught and taken to the camp by the bandits, who later found that he is an Imam in one of the mosques. They decided to set him free but he refused, insisting that they should also free two others kidnapped with him.

    “They said the only condition they would free him was if he would go and bring N100,000 ransom for each of them. He gave them the money and had the two others released.

    “Many of the survivors suffered snakebites trying to escape through the bush. Many of them are rushed to the clinic after being bitten by snakes. Some of them die on the road.

    “Our people also lose their children in the forest while fleeing into safety. It has also been a horrible experience for pregnant women. I remember when Kokochi was attacked, a pregnant woman seized by fear gave birth prematurely. The baby died thereafter.

    Genesis of menace

    Going down memory lane, Jibrin said: “As far as banditry in Niger State is concerned, I will tell you it almost started from my village, Allawa. As far back as the ending of 2014, some villagers close to ours came to say they were seeing strange faces of herders carrying AK 47.

    “Then, some herders were even living with the locals. They could buy something worth of N50 and give you N1,000. They used to go to Binin Gawara /Kaduna Road for their operations and come back to those villages.

    “One day, a herder came to Allawa to charge his phone. One of the villagers checked through his phone (because people were already suspecting them at that time) and saw there was a video of the man and his people gathering around the money they had made. And like Boko Haram members would always do, they started shooting into the air, celebrating that they had successfully operated on Binin Gwari Road.

    “One of the locals rushed to the police station to inform them about it. The police arrested the herder. The OC then was a two-star policeman. He decided to take the herder to the main division in Kagara. Before the officer returned, he discovered that the herder had been released.  The released herder was asking him, ‘Oga, are you back?”

    Jibrin added: “In October 2015, some military men came and told the district head of Allawa that they learnt there were armed robbers camped in one village. The district head said he had heard something like that but had not seen it.

    “When I went to see him, he said he knew that I must have been informed that military men came and he said no to them because of the way and manner he heard that those bandits  were equipped. He said if we should allow the military men to confront them, they might come back to destroy the community. The man later died and was succeeded by another.

    “The successor subsequently had his brother visited by the bandits. They robbed him and he went to report to his brother, the village head then. The village head got someone to lead a team of military men to the camp of the bandits. The military underrated the bandits but on getting there, they ran for their lives. That was how we lost the man that escorted them to the camp.

    “When the bandits caught up with him, they realised that he was from Allawa community. They said okay, Allawa people have started conniving with military. They attacked Allawa community and killed the village head, the police officer I mentioned earlier, and two other people. They operated for five good hours.”

    Jibrin described the atmosphere in the affected areas as very bad at the moment, adding: “Our people are predominantly farmers but they can’t go to their farms now. Because of the military onslaught against them along Katsina and Zamfara axis, the bandits are back to the Niger forest.

    “There is this games reserve in Allawa that the government just reserved without a patrol route or van. This is the forest that is housing the bandits.”

    Killing, kidnapping galore in Katsina, Kaduna

    One of the states that are most affected by bandits’ activities is Katsina. One of the people speaking against the menace in the state, Abubakar Kankia, said:  “Just last night (Tuesday), they killed my friend, a customs officer, and took his wife away. They will demand for ransom before releasing her as they always do.

    “About 16 days ago, they attacked the house of the dean, student affairs of a federal university here and went away with his 11 years old daughter. Up till now, they have not released her. Two days earlier, they kidnapped a former local government chairman and have demanded N10 million ransom. It is very difficult for a night to pass without this issue coming up. That is the truth, but the government is not ready to do what they are supposed to do.

    “Here in Katsina, banditry is getting worse. People in some frontline local governments bordering Sokoto, Zamfara, Kebbi and others linking Niger have left the areas. In Paskari, I have a friend who has moved away with his family to Funtua. Many in the IDP camps here in Katsina have lost their wives, their children or their husbands.” Kankia, who hails from Kancha Local Government Area, added: “There was a business man they kidnapped his mother and started demanding for ransom. People don’t sleep with their two eyes closed here.

    “The worst thing is that after paying ransom, they kill the victim and give you the corpse. On some occasions, when somebody takes ransom to them to free a victim, they will hold the person too.

    “In a village under my local government, one person took ransom to the bandits and they held him too.  One special adviser to the governor who is a former lecturer in Katsina State Polytechnic, had one of his colleagues kidnapped. When he went to pay the ransom, they released the victim and held him back.  He became a victim of circumstances.”

    The bandits, Kankia said, often attack from 10pm.

    “In the case of the dean of student affairs, the bandits came to the town around 9 pm. The bandits always come very confident, wielding sophisticated weapons.”

    He regretted that in a whole local government, “you may not find more than 50 policemen working there. Many have less than 50 policemen. Sometimes, it is local vigilantes that confront the bandits.

    “Many of the IDPs are living in classrooms since schools are not in session because of the pandemic. It is always a pitiable sight when they are collecting food.”

    In Kaduna, where mindless killings have become the order, the president of the Kukum Community nationwide, Yanshen Sunday Titus, recalled how 21 members of the area comprising youths were killed in one attack.

    “The killers struck between 10 pm and 11 pm. The death toll, as we speak, was 21. The assailants killed mainly youths from 22 years downward.

    “The attacks occurred after a marriage ceremony. My first son was injured in the attack while two of my nieces and a nephew were killed, making three people that were murdered in my family. We are one hundred per cent farmers here.

    “While taking the victims to the hospital, I also learnt of an attack on a neighbouring community where they also killed some people.  The attack on our community didn’t last more than five minutes. Two of the victims died on the way to the hospital, two others died in the hospital, remaining 17.

    “Now they have discharged five, leaving 12 in the hospital. Unfortunately, nobody has come to ask us how far about the medical bills. We have been paying them on our own. We contributed money to pay the bills.”

    Fearing that the blood thirsty criminals might strike again, he said: “The women and the children have been moved out of the community, leaving only the men.”

    Asked if they are still going to farm in the face of the attacks, Yashen replied: “How? In the face of all this trauma and tension? Feeding has become a problem.

    “The security operatives only came after the attack. They came, shooting sporadically and further scaring people. The already traumatised people started running helter-skelter, putting themselves in more danger.”

    The embattled man believes that the attackers were not bandits. “They are herdsmen. We have story to write. There are things we cannot disclose, but we have stories to write because the survivors will tell us what they heard during the attack and what they passed through.

    “The people attacking us here are not bandits; they are herdsmen. They only attack the village to kill people. They don’t ask for ransom but come only to kill.

    “We don’t know which village is next. The victims were dancing at the wedding party and we suddenly heard gunshots. One of the victims was calling the name of one of the herders who attacked them.”

    Asked if there was nothing they could do to stop the attacks, Yashen replied: “There is nothing we can do to stop the attacks. We are just farmers. We don’t know what we have done to the herdsmen.  I don’t know there mission and equally don’t know why they are attacking us.

    “We have no information that they have a camp anywhere.  There was a time we heard that story and mobilised to the place to confirm it but we didn’t see anything.”

  • Two brothers, others held for fraud in Ibadan

    Two brothers, others held for fraud in Ibadan

    Segun Showunmi, Ibadan

    Two brothers, Ayoola Timilehin, Olusola Timilehin, and others have been arrested by operatives of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) Ibadan zonal office, for internet fraud.

    They were arrested at their hideout yesterday at Alaka in Elebu area of Ibadan, Oyo State.

    The Head, Media & Publicity of the anti-graft agency, Dele Oyewale noted that the suspects were arrested based on intelligence linking them with opulence without any identifiable means of livelihood

    Read Also: EFCC directs ex-NASC members to return official vehicles

    A member of the gang displaying some of the materials used to dupe people and a calabash of black soap

    The other three suspects arrested with them were Temitope Kumuyi, Babatunde Oyelakin and Olanrewaju Ibrahim. They are all aged between 20 and 30 years.

    Items recovered from them included four cars, laptops, exotic phones and a stamp bearing the identity of the bursary section of Queensland University’s School of Medicine, Australia.

    Oyewale said the suspects will be charged to court as soon as investigations were concluded.

     

  • 270 crime suspects arrested in Kano

    270 crime suspects arrested in Kano

    Fanen Ihyongo, Kano

    Police in Kano have  arrested 270 crime suspects for various offences.

    Among the suspects were 45 armed robbers, eight kidnappers and 35 vehicle thieves.

    Other suspects included eight drug dealers, 28 fraudsters and 146 thugs, among others.

    Nine victims were rescued and several items, including firearms, cars, food stuff recovered during the raids.

    Among those rescued were four victims of solitary confinement, one victim of abduction and four victims of kidnapping.

    Commissioner of Police Habu Sani, who paraded the suspects and recovered the items, said the arrests were made in six weeks.

    Read Also: Kano loses N2b properties to rainstorm

    Several weapons were recovered from the suspects.

    Also recovered, among other things, from ‘Yahoo Boys’ were one Plasma television set, Hisense Model valued at N90,000, a Laptop HP Model G7 valued N120,000, an iphone 11 valued at N350,000 and an iphone 6x valued at N85,000.

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Osun returns 15 girls trafficked to Lebanon 

    Osun returns 15 girls trafficked to Lebanon 

    Toba Adedeji, Osogbo 

     

    OSUN State Government on Wednesrday received 15 citizens trafficked to Lebanon.

    Commissioner for Women, Children and Social Affairs, Mrs Olubukola Olaboopo and the Senior Special Assistant to the Governor on Diaspora Matters, Mrs Titi Fadahunsi-Ajayi received the 15 girls.

    In an address, Olaboopo said, “You have had the experience firsthand, and you are going to be the state’s ambassador on issues of trafficking. The State Government expects you to put in diligence in serving your motherland. You have seen the other side of life, and of course, you can see that there is no greener pasture anywhere, but home.

    Read Also: BREAKING: Protest in Osun over electricity, petrol hike

    “We want to know your qualifications to know how the government can assist you. Besides, we have organised an empowerment Programme for you, and your resource persons are on ground to take you through the training.

    The Senior Special Assistant to the Governor on Diaspora Matters, Mrs Titi Fadahunsi-Ajayi, commended Governor  Adegboyega Oyetola for his quick response that led to the rescue and return of the girls.

     

  • Cult suspects terrorise Rivers communities  

    Cult suspects terrorise Rivers communities  

    Mike Odiegwu, Port Harcourt

     

    SUSPECTED cultists have caused chaos in Diobu waterfront communities, Port Harcourt Rivers State, shooting and damaging properties including vehicles.

    It was gathered that the activities of the hoodlums created panic among residents, forcing most of them to hide in their houses.

    Sources said the waterfront communities of Obidianso, Nwachukwu, Anozie, Echue, Ukwato, Timber and Okwelle, were thrown into confusion by the rampaging youths.

    Read Also: NBS: Rivers, FCT face food insecurity

    The Diobu Vigilance group reportedly apprehended one of the suspects, identified simply as Brown, and recovered an AK47 rifle, which was handed over to the police.

    Chairman of Diobu Vigilance group, Amatari Bipelede, who confirmed the incident,  said his group arrested one of the suspects and handed him over to the police.

     

  • Curbing fake news

    Curbing fake news

    With the destructive influence of fake news pervading the society, curious stakeholders converged on Lagos to deliberate on how to effectively tackle the menace. OMOLOLA AFOLABI reports that the consensus was that the traditional media should uphold its gatekeeper role.

    They all converged virtually to find a solution to a disturbing issue. What could it be other than fake news whose potency is huge enough to throw the society into indescribable chaos?

    Among the critical stakeholders was Minister of Youth and Sports Development Sunday Dare who called on the traditional media to strengthen its gatekeeper role in combating fake news in Nigeria.

    The webinar was organised by the International Centre for Journalists in conjunction with the International Centre for Investigative Reporting fact-checking project. Its theme was “Gaining Trust for the Media in the Fake News Era.” It was moderated by ICFJ Fellow and former reporter with The Nation, Hannah Ajakaiye.

    Dare decried the impact of social media on the gate-keeping legacy of traditional media. According to him, the traditional media has a legitimate duty in upholding the gatekeeper role of the media as the rule of engagement still remains “when in doubt, don’t publish.”

    “The role of the journalist as a gatekeeper has, therefore, become more relevant in exploring the political, technological, and societal contexts of misinformation in Nigeria. The social media environment in Nigeria has become even more toxic than the contentious atmosphere that Cambridge Analytica precipitated with its video in 2015. Successive general and local elections have seen an escalation in the deployment of fake news to launch attacks on opponents,” he said.

    Decrying the situation where the government is guilty of perpetuating fake news said: “When fake news comes from government, the media should query such information and investigate the claims.”

    With regard to seeming lack of control over purveyors of fake news, he said: “The moment one gets an audio, video, document or picture one is not sure of and one proceeds to share it, one has automatically joined the array of fake news perpetrators.

    “The media has the responsibility of coming to the rescue. It must ensure that the public gets good, useful and truthful information, particularly now that people can act on the information they get online and on social media such that they could get hurt or even get killed.”

    The minister also made reference to the Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka, who has been a victim of fake news in his symposium on fake news on the BBC where he said: “I’ve said this before that fake news will cause World War 111 and the fake news will be started by a Nigerian.”

    He also appraised the efforts of fact-checking organisations such as Africa Check, Dubawa, and International Centre for Investigative Reporting and The Cable at combating fake news.

    “There must be civil punitive measures against peddlers of fake news and we must ensure silver bullet on misinformation, legislation, persuasion, co-operation and enforcement should be deployed,” he added.

    He also said the media and journalists should commit to countering fake news as an opportunity to claw back the influence lost to the emergence of the situation.

    “The growth of social media, technology and the internet has made everyone a journalist; all that is needed is a connected smartphone. But the tasks of gate-keeping, verification and contextualisation still fall within the jurisdiction of the career media practitioners and they must pick up the gauntlet.

    “The opportunity it offers is one that will drive traffic to the websites of organisations that have proven to be credible and reliable as fact-checkers,” he said.

    On the activities of the Ministry of Youth and Sports in ensuring a disciplined and responsible technology and social media among the youth demographic, he said: “Nigerian youths spend at least four hours online daily, which implies they are exposed to fake news for the most part of the time they are online. This is why at the Ministry of Youth and Sports Development we continue to work towards ensuring that the opportunities offered by technological improvement are put to good use.

    “Since the COVID-19 pandemic made virtual meetings preferable, the social media and the internet generally have been deployed for educating and training the youth, which includes modules that teach responsible use of social media.

    “This is the good use of social media and the internet. The youth and people, in general, should add the additional layer of using these platforms for the spread of truthful information and fighting harmful misinformation and disinformation.”

    According to the project lead Ajakaiye, the initiative is designed to amplify the reach of credible information by sharing fact-checks published by media partners on their social media platforms. It will also help to crowdsource online misinformation being debunked by participating fact-checkers.

    The event had Investigative Journalist, Fisayo Soyombo, multimedia journalist, Ejiro Umokoro and the Director of the International Centre for Investigative Reporting, Mr.Dayo Aiyetan as panellists and was attended by journalists and fact-checkers across various media houses.

    Mr Aiyetan who emphasised the urgency of conquering the menace of fake news through legislation said: “Legislation can be used to combat fake news but it shouldn’t be repressive. According to him, people lose trust in those in power as a result of their influence in the media.

    Soyombo called for a reversal in the role of journalists as mischief-makers begin to tag their work fake news. He said:

    “I’m very worried that people who don’t like critical journalism are branding true work of journalists as fake.”

    In his paper entitled “Fake News and the Influence Industry: The Responsibilities of Social Media,” Soyombo admonished social media influencers to be thorough when sharing information, as it is important to do self-examination by examining the implications of sharing news, the level of trust in the source and the motive behind sharing the information.

    According to him, efforts as simple as employing Google reverse image search in verifying fake pictures enables even social media influencers to ensure verified news are spread.

    He also gave reasons fake news is booming, especially in a pandemic, noting that there are instances of the genuine intention of people to help and the fear of contracting the virus.

    Corroborating Dare’s views that online consumption is at an all-time high as a study reveals that an average person spends over six hours online, Soyombo said the second quarter of the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) revealed that most sectors of the economy received a contraction. Telecommunications industry, however, grew by 18 per cent.

    For example, MTN data usage rose by more than five billion from first quarter to 2nd quarter of 2020.

    He, however, warned social media influencers to be cautious as their reach is deep and their followers are people who have developed confidence in them over a period of time.

    Ejiro Umokoro, a winner of the Wole Soyinka Centre for Investigative Journalism, award remarked on the digital ecosystem of Journalism.

    According to her, the work of journalists must not be affected by the brown envelope scandal.

    She also reiterated that biases which come in different forms, including cognitive bias, among others are some of the reasons people share fake news.

    She said: “The situation where public opinion is no longer shaped by truthful information but popular information is perfidious. We have to separate opinion and bias to be able to combat fake news, adding that journalism should go beyond sensationalism. It has to connect with people.

    “There is also the need to create a distinction between journalism and citizen journalism in order to avoid a breach of social trust. Shoddy journalism is also part of the reasons people perpetuate fake news.”

    Umokoro also advocated collaboration with digital and emerging practitioners in the media space.

    The fact-checking project is an opportunity for digital influencers to become verifiable sources of credible information to their online followers. She said it would also empower citizens by providing them with accurate information to enable them to make informed decisions. This is according to Jerri Haggins, Director ICFJ Knight Fellowship.