Category: Saturday Magazine

  • Senator Daisy Danjuma buries mum in style

    Penultimate Friday, the bigwigs gathered in Benin, Edo State capital, for the burial of Senator Daisy Danjuma’s mother, Dame Merry Oritsetimeyin Ehanire. To say the burial of the senator’s mother, who passed away on Tuesday, April 30, 2013, was befitting would amount to stating the obvious.

    Before the burial, the wake keep for Daisy’s mother had taken place on Thursday, May 23, 2013 at Our Saviour’s Anglican Church, G.R.A, Benin, Edo State. In attendance were the late woman’s children: Osagie, Iyayi, Edugie, Andy, Yawa and Isiah, as well as her in-laws and grandchildren.

    The body of the senator’s mother was kept in a N5 million gold and metallic casket. Those who graced the burial included the Governor of Edo State, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole; his Delta State counterpart, Dr. Emmanuel Uduaghan; the Senate President, Senator David Mark; Chief Gabriel Igbinedion and his pretty wife, Cherry; Grace Egbagbe and former Aviation Minister, Senator Kema Chikwe, among other dignitaries.

    Daisy’s husband, Gen. T.Y. Danjuma, co-hosted the event.

  • Fifi  Ejindu acquires N30m Rolls Royce

    Fifi Ejindu acquires N30m Rolls Royce

    Not many people would hurriedly forget Fifi Ejindu’s earth shaking birthday shindig at the world’s renowned seven-star hotel, Burj-Al-Arab, in the United Araba Emirates a few years ago. The 50th birthday show saw the gathering of highly influential Nigerians to celebrate with of their own.

    She recently capped that with the acquisition of a Rolls Royce car valued at N30 million. Ejindu was said to have placed an order for the expensive vehicle last year, and many who have attested to her attribute as a hardworking woman believe that she deserves nothing less.

    The newly acquired car is said to stretch about 212.6 inches from the bonnet to the boot. The model of Rolls Royce known as Ghost boasts an expansive front grille.

    Ejindu, a top fashion designer and proprietress of Fifi Ejindu Foundation, among other ventures, is reputed for spending most of her time outside the shores of the country. As the life patron of the African Fashion Week London, she has used her influence to shine more light on emerging African designers.

  • Bode Akindele celebrates 80 in style

    Bode Akindele celebrates 80 in style

    One of Nigeria’s most enduring billionaires, Chief Bode Akindele, celebrated his 80th birthday in Ibadan, Oyo State, last Sunday. Although he has witnessed many memorable days, the one of that day was a different ball game. The party was not much about any gaudy merriment or outlandish display of wealth, it was more about popular exaltation of the businessman by many of his friends and business associates.

    The choicest pack of Nigeria’s high society made the birthday party a meeting point, and the celebrant reveled in ecstasy as guests took turns to voice out his good deeds. Whenever Chief Akindele, the colossus behind Modandola Group, Fair Gate Investments Limited and Nigeria Biscuit Company, steps into any big social event, even the captains of industry constitute themselves into a guard of honour.

    Colourful and amiable, Akindele relishes the good things of life.

  • Ndidi Obioha launches initiative for aspiring couples

    Ndidi Obioha of Enthyst Event has launched a new initiative for would-be couples. Tagged ‘The 2013 Lucky Bride’, Enthyst will partner FinaTrust Microfinance Bank to sponsor weddings at affordable cost. Obioha disclosed this at a press briefing, which had Mr. Deji Popola, the MD of Fina Trust Microfinance Bank, among other staff of the bank in attendance.

    The exciting package, according to Obioha, was borne out of the desire to see young people get married. “There have been people who come for us to plan their wedding but would not come back because of funding. So, we thought, let’s make weddings a lot more affordable. Enthyst has emerged three times as the Event Planning Company of The Year. So, obviously when we come on board any event, we are coming with our expertise, professionalism and the fact that we are in all modesty one of the best in the industry.

    “We said to ourselves, let’s all bring in other vendors who have this same vision and mission like we do, provide an amazing wedding at very affordable cost; as in a wedding that you would come to and you probably assume roughly a three-hundred-man wedding. It is just the normal wedding that we plan. It would probably go for between N6 million and N9 million, depending on all the works that are being thrown in. But we are giving you the very same wedding at N3 million, everything inclusive.

    “And also, when you have parents determining everything to do with the wedding because they are funding it, what this does is that it also gives the groom a bit of confidence and power to determine what he wants at his wedding. Because where a groom has just started work and decides he really wants to marry but doesn’t have the funds yet, if he is from a family that is well-to-do, the moment the family wants to fund the wedding, it calls the shots. The groom and the bride are not happy a lot of time. So, these are things that informed the

  • What public office has taught me

    What public office has taught me

    When Louis Odion turned 40 two months ago, the media buzz was quite estatic. Fondly known as Mr. Capacity, among many ways that he was celebrated was an exclusive party at Oriental Hotel, Lekki, Victoria Island Lagos, that was put together by celebrities in the entertainment and fashion world. The event was attended by his choice friends. A young man with a quiet outlook, it was easy to understand why Odion readily appeals to the fashion world; he maybe a successful writer, he is also a peculiar man of style. The Edo State Commissioner for Information, says he is proud to have worked to get to his present position. “I started from the rung of the ladder and paid my dues.” He spoke to PAUL UKPABIO at his residence in Lekki, Lagos.

    Quite an achievement you’ve made of your life at 40! What does being 40 mean to you?

    Like someone once said, age is a matter of the mind, if you don’t mind, then it does not matter. I believe that it is a number, I’m thankful that God has preserved my life to be 40. Looking back, I’ll say I have every cause to thank God. I started very early, I didn’t have a background in journalism, the career line I pursued. It was by the grace of God I was able to rise through the rank to the top. I am grateful to God that I was able to manage a national newspaper, before going to Edo State to accept a political appointment as the Commissioner for Information.

    You will expect that somebody who was a reporter, became a line editor, and then an editor before becoming an editor-in-chief, must have been somebody who read journalism in school. I didn’t study journalism formally. I started as a reporter. I did Secretariat Administration (OND) at the Federal Polytechnic, Ado Ekiti. Afterwards, I came to Lagos where I got employed at the National Concord Newspapers as a confidential secretary. Along the line, my passion, my talent for writing took over. To the extent that I later got invited to the editorial. So while working as a reporter at the age of 19, I took JAMB afresh, and enrolled at the University of Lagos to study English Education and Guidance/Counselling Combined Honours. I was studying full time as well as working. For my Masters, I did International Law/Diplomacy at same institution.

    When I look back, I sort of thank God, for the opportunity. It’s good to be talented but talent alone does not necessarily translate to everything.

    What has experience thought you?

    I am a little wiser; there are certain decisions I took 10 years ago which, given the same opportunity, I won’t make same again. I believe that I used to be very impatient, that was one of my vices, my shortcomings. That must have been caused by the fact that I was always in a hurry. When I was at UNILAG, I was always in a hurry to catch up with my lectures, in a hurry to resume work and I did that for four years non stop. So it became my character. Now I’m learning to be more patient.

    If there is anything my outing in Edo State has done, it is that the system has taught me to be patient. In public office, you are dealing with civil service, it has it own logic. As MD of National Life newspaper, when I gave a reporter an assignment and he did not deliver, he might get sacked. But in civil service, it doesn’t work that way.

    You conceive an idea, you want it implemented and you call the civil servants, usually they will tell you it is good. If you call them after a week and ask them about it, they will tell you that they are working on it. Often time, that’s a lie!

    We as political appointees or ‘contract staff’ as Governor Adam Oshiomole calls us, are usually in a hurry. But the civil servants are not. They have always been there. They have seen commissioners come and go, they have seen governors come and go. So my outing in Edo State has taught me to be patient. In journalism, you have a deadline, a story is breaking, you go, report it against deadline. You can do a good story but if it does not meet deadline, your effort will be wasted. But civil servants work 8 to 4pm. As a matter of fact, once it is 4 pm, they give you the signal to close. That is the time journalists start the day. This has been an illuminating experience.

    What were your childhood dreams?

    Funny enough, I had a lot of dreams depending on the age grade I was. I remember as a boy of 10, watching a musician on television performing, and I told my mom: ‘When I grow up, I want to be a musician’. I was fascinated by the glamour of being a music star. In my later years, my passion shifted to boxing and that was largely influenced by Mohammed Ali. My dad is a boxing fan. I used to sit with him and watch. That fascinated me. In secondary school, I was into amateur boxing. I was involved in it till class 5. I was the leader of my weight category in school. We participated in many inter-school competitions and I performed well because whatever I put my mind to, I give it my best.

    Then, along the line, the writing passion came. That was inspired by Dele Giwa. I was about 13 when Dele Giwa died, the uproar it generated drifted my mind from boxing. What prepared me for writing was that my dad used to buy two newspapers daily. They were The Concord and Daily Times or Concord and Sketch. And on a weekly basis, he would buy American Time Magazine and later Newswatch. In our own time, we prided ourselves in reading voraciously, it was a status symbol to say that you have finished all Charles Dickens collection or you’ve finished all books on African Writers Series or all Pacesetters series. That was how we used to boast then. Reading widely prepared me for writing. When it came to current affairs, I was always on top, that sharpened my political awareness and knowledge of foreign affairs.

    Why didn’t you just study Mass Communication from the beginning?

    When I wrote the entrance examination to Federal Polytecnic, Ado Ekiti, it was my dad who said Accountancy would be nice for me. That was what I was admitted to study. But my maths was not good at the school. I was forced to either withdraw or change course. The school was not offering Mass Comm, so the only option I was opened to was Secretariat Administration, which was where mathematics was not required. My dad was afraid that returning home would dampen my spirit because I finished school and the following month I got the admission. There I got involved in campus journalism and my fame was all over the campus.

    I returned to Lagos for industrial programme at Concord. There I was mentored by Mr. Tunji Bello, current Commissioner for the Environment, Lagos State; Mr. Victor Ifijey, now the Managing Director of The Nation newspapers; Mr. Sam Omatseye, Chairman Editorial Board of The Nation; Lanre Arogundade; Taiwo Ogundipe and Mrs. Osanhenren, she was the Features Editor then. They were already in Concord. They saw that the little boy was writing well and started offering me advice. The average editor needs a script that gives him less stress. They noticed that when I wrote, they more or less may not need to do corrections. So I was getting published almost immediately I wrote. That motivated me.

    It was Nsikak Essien who suggested that I should go and get admission in UNILAG, that he would ask management to offer me scholarship. But when I got the admission, he had left. Mr. Tunji Bello was my editor. He offered me all the support I needed. He became my brother as he protected me in the newsroom. When Concord was not able to pay salary, he was supporting me financially. I can’t thank him enough.

    By 1999 when Mr. Dele Alake, who was also one of my mentors too, left to take up appointment as the Lagos State Commissioner for Information, Mr. Tunji Bello became Editor of the Daily paper, his deputy then, Kayode Komolafe, had moved to become the Editor, Sunday paper. I was told that at the management meeting, my name popped up for who to become the deputy. The argument that arose was that I was too young to be a deputy editor and not a graduate. There were others who were there and far above me in terms of experience.

    That was when it was revealed that I had since gone to UNILAG and came out with a 2.1 result. I had just finished the course. The MD, Dr. Doyin Abiola at that time, announced that I should take up the position. That was how I got the job. It was like a fairy tale, a boy who got into Concord as Confidential Secretary seven years earlier, who was typing scripts for the editors, had become an editor. It was a turning point in my career. So in a nutshell, writing has always been my passion.

    Now in Edo State, I miss writing but I also realise that I also needed to face life, so that when I get back to news room, I’ll be a better commentator. Now I can see why things don’t work. The political leader comes, he has good intentions, he makes a pronouncement, but when it comes to execution, people he relies on fail him.

    Why did you take the commissioner job?

    Before this, I had received others, from Edo State and at the national level.

    My standard then was that I wasn’t interested, writing gives me joy. But having witnessed what the governor did in 2008 and 2011, I knew this man is different. That was what made me accept and sincerely, I don’t regret it. Edo State used to be teased as a basket state, a place that had been condemned to a state of penury. That was the impression past governors created.

    For 10 years, PDP was there, nothing moved. They were telling people that the state is very poor and has nothing, that what they got from the federation account could only pay salaries. People had resigned themselves to fate, but Oshiomhole has shown a difference. Within the first tenure, he constructed more than 400 kilometres of brand new roads, quality roads like those found in Abuja. In PDP days, only asphalt will be poured. Now we do proper soil tests, proper road design and so on.

    Education sector has been transformed. Before now, the poorest of the poor paid through their noses to put their children in private schools, now the governor has transformed public schools and people are removing their children and wards from private schools to public schools. The schools are more beautiful and the teachers more competent, dedicated and motivated.

    What challenges do you come across as an Information Commissioner?

    Challenge is not what I will describe my peculiar experience in Edo State because I have a governor who is working ahead and people see him as performing. That has already lightened my job. If he were not working, I would have run into problems. People would have been asking questions. But today when I say Governor Oshiomhole is working, people say yes, we can see. That has helped me. I have also been lucky because I can’t imagine myself coming out to lie because of my professional background. I used to hold people in public officials by standards when I used to be a commentator. That’s the standard I still keep. I can’t imagine myself being in a position where I would be forced to lie that somebody is performing when he is not.

    That Governor Oshiomhole is working, has helped me. That has been my secret.

    Going to serve in Edo State personally amounted to a massive pay cut. I was the MD and Editor in Chief of a national newspaper. This is the same house I was living in Lagos, but had to leave to where I was not based, and operate in a totally different situation. However, when I leave this appointment, I will be sure to hold my head anywhere and say that I was part of the Oshiomhole revolution. Money is not everything.

    What determines your personal style?

    Style to me is an expression of the totality of a person and it reflects in my colours. I am not a loud person, so I have affinity with conservative colours. That is probably why you will not see me ordinarily wearing red attire in public. Some dress to impress but I dress according to my mood. My style reflects in how I talk, the company I keep, how I carry myself. Writing is a loneliness job so I find myself to be an intensive private person.

     

  • Dinner on dhow cruise

    Dinner on dhow cruise

    The dhow boats are common in the Gulf and eastern countries like Pakistan, Bangladesh, India and East Africa. The boats have been in use in this area since 1785 for commercial activities like conveying of goods and passengers from one point to the other. But they are no longer as popular as they were for such purposes now. In Dubai, however, they have become key attractions in driving the tourist industry. Thousands of tourists troop to the quays of the Deira area of Dubai for a dinner cruise  adventure.  The dhow dinner cruise is a huge hit,  and in this write-up, Okorie Uguru recounts an experience on a dhow cruise.

    Adventure in Dubai comes in different forms and shapes. However, not many offer the opportunity for one to feel the essence of this gulf country like the dhow cruise.

    Wikipedia discribed dhow  as the generic name of a number of traditional sailing vessels with one or more masts with lateen sails used in the Red Sea and Indian Ocean region. Dhows are trading vessels primarily used to carry heavy items, like fruit, fresh water or merchandise, along the coasts of the Arabian Peninsula, Pakistan, India, Bangladesh and East Africa. Larger dhows have crews of approximately thirty,while smaller ones typically have twelve.

    Well, in Dubai, these traditional boats are used more for leisure cruises. It offers fun-seekers the opportunity to dine on middle eastern cuisines and also explore the creeks of Dubai leisurely, taking the skyline and some of the more traditional Dubai settlements. This is done in style.

    Arriving for the traditional dhow dinner cruise, one is a little uneasy by the rather austere nature of the boats. They are built with woods, a jutting front that ends with a sharp edge. From outside, the only thing that looks modern about the boats are the huge electric cable of tiny lights that is woven round the the boats like a Christmas tree. At night while sailing, what one sees is a floating  spectrum of colours rather than a boat.

    Most of the dhow boats on dinner cruse starts boarding around 8pm after the Moslem prayers. There are normally stewards that welcome one onbard with a  glass cup of fruit juice.  The interior of the boat is tastefully decorated, sharply different from what one sees from outside. It is not the normal Arabian living room sitting arrangement that seats are much lower with throw-in pillows to recline on. This is more of a Western  sitting arrangement.

    The most dhow dinner cruise boats are double-decker. Guests have the choice of settlement deep in the boat below or take a seat at the top. The top is obviously much better simply because it gives one better view of the Dubai in the night, a rather enchanting sight. Arabian music plays from the background as one sits. One may not understand the wordings of the music, but that does not stop one from enjoying the sonorous voice of the singers and the instrumentation which is eastern. Musicians sing about different things based on their reality,  but there is always one common topic that they sing about and this is love. Occasionally, habibi, the Arabian word for love, is not far away in the music.

    Gradually, the dhow set sail, the music continues to blare on the quiet Dubai creek and the silver water ripples as the dhow slices through. The light of the tall buildings reflects on the water.  Guests are allowed to sail and enjoy the calmness of the water and senses suck in the exquisite feelings. With a glass of drink, one could simply recline by the boat, enjoy the solitude of the blend of nature and man as seen in the water and the  modern buildings all around.

    Then the entertainment starts, the Sufi dancer comes on board to entertain. He twists and turns with his tambourine altered with some other objects.

    The dance is very intricate and done with a certain grace and elegance in steps. It is difficult to imagine how one could dance for such a long time without falling.

    Sufi dance essentially rotates about its own axis, and through this movement, the dancers alternate states of consciousness and mystical ecstasy, while his soul emerges from earthly ties to enter the kingdom of God. The dance is a universe of Sufi mystics to connect with God.

    It was dinner time and one after the other, the guests filed to the dinner table to serve themselves. There was no alcohol served. The cruise went on for about one hour and then it was time for the return journey. Along the way, more 20 dhow boats cruised by filled with people.

    Although some cruises offer performances by belle dancers, our was just the Sufi dancers. But most of the guests did not seem to mind as they enjoyed the performance.

      The guests can enjoy the exquisite oriental cuisine. Daily boarding starts at 8 pm and the dhow sets sail at 8:30 pm providing everyone aboard with a wonderful two-hour experience.

  • Ozobuwa twins: Brilliant, beautiful, yet single

    Among friends, colleagues and associates, Patricia and Felicia Obozuwa are a set of abundantly blessed twins whose profile has since assumed the dimension of folklore. While Patricia, an accounting graduate of the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), works at Procter and Gamble, Felicia, also an OAU alumnus, is a top manager at First City Monument Bank.

    Both of them are doing well. They live large and hobnob with the rich and mighty. They are endowed with everything that would make any young man fall in love. Talk about pleasant looks that could charm even a bad-tempered gorilla and lovely figures that could draw tears to the eyes of a eunuch. Add to these their professional accomplishments and what you have is two sisters on top of their game.

    However, to the consternation of their friends who have held them in awe since their school days where their beauty and brilliance always stood them out, the two sisters are yet to add any suffix to their names. This, we learnt, might not be unconnected with their elitist disposition, which tends to scare many men away.

    In spite of this, the Obozuwa twins are not obviously daunted. They have preferred to consolidate on their individual successes and enjoy themselves while their single status lasts.

  • White Charming

    White Charming

    DO you know the colour of the moment apart from yellow, black and beige? Well, it is no other than white which is often referred to as a ladies’ colour. Trust the ladies, they are living up to that saying; strutting out in white of diverse fashion item from clothes (especially tops and gowns), bags, shoes, hair scarves, neck scarves, hair ruffle, belts, beads, handkerchiefs, wrist and head bands. White is everywhere; white, like black, goes with virtually all colours, provided you get your combination and coordinating power right, because getting a perfect match also depends on the style and the accompanying accessories.

    For instance, you can brighten your black suit ensemble with a white shirt, hair band, ruffle or better still a white neck scarf. In as much as being the reigning colour, it must not be “overdone”, tone white with other colours, do not make it an all-round angelic affair.

    Your top could afford to come in white, if you are wearing a black or cream pant or skirt and it could be the other way round.

  • Ex-Chief Dehinde Fernadez’s wife, Aduke, succumbs to cancer

    Cancer, that notorious ailment that seems to have become the albatross of the rich, has struck once again. Its wrath this time was targeted at Aduke Olufunmilayo, a former wife of one of Nigeria’s billionaires, Chief Antonio Dehinde Fernandez. Aduke succumbed to the cold hands of death a few days ago.

    While Aduke and her estranged husband had ended their marriage as a result of ‘irreconcilable differences’, the billionaire is nonetheless touched by the loss of a woman that was once so dear to his heart.

    Aduke would be remembered by many for her involvement in one of the most celebrated divorce cases. She had filed her papers in the court in Edinburg, claiming that her marriage to Fernandez had broken down as a result of the billionaire’s domineering attitude. The reclusive billionaire later moved out of their Georgian town home in Edinburgh.

    In 2012, the rumour broke that the billionaire was reuniting with his estranged wife, but he fiercely denied it. “It is a big lie. It will not happen in a million years,” he thundered. However, those who should know said must have felt the loss of Aduke.

    An American by birth, Aduke died in a New York hospital after battling with the illness for ages. As expected, she sought a permanent cure for her ailment in several countries to no avail.

    Fernandez is presently married to Halima, a former beauty queen from Kano.

  • Charity home battles  to save 15-yr-old TV commercial  model struck with  strange illness

    Charity home battles to save 15-yr-old TV commercial model struck with strange illness

    HOW could caring parents have abandoned their bed-ridden 15-year-old daughter for God knows where? The poser has become a refrain on the lips of residents of Agbado Road, Ijaiye-Ojokoro, Lagos State, ever since one Lateef, an auto technician and his wife abandoned their daughter, Kaosarat, who is laid back with a strange illness at home.

    The burden of caring for Kaosarat is currently being shouldered by neighbours and a social worker, Mrs. Titilola Adesida of Charity of Peace for Idle Hands and Gender Equity, Ikeja, Lagos State.

    The landlord of the building where Kaosarat is currently holed up, Mr. Idowu Ogunbanwo, explained that the couple may have fled their home following their daughter’s worsening sickness.

    “They moved into this house about seven years ago with Kaosarat but her condition was not as bad as it is now. She used to talk very well but she suddenly lost her speech and could no longer walk properly, probably as a result of being kept indoors. They told us that she was struck by a strange illness when she was barely five.

    “They claimed to have done their best to salvage her from the debilitating sickness and instead of seeking further medical solution to her problem, they abandoned her at home without a trace, leaving their eight-year old son, Augustine, behind to take care of her.

    “They had been owing rents for about three years now and all the efforts at persuading them to pay up have yielded no fruit. It was only three days ago that I was able to lure her father to come around so that we can settle the matter amicably. But I was smart to have invited the police as soon as he came around. He was taken to Ojokoro Police Station where he wrote an undertaking to pay up or move out of this building.

    “Kaosarat’s case is not getting any better as she has been infested with bed sores after being kept in the room for many months”.

    Findings revealed that Kaosarat had once featured as a baby model in a television commercial for a notable brand of multivitamin syrup manufactured by a leading pharmaceutical company when she was barely two years old.

    “Kaosarat’s parents said that she was used as a model for a television advertisement of multivitamin syrup when she was just one year and few months old. They even showed us the promo pack of the drug and other location shots. They claimed to have been paid about N10,000 as her participation fee then,” recalled Ogunbanwo.

    Our correspondent saw Kaosarat in a corner of the room, on a clothe spread on the floor with scars of bed sores all over her body. She had shrinked so much that she could be passed for a two-year-old. She muttered in Yoruba “ebi npa mi”( I am hungry). Her looks give a feeling that she is living on a borrowed time as medical help eludes her.

    In her words, Adesida said:”I was alerted by the landlord of the building, Mr. Ogunbanwo in 2012 and my organisation has since been responsible for her treatment at home. After her initial treatment, her conditions were stabilised only to relapse a few days ago. We have been carrying out periodic checks on her but her worsening condition has made us to cry out for support, so she won’t die. Last year, we took her to the Ikeja General Hospital but we were told that there was no bed space. It was at a private hospital that doctors gave some prescriptions that helped in stabilising her condition; otherwise, she would have died.

    “Since we took over Kaosarat’s case, I have not seen her parents and efforts to convince them to show up during our telephone conversations have failed.”

    Speaking with our correspondent, Kaosarat’s younger brother, Augustine, recalled how he was asked by his parents to keep watch over his sister.

    “I was formerly a student of Above Glory Nursery and Primary School, Ojokoro, but I stopped in Primary Six because of my sister. My eight-year-old younger sister, Aminat, now lives with one of my mother’s friends. My parents stopped me from schooling so as to take care of my elder sister and because they said there was no money to fund my education.”

    Augustine’s explanation was reinforced by his mother’s friend, Mrs.Eniola Shotunde, who explained why the couple had to abandon their daughter, Kaosarat.

    She said: “I warned Kaosarat’s mother against abandoning her daughter on the excuse of not having enough money to take care of her treatment. She had spent so much on Kaosarat’s illness to the extent that she sold her property in Ikorodu after her business collapsed. One of her sisters who works in a Lagos- based aviation company had also assisted her financially on a number of occasions. Koasarat’s parents claimed that she was hit by a strange illness called Apeta (an evil arrow) in Yoruba. They have been moving from one church to another and visited several spiritual healing homes to no avail.

    “I only took in the couple’s youngest daughter called Aminat on humanitarian grounds. At times, I would beg her on the telephone to come home and take care of Kaosarat but she would turn down my plea. I have not seen her for some time now. It is sad that Kaosarat’s parents are nowhere to be found because their innocent daughter had once given them joy as a baby when she featured in a television commercial of a multivitamin drugs.”

    In a telephone conversation, Kaosarat’s father, Lateef, said he left home to look for money to take care of his daughter but hung up when our correspondent queried his long absence from home.

    “I did not run away from home and I have not abandoned my daughter. I travelled out of town to look for money to take care of her and I cannot tell you when I will be back.”