Category: Special Report

  • Skye Bank’s in-road into SMEs’ development: the stakes, impacts

    Skye Bank’s in-road into SMEs’ development: the stakes, impacts

    With the recent successful conclusion of the Skye Bank SME Roundtable, the bank has upped the ante in SME development in Nigeria, a sector long touted as the likely driver of growth for the Nigerian economy.

    The sector accounts for about 20% of the country’s population – 35/40 million people, and therefore making it imperative that the bank pays close attention to the sector.  Why the Skye Bank intervention is crucial is that, as findings show, over half the number of the country’s 17 million SMEs identified by the National Bureau of Statistics may not make it through the next five years.

    The fatality rate for this class of business, experts say can be attributed to a number of factors, including poor infrastructure, inappropriate tax regime/multiple taxations, limited access to finance, unfair competition, poor managerial capacity and accounting/marketing/operational planning issues.

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) groups the militating factors into four namely: unfriendly business environment, poor funding, low managerial skills and lack of access to modern technology (FSS 2020 SME Sector Report, 2007).

    Yet the sector, according to the United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO), has a significant role to play in economic development. They form the backbone of the private sector; they make up over 90 per cent of enterprises in the world and account for 50 to 60 per cent of employment. They also play an important role in generating employment and poverty alleviation.

    “Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) are critical to the development of any economy as they possess great potentials for employment generation, improvement of local technology, output diversification, development of indigenous entrepreneurship and forward integration with large-scale industries”, observes the CBN.

    With such importance, it is little wonder that government is deliberate about developing the sector, especially by creating access to finance, albeit a fractional level to the needs of the economy. All Banks, including Skye Bank, are expected to contribute a fraction of their annual profits to financing SMEs.

    In 2010, to improve access to finance by SMEs, the CBN approved the investment of the sum of N500 billion debenture stocks to be issued by the Bank of Industry (BOI). The structure of the financing was such that in the first instance, the sum of N300 billion was applied to power projects and N200 billion to the refinancing/restructuring of banks existing loan portfolios to Nigerian SME/manufacturing sector.

    The objective of the CBN was to fast-track the development of the SMEs and manufacturing sector of the Nigerian economy and improve the financial position of deposit money banks. Complimentary to that, the CBN also established a N200 billion Small and Medium Enterprises Credit Guarantee Scheme (SMECGS), for promoting access to credit by SMEs in Nigeria. The Scheme is be wholly financed by the CBN.

    The objectives of the SMECGS is to provide a guarantee for credit from banks to SMEs and manufacturers; increase the access of promoters of SMEs and manufacturers to credit and set the pace for industrialization of the Nigerian economy.

    The overall goal of these two initiatives are to increase output, generate employment, diversify the revenue base, increase foreign exchange earnings and provide inputs for the industrial sector on a sustainable basis. But government intervention, while crucial and a necessary ‘first step’ can only go so far. Interventions such as that by Skye Bank, with its Business Roundtable platform, play a complimentary role.

    That role, beyond providing finance is that of nurturing and mentoring, a clear recognition of the fatality rate in the sector. Business owners need to be guided on their journey to entrepreneurial success. It is in the spirit for laying the groundwork for this journey that the first SME Roundtable on Distributive Trade was organised at the Lagos Oriental Hotel in Lagos last week. It is the harbinger of a long line of Roundtable events lined up by the Bank in the course of the year.

    The business roundtable, which is part of the bank’s initiative to connect with stakeholders in the different sectors of the economy, was well attended by stakeholders in the distributive trade sector.

    It was kicked off by the bank’s GMD/CEO, Timothy Oguntayo who assured participants of the bank’s commitment to serve customers better as symbolised by its customers’ service charter.

    The audience benefited from the experiences of the keynote speaker, Dr. Abiodun Adedipe and Director-General of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industries (LCCI), Muda Yusuf.

    Quoting UN sources, Adedipe harped on the importance of distributive trade saying

  • World Bank’s $500m facility: improving maternal, child healthcare in Nigeria

    World Bank’s $500m facility: improving maternal, child healthcare in Nigeria

    THE Board of Executive Directors of the World Bank Group, last month, approved a $500 million International Development Association (IDA) credit forNigeria.

    The IDA is the window of the World Bank which offers grants and low- to zero-interest rate loans for projects and programmes that boost economic growth, reduce poverty, and improve standard of living. The facility granted Nigeria was designed to bring about significant improvements in maternal, child, and nutrition health services for women and children in the country.

    Domestic reforms aimed at improving cogent primary healthcareindicators in the country and engagements with multilateral funding agencies and donors fructified the credit. In 2012, Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg of Norway and Chelsea Clinton, in her capacity as Board Member of Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI), arrived in Nigeria to join President GoodluckJonathan and (then) Honourable Minister of State for Health,Dr. Muhammad Ali Pate, to launch theSaving One Million Lives (SOML) initiative with support from CHAI. The rationale for the initiative was that in Nigeria, an estimated one million mothers and children die each year from preventable causes. As a result, the Federal Ministry of Health decided to set new goals to improve quality healthcare from 2013 and save the lives of Nigerian mothers and children.

    Health sector experts and stakeholders credit Dr. Pate as the initiator of the SOML initiative.He had come into Nigeria’s healthcare limelight following his trailblazing work at the National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA),where he served asthe Executive Director from 2008 to 2011. Prior to his appointment, Nigeria was one of the four polio endemic PAIN countries; the others being Pakistan, Afghanistan and India. Dr.Pate tackled the polio epidemic headlong. By June 2009, he had instigated a grassroots-oriented campaign of engaging respected traditional rulers in the North, under the leadership of the Sultan of Sokoto, to assist with delivery of the immunisation programme messages in combination with the development of an effective primary healthcare system. A decade earlier, the national immunisation programme had suffered severe setbacks, especially in the North.

    The effectiveness of the strategic approach adopted by Dr. Pate caught the attention of the international and local stakeholders in less than two yearsof his appointment. In 2010, incidences of the Wild Polio Virus (WPV) fell to only 11 cases from a staggering figure of 803 in 2008.  His work also entailed the consolidation of the National Programme on Immunisation (NPI) into the broader framework of NPHCDA, in line with international best practices. The merger sought to address old issues of structural constraint, fiscal decentralisation, mismatched burden of disease and low quality spending.

    This effort resulted in the strengthening of core diagnostics, systems development and human resources capacity development within the new NPHCDA. With the critical arms of the agencythus strengthened, the national Midwives’ Service Scheme (MSS) was launched, to mobilise midwives to selected primary healthcare facilities in rural communities to increase the pool of skilled birth attendants and boost delivery of services. The overarching objective of this programme was to significantly reduce high maternal and child mortality and morbidity. The level of work done to achieve the targets of the MSS paved the way for the Saving One Million Lives initiative.

    Subsequently, at the time of his appointment as Minister of State for Health by President Goodluck Jonathan in July 2011,Dr. Pate already had a clear focus on what his priorities were, namely continued fight for polio eradication and mobilization of public-private coalition for SOML.Nigeria is now at the verge of being declared polio-free by the World Health Organisation. However, Dr. Pate resigned his appointment in 2013 to take up a professorial chair at the United States’ Duke University’s Global Health Institute. The position would see him serve as Senior Adviser to the Seattle-based Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (a major player in Nigeria and other developing countries in the fight against major diseases like Polio), among other high-level engagements.

    Nevertheless, this high profile exit from Nigeria’s health policy sector, raised concerns on continuity of some of the programmes that had begun to gain traction under the purview of Dr. Pate. To address the concerns, he offered to continue to provide his services on part-time basis as chairman of the Presidential Task Force on Polio Eradication and the public-private coalition for Saving One Million Lives initiative, in fulfilment of his previous commitments to”see to conclusion of these important national priorities.”

    It becomes obvious that Dr. Pate, a consummate Nigerian health professional, has a strong passion and exceptional commitment to improvements in healthcare delivery in Nigeria, especially to the most vulnerable groups.It always instils confidence when donors are able to associate someone of this quality with a development programme they are giving funding consideration. The $500 million credit will serve as a necessary fillip to the policy drive towards a Nigeria where maternal, child, and nutrition health services for women and children would be significantly improved. Not least because of the existing constraint in the fiscal space as a result of the sharp drop in oil prices.

    The healthcare challenges the $500million credit is supposed to help address are enormous. Nigeria accounts for 14% of all annual maternal deaths worldwide, second only to India at 17%. Similarly, the country accounts for 13% of all global deaths of children under the age of five years, again second only to India at 21%.

    To address the challenge of estimated annual 900,000 maternal and child deaths, SOML focuses on increasing the use of high-impact reproductive and child health and nutrition interventions, and improving the quality of these services; strengthening monitoring and evaluation systems and measurement data; encouraging private sector innovation; and increasing transparency in management and budgeting for Primary Health Care (PHC) in the country.

    The World Bank Group says it is expectedthat the new health operation will start implementation on August 1, 2015 and run till December 2019. TheBank’s support for SOML will utilize the Programme-for-Results (PforR) instrument to encourage a greater focus on results, increase accountability, improve measurements, strengthen management, and foster innovation. Importantly, the PforR funds will only be disbursed to the Federal and State governments for independently verified improvements in key services such as vaccination coverage among young children, rates of contraceptive use, Vitamin A supplementation, skilled birth attendance, HIV counselling and testing among women attending antenatal care, and preventing new malaria infections among children by using insecticide-treated bed nets. Also, the Federal and State governments will receive incentive payments for effective tackling of governance and management issues in the health sector and for improving the quality of basic health services.

    The incoming administration of General MuhammaduBuhari now has the responsibility of successful utilisation of the IDA credit. Based on the passion of the President-elect to serve, there is high hope that the $500 million funding will deliver its objectives, and that further general improvementin healthcare delivery in Nigeria will be realised over the next four years.Appointment of a competent Nigerian with experience in result-based budgeting as Minister of Health will boost the chances of success in the implementation of health policies and foster judicious use of available resources. The need for such a professional to have exposure to the international health policy community and global funding agencies cannot be overemphasized, considering the significant international resources to be mobilized for healthcare under the Sustainable Development Goals which will replace the Millennium Development Goals in 2015.

    The WHO asserts that”the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of health is one of the fundamental rights of every human being.” This means children should have access to healthcare when they need it. It also implies that pregnant women should be able to receive antenatal care and deliver safely with the assistance of skilled birth attendants.

     

    • Moghalu is Head, Corporate Communication Department, Nigerian Export-Import (NEXIM) Bank.

     

  • Children, women as endangered species in the ‘world’s worst lead-poisoning disaster’

    Children, women as endangered species in the ‘world’s worst lead-poisoning disaster’

    Five years after a lead-poisoning epidemic that ravaged some villages in Zamfara State, echoes of the monumental disaster, which led to the death of hundreds of children and miscarriages among women, still linger on. After visiting these gold-rich villages and some mining sites, Assistant Editor ADEKUNLE YUSUF reports that the contamination crisis is an ongoing tragedy because artisanal gold mining that triggered the recent calamity is still an important source of livelihood for many poverty-stricken locals.

    It is barely 11am on a school day, but scores of children are surprisingly not in school. At a time their peers in other climes are busy getting set for the journey of life, these children are engrossed in their usual pastimes  chasing one another all over the dusty compounds, taking turns in rehearsing pretend plays, and climbing shrub trees that sparsely dot Bagega, a squalid community in Zamfara State. As if in a trance, one of the truant playmates peeps from the narrow entrance of her father’s mud house, gazing into a future that may not belong to her. Later, perhaps due to her pristine innocence, the little girl bursts into inexplicable smiles, seemingly unaware of the wrenching implications of not being prepared for a future that beckons.

    Sadly, not having their wards enrolled in school also surprisingly appears low on the priority radar of parents in Bagega, a bucolic community, which holds the unenviable record as the epicenter of the “world’s worst lead-poisoning disaster” in recorded history, as global human rights/medical community has dubbed the recent spate of deaths and contamination arising from artisanal gold mining activities in that part of the country. But poor school enrolment  as worrisome at it is  is not limited to Bagega; it is a statewide affliction that troubles children with relentless ferocity in all the villages in the state. According to Kabiru Garba, a social worker who knows the nooks and crannies of the state like the back of his own palm, only three of every ten Zamfara children enroll in  school, thus worsening the plight of children in a country that is home to an estimated 10.5 million out-of-school children (UNESCO’s latest statistics).

    The deplorable situation was what set the stage for an unprecedented tragedy that befell several communities where a lucrative gold rush turned awry in the state five years ago. Since most children are not in school, their parents – many of who have abandoned subsistence farming for a more lucrative but dangerous gold hunting – have found in them a ready pool of free labour during the time of processing the gold ore in the homes. Despite several awareness seminars, campaigns, and town-hall meetings to educate the locals about the dangerous aspects of their vocation, many are yet to quit gold mining.  Up till now, early in the morning, miners still crawl into huge craters with axes and shovels in their hands, salivating at the prospect of making good money as they fill the jerry cans with gold-laced rock properties.

    And after scooping the preferred particles, other tasks take place under awnings made of sticks, usually under scary weather conditions as miners toil to crush the valued rocks with heavy hammers or mills that are powered by miniature generators. Unknown to these seekers of easy bucks, trouble usually starts when the rocks laden with lead and gold are broken into pebbles, as dust billows off the hammers and out of the milling machines, which invariably ends up in the atmosphere as the ore is crushed. As lead is released into the air, it ultimately leaves toxic particles that cling to clothing, building and infiltrate water supplies from the streams  all causing brain, liver, kidney, nerve, and stomach damage as well as permanent developmental disabilities to children, say medical experts. That was what gave birth to a disaster that literally stole global headlines in 2010.

    A heavy price  children, women poisoned by gold

    At the emergency behest of Nigeria, a high-powered team of medical personnel  from the American-based Centers for Disease Control (CDC), Federal Ministry of Health, Nigerian Field Epidemiology and Laboratory Training Programme, WHO, United Nations Children Fund (UNICEF), and other international bodies and Medicins Sans Frontieres (MSF), otherwise known as Doctors Without Borders  carried out an investigation in the affected villages, where higher-than-expected numbers of children died between May, 2009 and May, 2010. They tested the blood of surviving children, took soil samples from family compounds and questioned parents about their dead children’s symptoms. By the time result of blood and soil tests were made public, it was a rebuke on the quality of leadership available in the country. Among other things, it showed that eighty-one per cent of the children who died in the villages had suffered seizures, a sign medical experts attribute to acute lead poisoning. And of the surviving children who were tested, the report said “all blood samples indicated lead poisoning,” while 97 per cent needed immediate therapy to lower those levels.

    Although the report said mercury levels were lower in the children, it was excessive  four to eight times higher than the average American child. Regarding the soil samples, 85 per cent of the samples taken from the family compounds exceeded the health standard for lead permitted by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). It is so bad that water taken from a well in one of the villages had 90 times more lead than the EPA’s action level for drinking water. Of the 118 households where children under the age of 5 had died, crude ore processing occurred inside the family compounds in 84 of them. Children, especially toddlers are most vulnerable to lead poisoning because they crawl or play on the contaminated ground and they have developing nervous systems.

    But it was a heavy price borne mainly by children and their mothers. Though there is no accurate figure on adult victims, field workers said miscarriages were rampant in affected communities. According to Dr. Nasiru Umar-Tsafe, a researcher and expert on lead poisoning who has played helped in containing the spread of lead poisoning in the state, at least 734 children below the age of five, out of 5,393 kids within the age bracket, were confirmed killed by lead poisoning between 2010 and March 2013 alone. He added that children within the 10-24 months age group are repeatedly identified as the most vulnerable, due to frequent soil-to-mouth activity exposed to during ore processing in residential quarters. In an epidemiological review of the contamination crisis, Dr Henry Akpan of the Federal Ministry of Health, wrote that lead can interfere with the nervous system development, adding that it can also cause permanent learning and behaviour disorders in children. There is also the plight of women, which many of them still suffer from in terms of miscarriages and infertility. He noted further that having unwholesome amount of lead in the body can cause miscarriages in pregnant women as well as trigger reduced sperm production in men. But the harm done by lead poisoning does not seem to end there. Medical professionals say beyond killing, lead poisoning or any other heavy metal contamination can also leave the spared ones with life-long impairments, including a worse danger of living with contamination of their water, plants, livestock, and earth where they grow their crops for food.

    Confirming that there is possible  re-contamination, Alhaji Shehu Muhammad Anka, Director of Pollution Control in the Zamfara State Environmental Sanitation Agency (ZESA), who was also in the 27-member team that cleared lead contamination in Zamfara villages, said his team members were also exposed to lead during the removal of unclean soil and other waster materials in 8 villages. “After we finished the remediation work, our staff members were exposed to lead. When they were tested by MSF, they have higher blood lead levels. They need treatment. We wrote several letters to the Federal Ministry of Environment to pay the field workers. Up till now, the Federal Ministry of Health is unable to pay our staff. Our money is N17 million to take care of treatment. Many of them, their wives had miscarriages. The women too had miscarriages. They cannot function very well sexually. That is the problem,” he said.

    Only 8 out of 38 affected villages remediated

    On July 28, 2013, the Federal Government announced with fanfare that it had concluded the environmental remediation of lead-poisoned sites in Zamfara State. N837million was spent for the environmental remediation, safer mining activities, and sustainable health  all to alleviate the effect of lead poisoning in the state, said the former Minister of the Environment, Mrs. Hadiza Mailafia. She disclosed further that the fund was shared among the Ministry of Health, which took care of the medical aspect; the Ministry of Mines and Steel Development, which was in charge of safer mining techniques; and the Ministry of the Environment, for environmental remediation.

    “This is to clarify the seeming complacency of the Federal Government towards the welfare of the children in Zamfara State affected by lead poisoning. The exercise spanned over a number of years, but today, we have kept our promise. We are glad that we have been able to successfully carry out environmental remediation of lead contaminated sites and this has brought succour to residents in the affected communities,” she boasted. However, when The Nation visited Bagega and other communities that were said to have been remediated, the minister’s boast turned out to be a near empty one. This is so because out of 38 communities recommended for emergency remediation therapy, only 8 had been remediated: Bagega, Abare, Dareta, Duza, Sunke, Tungar Daji, Tungar Duru and Yargalma. Dr. Umar-Tsaf stressed that 199 villages were actually surveyed, but 38 required emergency response  remediation and chelation therapy.

    In an interview with The Nation, Dr Michelle Chouinard, Head of Mission/Country Representative of MSF, revealed that more than 5000 children have been screened and more than 2, 000 treated for lead poisoning by her organization in the 8 villages since the outbreak of lead poisoning crisis in 2010. She disclosed that 1,361 children currently remain under treatment with MSF, while 3 clinics of the original 8 villages have now been closed as the medical emergency continues to provide treatment and follow-up in the 5 remaining villages. “MSF has been involved in the 8 villages from the original lead poisoning crisis of 2010 due to acute mortality and morbidity related to lead poisoning.  To date, MSF has screened 5,224 children and treated 2,698 children with chelation therapy. Currently 1,361 children remain under treatment with MSF. Three clinics of the original 8 villages have now been closed as all children have completed their treatment for lead poisoning. We continue to provide treatment and follow-up in the 5 remaining villages. Treatment began in 2010 following the acute outbreak and high mortality rate at that time,” Dr Chouinard said.

    She added that MSF focuses on children, being the most vulnerable groups in any population.

    “As children under the age of 5 have not yet finished developing, they are at most risk of disease in general and also of contamination by lead poisoning.  This is why we have focused on children under five in our program. MSF completely funds the chelation treatment and all the other project related activities such as health education and promotion, outreach activities in the 5 remaining villages where MSF is providing treatment for lead poisoning,” MSF Head of Mission/Country Representative stressed.

    Unfortunately, while the residents of eight villages have had smiles return to their faces (remediation being a condition that has to be met before treatment can start), thousands of people in 30 villages are not that lucky (see the table). Yet, the MSF, which treats victims (only children under five years) of lead poisoning in all the eight communities that have been cleaned up, said it cannot administer treatment in un-remediated environments, since victims face the risk of re-contamination. An official of MSF said environmental remediation, involving removal of lead-poisoned soil and replacing same with clean one, is said to be the most expensive and time-consuming process, since it is mandatory it comes first before medical treatment can be administered  in order not to leave room for re-contamination. Even at that, only residential areas in the eight villages were remediated, leaving the farmlands and other areas unattended to. In essence, what this means is that thousands of children, women and others living in the 30 communities yet to be remediated are still in danger! “MSF has been involved in the 8 villages from the original lead poisoning crisis of 2010 due to acute mortality and morbidity related to lead poisoning. As an emergency medical organization, MSF focuses on the emergency situations.  MSF has lobbied the Ministry of Health to follow-up on the suspected contamination in 30 other villages by doing assessments and action planning in confirmed contaminated villages.  However, as far as we are aware, only one village has been assessed by the Ministry of Health but no action taken,” Dr Chouinard lamented.

    Even there are issues with the Igoli processing plants and  Wet Milling  Machines (crushers), which were procured at an undisclosed amount,   for  the  Safer  Mining  Programme and   installed  in three  mineral  processing  centers in the state:  Anka,  Bukkuyum  and  Maru  Local  Government  Areas. A good idea, the wet milling machines are to eliminate dust generation during gold ore processing, while the Igoli machines can enhance gold extraction without the application of mercury.  However, more than a year after the imported machines have been installed, crude and unsafe artisanal gold mining and processing still go on unabated in the villages. When this correspondent visited the sites where Igoli machines were said to have been installed, not only was the so-called facilities not in use; the sites, which are meant to serve hundreds of villagers whose primary means of livelihood is tied to digging deep for gold and processing same through hazardous methods, were covered with grasses.

    “Except for the remediation of our community, which they did by digging the surface of our soil and scrapping the walls of our houses, nothing else has changed. We still mine and process it the same way. They gave boots and other kits to some of our members, but these did not reach many of our people. Anyway, we hardly use their kits. Though we have tried by not bringing the rocks into our homes to process, we still mine the same way,” said Adamu Rabiu, chairman of Bagega Miners’ Association, who said he has been in the mining business for about 17 years.

    Other rights violations

    As a matter of fact, rights infractions festering in the bowels of these poor villages have attracted the attention of environmental activists and other social workers, who are livid that government is complicit in the lead poisoning disaster that ravaged the communities. In a petition brimming with vitriol, governments at all levels were pointedly accused of “endangering the lives of citizens.” Written by six Zamfara State-based leading non-governmental organizations, and submitted to the National Human Rights Commission on July 3, 2013, the petition said various agencies of government condoned too many atrocities, stressing that the “presence of children at mine sites also points to child labour violations which have been overlooked by the government.” The petitioners, including the Center for Community Excellence, Community Enlightenment and Development Initiative, Community Advancement Project, and Adolescent Health Center, also requested the NHRC to investigate all the weighty issues with a view to compensating all persons affected by the disaster.

    Also confirming various happenings that constitute huge threats to vulnerable children and women in the gold-rich villages, Global Rights (GR), an international human rights capacity-building non-governmental organization, flayed Nigerian powers that be for letting down the embattled villagers. Apart from child rights abuses, GR, in its own “fact note on the human rights and governance failure in the gold mining disaster,” also documented other infractions being committed against the villagers, including non-protection of socioeconomic rights of gold miners/host communities, violation of right to life, overlooking of dangerous practices in the gold-rich villages, and failure to take corrective actions when aware of these dangers. “When a government fails to enforce or protect the rights of its citizens when they are being violated by private persons or entities, (and the government has a duty to act to prevent such violations) then that government has breached the rights of citizens through its passive acquiescence of unlawful actions. Therefore, where government neglects its duty to actively regulate mining and implement existing mining laws to protect the rights of host communities, it amounts to the violation of individual and collective rights of these communities by government itself,” the human rights group said.

    And why is the situation still deplorable? The GR, in another assessment report, has an answer: lack of awareness on mining laws and policies on the part of host communities, failure to comply with mining laws on the part of mining companies and artisanal miners, and failure to effectively regulate the sector on the part of government. Consequently, the following challenges still stare the embattled communities in the face: loss of lives and livelihood, air and dust pollution, environmental/topographical degradation, land and water grabbing, socio-economic imbalances, and loss of self-determination. Besides the fact that “lack of cohesion and synergy between stakeholders further perpetuates underdevelopment and poverty in mining communities,” Global Rights lamented that there is a “palpable disconnect between host communities and the government on the one hand and between agencies and institutions relevant to the mining sector on the other hand.”

    As unsafe mining continues, lead exposures persist

    Although there is a glad tiding that some miners have stopped processing the ore in their homes, which exposes children to dangerous dust whenever they lend a helping hand to their parents, it is not yet uhuru in Zamfara villages. Here, it is an open secret that artisanal gold mining, despite its hazardous consequences, is still a lucrative business among indigent locals, who have since ditched their traditional subsistence farming, which is increasingly less attractive as prices of gold soar in the global market. According to miners who spoke with this reporter while he was crisscrossing affected villages and some mining sites in the state, gold mining is their only hope in their desperate struggle to wriggle out of poverty conundrum stymieing their lives.

    Despite a great hue and cry about lead poisoning in recent times, gold mining goes on without any molestation in all the villages, including in all the eight villages already remediated.  and 30 that are still awaiting remediation efforts.

    Going by the result of an epidemiological review of the lead poisoning disaster in the state, which was carried out by a team of experts in November 2013, “overall situation (in Zamfara villages) still remains an emergency.” And while it is true that the wave of lead contamination that hit several Zamfara villages in 2010 may not be happening with the same monstrosity that stole global headlines recently, lead poisoning is still an ongoing tragedy in all the afore-mentioned villages. In a capsule, the destruction of thousands of innocent lives as a result artisanal gold mining activities is still taking place on a slow but steady scale. Who will save this vulnerable segment of the population from the hazards of a lucrative but dangerous gold business that is silently ruining lives?

     

     

  • ‘Unsafe mining activities still taking place in the state’

    ‘Unsafe mining activities still taking place in the state’

    Adamu Kotorkoshi is the Executive Director of the Centre for Community Excellence, a Zamfara State-based NGO championing the cause of victims of lead poisoning. He expresses his disappointment regarding how the federal and state governments have responded to the lead poisoning crisis, saying the villages are not yet rid of hazardous artisanal mining activities. Assistant Editor ADEKUNLE YUSUF met him in Gusau, Zamfara State.

    How will you describe the magnitude or scale of lead poisoning in Zamfara villages?

    The magnitude of lead poisoning in Zamfara villages is very high and beyond any ordinary human imagination. In fact, it is an unprecedented disaster. It was a situation whereby about 38 communities were contaminated and over 700 children lost their lives, while hundreds of children, if not thousands are still battling with the problem of lead poisoning. Many pregnant women suffered miscarriages. Some of the men have poor erection or impotency. Therefore, the magnitude of lead poisoning in Zamfara villages is so far the worst in the history of lead poisoning disasters globally.

    Are you satisfied with the response of government to the problem?

    To be candid with you, I must say it without any reservation or apology to anybody or any government agency, that I am not satisfied with the response of government to the problem. In fact, I am highly disappointed with the way and manner both the federal and state governments handled the problem when it surfaced in 2010. It is so disheartening that a government claiming to be democratic in nature is playing to the gallery with the lives of its citizens during disasters. The government of Nigeria has completely failed to discharge its constitutional responsibility of protecting the lives of Zamfara State mining communities.

    How could you describe the government that deliberately refused to come to the aid of the victims of the lead poisoning that began in 2010 until 2013? It was in the year 2013 that the Federal Government released the so-called fund for remediation of the top soil, safer mining and heath component. But unfortunately, as I speak to you right now, it was only 8 communities that were remediated in about 38 communities that require urgent attention. One of the major challenges that contributed to the government failure in addressing the problem was the so-called administrative bottlenecks, as well as poor working relationship among the stakeholders. The Federal Government, Zamfara State Government as well as the three relevant ministries at the Federal level have poor coordination mechanism, which has hindered the affected communities to feel the impact of government intervention. In communities where there is abject poverty, illiteracy and complete government neglect in providing basic amenities, the people have no alternative than to indulge in unsafe mining for survival.

    What can you say about the mode of mining in the state now, whether it is safer now or not?

    Well the Federal Government through the Ministry for Mining and Steel Development made some effort in the area of sensitization on safer mining, workshops on safer mining as well as procurement of 3 Igoli machines and some wet milling machines for safer mining. But to be candid, it is just like a drop of water in the ocean. The major challenge was all the programmes and interventions were designed at Abuja without due consultation of relevant stakeholders that have a clear picture of the real happenings on the ground. Millions of naira was wasted in order to satisfy the will and need of some selfish elements at the expense of the affected communities.  Therefore, I am not satisfied with the safer mining programme put in place by the government. The mode of mining in Zamfara State is not safer. It is business as usual. The truth is, unsafe mining activities are currently taking place in various communities in Zamfara State.

    How true is the rumor that there is a resurgence of lead poisoning cases in some villages?

    It was not a rumor. As I told you earlier, re are about 38 communities affected by lead poisoning in Zamfara State, but it was only eight communities that were remediated. So basically there are about 30 contaminated communities that are yet to be remediated. And there is no any concrete measure in place as far as prevention of re-occurrence of lead poisoning in Zamfara state is concerned. The government came and spent the money allocated for the intervention, but I can only score government fifteen per cent. All the vehicles, machines and tools bought with the money have been taken to Abuja, when they are desperately needed here in Zamfara State. What are they doing with the equipment and vehicles bought for Zamfara lead poisoning disaster at Abuja? As I speak to you, there is no single machine (detector) left in Zamfara state.  So the resurgence of lead poisoning in Zamfara state is inevitable if adequate, necessary and timely measures are not put in place.

     

  • FROM SHANTIES TO PALATIAL ‘HOMES’:Lagos IDPs  celebrate  freedom from  mosquitoes, rats

    FROM SHANTIES TO PALATIAL ‘HOMES’:Lagos IDPs celebrate freedom from mosquitoes, rats

    IF tragedy is what is required to transform people’s lives from a state of misery to happiness, the victims of the fire incident that occurred at Iwaya, a suburb of Yaba area of Lagos State, early last month, would no doubt wish for more.

    The victims, most of who have been moved by the state government to the LASEMA Relief Camp at Agbowa, a suburb of Ikorodu area of the state, appeared to have shrugged off the misery they were plunged into by the incident and enjoying their lives.

    They have moved from wailing to wearing toothy smiles, from being emasculated to being vivacious and from being gloomy to celebrating.

    One of the inmates, Blessing Asehinde, had this to say about their new status: “We are living like kings and queens here. I use two fans with my children.  It has been so good all along and we are very grateful for all this. If given the opportunity, I would want to continue living here.”

    A visit to the camp reveals that this is the mood of all the inmates and they are celebrating it. Coming from a ghetto where basic facilities are in short supply and where little or no attention is paid to hygiene, they have come to see the camp as a paradise that must not be lost. Checks showed that they are celebrating because they are now enjoying certain facilities that were previously alien to them.

    Back in their razed shanty settlement, the victims, it was learnt, were defecating in canals and living at the mercy of mosquitoes and rats. But this has changed since they got to the camp and for them, it is worth celebrating. From defecating in canals, they said they now do so in glittering water closet and do not wait till night fall to have their bath.

    “Back there in Iwaya, we used to defecate in the canal but coming here, we are now using water closet. It is not that we were going to canal to ease ourselves. We used to do it in a place that was covered with roofing sheet and after defecating, we would fling it into canal.

    “That was the practice then but all that has stopped since we got here. We who used to do ‘shot put’ style of defecating now defecate in clean water closet,” Madam Aina Sotade, a 60 year- old refugee told The Nation.

    Bimpe Akintunde , a mother of four, said they  have been delivered from the practice of defecating in one place and going to throw it away in another place since they got to the camp. She said: “We used to defecate in nylon bag and after doing that, we would transfer it inside latrine. We now defecate in fine water closet. We have also been delivered from the pains of carrying buckets up and down looking for water. We have been bathing three times a day and under shower for that matter.

    “We wash our clothes as soon as they are dirty, unlike in Iwaya where we used to heap our dirty clothes in one corner of the house because water was not always available. When water would even be available for us to buy, the money to buy it might not be there. We have taken a breather from all that since we came here.”

    Blessing Peters, a 28-year-old refugee, however, took exceptions to defecating in canal while living in Iwaya. “Although I lived in a plank building back there, I created a place where I fitted water system to in my apartment because I could not use latrine like most people. There were so many places that you would visit there in Iwaya and you would be shocked that such places existed in such shanty community.”

     

    Freedom from mosquitoes and rats

    Before the fire incident sacked them from Iwaya, the refugees narrated that they were literarily living with mosquitoes and never saw anything unusual about it.

    After some weeks of leaving the area, Folasade Meduoye, an refugee, said she develops  nightmare anytime she thinks of going back to the community to attend to personal issues.  “I had wanted to go to Iwaya since the beginning of the week but the fear of the mosquitoes keeps discouraging me.

    “I am always crestfallen whenever I remember that I have something to do at Iwaya all because of the anger of the mosquitoes.  They may even be more aggressive this time around because they would feel that we abandoned them to be starving since we left there to come here.

    “If you see the mosquitoes at Iwaya, fear will grip you. If you sit outside to receive fresh air, you will not wait to pick your slippers if the mosquitoes should descend on you. They were in different shapes and colours.”

    Bimpe Akintunde , a mother of four, also spoke about the menace of mosquitoes in the razed community. Mosquitoes used to bite the hell out of our bodies at Iwaya because of the nature of the area  but that is not the case here. Even if you choose to sleep outside, you would not feel a single mosquito bite. You dare not try that Iwaya. If you do, you will end up in the hospital the following day,” she said.

    Blessing Peter, 28, and a single mother, spoke about the effrontery of the rats in their former settlement. She remarked:  “We have been free from the usual offensive smells that used to be the order of the day at Iwaya. We don’t have heap of refuse dump and mosquitoes in this place but we had all that at Iwaya.

    “I have also come to notice that the rats here are different from the ones we lived with at Iwaya. The Iwaya rats are completely local rodents, while the ones here are classical rats.  When you come across a rat at Iwaya, they would not run away.

    “Instead of running away, they would keep staring at you in a manner that suggests they were co-tenants. It was only when they were chased that they would run away. The rats here would not wait for you to chase them before they run. They run immediately they see you.”

     

    Sexual life of refugees in the camp

    Owing to the conditions they have found themselves, findings revealed that the sexual life of the refugees has not been the same since they arrived the camp. While the male appears to have lost appetite for sex, the females said they always find ways to satisfy their urge with their husbands.

    Chief Oluw17, 18, 19 20 AGBOWA 14-2-15.o Oladiji Sotade, a native doctor, said his state of mind does not encourage sexual matters to cross his mind, adding: “My wife and my children are here with me but we are not staying in the same apartment.  I have had no sexual urge since the incident happened and have never thought of sleeping with my wife since then. I am telling you that I have nothing to fall back on again and that the dress I am wearing now was given to me by somebody, you are talking about sex. What is sex?

    “Is it not when you are happy that your manhood will be erect? Even when I sleep these days, I always make sure I lock up very well to prevent anybody from coming to disturb me.”

    Okorie, another refugee, said he has always wished to make love with his wife but could not because they were not staying in the same hostel. “I have not been ‘kicking’ (making love) since we came here because I am not staying in the same hostel with my wife. We only come together during the day to keep each other’s company.

    “There is nothing I can do about it because the environment does not permit that. I have always suppressed the feeling any time it comes.  ‘Kicking’ is suspended till we have a conducive environment for that.”

    It is, however, a different ball game for Blessing Asehinde.  She said: “My husband is not staying here with us. He only comes to visit us. We do make love whenever he comes because I am in a family dormitory. We just have to do that because it would not be appropriate to deny him sexually.

    “I would equally not want to starve myself of sex unnecessarily just because I am in a relief camp. There is no big deal about it as long as I am doing it with my husband. If there were no room for it, we would adjust or find a way out.”

    Another refugee, Folasade Meduoye, said: “My hubby used to come here and when he does, we take time out to make love. If he doesn’t come, I do go out to meet him to satisfy his sexual needs and mine. I don’t think it is necessary to abstain when my hubby is there to fulfill his conjugal duties.”

    Bimpe said she has been on ‘sabbatical leave’ sexually because her husband is currently held in prison custody. I have had nothing to do with sex since my husband was arrested.  No guy in Iwaya had the courage to come and approach me for such because they respect my husband. I have also not cheapened myself before any man since then because of the love I have for my husband.  I have put sexual matters on hold for now,” she said.

     

    Refugees seek permanent residence in camp

    Apparently overwhelmed by the facilities in the new environment they have found themselves, the refugees wished the government could make them permanent residents in the camp because  they have no place to move into if they are asked to quit the camp.

    Bimpe said: “I have nowhere to go from here if the government asks me to leave because I have been the only one responsible for the up-keep of my four kids. My husband, Sulaimon Olomi, who should have been complementing my efforts is currently in Kirikiri prison.

    “I want to plead with the government to help me facilitate the release of my husband from the prison.  He was into land business and was arrested with some of his colleagues sometime in August, last year.

    “The arrest took place three days to our last born’s naming ceremony.  We have made spirited efforts to bail him but all that has been fruitless.  Some of his colleagues that were arrested together with him have been released but I don’t know why he is still being held.”

    Expressing her wish to continue to live in the camp, Madam Sotade, said: “I don’t want to go back to Iwaya for any reasons. I wish to continue to live here and also appreciate getting a job from the state government to make both ends meet because I have nothing I can all my own again.

    “The clothe I am putting on was given to me by somebody. Aside from it, I only have two others that were equally given to me by kind-hearted people. If the government asks us to leave this camp today, I will end up wandering about because I don’t have anywhere to put my head neither do I have a dime to get accommodation.”

     

    Refugees eulogise Lagos govt, LASEMA

    The refugees showered praises on the state government and the officials of the Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA) for the love they have shown to them since the incident occurred.

    “I really thank LASEMA for their support since the incident happened. I could not bring my first son to this place because he wanted to write his common entrance examination. It was the officials of LASEMA that gave me money to buy his books and bag.

    “There is nobody that would not prefer the life in this place.  We are being given three square meals every day and once that is taken away from the poverty in one’s life, the rest can be endured. It even appears they instructed power authorities not to deny us of power supply and whenever there is power outage, they would switch on generator to give us power supply,” Bimpe said.

    Also speaking, Chief Oluwo said: “We thank God for the help we have been receiving from the state government. Governor Fashola has proven that governance is about meeting the people at their points of needs. He and the officials of LASEMA have been very helpful and faithful to us.”

    Still locked up in his state of confusion, he added: “I have no hope or idea of what to do next with my life and family. I am even yet to recover from the shock because all the traditional things I used to do my work were consumed by the fire. The shock almost affected me mentally because most of the things that were burnt are not things you can get to buy in the market. I have been sick since then.

    “I didn’t visit the clinic in the camp for treatment. I have been trying to treat myself the native way by going into nearby bush to get leaves to make herbal drinks. I am better off now and would only plead with the government to further help us.

    “I lost all my traditional heritage as a herbalist to the incident.  It is very painful to me and that is why I have decided to come and hide myself here to recover from the shock that I suffered after the incident.  As a native doctor, there was nothing I could do when the incident occurred because it happened late in the night and caught us, I in particular, unawares.”

     

    Our babies are for  gov —Pregnant refugees

    The family of Lagos State governor, Mr. Babatunde Fasola may soon get additional five new born babies! The babies are coming from five expectant mothers at the relief camp, who have described their babies as Fasola’s children following the support he has been giving them since they were taken to the camp.

    17, 18, 19 20 AGBOWA 14-2-15.The women,  Ngozi Aloy, Fausat Hussein, Ezinne Okorie,  Kafaya Ifaniyi and Oluwaseyi Kayode, described the babies in their wombs as ‘government pikin’ and wished  that the governor would attend their naming ceremonies. They lamented that all the baby things they bought in preparation for the babies’ arrival were burnt in the incident that brought them to the camp.

    “The baby I am carrying is a child of the governor because his good gesture brought relief to the baby when all hope was lost. I was sleeping in my tiny shop with my children after the fire incident. It was my husband that asked me to come here. In fact, I would want the governor to come for the naming ceremony to see the baby that his magnanimity saved from being born by the road side,” Ngozi said.

    The woman, who is close to her delivery date, pleaded for more medical attention, adding: “I have not been sleeping well. My stomach aches me a lot and it always appears as if the baby is coming up to my chest region. I would appreciate more support from the government to be delivered safely.”

    In the same vein, Fausat remarked: “I wish to stay here and give birth. Even if I don’t, the baby is Fasola’s child because he played a role in keeping him safe in my womb when the incident occurred. All the baby things that I bought got burnt in the incident. I thank the governor for giving me succour. I would have been wandering about with this pregnancy but the governor, out of his magnanimity, put a roof over my head. This is indeed Fashola’s baby.”

    The camp commandant, Saibu Akeem, said: “The refugees have been very cooperative and  law-abiding. We have not had any problem with them since they came here. We thank them for also appreciating the efforts of LASEMA and the kind gestures of the state government.”

  • Succour for widows

    Succour for widows

    HANNAH Ibrahim lost her husband about five years ago. A full-time housewife, Hannah’s husband’s sudden death brought her life to ground zero, with no hope of crawling out of the deep hole.

    She said: “I lost my husband five years ago. He fell sick, and despite everything we did to make him well, he died. Since then, my children and I have had to survive on the benevolence of neighbours and friends. Life has been tough. All the smiles and joy in our family disappeared with the death of my husband.”

    But the smiles and joy, which fled from Hannah’s family returned recently when she, alongside 11 other widows received empowerment items donated by a non-governmental women organisation,  Oasis Women Organisation.

    For the widows, Year 2015 indeed started on a good note. One after the other, they stepped out with bright smiles pasted on their cheeks as they received the materials, ranging from grounding machines and deep freezers to refrigerators and cash.

    The annual event, organised by Oasis Women Organisation, an organisation comprising wives of  leaders of the Oodua People’s Congress (OPC), is part of the efforts to put smiles back on the lips of grieving women coping with the loss of their husbands.

    According to the chairperson of the organisation, Erelu Moji Adams, wife of the National Coordinator of the Oodua Peoples Congress (OPC), Otunba Gani Adams, the materials were distributed to the widows to help them break the choke of poverty and help them in the education of their children.

    The event, which held at the popular White House Hotel in Ikeja, Lagos, also witnessed a large turnout of guests from the academia, business and entertainment circles.

    In her welcome address, Erelu Mojisola Adams urged the women to seize the opportunity of the empowerment to give their lives a new boost.

    She said the women should make effort to invest in their children, adding that the children are capable of bringing back the missing happiness into their lives if they are well-trained.

    “I beg all of you to try and make sure that you train your children. The children are able to put smiles back in your life if you give them the right education.”

    Speaking on the importance of women in the society, the guest speaker, Prof. Sophie Oluwole, said the role of women in the society cannot be quantified. She urged the women to look at themselves and identify the strong points that can be utilised.

    “A jobless woman is a useless woman,” she said, adding that women need to live responsible life that can add value to yourself and humanity.”

    Prof. Oluwole called on the women to see themselves as the salt of the world and should put in place measures that will help in the training of their children in the case of the death of the family’s breadwinner.

    “I beg you all to make sure that you get yourselves engage in one business or the other, no matter how little. Make sure that the education of your children is your priority at all times. They are your future. And whatever you invest in them today, you shall reap tomorrow.”

    Also speaking, Prof. Kolawole Raheem, urged the widows to make sure that they use the materials distributed to them wisely, saying the women should work hard to prove that the organization was not wrong in its decision to donate the materials.

    In his goodwill message, Otunba Gani Adams urged members of Oasis Women Organisation to continue in the good works they have embarked on. While promising to keep assisting the organization, he called on the well-meaning Nigerians to hands with the organization to help the poor in the society.

  • Pain in Cross River community over demolition of houses

    Pain in Cross River community over demolition of houses

    THE people of Etap Ayip Kasuk II Qua Clan, a community of over 30,000 inhabitants in Calabar Municipality of Cross River State, have decried alleged unlawful demolition of their houses and properties by the state government without prior notice or any form of compensation.

    Village Head of Eta Ayip Kasuk Qua Clan II, His Highness Chief Ededem Ayito, said the situation has rendered them homeless.

    He lamented: “No one came to us prior to the time of the demolition, neither was any notice in form of a letter of warning sent to us.  All we saw were officials from Town Planning acting under the authority of Cross River State Ministry of Lands.

    16 Feature 14-02-2015.“The only money that was ever paid to my community was N650,000 for the economic trees cut down during the inception of the construction of the new airport bypass. No other money has been given ever since and now they have started demolishing our houses.

    “They want to take over 150 metres of both sides of the road, which will in no small way affect more than 500 houses and render thousands more homeless. Many people are now living in anxiety because they can come at any time for mass demolition.”

    The secretary of Etap Ayip Town Council, Prince Innocent Agbor Okon, said all the landlords in the community had lodgment certificates and had been living in the area for more 20 years.

    He said: “Many people in the community are now stranded, and this is a huge threat to the very existence of the people of Etay Ayip Kasuk  II Qua Clan. We need the ministry involved to follow due process in this matter and do what is right. As it stands, we don’t even know our fate.”

    A landlord in the area, Mr. James Effiong, also said it was like a movie when they came to his place and started punching the walls of his house.

    “I had to move my wife and kids to my brother’s place for safety, although they only created holes on my building which they only marked on Monday and backdated to December 19, 2014 without any notice, but they didn’t touch my neighbour’s house because he is a naval officer. I just believe it is political because I don’t see why they would skip some houses and demolish others.”

    When contacted on the phone, the Commissioner for Lands and Housing, Surveyor Ralph Uche, said all compensations had been taken care of.

    He said a company was in charge of compensations.

    Uche said the only challenge they had initially was funds and when the money was available, they would swing into action.

  • EFCC: Blazing the  trail in three years

    EFCC: Blazing the trail in three years

    Given the scathing criticism against the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) in recent times, Assistant Editor, Blessing Olaifa, examines the records of the anti-graft agency in the past three years, bringing into focus the achievements of the Ibrahim Lamorde-led agency.

    Going by the records of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), the fight against corruption has been in upward swing for the past three years. Notwithstanding public perception and criticism against the anti-graft agency, especially in recent times, the EFCC believes  some grounds have been covered as far as its mandate is concerned.

    A school of thought however, believes that the deep-rooted and perverse nature of corruption in Nigeria only the war on corruption would not be an easy task for the agency. Yet others believe, the agency was only scratching the surface of the rot. Investigations  revealed that inspite of the scratching criticism against the leadership, the agency has remained focused and has pursued some cases to logical ends, making recoveries and obtaining sentences and favourable judgment against culprits.

    From the look of things, criticism against the agency in recent times seemed to have fuelled the resolve of the EFCC to go the extra mile to rid the country of corruption, a resolve that has undoubtedly yielded positive results.

    The former Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Kanu Agabi (SAN), recently alluded to the unwavering efforts of the anti-graft agency in its efforts to rid the country of economic and financial crimes. While encouraging staff of the Commission at a recent event, he expressed unalloyed belief that the EFCC’s war against corruption was a worthwhile one that can be won.

    “Let every Nigerian become corrupt and violent, yet corruption and violence shall remain illegal and unlawful and wrong,” he said. “In this battle, the EFCC is the lion and corruption is the lamb. Be assured that come what may, you shall make this lamb to lie down. Be also encouraged by the progress you have made in a short time.”

    Agabi’s view was considered succinct, and a morale booster for staff of EFCC considering the fact that the Ibrahim Lamorde-led EFCC has not relented in its efforts geared towards redeeming the image of Nigeria in the international community. The efforts have also yielded results, an official of the EFCC who would not want to be mentioned said.

    According to the EFCC records, in 2013, the anti-graft agency announced that it recorded 117 convictions. This development to the agency was no mean feat in the light of the challenges in the Nigerian Judicial system.

    Latest statistics indicate that the Commission surpassed the 2013 convictions considering that in 2014, 126 convictions were obtained. Again, when viewed against the 64, 68 and 67 convictions recorded in 2009, 2010 and 2011 respectively, the agency is of the opinion that that there is something that the EFCC under Lamorde has been able to develop, and get right with investigation and prosecution of cases.

    According to information obtained from the EFCC, in addition to achieving more convictions in the past year, the anti-graft body has also achieved more in assets recovery.

    In the annual report submitted yearly to the National Assembly, the anti-graft agency disclosed that in 2011, it recovered N9,755,924,635.69. The figures for 2012 was given as N41,548,665,730.69 and $1,520,410.00. That of 2013 was listed as N11,276,108,536.81; $2,190,127.00; 45,585.00 pounds and 7,090.00 euros.

    It was discovered that under the Lamorde’s chairmanship, the Commission pursued the trial of former state governors and other politically exposed persons accused of corruption. Cases involving Saminu Turaki, governor of Jigawa State; Chimaroke Nnamani, former governor of Enugu State; Rashidi Ladoja, former governor of Oyo State; Alao-Akala, former governor of Oyo State; Orji Uzor Kalu, former governor of Abia state; Athahiru Bafarawa, former governor of Sokoto State; Akwe Doma, former governor of Nasarawa State; Gbenga Daniel, former governor of Oguns State; Joshua Dariye, former governor of Plateau State; Abdullahi Adamu, former governor of Nasarawa state; Danjuma Goje, former governor of Gombe state; Timipre Sylva, former governor of Bayelsa State and Abubakar Audu, former governor of Kogi State are on-going in courts across the country.

    Also, investigations showed that the former governor of Edo State, Lucky Igbinedion was re-arraigned on fresh charges before a Federal High Court, Benin over a N25billion scam. Trial has reached the stage of final addresses by counsel. Besides, the Commission took steps to seize some of his alleged proceeds of crime.

    The EFCC records also showed that other politically exposed persons that were investigated and are currently being prosecuted by the EFCC under Lamorde include directors of the Ondo State Oil Producing Areas Development Commission. Debo Ajimuda, chairman of the Commission and four other officials: Mann Omobayi Alli, Ikuomola Vincent, Aghone, Mofolabomi Monday and Olayinka Olaitan Joseph. They are being prosecuted before a Federal High Court, Akure on 13 counts of fraud, embezzlement and conspiracy to defraud the state of N540 million.

    In Edo State, the quartet of Joseph Sule Emoabino, David Eson Igbinoba, Agbator Gaskin Efe and Dr. Simon Imuekeme were arraigned before Justice Esther Edigin of the Edo State High Court, Benin City on an 8-count charge bordering on diversion of N113 million. According to records they were chairman, secretary, director of Finance and Accounts of the State Universal Basic Education Board and Secretary to Edo State Government respectively, and are alleged to have fraudulently diverted the said sum to a project not covered by the intervention funds allocated by the State Universal Basic Education.

    In April last year, the Commission’s dragnet spread to Sokoto State, as Mohammed Bello Abubakar and Abubakar Abdullahi Ahmed, permanent secretary and deputy director, Ministry for Local Government and Community Development, were arraigned by the EFCC.

    The duo are being prosecuted on a 43-count charge bordering on conspiracy, forgery and money laundering . Also in neighbouring Kebbi State, the Commission docked the Accountant General, Alhaji Mohammed Arzika Dakingari, and Musa Yusuf, Managing Director, Beal Construction Nigeria Limited, before Justice Sabiu Bala of Kebbi State High Court, Birnin-Kebbi on a 20-count charge bordering on conspiracy, obtaining by false pretence and abuse of office.

    Dakingari’s counterpart in Taraba State, Joel Joseph Lenbang, was equally ensnared by the anti graft agency and faces multiple charges of stealing and money laundering to the tune of N1.56 billion

    Investigation showed that on July 3, 2014 at Asaba, the administrative capital of Delta State, the Commission arraigned the former executive secretary of Delta State Scholarship Board, Peter Amromanoh and the chief accountant, Eloho Otiede before Justice C. O Emifoniye of the Delta State High Court, Asaba on a 5-count charge bordering on conspiracy and stealing. Amromanoh is alleged to have abused his office by approving a sum of N36m (Thirty-Six Million Naira) which is above his official approval limit of N1million.

    The EFCC officials have dismissed allegations of sacred cows or selective prosecution at various fora, insisting that cases are treated based on merit and evidence available before the commission, especially after investigations. The Commission’s anti-corruption war does not respect anybody or treat any one as sacred cow, EFCC’s Deputy Director of Public Affairs, Osita Nwaja said at a media workshop in Enugu.

    During the period under review the Chairman of Bi-Courtney Limited, Chief Wale Babalakin was arrested and docked on money laundering allegations. Babalakin, Alex Okoh and three companies: Stabilini Visioni Limited, Bi-Courtney Limited and Renix Nigeria Limited are alleged to have between May 2006 and December 2006 corruptly conferred benefits on former Governor of Delta State, James Onanefe Ibori on account of contracts awarded by Delta State government to Stabilini Visioni Limited by transferring the monies through third parties to Erin Aviation account in Mauritius for the purchase of Challenger Jet Aircraft by the said James Ibori. Trial, according to EFCC is on-going on the matter.

    The Nation learnt that the EFCC under Lamorde successfully appealed the ruling of Justice Marcel Justice Awokulehin that quashed all 170-count money laundering charge against James Ibori. The Court of Appeal in Benin in May, ruled that Awokulehin erred in the ruling and ordered that the matter be reassigned. This invariably means that Ibori will be tried in Nigeria upon completion of his jail term in the United Kingdom.

    Under Lamorde’s leadership, it was gathered that the EFCC also initiated a process that eventually culminated in the ruling by a Federal High Court, Abuja ceding ownership of the controversial $15 million Ibori bribe money to the Federal Government after a legal battle that pitted the Commission against the Delta State Government which belatedly claimed ownership of the fund.

    Another area where far reaching impact has been made by the Lamorde-led EFCC is in checking the malfeasance in pension administration. Before his coming to the saddle, pension administration in Nigeria had become a cesspool of corruption. Many public servants who served the country meritoriously were consigned to a life of destitution upon retirement, no thanks to the activities of a cabal that turned pension administration to veritable gold mine.

    According to EFCC records, sanity has been restored to a considerable level to the system, given the vigorous law enforcement activities of the EFCC, which resulted in the arrest and prosecution of senior officials of both Police Pension and the Pension office in the office of the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation.

    The EFCC also claimed that its searchlight has been focused on the petroleum industry, unearthing mindboggling fraud that had reeked through the industry. Investigation led to the trial of persons and organisations indicted in the mindless abuse of the Petroleum Support Fund in the guise of subsidy for imported fuel. This formed the bulk of the economic and financial crimes cases successfully charged to court by the EFCC in 2012 and 2013.

    A few months ago two Indians – Sailesh Kumar Singh, and Chadrashekar Sharma were jailed, after successful prosecution by the Commission for oil theft. The duo were among 12 suspected oil thieves arrested in Brass, Bayelsa State in 2012 by the Joint Task Force with 157,822 litres of suspected stolen crude oil.

    They are to serve 15 years imprisonment. They are among a long list of oil thieves that have been successfully prosecuted by the EFCC.

    It is noteworthy that the Commission from January 2013 till date investigated 21 cases of crude oil theft. Eleven tanker vessels and 16 tanker trucks were recovered, while 81 suspects have been charged to Court over the cases.

    Officials of the Commission have lauded the leadership of the commission under Lamorde, saying global confidence in the EFCC has been restored. According to them before he came on board, credibility of the agency was at an all-time low, with critical partners doubting its commitment to the anti-graft war. A number of donor organisations and law enforcement agencies had actually severed ties with the EFCC or drastically scaled down their level of engagement, it was learnt. The tide has changed with Lamorde’s emergence as EFCC boss, EFCC top officials insisted as many donor organizations and LEAs are now eager to do business with the agency.

    Investigation revealed that operatives of the Commission travelled to Perth, Australia and Madrid, Spain in April 2014 to work with the West Australian and Spanish National Police. Through this program, they were able to assist the host Agencies in pending trans-national investigations and also gain exposure in international best practices. The Australian trip was in part facilitated by the Commonwealth Office, to which the agency owe a great debt of gratitude. The Commission in the last one year also hosted Investigators and prosecutors from Zambia, United States, United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Niger, World Bank and African Development Bank.

    The agency in its belief in the need to carry along everybody in the war on corruption also strengthened its communications section with the creation of a directorate of Public affairs which in the last three years, stepped up the Commission’s sensitization efforts through the three units in the department: Media and Publicity Unit, Public Interface and Enlightenment and Re-orientation Units

    It was gathered that as part of efforts to galvanize the crusade against corruption, the Commission in November 2014, signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), with credible Civil Society Organisations to partner in the fight against corruption. This, it was learnt was basically on the platform of the reformed Anticorruption Revolution (ANCOR), which is now known as the Anticorruption and Economic and Financial Crimes Support Network (ACE-Network).

  • Publications on Ukpabi Asika in the offing

    A big multimedia project featuring a website, two book launches, a documentary and an exhibition highlighting the life and times and activities in and out of office of Ajie Dr Ukpabi Asika, Administrator of former East Central State, is to be unveiled soon.

    Asika served from 28 October 1967 – July 1975 having been appointed by General Yakubu Gowon to replace Col Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu w ho was governor of Eastern Region.

    According to Obodoechina Asika,  son of the erudite scholar who was the only civilian among the soldiers in the realms of Nigeria leadership  during and immediately after the Nigeria Civil War,  “the multimedia project is one of the biggest projects on any known Nigerian leader and has been crafted over the past three years to throw light on the man and his life and his views about Nigeria. It consists of a website, a full archive of documents, letters, important policy information and private communications”.

    Asika added:”The website contains  a documentary; an insight into the man and his life while there are  over 60 interviews with friends, family members and principal actors from all sides of his life and work.

    Also expected  are  the book launches; Ukpabi Asika in his own words, a compendium of his words,  speeches, letters, policies and other important works.

    The project also features an exhibition comprising over 30, 000  images, documents, artifacts, antiquities and memorabilia collected during his eight years of exemplary reign over the place that now has five states namely; Enugu, Anambra, Imo, Abia and Ebonyi.

    Speaking further, Asika while thanking those who have already given their time for the success of the project, said the family and friends hope to take this multi-media project conceptualised, funded and driven by the family without external support on an international road show with the support of those who knew and loved Dr Ukpabi Asika.

  • Gangs of Lagos

    Gangs of Lagos

    Raimi Asegbe, 26, prowled the streets with habitual grace on a Thursday evening in Ilupeju. The day was October 30 and as he picked his way through the Lagos neighbourhood, death kept pace at his heels with the savage intent of a beast.

    Few minutes past 8pm, while worshippers at a nearby mosque completed Ishai, the Muslim evening prayer, five young men emerged from the shadows on motorcycles. At their arrival, they fired random shots into the air apparently to scare people. They were looking for Asegbe.

    No sooner they sighted him on the road than they hit him with a metal object to weaken him. Asegbe, according to an eye witness, tried to run but he was overpowered. The gang of five descended upon him with consummate brutishness and skill; cruising with bizarre dexterity, the assailants, believed to be members of a notorious cult group, shot Asegbe at close range, killing him on the spot.

    For about 20 minutes, the neighbourhood was terrified by the gory incident. Some residents said the assailants did not leave immediately after the incident. They allegedly threatened to kill more people.

    Asegbe reportedly belonged to a rival gang that invaded Kayode Street in Onipanu, Mushin two days earlier  on Tuesday October 28 to be precise  killing two persons from the opposing gang that killed him in a reprisal attack.

    A resident, who saw the late Asegbe 30 minutes before he was killed, said: “I saw him with a lady and another man in Iseyin Street at 7:30pm. He stopped by at a house and played with some people for about 15 minutes before he left. He walked towards Oyewole Street but 30 minutes later, we heard gunshots. We initially did not know where the shots were fired but I later got a call from a friend, who lives on Ilupeju Road, telling me that Raimi had been killed by a five-man gang. We rushed to the scene and saw his lifeless body in pool of blood.”

    The late Asegbe is survived by aged parents, three wives and seven children.

     

    Asegbe’s sin

    On October 28, two youths were killed by the Supreme Eiye Confraternity (SEC) at a restaurant on Kayode Street in Onipanu. The deceased, said to be members of Black Axe Confraternity, were reportedly having a good time when the opposing Eiye cult group stormed the restaurant to attack them. The late Asegbe was allegedly a SEC member, hence, his brutal murder is suspected to be a reprisal attack.

     

    Similar attacks

    From January, several youths have been killed in the ongoing gang war ravaging Mushin, Fadeyi and Onipanu in Lagos. The attacks are customarily carried out in mafia-execution style. For instance, in February, an alleged member of Eiye confraternity, known as Segun, was killed in Mushin by a bandit group led by a youth known as Oyinbo (his real name unknown) on Ajisegiri Street. The late Segun was said to be the hit man for SEC.

    Segun was stabbed several times with a dagger on the neck and chest before he was shot to death by his assailants. Prior to his execution, the deceased had reportedly gone on a mission to kill Oyinbo, an outlaw in the area. When he did not see him, he reportedly called Oyinbo on the phone and asked him to come out from his hideout for a fight. Oyinbo, however, told the late Segun to give him 10 minutes to finish what he was doing and promised to meet him wherever he wished for the fight.

    Twenty minutes later, Segun was killed. He was attacked at a local canteen, where he had gone to eat, perhaps in preparation for the grisly encounter with Oyinbo. Three weeks later, a member of Oyinbo’s group, identified as Lawal, was murdered in revenge. The reprisal was done before Lawal’s family members in Iyana Ipaja ,Lagos, where he fled to escape being killed.

    In June, Oyinbo reportedly killed another member of Eiye confraternity at a meeting and  disappeared to escape arrest.

    In August, the late Segun’s SEC group however, recorded a ‘breakthrough’ killing Oyinbo in a lottery kiosk located on Ogunmokun Street. The Nation investigations revealed that the incident happened in the presence of an anti-riot police squad stationed in the area to forestall violence. No arrest was made; the assailants, who, witnesses said, were armed with sophisticated guns, left the scene without confrontation by anyone. From September, more than eight youths have been killed in reprisals.

    In another development, a a recent fracas erupted with the killing of Sheriff Alasia, a lottery agent, on October 13. The late Sheriff was attacked in his kiosk in Ogunmokun area of Mushin.

    In the evening of the same day, Tunde, who was reportedly one of the late Sheriff’s assailants, was shot dead in reprisal and his head was chopped off.

    The police recovered the severed head of a 28-year-old Tunde, who was killed while smoking indian hemp in Akala street. The late Tunde was said to be a Fadeyi resident and his head was recovered on Ojelade Street, Fadeyi, on October 16 by security operatives from the Alakara Police Station.

    A resident said: “Tunde’s body was recovered by the police immediately after he was killed but his head remained missing for almost four days. The killers were playing soccer with the deceased’s head in the neighbourhood and we reported to the police. On Thursday night, policemen came to Ojelade Street to recover the head.”

     

    Mushin…the descent

    Mushin has maintained a reputation of violence, perhaps since the creation of Lagos State. But this could not be said of Ilupeju, a nearby community, which used to be relatively peaceful. But in the last five years, the once quiet neighbourhood has witnessed vicious attacks that have claimed the life of many, including personal friends and acquaintances.

     

    From the campuses on to the streets

    The Nation investigations reveal the ugly manifestations of confraternity wars in Nigeria. Until recently, cult activities were an exclusive feature of Nigerian tertiary institutions. Frequent fracas erupted between rival cult groups on university and polytechnic campuses but hardly spilled to the streets.

    “It was like an unwritten rule of engagement. Rival cult groups attacked each other on the campuses but no group  launched an attack against a member of another cult group outside the campus. No one dared attack a rival cult member at home. Each cult member’s home was like a hallowed ground, a sanctuary that evoked the respect of all and sundry. That was because we respected the institution of the family. Once when we went to hit (attack) one notorious Eiye (SEC) boy, we met his mother and sisters in his room. We could not drop (kill) him like we planned to but we brushed (beat) him severely. And that was even in his rented apartment outside the school campus,” disclosed Felix, a banker and former ‘butcher’ with the Black Axe confraternity.

    It’s a short haul from Felix’s era and the former ‘hitman’ admitted his shock over the metamorphosis of campus confraternities and spill over of their activities on to the streets.

    In Lagos, for instance, erstwhile peaceful neighbourhoods of Bariga, Festac, Ojodu, Mushin, Ojo, Somolu, Okokomaiko, Yaba, Surulere, Lagos Island and Ikorodu have in recent times imploded to fierce clashes between rival cult groups, leading to deaths and destruction of properties worth millions of naira.

    In Mushin, an enduring confraternity war has replaced the turf battles and armed robbery that characterised the area. At least five persons, among them, a final year Nigerian student who schooled at the North American University Houdegbe, in Benin Republic, were killed in a renewed cult war in the area. The victim, Adeolu Otenaike, 26, left Benin Republic on March 18, 2013 to celebrate the purchase of a car with his friends. He was reportedly accosted while seeing his friends off, beaten and shot in the head and neck.

    One of his friends simply identified as Chinedu, who managed to escape, reportedly sustained injuries. The same day, four other persons whose identities were given simply as Martins, Olosa, Fadeyi and Adeyemi were also killed at different spots in Mushin.

    Rival cultists in Somolu and Ketu areas of Lagos clashed recently, leaving four persons dead and several others injured. In Ajelogo area of Ketu, Nigeria, it was gathered that suspected members of Eiye confraternity stormed a suspected rival’s home in the wee hours of Monday morning. They flung his nine-month old baby off the bed, dragged him outside and clubbed him to death but not until they had taken turns in raping his wife in front of him.

    The inclusion of street urchins, commercial bus and motorcycle drivers, according to Biodun Gbolagade a.k.a Simple, a bar operator and Buccaneer, “has worsened everything.”

    Gbolagade bemoaned the inclusion of motor park urchins into the various confraternities, particularly the Buccaneer, SEC and Black Axe groups, as a worrisome development. “These hoodlums that they are blending (initiating) lack proper orientation. Consequently, they conduct themselves like ordinary hoodlums that they are, maiming and killing each other and innocent members of the public at the slightest provocation,” lamented Gbolagade.

    Indeed, street urchins and members of transport unions in the areas openly display their membership of cult groups. It is no longer a strange sight to see commercial motorcycle operators known as Okada riders, display the colours of the various cult groups that they belong to. Those claiming membership of SEC display the blue colour, Buccaneer, yellow colour and the Black Axe’s black colour. On several occasions, clashes erupt over non-members allegedly donning colours perceived as symbols of a particular cult group.

    A new manifestation of the confraternity ogre reposes in cultists’ deployment as mercenaries and land grabbers by influential members of the public. In rural areas of Itele, Iyana Ipaja, Ogijo and Igbo Olomu, land merchants frequently employ cultists as ajagungbale, land grabbers or mercenaries over land matters.

     

    Lagos gangs at a glance

    In recent past, Lagos has suffered the onslaught of certain fearful gangs terrorising the mainland, Isale-Eko and Stadium/Barrack, axis of Lagos Island. The most notorious amongst them was the Kainkain gang of Isale Eko; this gang was persistently blamed for serial criminal acts including rape, mobile phone theft, pick-pocketing and armed robbery. The leader of the group, ‘Surutu,’ allegedly relocated from the neighbourhood after he was shot.

    And residents of Ajegunle otherwise known as Lagos’ jungle city will not forget in a hurry, their ordeal in the hands of One Million Boys (OMB), a gang of hoodlums that terrorised the area before they were arrested by the police. At inception, 20 boys in Ajegunle united to form the association with the original intent to fight perceived injustices synonymous with the township. Subsequently, the gang grew in strength and numbers and soon they formed a vigilance group to checkmate and fight crime and criminality in the community. But somewhere along the way, some members of the association hijacked it and turned a hitherto crime fighting group into a sinister one; terrorising the entire community, raping hapless women and robbing defenseless residents.

    Residents revealed that the group metamorphosed into a gang of outlaws. “Before they invaded any community or street, they usually wrote a letter to inform the residents. They sent the letter through a courier, usually a minor, to the head of that street or the landlord association. And when they come, they would rob from one house to the other, raping young girls and even married women. There was one bizarre situation when members of the group allegedly raped a pregnant woman to death and forced a father to sleep with his daughter with a threat that if he did not comply, he would be killed. Of course, the man complied with their wish, while they laughed maniacally.

    They operated with such impunity until their operation in Agugu Street, where they killed a young man, after robbing a resident. The community could not take it any longer and they sent an SOS to the Commissioner of Police, Umaru Manko, who issued a directive for their arrest. The police was able to arrest over 400 suspected members of the group.

    The raid was led by Area B Command Apapa, comprising Apapa, Ajegunle, Tolu, Trinity, Amukoko, Ijora Badia, Layeni and Kirikiri Police divisions. “The onslaught was led by the Area Commander, Mohammed Alli.

    Ijaya Boys (Minstrels of fear) comprise a group of 17 boys, all school drop-outs except their leader who never attended high school. The latter, a former butcher, assembled young boys in his area in Alimosho to form a gang with a purported mission to right the wrongs in their community. No sooner they formed the gang, than he led them in two bloody turf wars in which they succeeded in dislodging two former gangs that held sway in their neighbourhood. They operate with knives, cudgels, guns and dangerous charms.

    Several gangs are linked to criminal operations between Surulere and Lagos Island, where several house burglaries and armed robberies are perpetrated and the stolen valuables are sold often at ridiculous prices. Most gangs are principally concerned with fighting and conquering other young male gangs from one street or district to another in violent turf wars to establish their dominance. After establishing their dominance in any neighbourhood, they engage in a peculiar brand of hustle by which they perpetrate scams, bullying, political violence and armed robbery, according to Ikuomola Adediran Daniel (PhD), Department of Sociology, Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba-Akoko, Ondo State.

     

    Living by the street code

    Analysing the street code of the ubiquitous gang member, Dr. Ikuomola stated that within the social world of the gang member, familial and peer group attachments are essential in terms of ‘back up’ and possible retribution for an act of bullying, violence and robbery. “As such, when a group of boys from ‘rush’ or ‘jack’ a young person  either from their hood or a surrounding neighbourhood  with no obvious familial or peer group attachments, most young males in public will just shrug their shoulders as if to say ‘well that’s just how things are on the street.’ However, in private the young males will acknowledge that the assaulters involved were out of order, they shouldn’t have picked on an innocent.”

    Yet the code of the street dictates that sympathy for the victim is at best fleeting and generally non-sympathetic, as the commonly held view amongst young males is that ‘they’ (victim) should not have allowed themselves to be picked on so easily. On the other hand, when the victim is a known but disliked individual  usually a rapscallion who does not play by the rules,  perhaps he attacks people indiscriminately, harassing young girls at street corners and therefore creating lots of potential enemies within the neighbourhood,  the code of the street determines that the defaulter probably got what he deserved, as he was beginning to believe too much ‘in his own hype,’ running about upsetting ‘too many of the area boys’ in the neighbourhood.

     

    Psychology of a gang-banger

    According to Omotoke Iyunade, a social psychologist, the harsh living conditions and endemic poverty in the slums wreak untold havoc on the inhabitants, the children in particular. “Such children having undergone a gruesome childhood characterised by an insidious socialisation process eventually mature into what could be termed damaged youth.”

    According to her, young people in the slums are often the victim of non-existent or dysfunctional family structures, lack of education and opportunities, race and class-based discrimination. This militarizes them and forces them to adopt a hostile attitude to the world. Ultimately, they are considered enemies of the state by law enforcers and the society at large and this is due to their hostile disposition and inclinations for violence.

    Shanty life is such that vulnerable children and youths are exposed to considerable amount of hazards and they face a number of problems ranging from financial problems to harassment and extortions from police and the ubiquitous area boys; eventually, many of such vulnerable youth evolve to become area boys. As area boys, they learn to perpetuate the insecurity, severe beatings and fighting, sexual abuse (especially of the females) and health hazards that they had erstwhile been exposed to as vulnerable minors.

    According to Patrick Edewor, PhD, Department of Sociology, Covenant University, the presence of street children (and homeless children and youth) is an indictment of the way the society construes its priorities. “These children and youths suffer considerable amount of hardship. Although they are ignored by the society, they hope to become productive members of the society,” he noted.

    Gangs of area boys are composed of mainly young males aged 11 to 25 years and they are a typical characteristic of the state. These gangs provide young people with a sense of belonging and social identity, and as they operate in shadow economies, they make up for the lack of educational and job opportunities.

    Within gangs, young men find a way to make a living. Many of them primarily commit serious crimes such as robbery and burglary with the intention of exchanging the stolen goods for cash. The money earned from such crimes is invested in patronising sex workers, gambling and other guilty pleasures. Others expend it on status enhancement drives such as ‘looking good,’ eating out, smoking cannabis, cocaine or crack, and clubbing.

    In Lagos, many gang members and area boys act as violent brokers in parallel structures, having created an income for themselves via forced extortions (owo ile) and narcotics peddling, playing guard of individual property or public space in situations of inadequate or ineffective police presence. Over time, they have become an accepted part of the urban landscape even as they become willing tools and available mercenaries for various forms of political, ethnic and religious criminal contracts in the process.

    Some gang bangers, however, start out from promising beginnings. According to a childhood acquaintance of late Segun, who simply identified himself as Adewale, the latter started out promisingly. “I met him at an evening coaching class on Shokunbi Street in Mushin. Although, he was a year junior,  we used to attend mathematics class together. He was brilliant. But when he was unable to gain admission into a higher institution, he became frustrated and joined a gang of street urchins. He gained an infamous popularity in 2010 when he reportedly shot someone 35 times in the thigh at a street carnival in Onipanu. Since then, he became notorious and a serial killer until he was killed in February by a gang of cultists.”

    Late Shina Ajah also presents a peculiar case. Late Ajah, a burly figure, was 24 at the time of his death. He was killed in front of an eatery in Onipanu, Mushin. According to Wale, Shina Ajah was violent and showed no mercy to anyone who dared cross him. “There was an incident, which took the residents of Oluwakemi Street in Onipanu by surprise. He reportedly stormed a christening ceremony and forcefully took away the eight-day-old baby in the full glare of the residents. What was the baby’s sin? The baby’s father, who is a tout, had a disagreement with the late Shina Ajah days earlier. Ajah threatened to cut the baby into pieces should his father refuse to come out of hiding. It took the heartfelt plea of clerics, who came for the ceremony to get the late Ajah to release the baby to her mother. A few months after the incident, Shina Ajah was shot dead by an unknown gang.

     

    Stemming the menace

    According to Dr. Ikuomola, a youthful population can be a significant and positive asset to a country and its development, but if left to its own devices, that is, marginalised and exploited, they can also turn against the society and become a force of destruction. The latter suggested that in order to prevent such situation, the government should create an environment that will improve the quality of nation’s education system through investments in free technical education that will have meaningful impact on the youth and the quest for self reliance and development. In the long run this will influence and increase youths employment outcomes. He also suggested that “policies should be put in place at all levels for young men and women to have the same opportunities in job prospecting. Emphasis should also be placed on vulnerable groups, especially children and youths; to avoid child labour and exploitation, street life and the breeding of street urchins in cities.”

    While suggestions like Ikuomola’s may in part be the palliative to the scourge of area boys in the state, further priority strategies may have to be tailored to the reorientation of the family structure, parenting and the Lagos youth, according Morenike Abass, a school proprietor and educational psychologist. Exactly how fragile the situation is in the state is vividly illustrated by the exploits and premature deaths of random teenagers like Asegbe, Shina Ajah, Segun  and so many others.