Category: Special Report

  • Haunted by disaster

    Haunted by disaster

    Following unprecedented flood in some states last year as a result of the sudden discharge of water from the Lagdo Dam in Cameroun, the Federal Government opened bilateral talks with the country last week. In this piece, our MANAGING EDITOR, NORTHERN OPERATION, YUSUF ALLI, who was in Yaoundé, reviews the negotiation and outcome of the session, which overstretched the two teams 

    Beyond the territorial dispute over Bakassi Peninsula in the recent past, Nigeria and the Republic of Cameroon came together last week to address the flood menace which ravaged the two nations in 2012 as a result of the release of excess water from Lagdo Dam. For three days, a 24-man delegation from Nigeria, led by the Minister of Water Resources, Mrs. Sarah Ochekpe, had a series of brainstorming session and shuttles to the furious Lagdo Dam in the North-Central Province in Cameroon with the Minister of Water and Energy, Basile Atangana Kouna.

    The delegation included Nigeria’s High Commissioner to Cameroon, Hajiya Hadiza Mustapha; the Director-General of the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), Alhaji Muhammad Sani Sidi and Commissioners for Water Resources from Kogi, Adamawa, Taraba and Benue states. An added value to it was another round of discussion which centered on the future of Lake Nyos.

    Although it was a tedious trip which went into midnight, the sacrifice underscored the determination of the two countries to avert a reoccurrence of last year’s flood. Going by statistics, both countries suffered the pangs of the flood such that the bilateral session on how to manage water from Lagdo Dam and the entire Benue Basin was inevitable.

    REVISITING THE FURY OF LAGDO DAM

    A brief on the Lagdo dam showed that it was constructed between 1977 and 1982 by China International Water & Electric Corp, though it was not put into use until 1983. The dam, which is 308 metres long, 40 metres high and 9 metres thick, is on River Benue and about 60 kilometres away from Garoua, the capital of North-Central Province of Cameroon. Besides providing for the irrigation of about 15,000 hectares of crops downstream, Cameroon currently generates about 72MW of electricity from the dam through an international power firm, AES SONEL.

    Little was known of the dam until excess water was released from it on August 24, 2012, leading to devastating flood which took a toll on states in the lower belt of River Benue. A brief from the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) gave details on the link between Lagdo Dam and states in the North-East and North-Central geopolitical zones, and how Nigeria became susceptible to flood last year.

    The document states: “Lagdo dam is located on the Adamawa Plateau of the Northern Province of the Republic of Cameroon which shares border with the North-Eastern States of Borno, Adamawa and Taraba States of Nigeria. The primary outflow of the dam is River Benue, the second largest river in Nigeria’s drainage system. The Benue River, which takes its source from the same Adamawa Plateau in Cameroon, flows through the lowland elevations of Adamawa, Taraba and Benue States before meeting River Niger in Lokoja, Kogi State. The steep elevation of the Adamawa Plateau, coupled with the sudden release of excess waters in 2012, has therefore created a great risk of inundation of the lowland communities of North-Eastern Nigeria, especially those located within the River Benue drainage basin.”

    Topographically, Nigeria was much more at the receiving end of the fury of Lagdo Dam. According to the Minister of Water Resources, Mrs. Ochekpe, in a presentation to Cameroonian authorities, the Lagdo Dam flood in 2012 led to the death of more than 49 lives and displacement of over 91,000 in 16 local government areas. This is apart from the destruction of 117, 978 structures destroyed.

    Ochekpe said: “It is worthwhile to mention that due to extensive rainfall and releases from the dam, the downstream areas of the dam, Nigeria had experienced periodic flooding. As at 14th December 2012, the total number of internally displaced persons in Adamawa State was 949 while 45, 253 structures were destroyed.

    “The devastating floods in Taraba State, which affected about 37 communities, claimed 27 lives and displaced 34, 393 persons amongst others.

    “Three persons were reported dead, over 25,000 displaced and property worth billions of naira were destroyed in Makurdi and seven local government areas in Benue State. Persistent torrential rainfall and compelling release of water from Lagdo, Kainji and Jebba dams led to massive flooding of 335 communities in nine LGAs of Kogi State, including Ajaokuta, Bassa, Lokoja, Kogi, Omala, Idah, Ibaji, Igalamela and Ofu. The flood affected 72,725 people in the state, 19 lost their lives, 30,709 people were displaced and disruption of businesses and livelihoods brought down infrastructure and public institutions.”

    On his part, the Minister of Water and Energy, Basilie Atangana Kouna, said about 40,000 Cameroonians were displaced by the Lagdo Dam. He said Cameroon did its best to regulate water from the dam but the volume was more than it could manage.

    He disclosed that inflow of water into Lagdo Dam in 2012 was 6, 240km per second but Cameroon was releasing 3,000km per sec. He also added that high outflow from Mayo-Kebbi River from Chad and Faro River contributed to the flood disaster in Nigeria in 2012.

    THE KERNEL OF NEGOTIATION

    Areas of bilateral talks for the three days, as tabled by Nigeria, were as follows:

    · Managing future release of excess water from Lagdo Dam with adequate communication by both countries

    · Establishment of framework of cooperation for exchange of data and information on safety measures taken or envisaged to be taken with respect to Lake Nyos ( Cameroon ) and;

    · Putting in place joint technical site visits, studies and research and setting up early warning notification and response mechanisms for any emergency in the Benue Basin

    · Signing of MoU by Nigeria and Cameroon to give legal teeth to any commitment from both sides and how to dredge River Benue and construct appropriate infrastructure that will enhance navigation within the river channel

    Ochekpe said the situation would be worse if Cameroon does not cooperate with Nigeria.

    She said: “This situation, if not addressed, will affect our populace and resources within the catchments resulting to fruitless efforts in the development of our natural resources in a sustainable manner. Therefore, the proposed MoU is rightful to address the following issues:

    “Establish framework of cooperation for exchange of date and information on safety measures taken or envisaged to be taken with respect to Lake Nyos (Cameroon) and;

    “Put in place joint technical site visits, studies and research and setting up early warning notification and response mechanisms for any emergency in the Benue Basin.”

    Ochekpe said apart from signing MoU with Cameroon, the Nigerian government would dredge River Benue and construct appropriate infrastructure that will enhance navigation within the river channel.”

    The Cameroonian Minister of Water Resources and Energy, Basie Atangana Kouna, said his country would cooperate with Nigeria on the release of water from Lagdo Dam.

    Kouna said: “We shall be committed to exchange of data and information relating to the water resources of the Benue Basin and use.

    “We will consult each other mutually and if necessary negotiate the possible effects of measures planned in the Benue Basin .”

    HOW THE NEGOTIATION WENT AND WHAT THE MEETING ACHIEVED

    In spite of mutual suspicion, the three-day session opened a new vista in the relationship between Nigeria and Cameroon. With much tact and diplomacy, the Ochekpe delegation succeeded in extracting a commitment from Cameroon not to release excess water from Lagdo Dam without adequate communication with Nigeria as part of the pending Memorandum of Understanding which might be signed in two weeks.

    The Cameroonian Minister of Water and Energy, Mr. Basie Atangana Kouna, captured the mood in a chat with newsmen. He said his country would not release water from Lagdo Dam in line with the ongoing talks with Nigeria to avert a reoccurrence of last year’s flood disaster.

    He also said a group of experts has been set up by Cameroon and Nigeria to work out the terms of the proposed Memorandum of Understanding between the two nations.

    He said although last year flood was exceptional, both Presidents Paul Biya and Goodluck Jonathan are determined to collaborate to end such flood disasters.

    He said: “I can assure you that Cameroon will not release any water from Lagdo Dam.

    What we had last year was exceptional. That was why the Secretary- General of the North-Central Province was talking of the 2012 flood being exceptional. He was talking of such high water level being a 50-year thing. The meeting with experts will lead us what to do.

    “As part of being proactive, the Cameroonian government has engaged deep measures into the management of the basins, especially Benue Basin. We are happy that Nigeria is also taking a step in the same direction.

    “The two countries have inaugurated a group of experts to analyse the situation and suggestions to avert future flood disasters. The experts will come together and forward their report to the government. This will lead to the signing of MoU between the two countries.”

    Asked of the timeline for the MoU, Kouna added: “There is no timeline but we will work on it as soon as possible.”

    The Secretary- General of North-Central Province, Tegni Fidele, said: “I will like to say that the worries of Nigerians are shared by the administrative authority of the Northern Region. What we had last year was just a 50-year thing. But since we are dealing with nature, we cannot rule out higher rainfall. We have put in place three steps.

    “These three ways are sharing communication and information by the two countries; asking those proned to flood to stay away from submerged area or forcefully ejecting those who do not leave, and the third option is the partnership.

    ” If we try to harmonise the administrative efforts, we will communicate more with the Nigerian delegation. My hope is that something positive will come out of this synergy.”

    The Minister of Water Resources, Mrs. Sarah Ochekpe, assured Nigerians that the two countries have agreed to share information on rainfall and how to manage excess water without leading to flood disasters.

    She said: “Cameroon has agreed to collaborate with us. We are not likely to have the same flood challenge we had last year. We have come to Lagdo to seek collaboration with Cameroon because one hand cannot build a house. If Nigeria and Cameroon work together, it will do a lot to improve the sub-region.

    ” On the Cameroonian side, they have the Lagdo Dam but we shared the same Benue Basin. We have come together in a way and manner that will protect and promote the economic interests of the two countries.

    “We are happy with the visit to the site; we are all here to share information because information is power and when it is used for planning it facilitates development. Going forward after this session, both Cameroon and Nigeria will be guided by information to plan better and take decision for the development of both countries.

    ” There is a proposed MoU between the two countries and part of what we want to achieve is a joint monitoring of Benue Basin to protect our people and manage the resources that God has given us.

    “We will work together to say water is life and a reality. When we plan well, there will be life. But when we don’t, water can be destructive.

    Nigeria’s High Commissioner to the Republic of Cameroon, Hajiya Hadiza Mustapha, said: “I am very happy at this development or understanding between the two countries.

    “It is my job to bring the two countries together. It is true that we have diplomatic channel, but what we are saying now is to improve on it. We need a contact person in Cameroon to relate with on flood management because sometimes, natural challenges are rapid.”

    THE COMMUNIQUE

    The summary of the agreement between the two countries was contained in a six-point Joint Communiqué by Ochekpe and her Cameroonian counterpart, Kouna as follows:

     The need to establish framework of cooperation for exchange of date and information on reservoir management and water releases of Lagdo Dam (Cameroon) and similar structures in the entire Benue basin.

     The need to expedite action on the signing of the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) for the exchange of date and information on the management of the shared basin for better planning and sustainable development in the two countries.

     The need to put in place joint technical site visits, studies and research and setting up of Early Warning and notification and response mechanism for any emergency in the shared basin.

     Both sides also agreed on the principle of appointing focal points to further facilitate communication among experts and the early warning mechanism being establishes, in addition to providing information through diplomatic channels.

     On the sidelines of the visit to Cameroon of the Nigerian Federal Minister of Water Resources, a working session held between the Director General of NEMA, the Director of the institute of Geological and Mining Research (IRGM) and the Director of Civil Protection of the Ministry of Territorial Administration and Decentralization. The Nigerian side was briefed on the measures taken by the Cameroonian side to ensure the security of Lake Nyos , in particular, the degassing operation and the strengthening of the lake’s storage dam.

     The Honourable Minister of Water Resources of Nigeria offered to host the joint technical meetings in Abuja , Nigeria , in august 2013 after which it is expected that the MoU would be ready for signing.

    WILL THE UNDERSTANDING PREVENT FLOOD THIS YEAR?

    The huge task before the two nations during the negotiation was how to avert a repeat of last year’s flood to save the helpless farmers and natives on the River Benue Basin unnecessary agony. Since there were commitments on both sides, Mrs. Ochekpe said: “We have talked; we have agreed on preventive measures, we are hopeful that we will not experience such flooding again.” She also disclosed that Nigeria is adopting a pragmatic approach by building a new dam along the Benue Basin to absorb excess water from Lagdo Dam, Mayo-Kebbi River , which flows from Chad , and Faro River . Water from these two rivers is unregulated. With the prediction of a heavy rainfall this year, the government and all vulnerable states are expected to put preventive measures in place including paying attention to hydrological signals. A major challenge during the trip, which requires the attention of the two countries, is the under-utilization of Lagdo Dam that gives room for the collection of excess water. Out of the 72 MW of electricity being generated from the dam, Cameroon is only consuming 30MW. Certainly, there is a window for the two countries to go into joint projects on how to maximize the benefits of Lagdo Dam and the Benue Basin if they have the political will.

  • ‘Why our mission to extort money from  school proprietress by threatening  her with assassination failed’

    ‘Why our mission to extort money from school proprietress by threatening her with assassination failed’

    A THREE-man gang of suspected assassins who claimed that they were paid N150,000 to kill a school proprietress, Mrs. Veronica Okonido (65), has been arrested by operatives of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) of the Lagos State Police Command. The suspected assassins were arrested penultimate Friday.

    A police source said the gang’s suspected leader, Jude Ekpenisi (25) claimed that the gang was paid by a certain individual to assassinate Mrs. Okonido, but he had compassion for the woman and decided to reject the sum offered for her head. Instead, he requested Okonido to pay the gang the same sum of money or it would carry out Okondo’s assassination.

    The two other suspected members of the gang are David Ekpenisi (22) and Philemon Uwadi (22).

    As soon as the case was transferred to SARS for investigation, the officer in-charge, Mr. Abba Kyari, a Superintendent of Police, swung into action and tracked down the gang leader through David Ekpenisi’s SIM card, which they used to tell him that the pastor of a big church had told him to come for a lucrative job. The pastor turned out to be a SARS operative and Jude Ekpenisi was immediately arrested.

    The third suspect, Philemon, reported at SARS’ headquarters by himself, not knowing that Jude was arrested in connection with the assassination attempt case which they had abandoned when it became clear that Okonido was not willing to cooperate with them.

    Okonido is the proprietress of Crownfield Nursery and Primary School in Ijegun, Ikotun area of Lagos, and resides and resides within the school premises. The police source said the suspects stopped troubling her when it dawned on them that she was not willing to do their bidding.

    Confessing his involvement in the assassination saga, Jude said: “I was the one that accommodated the two other suspects in my room. One day, we sat down and discussed how we could squeeze out money from the woman, who we thought was a millionaire. We first sent her a threat message. The text reads: ‘Somebody has paid us to eliminate you. But we are God-fearing. That is why we decided not to kill you.’ The first text message was sent on June 24, 2013.”

    Having threatened the woman, they asked her to send the said sum through Jude’s account. They sent the account number to her but she would not bulge. But in their desperation to collect the money from her, Jude sent a threat letter to her three days later, saying that they would kill her if she remained adamant.

    “We pasted the threat letter at the gates of the school, the body of the school bus and other places within the school compound,” he said.

    After waiting for four days without a response, they came up with another threat: to kidnap her and two of her pupils. “When the plan did not work, we decided to look for legitimate employment. I secured an employment in an air freshner factory.

    “After working there for one week, I received a call from a church that there were job vacancies. I quickly ironed my trouser and shirt to attend the interview in the church premises. But when I got there, I was arrested by SARS operatives.

    “I led them to my house where my younger brother who gave us his SIM card to use for the deal was arrested. David later came to SARS to see us and he was nabbed.

    “I came to Lagos in 2007 and stayed with my grandmother at Ikotun. It was unemployment and the money to pay for accommodation that made to form an assassination gang.

    “I was initially living alone at Ramat Ajike Street, Ijegun, where the woman’s school, Crownfield Nursery and Primary School, is situated. My house has a common fence with her school. She drives a Toyota Camry car and she knows me. But she did not know that I was the one who planned the attempted assassination and the kidnapping of two of her pupils.

    “She is always kind and friendly. She was surprised when SARS operatives arrested us.

    “My brother David and Philemon were not living with me before. They joined me from Ajegunle (Lagos) in April to look for jobs. I was living with one Solomon and my wife Precious who works with a Laboratory in Lagos. She is the one that feeds us and pays the house rent. She was not aware of the plan otherwise she would have driven us away. We demanded for N150,000 only.”

    He gave further details of the threats they issued to the woman, saying: “In the first week, we called her on her mobile phone after getting the number from her school’s sign board. When I called her, she asked who I was and I tried to use a name that would scare her. I told her my name was Jack.

    “I said somebody was working against her and she should call back if she wanted to know. She did not call back. After waiting for 30 minutes, I called again and told her that somebody had paid us to kill her.

    “She then said I should talk to her; that she is a child of God. I then told her that I am also a child of God and that was why I called her. I told her that she should try to cooperate with us, that the person behind it would die if she cooperated.

    “She then asked what we wanted and I told her to give us N150,000. She said okay and asked us to send our account number. I can’t remember the account number. It belongs to my brother and he did not know that we wanted to use it. I was using to use it to send money to him before.

    “I called his wife and told her that somebody wanted to send me money through her husband’s account number. She obliged, knowing that the number was always with me. When the proprietress did not send the money after two days, we called and asked her why, and she said the money was not yet complete.

    “We gave her one more day to send it. When she failed, we sent the threat letter. We told her that we were good boys but she wanted to turn us into bad boys. We asked how she would feel if we kidnapped two of her pupils or if they got missing. We asked her to call us with our phone number that was with her, but for three days she did not call.

    “Uwadi Philemon then wrote another letter which we pasted at the gates and on the school bus. It reads: ‘Since you have refused to send the money, you do not like the finger that is pointing at you to return back to the sender. Send the money now or we carry out our threat.’ Still, she did not answer until we started receiving calls from somebody else who claimed to be her brother.

    “He said he was a policeman and that he would trace us. She asked why we should demand money from his sister. From that day, he was the one calling and telling us that we would be arrested.

    “When they started threatening us with arrest, I called Jude and told him that we should stop disturbing the woman. That was how we stopped and decided to seek employment. I got an employment as a waiter in a hotel situated in Ikotun on a monthly salary of N11,000 before we were arrested. Jude and his brother, David, secured employment as marketers in a company that produces air freshner in Lagos.”

    Asked how they were arrested, he said: “They called David that a church had a vacancy for a drummer, a keyboard player and one security man. When I got there, I saw the lady and the police officer who was introduced to me as the pastor of the church. I asked if the work would be daily or weekly and he said we should go to the church.

    “The next thing I saw was a SARS’ car loaded with SARS operatives reversing to meet us. The SARS operatives alighted with guns and handcuffs. It was then that it dawn on me that we were in police net.”

    The third suspect, David Ekpenisi, Jude’s younger brother, said: “I was the one who gave them my mobile phone’s SIM card as contact. I was there always when Jude and Philemon communicated with the woman.

    “It was also my number that the police used to deceive us that a church wanted to give us employment.

    “It was because of poverty that I joined the gang. I found it difficult to feed because my sister said she hadn’t enough money to feed three big mouths. It was a big temptation because we were over stretching our sister.

    The spokesperson of the Lagos Command of the Nigeria Police Force, Mrs. Ngozi Braide, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP) could not be reached for comment at press time. She was said to have travelled for the burial of her father who died a few days ago.

  • Two months after losing two children to kerosene explosion:

    Two months after losing two children to kerosene explosion:

    Since a pall of grief fell on the household of Emmanuel Olisakwe and his wife, Jane, about eight months ago, the couple has continued to drench their couch with tears.

    The Nation newspaper had reported about a month ago how the couple lost their two children to a fire outbreak on December 26, 2012, following a kerosene explosion that rocked their two-room apartment at No 14, Ikire Street, off Akeredolu Street, Olambe, Ogun State.

    The fireballs had first landed on the couple’s five-year-old son, Miracle, burning him beyond recognition. He died the next day. Their eight-year-old daughter, Ebube, would have escaped unhurt, but the fire balls landed on her newly-fixed hair and she was severely burnt. She battled death for 17 days before she died in the hospital.

    Emmanuel was severely burnt while trying to light a lantern shortly after he loaded its tank with kerosene. He was taken to the Burns Unit of the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH) for treatment.

    He escaped death by a whisker due to the prompt treatment he received at the hospital. He would have been discharged from the hospital about three weeks ago, but he has not been able to go home because he cannot defray his medical bill which, according to his wife, is about N700, 000. “He is removed from the bed whenever there is a new patient who cannot get a bed space,” she added.

    She spoke further on the family’s plight and how she had been running from pillar to post in search of money.

    She said: “Until the unfortunate incident, my husband was a tricycle operator and breadwinner of the family. I have practically been living on charity since then and I don’t know where else to run to for assistance.

    “Although some people had forwarded some money to us shortly after your paper published the story, it was not enough to clear the hospital bill. We have been told to settle the bill or my husband would not be allowed to go home or sleep on the bed anymore.

    “I don’t know what to do. That is why I’m asking for help from the members of the public.”

    Speaking with our correspondent, Emmanuel said: ”I was discharged about a month ago, but I cannot go home because I have not been able to pay my medical bill. I have been asked to pay or forget about going home for now.”

    Emmanuel, a native of Umunuko-Upkor community in Nnewi South Local Government Area of Anambra State, further shared his plight with our reporter, saying: ”My condition has improved and I can now walk with the aid of a walker. But my greatest problem is the unpaid bill because I have been told to pay up by this weekend or face the risk of being asked to vacate my bed for other patients. At the moment, doctors have stopped attending to me except I pay for my treatment. Life has turned nightmarish. I don’t know what to do because my wife has fruitlessly been looking for money to settle the bill. It’s almost a hopeless situation and I just hope that kind-hearted Nigerians would come to my rescue.”

    Jane, recalled the incident, saying: “The incident happened on December 26, 2012, at about 7 pm. My husband had asked me to prepare yam and fried egg for dinner, but I told him that there was no kerosene at home.

    “While returning home, he bought kerosene at a filling station in Akute. I was trying to slice some yam when I heard my 10-month -old baby’s cry. I quickly left the yam to attend to the baby.

    “Since it was in the night, my husband was about lighting the lantern after putting Kerosene into it, but the lantern exploded and burnt him and my kids.

    “We just moved into the house about six months before the fire incident. Our 10-year-old son, Victor, is about entering secondary school, and it has not been easy coping with other domestic responsibilities.

    “In fact, my son’s education would have been truncated but for the intervention of the proprietress of his school and some of her teaching staff who offered him a lifeline.

    “I have been married to my husband since 2001 and we had four children. But we have lost two of them now. I have since been squatting with one of my friends because I cannot cope with living in the same house where the fire had killed my son and daughter and rendered my husband incapacitated.

    “He is a native of Nnewi, Anambra State and a former employee of the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE). He lost his job after a major shake-up in the firm and has since been operating a commercial tricycle to earn living.”

    Anyone who is willing to offer financial assistance can forward money to Mrs. Jane Nkechi Olisakwe’s First Bank account-3069048378. She can also be reached on 08139234474

  • ‘Why our mission to extort money from  school proprietress by threatening  her with assassination failed’

    ‘Why our mission to extort money from school proprietress by threatening her with assassination failed’

    A THREE-man gang of suspected assassins who claimed that they were paid N150,000 to kill a school proprietress, Mrs. Veronica Okonido (65), has been arrested by operatives of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) of the Lagos State Police Command. The suspected assassins were arrested penultimate Friday.

    A police source said the gang’s suspected leader, Jude Ekpenisi (25) claimed that the gang was paid by a certain individual to assassinate Mrs. Okonido, but he had compassion for the woman and decided to reject the sum offered for her head. Instead, he requested Okonido to pay the gang the same sum of money or it would carry out Okondo’s assassination.

    The two other suspected members of the gang are David Ekpenisi (22) and Philemon Uwadi (22).

    As soon as the case was transferred to SARS for investigation, the officer in-charge, Mr. Abba Kyari, a Superintendent of Police, swung into action and tracked down the gang leader through David Ekpenisi’s SIM card, which they used to tell him that the pastor of a big church had told him to come for a lucrative job. The pastor turned out to be a SARS operative and Jude Ekpenisi was immediately arrested.

    The third suspect, Philemon, reported at SARS’ headquarters by himself, not knowing that Jude was arrested in connection with the assassination attempt case which they had abandoned when it became clear that Okonido was not willing to cooperate with them.

    Okonido is the proprietress of Crownfield Nursery and Primary School in Ijegun, Ikotun area of Lagos, and resides and resides within the school premises. The police source said the suspects stopped troubling her when it dawned on them that she was not willing to do their bidding.

    Confessing his involvement in the assassination saga, Jude said: “I was the one that accommodated the two other suspects in my room. One day, we sat down and discussed how we could squeeze out money from the woman, who we thought was a millionaire. We first sent her a threat message. The text reads: ‘Somebody has paid us to eliminate you. But we are God-fearing. That is why we decided not to kill you.’ The first text message was sent on June 24, 2013.”

    Having threatened the woman, they asked her to send the said sum through Jude’s account. They sent the account number to her but she would not bulge. But in their desperation to collect the money from her, Jude sent a threat letter to her three days later, saying that they would kill her if she remained adamant.

    “We pasted the threat letter at the gates of the school, the body of the school bus and other places within the school compound,” he said.

    After waiting for four days without a response, they came up with another threat: to kidnap her and two of her pupils. “When the plan did not work, we decided to look for legitimate employment. I secured an employment in an air freshner factory.

    “After working there for one week, I received a call from a church that there were job vacancies. I quickly ironed my trouser and shirt to attend the interview in the church premises. But when I got there, I was arrested by SARS operatives.

    “I led them to my house where my younger brother who gave us his SIM card to use for the deal was arrested. David later came to SARS to see us and he was nabbed.

    “I came to Lagos in 2007 and stayed with my grandmother at Ikotun. It was unemployment and the money to pay for accommodation that made to form an assassination gang.

    “I was initially living alone at Ramat Ajike Street, Ijegun, where the woman’s school, Crownfield Nursery and Primary School, is situated. My house has a common fence with her school. She drives a Toyota Camry car and she knows me. But she did not know that I was the one who planned the attempted assassination and the kidnapping of two of her pupils.

    “She is always kind and friendly. She was surprised when SARS operatives arrested us.

    “My brother David and Philemon were not living with me before. They joined me from Ajegunle (Lagos) in April to look for jobs. I was living with one Solomon and my wife Precious who works with a Laboratory in Lagos. She is the one that feeds us and pays the house rent. She was not aware of the plan otherwise she would have driven us away. We demanded for N150,000 only.”

    He gave further details of the threats they issued to the woman, saying: “In the first week, we called her on her mobile phone after getting the number from her school’s sign board. When I called her, she asked who I was and I tried to use a name that would scare her. I told her my name was Jack.

    “I said somebody was working against her and she should call back if she wanted to know. She did not call back. After waiting for 30 minutes, I called again and told her that somebody had paid us to kill her.

    “She then said I should talk to her; that she is a child of God. I then told her that I am also a child of God and that was why I called her. I told her that she should try to cooperate with us, that the person behind it would die if she cooperated.

    “She then asked what we wanted and I told her to give us N150,000. She said okay and asked us to send our account number. I can’t remember the account number. It belongs to my brother and he did not know that we wanted to use it. I was using to use it to send money to him before.

    “I called his wife and told her that somebody wanted to send me money through her husband’s account number. She obliged, knowing that the number was always with me. When the proprietress did not send the money after two days, we called and asked her why, and she said the money was not yet complete.

    “We gave her one more day to send it. When she failed, we sent the threat letter. We told her that we were good boys but she wanted to turn us into bad boys. We asked how she would feel if we kidnapped two of her pupils or if they got missing. We asked her to call us with our phone number that was with her, but for three days she did not call.

    “Uwadi Philemon then wrote another letter which we pasted at the gates and on the school bus. It reads: ‘Since you have refused to send the money, you do not like the finger that is pointing at you to return back to the sender. Send the money now or we carry out our threat.’ Still, she did not answer until we started receiving calls from somebody else who claimed to be her brother.

    “He said he was a policeman and that he would trace us. She asked why we should demand money from his sister. From that day, he was the one calling and telling us that we would be arrested.

    “When they started threatening us with arrest, I called Jude and told him that we should stop disturbing the woman. That was how we stopped and decided to seek employment. I got an employment as a waiter in a hotel situated in Ikotun on a monthly salary of N11,000 before we were arrested. Jude and his brother, David, secured employment as marketers in a company that produces air freshner in Lagos.”

    Asked how they were arrested, he said: “They called David that a church had a vacancy for a drummer, a keyboard player and one security man. When I got there, I saw the lady and the police officer who was introduced to me as the pastor of the church. I asked if the work would be daily or weekly and he said we should go to the church.

    “The next thing I saw was a SARS’ car loaded with SARS operatives reversing to meet us. The SARS operatives alighted with guns and handcuffs. It was then that it dawn on me that we were in police net.”

    The third suspect, David Ekpenisi, Jude’s younger brother, said: “I was the one who gave them my mobile phone’s SIM card as contact. I was there always when Jude and Philemon communicated with the woman.

    “It was also my number that the police used to deceive us that a church wanted to give us employment.

    “It was because of poverty that I joined the gang. I found it difficult to feed because my sister said she hadn’t enough money to feed three big mouths. It was a big temptation because we were over stretching our sister.

    The spokesperson of the Lagos Command of the Nigeria Police Force, Mrs. Ngozi Braide, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP) could not be reached for comment at press time. She was said to have travelled for the burial of her father who died a few days ago.

  • Pathetic tales of abandoned  PDP members involved in fatal accident on their way to Jonathan’s campaign

    Pathetic tales of abandoned PDP members involved in fatal accident on their way to Jonathan’s campaign

    ON Friday March 25, 2011, 50 enthusiastic members of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) left the party’s secretariat in Ikeja, Lagos, to take part in the campaign rally of President Goodluck Jonathan at the Eagle Square, Abuja the next day. It began as a smooth journey as the PDP members sang Jonathan’s praises.

    But tragedy struck as the travelers approached Ikire, a historical community in Osun State. The driver of the luxury bus that conveyed them lost control of the vehicle, leading to the death of a passenger while scores of other passengers sustained various degrees of injuries that have refused to heal.

    Those who sustained injuries in the accident included Madam Funke Oyinsanmi and Madam Bisi Awe. Others were Olabisi Olojede, Mercy Oluyemi and Mary Balogun.

    The victims were first taken to the Ikire Catholic Church hospital, from where they were transferred to the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH), Idi-Araba, where most of them remained about two months.

    Mrs. Awe did not only lose four of her teeth in the accident, her fractured arm had to be amputated while her broken lower jaw makes it impossible for her to talk properly. Other victims of the accident are nursing equally serious injuries, nursing excruciating pains and securing no tangible help, even from the party.

    Recalling the events that culminated in her ugly fate, Mrs. Awe said: “I had no premonition whatsoever that the journey would bring me recurring tears instead of joy. I went on the journey because of my love for President Jonathan. Honestly, if I knew that the journey would turn awry, I would have turned down the offer to be part of the contingent.

    “We were singing songs in praise of President Jonathan when we suddenly heard a loud noise. I passed out immediately. The next thing I saw was that I found myself in the hospital. To my surprise, I found that my right arm had been amputated. At that point, I wept uncontrollably, but I was frantically consoled by the doctors and nurses around.”

    When our correspondent visited the Ikorodu residence of Awe, there were tell tale signs of sadness in the household. She was drinking garri, a delicacy she said she detested when things were going well.

    The 57-year-old woman recalled the fate that had befallen her since she lost her arm and joined the league of deformed persons.

    She said: “Apart from the fact that I have become a disabled person, the incident has turned me into a beggar. I now live in penury because I have spent all the money I have on treatment.

    “You can see that I have just finished a bowl of soaked garri, which ordinarily I would not have taken when I was hale and hearty. Now, I can hardly feed myself, not to talk of my children and other dependants. I have aged parents whose welfare was my responsibility before the accident. Now, I can no longer take care of them.”

    She also recalled how prominent party leaders, including the First Lady, Mrs. Patience Jonathan, promised to help her but failed to make good their promises.

    She said: “During one of her visits to Lagos State in December 2011, we met the First Lady at the State House, Marina, at the instance of our party leaders. She sympathised with us and promised to facilitate my trip to India for corrective surgery on my face and to procure an artificial limb. Sadly, she has not fulfilled that promise as I speak, even though she made the promise in the presence of our party leaders.

    “I am therefore using this opportunity to once again remind her of her promise and to come to my aid as my health keeps deteriorating every day.

    “I know that some party leaders have assisted me at one point or the other, but I still need a huge lifeline to overcome my predicament. As I speak, my children have dropped out of school while I still have medical bills to settle.”

    Other victims of the accident alleged that they were abandoned by the First Lady and PDP leaders, who had promised to take care of their treatment and rehabilitation. Lamenting their fate, they pleaded with the party leaders and the First Lady to redeem their pledge.

    One of the victims, Madam Funke Oyinsanmi, an indigene of Ado-Ekiti, said: “I am a PDP member in Ward J, Ifako-Ijaiye Local Government Area of Lagos State. At about 7.30 pm, we left the PDP secretariat in GRA, Ikeja in a luxury bus en-route Abuja for the grand finale of the presidential rally.

    “When we got to Ikire, Osun State, our vehicle was involved in an accident and it somersaulted several times. Some policemen rescued and took us to Catholic Hospital in Ikire, Osun State, from where we were referred to LUTH for treatment.

    “I spent two months at the hospital because one of the veins on my wrist was badly affected while there are still broken glasses that have not been removed from my hand to date. The affected hand is lifeless; I can no longer use it to lift anything.

    “I sincerely believe that the accident would have been averted if we had travelled in the day time. Queer party officials in charge of mobilization are in the habit of asking us to travel in the night, so that they can pocket the money meant for our accommodation.

    “While we were in the hospital, some stalwarts of the party, including Senator Florence Ita Giwa, visited us and promised that the party would take very good care of us. But the promise has remained unfulfilled.

    “We also sought audience with the First Lady, Dame Patience Jonathan, during one of her visits to Lagos, and she promised to take care of our treatment. But she has since abandoned us to our fate. Please tell Mrs. Jonathan and our party leaders to come to our aid because our health has not improved at all.”

    The story of Mrs. Olabisi Olojede is not different from those of other victims. The Woman Leader from Ward G, Lagos Mainland suffered a fracture and a swollen hand that have refused to heal.

    She said: “We were singing on our way to Abuja. In the middle of this, I fell asleep. The accident happened while I was still sleeping. I woke up to see blood gushing out of my head while I also sustained injuries on my lips and left hand. My swollen hand has not gone down and the attendant pain is what I live with to date.

    “In April last year, we met with Mrs. Patience Jonathan in Lagos and she promised to facilitate our treatment; which she has not fulfilled. Although she gave us some money on that day, it was not enough to even take care of one person, let alone the rest of us.

    “I used to work as a bead maker and traditional wedding engagement anchor, but people are no longer giving me jobs because of my predicament. Please tell our party leaders to take care of us in the name of God, because we embarked on the journey out of our love for PDP.

    “Since the incident and the indifference of party leaders to our plight, we have become the butt of jokes from members of rival political parties in the state.”

    Another victim, Mrs. Mercy Oluyemi-Lawal (49) said: “When the incident occurred, one of my hands was trapped under a heavy object. I tried to lift my hand but I couldn’t. My forehead was lacerated by broken glass and my tooth was also broken.

    “To date, I still suffer severe pain in my arms while pieces of glass are still stuck in my hand. I am a trained caterer but I can no longer work because of my broken arm. Our former State Woman Leader, Mrs. Olabisi Odunsi, tried for us but her effort was not enough to relief us of our pains.”

    Also recalling the sad incident, 43-year-old Mrs. Mary Balogun said: “I was sleeping when the vehicle somersaulted at about 7.30 pm at a spot on Ikire-Gbongan Road. I hit my head on the pavement and blood started gushing out of it. A co-passenger had to use her wrapper to tie my head in order to prevent further loss of blood.

    “Now, I can no longer see clearly with my eyes while my badly damaged hand is yet to heal. As I speak, I cannot use the hand to lift or pick anything. “

    “Despite the promises made by our party leaders and Dame Patience Jonathan to the effect that we would be given free medical treatment, nothing has been done about our plight. We can no longer continue to suffer for being patriotic, and that is why we are appealing to our party chieftains to assist us. We are dying in silence.

    “Many of us still need treatments that require going overseas even as we battle with poverty and hopelessness.”

    A letter of appeal addressed to the Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, by the counsel to the victims, Kunle Fadipe, dated March 18, 2013, reads in part: “We wish to bring to your attention that efforts made by our clients to get echelons of the party (PDP) at the local government and state levels to look into their predicament have been futile…our clients are widows whose means of livelihood have been truncated by the mishap.

    “Because of their health challenges, they cannot go about their daily businesses, which were hitherto their sources of income. Unfortunately, they now live on contributions from friends and family members. Even from these contributions made to them, a substantial part goes to the purchase of drugs and other medications…it is upon these ugly experiences of our clients that we passionately appeal to your esteemed office for a comprehensive rehabilitation programme.

    Their situation is pathetic and needs urgent attention. They have become objects of ridicule and scorn in the eyes of friends and associates who deride them for sowing where they could not reap. They blame them for committing so much to the party and getting nothing in return in their time of need.”

    The Acting National Publicity Secretary of PDP, Mr. Tony Okeke, declined comment when one of our correspondents met him at his office in Abuja on Thursday. ”I am not in the mood to say anything on the matter,” he said.

    Efforts made by our correspondent to get the comment of the Media Assistant to Dame Patience Jonathan, Mr. Ayo Osinlu, were also fruitless. After failing to respond to calls made to his phone, our correspondent sent a text message, explaining why he needed his comment, but he responded saying: “Welcome and thanks for making contact. However, I am not in a situation to make a comment right now. Please direct this enquiry to Mrs. Ayo Adesugba.”

    Adesugba initially did not respond to a text message our correspondent sent to her phone. Our correspondent later called her on the phone and she promised to call back. ”I am in a meeting, I’ll call you later,” she said. She, however, did not make good her promise to call back.

    The PDP chairman in Lagos State, Mr. Tunji Shelle, could also not be reached for comment as he neither picked the calls made to his phone nor respond our correspondent’s text message.

  • ‘I contributed  the most to the  wordings of  national anthem’

    ‘I contributed the most to the wordings of national anthem’

    Following the publication of our recent interview with one of the five composers of the national anthem, Dr Sota Omoigui, now a consultant anesthesiologist and pain specialist in the United States of America, Elder Philips Olusegun Aderibigbe, the author of four lines of the anthem, called at our office last week. Aderibigbe, a former employee of the National Assembly, explained his part in the composition of the anthem, lamenting the failure of the Federal Government to fulfill its pledge to compensate him and his co-authors. He spoke with LEKAN OTUFODUNRIN and JUSTICE ILEVBARE.

    How did you become involved in the composition of the national anthem?

    In 1976, Nigeria was just recovering from a gruesome civil war. The Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo-led military administration called for the composition of a new national anthem. The national policy committee on the draft constitution on return to civilian rule then announced a national anthem competition. At that time, I was a 100 level undergraduate student of the University of Ibadan.

    The national policy committee received about 1,499 entries from Nigerians. The entries were sent to the department of English in five Nigerian universities. It was from these entries that the best five were picked and the lines of the national anthem were selected from them.

    I wrote the first line of the anthem: “Arise o compatriots”. The original draft, as was typed in 1976-77, is available for anybody to see. Other writers were John A. Ikechukwu, Eme Etim Akpan, B. A. Ogunnaike, Dr. Omoigui and I, Philips Olusegun Aderibigbe. The military administration said they were going to pay some honorarium to the writers, but up till now, nothing has been done. Even the music of the anthem, as composed by the late Pa Odiase, was sung without us being invited. And it is regrettable that up till today, there has been no acknowledgement.

    Since five of you composed the wordings of the national anthem, why was the Late Pa Odiase described as the composer until he died recently. Was he the person that merged the various contributions?

    There seems to be lack of information in this country, and we do not even know our background very well. For your information, Pa Odiase was just the band master of the police band. The anthem was given to the police band, which Pa Odiase just happened to be the leader at that time. The wordings of the anthem were written by five Nigerians, out of which the best were selected, like I mentioned earlier.

    You said that no honorarium has been paid and no acknowledgement has been given? Why did it take you so long to speak on the issue? What have the five of you done to claim the ownership of the anthem? Has there been any time you met?

    There was no way for us to meet, because we were from different locations. There was no time they invited us together. I am here because I saw the interview with Dr. Omoigui. At that time, the office of this committee was at the Independent building in Race Course, Lagos. After some time, they packed out of the office, and when we went there to see the officers in charge, we were told that they had relocated. So, it was difficult to see anybody concerning it.

    What other effort did you make?

    I wrote a personal letter to the Federal Ministry of Education then, complaining that we were the writers of the anthem. We are not talking about music but the wordings of the anthem. The composition is an intellectual property. Up till today, they have not acknowledged the ownership of that intellectual property.

    At the point of asking for entries, was there any particular promise in form of a prize?

    There was none. But after the composition, they said the Federal Government of Nigeria was going to pay a marginal honorarium to the composers. But that has not been done till today.

    You composed the lines, ‘Arise o compatriots, Nigeria call obey… The labour of our heroes past, Shall never be in vain.’ What did you have in mind when you wrote these lines?

    It was simply patriotism. Nigeria had gone through so many negative experiences. Right from 1953, there was the Kano riot, during which so many lives were lost. There was the 1962/63 political crisis in the West. There was the census crisis in 1965 and so many lives were lost. There was mismanagement; in fact the military said the reason why they came into power in 1966 was mismanagement, corruption and ineptitude.

    Things were upside down. And so, when we had that challenge, I rose. I said okay, Nigeria has to come back and readdress itself to some new situations. So, I wrote that lineArise. Arise from decay, from misgovernment, from corruption, O ye compatriots. That was the message in the anthem. Patriotism is the principle of the anthem. In fact, if anybody asks me to mention the problem in Nigeria today, I would say it is lack of patriotism.

    Do you think we have been true to the national anthem?

    The problem is that there was no orientation at all when the national anthem was introduced. They brought the composition to Nigerians, but the federation did not buy the idea. There was no education. In fact, one would expect that based on the message drawn from an anthem, there will be an orientation to follow; there will be training; there will be dedication; there will be organisation to follow. But nothing like that was done. They just took the work, gave it to somebody to turn into music, and there was no orientation. So, up till today, patriotism is lacking in this country. And what is the root cause of corruption? It is lack of patriotism.

    As far as I am concerned, if anybody is stealing government money, it is because he is not patriotic. If there is misgovernment, it is because there is no patriotism. If there is mismanagement, it is because there is no patriotism. Look at the countries that are well run in the world today, they are all patriotic countries. America is on the lead today because the citizens are patriotic, the government is patriotic and an American life is very dear to the government of America. They can do anything to save the life of an American because they know the government cares for them.

    So let’s go back to patriotism. And I am suggesting that there should be a lot of awareness concerning patriotism. Even what is happening in the north now is as a result of lack of patriotism.

    What kind of feeling do you have when you hear the national anthem?

    I feel very happy because it says arise. Arise means that if you have been sitting down before, rise up. If you have been down before, get up, stand up! To defend is to fight, to struggle and make Nigeria a great nation. As at the time I was writing this composition, Nigeria was at the same level with countries like China, India, Indonesia, Malaysia and Brazil. Look at the positions of these countries today. Nigeria was at par with them, but those countries have gone ahead of Nigeria because of lack of patriotism.

    Do you agree with those who say some parts of the national anthem should be changed?

    I don’t. The anthem of the nation is the culture of the nation, the set of beliefs, the principles, and so on. Nobody who knows what he is doing would say that the anthem should be changed. What is to be changed there? Is it that we are not arising again? What do you want to change in that? Is it that patriotism is not good? Many people are talking of the anthem in terms of the music. How many Nigerians even know what the anthem is saying? How many have the wordings in their memory? How many of them know the meaning of the anthem? How many of us are obeying the call of the nation today? That is the problem.

    So if they know what the anthem is saying, they would call for more dedication, more orientation and more awareness rather than say the anthem should be changed.

    I’m intrigued by the line “The labour of our heroes past shall never be in vain”. It would seem that the labour of our heroes is already heading towards vanit…

    It has happened and it will continue to happen. Nigerians don’t even know their heroes. We know names of corrupt officers. We know of very important people who have looted the treasury. We know the names of those who have bastardised our economy. We know about those who have looted the national treasury. But we don’t know the heroes that we have, and that is one of the problems of this country.

    A country must know her heroes. Look at Ghana, people are still talking about Kwame Nkrumah till tomorrow. Look at Rawlings, people are still talking about him till tomorrow. Look at Nelson Mandela who is sick nowmay God heal him. Nobody talks ill about him. He is a patriot. Patriots and leaders we can gain from are in this county. We have heroes in this country, but we don’t know our heroes.

    Your co-composer, Omoigui, says he looks forward to the day they would bring together those who composed the messages. Do you see this happening soon?

    Who would bring them together when they don’t know their heroes?

    But is it something you would love if it happens?

    Yes. In fact, I thought that before the anthem was sung for the first time, we should have met. But they did not make it possible. Now it is even more difficult because Omoigui is abroad now, I’m in Nigeria, and I don’t know the other three. I’m only praying that none of them has died. These are our heroes; they are dying without being honoured.

    What is your own definition of patriotism?

    My definition of patriotism is great, undiluted support for the nation; standing to fight for the nation. The Spartans in the Greek states brought up their children with training modelled along support for the nation. They would fight and not allow anything that can bring the nation down to happen. So, they see themselves first for the nation than for themselves, their family, their ethnic background or their place of origin. That is patriotism. In fact, the act of patriotism is even stronger in my heart now than when I wrote it.

    There are Nigerians who say they can’t die for this country. Do you think Nigeria is worth dying for?

    Nigeria is worth dying for if we are all ready. If we are all patriotic, Nigeria would be worth dying for. But if we are not patriotic, well, that is when the issue comes. Look at China; they would not allow anything to mess up their economy. America would not allow its country to be bastardised. Korea would protect its interest. So, Nigeria is worth dying for. Why not? The country of my birth is worth dying for.

    But the country also must die for its people. If we are ready to die for the country, the country also must be ready to die for its people. The American government can spend billions of dollars to rescue the life of a single American. And if an American knows that the country is ready to die for him, he can die for his country too. Patriotism is a whole system on which we should start to educate Nigerians now. As far as I am concerned, even indiscipline is lack of patriotism.

    When you were composing the anthem, you had the unity of Nigeria in mind. What is your take on the call for national conference?

    I have my own personal opinion concerning the national conference, but I’m not in support of the break-up of Nigeria. I have a feeling that Nigeria is meant to bring us together. If you see the resources in Nigeria, the way God has positioned the resources in Nigeria and left them in different places, you will see that God has made us to be together and to substitute for one another.

    But let me go back to my point: it is mismanagement and lack of patriotism that has made things to be like that. I remember a time I had to serve in Sokoto; I was in Sokoto for months without any fear of molestation. Nigerians were together then. You could travel to the North and East without any fear. How did it now generate to this level? So it’s not that Nigeria is not worth dying for, its management and wrong leadership. Nigeria is a very good business. Somebody said Nigeria is a good business in the hands of bad managers.

    Do you think Nigeria will ever get to the promise land?

    Why not, if we return to the basics? Let patriotism be taught in schools. Let people know the meaning of patriotism. Let it be a topic in schools. It must start from the top. Recently, some people were talking about jumbo pay for public officers. About 43 per cent of the nation’s total income is spent on the payment of legislators and government. 80 per cent is spent on running the government. If the amount of money taken from the Nigerian economy is taken from the British economy, it will collapse.

    Have you ever been acknowledged as one of the composers of the national anthem?

    Yes. But by only those who are close to me. When those in my hall, Nnamdi Azikwe Hall of the University of Ibadan, heard that I was the writer of the line ‘Arise o compatriots’, there was wild jubilation at the JCR Hall in 1978. Some newspapers also wrote that I and four others were the writers of the anthem.

    The government must acknowledge the writers of the anthem. We are not asking for money but for respect and honour. I composed four lines of the anthem, so I’m the major writer of the anthem.

  • Now, I want  to become  a doctor, says  hole-in-the-heart  boy rescued  through surgery

    Now, I want to become a doctor, says hole-in-the-heart boy rescued through surgery

    MUBARAK OLANREWAJU, remember him? He was the four-year-old boy with a hole in the heart, whose story we published earlier. After a seemingly hopeless battle to save his life, he is back on his feet after visiting a hospital in India, running and playing with his mates.

    His dream to become a medical doctor, severely threatened by the ailment, is alive again. “I want to be a doctor when I grow up”, Mubarak told a crowded room of well-wishers last week.

    And he decided to thank Nigerians who rose to the call to save his life by paying a visit to the head office of The Nation during the week.

    Looking gay and smart in a T-shirt over a pair of jeans, one needed no medical certification to know that he had been handed a new life that changed his fortune from a burden on his parents to a blessing, just as his Arabic name suggests.

    The first sign that all was not well with the little boy had emerged in February, 2012. His father, Abiodun Olanrewaju, said: “We first noticed that something was wrong around February 2012, when he started complaining of tiredness. I was surprised that such a small boy would complain of tiredness.

    “We went to Mercy Hospital on Lagos Island, from where we were referred to the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH). At LUTH, the consultant told us that our son had a hole in the heart. She counselled us, saying that it could be corrected if we had the money for surgery. She said we would need about N2.5 million for a surgery in India.”

    For the petty trader parents whose income was barely enough to take care of the family’s basic needs, raising the sum of N2.5 million looked every bit an impossible task.

    “We did not know where or how to raise the money. But we remembered the advice the consultant gave us; that we should appeal to Nigerians to come to our aid. We also shared the problem with family members, one of whom advised us to approach the Lagos State Government for assistance.

    “The government heeded our appeal and took the case to the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH). The government also released the sum of N700, 000. Another tranche of N800, 000 was released later, making a total sum of N1.5 million. ”

    But while the search for more money continued, the family was thrown into more misery, as Mubarak developed another ailment. At a point, the medical team almost lost the little boy while they battled to unravel the mystery behind his ceaseless and severe headache.

    Olanrewaju recalled: “On December 1, 2012, Mubarak started complaining of headache. It got to a point that we had to go back to LASUTH. He was immediately placed on admission. He was discharged the following day and given some drugs.

    “Three days later, another test was carried out, where it was discovered that the surgery had to be done quickly. He was admitted again on December 11, 2012. We almost lost him on December 12, as his condition deteriorated.

    “After a scan was carried out on his head, it was discovered that he had abscess in the brain. He was placed on admission for two months to drain the abscess from his head.”

    At this point, several other issues that threatened Mubarak’s future emerged. There were uncertainties about his ability to see or walk. Olanrewaju recalled that the situation was so bad that some of his friends walked up to him and told him it was better to let the boy die instead of wasting so much money on him.

    “They wondered why we wanted to waste so much money. But why would a father allow his own child to die?” he queried?

    In the midst of all this, Mubarak comforted his parents by insisting that he would not die. “He always told us that he would not die,” the parents recalled.

    After a campaign championed by The Nation, the sum needed for the surgery was raised, and Mubarak, accompanied by his father, headed for India.

    Olanrewaju said: “We finally left for India on February 10, 2013. But before we left, the boy could no longer see, and we were told that he was going blind. But the real problem that now confronted us was that the bulk of the money we received for the surgery had gone into treating the abscess.

    “Upon arriving in India, we spent another six weeks treating another ailment. The doctors then placed him on a new drug, which they said would help in battling the infection. He took three doses every day, and each dose cost N4,000. He was on this drug for 30 days.

    “At a point, we ran out of money, but God was merciful.”

    The waiting period ended for Mubarak and his family on June 12, 2013, when he was wheeled into the theatre to correct the hole in his heart. For the more than one year that the problem started, nothing would compare to what Mubarak’s father felt the minute his little son was taken away from him to be prepared for surgery.

    His only solace, however, remained his faith in God and his ability to withstand the pangs of dry fasting. “I went into fasting accompanied with serious prayers. At a point, one of the coordinators in the hospital advised me to break the fast and eat. He reminded me that I was the only person around the boy, and that he needed me to be alive,” Olanrewaju recalled.

    To underscore how worried he was, he kept the news of the surgery to himself, not letting the wife, who was in Nigeria, know the details until three days after the surgery had been successfully done.

    He said: “I could not tell her about the surgery. We spoke every day, but I didn’t let her know when Mubarak was taken into the theatre. The surgery lasted for about four hours. But I cannot really tell you how I felt or what was happening to me until they had finished.”

    Be it as it may, his worries were over when the surgeon emerged from the theatre and stretched his hand to congratulations the distraught him.

    “The surgeon came out and said congratulations!. He also asked me to go to the ICU ward to see my son. I went in and saw him breathing. At that stage, I simply went on my knees and started praying. I couldn’t even tell his mother about the surgery until three days after, when I was sure that it was successful.”

    Mubarak sat between his parents as they rolled out loads of gratitude to all those who had heeded their cries, particularly the Lagos State Government, which Olanrewaju said had changed his opinion about governance in Nigeria.

    He was also full of praises for the media for rising to the challenge of leading the clamour for help to give little Mubarak the chance to live.

    “I thank Nigerians who helped us to keep Mubarak alive. In particular, I want to say a big thank you to the Lagos State Government for coming to our rescue. This has really changed my opinion about governance in Nigeria.

     

  • Shattered  lives

    Shattered lives

    Whether sleeping on the sidewalks of Bosso, Niger Republic; in a mud hut in Mokolo, Cameroun’s Far North Region; or in the curtained tents of converted wild lands of Garwa, the refugee child is the one who cannot go home again. Behind him lies the major conflagrations of past yearsWorld War II, the Palestinian war in 1948, Dienbienphu in 1954, the Algerian strife, Hungary of 1956, Tibet in 1959, Nigerian civil war of 1967or the tragic manifestations of the JTF-Boko Haram bloodbath in Northeastern Nigeria. Sometimes beckoned by hope, usually driven by despair, he forsakes his homeland for the uncertainties of another land writes OLATUNJI OLOLADE, Assistant Editor

    THE scene in Garwa is post-apocalyptic: untenanted stretches of land unfurl languidly into the distance. Somewhere along the deserted stretches, the dusty road tract terminates where human beings occupy the crust of a previous existence. Shabby men recline under a withering tree and skeletal spiral stall, taking advantage of the shade. Forlorn women and girls peep from behind white tents toned earth brown, the colour of dust and polluted air. Few metres into the settlement, kids with sunken eyes, flaky skin and parched lips stare pitifully into the expanse. Like every adult on the camp, they are Nigerians fleeing the violence and bloodshed in Northeastern Nigeria.

    Welcome to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) camp, Garwa. At the camp, off Mokolo highway, Maroua, in the French-speaking region of Cameroun, there is nothing beautiful to see. Just silence, starvation, despair and greater silence. The effect is horrendous; although nothing beats the horror of seeing five-year old “Rekiya” and “Hawau” her sister stare wistfully at each other as they carry on.

    Lying on a torn polythene bag outside the tent they share with hundreds of other kids and adults, Rekiya, five, extended her hand to comfort Hawau, three, who had been crying. When Hawau refused to stop, Rekiya offered her, her middle finger to suck. It didn’t matter that the finger was covered in dirt and nail crust, the toddler stopped crying and sucked on it with relish.

    “That tiny thing is always hungry. She is never satisfied and when she cries, she raises a ruckus,” said Hadiza, 14, one of the kids’ roommates, indignantly. Reactions like Hadiza’s betray irritation with the toddler’s tantrums and it explains why Rekiya prayerfully offered the three-year old her dirty finger to suck.

    “I do not want her to get smacked by any of the elders around. She likes to suck her finger whenever she is hungry. She starts crying when she doesn’t get enough food to eat. I give her my finger to suck until she sleeps,” said Rekiya. But when that refuses to work, Hauwa begins to wail at the top of her voice. That often gets her spanked, to Rekiya’s consternation.

    But their father couldn’t be bothered. His name is Aliyu. He is 35 years old and ever since he lost his wife and their mother to the bullets of the rampaging militaryJoint Task Force (JTF) in Baga, he had become somewhat disheartened. “He has become too detached to care for his kids,” said Muminu, a UNHCR staff, in apparent bid to explain the father’s neglect of his kids and hostility towards the reporter.

    But Ali Shonek affects no such detachment or hostility. His children have a lot to be grateful for. Although the 35-year old squats in a separate tent from his wife, Saratu, and their five children, he endeavours to see them every day. “I can’t provide their needs but I try to say good words to them and calm their nerves. We are in a desperate situation. But things will get better…Back in Nigeria, we used to live in bondage. We lived in constant fear of sudden death and insecurity but today, we have hope,” said the former staff of the National Assembly, Federal Capital Territory, Abuja.

    Shonek deserted his job as personal assistant to an Abuja-based senator, to protect his family in Gwoza, Borno State, at the beginning of the JTF’s onslaught against outlawed terrorist group, Boko Haram, in the area.

    “I had to leave my job and travel back to Gwoza to be with my family. I ran back home to protect them and other members of my family,” said Shonek.

    But he was only able to rescue his wife and five kids from the bloodbath. “I lost three members of my family. They were butchered very coldly by Nigerian soldiers in the heat of the pogrom they visited on us. I was only lucky to escape with my wife and kids,” said Shonek.

    While they fled, Shonek disclosed that it felt very painful to leave everything and everyone behind. “I was powerless and impotent against the soldiers. They were killing people in my community at random and destroying houses at will…so I simply gathered my wife and five children, Zipora (eldest child, 12-years old), Faith, Jocas, Rafkat, Mary and fled across the border into Cameroun.

    They currently live on the camp in Garwa locality. Initially, they sought refuge at Zelevet with fellow refugees. Zelevet is the village from which the refugees were relocated in Mokolo and the village is a very small one without the capacity and resources to cater for over 3, 000 refugees. Hence it was a welcome relief to the villagers when Governor Awa Fonka Augustine, of the Far North Region came over to lead the refugees to the camp in Garwa.

    According to the governor, about 20, 000 Nigerian refugees are still scattered along the border communities and villages bordering Nigeria and Cameroon. They have refused to relocate to the refugee camp. “If they do not resettle in the refugee camp soon, they will have to contend with immigration and police officers whose duty it is to guarantee the safety of Cameroon by monitoring immigrant influx (legitimate and illegitimate) into the country,” he said in a chat with The Nation.

    At the beginning of the mass exodus from Nigeria via Banki, a Borno State border community with Cameroun, over 3, 000 displaced Nigerians comprising men, women and children, fled across the border into Cameroun. Many of them settled around the border and Mokolo Township. However, in order to prevent a severe human crisis, Governor Augustine urged the fleeing Nigerians to move to the hastily constructed settlement in Garwa.

    He said his administration was ready to offer the refugees support as long as they agreed to accept the refugee status and live on the UNHCR camp. However, of the 3, 000 Nigerians that resided at the temporary settlement in Mokolo, only 780 agreed to move to the Garwa camp. The remaining 2, 220 simply chose to abscond into Maroua and environs.

     

    Garwa camp

    Two babies have been born on the camp since the refugees’ arrival. It is unclear how they would be kept in good health and taken care of, given the dire circumstances. At the time of The Nation’s visit, the camp consisted of 25 tents, two water tanks, two bathrooms and two toilets for 780 refugees. There is no electricity supply but a power generator is used to power the camp from 6pm to 10 pm every day. Due to water scarcity, the fire brigade comes to make delivery of water twice daily, said Jan Marie, the UNHCR camp director.

    All around the refugee camp, many seemed to be disenchanted and at sea. Many more seemed to be dealing silently with their grief and scrambling for the safety of Shonek’s profound disclosure: “The quest for peace and freedom drove us here.”

    Far from the Far North Region of Cameroun, along the desert plains of Diffa to be exact, Suleiman Idris, 42, dwells in destitution with his wife and their only surviving child, Lema. The latter, a six-year old girl, was the only one they could save of their three kids when the JTF struck in Baga.

    In the decrepit barn he shares with the surviving members of his family, the atmosphere is grim and bare of comfort. Nothing moves or kicks save the occasional glide of the itinerant gnat and rustle of dried palm fronds blown against the wooden poles of the shed by breeze. All around Idris and his family, echoes of a gruesome massacre boom ominously in the shades of angst and desolation masking their faces and other refugees’ faces.

    Like the Idris family, eight-year-old Afifa and her younger brother, Bashir, live despondently in the same settlement. Their father got blown to pieces along with Hussein and Hassanat, their twin siblings, while buying bean cakes for the family supper at a neighbourhood snack stall in Budum, Maiduguri. The bomb was detonated by the Boko Haram sect. Few weeks afterwards, their mother got hit by a stray bullet in the heat of the violence in Baga. Today they live with the Idris family.

    Their refuge is a slum; home to hundreds crammed into rickety and makeshift tents, their hearts are fraught with freshly borne agonies and unspeakable narratives. “We are all very devastated. Most of us have lost loved ones. When the Nigerian soldiers invaded our town, they ruined our lives. They burnt our homes and killed everybody. They said we harboured Boko haram but we didn’t. They shot my daughters to death and stabbed my mother-in-law in the belly. They said she was struggling with them but she was only preventing them from getting away with murder. She bled to death in the presence of my last and only surviving child,” said Kalia Koneh, 32.

    Many new arrivals have walked into Niger, taking refuge in villages located only a few kilometers away from the border. Others, who fled areas located as far as 300 kilometers away such as Maiduguri in Nigeria, have used cars or motorcycles. New arrivals are either renting houses or staying with host families, who are themselves living in very precarious conditions in the open and under trees.

    Although the local population has welcomed those who have newly arrived, the presence of newcomers is putting a strain on meager local food and water resources. Niger, a country in the Sahel, itself struggles with food insecurity due to years of drought.

    Precisely 6,240 Nigerian refugees currently live in Niger’s south-east Diffa region. That includes 2,692 Nigerian nationals as well as 3,544 returning Niger nationals and others, mainly Chadians. Of the figure, 1, 514 Nigerian refugees live in Bosso, six live in Garin Amadou, 52 in Kablewa, 233 in Tam, 68 in Mamouri, 10 in Tchoukoudjani, 10 in Maine, and 453 in Diffa.

    Then there are Nigerien citizens living in Nigeria who also fled the fighting in northern Borno and returned home. About 1, 339 of such returnees currently live in Bosso, 714 are in Kablewa, 42 in Tam, 35 are in Mamouri, 63 are in Tchoukoudjani, 431 are in Maine, while 920 are living Diffa. There are other nationals too, and of those, 17 are living in Bosso, 12 in Maine and 65 in Diffa region.

     

    State of emergency

    The Nigerian government imposed a state of emergency on Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states in the northeast of the country since May 14. The action was taken to aid the JTF’s military campaign against the Boko Haram sect. And ever since the beginning of the military campaign, the region has been enmeshed in recurrent bloodbath of unimaginable proportions.

    Recently, there was public outrage over the massacre of no fewer than 185 people during a recent clash between the militant Islamic sect, Boko Haram and the Joint Task Force (JTF) in Baga, Kukawa Local Government Area of Borno State. At least 2,000 houses, 65 motorcycles and 40 cars were burnt in the attack. However, the JTF maintains that the inferno that razed the town should be blamed on Boko Haram militants who opened fire on soldiers while using residents as human shield.

    “The Nigerian military has a duty to protect itself and the population from Boko Haram attacks, but the evidence indicates that it engaged more in destruction than in protection,” said Daniel Bekele, Africa director at Human Rights Watch. “The glaring discrepancies between the facts on the ground and statements by senior military officials raise concerns that they tried to cover up military abuses.”

    In a separate development, Boko Haram militants killed 29 students and a teacher in a Yobe school attack recently. The sect killed the 29 students and their teacher in a boarding school in the northeast Nigerian town of Potiskum. The attack is a further sign that the extremist sect remains a threat to Nigeria despite a crackdown on it. The attackers set fire to buildings and shot pupils as they tried to flee. It was the deadliest of three attacks on schools since the military launched an offensive in May to crush Boko Haram.

    The recurrent violence has forced many of the natives to flee across the border into neighbouring Cameroun and Niger Republic. As a result of the exodus, old close-knit households have broken up like a little girl’s dollhouse and their hopeful yearnings have sunk in bad faith. Many of the refugees, the children particularly, have to contend with problems they never envisaged.

    Across the Sahel region, growing emergencies like the ongoing JTF-Boko Haram war pose a growing threat to stability and development in the region. Humanitarian needs cut across the Sahel belt, and include the entire countries of Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Senegal and the Gambia and the northern regions of Cameroon and Nigeria.

    Nearly 1.1 million children were projected to suffer from severe acute malnutrition (SAM) in 2012, and almost three million children reportedly suffered from moderate acute malnutrition (MAM), exacerbated by and complicating needs in health, water and sanitation, protection and threatening rights to education. By the end of April, about 249,800 children had been admitted to UNICEF-supported SAM treatment facilities across the Sahel. Yet chronic food insecurity and cyclical food crises such as today’s situation in the Sahel are further compounded by poor infant and young child feeding (IYCF) practices at home, poor health status and insufficient access to health services, inadequate preventive interventions against malnutrition, and poor access to water and sanitation. Poor rainfall has exacerbated food insecurity and loss of livestock, coupled with increasing food prices especially of cereals, impacting the purchasing power of households and increasing the strain on livelihoods, jeopardizing children’s lives.

    The accumulation of stress over time and the long-term consequences of distressing events can have an intensely disturbing and potentially far-reaching impact on children’s social, emotional, cognitive and spiritual well-being and development, according David Omonafor, a clinical psychiatrist. According to him, “Analysis of global data, for example, has shown how protective factors such as parental support and moral guidance can help children overcome horrific experiences and help to promote individual healing and community reconciliation.

    But that could only be enjoyed by children whose parents survive the violence long enough to protect them and cater to their health needs.

    True, living in environments characterized by poor sanitation, over-congestion and poor shelter, has exposed many displaced Nigerian kids to all kinds of diseases and infections. Malaria and diarrhoea are rampant due to poor hygienic conditions, stagnant water, bushes in the surroundings and lack of mosquito nets.

    Shortage of clean water also leaves most families with no other option but to use stagnant or pond water that is usually infested with worms. Because of the unfavourable environment, children always suffer from respiratory tract infections that are easily transmitted to others. Infections, such as, fungus and bilharzias are reported in various refugee settlements in the Sahel region. In addition to these factors, community members also linked children’s poor health to poor feeding which often results in malnourishment.

    Amidst all this, displaced people have limited access to basic health care services. There is a shortage of qualified health staff, those available are poorly paid and operate in inadequate working conditions and non-functional health facilities. All these pose challenges to delivery of services.

    Under such circumstance, children are sometimes given inadequate doses of much needed drugs instead of a full dose, so they can’t get relief. The situation is worse for internally displaced children who in most cases have no access to medical aid. Yet their parents are too poor to afford medical fees charged at local health centres or hospitals.

    Displaced kids complained of unfavourable dwellings among other things. For instance, Zipora complained that congestion makes it difficult for her family to live together the way they would have loved. Limited blankets, mattresses and mats in homes lead to the sharing of sleeping space among family members. Outside the refugee camps, more children complained that this was not only uncomfortable but was a source of sexual abuse. For instance, Nimotalayi Uthman, a 14-year old teenager from Baga revealed that she had escaped being raped twice by a cousin and fellow squatter in their makeshift refuge in Mokolo.

    Due to the trauma experienced by many displaced children, it is often very difficult to raise children the way a parent may wish to. Children are often frustrated, easily agitated and hardly listen or take advice or instructions. They have difficulties concentrating in class. They often get agitated and are in the habit of threatening teachers. However, boys, compared to girls, were found to have a lot more worries over their future because of the cultural expectation that they are the future bread earners for their families. Without access to schooling, they have no hope of living a better life in the years to come since they have nothing to do to earn a living. This has deepened their frustration.

     

    Children in flight

    For children in particular, flight across borders can be dangerous and uncertain, subjecting many to exploitation and abuse. The process of seeking asylum, especially for separated children, may be complex and extended. Families often become separated in the process of flight and many children fall ill and in extreme situations lose their lives for lack of proper health care according to Jan Marie, Garwa UNHCR camp director.

    Corroborating him, Idiat Bello, a social worker, noted that many children in flight are usually in need of special attention. That is because at a crucial and vulnerable time in their lives, they are brutally uprooted from their comfort zones and exposed to extreme danger and brutality, she said. However, while child refugees benefit from the specific attention of a number of international NGOs, those who are internally displaced receive less protection even though they tend to be at greater risk.

    Children in camps

    In times of conflicts, children’s traditional systems of social protection come under severe strain or break down completely and there are often high levels of violence, alcohol and substance abuse, family quarrels and sexual assault according Peter Adamu, a Zinder, Niger-based social work volunteer. According to him, adolescent girls are particularly vulnerable and even the youngest children can be affected when they witness an attack on a mother or a sister. One important aspect of relief that particularly affects women and children is the distribution of resources such as food, water, firewood and plastic sheeting. Control of these resources represents power. Men are usually in charge of distribution and often abuse their power by demanding bribes or sexual favours. This puts adolescent girls and women at risk, according to the UNHCR. The UNHCR alleged that the first days and weeks of a mass displacement of people usually result in high mortality rates for children. Among displaced children, measles, malaria and malnutrition account for 60 to 80 per cent of reported deaths.

    Thousands of children die each year as a result of armed violence from knives, bullets, bombs and landmines. But many more die from the indirect consequences of warfare as a result of the disruption in food supplies, for example, and the destruction of health services, water systems and sanitation. In poor regions where children are already vulnerable to malnutrition and disease, the onset of armed conflict can increase death rates with those under five years at particular risk.

    But beyond the physical dangers, children may also suffer lasting psychological damage as a result of the loss of their families. Children and adolescents also have very different capacities, and the lines between them are often blurred. In a child’s early years, the focus is on survival, with special attention needed in health, nutrition and protection. However, the ways in which children respond to the stress of armed conflict also depend on their particular circumstances. These in turn are affected by such factors as age, sex, personality type, personal and family history, and cultural background.

    Moreover, armed conflict often pushes children into roles beyond their capacity. It can also prolong certain transitions for young people. Because children are agents of their own protection, and appropriate coping mechanisms require specific cognitive competencies, a key priority is supporting children’s cognitive development through various life stages.

    The different ways in which armed conflict may have already shaped children’s lives can expose them to additional risks. Children can be especially vulnerable if they are living with a disability, with HIV or on the street, or if they lack access to school or health care.

    Similarly, separation from family, the experience of gender-based violence, internal displacement or refugee status, and current or former association with the armed forces or other armed groups can heighten the risk of further violations. A child’s reaction however, depends on the accumulation of risks, and also on her or his coping skills, available sources of support and other resources.

     

  • The painful world of children living with cancer

    The painful world of children living with cancer

    *They are the unknown few, eaten up by a cancerous cell and abandoned by
    government.  These children live in agonizing pains, reports Seun Akioye
    who spent time with many of them.*

    Chioma Ukanwa. She was light in complexion with a big, prominent facial
    features, black silky hair which some people say was unnatural for a
    nine-year-old girl. Her eyelashes were big and black adding a touch of
    beauty to her full face. She had large, clear eyes and when she focused
    them on an object for a long time they got moisture. When she smiled, and
    not too often in the last one year, she revealed a set of strong white
    teeth. It was not unusual to remark that she was a beauty queen in the
    making.

    On the evening of Friday June 14, Chioma’s remains were released from the
    morgue at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH), Idi-Araba, Mushin,
    Lagos mainland to  her parents, Charles and Kate Ukanwa for burial. The
    short ceremony was conducted under an ambience of extreme grief.  Exactly a
    week earlier, she had lost the battle she had bravely fought for five years
    against childhood cancer.  The afternoon Chioma died was one of the most
    shocking in the Pediatric Oncology ward at LUTH. A day before then, she had
    received the life saving platlet and had been on the road to yet another
    recovery. Hours after that treatment her condition deteriorated and in the
    early afternoon she died. Her death was sudden and shocking.

    “I still can’t wrap my hands around this. I am still in shock. I cannot
    just believe this had happened,” says Dr. Nneka Nwobi, the founder of
    Children Living with Cancer Foundation, a non-governmental organisation
    that caters for children with cancer. For some years, Nwobi had been
    involved in Chioma’s case, providing counseling to her parents and
    supporting them to offset her often heavy medical bills.

    Two weeks before her death, Nwobi had been involved in different activities
    designed to raise money for another round of chemotherapy for her. She had
    planned to go round schools to raise the much needed funds to save her
    life.  On May 30, *The Nation*  met Chioma and her parents at the
    children’s ward. They stood dutifully by her bed at the pediatric ward at
    LUTH. Chioma had exhibited no trait of someone about to die; she had
    responded to questions and expressed optimism to live. Her father told her
    story.

    It started in 2008, she developed feverish conditions, there were rashes
    all over her body, then her body began to swell, every external organ that
    could accommodate more fluid did. She was taken to the Lagos State
    University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH) after she was referred to LUTH. She
    spent three weeks undergoing diagnosis, the result was crushing: Acute
    Lymphoblastic Leukemia or cancer of the blood. Her treatment began in
    earnest and after five months she was discharged with a warning to continue
    to come back for treatment.

    “Between 2009 and 2011, she was okay, she looked fine and we thought the
    worst was over so we stopped coming for the treatment. Also, our family has
    incurred a huge financial burden that we could not handle so we defaulted,”
    Charles said.

    But in January 2012, whatever hopes the family had evaporated. The rashes
    returned and the swelling began in earnest. She returned to her bed at LUTH
    and doctors say her condition had worsened due to her default. Chioma had
    maintained a permanent bed at the Ward D since July 2012 until her death.

    *Inside the cancer ward*

    Nineteen months old Esther Shedrack laid in  her cot at the paedratic
    cancer ward at LUTH. She had just finished a session of biopsies and had
    reacted violently to it. An oxygen mask was fixed to her head and there was
    a drip fixed on her hand, for several hours she stayed still without giving
    any indication that life was inside her. Her head was devoid of hair and
    she wore no ornament to distinguish her sex. Beside her, another baby slept
    peacefully in her cot, her mother also slept on a chair beside her. Ann
    remained motionless and her distraught mother, Ann Shedrack sat beside her
    cot, it was evident she had been crying.

    “The cancer is eating her up,” she said painfully,” then raising her voice
    she added: “ My baby’s condition is making me agitated, the chemotherapy is
    eating her up gradually. You go for a test, they need platelet, the next
    day it is plasma and red blood cells. Even as big as LUTH is, there is no
    facility for platlet , we go all the way to Island Maternity to get it  and
    it’s not easy, that is where the whole of Lagos go to, look at her she
    needs platlets, she needs blood. Since morning I cannot even get blood in
    LUTH here, I have been going to blood bank like somebody going to the
    bathroom.”

    Esther’s troubles began in January 2013. Her mother discovered a side of
    her abdomen was hard and swollen, when touched the baby cried out in pain.
    She acted fast and took her to a private paedriatic clinic in Ikeja , a
    scan was done and the result brought life to a halt for her parents. She
    had cancer of the ovary. Subsequently, the family was referred to the Lagos
    State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH) and finally to LUTH in March,
    but her problems were far from over.

    In March, Esther was operated upon to remove the tumour in her abdomen but
    the doctors “found out the mass is large and is lying over critical organs
    in her body”.  The operation failed and the patient had to be covered up.
    Part of the mass was taken for biopsies and she resumed her chemotherapy
    which caused a violent reaction. Then she stopped eating and had
    experienced various degrees of dehydration, currently she is being fed
    through a tube passed over her mouth.

    The nurses in the ward work round the clock seeing to the wellbeing of the
    children, for some of them who had been there long enough, they had seen
    many of the children succumb to the cold hands of death. “ Our children are
    doing fine, we do lose some of them but as you can see we are doing our
    best to keep them happy while they are here,” a nurse who pleaded anonymity
    said.

    Timothy Olaonipekun was a known face to all the wards in the pediatric
    centre, most of his time was spent cheering up other children too weak to
    play and who are restricted on their beds. His journey to LUTH began in
    July 2012. He was struck with fever and taken to Sacred Heart Hospital,
    Abeokuta where he was treated for fever and tuberculosis.  When he showed
    no improvements, a cocktail of tests followed, eventually on November
    2nd2012, a test result said: Axillary Lymph node-High grade non-Hodgin
    lymphoma diffuse large cells or Acute Lymphoblastic Lymphoma.  Two days
    later, he was rushed to LUTH where he underwent three agonizing, but
    successful chemotherapy.

    Timothy is on course for his 4th therapy but has been hampered by lack of
    funds. While waiting for a miracle that would enable him complete his
    treatment and return to his friends at the Baptist Boys High School,
    Abeokuta where he was a senior student, he spent his time spreading joy and
    happiness among the children who happened to be in the same boat as himself.

    The children’s ward at LUTH has been designed to give comfort to the
    children. According to Adebola Akinsulie, a professor of Paediatric
    Haematology and Oncology, who is also the Head of Paediatrics at LUTH, the
    ward can accommodate about 20 children, a far cry from the demand as the
    hospital admits between five and six children every week.

    The rooms have between three and four beds and they are kept clean. There
    is a reception area with a television and a playing section equipped with
    toys. All over the wall, there are paintings of animated creatures which
    lightened up the ward and brought some sunshine into the otherwise grim
    circumstances of the children who lived there. The paintings *The
    Nation*learnt has been done by children of the American International
    School Lagos
    while the ward has been furnished and equipped by Children Living with
    Cancer Foundation.  Out of the children admitted for cancer in the blood,
    only 20 percent will survive the two year treatment period.

    *An underreported malady*

    Chioma was one of the hundreds of Nigerian children who die each year as a
    result of childhood cancer. Although, childhood cancer accounts for less
    than 10 percent of children’s illnesses, but for the children who have been
    afflicted and their families, the consequences are dire. Unlike adult
    cancer which has received worldwide awareness and funding, childhood
    cancers are largely unnoticed, statistics scarce, treatment expensive and
    equipments non-existent.

    In Nigeria, over 95 percent cancer actions were focused on adult cancer. In
    August 2011, the Federal Ministry of Health inaugurated a technical
    committee that would draft Nigeria’s position on Non -communicable Diseases
    (NCD) for the  United Nations High- Level Meeting on NCD which held in
    September 2011. While cancer was a recurrent feature in the technical
    committee action plan of reducing NCDs, childhood cancers were ignored.

    Consultant Paediatric at the Olabisi Onabanjo University Teaching Hospital
    (OOUTH) Sagamu Ogun State, Dr. Folasade Adekanmbi said the neglect of
    childhood cancers transcends government apathy.

    “ The general attitude towards dependants is awful in Nigeria, many
    parents are not totally committed to the treatments of their child with
    cancer, some of them will say if this child dies God will bring another
    one. But if it is an adult everybody will be running around.”

    But it is not just the parents who generally disregard treatment for
    cancer, very few government hospitals are adequately equipped to deal with
    childhood oncology. For instance in the entire South West region of
    Nigeria, only the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH)  and the
    University College Hospital (UCH) have dedicated  wards to paediatric
    oncology in Nigeria.  The two hospitals also get patients from outside the
    South West. Consequently, resources and equipments are put under tremendous
    strain at the two hospitals thereby making them unable to meet up with the
    demands for drugs and other treatments.

    This situation has forced many parents into seeking alternative means of
    cure-often from traditional healers- with often devastating and fatal
    results for the children involved. In 2010, Chioma was reportedly taken to
    the village to consult herbal healers and was only returned to LUTH when
    her condition showed no improvements.

    *Treating cancer*

    No one could pretend that treating cancer is fun or cheap in Nigeria and
    Dr. Akinsulie was not about to start.  According to him, cancer can affect
    any part of the body but the most common are cancer of the blood and the
    kidney. The treatment for the two differ in time and cost, while kidney
    cancer can be treated in six months and has a survival rate of about 80
    percent, treatment of leukemia could prolong for two years with the
    survival rate hovering between 20-30 percent.

    Treating cancer is both emotionally draining and expensive. For Muyiwa
    Olaonipekun, father of Timothy, a cancer patient, the one-year experience
    has left him drained both financially and emotionally. “My wife died in
    April last year just after that this sickness began, the money left by my
    wife has been expanded on treating my son. I have had to go seek help from
    my old school association. Till now, we have spent up to N2million and we
    are on the 4th course of the chemotherapy, we still need N2.5milllion and
    we have less than N50,000,” Olaonipekun said.

    His work has suffered too.  Since the sickness began, he has abandoned his
    business and took up the full time job  of sitting by the side of his son.
    He slept each night on the floor by his son. This is no mean task for the
    floor is bare and hard. “ It is the Lord that is keeping me strong,” he
    said with a smile, clutching a tiny bible to illustrate his belief in the
    supernatural.

    Esther Shedrack, though has spent just a few months in the hospital already
    raked up about half a million naira in hospital bills and the treatment has
    just commenced.  Her mother, a caterer has given up her job and has
    exchanged her bed for the cold floor of the hospital ward. She has also
    added another profile to her new occupation: endless tears.

    “ I feel agitated all the time when I look at my child. There is no
    assurance for kids how much more adults and we call ourselves freeborn. We
    are all strangers in our fatherland that is why I don’t blame those who
    leave this country for places like Ghana,” she lamented.

    Charles Ukanwa said he had spent more than N5million treating his daughter
    before she finally gave up the ghost, a transport driver by profession he
    said he has tried his best to raise funds for the treatment of his child.
    But according to some hospital sources, the hospital staffs have been
    responsible for the upkeep and treatment of Chioma for a long time after
    the father could not come up with any more fund. He was still looking for
    about N20million to fund her treatment in India when she died. The mother
    who was a full time housewife had become a full time nurse always by the
    side of the child until the bitter end.

    Prof Akinsulie said: “For the family that has one case of cancer, its
    total. You discover you are spending N2million-N3million and how many
    families can afford that? A family that cannot make N100, 000 a month will
    need to cough out N300, 000, a month for treatment, they sell the
    properties and in six months they are poor.  The thing spreads because the
    other children cannot feed well, sicknesses set in, unfortunately, there is
    no guarantee the child would survive, and it can be very devastating.
    Sometimes treatments can be up to three years and it may cost about
    N5million,” he said.

    To survive the crippling costs of treatment, parents have devised several
    means of raising funds which include going cap-in-hand to corporate
    organizations, media and others just hit the streets, going to the motor
    parks and churches. One of such parent whose child is now late told *The
    Nation*  after an agreement to protect his identity: “ I was desperate, I
    sold my car and all my properties, if someone was willing to by my cloths,
    I could have sold them. I had to go to the streets, it was painful and
    shameful but I had no choice. To make it worse, I did not raise N50, 000
    before my son died.”

    But if the scheme currently being worked upon by LUTH comes to fruition,
    this agonizing search for funds may come to an end. According to Akinsulie,
    the hospital management is currently trying a new campaign to involve
    millions of Nigerian donating a fraction of their income monthly towards
    the Save the Cancer children fund. A paediatric hospital called St, Judes
    in the USA, it was learnt is ready to partner with LUTH to raise more funds
    if the Nigerian partners can kick-start it.

    “The aim is to get small money in large numbers so if we have one million
    Nigerians donating N100 per month we would have about N1billion to play
    with and we can give quality treatment for the children for free. Our
    partners in the USA are ready, they just want us to run this thing for like
    two years, we are appealing to Nigerians to help, it doesn’t have to be
    your child,” Akinsulie said.

    *Life saving platlets*

    The cause of about 90 percent of the deaths  from childhood cancers is laid
    sorely on scarcity of platlets. According to one of the nurses at the
    children’s ward, what many children are waiting for are platlets but while
    waiting many succumbed to death.

    “There is this crisis of platlets here, it has been hell getting it so we
    start to look for it all over the place. Here in LUTH, it costs N5,000 but
    outside in the private laboratories it is N17,000,” Olaonipekun said.

    Ann Shedrack said she has been able to secure some platlets at the Island
    Maternity on Lagos Island which is where most of the people needing the
    life saving blood get it from. The LUTH management did not deny there is
    shortage of platlets in the hospital; neither do they deny many children
    have been lost due to that shortage. So what could have caused this
    scarcity?

    In a bag of blood, there are many components like the red blood cell and
    platlets. Those needing blood transfusion do not need all of these
    component so there is a separating method using a machine called Cold
    Centrifuge for blood bag separation. This is how it works, a blood bag is
    placed inside and the machine separates the different blood components.  So
    a patient does not need to get a full bag of blood if he doesn’t need it.
    But it is this machine that would separate the platlets for use by the
    children that is scarce. Without the platlets, children undergoing
    chemotherapy will die, it is certain and many have died.

    Only LUTH and UCH have a cold centrifuge machine and all the cases in the
    South West are directed to these two institutions, which puts a lot of
    pressure on the equipments. As a result the machine is overused and it
    malfunctions, this is the exact case with LUTH.

    Frustrated and upset parents then begin to patronize the ‘black market’.
    But that also has its dangers as many unscrupulous sellers wanting to make
    maximum gain mix serum with the platlets. The results could be devastating
    as seen in the case of Chioma.

    “They got the platlets outside LUTH and there should be a toxicology test
    carried out on it, the thing is that one bag of platlets in LUTH is better
    than six bags outside. I do not know if the girl reacted to the platlets, I
    am also not sure of the source either,” Nwobi said.

    The problem is replicated at all the teaching hospitals. At the OOUTH
    Sagamu, sources said even though it does not have a dedicated paeditric
    oncology ward, it nonetheless has the capacity to get platlets anytime it
    is needed. “We have a professor here that has connections at LUTH, so we
    always get it when we need it.  We are also in the process of establishing
    our cancer ward and in two years time we should be able to do that so that
    we can fully treat our patients.”

    According to Akinsulie, the problem of scarcity of platlets could be solved
    if the hospital can get the machine. A single machine that is capable of
    separating four bags of blood cost only N6million while one that can
    separate between 10 and 12 bags of blood cost N10million.

    “We are appealing to those with human kindness to help us purchase these
    machines which are so vital to the treatment of these children,” Nwobi said.

    “These children do not have to die needless deaths all the time, the
    government can fund the purchase of this machine and highly subsidize the
    treatment of Paediatric cancer. If corruption is eliminated in governance
    that money can be channeled into treating those with cancer. Even Somalia
    has made tremendous progress, why can’t we curb corruption and save the
    children,” a hospital management staff said.

    “I once spoke to a state government and I was shocked when they said the
    money they will use to treat one cancer patient would be used to treat
    5,000 dieahoreah  or malaria. That is the way our government thinks,”
    Nwobbi recounted to *The Nation*.

    *Creating Awareness*

    By 2002, Nneka Nwobbi has seen enough inside the horrid walls of caner
    wards at the LUTH; she had seen many children die from childhood cancer due
    to lack of financial resources to treat the disease or from sheer apathy
    from the parents. She, therefore, decided to embark on an adventure such
    that would attempt to save the lives of some of the children. She founded
    the Children Living With Cancer Foundation (CLWCF).

    The organisation she founded has gone ahead to provide services to these
    children some of which include: Total or partial coverage of expenses
    related to chemotherapy; support with medications; overseas travels when
    needed; counseling for families and patients; creating awareness about
    childhood cancers.

    Nwobbi has worked with many of the patients at LUTH, a week before Chioma
    died; she has been involved in the campaign to raise funds for her. Her
    past chemotherapy has been partially funded by her organization. The
    paediatric oncology ward had been furnished and equipped by her
    organization. Most of the parents come to her for chemotherapy medications
    which she gave free of charge. Her success stories have been more of kidney
    cancer than leukemia. “We have had success stories mainly with kidney
    cancer.  We have what we call save 10 projects, looking for sponsors at
    least to treat 10 children with the disease. Not as costly as leukemia,
    roughly about N2 million for treatment,” she told *The Nation* in her
    Anthony Village, Lagos office.

    Nwobbi believes that childhood cancer doesn’t have to be a death sentence.
    “ The cancer is curable if the children are brought in early enough to
    start treatment and that is why awareness is involved. Parents need to know
    the signs to look for in their children.”

    She has therefore devised the SILUAN method. This method involves Seeking
    medical help for persistent symptoms, check for white sports, squinting in
    the EYE, looking for LUMP in the abdomen and pelvis and other parts of the
    body, reporting UNEXPLAINED  fever, weight loss and appetite, Aching bones
    and joints should be reported and NEUROLOGICAL change in behavior, balance
    and gaits in children should be reported.

    But one of the factors inhibiting the work against childhood cancers
    surprisingly is the attitude of the parents. Many parents simply refused to
    believe their wards may have cancer. “There are several cases where the
    parents have simply refused to believe in the doctor’s diagnosis,” she said.

    The refusal of the parents to believe in cancer have had devastating
    consequences for the children who are caught in the middle of this
    unbelief, a situation which has led to the death of many of them. Closely
    following this is the belief in the supernatural. “When the after-effects
    of the chemotherapy start to occur like the loss of hair, many parents are
    afraid and they say this cannot be cancer again, some evil spirits must
    have been responsible, so they stop coming for treatment and take the
    children to the village. Even Chioma went to the village that was when she
    defaulted. Unfortunately, when they return to the hospital it’s always too
    late,” Nwobbi explained.

    It’s another week at LUTH and five more patients will join the ones who are
    lucky enough to be alive, none of the doctors could guarantee which of them
    would survive, but what they can assure is that they will be needing
    finances in the millions. Maybe few can afford it many none can, except
    kind hearted Nigerians come to their rescue.  Ann Shedrack and Muyiwa
    Olaonipekun are appealing to kind hearted Nigerians to save their children.
    Donations are solicited through the following accounts:  Muyiwa
    Olaonipekun, Stanbic IBTC Bank, Account N0: 0005233079

    *Box interview*

    *Why we lose many children to cancer-Prof. Akinsulie, Head Paediatrics LUTH*

    *How frequently do we have the cases of childhood cancer and what are the
    various forms it takes?*

    Cancer is just about one percent in children’s health problems. But there
    has been a slight increase in some of them like cancer of the blood, called
    leukemia; we have so many cases here because we have referrers from all
    over South West. For the family that has one case of cancer, its total. But
    when we consider it among other diseases, it’s still low. For those who
    have, it can be devastating for the family.

    Cancer in children if presented early is curable,  but we need to  educate
    the parents on some of the forms cancer takes in children. When flashes are
    coming in the eye of the child it could be Retino Plastoma; when the tummy
    is growing more than normal especially when you can feel something hard ,
    it could be a cancer of the kidney, likewise if any other part of the body
    is hard. It is only the cancer of the blood that does not give us a lot of
    signs, but you will still notice the child feeling tired, unfortunately a
    lot of doctors will be treating malaria instead of looking at the blood.
    When the cancer is in the blood, it is already all over the body because
    blood goes all over the body and the more they delay the more damage it
    does to the body organs, but cancer of the blood can also be diagnosed
    early.

    Fortunately, many of our doctors in private hospitals also know enough to
    check the blood for signs of cancer. Most of these things are diagnosed
    early in advance countries but are picked quite late here, but there are
    some cancers that are quite merciful so to say like cancer of the kidney
    called nefroblastoma. It must take a careless person to have this cancer
    going to many places in the body before they come for treatment. Some
    cancers start as a solid tumor, but our people will apply Robb and pray,
    instead of coming straight to the hospital.

    You need to see some of our children, one has the cancer of the jaw, it was
    huge as a football but now she is looking almost normal because some
    organizations were able to donate for her. She had almost five operations. *
    *

    *What is the most common type of cancer that you have noticed in Nigeria?*

    We usually like to separate the one that affects the blood and the solid
    one. In the blood category, the most common is Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia
    (ALL).  The commonest solid one is Wilems Tumor. There are others too that
    are common, retino plastoma.

    *What are the causes of childhood cancer?*

    In most cases we don’t know but from research, we know some viral infection
    and malaria are associated with cancer of the jaw, if you are exposed to
    heavy radiation, they can develop cancer, even the radiotherapy that we use
    in curing cancer, if you are exposed to it for long, you might develop a
    secondary cancer. Some drugs taken by mother can affect the baby, but this
    is less than five percent of the causes.  But to be honest, 90 to 95
    percent of the time , we don’t know the causes, it occurred spontaneously.
    Occasionally we know some abnormalities in parent; genetic abnormalities
    too can lead to some cancer. The good thing is that the signs are there, if
    you are the type that would approach a doctor early enough you stand a
    chance to cure it.  For the cancer of the blood, the child can be bleeding
    and weak. It also affect their ability to fight infection so they can have
    fever, these are the signs of the other normal ailments so if your child
    have this sign and its not responding to the usual drugs you must come in
    to the hospital.

    *How much does it cost to treat these cancer and for how long?*

    On the average we can treat them for upwards of two years especially cancer
    of the blood. Those with cancer of the kidney can be treated in six
    months.  But you discover you are spending N2million-N3million and how many
    families can afford that? A family that cannot make N100,000 a month will
    need to cough out N300,000, a month for treatment, they sell the properties
    and in six months they are poor.  The thing spreads because the other
    children cannot feed well, sicknesses set in, unfortunately, there is no
    guarantee the child would survive, and it can be very devastating.

    We also do radiotherapy for leukemia for as long as two to three years, if
    you stop the cancer comes back,  for the first 3 months they must be in the
    hospital but after that they need to come to the hospital at intervals and
    we give treatments for the next three years, the cost of it may be up to N5
    million.

    *How is the hospital helping regarding funding this treatment?*

    What we need is education. Another thing we need is to treat it free; it
    is possible. If every Nigerian is contributing N100 naira per month, we
    will have almost a billion naira to use for treatment in a month. It is
    awareness, people need to start donating freely, these children will come
    and we will treat them free, we can give them the best of treatment.

    But if people can donate just a tiny fraction of their income, something
    they will not notice, we can call it  friends of leukemia or  friends of
    children living with nefroblastoma etc,  the money can be managed by an NGO.

    We have been going to companies, which can donate like N10, 000 a month and
    the more people buy into the idea the bigger the fund, we can buy more
    equipment. St Jude’s hospital in the United States  is promising us that if
    we can start and run it well, we can become an affiliate and more funds
    will come in. In that hospital, they admit hundreds of children with cancer
    every day, they come all over the world and they are treated free. With a
    facility like that why won’t the children come in early?

    If you say I want to be donating N200 a month for the children living with
    cancer, this project  will move ahead, the group in America, wants us to
    start running the free donation project for at least two years so they see
    that we have capacity to manage big funds. But also we will appeal to the
    government to make the treatment free or subsidize it heavily. It will be
    wonderful if it is on the National Health Insurance Scheme, (NHIS).

    *How many children do you admit here weekly?*

    Here we see between five to ten children every week but our ward is still
    small for them, our ward is for 20 patients and its always filled up, so
    most of them are out-patient.

    *There is so much noise about platlets, how important is it and why is it
    scarce?*

    Now platlet is what prevents us from bleeding. If the child bleeds in the
    brain it is instant death so they need the platlet. In a bag of blood there
    are different components and platlet is one of them. A patient that needs
    blood may not need platlet or some other components and we would need to
    separate what he needs from what he does not. The machine we use for that
    separation is called cold centrifuge for blood bag separation. We have just
    one machine at LUTH and I think there is another one in UCH. That is all
    for the whole South West. Our own here is overused because we are not the
    only one using it, it is not available all the time.

    The children need platlets during Chemotherapy because they can lose a lot
    of blood and if it gets to the brain the child dies .We lose a lot of
    children just because we don’t have the platlets. That is one big appeal I
    am making to the people to please help us with the machine that can help us
    separate the platlet.   A moderate one is 6 million, if we can get two or
    three machines in this hospital it will save lives.

    *What are the chances of survival for cancer patients?*

    The prognosis for Leukemia is not encouraging.  It is just about 20-30
    percent that can survive two year.  But for cancer of kidney, it could be
    as high as 80 percent, if they come early.

  • Why impact Journalism Day?

    Why impact Journalism Day?

    Readers all over the world today are hungry for stories with a difference. Stories that bring hope and concrete solutions, at both a local and global level. They are looking for signs of change they can identify with. Change that will make them think… and act.

    The media has a key role to play in this – to alert us about problems AND share solutions. This is called Impact Journalism.

    Stories like these are often hard to find. As the proverb says, “a falling tree makes more noise than a growing forest”.  That is why Sparknews is working with the media to track down stories that are changing our world.

    We invited editors of major newspapers to give more space to these inspiring initiatives. Twenty-two papers said yes, and today, the special pages they are dedicating to solutions will reach up to 50 million readers in 20 countries. Others are keen to join us and we hope 100 newspapers, TV and radio stations will participate in the next edition.

    This has been a collaborative effort. The Sparknews team prepared a package of original articles, and the newspapers in turn reported on innovative projects in their own countries. The editors then made a selection for their own readers.

    We at Sparknews hope the pages you are about to discover will be the start of a long adventure. Once this campaign is over, we will bring together our partner editors to share best practices and develop future collaborations.

    The media are on board.  Now what about us? Are we, ordinary readers, doing our bit to share solutions? A father complains his son is falling behind at school and losing confidence in the future but then he realizes he’s the one who comes home at night moaning about problems at work, the financial crisis and political scandals.

    In other words, it’s up to each one of us to pass on news that could inspire others and give them hope.

    So once you have read these pages, why not show them to your children, friends or colleagues? Why not use the social networks to share a video or an inspiring project you discovered on the Sparknews website? Why not become a force for change yourself, by talking about solutions?

    Join us on www.sparknews.com or, if you would like to contribute: impact@sparknews.com

    Thank you and welcome aboard!

    •Christian de Boisredon is founder of Sparknews