Category: Special Report

  • Our battles with  the virus, by Benue people living   with HIV/AIDS

    Our battles with the virus, by Benue people living with HIV/AIDS

    The sea of heads, with women constituting a preponderance at the vast concourse of the AIDS Preventive Initiative of Nigeria (APIN) complex, Federal Medical Centre, Makurdi, Benue State, tells a glum story, a story of a state ambushed by a debilitating scourge.

    A conjectural estimate put the figure at well over 800 persons- men, women and children. On this day, April 9th, this gathering reportedly paled significantly against the previous days’ figure put at about 1,000 of People Living With HIV and AIDS (PLWHA), who daily throng the complex from Monday to Friday, for counselling and treatment.

    A cursory peek of the PLWHA hordes first conveyed a picture of a congregation of religious faithful waiting for their pastor’s homily. But the images became starker when this reporter eventually found himself swathed by people who were in no way out to receive a sermon on the kingdom of heaven, but on how to live normally with the pandemic of HIV/AIDS.

    This sight is not peculiar to the Federal Medical Centre, Makurdi, alone. In Otukpo, Ohimini, Okpoga and elsewhere, the spectacle mutually replicates itself, with women and children mostly, at the highest rung of the HIV/AIDS ladder. For long, the monster has been stalking the state like an incubus. Finally, it has laid a seeming terrorist siege, progressively for eight years running.

    Benue State is currently burdened not only by the high prevalence of the disease but more as the highest army of people living with HIV/AIDS in Nigeria. From the available statistics released in 2010 by the National HIV Sero-Prevalence Sentinel Survey, the state reportedly had 12.7 per cent prevalence rate, a figure considered far above the national average of 4.1 per cent.

    Additionally, Benue State is adjudged as having the highest urban and rural prevalence rate of 12.5 per cent and 13.3 per cent respectively, with prevalence as high as 21.3 per cent in wannune, 18 per cent in Ihugh and 5.3 in Okpoga, Okpokwu Council Area, all of which are rural communities.

    During the period under review, Makurdi and Otukpo (both urban centres), posted 10.3 percent and 9.1 percent respectively.

    Investigations also show that the youth population stands imperiled by the HIV prevalence in the state, with the figure reported to have been consistently higher at 5.5 than its value or projection in 2008. Transmission dynamics, according to existing data, affect both key most-at-risk populations and a strong generalised constituent driven by behavioural patterns through high-risk sexual network of the general population.

    But prior to the 2010 sentinel survey, the 2005 United Nations General Assembly Special Session (UNGASS) report had put the HIV/AIDS prevalence rate in Benue State at 10 per cent, with Otukpo Council Area ranked as one of the highest with incidence rate at 7.2 per cent. Makurdi, the state capital, was 10.3 per cent and 4.4 at the national level respectively.

    The corollary of the survey showed, therefore, that there was a geometric increase of 2.7 per cent and 2.1 per cent within the five-year period from 2005 to 2010 for state and Otukpo local council respectively.

    According to a progress report by the Otukpo Local Government Area Local Action Committee on AIDS (LACA), a copy of which was made available to The Nation by the council’s Head of Department on Health and LACA Coordinator, Mrs. Rebecca Audu, showing the result of a sentinel survey in 2010 on pregnant women, 160 sites were sampled across the country, of which 86 were urban and 74 were rural sites. A total of 36,427 pregnant women were sampled across the country.

    Similarly, in Benue State, five sites, involving the three senatorial zones, were sampled during the period under review. The outcome of the study revealed the highest incidence rate of 12.7 per cent with infections mostly in the rural areas. The age groups most affected were between 15 and 35 years.

    In summary, the study showed that there was a 20 per cent increase of HIV prevalence from 2005 to 2010, with a dire consequence of about 40 per cent projected increase if nothing was done to abate the trend by 2012. The survey further reveals that about 603,000 people are infected with HIV, while about 28, 948 pregnant women are infected yearly with HIV/AIDS, and about 10,421 children infected yearly through mother to child transmission (MTCT).

    Records from the Comprehensive Health Centre, Otukpo (Ward 2), showed that of the 178 ante-natal cases, three are positive and currently on drugs as at January 2013.

    Further check by The Nation at the Otukpo General Hospital revealed a worrying incidence of new cases in the last quarter of 2012 (October to December). For instance, in the month of October, 71 people were admitted, 22 of whom were males and 49 females. November records also indicated that out of the 75 new cases, 24 were males and 51 females. For the month of December, 2012, there were 43 new cases, 13 of whom were males and 30 females.

    Conversely, in the first quarter of 2013 (January to March), The Nation investigation at the same Otukpo General Hospital shows that of the 88 new cases of people living with HIV in the month of January, 25 were males and 63 females. February records put the figure of new cases at 43 with 10 males and 33 females. While those of March were 73, with 26 males and 47 females.

    At the Pediatric Ward of the same hospital, new cases of children admitted in October 2012 were three, in the ratio of one female to three males. in November, the figure shows that eight new cases were recorded in a disparate ratio of five males to three females. In December, it was two males to zero female.

    Similarly, in the first quarter of 2013, January to March, eight children in an equal ratio of four males to four females were recorded. In February, out of six cases, one was male and five were females. It was two males to five females in the month of March.

    A survey of death rate in the last quarter of 2012 stood at one in January and one in February, all of whom were females, while three male deaths were recorded in the month of March.

    Figures at other centres –Makurdi, Okpoga and elsewhere – could not be immediately gleaned owing to unavailability of data and red tapism.

    According to the National Agency for the Control of AIDS (NACA), 10 in every 100 persons are said to be living with HIV in Benus State, with ages ranging between 15 and 49.

    According to The Nation investigation, the conveyors of the epidemic in the state include high illiteracy, particularly in rural areas, high rates of Sexually Transmitted Infections (STIs) in vulnerable groups, poverty, general apathy to condom use and carefree attitude to perceived personal risks.

    Findings also revealed that average monthly new cases in the state are put at 200 per general hospital, which brings the aggregate haul in the state to about 3,000 per month.

    Investigation by The Nation indicated that Nakar town has recently been discovered to have high prevalence of people living with HIV as records at the Federal Medical Centre, Makurdi, showed, prompting APIN and other implementing partners to contemplate the setting up of care centres in the area. At Logo in Gwue Council Area, it is the same running story as statistics at the FMC also revealed.

    The outlook cannot be any grimmer for a state famed as the ‘food basket’ of the nation. Not with its productive farming population insufferably being pillaged by the high prevalence of HIV/AIDS. It just may gradually be turning the world of the state’s agro-industry on its head.

    Factors aiding prevalence

    Considered as one of the biggest headaches in the effort at containing the scourge, is the general apathy on the part of the men folk to submit themselves to testing. According to Isaac Agbe Azor, Data Manager with the AIDS Preventive Initiative of Nigeria (APIN), FMC, Makurdi, “the men have posed the biggest challenge in combating the scourge. While their women counterparts are easily convinced to come forward for screening and testing, men have constituted our biggest obstacle. So they constitute a factor in the spread of the disease. As long as they are positive and refuse to come forward to be tested, diagnosed and managed, they will go on spreading the HIV virus.”

    He also identified logistics in the rural areas as hindering awareness campaign. “The awareness campaign has not been so vigorous as a result of logistics. Even in some of these areas, the response level is always higher with the women than the men.

    “Another challenge is poverty. There are many who cannot afford to bring their wards for testing. If, for instance, a member of the family is found to be positive and we ask them to bring the rest of their wards for testing, it is usually difficult for an individual to transport herself or himself, much more transporting the entire family from a distance of say, 50 kilometres.”

    The emergence of gay clubs in the state has also been identified as working to undermine the efforts at containing the spread of the disease, with Makurdi and Otukpo as the epicenter of the new trend in homosexual activities. According to The Nation finding, membership of these gay clubs currently stands at over 400, a figure, it is feared, is likely to snowball as youths are said to be the prime target usually recruited from some of the state’s tertiary institutions.

    High rate of promiscuity, especially in rural areas with dense illiteracy rate, an APIN official noted, is another disturbing concern. “Sexual activities in such areas are often concentrated because people do not migrate. So the spread is also concentrated, leading to a crisis proportion. In these communities, there are cases of either deceased or infected victims of HIV/AIDS in almost every household,” the official said.

    Indifference to use of condoms

    Ali Baba Emmanuel is the General Secretary of the State Coordinator of Benue People Living with HIV/AIDS (BenPlus), a network of non-governmental organisations (NGOs), which coordinates the activities of people living with HIV/AIDS across the state.

    He lamented the general apathy of the people of the state to the use of condoms. “Despite campaigns for behavioural change, people are yet to embrace the advocacy for the use of condoms. Poverty among the people has also accounted for the rapid spread of the disease, just as stigmatisation is a major hindrance to people submitting themselves to HIV screening.”

    Ali Baba further hinted: “It has also been discovered that even those on ARV have gone on to spread the virus through reckless sexual activity because their HIV status is known only to themselves. Here in Benue State, your sexual partner is likely to find it strange and will ask why you want to use a condom on him or her. He or she will demand to know why because they say sex without condom is more enjoyable. So, to avoid this embarrassing situation, an HIV person who does not want to reveal his status will go ahead and have unprotected sex with a non-HIV person. And the spread goes on and on.”

    Dr. Ali George, an anti-retroviral therapist (ART), at Saint Mary’s Catholic Hospital, Okpoga in Okpokwu Local Government Area, offers an insight into how the scourge has assumed this pandemic proportion in Benue State, culminating in its top ranking in the country’s HIV/AIDS log.

    “From my experience and from the much I have gathered as an ART at Saint Mary’s Catholic Hospital, Okpoga, the ignorance of the people is one of the factors that have facilitated the high rate of HIV/AIDS prevalence in the state.

    ‘’Oftentimes, those who are infected by the HIV virus, rather than seek medical treatment or diagnosis, resort to other means than medical. Some blame their circumstance on witchcraft or spiritual attack. Their next line of action is to go to their pastors for prayers and deliverance. This belief is also common among the enlightened ones.

    “The emergence of ‘miracle pastors’ has also been found to be one of the factors for the prevalence of HIV/AIDS, not only in Benue State, but in Nigeria as a whole. Without mentioning names, we have had cases here in Okpoga where PLWHAs abandoned treatment and sought relief in churches. Many have taken off to Lagos to get ‘cure’ from a particular church in Lagos renowned for miraculous claims in such areas. It is a major challenge in the management and prevention of HIV/AIDS in the state.

    “A particular patient was recently ripped off by a pastor who allegedly demanded for and collected N250,000 to pray for him. The same patient, who could barely afford decent meals, had to borrow to pay in order to be prayed for. A month or two later, he came back looking like a bag of bones. Before we conduct a check, the virus had seriously ravaged him because he discontinued his treatment. After much probing, he confessed and said the pastor told him to stop taking drugs as God had already healed him.

    ‘’But the sad and unfortunate thing is that the virus will begin to multiply and ravage them progressively.’’

    Pregnant women not going for ante-natal

    In many parts of the state, many pregnant women do not register for ante-natal. And when it is time to put to bed, they go to traditional birth attendants. There is also the existence of substandard maternity clinics operated by quack nurses. Pregnant women usually prefer these quack clinics because they feel they are cheaper. In these clinics, both mother and her new born child are not given quality services usually extended to pregnant women. It is very common to find mothers infecting their new born babies with the HIV virus.

    Disappearance of Support Group

    According to Mrs. Roseline Agbo, Health Line Coordinator, Otukpo Comprehensive Health Centre, “the disappearance of the Support Group has also been hampering the management and control of the spread of HIV/AIDS in the state. The Support Group deals with the welfare of PLWHAs, counselling, social wellbeing, break up of stigma which hitherto made it impossible for victims to interact socially. Paucity of funding has led to the disappearance of the Support Group. Funding used to come from both the government and donor agencies. Through the Support Group, PLWHAs are counselled to socialise sexually within the same ‘positive’ group. On a few occasions, marriages had been contracted for some members of the support group. The idea is to ensure that they do not seek sexual remedy outside the fold.”

    Benue government speaks

    When The Nation sought the comment of the Executive Secretary of the Benue State AIDS Control Agency, Mrs Grace Wendy, on the high prevalence of the HIV/AIDS in the state, she declined, claiming that she had earlier been misrepresented in the media on the issue. But the Media Officer at the state Ministry of Information, Mr. Pius Torkuma, attributed the inexorable prevalence and spread to stigmatisation, “which has prevented people from coming forward for testing, with the attendant consequence of further spread by those unwittingly living with the virus.’’ According to him, there is currently an Anti-Stigmatisation bill before the state House of Assembly.

    Similarly, the state Government had, through the former Commissioner for Health and Social Services, Dr. Oduen Abunku, expressed concern over the worrisome development when he disclosed that over 600,000 persons are currently living with the dreaded HIV/AIDS in the state.

    Speaking at the joint Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signing ceremony between the Benue State Government, the NKST Health Services and the Nigeria Indigenous Capacity Building Project, Abunku lamented that skyrocketing figures had left the state on the top of chart of available statistics of the most endemic states in the federation.

    The commissioner regretted that HIV/AIDS infestation in the state was destroying and eroding the state’s capacity in the food and agriculture. “In Nigeria, Benue State has for many years topped the chart of the prevalence of HIV/AIDS with over 600,000 persons living with the virus in the state.

    “The virus is destroying our farms, schools and churches and that is why we will continue to partner organisations who are providing services to the infected and affected in the state.”

    Governor Gabriel Suswam, who was represented on the occasion by the Secretary to the State Government (SSG), Dr. David Salifu, had reaffirmed that his administration would continue to partner relevant agencies and international partners to ensure that the scourge of HIV/AIDS in the state was effectively checked.

    The governor urged the people of the state to put aside their socio-political differences and join forces against the virus in the state, adding: “We must put aside our socio-political differences and stand up against the virus, so that our people will be able to lead a normal life.’’

    As it stands presently, the state faces a stiff struggle. A struggle between sustaining its famed status as the ‘food basket’ of the nation by winning the battle against HIV/AIDS scourge or losing the battle and its acclaimed image as the nation’s ‘food basket’. In truth, Benue is a state under siege.

    An encounter with some of the PLWHAs

    From Makurdi, Otukpo, Ogobia to Okpoga, the story of how they came to be associated with the disease is virtually the same: infidelity and other factors as well as the attendant consequences. Except for Gertrude (real name withheld) who is single but whose HIV positive status was as a result of reported blood transfusion, many others had so much to do with untamed libido, sexual recklessness and betrayal.

    For Gertrude, “It was in 2006, while I was a student of College of Education, Katsina-Ala, Benue State, that I noticed I was having frequent fever. My uncle’s wife with whom I was staying had to take me to the university clinic where I was treated for fever and malaria. When it was discovered that the fever was a frequent occurrence, our family advised me to do HIV test. Lo and behold, the outcome was positive. That was June, 2006.

    ‘’Since then, I have been on ARV. Before I started taking the drugs, I discovered that I was emaciating and losing weight. But the drugs have been working for me. I noticed that I have gained so much weight and I am feeling much healthier.’’

    Jonathan (surname withheld) is a staff with APIN. For 17 years, he has been living with the virus. Jonathan, whose wife is also HIV positive, said: “I have been living with the disease for the past 17 years. I got to know I was HIV positive when I went for a test to know my status. That was then I discovered that I was positive.

    ‘’I might have contracted the virus from my first wife who is now late. I remember that before we went our separate ways, she was always falling sick and losing pregnancies. So there was pressure from my people to put her away and marry another woman. So, I did. But it was later I got to know that she died of AIDS.

    ‘’Despite testing positive, I did not seek treatment until four years later. I have four children, but none of them has tested positive. I have been doing regular HIV tests for them.’’

    Thessy (surname withheld) is a primary school teacher with one of the state’s primary schools. She has been on ARV for the past 10 years. She got married at the age of 16 years and had her first child at the age of 18. A mother of four, Thessy’s first child is a 25-year-old medical student. Her story is not only heart-tugging, but depressing and tears-conjuring.

    At 44 and widowed, life can only be said to be abrasive, dreadful and unkind to her. At the onset of her travail as a person living with HIV/AIDS in 2002, she said she had journeyed to the land of the dead only to be chased back to continue her now gloomy life among the living.

    She lost her husband to the dreaded AIDS scourge in 1997 and thereafter, life took a battering for her and her four HIV-negative children. But she was not so lucky as her late husband had bequeathed her the HIV virus. Reliving what has now become her life’s downward trajectory since her husband’s death, Thessy said: “My condition became very critical when my husband died. There was no remedy as there were no free drugs then when I tested positive.

    ‘’Earning below N10,000 monthly income as a primary school teacher, it was not easy accessing the drugs, hence, I had to be borrowing to stay alive and look after my four children. I am alive today by the special grace of God. When my husband died, I did not know what was responsible for his death. It was not until a doctor friend confided in me that he died of AIDS.

    ‘’It was the same doctor who advised me to do HIV test. The test was N10,000 then. I did not have the money but the doctor advised me to borrow the money anywhere I could to do the test. I resigned myself to death, because I was already a dying woman. Where would I get N10,000 to pay back as a primary school teacher? So I was waiting for death to come.

    ‘’Fortunately, some health personnel were available to carry out tests. So, the cost was later slashed to N7,000, but it was still difficult to raise the money. Eventually, I did. Nobody thought I could still be alive as my case had neared a terminal stage. Even the doctors had given up on me.’’

    Thessy’s first son is a 300-level medical student. She has been slumming life to see him through medical school. But life itself has been a sticky patch for the family, leaving her in a lurch as to how her son will graduate as a doctor. Destitute of a breadwinner, Thessy has been buffeted on all fronts: inability to feed her four children, sustaining her son in the medical school and sundry deprivations in her home.

    She bemoaned her helplessness to The Nation in Otukpo amid sobs: “In Benue State, primary school teachers are not part of the minimum wage. In order to continue to support my children, I took up a part time job with the Catholic Archdiocese of Otukpo which was also involved in HIV/AIDS programme, earning a stipend. But since their project stopped in 2010, I depend solely on the irregular income from the government. I have continued to borrow to see my son through the medical school and taking care of his siblings. today, I owe N300,000.’’

    For Okpanachi (surname withheld), his plight was self-inflicted. It is the comeuppance for his unbridled libido. With bloodshot and sunken eyes, burrowed deep into their sockets and a long woozy neck completely receding into his collar bones, Okpanachi cuts the image of a man whose life hangs in the balance. Pithily, he relived his stigmatisation ordeal: ‘’Even my own biological brother who was serving in the military and with whom I used to share food, started keeping me at a distance. This discrimination became unbearable for me. I felt that the only thing left for me was suicide.”

    A once-upon-a-Sunday school teacher with the Assemblies of God Church, Otukpo, Okpanachi would soon discover that the stigma he experienced at the hands of his own brother was also waiting for him in the house of God where he conflated with the brethren and taught the scriptural tenets of love, compassion and meekness.

    A father of eight, Okpanachi told this reporter at Otukpo Comprehensive Health Centre, where this dialogue took place, that he married his wife as a virgin and vouched for her fidelity, but admitted amid penitence that he brought the faggot to his home as a result of his philandering.

    His wife, now separated, and their last child, 7, are plagued by the scourge. His other seven children, he said, are, however, all negative.

     

  • Our battles with the virus, by Benue people living with HIV/AIDS

    Our battles with the virus, by Benue people living with HIV/AIDS

    THE sea of heads, with women constituting a preponderance at the vast concourse of the AIDS Preventive Initiative of Nigeria (APIN) complex, Federal Medical Centre, Makurdi, Benue State, tells a glum story, a story of a state ambushed by a debilitating scourge. A conjectural estimate put the figure at well over 800 persons- men, women and children.

    On this day, April 9th, this gathering reportedly paled significantly against the previous days’ figure put at about 1,000 of People Living With HIV and AIDS (PLWHA), who daily throng the complex from Monday to Friday, for counselling and treatment. A cursory peek of the PLWHA hordes first conveyed a picture of a congregation of religious faithful waiting for their pastor’s homily.

    But the images became starker when this reporter eventually found himself swathed by people who were in no way out to receive a sermon on the kingdom of heaven, but on how to live normally with the pandemic of HIV/AIDS. This sight is not peculiar to the Federal Medical Centre, Makurdi, alone. In Otukpo, Ohimini, Okpoga and elsewhere, the spectacle mutually replicates itself, with women and children mostly, at the highest rung of the HIV/AIDS ladder. For long, the monster has been stalking the state like an incubus. Finally, it has laid a seeming terrorist siege, progressively for eight years running. Benue State is currently burdened not only by the high prevalence of the disease but more as the highest army of people living with HIV/AIDS in Nigeria. From the available statistics released in 2010 by the National HIV Sero-Prevalence Sentinel Survey, the state reportedly had 12.7 per cent prevalence rate, a figure considered far above the national average of 4.1 per cent. Additionally, Benue State is adjudged as having the highest urban and rural prevalence rate of 12.5 per cent and 13.3 per cent respectively, with prevalence as high as 21.3 per cent in Wannune, 18 per cent in Ihugh and 5.3 in Okpoga, Okpokwu Council Area, all of which are rural communities. During the period under review, Makurdi and Otukpo (both urban centres), posted 10.3 percent and 9.1 percent respectively. Investigations also show that the youth population stands imperiled by the HIV prevalence in the state, with the figure reported to have been consistently higher at 5.5 than its value or projection in 2008. Transmission dynamics, according to existing data, affect both key most-at-risk populations and a strong generalised constituent driven by behavioural patterns through high-risk sexual network of the general population. But prior to the 2010 sentinel survey, the 2005 United Nations General Assembly Special Session (UNGASS) report had put the HIV/AIDS prevalence rate in Benue State at 10 per cent, with Otukpo Council Area ranked as one of the highest with incidence rate at 7.2 per cent. Makurdi, the state capital, was 10.3 per cent and 4.4 at the national level respectively. The corollary of the survey showed, therefore, that there was a geometric increase of 2.7 per cent and 2.1 per cent within the five-year period from 2005 to 2010 for state and Otukpo local council respectively. According to a progress report by the Otukpo Local Government Area Local Action Committee on AIDS (LACA), a copy of which was made available to The Nation by the council’s Head of Department on Health and LACA Coordinator, Mrs. Rebecca Audu, showing the result of a sentinel survey in 2010 on pregnant women, 160 sites were sampled across the country, of which 86 were urban and 74 were rural sites. A total of 36,427 pregnant women were sampled across the country. Similarly, in Benue State, five sites, involving the three senatorial zones, were sampled during the period under review. The outcome of the study revealed the highest incidence rate of 12.7 per cent with infections mostly in the rural areas. The age groups most affected were between 15 and 35 years. In summary, the study showed that there was a 20 per cent increase of HIV prevalence from 2005 to 2010, with a dire consequence of about 40 per cent projected increase if nothing was done to abate the trend by 2012. The survey further reveals that about 603,000 people are infected with HIV, while about 28, 948 pregnant women are infected yearly with HIV/AIDS, and about 10,421 children infected yearly through mother to child transmission (MTCT). Records from the Comprehensive Health Centre, Otukpo (Ward 2), showed that of the 178 ante-natal cases, three are positive and currently on drugs as at January 2013. Further check by The Nation at the Otukpo General Hospital revealed a worrying incidence of new cases in the last quarter of 2012 (October to December). For instance, in the month of October, 71 people were admitted, 22 of whom were males and 49 females. November records also indicated that out of the 75 new cases, 24 were males and 51 females. For the month of December, 2012, there were 43 new cases, 13 of whom were males and 30 females. CONVERSELY, in the first quarter of 2013 (January to March), The Nation investigation at the same Otukpo General Hospital shows that of the 88 new cases of people living with HIV in the month of January, 25 were males and 63 females. February records put the figure of new cases at 43 with 10 males and 33 females. While those of March were 73, with 26 males and 47 females. At the Pediatric Ward of the same hospital, new cases of children admitted in October 2012 were three, in the ratio of one female to three males. In November, the figure shows that eight new cases were recorded in a disparate ratio of five males to three females. In December, it was two males to zero female. Similarly, in the first quarter of 2013, January to March, eight children in an equal ratio of four males to four females were recorded. In February, out of six cases, one was male and five were females. It was two males to five females in the month of March. A survey of death rate in the last quarter of 2012 stood at one in January and one in February, all of whom were females, while three male deaths were recorded in the month of March. Figures at other centres –Makurdi, Okpoga and elsewhere – could not be immediately gleaned owing to unavailability of data and red tapism. According to the National Agency for the Control of AIDS (NACA), 10 in every 100 persons are said to be living with HIV in Benus State, with ages ranging between 15 and 49. According to The Nation investigation, the conveyors of the epidemic in the state areas, high rates of Sexually Transmitted Infections (STIs) in vulnerable groups, poverty, general apathy to condom use and carefree attitude to perceived personal risks. Findings also revealed that average monthly new cases in the state are put at 200 per General Hospital, which brings the aggregate haul in the state to about 3,000 per month. Investigation by The Nation indicated that Nakar town has recently been discovered to have high prevalence of people living with HIV as records at the Federal Medical Centre, Makurdi, showed, prompting APIN and other implementing partners to contemplate the setting up of care centres in the area. At Logo in Gwue Council Area, it is the same running story as statistics at the FMC also revealed. The outlook cannot be any grimmer for a state famed as the ‘food basket’ of the nation. Not with its productive farming population insufferably being pillaged by the high prevalence of HIV/AIDS. It just may gradually be turning the world of the state’s agro-industry on its head. Factors aiding prevalence CONSIDERED as one of the biggest headaches in the effort at containing the scourge, is the general apathy on the part of the men folk to submit themselves to testing. According to Isaac Agbe Azor, Data Manager with the AIDS Preventive Initiative of Nigeria (APIN), FMC, Makurdi, “The men have posed the biggest challenge in combating the scourge. While their women counterparts are easily convinced to come forward for screening and testing, men have constituted our biggest obstacle. So they constitute a factor in the spread of the disease. As long as they are positive and refuse to come forward to be tested, diagnosed and managed, they will go on spreading the HIV virus.” He also identified logistics in the rural areas as hindering awareness campaign. “The awareness campaign has not been so vigorous as a result of logistics. Even in some of these areas, the response level is always higher with the women than the men. “Another challenge is poverty. There are many who cannot afford to bring their wards for testing. If, for instance, a member of the family is found to be positive and we ask them to bring the rest of their wards for testing, it is usually difficult for an individual to transport herself or himself, much more transporting the entire family from a distance of say, 50 kilometres.” The emergence of gay clubs in the state has also been identified as working to undermine the efforts at containing the spread of the disease, with Makurdi and Otukpo as the epicenter of the new trend in homosexual activities. According to The Nation finding, membership of these gay clubs currently stands at over 400, a figure, it is feared, is likely to snowball as youths are said to be the prime target usually recruited from some of the state’s tertiary institutions. High rate of promiscuity, especially in rural areas with dense illiteracy rate, an APIN official noted, is another disturbing concern. “Sexual activities in such areas are often concentrated because people do not migrate. So the spread is also concentrated, leading to a crisis proportion. In these communities, there are cases of either deceased or infected victims of HIV/AIDS in almost every household,” the official said. Indifference to use of condoms Ali Baba Emmanuel is the General Secretary of the State Coordinator of Benue People Living With HIV/AIDS (BenPlus), a network of Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs), which coordinates the activities of People Living With HIV/AIDS across the state. He lamented the general apathy of the people of the state to the use of condoms. “Despite campaigns for behavioural change, people are yet to embrace the advocacy for the use of condoms. Poverty among the people has also accounted for the rapid spread of the disease, just as stigmatisation is a major hindrance to people submitting themselves to HIV screening.” ALI Baba further hinted: “It has also been discovered that even those on ARV have gone on to spread the virus through reckless sexual activity because their HIV status is known only to themselves. Here in Benue State, your sexual partner is likely to find it strange and will ask why you want to use a condom on him or her. He or she will demand to know why because they say sex without condom is more enjoyable. So, to avoid this embarrassing situation, an HIV person who does not want to reveal his status will go ahead and have unprotected sex with a non- HIV person. And the spread goes on and on.” Dr. Ali George, an anti-retroviral therapist (ART), at Saint Mary’s Catholic Hospital, Okpoga in Okpokwu Local Government Area, offers an insight into how the scourge has assumed this pandemic proportion in Benue State, culminating in its top ranking in the country’s HIV/AIDS log. “From my experience and from the much I have gathered as an ART at Saint Mary’s Catholic Hospital, Okpoga, the ignorance of the people is one of the factors that have facilitated the high rate of HIV/AIDS prevalence in the state. ‘’Oftentimes, those who are infected by the HIV virus, rather than seek medical treatment or diagnosis, resort to other means than medical. Some blame their circumstance on witchcraft or spiritual attack. Their next line of action is to go to their pastors for prayers and deliverance. This belief is also common among the enlightened ones. “The emergence of ‘miracle pastors’ has also been found to be one of the factors for the prevalence of HIV/AIDS, not only in Benue State, but in Nigeria as a whole. Without mentioning names, we have had cases here in Okpoga where PLWHAs abandoned treatment and sought relief in churches. Many have taken off to Lagos to get ‘cure’ from a particular church in Lagos renowned for miraculous claims in such areas. It is a major challenge in the management and prevention of HIV/AIDS in the state. “Aparticular patient was recently ripped off by a pastor who allegedly demanded for and collected N250,000 to pray for him. The same patient, who could barely afford decent meals, had to borrow to pay in order to be prayed for. A month or two later, he came back looking like a bag of bones. Before we conduct a check, the virus had seriously ravaged him because he discontinued his treatment. After much probing, he confessed and said the pastor told him to stop taking drugs as God had already healed him. ‘’But the sad and unfortunate thing is that the virus will begin to multiply and ravage them progressively.’’ Pregnant women not going for ante-natal In many parts of the state, many pregnant women do not register for ante-natal. And when it is time to put to bed, they go to traditional birth attendants. There is also the existence of substandard maternity clinics operated by quack nurses. Pregnant women usually prefer these quack clinics because they feel they are cheaper. In these clinics, both mother and her new born child are not given quality services usually extended to pregnant women. It is very common to find mothers infecting their new born babies with the HIV virus. Disappearance of Support Group ACCORDING to Mrs. Roseline Agbo, Health Line Coordinator, Otukpo Comprehensive Health Centre, “The disappearance of the Support Group has also been hampering the management and control of the spread of HIV/AIDS in the state. The Support Group deals with the welfare of PLWHAs, counselling, social wellbeing, break up of stigma which hitherto made it impossible for victims to interact socially. Paucity of funding has led to the disappearance of the Support Group. Funding used to come from both the government and donor agencies. Through the Support Group, PLWHAs are counselled to socialise sexually within the same ‘positive’ group. On a few occasions, marriages had been contracted for some members of the Support Group. The idea is to ensure that they do not seek sexual remedy outside the fold.” Benue government speaks When The Nation sought the comment of the Executive Secretary of the Benue State AIDS Control Agency, Mrs Grace Wendy, on the high prevalence of the HIV/AIDS in the state, she declined, claiming that she had earlier been misrepresented in the media on the issue. But the Media Officer at the state Ministry of Information, Mr. Pius Torkuma, attributed the inexorable prevalence and spread to stigmatisation, “which has prevented people from coming forward for testing, with the attendant consequence of further spread by those unwittingly living with the virus.’’ According to him, there is currently an Anti-Stigmatisation Bill before the state House of Assembly. Similarly, the State Government had, through the former Commissioner for Health and Social Services, Dr. Oduen Abunku, expressed concern over the worrisome development when he disclosed that over 600,000 persons are currently living with the dreaded HIV/AIDS in the state. Speaking at the joint Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signing ceremony between the Benue State Government, the NKST Health Services and the Nigeria Indigenous Capacity Building Project, Abunku lamented that skyrocketing figures had left the state on the top of chart of available statistics of the most endemic states in the federation. The commissioner regretted that HIV/AIDS infestation in the state was destroying and eroding the state’s capacity in the food and agriculture. “In Nigeria, Benue State has for many years topped the chart of the prevalence of HIV/AIDS with over 600,000 persons living with the virus in the state. “The virus is destroying our farms, schools and churches and that is why we will continue to partner organisations who are providing services to the infected and affected in the state.” Governor Gabriel Suswam, who was represented on the occasion by the Secretary to the State Government (SSG), Dr. David Salifu, had reaffirmed that his administration would continue to partner relevant agencies and international partners to ensure that the scourge of HIV/AIDS in the state was effectively checked. The governor urged the people of the state to put aside their socio-political differences and join forces against the virus in the state, adding: “We must put aside our sociopolitical differences and stand up against the virus, so that our people will be able to lead a normal life.’’ As it stands presently, the state faces a stiff struggle. A struggle between sustaining its famed status as the ‘food basket’ of the nation by winning the battle against HIV/AIDS scourge or losing the battle and its acclaimed image as the nation’s ‘food basket’. In truth, Benue is a state under siege. An encounter with some of the PLWHAs From Makurdi, Otukpo, Ogobia to Okpoga, the story of how they came to be associated with the disease is virtually the same: infidelity and other factors as well as the attendant consequences. Except for Gertrude (real name withheld) who is single but whose HIV positive status was as a result of reported blood transfusion, many others had so much to do with untamed libido, sexual recklessness and betrayal. For Gertrude, “It was in 2006, while I was a student of College of Education, Katsina- Ala, Benue State, that I noticed I was having frequent fever. My uncle’s wife with whom I was staying had to take me to the university clinic where I was treated for fever and malaria. When it was discovered that the fever was a frequent occurrence, our family advised me to do HIV test. Lo and behold, the outcome was positive. That was June, 2006. ‘’Since then, I have been on ARV. Before I started taking the drugs, I discovered that I was emaciating and losing weight. But the drugs have been working for me. I noticed that I have gained so much weight and I am feeling much healthier.’’ Jonathan (surname withheld) is a staff with APIN. For 17 years, he has been living with the virus. Jonathan, whose wife is also HIV positive, said: “I have been living with the disease for the past 17 years. I got to know I was HIV positive when I went for a test to know my status. That was then I discovered that I was positive. ‘’I might have contracted the virus from my first wife who is now late. I remember that before we went our separate ways, she was always falling sick and losing pregnancies. So there was pressure from my people to put her away and marry another woman. So, I did. But it was later I got to know that she died of AIDS. ‘’Despite testing positive, I did not seek treatment until four years later. I have four children, but none of them has tested positive. I have been doing regular HIV tests for them.’’ Thessy (surname withheld) is a primary school teacher with one of the state’s primary schools. She has been on ARV for the past 10 years. She got married at the age of 16 years and had her first child at the age of 18. A mother of four, Thessy’s first child is a 25-year-old medical student. Her story is not only heart-tugging, but depressing and tears-conjuring. At 44 and widowed, life can only be said to be abrasive, dreadful and unkind to her. At the onset of her travail as a person living with HIV/AIDS in 2002, she said she had journeyed to the land of the dead only to be chased back to continue her now gloomy life among the living. She lost her husband to the dreaded AIDS scourge in 1997 and thereafter, life took a battering for her and her four HIV-negative children. But she was not so lucky as her late husband had bequeathed her the HIV virus. Reliving what has now become her life’s downward trajectory since her husband’s death, Thessy said: “My condition became very critical when my husband died. There was no remedy as there were no free drugs then when I tested positive. ‘’Earning below N10,000 monthly income as a primary school teacher, it was not easy accessing the drugs, hence, I had to be borrowing to stay alive and look after my four children. I am alive today by the special grace of God. When my husband died, I did not know what was responsible for his death. It was not until a doctor friend confided in me that he died of AIDS. ‘’It was the same doctor who advised me to do HIV test. The test was N10,000 then. I did not have the money but the doctor advised me to borrow the money anywhere I could to do the test. I resigned myself to death, because I was already a dying woman. Where would I get N10,000 to pay back as a primary school teacher? So I was waiting for death to come. ‘’Fortunately, some health personnel were available to carry out tests. So, the cost was later slashed to N7,000, but it was still difficult to raise the money. Eventually, I did. Nobody thought I could still be alive as my case had neared a terminal stage. Even the doctors had given up on me.’’ Thessy’s first son is a 300-level medical student. She has been slumming life to see him through medical school. But life itself has been a sticky patch for the family, leaving her in a lurch as to how her son will graduate as a doctor. Destitute of a breadwinner, Thessy has been buffeted on all fronts: inability to feed her four children, sustaining her son in the medical school and sundry deprivations in her home. She bemoaned her helplessness to The Nation in Otukpo amid sobs: “In Benue State, primary school teachers are not part of the minimum wage. In order to continue to support my children, I took up a part time job with the Catholic Archdiocese of Otukpo which was also involved in HIV/AIDS programme, earning a stipend. But since their project stopped in 2010, I depend solely on the irregular income from the government. I have continued to borrow to see my son through the medical school and taking care of his siblings. Today, I owe N300,000.’’ For Okpanachi (surname withheld), his plight was self-inflicted. It is the comeuppance for his unbridled libido. With bloodshot and sunken eyes, burrowed deep into their sockets and a long woozy neck completely receding into his collar bones, Okpanachi cuts the image of a man whose life hangs in the balance. Pithily, he relived his stigmatisation ordeal: ‘’Even my own biological brother who was serving in the military and with whom I used to share food, started keeping me at a distance. This discrimination became unbearable for me. I felt that the only thing left for me was suicide.” A once-upon-a-Sunday school teacher with the Assemblies of God Church, Otukpo, Okpanachi would soon discover that the stigma he experienced at the hands of his own brother was also waiting for him in the house of God where he conflated with the brethren and taught the scriptural tenets of love, compassion and meekness. A father of eight, Okpanachi told this reporter at Otukpo Comprehensive Health Centre, where this dialogue took place, that he married his wife as a virgin and vouched for her fidelity, but admitted amid penitence that he brought the faggot to his home as a result of his philandering. His wife, now separated, and their last child, 7, are plagued by the scourge. His other seven children, he said, are, however, all negative.

  • 68-yr-old  man dies mysteriously after  sex with  mistress

    68-yr-old man dies mysteriously after sex with mistress

    IT was an illicit affair turned tragic on the Lord’s Day. Mother of three, Olaitan (surname withheld), and her lover, Kehinde, had stormed their love nest for rounds of sex but the 68-year-old man died during the process.

    The incident happened on Easter Monday April 1, 2013 in Oke-Ado, Ibadan, Oyo State. While Christians were preparing for picnic, the deceased called on his mistress on the telephone at about 8 am to meet him at 003 Hotel in Itamaya, Oke-Ado. He went further to book a ‘short time’ accommodation at the hotel where they both hit it off.

    A few minutes later, Kehinde allegedly coughed repeatedly and his health took a turn for the worse. In the middle of this, his mistress reached for some water thinking that he was dehydrated. Kehinde had not taking the water before he gave up the ghost at about 10 am.

    A source, who spoke with our correspondent in confidence, explained that Olaitan had left her husband and children at home on the excuse that she was visiting a friend somewhere in town.

    “When she was leaving her matrimonial home that day, she lied to her husband that she was visiting one of her friends, not knowing she had a date with her lover. She was the one to first arrive at the hotel at about 9.05 am, while the deceased arrived a few minutes before 10 am. From the look of things, the said lover might have fallen victim of Magun, better known as ‘thunder bolt,’ because he was said to have started coughing during the sex romp.

    Kehinde, said the source, had barely finished the ‘show’ when he started gasping for breath and coughing.

    “The deceased did not waste time at all. As soon as he arrived the hotel, he beckoned on Olaitan and they both went into the room only for the woman to raise the alarm a few minutes later. Her distress was what attracted the hotel employees who dashed to the scene only to find the late Kehinde convulsing.

    Speaking with our correspondent, Olaitan, who is now in police custody, said she would not have indulged in extra-marital affairs but for her husband’s inability to satisfy her sexually.

    “I am a native of Igbajo, Osun State, and I am already married with three children. My husband is a generator technician and he also sells soap. I started having affairs with the deceased in April 2012 when my husband could not take care of my needs.”

    The 44-year-old woman recalled how she met her late lover through one of her friends and how they had hit it off immediately.

    “I met Kehinde (the deceased) through a friend and I agreed to date him because he told me he really loved me. I was forced to indulge in extra-marital affairs because my husband was always complaining of being ‘broke’. There was a time my husband didn’t give me money for upkeep for more than one month. He would complain about poor sales; hence, I would have to fend for myself and our children. The little money he makes from his businesses is not enough to feed the two of us, not to talk of our children. And if I complain, he would ask me to go back to my parents because he cannot give what he does not have.

    “Whenever Kehinde wanted to have sex with me, he would give me N500. Our love nest is a hotel in Itamaya, Oke-Ado .The day of the incident was the third time that we would have sex in one of the rooms in the hotel. Although, the cause of his death remains a mystery but it’s known to God. It was unfortunate that he was yet to give the money he had promised me before he died because I was already thinking of what to do with the money.

    Speaking further, she said: “On the day of the incident, Kehinde called me at about 8.30 am and asked me to join him at the hotel. I arrived late and we immediately had sex which lasted for just three minutes. He was about dressing up when he started coughing repeatedly. I ran to the bar tender to get sachet water but he could not drink nor walk and he was already foaming in his mouth. The hotel employees also tried to communicate with him but he could not talk any more.

    On whether she was laced with Magun, she said: “My husband could not have laced me with Magun. He also patronises the hotel because he smokes and drinks. He denied lacing me with Magun when he was asked by sympathisers. He repeated the same thing when I asked him too and that made me believe that Kehinde did not die of Magun.”

    It was gathered that the matter is currently being handled by men of the State Criminal Investigation Department (SCID) Iyaganku, Ibadan while the remains of the deceased have since been deposited in the mortuary. A top police officer who spoke in confidence confirmed the story but said investigation was ongoing.

    A community leader who simply identified himself as Elder Daramola, however, said the suspect’s husband was not saying the truth.

    “Do you expect the woman’s husband to own up just like that? I am a Yoruba man and I know that Magun is a deadly charm commonly used to deal with a promiscuous woman. As far as I am concerned, Kehinde was a victim of Magun and it serves him right for having an illicit affair with a married woman. I know the woman but I don’t know the man at all but I guess the woman’s husband must have suspected that his wife was cheating on and that could naturally lead any man to take extreme measures to punish such a wayward woman.”

  • Travails of  pensioners

    Travails of pensioners

    Pensioners are supposed to be enjoying their lives after years of toiling for their country. But, in Nigeria, the reverse is the case, as the monthly dues of many of them are delayed for months and at times years, writes LEKE SALAUDEEN

    HE knew he did not have the strength. So, he sent his son to the Pension Office in Abuja from his base in Benin, Edo State. But despite the fact that his son was armed with a letter of authority to receive the money on his behalf, he was ignored by the officials in charge. He had to return to Benin to fetch his aged and sick father, a decision which proved fatal.

    Elder Michael Igiebor Okhokpa had worked with the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC). He died on his way to Abuja to receive his pension. He died inside the vehicle conveying him to Abuja. In frustration, the son took his father’s body to the pension officers. There was pandemonium when they arrived, as angry onlookers, including other pensioners, nearly caused a riot. The hitherto recalcitrant officials promptly paid the dead man’s pension.

    Certainly, this is not how to treat a senior citizen who had served his country meritoriously. It shows how callous and insensitive the Nigerian system can often times be.

    Getting gratuity and pensions in Nigeria has become a nightmare for senior citizens. Often, these men and women who spent their youth serving the country are compelled to make long journeys to Lagos or Abuja or state headquarters for some officials to ascertain their continued existence. In some cases, the pensioners, where they enjoy good health, do not even have enough funds to make the trip.

    Retirement is a period workers should look forward to with hope and pleasure. After many years of hard labour, a worker is entitled to some peace and security in his old age. It is for this reason that many people once considered a career in civil service safe and secure. But that is no more. The life of an average pensioner is now insecure and generally, senior citizens are treated shabbily. Help does not come from the state either, and the future is uncertain.

    Last Wednesday, the National Union of Pensioners (NUP) was to hold a peace protest. The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) had directed all members of the congress, who work in Abuja and Lagos, to stay off work on that day in solidarity with the pensioners. But the protest has been suspended till April 30 to allow government to address the issues at stake.

    The Ag. President of the congress, Comrade Promise Adewusi, had, before the suspension, said that NLC would not rescind the decision unless the Federal Government “considers the inequities in the pension fund administration in the country, particularly as they affect our members.”

    He had said: “The issues in a nutshell are non-payment of outstanding arrears to scores of pensioners, non-enrolment of thousands of pensioners on the Federal Pension Payroll , non-payment of death benefits to deserving next of kin.”

    He added that other issues at stake are the non-implementation of payments to pensioners to reflect the 53.4 per cent salary review and payment of pension in line with relevant increases in the Minimum Wage to N18,000, withholding of the NUP statutory check-off dues for over a year, and the slow pace at which pension payment is being processed by the Office of the Head of Service of the Federation.

    The NLC recalled that the administration of pension funds has been enmeshed in unprecedented corruption with some public officers, institutions of government and banks generously helping themselves to the said fund, and in the process, deny pensioners their pension.

    This, situation, said Adewusi, has thrown majority of whom are members of NLC into penury, with some dying in queues of protracted and unending verification exercises that yield little or no result.

    The congress noted that government’s undignified silence on the matter in spite of the shrill cries and agony of the victims and the criticism of concerned citizens has been shocking.

    According to the Ag. President, the congress had tried to intervene or mediate by writing several letters to the presidency and reaching out to the government through other channels.

    He said the NLC also made public pronouncements on the pension saga in the hope of getting the government to do something to ameliorate the trauma and sufferings of pensioners, all to no avail.

    The congress submitted that “the government did not as much as acknowledge any letters, let alone respond to the issues Congress had publicly raised, lending credence to its indifference and complicity.”

    To avert the impending peace protest, NLC therefore called for immediate restoration of the withheld check-off dues to NUP, accelerated payment of all arrears of pensions to the deserving pensioners.

    The NLC President, Abdulwaheed Omar, and the Acting General Secretary, Chris Uyot, announced in a communique signed by them on Tuesday, that Federal Government, at a joint meeting held with the NLC and TUC, had accepted to restore the check-off dues of the NUP which had been withheld for a year.

    The case of NITEL staff

    Three years after disengagement, hundreds of ex-workers of the Nigerian Telecommunication Limited (NITEL) and its mobile arm, M-tel, are left in the lurch over non- payment of their pension entitlements. Life has not been the same for the retirees.

    Mr. Oghevbode Otaghogho cannot understand why he was being denied his entitlements after serving the country for 28 years. “The psychological trauma I’m going through is beyond imagination. Before I left Bauchi where I served, I was engaged in petty trading that was fetching me money to feed my family. But insecurity has forced me to relocate to Abuja. I have exhausted the little capital for petty trading on feeding due to high cost of living in Abuja. In fact, I’m contemplating returning to my village in Delta State. For how long will I continue to depend on people to survive?”

    Mr. Amos Alagbe retired in 2005. His plan was to use his pension entitlement to complete a house he was building in his home-town Ogbomoso, Oyo State. He’s living in a two-room apartment in Bauchi with his family.”Even if I decide to go home now, where will I stay? The joy of a retired worker is to have a roof over his head. It has been hectic for me and my wife to survive in the last eight years. The treatment being meted on us by government is unjust.”

    Mr. Enong Okey relived his experience: “It has been very tough living without pension. I thought they would pay immediately going by the content of the letter stating our pension entitlement. Since 2010, it has been promises upon promises. At a time, we were told that the money had been paid to the bank. We went to the bank for confirmation. To our surprise, the bank said there was nothing like that. The bank officials said we should demand a copy of pay mandate from the Accountant General of the Federation’s office if it is true they have paid. But the officials in AGF’S office said they can’t release it because it is an official document. When I was evicted by my landlord, I have to squat with my relations together with my wife and children. It was a clergy man in my church that gave me N100,000 to secure accommodation out of sheer sympathy.

    ‘The money could pay for six months. The rent will expire next month. I don’t know what to do. I hope those who are making life difficult for retirees realise that one day they will retire from the civil service and they would not pray to undergo this kind of experience.’

    Mr. Igili Gregory Edekin served in Jalingo, Taraba State, before his retirement. He lost his wife recently because of lack of medical care as he could not afford to pay hospital bills. Even after her death, Edekin could not foot the burial bills of his beloved wife. Now, he has been evicted from his residence owing to accumulated rents. He was forced to relocate to his village in Edo State.

    Similarly, Mr. Ahuka Lawrence Iheanyi may be ejected by his landlord who is tired of stories that he is awaiting his pension to be paid. His children have stopped schooling because of unsettled fees. His concern is how to raise money to send his children back to school.

    For Mr. Umana Umana, the only regret he has serving NITEL is the failure of the management to pay him his entitlements after serving the country for many years. The non-payment of his pension is affecting his family. He finds it difficult to feed his wards let alone paying his children’s school fees. This is not how to reward people that have used their productive years in serving their fatherland, he said.

    Investigations by The Nation revealed that the 7.5% were deducted from the staff salaries as pension contribution between 2007 and 2010. Both the employees’ contribution and the other 7.5% to be contributed by the management as required by the new pension scheme were not remitted to the Pension Fund Administrators. Hence, the accounts of some retirees at their respective PFAs show they have not contributed anything.

    Whereas, when the workers were laid off in 2010, they were issued letters indicating how much each of them is entitled to as pension. The packages, according to our findings, were worked out by the NITEL management, the Bureau of Public Enterprise (BPE) and the Office of the Accountant General of the Federation (AGF).

    One of the affected retirees said: “NITEL retired about 90% of its workforce in 2010. We started contributing to pension scheme in 2007. Deduction for pension contribution is reflected in our pay slips. The management through a letter informed us that our pension benefits were to be drawn from our PFAs.

    “On the strength of the letter, I went to my PFA- IBTC with the hope of getting paid. To my surprise, my account and that of other colleagues show that we have not contributed anything. That is to say that our accounts were not funded by NITEL. In IBTC alone, 1,031 retirees are affected; IBTC is just one of the PFAs that manage the pension fund of NITEL workers.

    “We learnt that IBTC had written NITEL that some of the accounts were not funded by it. Since 2010, we have been struggling to get our entitlements. The questions we keep asking are: What happened to our pension contributions? Where are the government’s contributions?”

    Expressing displeasure over the development, the National leader of the Association of former Telecom Employees of Nigeria (ATEN), Mr. Godwin Alajemba, told our correspondent in an interview that “there is record that all staff of NITEL between 2007 and 2010 paid their own quota of the 15% contribution (being 7.5% as specified by the PFA requirement). This is so because these monies were deducted from source before the salaries were paid or collected by the staff. But one is sad to note that although that of the staff were deducted and some paid to their respective PFAs, the other 7.5% that is to be contributed by NITEL was not inclusive in the monies so far remitted to the PFAs, that is in the case of those who have been paid, let alone those yet to be paid.

    “On several occasions, the Association of Former Telecoms Employees has taken up the matter with NITEL and the AGF’s office with the occasional results of the AGF paying a few numbers of persons and once again putting on hold the payments. With this action, it is clear that the AGF’s office is responsible for the delay in payments”.

    On whether there was fraud in the management of the pension funds, the ATEN leader said: “I would want to be careful asserting fraud here on the reasons that from my findings, the AGF directed that monies (released in October 2012 to banks who were in turn to credit the account of the respective PFAs) be returned to the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) in November 2012; their reason being that some banks were under merger process.

    “Our concern now is that the merging process has long been completed and so the monies should have been released to the banks for onward transmission to the PFAs. Largely affected was Access Bank and unfortunately, they are the bank paying or remitting to IBTC. We are getting information that the banks have been contacted to produce proof of their remittance to CBN so that they can be repositioned to receive the money back for the PFAs within the next few weeks. We understand IBTC has written NITEL on the delayed payment.”

    Alajemba, however, attributed non-payment of retirement benefits to various factors such as submitting wrong account number, error in computation of peoples data at the Accountant General’s office, omission of names both at NITEL and AGF ends and wilful withholding of money transfer as directed by the AGF.

    Frowning at the bureaucratic procedure, Alajemba said: “it is quite a pity that a lot of people placed in government offices are there not really putting their best even when they know that the life of others is largely affected by their unserious attitude to work. Most of the pensioners in question served NITEL for 35 years, thus giving out the most useful part of their lives for the service of their fatherland. If the economy is in good shape, we would not rely on pension money. By the circumstances of their age, most of them are no longer relevant in the labour market. Government should expedite action on this matter.”

    Enquiries at the AGF’s office, however, confirm that the pension deductions of NITEL workers were paid to their respective PFAs in August 2011, two years after the disengagement of the workers. An official, Mr. Sunday Adamu, explained that those who have not received their pension are those who have problems with their accounting details.

    He said the pensioners are not helping matters by storming AGF’s office in pursuit of their pension. “It is a breach of protocol because the AGF’s office does not recognise individuals but the PFAs. It is the responsibility of PFAs to come and find out the cases of their clients not individuals.”

    Adamu said NITEL and BPE are responsible for computing their pension details not AGF. They are still compiling names. As soon as they are through with the compilation and forwarded to the AGF’s office, they will be paid, he said.

    A spokesman of IBTC, Mr. Magnus Ekwueme, told The Nation: “We pay former staff once NITEL sends their names along with Retirement Savings Account (RSA) and Pencom Pin Number as well as the amount due to the Office of the Accountant General of the Federation. They have been doing this in batches.”

    Asked how many have been paid, Ekwueme said quite a number have been paid, emphasising that as long as the ex-staff provide the statutory documentations Pen Coms approval would be sort and the client will receive their pay.

    What Pension Commission Act says?

    The National Pension Commission Act stipulates that all pension funds and assets shall be transferred to licensed operators.

    Section 39(1) of Pension Reform Act 2004 which deals with penalties for non-compliance with funding of existing Pension Scheme states that the pension scheme has to be fully funded by the employer at all times and any shortfall to be made up within 90 days.

    After the expiration of 90 days and there is no compliance, the commission will write a letter of advice to the defaulting employer. One month after, the recalcitrant employer gets letter of caution. Thereafter, a fine not more than N250,000 and N500,000 is imposed every month, Section 44-46 0f the Act provides that all pension funds and assets shall be transferred to licensed operators.

    The revised regime of sanctions and penalties for non-compliance states that: “Upon discovery of non-transfer by the commission letter of caution will be issued. Two months after, letter of advice will be written. One month after, letter of warning. A month after, letter to pay fine of N250,000 for every month of default will be issued.

    Pension system encourages corruption

    An expert in pension administration has described the pension system in the country as lacking care and respect for the senior citizens. Mr. Kunle Ajibade told our correspondent in an interview that except pensioners receive fair and prompt treatment, the country is unwittingly strengthening the temptation of civil servants to be corrupt.

    According to him, any society that cannot treat its elderly citizens with care and respect advertises its disregard for values. Stressing that retirees should be paid their entitlements without any stress, he said the present practice where civil servants at both federal and state levels have to wait for four to five years before they get their gratuity is not ideal.

    He noted that some ministries are notorious; they seem to derive pleasure from the hopelessness of retirees. Proper records are not kept. Unscrupulous officials demand different documents from bewildered retirees.

    On the new pension scheme, he said: “The expectation was that the private sector-driven national pension scheme introduced by the Obasanjo administration would fast-track payment of pensions to retired civil servants and that the emergence of Pension Fund Administrators (PFAs) will eliminate inefficiency and corruption in the system; this has been counter- productive in some cases.

    It’s not because the new scheme is not good but the Nigerian factor is at play. Many employers have circumvented the Pension Act by deducting pension contributions from the salaries of employees without remitting them and the employers’ mandatory contribution to the pension administrators. It is when the employees disengage and approach their PFAs for their pension entitlements that they realise that there is nothing in their accounts.

    “The employers particularly in the private sector breach the rule with impunity. Despite the prescribed sanctions in the Act, how many employers have been brought to book? It is because we don’t value the contributions of retirees in this country. In other climes, the welfare of senior citizens is accorded high priority.

    “The pension payment system, with regard to retired civil servants who are not covered by the new system introduced by the Obasanjo administration, must be reviewed. Humiliating and maltreating persons who had spent a better part of their lives serving the country is unacceptable. It is curious that the usually discourteous pension payment officers, who derive joy in humiliating pensioners, hardly realise that they would also end up as pensioners some day.”

  • Towards Yorubaland development in Dubai 

    Towards Yorubaland development in Dubai 

    For the Yoruba in the South-West region of the country, one thing that  has become a burning issue  of recent is the promotion of  the culture of  a nation which has its people beyond the confine of  the  African continent  and has been regarded as one of the dominant  ethnic group in the world. This resuscitation is not however limited to the country alone as those in the Diaspora have taken it upon themselves to not only promote the culture of the race but also see to its development.

    Thus when an assemblage of Yoruba people from over  26 countries  recently converged at the Palace Hotel, Burj  Khalifa Souk Al Bahar, Dubai, in the United Arab Emirates, for the Yoruba in Diaspora International Convention, it was aimed at resuscitating the past glory of the race.

    Indeed, the convention which had in attendance Yoruba professionals and technocrats  had as its theme: “ Resuscitating Our Past Glory,” and was held between March 14 and 16, 2013.The convention which could not have come at the right time than now with the happenings all over the world provided an opportunity for the people of a race so rich in culture and human resources to dig trenches in far away Middle East to discuss Development Agenda for Western Nigeria (DAWN), which is a document being promoted by state governors in the South-West geo-political zone. The aim was actually to infuse a road map tagged “ Yorubaland Development Agenda”, based on the experiences garnered over the years from other nations by Yoruba intellectuals, professionals and business men and women into a wholesome worldview acceptable to the geo-political zone.

    Declaring the convention open, the Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Lamidi Olayiwola Adeyemi 111, who marveled at the state of tranquility and developmental progress attained by Dubai in a short space of time which has turned the city into a huge world trade centre, said the South-West region had similar experience early in her practice of culturalization which ensured her rapid growth and development. The  first class monarch added that the region was a pacesetter in the fields of broadcasting, print journalism, banking, sports, accounting, law, medicine and engineering, saying, “till date the South-West region is one of the safest areas in Nigeria to live in.”Oba Adeyemi while enjoining investors that were present at the convention to seize the opportunity of the peace pervading the South-West region to invest in the area, maintained that the pace setting of old is still achievable today given the fact that all the governors in the region shared the same ideal of regional integration, appealing that this “ sense of responsibility “ should continue to prevail.

    He explained that the protection of the Yoruba heritage should be paramount in the minds of all Yoruba indigenes whether at home or in the diaspora, calling on the participants to protect and defend the Yoruba language because any tribe or community that rejects its language cannot be heading towards extinction.

    On her part, the Iyaloja of Oyo Kingdom, Chief (Mrs.) Orija Adesoye, charged the participants to view and fashion out an all encompassing development plan for the Yoruba race which will be relevant to its traditional tenets.

    Indeed, the main thrust of the convention was geared towards taking an immediate advantage of the assurance given by the international experts to develop Yorubaland to similar standards as seen in developed countries of Europe, America  and Asia without taking any money from the governors of the South-West states or people of Yorubaland. Foreign experts that gave keynote presentation at the convention include Mr. Lamar Nathan Jensen, Founder and Chairman  of Worldwide Holdings Limited; Dr. Sidi Larbi Cherif, Executive President World for World and United Nations NGO; Dr. Ulrich Hatiner, CEO, LLC, Director of Developing Markets in Africa and Mr. Sun Seek Cho, Managing Director, Eco Green Energy, LLC.Jensen in his paper spoke of a wide rage of assistance his organization which has as its motto “ The Power of Synergy” and in over 50 countries can offer , maintaining that the experience of organization will rob off positively on the economic  front not only in Yorubaland but also in Nigeria as a whole in order to accomplish substantial needs of humanitarian benefits.

    And while responding to a question posed by the Legal Secretary of the Conveners, Barrister Abiodun Olopade, Jensen emphasized that all the developmental projects agreed on at the convention will be carried out at no cost to the governments and people of Yorubaland, disclosing that about 50billion dollars has already been earmarked  for the projects by international agencies.

    Also, the Alaafin  of  Oyo was asked to approach the Federal Government of Nigeria  for an aviation license for proposed Oduduwa Airlines which the foreign  investors want to start immediately.

    The participants similarly agreed to open Oduduwa Trade Missions in major advanced countries in order to forge economic cooperation between states in Yorubaland and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) in general and Dubai in particular.

     — Prince Fehintola Azeez Aremu , is the Chief Press Secretary to the Alaafin  of Oyo and Permanent Chairman, Oyo State Council of Obas and Chiefs,  Oba Lamidi Olayiwola  Adeyemi 111.

  • How our parents were gruesomely murdered by religious fanatics  —Inmates of Ogun orphanage

    How our parents were gruesomely murdered by religious fanatics —Inmates of Ogun orphanage

    Since the religious riot that claimed thousands of lives in Kaduna in 2000, scores of men and women have been killed in religious and sectarian violence that has ravaged the northern part of Nigeria. Although religious organisations, government agencies and other groups have doled out relief items to victims, the hopes, survival and educational development of the children whose parents were killed during these crises remain threatened. Most times, their houses and business outfits are set ablaze, prompting a non-governmental organisation, Stephen Centre, to offer help to more than 320 children whose parents were victims of religious persecution. ADEOLA OGUNLADE recently visited the centre in Abeokuta, Ogun State.

    Entering through the gates of Stephen Centre in Aregbe community, Obantoko area of Abeokuta, Ogun State, it looked quiet and homely. The children were warm as they welcomed the reporter.

    Most of them had been orphaned as a result of the religious crises that have rocked the nation in the last couple of years, particularly the activities of the Boko Haram sect in the northern part of the country.

    Some of the inmates relived the horrible circumstances in which they lost their parents to rampaging Islamist sects in the north before the centre came to their rescue.

    One of them is Blessing Justin.an indigene of Anambra State, who was born in Kaduna State. She said: “As a result of the religious crisis going on in Nigeria, particularly the northern part, so many people have been killed because of their faith in Christ Jesus. Happy homes have been turned into homes full of sorrow and tears. I am a living testimony to this crisis.

    “On February 21, 2000, we were all at home when it was announced that there would be a peaceful protest against the Sharia law that was being imposed. It started peacefully until the next day when houses were set on fire with people in them. Shops were burnt with people in them. Schools were burnt with students in them and people were being slaughtered like animals.

    “On February 22, my father left the house early in the morning for early morning prayers in our church. He asked my mother to stay at home and watch over us the children. After he left, our house was attacked by the rioters. Car tyres with fire on them were thrown at the house, but with God’s intervention, only the roof of the building caught fire and it was quenched.

    “We waited for our father till later that evening, but he was nowhere to be found. Later at night, my uncle who witnessed the killing came to relay the news of my father’s death to us.

    “Being a man of God (pastor) with strong faith in the Lord, my father was asked to deny his faith in Christ Jesus in order to save his life, but he refused. He was tortured but he still refused to deny Christ Jesus. This got the rioters angry and they killed him. He was shot with a gun.

    “His body was brought to us. There were so many injuries inflicted on him while he was being tortured.

    “All hope seemed lost for us. Things became difficult. But as it is written in the Bible, Jesus is the father to the fatherless and the husband to the widows. He remembered us through the Voice of the Christian Martyrs (VOCM). I thank God for VOCM and the director of Stephen Center International Group of Schools, Rev. Isaac Oluwole Newton Wusu, for bringing me, three of my siblings and other people that have also lost one or two parents during the religious riots to Stephen Centre International/Stephen Children’s Home in Abeokuta, Ogun State.

    “I came here in the year 2001. Then, I was just seven years old. I was given free education, free feeding, clothing and other basic needs of life.

    “At first, I never wanted to stay because we had to manage everything. The water was not good. We slept in classrooms and so on. But it was better than going back to nothing. The director kept encouraging me and my colleagues to be strong. As the years went by, things began to change for the better. We now have buildings of our own, a secondary school and so many social amenities. Things are now great here at Stephen Centre International.

    “To the glory of God and the help of Stephen Center International, I graduated from secondary school in 2010. Even though the road has being tough, God saw us through. The following year, 2011, I also got admission into the Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU) for a diploma course.

    “I have been with Stephen Center International for 12 years now. This place is a home to me. It is not just where I stay but where I learn educationaly and morally.

    “I thank God for VOCM and Rev. Isaac for giving me and the other children here a second chance to live a good life.”

    Another inmate, 13-year-old Silas Victoria, an indigene of Enugu State, whose parents were killed in Jos in 2009, said: “I was brought here in April, 2012. My growing up in Gombe was very nice as I enjoyed the company of my friends. I spoke their language and ate good foods like nwake, tuwo and others. But it was like a joke when in 2011, Christians were told to leave within three days. It was on the fifth of January when we went to a revival service in Deeper Life BSGA.

    “Around 7pm, there were shootings by some unknown gunmen. They shot my father, brother, and elder brother on his two laps and his spinal cord. I jumped from the window and I felt no pain after I saw my younger sister with bloodstains. It was very painful. After two days, daddy died. They shot me in the left side.

    ‘Ironically, we had good relationship with our Muslim neighbours who behaved like Christians. They wept when they heard that we were leaving. We trusted the Muslim brothers, their ways and culture so much. I will love to go back to Gombe. I only implore the religious fanatics to change because the end is near.”

    Sunday James, a 15-year-old indigene of Plateau State, recalled that he was in primary 5 when at about 3 am, some religious fanatics set fire to their house. We came out to escape being burnt and then my brother and I fell down and they started cutting us with machetes so much so that I landed in the hospital where they later told me that my parents and brother were killed in the massacre.

    “I feel bad whenever I remember the incident. I want to be a banker. I had thought of fighting back, but I stopped the idea and gave peace a chance.”

    Racheal David, who was rescued in Maiduguri, said : “Since 2009, life was always boring as the Boko Haram sect made life unbearable for all of us.

    “One day, they passed by our house and saw my younger brother, but they did not do anything. They came back to ask where he was. I was standing by the door when they came in, but he had gone to play.

    “They started shooting into the air. They took my father and asked whether to shoot him in the back or in the stomach. He did not say a word. but kept praying. They shot him in the ear and the bullet got out through the other ear. His teeth and brains popped out and he died.’’

    In a chat with the Executive Director of Stephen Centre, Mr. Isaac Nelson, on what led to the initiative, he said it all began sometime in 2000 while he was distributing relief materials donated by an international organisation, Voice of the Martyr, where he had served for more than 30 years, to victims of the Kaduna riots. He said he came across two women at the refugee camp who gave birth to two girls and both named them Mary

    He said: “The circumstances leading to their birth was touching. By the time I went back to search for the two Marys, I discovered that one had died with the mother. The other Mary survived and I brought her with me to Abeokuta, Ogun State.

    “Stephen Centre was not actually founded as a school. While we were in Lagos, the harassment during the Abacha regime was so terrible that my brother suggested that I move to his apartment in Abeokuta. Incidentally, we spent little time there since the situation in Nigeria was not conducive for our activities. We moved to Ghana.

    “After the death of Abacha and Abiola, I decided to use the apartment I was given in Abeokuta as a computer school and Christian library. That is why the name of the school is called Stephen Centre.

    “I first brought eight children from Kaduna and called them Kaduna Special Children. Without funding and support, we increased the number to 14, then to 40 and later to 50. We later brought children from Kano, Bauchi, Jos, Maiduguri, and from the Boko Haram uprising. Now, there are 300 of such children here. We call them the family of Mary.

    “Each of them lost one of their parents or both parents in the religious uprising in most parts of the north. When we brought them in those days, we could not communicate. I cannot speak Hausa very well and none of the children could speak English. So, we used signs to communicate.

    “By the end of July 2011, we had 44 of them who had graduated from the college here. Twenty of them are in the university. Till today, the 20 students are not sponsored by anybody other than us. We have not got any external help for them.

    “The journey has been exciting, though it is full of ups and downs. But the most important thing is that we are focused on where we are going. At Stephen Centre, we are dedicated like the biblical Stephen who was persecuted. Our trademark is for the church because we are children of the persecuted. There we started with the Kaduna riot in 2000.”

    On whether Nelson had the capacity and experience to shoulder this responsibility, he said: “For me, it is just a miracle. How we got here, I can’t tell, as we wake up every day with God as our guard. We trust Him to support us and He has never failed us.

    “We have also sponsored 20 children to higher institutions, studying courses that range from Law and engineering to Medicine and the humanities. We just bought an uncompleted building in Ijebu-Igbo to house the children who are in Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ogun State.

    “It was a big challenge to start and to get approval from the Ministry of Education. We thank Mrs. Sore and Rev. Sofuluwe who supported us, took our plight into consideration and made sure that Stephen Centre was approved. It was a very big challenge which we could not have handled on our own. But the children within the community supported and welcomed the children.”

    He recalled that when the orphanage started, the community thought that the children would be violent because they were products of crises. But with time, they saw that the children were calm and upheld godly virtues. Hence, they opened their arms to accept the children.

    He said there were 60 teachers at the centre and their salaries were being paid regularly. “We have quality teachers who are totally committed to us and our goal. We are grateful to the parents, children and teachers who are working very hard on this project, as it is very challenging.

    “Everything about us is a miracle. God has always been with us at this centre. We have graduated 44 students and several of them are in the universities in Nigeria. Often times, my answer has been very logical when people ask me how we are able to do this great work, because it is not a dream you can conceive or an idea that can just come to one’s mind. Feeding, housing and providing vocational and formal education to 320 children is never a child’s play.

    “The churches have been helpful. The children were recently invited by Pastor Wale Adefarasin, the Senior Pastor of Guiding Light, who welcomed the children and gave them the opportunituy to share their stories with the congregation and were thereafter supported with several thousands.”

    Funding for this humanitarian project could be a daunting task. How has he been able to work around it? Nelson said: “I worked for a Christian mission for more than 30 years, and I do a lot of publishing. At first, I thought I could feed eight children conveniently. But when the number increased to 20 and 50, it became difficult for me. To worsen it all, neighbours could not imagine what I was doing. They thought we were into child trafficking. I had to sell my books to feed the children.

    “Some of the children are today reading Law. And when I think about the struggle, it is not an issue to remember. The God of the widow is also the God of the orphan. The church is really making a big mistake when orphans are seen as beggars. James told us that true religion is to visit the orphan and the widow in their affliction. God has not abandoned us and the church is realising it. We need to store up together and not fight one another, because our arch enemy is Satan, not the people that are killing us.

    “The Voice of Christian Martyr, which I worked with for more than 30 years, gives us the most support. We are doing our best to rescue these children and their families, so that tomorrow when I die, I will be happy I have done my part towards saving lives.”

    Asked whether the fact that he had worked in the North had given him a leeway in his intervention projects, he said: “I work in the North through an international Christian mission where we give relief materials to families of Christian martyrs. We are also working aggressively, reaching out to help persecuted Christians. We are the only mission recognised in most parts of northern Nigeria. We created a library where we fabricated artificial limbs for Christians whose legs were broken or damaged with bombs.”

    Religious crises have pervaded the world, with Nigeria as one of the major trouble spots. But Nelson said there had not been a time when the church was not persecuted. “Jesus was crucified. And bible scholars record that only Apostle John, the brother of Jesus, died a natural death. The remaining apostles died harrowing deaths.

    “Christianity was borne out of persecution. I will like to recommend this book, Foxes Book of Martyr, which gives a detailed report of Christians’ persecution. Today’s world can never be defined, because when you think you are at peace serving Christ, you should see yourself as being parochial. But when we open our eyes to the world, there are countries where you cannot mention the name of Jesus Christ.

    “In Iraq, Egypt and America, Muslims are using oil money to buy churches and turn them into mosques as Christians no longer go to church and in most climes do not stand for the faith once delivered unto the saint. It is very alarming what you see around the world. Interestingly, the Bible is still the best seller in the world. A former senator in America, Thomas, said that evil triumphs when good people sit down and do nothing. It is not news that Christians are facing intense persecution around the world.”

    What then should be the attitude of the Christians suffering intense persecution? To this, he said: “Extreme persecution should not deter Christians from following the path of truth. It is like the death of Stephen in the Bible, which added great impetus to the spread of the gospel after the ascension of Jesus Christ. We must also understand that serving Christ does not consist only in some fake and cheap miracles, screaming for prosperity without salvation, even to the neglect of the persecuted.

    “The church must lay emphasis on preaching on persecution, passion for Christ and its attendant suffering, which is a must for all Christians.

    I have heard of CAN (Christian Association of Nigeria) President agreeing with Muslim leaders that Boko Haram is not a religious group but a political one. But the group fights with the Quran and machetes in their hands. While I agree partially that some of the reasons for the unrest are political and some economic, we can recall that a former presidential aspirant once boasted that because of the election rigging in Nigeria, Nigeria would never know peace.

    “I hope there will be a remedy to the issue of children given to early marriage and the almajiri (street urchins) who are often used for political or religious reasons. Until you take these almajiri children off the streets, we cannot know peace.

    “Let me tell you, some of the leaders of the North will not do anything about taking them off the streets, no matter the effort of the government in tackling the menace. This is because the belief is that any city in which you do not have beggars on the streets cannot be blessed. So, these children grow up in hopeless conditions. They sleep on the street. They are covered with flies and live in inhuman conditions. They therefore kill without passion because they themselves grow up in hopeless conditions.

    “If the Boko Haram sect kills all the infidels in Nigeria, only the Christians would be left for killing. People should not think of fighting for God because God is so great, good and full of mercy. Why do we now have to use cutlass to fight for God? It is political as well as religious.’’

     

  • Group condemns mob action against homosexual suspects

    A Non Governmental Organisation, NigeriaHIVinfo.com has condemned the  mob action by the people of Umuka, in Njaba Local Government Area of Imo State on  Monday, January 14, against the three men alleged to be caught having homosexual relationship.

    The organization in statement by its Coordinator Steve Aborisade  said it has reliably confirmed and authenticated the incident and the identity of one of the men in the picture and called on security agents to quickly respond to the plight of these men.

    “As it is, only the perpetrators and the community can tell the whole world what has become of these men who were seriously beaten up, stripped naked and paraded around the community bounded together like animals on allegation that they were caught having sex together.

    “Our source reliably confirmed that the men were yet to be released from the location where they are being held in Umuka, Njaba Local Government Area of Imo State.

    “We demand that the plight of these men be given the urgent attention it deserves by the Nigerian Police and other security agencies, and we especially appeal to Owelle Rochas Okorocha, Executive Governor of Imo State to intervene to save their lives.

    “While acknowledging that several Nigerians find the practice of homosexuality strange and unnatural, we also realize that it does not confer a license to trample on the rights of people who engages in it, with the sort of inhuman treatment that was meted out to these them.

    “So many informed commentators, including Nobel Prize winner, Prof Wole Soyinka have commented on the scientifically proven fact that more than anything, gays are just victims of biology.

    “We note and condemn the prevailing adverse legal and social environment that most LGBT now have to face in Nigeria, being criminalised for their sexual orientation and being made a target for harassment and violent assault fuelled by the on-going debates by the nation’s parliament on criminalizing homosexual acts.

    “Instead of being singled out for harassment and prosecution, what this community deserves is support and access to sexual health services that they lack as citizens of this country. The LGBT community remain a high risk group to HIV/AIDS infection, yet it is a community that has been denied of all access to life saving HIV/AIDS services. We suggest that our parliamentarians should devote equal energy at fishing out and punishing our treasury thieves who are doing more harm to the continued survival of our nation instead of dissipating energy on an issue that borders on private morality.

    “We enjoin other rights group to show solidarity and ensure that the rights of sexual minorities are protected like other marginalized groups in the country” Aborisade stated.

  • ‘Tanker  explosion  victim had just reunited with husband after four years of living apart’

    ‘Tanker explosion victim had just reunited with husband after four years of living apart’

    It was tragedy at nightfall in Ago-Egun, Idiroko, Ogun State, and it happened so fast on Wednesday January 2, 2013. Not a few residents were already in bed when a petrol tanker carrying about 33,000 litres of petrol to a nearby filling station skidded and fell on its back. A few minutes later, the petrol flowed into the street and a spark from the vehicle’s battery triggered an explosion that razed buildings, shops and vehicles.

    The horrific and repulsive incident also consumed a woman and her two children while many residents sustained various degrees of burns on their body.

    The fire, according to eyewitnesses, started at about 11:15 pm when the tanker driver was trying to remove the battery to stave off fire outbreak. The fire engulfed buildings and trees on two streets in the community.

    A transporter, Shittu Rasheed, who lost a row of shops to the inferno, recalled the event while bemoaning his loss. “A tanker fell on its back a few minutes after 11pm and fuel started gushing out into the street. A few minutes later, it caught fire and destroyed houses. I am one of the victims because my nine shops had been burnt into ashes and I am left with nothing. My property are worth about N2.5million. They include a hairdressing salon operated by my wife.

    “The question I want to ask is whether government is aware that some unscrupulous people are carrying fuel at odd hours into a community like ours?”

    Another resident, Saliu Oyegbile, lost his Jetta car marked DC 309 MUS and home in the fire. He condemned the location of fuel stations in the neighbourhood.

    “Any reasonable man should not contemplate building a fuel station in a residential area and it is so appalling that the reverse has been the case in our community lately. The development is encouraged by the smuggling of petrol into the neighbouring Benin Republic by unscrupulous businessmen. The fire caught everyone including myself, unawares and my car that was parked outside went with the inferno.”

    Worst hit by the incident is the traditional ruler of the community, Chief Kolade Amosun, whose nephew, Mathew Amosun, a Lagos-based automobile technician, lost his wife,Abosede,26, and two of his children- Joseph,9, and Serah,7, to the inferno. The fire also destroyed their home.

    In an emotion-laden voice, Chief Amosun described how the fire started and the failed rescue effort.

    “I was in bed around 11: 20 pm when I heard persistent knocks on my brother’s door. I came out of my house to the street and discovered that fuel was flowing into the street. That was when people told me a tanker had fallen in the street and its content was flowing into the community. We tried to pour sand into the fuel in order to prevent it from flowing further into the street.

    “A woman later instructed everyone to put off the light and I rushed back to my house to evacuate my family. But before I could step out of the house, the tanker had exploded and huge balls of fire engulfed my house. One of my nephews lost his wife and two children in the fire. “

    Chief Amosun gave a graphic account of how the deceased woman, who was said to be a fashion designer, lost her life while trying to save her children from being consumed by the fire.

    “After I had alerted everyone in the building, Abosede ran out with two of her children, Joseph and Serah and asked them to wait outside while she went inside the house to pick her last child called Israel. Unfortunately, before she could return, the balls of fire had consumed her two children outside the building. She was also burnt to death while trying to salvage her last born from the inferno. As we speak, her last born is lying critically ill in the hospital in Oke-Odan, a neighbouring community.”

    The late Abosede’s brother-in law, John Amosun, shared the horrific incident with our correspondent and fruitless effort made to save her life.

    He said: ”Immediately the tanker fell, we were asked to remove inflammable materials in sight. Everyone was running helter skelter and after about ten minutes, we heard a bang. I could not rush down to our family compound to rescue anyone because I was also busy trying to ensure my wife and kids were safe.

    “Unfortunately, by the time I got to our family house where my brother’s wife was staying with her kids, they had been burnt to death. The fire had gone out of control by the time men of the Ogun Fire Service Station in Ipokia arrived. It was indeed a major disaster to this community.

    “However, Abosede did not die on the spot; she would have survived if we had gotten prompt medical attention. I personally drove her to various hospitals in the community but we were turned back on the excuse that her condition was beyond what they could handle. I drove her at midnight to the Ipokia General Hospital but I was shocked to find out that there were no doctors on duty.

    “We met a nurse on duty who referred us to the Federal Medical Centre, Abeokuta, and when I figured out that the distance would be too much to cover considering her condition, we decided to seek treatment for her in a public hospital in Benin Republic. Sadly, she was again rejected when we got there at about 5 am on Thursday January 4.

    Immediately she heard that she had been turned down again, she told me ‘ O pari (It is finished) and she gave up the ghost.”

    An eyewitness, who asked not to be named, explained that the gruesome death of the woman had shattered her blissful reunion with her husband after his four years of sojourning in Lagos.

    “The woman’s death and that of her two children is so pathetic considering the fact that she laboured so hard to fend for her children. There was nothing she did not do to survive. Although she trained as a fashion designer, she took to some menial jobs to survive when things became difficult for her.

    “For about four years now, her husband, called Mathew Amosun, an automobile technician, had left her in the village for Lagos in search of the proverbial greener pasture while she borne the responsibility of caring for the children. For the first time in four years, however, he decided to reunite with his family for Christmas and New Year celebration and had looked forward to savouring the joy of the yuletide season with them.

    “The reunion, however, lasted only 13 days. Sadly, he entered 2013 without his beloved wife and two children; they had gone in an instant. But for people around, the woman’s husband would have jumped into the fire when he got to the scene and saw the remains of his children and wife. He has since been moved to an undisclosed location because of the psychological trauma of the incident.”

    A source, who also sought anonymity while recalling the last days of the deceased, said:” It was as if Abosede knew she was spending her last days on earth.  A day before the incident, she had sent for a photographer to take her pictures lavishly and she repeated the same thing later in the day using the camera phones of neighbours.”

    A sombre day it was on Thursday January 4, 2013, as a sense of heaviness descended upon the community during the burial of the deceased and her two children in their family compound. Friends and family members of the victims wept uncontrollably as their bodies were being interred.

    The funeral ceremony had barely ended when residents launched into a protest over the indiscriminate location of filling stations in residential areas. The particular fuel station where the tanker was headed before the explosion was partially destroyed by angry residents in the wake of the incident.

    A resident who identified himself simply as Ojulari said:” I wonder why some unfeeling businessmen would site filling stations in residential areas. As we speak, another filling station is being constructed by a local politician near the Ipokia Local Government Primary School. This shows that owners of such filling stations are more concerned with their business than the lives of other residents. You can imagine what the situation would look like should a fire outbreak occur in future at the filling station near a public school in session.”

    In his remarks, Bobajiro of Ikoland, Chief Julius Suru, condemned the building of fuel stations at the detriment of lives and property.

    “Building a petrol station close to a school is no doubt very unreasonable. The space between the school and the station is so narrow that it would be very difficult for tankers to navigate. We don’t want a petrol station near the community’s primary school and in residential areas within our community. Government should also stop giving approval for the building of petrol stations near residential buildings.”

     The Ogun State Governor, Sen. Ibikunle Amosun, however, visited the scene of the incident on Friday January 4, 2013. The governor, who was accompanied by the Chairman of Ipokia Local Government Area, Hon. Isiaka Aderounmu, while commiserating with victims, condemned the building of fuel stations in residential areas.

    “We have come to sympathise with you and to look at ways of assisting those who may have lost property in the incident. We are not against people doing their legitimate business but they should not endanger lives in order to make quick money. Although, I know that the council area will do something for the victims but I have also asked the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) to collaborate with the council to bring succour to victims of the unfortunate incident. May God continue to protect and guide the family members of the victims.

    “I wonder who must have approved the building of fuel stations in residential areas and I want to assure you that the Ministry of Physical Planning will ensure that business owners comply with relevant laws in siting fuel stations”.

    Before leaving at about 3.30pm, Governor Amosun inspected a number of places where fuel stations are sited. He warned petrol tanker drivers against reckless driving, saying: “We will still continue to ask our tanker drivers to be extremely careful while on the road. And I don’t even think it is right to carry fuel in the midnight.”

    The traditional ruler of the community, Chief Amosun, thanked Governor Amosun for finding time to share the grief with his family and other victims.

    “I am so surprised that the governor could take some time off his busy schedule to sympathise with us. I feel a sense of personal loss having lost my family house in the fire and three members of my family in one day. The incident has got me so devastated that I have taken refuge in the home of my subjects. To this end, I want to commend Governor Amosun for his sense of duty and love for people of this community.”

     The beleaguered residents took their protest further on Tuesday, January 8, 2013, when they marched on the streets calling for a halt to the building of fuel stations and tank farms in residential areas. Chanting solidarity songs, the residents also stormed the palace of the traditional ruler of Ikolaje-Idiroko, Oba Olakunle Ojo, to demand his intervention.

    Speaking with our correspondent, one of the protesters, who identified himself simply as Akinlabi, said: ”We can no longer tolerate a situation whereby our lives would be endangered by petrol explosion. The tanker explosion that occurred a few days ago had resulted in the gruesome death of a woman and her two children.

    “We are therefore carrying out this peaceful protest to drum home our demand for the removal of fuel stations from residential areas and we will not relent until the concerned authorities do something drastic about it.”

  • For me, seeing her was strange; but I’m not surprised she passed the exam –Her centre’s proprietress

    MRS. Clara Olufunmilayo Adenodi is the Proprietress of the Wisdom Spring College, a sprawling compound comprising a nursery, primary, and secondary schools, in Ogun-Ojule Area of Egan town in Igando, Alimosho Local Government area of Lagos State. A place mostly inhabited by low and middle class people of Lagos State. With the board of governors of the school chaired by city lawyer, Otunba (Barr) Olu Adenodi, the 15-year-old school, according to Clara Adenodi, has been a regular spot for use by the GCE examination body. She said: “Our school is approved for use for GCE/WAEC and JAMB examinations.And I am proud that when the candidates come here, they appreciate the environment and the quality we put here to ensure smooth education for people. As for the girl you are talking about, Patience Ijeh, yes, she was here for the examination. I still recall middle last year when the examination was on, I had just returned from a trip to America, and you know, having such a candidate taking examination in the school brought about some excitement. When the teachers told me that there was such a person who writes with a pen between her toes, of course, I did not believe it. ‘’But I sooner saw it myself. I remember that after the papers, I called her aside and spoke to her at length. I was sad to find out that she lost her mother at a young age and that her father is in the village working as a security guard; such beauty and brain but struggling. You could tell that this one has a good head.” On hearing that Patience had passed the examination which she sat for, Clara Adenodi simply told us that she is not surprised. She has not called to tell me. But I am not surprised because you could see the meticulous way she went about writing the examination. I believe that she deserves to continue with her education and achieve something in life. I saw in her a young girl that is ready to excel. “For me, seeing her, was strange. We normally read about such things in foreign newspapers, but seeing it real life in our school was strange to me. I was moved and I’m glad to hear that she passed. I wish spirited Nigerians can come to her aid because I know how expensive university education is right now in Nigeria. She will constantly need financial support. I wish her success in her future endeavours.”

  • ‘This has given me hope that one day, I may be an undergraduate’

    AFTER living two years in depression, hope finally came alive once again for the girl who writes with her toes. Patience Ijeh had given up on further education, when two years ago, her General Certificate of Education (GCE) examination result was seized. It was an examination that she said she had prepared so diligently for, and expected so much that the result would be good. But it turned out that her result was seized with no explanation from the examination body, and that was enough for the young girl to suspend everything about education. She was just not interested again. So for two years, the young girl from Ubulu-Okiti in Delta State, who was born with deformed hands, which her mother later on told her was caused by the nature of her delivery, felt that the only hope that what she wanted in life would be realised through education was gone. So she slipped into depression. “I was not happy and I told myself to forget about education. I floated. I didn’t have anything that I wanted to do again. I just wanted to float. But early last year, I started seeing my mates moving on in life, people who I knew that I am even more brilliant than. ‘’I then started thinking of putting in for the GCE examination again. But this time around, I was not as enthusiastic as before. I did it with less interest. But now that I have passed, I am sure that by the grace of God once again, I am going to further my studies,’’ she said. For Patience, life has always been a struggle. For no fault of hers, her birth to Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan and Theresa Ijeh, at Saint Mary’s hospital in Delta State, became complicated because the baby was not properly positioned in the womb. “According to my late mother,” began Patience, “caesarian birth was not popular then in my village. My mom who is late now, told me, I was already coming out from her womb with my hands. So in the process of pushing me in again and trying to reposition me to come out normally, my hands were affected. I was being turned all over. Little did they know that my hands had been affected! Even when I was out, it was not noticed. Unfortunately, it affected both hands. My father said it was the fault of the nurses that handled the delivery.” Patience cannot recall how the miracle of writing with her toes started. “I actually don’t know when I started writing. I guess I grew up to find myself writing this way. I have never known how to write in any other way. The earliest period I can recall is when I was 5. I remember seeing myself writing with pen between my toes. Then I was living with my mother in the village in Delta State. I remember I was at Ikeliki Primary School then.” But she soon became the mother’s sole responsibility when her parents parted ways. “I don’t know what happened between my mom and dad, but when I grew up, I saw myself living with my mom at her own village; though my dad used to come around from time to time. I later attended St. Rose Girls Grammar School. Growing up for me was not much different from that of other kids. Though I found out that there were some things that I could not readily do like others. For instance, I couldn’t wash my clothes like other girls do. I couldn’t also carry things with my hands like other girls do. However, I mixed well as a child more than I now do as an adult.” But her troubles were compounded again when death struck and took away her mom. “I miss my mom, she was the only one that was close to me and assisted me with almost everything. I left the village to live with my brother in Benin City, because he is the only one that can take care of me. I lost my mother when I was in secondary school. That was when I decided to gain computer knowledge. I got a diploma in Computer Studies. I was learning to use my legs to operate the computer and competed very well with the others. The only difference is that I had to put my own computer on the floor to operate it.” She was doing well academically and the future looked promising. “Much early in life, I grew up, dreaming of becoming a lawyer one day. I kept this in my mind and spoke about it to my mom when I was growing up. But much later, as I was growing up, people around me kept telling me that I would not be able to achieve it. They gave me reasons of my disability, which would not make it possible for me. They told me to look for simple things. And hearing such things truly affected my ability to push. I didn’t know of simple things and I didn’t want to do simple things. I wanted to be a lawyer or study mass communication. I wanted to do a job that is challenging, despite my inability to use my hands effectively. I told myself that I would be okay working in an office.” Patience later moved to Lagos with her brother in 2008. “It was an opportunity for me to further my education. So I sat for the GCE ordinary level examination. Unfortunately, it did not work for me the way I planned. My efforts did not show because the result of the examination was not released. My result was seized.” Depressed, pushing ahead with her dream became an uphill task. “It really affected me because I didn’t put in for any other examination again until last year when I picked up the interest again and that was how I sat for the GCE/NECO examination this year.” Having had the ambition of being a lawyer, Patience recalls being studious at school. “I loved school, I used to tell my mom then that I wanted to be a lawyer and she used to tease me about it. But she is late now. She was so kind to me. She was my best friend because she encouraged me to do everything that I wanted to do. You know because I could not use my hands, she was always there to make sure that I got the personal assistance that I needed from time to time. Even now I still miss her.” Her mother may not be alive today, but she did stay alive to see to some extent that her daughter, despite her handicap, may become successful in life. This is because, after scalling through secondary school at St. Roses Girls Grammar School in Ogwashi-Uku in Delta State, Patience immediately went for Computer Studies and emerged with a diploma. “How I did it? I was simply putting my computer on the floor. I typed the keyboards using my leg and passed the examinations. I was also taking notes using my toes and it was not that difficult for me. Though now people look at me with wonder when I write with my toes. When I was a child in primary school, my friends in school were not looking at me like that. They just saw it as a different way that I used to write. ‘’Truly, when I moved to Lagos where I now live with my brother, I used to feel embarrassed. You know I am a shy person. But I have told myself that education is what I need, so I just face it.” So now that the GCE result she sat for in the middle last year is out and she did well, we asked Patience how she feels. “I feel very happy; it has been a big cause of anxiety for me since I sat for the examination. You know, the last one was seized and I knew that I did well in that particular examination because I was still fresh from school. ‘’But this time around, I had stayed at home for long and depressed. I had even given up on continuing with further studies for two years before I summoned up courage again to put in for that GCE examination. So I am happy knowing fully well that once again, I could be on the right track to get a good future for myself and the society at large.” The school where she sat for GCE is Wisdom Spring College comprising nursery, primary and college, WAEC, GCE and JAMB approved. It is located in Wisdom Avenue, off Ogun-Ojule Area of Egan town in Igando, Alimosho Local Govt area of Lagos State, a place mostly inhabited by low and middle class people of Lagos State. How was the examination? Were you treated in anyway like a special student? Patience was asked. She replied: ‘’Getting round to Egan in Igando area in Lagos was difficult for me in my circumstances, but that of course was a small challenge. I was, however, cheered up when I arrived at the school the first time and saw that it was a very clean school. I mean, everything was well arranged for the examination. It was not rowdy and I was also worried since I was going to be placing my papers on the floor. I needed somewhere that I could do that and still make sure that my examination papers were clean and readable. So I was happy that the school was clean and the floor had neat tiles. ‘’Part of the reason I suspect that my result was seized the other time could have been because, where I had the examination was not clean. The papers I submitted were rough and slightly dirty. So even if I had done well, those who marked my answer sheets would’ve wondered why my papers were that dirty. You know, but I thank God; this has given me hope that I may one day be an undergraduate.” Patience now has her six credits: C5 in Biology and C6 in all the other five subjects; that is, Literature in English, Economics, Government, Mathematics and English Language. “I know I can do better. I just needed this to convince myself that I can do more.” So what are her plans? “Though I would have loved to go into the university and, like I said, study Law. People are telling me that taking such a course is very expensive. I would also love to study Mass Communication, but I also hear that it is expensive. These are the only courses that appeal to me. But you know, my mom is late, my dad is in the village and my brother is just managing. We don’t have any rich person in my family. I can only continue to pray and hope that God makes a way for me.’’