Category: Southwest

  • Honour for a cop

    It was honour for whom honour is due recently when  the Police Public Relations Officer, Ogun State Command of the Nigeria Police Force(NPF), Prince Olumuyiwa Adejobi was conferred with the Most Outstanding Police Public Relations Officer in Nigeria.

    The Award  his second in recent times was conferred on him on a Sunday at the Sky Pavilion, Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, by Adlack Multi Concept, Abeokuta – based media and entertainment organisation, during its 4th edition of the ACE (Awards Celebrating Excellence) 2014.

    In conferring the award, Mr Kolapo Fadeyi, Secretary, ACE Award, said it was done in recognition of Adejobi’s contribution  to the “development of the nation, his selfless service to humanity, diligence and outstanding pedigree among professional colleagues” especially the manner he deploys public relations to bear on effective crime fighting and prevention as well as bringing quality public goodwill to Police Command in Ogun State.

  • Group prays for peace in the Southwest

    A Lagos-based group, the Christian Ministers’ Welfare Initiatives (CMWI) has devised a working plan to use prayer as a strategy in ensuring peace in all the six geo-political regions of Nigeria, starting with the South West.

    Speaking at a press conference in Lagos at the weekend the founder and President of the association,Apostle Daniel Aderemi Adebiyi explained that all the challenges facing Nigeria stemmed from the lack of effective prayer by both Christian and Muslim leaders.

    Apostle Adebiyi said one of the covenants the Lord gave him was the covenant of peace, adding that the association gathered in Abuja on June 26, 2014 to save the nation from being dragged into the abyss by the insurgency of Boko Haram.

    He said: “As an association, we believe prayer is the only effective weapon that can destroy the power of darkness enveloping the nation.”

    CMWI–MOG, as it is fondly called, according to its president has about 4.3 million members that cut across 36 states of the nation.

    Flanked by his Deputy President, Bishop Joy Eberico, and the Chief of Staff, Pastor Gbenga Koyi, Apostle Adebiyi said: “The association holds in high esteem  its Grand Matron and Ambassador of Peace, Chief (Mrs) Remi Adiukwu, who was the pillar behind  the National Prayer Rain for Peace in Abuja.”

    Describing Chief Adiukwu as a woman of honesty, truth and integrity, he said the CMWI could not have achieved what it has in the last one year of its existence without her support .

    Also speaking on why the group inaugurated General Oladipo Diya (rtd) as its Grand Patron, Apostle Adebiyi said: “The General always gives the association both moral and spiritual support. His constant advice has put us in good stead, and his fatherly role in our day-to- day decision-making cannot be quantified.”

    He further said: “We don’t just appoint a Grand Patron. We appoint one after proper screening. We have about six committees. They were all involved in the appointment. This is to show the calibre of our patrons. The General is a great Nigerian who has greatly contributed  to the advancement of this nation in many areas of life. His appointment was in recognition of his greatness.”

    The association will move to Kaduna on September 6 for the National Prayer for Peace Rain 2015 and the inauguration of the CMWI, Kaduna Chapter.

    Apostle Adebiyi said the Kaduna prayer has the support of  Governor  Muktar Ramalan Yero and other senior government officials.

    The group will move to Taraba State on September 9, 2014.

    Speaking on the achievements of the association, Apostle Adebiyi said:  ”The achievements of the group lie in its membership. The association is waxing stronger in numerical strength. We are mobilizing these members politically and socially for the good of the nation.”

  • ‘This bridge is saving our lives’

    ‘This bridge is saving our lives’

    31-years after the Ogun State House of Assembly passed a resolution calling for the construction of a flyover across the Sagamu-Benin Expressway at Mobalufon junction in Ijebu-Ode, the bridge has finally been built –– to the relief of motorists and pedestrians. ERNEST NWOKOLO reports.

    Princess Titilayo, daughter of the reigning monarch of Igbekebo in Ese – Odo Local Government Area of Ondo State, His Royal Highness, Oba Emmanuel Egbukuyomi, heaved a sigh of relief and joy recently when told by a friend that a fly – over bridge now runs across the Sagamu – Ore Expressway at the chaotic and treacherous Mabolufon junction in Ijebu Ode, Ogun State

    Titilayo who is married with a kid, said the building of the bridge was a long overdue life – saving intervention for cyclists, pedestrians, motorists, commuters and street traders. She said:”that is nice. Whoever conceived the idea and executed it must be lauded for his concern for the safety of road users and smooth traffic flow that would now be engendered by it.

    “People coming from Ijebu -Ode town and going to either Ondo or Eastern part of the country or Ikorodu in Lagos State, would not have to cross that expressway again directly at a grave risk to their lives. Also, those coming from either Ondo, Ikorodu or in the direction of Sagamu would not have to cross it before veering into the Ijebu – Ode town.

    “The flyover would have come handy to save travellers’ lives, that of the pedestrian and street traders. Many travellers, street traders and cyclists have died there while some survivors are living with one form of impairment or the other.”

    Titilayo, an English teacher at a public Secondary school in Lagos state, is neither an Ogun state indigene nor does she lives in Ijebu – Ode but it is understandable why she is enthusiastic about the flyover.

    Barely out of the secondary school about 12 years ago, providence saved her from losing her life in a fatal accident at the Mabolufon junction but she bears scars that served as constant reminder of that dreadful experience.

    ”It was an incident I can’t forget. It was a trailer that collided with my bike, far back in 2002 at Ijebu – Ode Expressway (Mabolufon junction),” she had told The Nation.

    It happened that Princess had paid a visit to her sister who is married to a lecturer at the state – owned Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU), Ago – Iwoye, and after spending some days, decided on November 2nd, 2002, to return to her Igbekebo home town in Ondo.

    On arriving at the Lagos Garage, Ijebu – Ode from Ijebu – Igbo, she boarded a commercial motorcycle to Mabolufon junction where she would take a bus for the onward journey to the Sunshine state and while the cyclist tarried at the junction to enable speeding vehicles going in the direction of Lagos from the East pass before crossing the expressway, a lurching danger turned up around 1:30pm: a truck that lost control roared from the rear and swept her and the cyclist away as well as others equally waiting to cross the highway.

    When the dust finally settled, about a dozen of persons, including postgraduate students of OOU, were crushed to death when the truck fell on them but Princess and a few others survived.

    Narrating it, she said: “When I returned to the scene to see if I could see some of my items, I discovered that the truck had pulverised the bike, I saw on the ground, particles of brains from crushed skulls and I don’t know if the bike man that carried me made it  as ten dead bodies were removed from the spot.”

    Experiences like the one above had happened before 2002 and had also continued to occur ever after, even on a more scaring scale at the Mabolufon junction, prompting many to wonder whether there were vampire spirits inducing accidents for the purpose of collecting victims’ blood.

    A teacher and trade unionist living in Ijebu-Ode, Comrade Badejo Abosede, who described the junction as a “death trap for years,” said residents and travellers had always looked in expectations for respite.

    There is no readily available official data on the number of lives that have been lost at that spot within a given period but a resident of Mabolufon area of Ijebu – Ode told The Nation that over 75 persons might have lost their lives there in the last couple of years and scores of others maimed while the monetary cost and attendant challenges was put at about N25million.

    That the Mabolufon junction was such an Achilles heels of travellers first came to the attention of the Ogun State government in the second republic during the administration of the first civilian governor, Chief Olabisi Onabanjo.

    The Nation learnt that the then Ogun State House of Assembly which was worried and saddened by frequent loss of lives at that location, did pass a resolution recommending that a bridge be constructed to run overhead  across the expressway at Mabolufon to check such reckless loss of lives there.

    Perhaps, Onabanjo might have built that fly – over provided for in the House’s resolution but the lifespan of his government was cut short by the December 31, 1983 Buhari – Idiagbon military coup.

    While the resolution remained largely advisory and perhaps ignored by successive governments in the state, 31 years after it was first conceived, lives kept getting wasted there needlessly with each passing year.

    Former Speaker of the state Assembly(1999 – 2003), Hon. Muyiwa Oladipo, said a resolution of the House is merely advisory, and is not binding on the executive to act upon if there was a resolution in the past recommending a fly – over across that junction.

    Oladipo who is the current Commissioner for Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs, noted that Onabanjo was a forward looking and progressive leader, and would probably have constructed the fly – over as at the 80s but financial constraints and his short-lived administration didn’t help the situation.

    The former Speaker who recalled that between 36 and 50 persons died on a particular day at that junction not long ago, said the state can’t continue to allow precious lives to be lost there unnecessarily hence the current measure in place.

    Governor Ibikunle  Amosun, last year, awarded the contracts for the construction that stretches into the Ijebu – Ode – Ikorodu road.

    Many said what propelled the Governor to embark upon the billion naira project was the gory incident of Tuesday September 18, 2013.

    In the morning on that particular day, no fewer than 37 people lost their lives at the said junction in an accident involving a truck, two commercial buses and several motorcycles.

    The truck which was carrying fertilizer lost control due to over speeding while trying to avoid collision with another truck that dashed into the expressway way headlong from the Ijebu – Ode –  Ikorodu road.

    Coincidentally,  Lagos State – bound passenger bus that took off from Ondo State had just pulled – up at the time to drop a passengers at the junction, when the truck crashed into it, killing those inside, some that had already disembarked, hawkers and some cyclists that had rushed out in a scramble for the passengers.

    The driver of the passenger bus had taken – off in the morning at the  Ajebandele park, Ondo State, and had stopped at the junction to drop one Mrs. Adebowale Ayomide, a nurse and an employee of the Ondo State government.

    The nurse was waiting to collect the balance from the N1, 000 she gave to the driver, who also came down to split the N1, 000 note around the Mabolufon junction and while waiting, the killer-truck rammed into them.

    Though the driver and Mrs. Adebowale survived the accident, but not without severe injuries that sent both into coma following severe fracture while the driver also had his leg chopped off from above the knee region by the truck.

    And because of the gravity of the accident and numbers of people affected, the Secretary to the Ogun State Government (SSG), Mr. Taiwo Adeoluwa, visited the victims at the State Hospital, Ijebu – Ode, and also personally donated N200, 000 for their treatment.

    The hospital’s Chief Medical Director (CMD), at the time, Dr. Wellington Ogunsanya,  told The Nation that victims who suffered from “severe fracture, head injury, lung – limb fractures were referred to bigger trauma centres at the Olabisi Onabanjo University Teaching Hospital (OOUTH), Sagamu and the University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan for special care.

    Today, Mobalufon bridge is completed and already in use with  residents of Ijebu – Ode and motorists not only lauding  the project, but also saying it is saving their lives and time from a location hitherto notorious for fatal and ghastly accidents as well as routine gridlock.

    Mr Gbenga Aroyewun, the Publisher and Editor -In- Chief of the Obanta NewsDay, a grassroot magazine published in Ijebu – Ode, told The Nation that the Mabolufon fly -over was a plus to the state government as it has put a halt to the accidents on the expressway that occur often when vehicles moving to Ijebu-Ode from the Itoikin-Ikorodu road or Lagos end attempt to cross the highway.

    Aroyewun said such vehicles now safely use the flyover instead of risking head-on collision with those coming from the Benin-Ore end of the expressway as were hitherto the case.

    According to him, aside serving as life saver, it is also bringing succour to motorists who had  to  contend with the chaotic traffic gridlock there in the past as there were neither traffic light nor presence of the officials of the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC), the state’s traffic agency – TRACE and the Traffic Wardens to control vehicular and pedestrian movement.

    Also, Comrade Badejo Abosede, a public school teacher and trade unionist, said it was a long overdue rescue effort that came at last from the present state government.

    Lauding Senator Ibikunle Amosun for the initiative, Abosede who is of the Academic Staff Union of Secondary Schools of Nigeria, Ogun State chapter, noted that the junction until now “was a death trap for years” but said it gladdens the heart that sanity has returned to the location.

    For an Ijebu – Ode based legal practioner, Mr Olajide Banjo, the fly -over  is saving the lives of cyclists, padestrians, motorists, Ijebu people and others travelling to the eastern part of the country from Lagos end and also those coming from the Benin – Ore direction of the highway.

    The state’s traffic agency, Traffic Enforcement and Compliance Agency (TRACE) said since road users started using the bridge following its completion four months ago, respite has returned to the junction as no case of accident whether major, minor or a narrow escape of it has been recorded.

    The Zonal Commander, Ijebu – Ode TRACE Corps, Cmdr Tommy Hamzat, said the fly – over has reduced accident at the spot by 99.9 percent.

    Hamzat said:”it is really helping to save lives and accident by 99.9 percent. We have not recorded any accident again at the junction since motorists and cyclists do not cross the expressway directly.”

    Hamzat however rued that despite this provision, some motorists in a bid to save time, occasionally avoid the bridge and attempt to cross the Highway directly at a great risk to their lives, that of the passengers and other road users.

    According to him, the agency would be monitoring the spot to check such reckless drivers who would want to dash into the expressway headlong instead of using the fly – over.

    Also, an Ijebu – Ode based transporter and member of the National Union of Road Transport Workers(NURTW), who identified himself as Segun, said it was a huge relief to everybody particularly the commercial transport operators who bear the brunt of such crashes.

    Segun said in every case of accident, aside the passengers who equally suffer and perhaps lose their lives, the transporters suffered double tragedies. Where the owner is the driver, he could be killed or maimed in an accident and his accidented vehicle too, may turn out to be a write – off in severe cases.

  • ‘Army’ of beggars invades Ibadan

    ‘Army’ of beggars invades Ibadan

    An unusually large number of beggars have descended on Ibadan, the capital of Oyo State, causing all sorts of problems for the residents amidst efforts by the state government to rid the city of their menace. TAYO JOHNSON reports. 

    Residents of Ibadan in Oyo State have been having an unusual kind of ‘headache’ for some time now, no thanks to the invasion of their beloved city by a large number of beggars seeking economic sustenance.

    Major roads and strategic road junctions in the ancient city have been taken over by these ‘army’ of beggars who could also be seen lurking around major motor parks and markets across the metropolis.

    From Mokola Roundabout in the city centre via Sabo through Jemibewon Road to Molete, Beere junction, down to Oje Market, Agodi-Gate Bus stop, Iwo Road Roundabout, Old Ife Road and up north around Ojoo Motor park, a long queue of old men and women some dressed in tattered clothes with begging bowls or polythene bags in hands could be seen here and there waiting for good spirited people to gift them any amount of money.

    And moving around in twos and threes in between slow moving traffic in the city could also be found young children sent out by their parents or guardian to solicit for alms from motorists and even pedestrians. Seated somewhere not too far away from the kid beggars are their adult counterparts waiting for them to bring ‘returns’.

    All over the place the city seems to have been taken over by the beggars who are almost becoming a permanent feature of the society that nobody seems to take notice of them anymore save for those who want to give them alms sometimes for religious purpose.

    Though the beggars are mostly from the northern part of the country and across the border in Chad and Niger Republics, a few of them also come from some neighbouring states in the southwest.

    Homeless, poor, hungry and almost totally illiterate, these beggars some of them physically challenged were drawn to Ibadan by the prospect of being able to make ends meet in a city, the stature of the Oyo State capital, in the absence of any viable economic venture back home where they come from. But their presence is becoming an embarrassment to the residents.

    A beggar along Jemibewon Road, Bashir Mohammed, a father of eight children, told The Nation that begging is the only way he could take care of his large family because nobody gives him and his family food.

    The alarming and embarrassing trend becomes more worrisome when it is discovered that some of these beggars have no business begging because they seem physically capable of doing menial jobs to eke out a living.

    Though poverty and unemployment have been identified as the driving force behind this culture of begging, the ‘business’ seems to have become so lucrative that some like the aforementioned Bashir Mohammed have turned it into a ‘job’.

    But another beggar, Sule Mohammed, who does his business around Agodi Gate Bus-stop said the job is degrading. He told The Nation:”ýI never planned or dreamed to being a beggar, even once in my life, but I don’t have a choice because I have to survive. Being a beggar is an unfortunate life experience. God knows I tried every effort to avoid this condition I have found myself now. But, who would give a chance to a man who could not even read or write his name? If ever there are, I never met one. I thought the city would be the best place for me and my family to live in. We left far away Dutse (Jigawa State capital) where we once lived to come down here to survive in this city.

    “Many Nigerians probably think that my `job’ is the easiest job on earth. If that would be the case then I have to be the richest “dying man”. Well, they should hear me now. Begging is the most degrading and painful work anyone could ever have”.

    Degrading or not, the Oyo State government seems poised to rid the metropolis of the menace of the beggars. Recently, the Special Adviser to Governor Abiola Ajimobi on People with Disability, Prince Paul Adelabu declared street begging in any part of the state as an offence with immediate effect, replacing it with the introduction of a social scheme that would be established to feed and cater for the beggars in a centre to be established.

    He said that no indigene of the state is among the beggars, adding that people from other neighbouring states and tribes are the ones littering the streets, constituting the nuisance.

    “There is no religion that tells us to go out and beg, henceforth street begging is prohibited in all the 33 local government areas of Oyo State, any beggar found begging on the street will be arrested and returned back to their various states.

    “This will also ensure that the practice which allows children of school age to go about begging in the streets in the name of Almajiri is stopped” said he

    A social welfare officer in Ibadan, Mr Kehinde Ayinla noted that street begging is not only perpetrated by hopeless, sick or physically challenged people, stressing that strong and agile people do beg too.

    According to him “if you go to government ministries, departments and agencies, you will see able bodied men going from office to office begging for money. Some ladies too indulge themselves in the act of begging, some will hold little babies and tell one lie or the other to beg for money, while others hire children to beg and return them later in the day.”

    The Nation checks round the city revealed that some parents actively encourage their children to go about begging on behalf of the family blaming it on poverty, a situation a Civil Servant Mr Muyiwa Ogundoyin described as irresponsible parenting.

    Much as poverty has been identified as the major cause of street begging in Nigeria, many who spoke with The Nation believe that there was need for government at all levels to eradicate poverty to the barest minimum to reduce the number of beggars on the street. They say government should provide jobs for people so that they in turn can take care of their families while also strengthening social welfare programmes for destitute and the physically challenged.

    While some are quick to blame a particular religion for the menace of street begging, the National President of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Youth Organisation, Abdul-Quadir Abdul-Rafi said “even Allah discourages begging”, noting that the hands that gives rather than collects is blessed according to Islam.

    “Anybody that begs has thrown away his dignity and morals. The government needs to clear them off the street in no time, and provide them with enabling social amenities” he said

    Abdul-Rafi urged the state government to create a rehabilitation centre for the beggars.

    In the opinion of the Presiding Pastor of a Pentecostal Church in Ibadan, Moses Ayanleke begging portrayed that a country is poor and lacking in human resource management.

    He said that if the roads and streets were rid of beggars, it would save the image of the state.

    A leader of the Catholic Women’s Organisation, Mrs Patricia Chukwu on her part called for the urgent need to take away the beggars from the street of Ibadan. She is worried that visitors arriving in Ibadan could have a negative impression of the Oyo State capital on sighting a battalion of beggars on the roads. She held firmly that there should be a stop to loitering of beggars in Ibadan and urged the state government to take necessary steps to ensure that this was done.

    “Street begging in our society today is like cancer in the body. Either we sacrifice the affected part and save the body or we allow it to invade and destroy the entire body. We either summon enough courage or will to break its neck and finish it once and for all, or we allow it to remain a nuisance and an obnoxious part of our culture and tradition till the end of time.” She noted

  • Group condemns INEC over insufficient PVC

    Group condemns INEC over insufficient PVC

    Socio-Political group in Oyo State, Youth Advancement Movement (YAM), has condemn the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) over the insufficient Permanent Voters Cards (PVC) for the residents of Ibadan North East Local Government and other part of the state.

    In a statement issued Monday by its President, Mr Abimbola Akomola and Vice-President, Mr Abbey Ale, they alleged that out of 34 polling units in Ibadan North East Local Government area, only 8 units are issuing PVC to the electorate.

    YAM said it seems like a deliberate attempt to disenfranchise the electorate in the forth coming election in the state in 2015, since only those who possess PVCs will be allowed to vote.

    “We are challenging the INEC leadership to wade into the delay in the distribution of PVCs in our council area and Oyo State at large, since it is possible that this planned disenfranchisement of the electorate may be the handwork of some compromised INEC officials in the state.

    “Anything short of an urgent resolution of the PVC crisis, which may have been instigated deliberately by unscrupulous elements within INEC, will not augur well for a free, fair and credible election in the state come February 2015” the group said.

  • Implement conference decision, Anglicans tell Jonathan

    At their recent annual Synod hosted by Ido-Ani Diocese, the Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion) took a look at the state of the nation and called on the Federal Government to implement the decisions of the just concluded National Conference. DAMISI OJO reports

    The seemingly unending Boko Haram insurgency ravaging the north eastern part of the country and the just concluded national dialogue were among the issues that engaged the attention of Bishops and other clerics from the Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion) when they gathered recently at Ido-Ani for their annual Synod.

    And at the end of the conference held at St. David’s Anglican Church, Afo in Ose Local government area of Ondo State, the delegates drawn from the Church’s Dioceses across the country called for the full implementation of the recommendations of the National Conference by the federal government.

    With the theme “Obedience is better than sacrifice”, the synod addressed the concept of obedience and urged all Nigerians especially Christians to be obedient in order to enjoy the full blessings of God.

    The Synod lamented that corruption had eaten deep into the fabrics of Nigerian nation, calling for stiffer legislation and more sincere approach to fight the menace.

    It added that government’s drive to create employment opportunities should be more vigorously pursued.

    A post- Synod communiqué jointly signed by the Diocesan Bishop, Rev Dahunsi and Synod’s Clerical Secretary, Ven S.O Ojowuro also commiserated with the victims of terrorism and other social vices.

    “We are praying for the freedom of the Chibok School Girls abducted by Boko Haram insurgents; the spate of insecurity in Nigeria is too alarming, governments at all levels should to do more to check the malady of the evil doers.

    “We are also calling for the suspension of the strike by medical doctors and other professional bodies and urge the federal government to put in place enduring mechanism to finally stem the tides of strikes by Nigerian workers as human lives and the economy of the masses are always the worst hit” The communiqué stressed.

    On 2015 general elections, the synod called on politicians not to heat up the polity beyond control and to refrain from “do or die” politics, stressing that anyone who wishes to serve the people sincerely should not destroy intentionally or unintentionally those whom he wanted to serve.

    The Synod commended the federal government for convening the national conference, but urged the administration to do all things possible to actualise the minds of Nigerians as expressed at the national dialogue.

    Bishop Dahunsi glorified God for the achievements recorded by the Diocese within just five years of its inauguration.

    He eulogized Senator Bode Olajumoke for singlehandedly building the Diocesan Secretariat and Evangelist Soye Oniagba for donating an ultra-modern Bishop’s Court with all conveniences.

    Highlight of the second synod was the commissioning of a Church Hall built in Oke Afo by the former Chairman of Ose local government, Hon. Dennis Alonge.

    Among eminent personalities at the Synod thanksgiving service was the Bishop of Owo Anglican Diocese,Rt Rev James Oladunjoye who preached the sermon.

  • How UCH,Oyo govt are tackling Ebola

    How UCH,Oyo govt are tackling Ebola

    Months before Patrick Sawyer imported Ebola into Nigeria from Liberia, Nigeria’s premier tertiary health facility, the University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan has made adequate preparation to contain any outbreak of the deadly disease. BISI OLADELE reports on what the hospital and the Oyo State government are doing to fight EVD

    Should preparation and precautions be enough to prevent and curtail the spread of the deadly Ebola virus, then efforts by the authorities of the University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan and the Oyo State government would offer total peace to those living in fear of the disease in the State.

    The hospital, leveraging on the opportunity of doctors’ strike which prevents patients from patronizing the hospital since six weeks ago, has since April, instructed its staff to take precautionary measures against the possible outbreak of the disease.

    Reason? Its committee on Emergency Response to Outbreak of Diseases reported a case of Acute Viral Haemorrhagic Fever in April.

    According to the Head, Emergency Department of the hospital, Mr Wale Olatunde, there was a case of Acute Haemorrhagic Fever in April, suggesting a possible outbreak of one or all of three diseases namely Ebola, Dengue and Lassa fever.

    Olatunde, who is also a member of the committee, disclosed that they immediately alerted the Management of the hospital, which in turn, put all members of staff on red alert to prevent them from contracting any of the diseases either from patients or from their various local communities.

    Today, the UCH has built an Ebola Isolation Centre with equipment to handle possible victims of the virus, provided its staff with Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), runs media campaign on outbreak of Ebola and also restrict access to all its medical departments as precautionary measures.

    In an interview with The Nation, Mr Olatunde said: “Unfortunately, we have this sudden condition which has thrown up a lot of challenges into the hospital system.

    “At the UCH, being the foremost teaching hospital in the country, we were never caught unawares. The hospital has a committee called UCH Emergency Response to Outbreak of Diseases put in place in 2011 by the Chief Medical Director (CMD), Prof. Temitope Alonge.

    “One of the oversight functions is to regularly assess outbreak and notify appropriately the outbreak of any communicable disease. The committee and the hospital were fully involved in the outbreak of cholera in Oyo State in 2012.

    “We were able to contain it then. We notified the government as soon as we started receiving patients on cholera. We asked them to do contact tracing and disinfection of affected areas.

    We acted better in 2013 when it broke out in Egbeda axis. We were able to quickly curtail it. Members are drawn from every segment of the hospital. Once you notice any of these communicable diseases, we notify the committee which will swing into action.

    “The same happened last year when we had suspected cases of meningitis and Lassa fever.”

    Specifically, on Ebola outbreak, he said: “This year, the first suspected case was Acute Viral Haemorrhagic Fever in April. Infections that present as such include Lassa, Dengue and Ebola. Incidentally, presenting symptoms are similar to those of malaria fever, typhoid fever and upper respiratory tracts infection which make the diagnosis very difficult.

    “So as early as April, we started suspecting and we notified appropriate authorities but because we didn’t have a conclusive diagnostic test, we couldn’t come out. But appropriate precautionary measures universally acceptable were employed. They include isolation of suspected patients and use of Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) by workers.

    “Four Lassa cases were confirmed from the laboratory and one Dengue. It was when we were working on this that Patrick Sawyer came into Nigeria. We might have had a reported case of Ebola but for the doctors’ strike.

    Preventive Measures

    “As early as April, the Management of the hospital, based on the report of the committee, alerted all staff to be on red alert. There is no fatality among us because we were well prepared for it.

    “When Ebola became an epidemic, the Management printed fliers sensitizing the public to quickly identify report and put measures in place to curtail the spread of the disease. In addition, Management started in- house training for the staff. We also had a ground round on August 8. We also have road shows and jingles on radio and TV.

    “In addition to that, the Management embarked on immediate construction of Ebola Isolation Centre near the main entrance.

    “We are also following the World Health Organization (WHO) recommendation in management of cases like this. There are categories A, B and C. Only those confirmed as positive will go to isolation centre.

    “We now use Infrared thermometer in place of the old clinical thermometer. With this, all patients coming to the hospital will be screened for fever without any personal contact. Those cleared would be brought into the hospital and those with index or suspicion will be isolated. Those confirmed will be transferred to the Isolation Centre.

    “We also have reduced entry to every department for the safety of patients and staff. This will continue until the epidemic is over as a way of curtailing its spread.

    “We are expecting more PPE from the government.”

    Items to be used for the prevention and treatment of Ebola and related ailments stocked by the hospital include N95 Masks, booths, gowns, gloves, goggles, sterile alcohol prep pads, gauze dressing, sutures and sutures removal, breathing circuits and hand towels.

    “When kitted, you are like an Eskimo, prevented from spillages.” Mr Olatunde said.

    The equipment was donated by the Minister of State for Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Jumoke Akinjide

    On its part, the Oyo State government has assured members of the public on steps taken so far over the last three months to ensure the prevention of an Ebola disease outbreak in the state.

    The Commissioner for Health, Dr Muyiwa Gbadegesin said: “In all these, the Ministry of Health is working closely with the Federal Ministry of Health, World Health Organization and Ministry of Health of our neighboring States to carry out the following: All local government areas Disease Surveillance and Notification Officers have been alerted and sensitized to promptly respond to the outbreak, in addition a sensitization programme has been organized for the Disease Surveillance and Notification Officers in all the 33 LGAs in the State.

    “Public enlightenment highlighting how to prevent Ebola Virus Disease, its causes, mode of transmissions and steps to be taken in case of outbreak has commenced in form of; airing of jingles to educate the people on preventive measures against Ebola and other epidemic prone disease;

    production and distribution of posters and handbills for public enlightenment; sensitization of traditional healers, religious and community members in Oyo State on prevention of Ebola and other communicable diseases”.

    Sign and Symptoms of Ebola disease

    Gbadegesin further said that: “For emphasis, members of the public are hereby informed that symptoms of Ebola infection are as follows:

    Sudden onset of fever, weakness, muscle pain, headache and sore throat, conjunctivitis, hiccups, dysphagia, followed by vomiting, diarrhea and rash, bleeding from body orifices (nose, Eye) coughing of blood, unexplained vagina bleeding, bleeding from the gums and bloody urine.

    “Circumstances that fuelled the epidemic in neighbouring countries are spread to health care workers while nursing those affected by the disease; spread to care givers of those affected by the disease (mainly family and community members); contact with body or body fluid of the dead; living in the same household with somebody affected by the disease raises the chance of coming down with the disease”, adding that “transmission across international borders have been shown to propagate the spread of disease, (hence) special surveillance is thus being paid to our border LGAs which are Atisbo, Saki West, Itesiwaju and Iwajowa which share borders with Republic of Benin”.

    What to do?

    The Commissioner directed that any suspected case should be taken to the nearest public health facility for adequate care. “The State Government thus wishes to assure the populace of effective monitoring of the situation.”  He said advising residents of the state to call 08033280687, 07087288333 to report cases of the disease.

  • Ajimobi’s wife empathises with Alesinloye traders

    The wife of the Governor of Oyo state, Mrs Florence Ajimobi has commiserated with shop owners at Alesinloye International Market over the loss they suffered in the fire outbreak that ravaged the market last Saturday.

    Mrs Ajimobi in a statement by her Special Assistant on Media, Yejide Gbenga-Ogundare, said she felt their pains over the loss of their goods worth millions of naira.

    She prayed that God almighty will grant them the strength and fortitude to bear the loss.

    According to Mrs Ajimobi, “it is true that such a disaster is a setback but God will in His infinite mercies raise divine help for all those affected by the fire.

    “This is indeed a sad occurrence which has negatively affected the lives of many families, their economy and the economy of the state.

    “However, I pray that God will meet everyone affected at the point of their needs and help them recover every loss.

    “We feel their pains and understand what they are going through, it is our sincere prayer that this unfortunate incident will not cripple their businesses.

    “We pray for God’s mercy and favour on everyone and it is our prayer that we will not experience such again,” the statement said

     

  • The day after: Aleshinloye market traders recount losses

    The day after: Aleshinloye market traders recount losses

    Ten years after a fire at the popular Aleshinloye Market in Ibadan, the Oyo State, part of the facility went up in flames again last Friday, destroying goods and property. OSEHEYE OKWUOFU reports on the cause of the inferno and efforts being made to restore the market and assist the victims get back to business.

    Last Friday 15, August 2014 darkness fell on the popular Aleshinloye Market in Ibadan when a night fire outbreak wrecked havoc, destroying goods and property worth several millions of naira.

    The victims, numbering over 200 are yet to recover from the shock of the fire disaster, even as some of them were making effort to clear the ruins of the destruction and start reconstruction of their stalls when The Nation visited last Monday.

    Others who wore glooming look mill around their burnt shops, discussing with one another the fire incident.

    Bricklayers and labourers were busy moving bricks and blocks and other building materials to site to begin reconstruction on some of the burnt open shops.

    A victim, Mr Luke Onwuka, dealer in textile materials whose shop was completely burnt said the incident was the worst ever since the last fire incident on March 9, 2004.

    Onwuka who said he does not know where to start from having lost over N300,000 worth of goods to the inferno blamed the fire outbreak on power surge .

    He said: “according to what I heard when I came here, it was as a result of power surge. They said the electricity supply company brought high voltage and some people who have their shops around that area left some of their appliances on, and immediately the light came the freezer went up in smoke and flame. It happened on Friday around 8.30pm.

    “By the time the fire began to spread, the fire fighters had arrived with four water tankers but three out of the four did not have water. If the four had water they would have been able to stop the fire”.

    Many of the traders expressed concern that the fire could do so much damage in spite of the presence of a fire station within the market, and called on the authorities to investigate the remote causes and why the fire men were unable to curb the inferno.

    “The victims should have been saved the bitter pills if the fire fighters in the market were alive to their duties”, said one of the women traders who would not want her names in print.

    Mrs Iyabo Owanikin, owner of T120 and a dealer in jewelries said she was heartbroken when she got the news particularly a day after she stocked her shop. She appealed to the state government to with the reconstruction of the burnt shops as well as give financial assistance.

    Also, Mrs Easter Oladeji, who sells clothes at shop T121 next to Mrs Owanikin wants the management of the market to assist in putting an end to fire disasters at the facility as this has continued to bring untold hardship on the traders.

    The Oyo State Emergency Management Agency (OYSEMA) officials were busy at the market on Monday, making a list of shop owners affected by the fire.

    One of the officials who pleaded anonymity told The Nation that they came to the market on the directive of the governor who asked that a comprehensive list of victims of the fire be compiled for urgent assistance.

    Governor Abiola Ajimobi who was said to have visited the market at 2am, about four hours after the fire outbreak has pledged government’s assistance to the victims of the disaster within the next one week.

    The governor, who summoned leaders of the market to a meeting on Monday, made the pledge while inspecting the level of damage at the market and expressed sympathy with the traders.

    Apart from first visiting the market by 2am on Saturday before visiting the place again later that day in the afternoon to identify with the affected traders, Governor Ajimobi has directed all the top government officials to visit the victims to assure them of government concern and support.

    He described the fire incident as very unfortunate, pledging that necessary machinery would be set in motion to provide succour for the victims to cushion the effect of the inferno.

    Governor Ajimobi recalled his experience when his private residence in Lagos was gutted by fire in 1993, praying that God, who assisted him to overcome the incidence, would also compensate the traders.

    He directed the affected traders to form a committee to meet with government representatives for the provision of necessary assistance.

    The governor urged the leadership of the market to ensure the equitable distribution of whatever assistance offered by the government, stressing that it should not be politicized.

    The Chairman of the (Fancy) section of the market affected by the fire, Mr Rahman Olabamiji said no fewer than 1000 shops were affected , while appreciating the state governor and Caretaker Chairman of Ibadan South West, Alhaji Taoheed Adeleke for their prompt visit.

    Olabamiji further thanked Governor Ajimobi for his past assistance to the traders, just as he pleaded for kind assistance to the victims to cushion the effect of the huge loss.

    He blamed the fire men for not rising promptly to the challenge, adding that the fire would have been put under control if the firefighters had water in their tankers.

    Investigation revealed that when the fire initially started, five shops were affected while the private night guards on duty alerted men of Oyo state fire Service nearby.

    It was also learnt that the fire fighters could however not get enough water to contain the fire, a development which worsened the situation.

    It was a sad tale for many of the traders who got to know of the incident as late as midnight as hoodlums had already vandalized and stolen their goods before getting to the market.

    The leader of Igbo community in the state, Eze Ndigbo of Ibadanland,  Eze Alex Anozie on Monday led other Igbo chiefs to the market to sympathise  with the  traders .

    Describing the loss as very devastating, Anozie made a passionate appeal to the state government to assist the affected traders financially and also help in reconstructing the shops.

    He also suggested that the market be ordered to close by 6pm daily, leaving only the security personnel to man the market, and to open for business  by 7am .

    “I remember that since such was introduced at Onitsha market, frequent fire out break there stopped”, Anozie added.

     

  • Council chairman donates  to motherless home

    Council chairman donates to motherless home

    The chairman of Ikosi Isheri Local Council Development Area (LCDA) Hon. Abdelfatah Oyesanya has donated some items to the Motherless and Old People’s home in the council.

    The chairman made the donations as part of activities marking his birthday celebration. Items donated include food stuffs, baby materials, pampers, food flasks, clothes, beverages among others.

    On why he chose to celebrate his anniversary by reaching out to the less privileged in the society, Oyesanya said it was his way of appreciating what God has done in his life.

    “This is my little way of thanking God for His blessings on me since I began fulfilling God purpose in life. We also want to share out of their pains and plights.”

    The chairman who, along with his family and council chiefs, was received by the Matron of Love Homes, a motherless home in Isheri area of the council, Miss. Oluwawemimo Adebiyi said he was obliged to contribute to the welfare of the less privileged in the society especially as he had just added a year.

    Oyesanya also called on Nigerians to imbibe the spirit of generosity adding that those at the lower rung of the ladder also need the support of the people.

    “There is nothing too much or too small in assisting the less-privileged. I urge all to cultivate the habit of giving to the poor in the society,” he said.

    The council chief also advised the other political office holders and other well-to-do in the society to always help the old people and the less-privileged in the society.

    “My advice to other political office holders and businessmen is that they should take care of these old people and the motherless,” he said.

    While reacting Adebiyi said the council boss has demonstrated that he did not forget the needy in the society and he understands their plight. She also called for support the less privileged in the society.

    The same items were also donated to Optima Old people’s Homes in Isheri area of the council. The representative of the Chief Matron of the home who pleaded anonymity said the council boss has demonstrated generosity saying other well to do Nigerians should emulate him.

    She commended Oyesanya’s gesture, just as she prayed God to meet the donor at the point of his needs and replenish his pocket.