Category: Sunday magazine

  • Bara’atu Muazu hooked

    BARA’ATU Muazu, the daughter of the National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, Adamu Muazu, is definitely in her best moments. She got married to Ahmed Mutallab, son of business mogul Umar Abdulmutallab. The superlative event started in Bauchi and climaxed in Abuja last weekend. Beautiful Bara’atu Muazu & Ahmed Mutallab had their splendid wedding over the weekend.

  • Pursue your  destiny (IX)

    Pursue your destiny (IX)

    MY wonderful sisters and every fan of this column,  I am most delighted to be with you again today and happy to inform you that this is the week of your great harvest and unstoppable manifestation of all you’ve ever craved all your life. It shall be so in Jesus name. I welcome you all to school on Sunday.

    Last week, I began discussing the most potent weapon we need to discover God’s purpose for our lives on earth- the fear of God. “The secret of the Lord is with them that fear him; and he will shew them his covenant.” Psalm 25:14 KJV

    This same weapon enables us have unlimited access to Him and gives us the opportunity to hear from Him directly and have Him guide us the way to go in the wilderness of life. How nice! With such a golden opportunity, you can’t go wrong in life. You discover your calling, the right location, the right job, the right spouse and your glorious destiny just has to manifest because you have nothing whatsoever to do with the devil-God’s enemy and the enemy of your destiny!

    The Fear of God (Contd.)

    Our entire existence on earth is a fierce battle and not an easy task and it started right from our conception. We are told in the scriptures that we wrestle against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of darkness of this world and against spiritual wickedness in high places. You can’t fight darkness with darkness. It is the fear of God in you which makes you live a holy life that enables you carry the light of God in your life and consume the darkness that would have over-shadowed your life. The light in you shouldn’t be dim because you will keep falling into the traps set for you by the devil. Your light must shine so brightly for you to find your way and deal with this darkness and wickedness in high places. Just one sin you consider little, could put out your light and at that moment land you into a major setback. We all know that the devil is out to destroy any destiny that has to shine. In actual fact, we all have shinning destinies because we were created for God’s glory. Now, does it make sense to have anything to do with the devil even when we are going through severe tribulations and temptation? Does it make sense to tell a lie to save yourself from being punished by man? Does it make sense to sleep with that guy because he appears to be the only one ready to pay your school fees or your lecturer so he can pass you? Does it make sense to organise “expo” so you can pass an examination you’ve had to sit for and failed over and over again? Does it make sense to allow the devil have a strong hold on your life? How do you expect God to rise up for you in time of trouble when you constantly dine with His enemy? Remember we are told He is a jealous God! Asides this, if you take God seriously and firmly resist the devil no matter what, God will also take you seriously. Don’t “dull” yourself into thinking it’s okay to sin because you’ll always be forgiven when you ask for forgiveness. Yes, you will be forgiven. But take it or leave it, God is faithful to those who are faithful-blameless and He will always show them mercy and lift them high even when the world turns against them. We must take great care with the sort of life we live if we want our destinies to manifest.

    Now, can you imagine what would have happened to Joseph if he had succumbed to Potiphar’s wife’s advances? He would have had a temporary relief but ended up in great shame and would never have gotten to the exalted position of being the Prime Minister at that young age. The fear of God in him promoted him. His fear of God made God happy and had no choice but honour him. Anytime you have the urge to do something that is clearly against God’s commandments, does it ever occur to you how God will feel? Joseph did and that pleased God and enabled God dwell in Him the more which I’m sure empowered his gift of interpreting dreams which is what eventually announced him in the world and made his wicked brothers bow before him. How wondrous!

    If you don’t ever consider what God thinks of your way of life etc. then you don’t love God-and He knows! He knows you only run to Him in times of trouble. If you were God, how would you treat such a person?

    “Nevertheless the foundation of God standeth sure, having this seal, The Lord knoweth them that are his. And, Let everyone that nameth the name of Christ depart from iniquity.”2 Timothy 2:19

    You never can tell the type of destiny you have. It could be one which the devil is determined to suppress till the end of time. And because he is very clever and knows how to get you to go against God by sinning, he has an upper hand over your destiny. I’m sorry that is most fatal to your destiny and I bet you’ve been missing a lot and suffering when you should be enjoying all the goodies of life and shinning. Beware, be wise!

  • On Peter Obi’s Papal knighthood

    The concept of granting dignities and honouring people who have distinguished themselves in their chosen fields has always been part of man  in all epochs and cultures. Its inception might remain unknown to anyone. It probably belongs to the mysteries of origin about which all might guess and propound theories, but none might ever know conclusively.

    In the years gone by, there were a lot of values that were applauded in Igbo land and beyond. Then, excellence was the norm; Igbos cherished and applauded it. Titles and dignities were conferred on, and granted to people based on merit and nothing else. As far back as a pry into Igbo history can reveal, it was not in vain that Igbos conferred names and titles such as Diji, Diochi, Dike, Dimgba, di this or di that on people. The bearers of such titles were experts in cultivation of yam, palm wine-tapping, wrestling, or would have performed some heroic acts in other endeavours. These people achieved excellence in their fields and were consequently honoured.

    Because of what Obi is to humanity, his salient contributions to the Church, innovation in governance and his community at large, his Bishop, Most Rev. PaulinusEzeokafor recommended that he be honoured with the Papal knighthood. Collaborating the reports through independent enquiry by the Holy See, the Supreme Pontiff, His  Holiness, Pope Francis, through his Cardinal  Secretary of State, signed a Bull by which the former Governor of Anambra State, Mr. Peter Obi became a Papal knight of the Order of St Sylvester on the 31st of July, 2013. This made him one of the few to be so recognized by the Pope and one of the first sets to be so recognised by Pope Francis.

     Papal Orders are not easy to come by, and it is not for sale.  The  holder of the highest among the five Papal Equestrian Orders, granted by the Pope as a temporal sovereign, known as the Supreme Order of Chris, died in 1993. Only one living person is holding the second one, Order of the Golden Spur. The third one, Order of Pius  IXmay be presented to even non-Christians. We also have the Order of Gregory the Great and Order of St Sylvester Pope and Martyr.  There are other orders with religious connotation granted by the Pope such as the Order of the Holy Sepulchre and Order of Malta.

    The Pontifical Equestrian Order of Sylvester Pope and Martyr granted to Mr. Peter Obi is awarded by the Pope directly, usually on the recommendation of the local ordinary, in this case, His Lordship, Bishop Paulinus Ezeokafor.  A person can also be nominated by the representative of the Pope, the papal Nuncio. The Pope’s Secretary of State can also recommend one for the award.

    As the Governor, almost all group of Knighthood in the Church wanted Obi to join them, but he declined. The Papal award thus came to him by surprise, because he was completely unaware of that until his Bishop, Most Rev. Dr.PaulinusEzeokafor, a prelate who possesses spiritual comeliness, delivered the Papal Bull to him. Each time I visited Bishop Ezeokafor’s residence, the modesty derives me to the conclusion that here is a man of God in fact and in name, just simply after the souls he will win for God as the major part of his apostolic triumph.

    Those who knew about the award naturally urged Mr. Obi to roll out drums immediately, but he refused, saying that he preferred the investiture after he would have left office.

    But why Obi should he be nominated for the Award among millions of Catholics in Awka Diocese? It is not because he was once a Governor. It is not because he is rich. It is not because his younger brother is a priest, while his elder Sister is a Rev Sister. Anybody who has been following the trajectory of Obi’s life even before he became a Governor will know the reasons he was considered fit for that rare honour. Yes, his stewardship as the governor was the major contributory factor, especially his partnership with the Church that benefited the people of the State in the area of education, health, among others, but there are much more to that.

    Obi is one person who believes and lives out the biblical instruction that in charity-giving, one’s right hand should not know what the left is giving. Obi has continued to be part of building of Churches in many communities. Those who attended the dedication of St. Patrick’s Cathedral saw how the Bishop, in spite of Obi’s resistance announced that he was the highest donor towards the building of that Church, the Bishop made it clear that those contributions were even before he became the Governor.

    Besides changing the psyche of the people of the state and the reconditioning it to onceagain think and act for the interest of the State, I consider his return of schools to their original owners as his most important achievement. Some may want to locate this at the number of infrastructure he built, but the fact remains that education, as he always said, is the most important legacy one can possible bequeath posterity. This assertion is not originally his, but has been universally ascertained. Thus, many years ago, when Aristotle was asked to differentiate between the educated and the uneducated, he said it was as the difference between the living and the death. Asked the same question, Aristophanes said it was as the difference between broken and unbroken horses. This informed Zeno’s reference of an uneducated man sitting on a stone  as a stone seated on another stone.

    For those circumscribing the award to what he did as the Governor, we note here that it transcends it. Obi’s opportunity came early in life even as an undergraduate. Between the time he left the University of Nigeria, Nsukka and the time he became a governor, he had attended some of the world most renowned management schools.

    In his business, he put what he learnt into practice and rose so rapidly to become the youngest Chairman of a 25Billion Naira Bank. He has never mismanaged public property or funds entrusted to him; rather he has been consumed in the creation of wealth. He was not just on the board of companies that were successful, but was active chapter in the success stories.

    If you study successful economies of the world you will see behind them both long and short-term planning. You will hear of projections to the year 2020 and all that. A wise man prepares for winter in summer’s time of plenty, but it is foolishness to encourage Epicurean indulgence, the lower animal’s philosophy of: “Let us eat today for tomorrow we shall die.”  This was the reason Obi, even when others crippled their states and sold the investments of the State for peanuts to their cronies, left over N75 Billion Naira for his successor in cash and investments.

    Obi was neck-deep in the business world and has seen the world, but yet no story of gallantry or dealing dishonourably with anybody is told about him.

    No doubt, Nigeria’s politics is that of intrigues, mud-slinging, divide and rule (dividaetimpera), parochialism, prebendalism, impeachment-scheming, and so on. Such politics has led to our retrogression. Obi has chosen to play it differently and those too backward to understand him call it timidity. Today, as anytime in the future, any political history of Nigeria will be incomplete without Obi as it will be without the Ziks, the Awolowos, the AhmaduBellos and the Ojukwus.

    When I recommend him as a role model to the youth, it is always after weighing the totality of his life. He is married to Her Excellency, Mrs Margaret Peter-Obi, a woman every inch as noble as nobility dares be. Endowed with physical beauty, her manners and morals are so magnetic that one feels drawn to her in spite of oneself. She shows everybody around her a mother’s surpassing love and care.

    Their two charming children, Amaka and Eloka will annoy other children of the rich by their simplicity, no airs attached.

    If we can tremble before the work of nature, why should we not tremble before a man that exemplifies virtue as far as Nigerian politics is concerned?  Though some of his brothers out of envy resent him, the awards he has been receiving from across the length and breadth of the world is a clear statement that he represents the best among men.

     

    •Valentine Obienyem,

     wrote from Abuja

  • Exploring The Secrets Of Success! (3)

    Welcome toyour regular column. I started this teaching a fortnight ago. In the first week, I told you that the Bible is the most reliable Book on all-round success. I told you that engaging Biblical principles guarantee outstanding success. I showed you some examples buttressing this truth.

       Also, I said there are certain forces that are responsible for the success of the saints. These forces empower believers to command breakthroughs and excel in their various endeavours. I considered the first force which empowers us for success – The Power Of Love.

       Last week, I taught on the second force for success – The Power Of Divine Endowment. Recognize that everyone is gifted in some special ways — endowment (Matthew 25:15). There is something in you that makes you unique (1 Corinthians 12:4-7). You must look inwards and identify your talent by the help of the Holy Spirit (Luke 15:7-8).

       This week, I shall consider yet another force that engenders success in our lives. It is The Power Of Discretion. Discretion is key to outstanding accomplishments (Jeremiah 10:12). From scriptures, we understand that discretion has its source in God. Isaiah 28:26 says:For his God doth instruct him to discretion, and doth teach him.

    What Is Discretion?

    Discretion can be defined as divine insight in the approach of any given task. No accomplishment can outgrow the level of discretion at work in one’s life. Psalm 112:5 says:A good man sheweth favour, and lendeth: he will guide his affairs with discretion. Discretion perpetuates your success into posterity. Without discretion in any given task, failure is inevitable.

       The Bible paints a graphic picture of Job, who succeeded by trading divine secrets – insight. The Bible says: But there is a spirit in man: and the inspiration of the Almighty giveth them understanding (Job 32:8). Job was trading divine secrets, which launched him into realms of exploits. Exploits connote unusual accomplishments.

    Why do we need discretion?

       We can make inquiries to access discretion. We need discretion in any given task. Discretion will terminate all frustrations, and show us the way forward. Discretion does not just flow; it flows through reasoning in the Holy Ghost (Acts 15:28; Acts 6:3,7). Don’t be under pressure; so, allow discretion to be real.

       We can engage discretion to be free from pressure, frustration and stagnation. We need discretion to conserve energy, resources and time, and you will see how your life will be decorated.

    How Do We Connect With Discretion?

    •Inspiration is the gate                                way to a world of discretion (Job 32:7-8).

    •By engaging in the prayers of inquiries:There are times we get to points in life, when we don’t know what next to do or which way to turn. These are the cross-roads of life. The Bible tells us what to do: If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally…(James 1:5).

    We have often ignored the place of enquiries, which is what gives us access to God’s ways. It is the access to the secret and hidden things of life. You must make enquiries from God, if you really desire the way out of your predicament, for His ways and thoughts are higher than ours (Isaiah 55:9).

    In prayer of enquiry, God shows you what you need to do, in order to get what you are looking for. It then becomes your responsibility to put to work what has been revealed to you. For instance, David was a man of enquiries; so he never suffered any defeat or injuries as a warrior. He had access to divine instructions by prayers of enquiry, and it made a world of difference in his life (2 Samuel 5:17-25). One instruction from heaven can deliver one from a lifetime of struggles. You will no longer suffer injuries in your life.

    •By being joyful (Isaiah 29:3):When you sing and praise God, discretion is inevitable.

    •By Word addiction (Hosea 4:6l; Eccl. 10:15): When you become addicted to God’s Word, discretion is available, to create the type of future you desire.

    •Through meditation: We can meditate our way into realms of discretion (Jeremiah 33:3; Daniel 2:16-19).

       Friend, the power for discretionis for those who are born again. You become born again, by confessing your sins and accepting Jesus as your Lord and Saviour. If you are set for it, please say this prayer:“Lord Jesus, I come to You today. I am a sinner. Forgive me of my sins. Today, I accept You as my Lord and Saviour. Thank You, for saving me! Now, I know I am born again!” I will conclude this teaching next week.

       We shall be celebrating Christmas on December 25, 2014. Remember, Jesus is the reason for the season! I wish you and your family Happy Christmas!

       Every exploit in life is a product of knowledge. For further reading, please get my books: Success Button, Success Systemsand Exploring The Secrets Of Success.

       I know this teaching has blessed you. Write and share your testimony with me through: Faith Tabernacle, Canaan Land, Ota, P.M.B. 21688, Ikeja, Lagos, Nigeria; or call 7747546-8; or E-mail: feedback@lfcww.org

  • ‘No one who obeys God regrets it’

    ‘No one who obeys God regrets it’

    Pastor Jacob Abimbola Asubiojo, Ekiti State Overseer of Deeper Life Bible Church, Ado Ekiti, in this interview with journalists talks about the upcoming Deeper Life crusade in Ekiti State.

    No man who obeys God ends up regretting, do you agree to this and why did you come into the ministry?

    I actually agree with that statement that when you come to the side of the Lord you cannot regret it.  Personally, I can say that, because any time I look back into my life, I can see the direction of God, even while I was an unbeliever. I can see it was God who directed my path.

     When did you go into full time ministry and where did you start?

    My salvation was not in Deeper Life, it was inside the Anglican Church. I have been attending Deeper Life all along, I think since 1976. They came to do a retreat at Efon-Alaye in Ekiti State in 1978 and at Okitipupa in1979 at Ibadan during Easter retreat.  I used to attend their retreats but I came into the Deeper Life fully in 1983. 1984 when I went for my youth service, I served with the Deeper Christian Life Ministry and it was from that time I came into the church.

    Sir, how are you faring with the load of work in Ado Ekiti and the response of the people to the work of the Lord?

    It’s just like when the General Superintendent was speaking the other time; everything is by the grace of God. Once you surrender your life to God, the work of God becomes easy. You see, the brethren there, they are a gift unto us and they are to support us and help us, just like when God told Aaron, He has given the Levites as a gift unto him. So, by the grace of God we are to help them to develop their talents and utilise those talents in the work of the ministry and by the grace of God, God has been helping, they have been cooperating.

    Have people been responding to the gospel?

    By the grace of God, people have been responding to the gospel all over Ekiti State.

    Pastor W.F Kumuyi has been going from state to state, when is he coming to Ekiti?

    By the grace of God, he is coming from December 24 to 26, 2014.

    People stage-manage miracles. What is the place of miracles in Deeper Life?

     By the grace of God, in Deeper Life Bible Church, there are no stage-managed in miracles, because we ourselves want to see the reality. We believe in the reality of the supernatural and we don’t stage manage miracles. We want God to do it himself and that’s why before people come out for miracles to give testimonies, we do interview to authenticate that miracle is genuine and is from God.

    Of recent, the Nigerian economy was adjudged to be the biggest economy in Africa, do you see the reality of this in the lives of the poor masses as a man of God?

    Well, actually from my own point of view, I can see that truly Nigeria’s economy is growing because when you look at those  who are working, either they are working with government, or with companies or they are artisans working for themselves, you will see that their standard of living has improved compared with the past. In the past, very few had access to the good things or the social things of life that make life comfortable. But now, many people, whether you are farmer, once you are able to do your work and you are diligent, you will be able to make it in the country. The market has been expanded for people, anything you are doing in Nigeria now, do it well and you will make it, the economy is actually developing.

    As the 2015 elections are approaching and the electioneering campaigns have started, there may be violence and rigging. What is your advice to the electorate, politicians and the electoral commission?

    My advice to the electorate is that they should vote for people they know will be able to deliver the benefits of democracy to them and they should adhere to the electoral rules as given by INEC. They should not allow politicians to use them as thugs and hoodlums to disturb the peace of the nation and, for the politicians, my own advice is that they should play according to the rules of the game, instead of spending money to sponsor people to commit violence. They should concentrate on how they are going to develop the economy of the state, local governments, and of the nation in whatever position they are contesting for.

    That means, if we pray, something will happen?

    Yes, if we pray, something will happen. We have to pray until something happens.

    The World Health Organisation (WHO) has declared Nigeria free of Ebola virus disease, what is your advice to the government and the masses in sustaining this declaration? Do you have any fear that this virus can resurface somewhere or we are completely free?

    There is no fear and we should not be living in fear. However, precaution, they say, is better than cure, so I will advise the citizens to follow all the rules of hygiene and other rules that have been recommended to keep away this disease. And then the government also should use this period to expand their health care delivery system so that they will be ready in case of any eventuality even though we are not praying for one.

  • Empowering one to empower many

    Empowering one to empower many

    IT was a colourful morning, with women and young ladies dressed in green and white at the Lagos State University annex, Ikorodu road. The annual event was a forum where issues affecting their lives and patriotism were discussed. The theme for this year’s event focused on making an impact as extraordinary citizens.

    For Chinwe Osuagwu, the initiator of the Green and White Initiative, there is a need to bring positive values. “The problems we have today are because a lot of people want to achieve greatness without paying their dues. This should not be the case and we all need to start to change this negative mindset. The most important part of our life is to strive to be different and make a great impact in the lives of others. Important citizens in different fields of endeavour who have made a mark in life usually start from nothing to become extraordinary citizens.”

    Asked about the motive of the organisation and Osuagwu replied this way: “It is about appreciating ourselves as Nigerians and appreciating our country. Not just criticising our leaders, the country and pulling every other person down. Of course, we know that we have issues but we need to know and understand the issues of patriotism. I strongly believe that Nigerians are patriotic. There are times we go out of our way to do the wrong things at the wrong time. The main objective of the organisation is to re orientate our minds. To see good things and work towards achieving positive goals.”

    She continued: “Our theme this year is extraordinary and we are looking at extraordinary people, extraordinary activities and building something out of nothing. We want to appreciate and celebrate people who have gone beyond expectation to turn lives and things around; people that have gone from failure to success. When people are not expecting anything to happen and you stand on your ground to positively impact on lives and the environment.”

    Apart from the talks, some of the activities the group has been working on include assistance to the less-privileged in the society. “We visit orphanages, the elderly, motherless babies and school of the blind. In all our programmes we try to reach out to our participants. We give out food, clothing as well as organise skill acquisition programmes to give them opportunities to empower themselves. It is better to start small and grow big.”

    Osuagwu stressed that “Once you have empowered someone, you can be sure that this particular person would go on to empower other people and things would get better all over the country. We also organise an essay competition for young people in schools and the topic is on patriotism and nationalism. It is better to catch them young so that we would have a better future for all of us.  A lot of people focus on widows and orphans but we look beyond this group because there are lots of people who really need help. They also need to have a sense of belonging, which is one of the things we offer.”

  • Forum donates items to widows

    A group known as Friends of Widows and Orphans Care Initiative has donated bags of rice, packets of maggi cubes, cartons of Indomie noodles, bags of salt and toiletries to 100 widows for the yuletide.

    Rev Levi Adegbe,  the leader of the group, disclosed at the occasion that the donation had been an annual practice of the church in the past fourteen years, adding that it was aimed at touching the lives of the less-privileged members of the Nigerian society.

    Adegbe, who also pastors Life Gate International Bible Ministry, noted that aside providing food items, they also empower widows by teaching them how to make soap, izal, (a disinfectant), among others. The man of God said the body also collaborates with other widow organisations such Daughters of Zion. “We have gone beyond giving them food, we also empower them because there is no amount of food or money that will ever be enough to make them happy and stay healthier,” said Alegbe.

    Rev Adegbe disclosed that he convened the NGO because it has always been a burden on him to take care of widows. “I decided to make enquiry of the number of widows in my community of which I had up to 49 names in my village through the help of my sister who is also a widow. As at the end of the year we had more than 60 widows and I told it was according to God’s direction to go and fee widows.”

    Admonishing well-meaning Nigerians and religious leaders to take care of the poor around them for a better Nigeria, the pastor said: “I’m appealing to the government to take these up, not only by caring for the citizens but widows as well as the less-privileged, so as to reduce the rate of crime in the country.

    “Church leaders shouldn’t be selfish, they should care for the people they are leading, so as to emulate our master (Jesus).”

     Responding to the gesture, one of the widows, Comfort Peter, said she joined the Initiative in 2006 when every member of the family deserted her and her children. According to her, Rev Adegbe really did a lot to support her and her children, and she really thanks God for somebody like the pastor who not only put food on her table but also ensures that all the widows are fed spiritually as well.

  • Nigeria’s romance with MARIJUANA

    Nigeria’s romance with MARIJUANA

    Regarded as an illicit drug in many countries, marijuana is outlawed by many governments. In this report, Joe Agbro Jr. examines the state of the war on cannabis in Nigeria.

    FOR Nurudeen (not his real name), 34, a day is never complete without smoking marijuana. For the past 20 years, that has been a routine for this seller of used clothes. Members of his family and close friends know that he is addicted to the drug.

    “My people know I smoke,” he said, gently puffing away at his spliff at one of the side-stalls located on Ipaja Road, Agege, in Lagos. Just adjacent is Akerele Street, notorious for drug peddling. While the street offers cocaine and heroin, marijuana is the most traded drug there.

    “Marijuana is like pure water here,” says Nurudeen in between puffs of smoke, while sitting under the stairway of a building. Two other men sit in a nearby corner, also smoking marijuana. Less than a minute later, another customer arrives, and the dealer in charge reaches into his bag to bring out marijuana and rolling paper packaged in dispensing packs that are usually used in hospital for dispensing legal drugs. At other times, the marijuana is simply wrapped in paper. Such a ‘wrap’ costs fifty Naira in many places across the country. Larger quantities are sold in ‘parcels’ which can averagely roll about six average-sized spliffs while the more serious buyers buy in bags.About 200 meters away from this scene is Isokoko Police Station, yet the drug users on Akerele Street act without fear. “I’m not afraid of police,” says Nurudeen. “I know at the end of the day, I will just settle them with money.”

    Another way of life

    Marijuana is a burning topic, especially among young people today. In different parts of the world, while law enforcement officers are busy trying to stop the tide of cultivation and consumption of the plant, many users continue to have a field day. At many clubs, street corners, markets, schools, beaches and other exclusive areas, smoking marijuana is no longer considered novel, maybe obnoxious.

    At Oshodi, a commercial hub in Lagos, large sections of the railway lines have been colonised by marijuana smokers. All day long, smokers freely smoke the drug in the public gaze. Those who do the selling, usually boys, as young as 12 year old, are often scruffy-looking and hang around in a cluster. They clutch black nylon bags containing the drugs and make catcalls  a peculiar form of advertisement – to potential buyers. At night, they come closer to the regular traffic. The acrid smell wafts constantly in the air. For the boys, there is little attempt to shield their nefarious activities from the eyes of the security officers permanently stationed there. Successive administrations in the state have cleared Oshodi of marijuana smokers and sellers, but time and again they come back.

    “What can the police do?” asked Tunde Salako, who operates a lotto kiosk at Oshodi bus stop. “I think because they (the sellers) stay on their own (gentle), the police just leave them alone. Once in a while some of them (policemen) even collect igbo (marijuana) from (the sellers).”

    Nigeria’s romance with marijuana is not a recent one. Often referred to as ‘Indian hemp’, in the country, Cannabis Sativa, which has enjoyed use as fibre, seed and seed oils, medicinal purposes, and as a recreational drug traces its origin to Central and South Asia. The drug also has many other aliases  igbo, dope, ganja, sensi, kuma, morocco, eja, kpoli, weed, trees, etc. Though usually smoked, the plant can be soaked in alcoholic drinks dubbed ‘monkey-tail’, and consumed mostly in the south-south parts of the country. Some people cook food with it, some boil it to drink as tea, while others just chew the plant and seeds. Physiologically, cannabis causes euphoria, relaxes the muscles and increases appetite. On the downside, the drug can impair motor skills, cause anxiety and paranoia and decrease short-term memory.

    Deemed an illicit drug by the law, it had always been an offence in Nigeria to smoke marijuana, and it has largely been frowned upon by society. However, paradoxically, despite increased hounding of growers, sellers, and users, marijuana appears to be consumed in ever greater quantities.

    Some sections of the society feel using marijuana should not be illegal. And they have made their voices heard through music. Apart from older generation of Nigerian musicians such as the late Fela Anikulapo-Kuti and Orlando Owoh, who used marijuana and whose songs sometimes glamorised it, in recent years music stars like Nice, Terry G, Timaya, Oritsefemi, and WizKid have also saluted the scraggly green plant in their lyrics, to the delight of many fans. Seun Kuti, Fela’s son, also praised marijuana in one of his songs titled ‘The Good Leaf.’

    Perhaps following an unwritten legacy by Fela Anikulapo Kuti, radical Afrobeat musician and unrepentant hemp smoker, the New Afrika Shrine built by his son Femi, has mutated to become a sort of ‘Free Parking’ for marijuana smokers. Forget the sign on the wall that reads ‘Drugs are not allowed in the Shrine’. Patrons of different societal class gather to enjoy good music, and with no sign of the buying or selling of marijuana there  it is an invisible trade with only buyers and sellers able to identify each other..

    Arresting the hemp trade

    During a recent raid, Nurudeen was rounded up with 11 others by a team of policemen at the Lagos State Abattoir at Agege.  According to Nurudeen, seven were released from police detention, but only after they had paid amounts ranging from N30, 000 to N40, 000. Nurudeen and the four others who could not afford to pay were charged, and later remanded at Kirikiri Prison. Though Nurudeen had been arrested at a shed where marijuana was sold and smoked, he was charged only with ‘disturbing the peace’, as he said “they (police) didn’t find any marijuana on me.”

    Created in 1990, the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) has the job of curtailing the consumption of drugs in Nigeria. The police also join in apprehending and prosecuting offenders. However, it seems that the security agencies are inefficient  as marijuana use still persists across the country.

    Had Nurudeen been charged under the NDLEA Act, the matter would have been more grave. Under this Act  which came about by the promulgation of Decree Number 48 of 1989, the possession or smoking of cannabis, or even allowing one’s premises to be used for dealing in cannabis, can result in a prison sentence from 15 years to life. Its precursor, the Indian Hemp Act, was even harsher, carrying a maximum sentence of death.

    At the court, Nurudeen was released on a bail of N50,000 and a surety with a tax clearance certificate. However, it was because the bail conditions were not fulfilled on the spot that he was remanded. After spending 14 days at Kirikiri, he was set free after his friends satisfied the bail conditions. He said he was one of those lucky to regain their freedom quickly. “I left some people who didn’t have people to come for them,” he said.

    The official position of Lagos State police is that it raids venues where marijuana is sold or consumed. “What we do is that we raid black spots because that is where criminals converge to carry out their illegal activities,” said Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP ) Kenneth Nwosu, the Lagos State Police Public Relations Officer.

    There are allegations, however, that Nigerian security operatives do smoke marijuana, and that they even connive with dealers to escape prosecution. When asked to reflect on these allegations, Nwosu denied that this was possible. “How can we who are arresting smokers, now be the ones who are smoking?”

    An Abuja-based lawyer, Segun Momoh, stresses that the law in Nigeria is not properly enforced by law enforcement agencies in order to profit from it. “Some policemen are aware of what is going on,” he said. “It is a racket.”

    Statistics for arrests and prosecutions relating to marijuana are not easily obtained. Three visits and repeated telephone calls to the Lagos State Police Public Relations Officer to get this data had been unsuccessful at the time of writing.

    Through the chain that leads from cultivation to transportation and to sales, the marijuana industry connects different cities throughout Nigeria. At many outdoor markets and public motor garages, it is not strange to see marijuana smokers puffing away. In this regard, Kano State residents take the lead. According to NDLEA figures, 37 per cent of Kano State population abuse drugs, the highest in the country. It is not uncommon to see youths gathering in public spaces, puffing on marijuana cigarettes in the bustling city. At Kwanar Sabo Street, Hotoro, youths gather most evening to smoke.

    Ironically, this area is close to Mobile Police (MOPOL 9) barracks. A resident, Thomas Adelaja said people don’t even see anything wrong in the boys smoking there. “These boys are committing an offence,” he said. “But it now seems as if they are just smoking ordinary cigar.” That is his way of saying it is so usual no one notices any longer.

    In Tudun Wada Quarters, youths flock into the dilapidated cemetery most mornings and evenings to smoke marijuana. The situation is also the same at Danmarke near the NNPC depot where Motor Park touts freely consume it. And at Tinshama, it is almost as if marijuana is already legal as young people walk about holding their marijuana joints and going about life. “Even the people (security officials) that come to raid us smoke,” said Shehu, one of the boys there.

    According to a fall-out report from a 2013 NOI poll, the key causes for the rise in drug and substance abuse are listed as poverty and unemployment.

    These twin problems can be seen at the university campus town of Abraka, Delta State. Here, smoking of marijuana amongst the student population is hardly seen as a misnomer. A section along the River Ethiope close to the Abraka River Resort Motel serves as a joint where students and indigenes converge to smoke marijuana.

    “Many people misunderstand smokers,” said Marho (not real name), a former student who now sells marijuana there. “We just smoke here to relax and forget our sorrows. It helps you to ‘reason’ (think properly) and it is even medicinal.”

    Marho’s boss, Tony (not real name), sells ‘skunk’, marijuana grown with fluorescent light and trending among youths. While Marho uses his motorbike to get supply from neighbouring Obiaruku, Tony gets his from Lagos, most times, using ladies as his couriers.

    “Police or NDLEA won’t suspect any woman,” Tony, 43, said. “They (security officials) don’t search their load and it is easy for them to bring ‘stuff’.”

    Current figures from the Nigeria Bureau of Statistics (NBS) put youth unemployment rate at about 24 percent. In April, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, the Coordinating minister for the Economy, quoting NBS figures, said no fewer than 5.3 million Nigerian youths are jobless with 1.8 million graduates entering the labour market annually. Also, earlier in the year, the World Bank estimated the number of poor Nigerians to be about 58 million.

    With surging youth population and high unemployment, some youths are lured by the easy money which drug peddling offers. According to Tony who did not complete his secondary education, poverty drove him to dealing in marijuana.

    “If someone like me had something doing, I wouldn’t be selling dope. But as it is now, I am ready for the risk since I am not stealing or killing anybody.”

    Concerning arresting hemp dealers and users, the Delta State’s police public relations officer DSP Celestina AmadiKalu hinted that the police in the state only “focused on the big-time producers.” But data on arrests of everyday users in the state was not provided.

    Home grown

    The 2011 United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) World Drug Report stated that cannabis use was prevalent among 14.3 per cent of 15 to 64 year olds in Nigeria. The same report in 2014 revealed that Nigeria had made the highest number of cannabis seizures of any African country. Following this report, the NDLEA launched a programme dubbed ‘Operation Weed Eaters’ that aimed to rid the country of cannabis.

    harvested cannabis being processed at the farmWhile marijuana can be grown in all parts of the country, according to the NDLEA, the states that are notorious for cultivating the plant are Ondo, Ogun, Osun, Oyo, Ekiti, Edo and Delta. In September, the NDLEA destroyed cannabis farms in Ute and Ose local government areas in Ondo State and arrested 30 suspects, seizing 31 kilograms of dried weed suspected to be marijuana in the Suleja area.

    “Taking the battle to the farms has yielded significant success,” said the NDLEA Chairman, Ahmadu Giade. “We are determined to destroy all cannabis farms and cut off supply to users. This is one of our strategies of reducing crime and violence in our country. More barons shall be arrested and cannabis plantations destroyed.”

    It takes an average of six months for the marijuana to be smoke-ready from seeds. NDLEA admits that even locating marijuana farms, which are usually sited in the middle of thick foliage, presents a significant challenge. Once located, such farms are burnt to the ground. However, the sheer demand for cannabis in Nigeria means that new farms subsequently emerge in different locations.

    Mitchell Ofoyeju, Head, Public Affairs of the NDLEA, says that cannabis that has dominated the list of illegal drug seizures ever since the Agency was founded in 1990. “Cannabis farm destruction is one of the most challenging operations in the Agency,” he said. “This is so because cannabis cultivators go very far into the heart of the forests to cultivate cannabis. Locating these farms is not easy. There are no roads, so officers have to walk for several hours to get to the farms. Apart from locating the farms, we are also faced with the challenge of how to destroy the farms. Manual destruction is painful and time wasting.”

    In October, NDLEA discovered a 57-hectare cannabis plantation at Gbongan Forest Reserve in Osun State. And one Godspower Chibogu, 51, was arrested. The street value of the 676, 800kg of marijuana on the plantation was estimated at N6.8 billion. According to Ofoyeju, it took the NDLEA team three days to destroy the farm using a tractor.

    And this is only one farm.

    Between January and June 2014, NDLEA arrested 4,511 suspected drug traffickers and seized 47,423 kilograms of drugs. Of that number, cannabis accounted for 45,875 kilograms. Though these seizure figures are high, large quantities of marijuana still find their way to the market baffling the law enforcement system.

    Orianne Akere, a lawyer and chairman of the Benin branch of the Nigerian Bar Association, believes that law enforcement officials are not helping matters in the fight against marijuana. “You hardly ever hear that anybody has been convicted for marijuana usage,” he said. “They are not taking it upon themselves to interrogate users because I think some of them are also users, so they condone all these.”

    Akere also does not understand why some officials allow ‘consumer quantity’ (usually a quantity at the discretion of the officials) of marijuana. ”Once you are caught with marijuana, so long as it is an offence in Nigeria, I expect the law enforcement agencies and the court to effectively deal with you to serve as a deterrent to other users.”

    To Akere, marijuana use has overwhelmed security officers.

    NDLEA does not agree. “NDLEA is winning the war,” Ofoyeju said. “With the resources available to us, our performance is impressive. We can only improve on this momentum.” Ofoyeju contends that the N9.028 billion that has been allocated to the NDLEA in the 2014 budget is not enough, and says that the Agency is seeking greater funding in the future. Ofoyeju also counters allegations of corruption, stating that the Agency under the leadership of Ahmadu Giade operates “a zero tolerance for corruption.”

    But the history of the Agency is certainly chequered. In 2006, former president Olusegun Obasanjo inaugurated a National Committee for the Reform of the NDLEA, led by Justice Gilbert Obayan (now retired). According to the Committee report, 197 arraigned persons between 2005 and 2006 with aid from NDLEA and prison officials evaded jail terms. In June 2010, former Chairman of NDLEA Alhaji Bello Lafiaji and his Personal Assistant, Usman Amali, were sentenced to 16 and seven years in jail respectively by a Lagos High Court, presided over by Justice Olusola Williams, after they were found guilty of using their offices to confer corrupt advantage upon themselves. However, both were freed in November 2011 when the Court of Appeal discharged and acquitted them unconditionally.

    Making it legal?

    Since the beginning of the 20th century, many countries have enacted harsh laws against the cultivation, possession or sale of cannabis. In fact, dealing or using marijuana in countries such as Singapore, China, Malaysia, United Arab Emirates, and Saudi Arabia could land one from four years in jail to public beheadings.

    But in recent years, some nations have adopted a different strategy, of decriminalising marijuana usage as a way of combating it. These societies have also often reduced the penalties for possession of small quantities of cannabis, so that it is punished by confiscation or a fine rather than by imprisonment. The idea has been to focus more resources on those who traffic the drug.

    Uruguay made history by becoming the first country to legalise cultivation, trade and usage of marijuana in December 2013. In countries as varied as the Netherlands, Germany, Mexico, Peru, and Canada, the emphasis has shifted towards the decriminalisation of marijuana. Jamaica, a country where marijuana smoking has long been popular, is set to decriminalise it too.

    Moves towards decriminalisation have also occurred in the United States. Last year, the state of Colorado made history by allowing the recreational use of cannabis following a majority vote. According to the state governor, John Hickenlooper, “this industry will create jobs”. The state of Washington has since followed Colorado’s lead, and in November, Alaska, Oregon and the capital Washington DC also voted to legalize marijuana.

    Although marijuana is still illegal in New York, New York Mayor Bill de Blasio said in November that, instead of the state arresting anyone carrying less than 25 grams of marijuana, it is likely that such persons will simply be fined up to $100 in future. De Blasio said the relaxation in policy was particularly aimed at young people, who would no longer have a criminal record for the rest of their lives as a result of carrying a small amount of marijuana. “This is part of a long-term effort to make us safer,” he added.

    tractor working on the cannabis farm in osunThe NDLEA disagrees with these approaches. “Nigeria is not considering decriminalizing cannabis,” says Ofoyeju. “The active ingredient in cannabis is tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). It is one of over 400 different cannabinoids. Cannabis has psychological and physiological effects on the human body. In large enough doses, THC can induce auditory and visual hallucinations. It is a very dangerous drug.”

    Yet recent medical studies have also indicated that marijuana can also be beneficial to health. In a CNN report titled ‘Why I changed my mind about weed’, Dr Sanjay Gupta, a neurosurgeon and the Cable News Network CNN ‘s Chief Medical Correspondent, said that he was misled into viewing marijuana as very dangerous.

    “There is clear evidence that in some people marijuana use can lead to withdrawal symptoms, including insomnia, anxiety and nausea,” Gupta said. “We now know that while estimates vary, marijuana leads to dependence in around 9 to 10% of its adult users.

    “While investigating, I realized something else quite important. Medical marijuana is not new, and the medical community has been writing about it for a long time. There were in fact hundreds of journal articles, mostly documenting the benefits. Most of those papers, however, were written between the years 1840 and 1930. The papers described the use of medical marijuana to treat “neuralgia, convulsive disorders, emaciation,” among other things.”

    Dr Dam iAjayi who works at the Federal Neuropsychiatric Hospital in Yaba in Lagos, takes a more balanced view. Dr Ajayi says that, while taking marijuana may be helpful for some people, it could trigger mental challenges in others. “So, it is good for some people but bad for others”.

    A recent Facebook poll conducted by The Nation newspaper asked respondents to comment on whether marijuana should be legalised or not in Nigeria. 44.7% voted in favour of legalization, while 55.3% voted against, in this case showing a greater alignment with marijuana’s status quo as an illicit drug. Some Facebook respondents also aired reasons for their answers.

    “The dangers inherent in the usage of marijuana would be catastrophic,” Henry Akisikpo wrote against the legalisation of marijuana. “l am absolutely sure there is going to be so much insanity and atrocities arising from its usage which will in turn give birth to crime of various forms.”

    Abdulrazak Abdulhamid also said he would not support the legalisation of marijuana though he knows it is consumed heavily in the country. “At the university, I could not get the image of a stark mad fellow out of my mind as some friends experimented and others perfected their weed-smoking skills,” Abdulhamid wrote. “There was this guy who used to transport it from Lagos to Ado-Ekiti in a 25-litre jerry can, until NDLEA caught him one day, seized his stash and made him pay heavily for it.”

    But not everyone is against legalising it.

    Tosin Adewale wrote, “we deceive ourselves a lot. Now, in motor parks and streets in Lagos, men smoke (marijuana) as if it was legalised and nothing follows. (It is) same thing at carnivals and beaches. So, if it’s banned, let the enforcement agents act without exclusion.”

    Commenting, Ogbonna Valentine opined that marijuana should be legalised but accompanied with strict regulations to discourage abuse. “Legalising it will create more jobs and employments and as well help in improving the economy,” he wrote. “Companies should be licensed to engage in producing medical marijuana. Arresting and detaining offenders will only worsen the case as more individuals will develop a means of taking it without the law getting at them. The most annoying part is that our politicians, armed forces personnel and individuals in law enforcement agencies are also marijuana addicts.”

    Economics teaches that placing restrictions on a product with high demand especially when supply cannot be controlled creates ‘black market’ situations. That seems to happening with marijuana in Nigeria  it is unregulated, profitable to traders, and easily accessible to consumers.

    Despite being incarcerated for two weeks, Nurudeen, who began smoking weed at age 14, has not been convinced to quit the habit. A month after his release, he is seated with friends at his regular haunt with a marijuana cigarette in his hand. “This is the only way I know how to relax,” he says.

    There are many Nurudeens in cities across Nigeria, who have not been deterred from continuing to smoke cannabis. As the security agencies continue to wage battle against the marijuana industry with arrests and prosecutions, the growers, traders, and users simply continue to do their thing. It remains a fierce battle.

     

     

    This report was produced by Joe Agbro Jr., with support from Partners for Democratic Change and the Institute for War and Peace Reporting. It is part of the Access Nigeria/Sierra Leone programme funded by the United States Department’s Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement

  • ‘My two children are free from  the virus eventhough I’m infected’

    ‘My two children are free from the virus eventhough I’m infected’

    MY name is Aminat -Agboola Alli, and I am the Lagos State coordinator of the Network of People Living with HIV and AIDS in Nigeria (NEPWAN). I was at the dying stage, which is what the doctors call the AIDS stage when I got to know about my status. Consequently, I was placed on Anti-Retro Viral drug (ARV), and within six months of being placed on the drug, I revived. Within one year, my virus load had become undetectable.  That was in 2005. Invariably, what ARV does is that it reduces the amount of virus in the body and ever since, it has remained undetectable. Being undetectable however does not mean that I no longer have the virus; it just means that it is at the dormant, and I can give birth to a child, who would be negative. Doctors advise that I should maintain that undetectable level by adhering strictly to the dosage of the drug, which I have to take for life. Usually when the viral load is suppressed, you’d look good and your rate of infection to others is minimal.

    At the moment, I have two children, whom I gave birth to through natural birth process and who are HIV negative. My husband is negative as well. It is important to note that he knew of my HIV status even before he got involved with me. However, practising unprotected sex with him still comes with a level of risk, despite my undetectable viral level, because there is still that probability of him getting infected. But the probability is low, because being a woman; I am at the receiving end. So I just make sure that my vagina, when we’re having sexual intercourse is not tight. I make sure that I am wet, so that there is no bruise of any kind; because HIV passes a through a medium, which is blood. And blood cannot just come out, except there is a bruise or cut.

    On stigma and stigmatisation of victims

    First of all, I’d like to say that we are not victims. We say we’re not victims because, as you can see, we are looking good. And you’re not likely to know that I have the virus because it is not written on my face, until I open up to you. And because the ARV drugs are available – they’ve been free until recently when they began to place some charges, people are accessing them. Although some people, for fear of being stigmatised in their locality, commute to long distance to access the drug, the fact remains that they still access it. And because of that, they are looking good and are no longer dying. What’s killing people more today is self-stigma or stigma and discrimination from outside world.

    Be that as it may, stigma is minimal now, compared to some years back, and that is because a lot of things have been put in place. I am in Lagos, which is a responsive state, and we have an anti-stigmatisation law, which means that I can take you to court if you stigmatise me. But in Nigeria as a whole, the bill is still in process. Also in Lagos, we have the Lagos State Workplace Policy on HIV/AIDS, in which we want to encourage business organisations to employ people living with HIV AIDs, so that they can work and not be discriminated against. That, is yet to be signed.

    Systematic discrimination

    Discrimination still occurs and there are instances where people living with HIV/AIDS have been discriminated against during the process of job recruitment. However, they don’t tell them. A typical example would be that you’ve been interviewed, got to the final stage, gone for health screening, and then suddenly dropped. So, usually you go your way, wondering why you’re so unlucky. But after sometime, you begin to fall sick, go to the hospital, do a screen test and eventually find out that you are HIV positive. But at that time, you really can’t take any legal action because it is a bit hard to establish the connection.

    Contracting the virus

    There are different modes of infection, namely mother to child, blood transfusion, sharp object and sexual intercourse. I know my mother didn’t give birth to me with HIV and I didn’t do blood transfusion, so it could only have been through any of the two others. But I’ll tell you that I practised unprotected sex; so there is high probability that I got it through that medium. At first nobody thought it was HIV. All our concentration was on Tuberculousis, but the illness persisted even after I’d been treated for tuberculousis. It was at that point that someone suggested to my sister that I went for HIV test. Looking back, if my sister had said, ‘no, my sister can’t have HIV’, maybe I would have been dead by now. Like I said, I was at the AIDS stage; but with appropriate treatment, and support and love from my family, I was able to recover and get back on my feet.

    Did she try to contact any of her sexual partners?

    I practised what we defined in our field as serial monogamy, which is when one has one sexual partner at a time. I contacted at least the last person I had sexual relationship with and he wasn’t infected. So it didn’t occur to me to even think about the person before him. I also remember that my last partner didn’t opt for the test initially, so I assumed it was him. By the time I finally thought about the other person and went to look for him, I was told he had died. So I concluded that it must have been him.

    On the decline in awareness campaign

    Even those working on the field feel that HIV is been over-flogged. And that is why the awareness campaign has been on the decline. There is however need to step up action against HIV infection, especially with young people, because we found that more than 80% of infection is still through sexual intercourse and prevalent amongst people between ages of 15 to 49. We should step up action on reaching out to both in-school youth and out-of-school youths and equip them with Comprehensive Sensuality Education. They need to know that they can’t just go experimenting and endangering themselves, or think that HIV/AIDS danger is no longer out there.

    Challenges facing HIV positive people

    The major challenges we face is that from October this year, some treatment centres have started putting charges on the treatments such as pick up of drugs, follow up lab test and some of us cannot afford it. I speak not as Aminat, but as coordinator of Lagos State Network of People Living with HIV/AIDS in Nigeria (NEPWHAN). Even though it has not been proven, HIV has the face of poverty, since most of those living with it live below the poverty line.

  • ‘My husband loved and  married me despite  my HIV/AIDS status’

    ‘My husband loved and married me despite my HIV/AIDS status’

    I first got to know about my HIV status in 2005. I had taken seriously ill after delivering my first daughter, who by the way was negative. So I was asked to do an HIV test, to which I tested positive. Of course there was a lot of stigma and discrimination at that time, but the good thing was that I had a family that supported me. They gave me all the love and support I needed. My husband at the time, however, did not support me, because he was negative. He accused me of promiscuity. At that time, you were always going to be accused of promiscuity, but I have really never been able to figure out how I got the virus.

    Along the line, I met and got married to somebody else who was negative and knew of my HIV status well before we started the relationship. And today, we have a child who is free from the virus.

    Immediately my second husband started making overtures at me, I told him that I was HIV positive and if he was ready to go the long haul. But his reaction was that being HIV positive wasn’t the end of the world. ‘You’re intelligent and I believe you can add value to my life.’ Interestingly, telling him about my HIV status turned out to be a major attraction. He said he had never seen any woman with that kind of courage. But basically, it was love.

    However, his family is not aware of my status, and we agreed to keep it that way, to avoid unnecessary issues.

    End of the world?

    Of course it felt like the end of the world. You know then it was like a death sentence. Once you test positive, people think that you’re going to die in another two or three days. I actually felt like that too; and I was therefore thinking: ‘Who would take care of my child when I’d passed on? Am I going to live? I even thought of suicide. I thought,  ‘Do I just kill myself?”A lot of negative stuff came into my mind then.

    But all that changed when I went to the hospital and saw other people living with the virus, and looking good and well. In fact, I got the encouragement to live from them. And that gingered me to join the support group and also counsel women that it is not the end of the world. We also passed the message onto those who find themselves in the situation anew. And for those who are pregnant, we let them know that, ‘Hey, you can still have babies who are HIV negative; if you take your drugs regularly and follow the doctors instruction on the usage of the drug, your viral load will get to that zero level, where chances of mother to child infection is very slim.’

    ARV drugs

    The good news is that once you start taking the ARV drugs, the risk of deteriorating to that dreaded AIDS level is remote, except for the fact that the drug itself, like the doctors tell us, can have side effects. Aside the fact that it can keep the virus in check, it can also damage some body organs and make the person come down with AIDS. So it’s not as if it is 100 percent safe. But it suppresses the power of the virus and also increases the CD4 counts.

    Stigmatisation

    The truth is stigmatisation still happens. People still withdraw into their shells, the moment they become aware of your status. But at the end of the day, we are all human beings. But self-stigmatisation is the biggest one that we are facing today, although a lot of efforts, campaign and support is going on. Government is really doing great to support people living with HIV/AIDS. Ordinarily there is no difference between you and me. The only difference is that there is a virus in me that I have to take a drug for. But I know people who are hypertensive, who are also on drugs; people who are diabetic, who are also on drugs for the rest of their lives.

    Message to the youths

    HIV is real and the mode of contraction is still mostly through sexual intercourse. So recklessness or I-don’t-care attitude will only put you in danger. You may be at that youthful stage when life can be very interesting, but be careful and protect yourself. Life has no duplicate. It is not easy living with the virus. Of course, everyone is going to die, but living with the virus always makes you think that somehow, you are going to die. Neither is it easy taking the drugs, which would have to be every day for life. I was not a drug person initially, but once I realised it was my only chance of staying alive, I accept my fate and began taking it regularly. I had worked with Medicine Sans Frontier before and seen people die for not taking the drugs. And since I’m not ready to go down that same way, I have set an alarm; in fact, my brain has become an alarm: once it is time to take the drug, something just triggers in me.

    Association of Women Living with HIV

    Our main vision is to ensure that women living with HIV/AIDS live a healthy and fulfilled life. We have this forum, where we make sure that members have and use their drugs as at when due; we also try to make sure that members are empowered through skill acquisition, so that they can earn income, because you must be happy, eat adequately, take your drugs regularly and provide your basic needs. Our association is also out to ensure that justice and equity is ensured, because you find out that some of the men are not helping matters. I was at a clinic one day and I had the opportunity to assist in the registration area and I had this interaction with a man who told me that he has two wives and both of them are not aware that he is HIV positive. So he has already infected them, and to now come out and take responsibility is difficult. He actually confessed that he married one of them, a virgin. And yet he couldn’t do her the favour of telling her before marrying her! Call that wickedness and you’d be right on point. And we’ve had several other cases of men who, because they thought they got the virus from a woman, have sworn to spread it to as many women as come their way. But that is not right. If you try to spread it, you can also contract another type of virus called HIV II and other more deadly diseases. Towards this end, the government is trying to put in place a disclosure mechanism, whereby anyone who is found guilty of such act will be prosecuted and punished by the law.