Category: Sunday magazine

  • Aspiring actress betrayed by mentor

    Aspiring actress betrayed by mentor

    THIS is the case of a male Nigerian artiste was asked to help mentor a young aspiring actress, but who ended up having forceful sexual intercourse with her. This is the victim’s story as narrated to the reporter. “I studied Theatre Arts. After I completed my university education, my aunt introduced me to a set of identical twins. They are both men and run an NGO which brings twins, triples and such sets of children from all over the world to attend their annual event in Nigeria. Because of that, these twins are well networked. So, they promised to get me connected to one or two actors. Before long, I was taken to meet this particular artiste. You know, the excitement of meeting someone you’ve always seen on TV was so overwhelming. Anyway, to shorten the lengthy story I met him. He introduced me to others. He took me along to about three auditios; though, I did not take part in any, but I was thrilled nonetheless.

    “However, I was always with him as his protégé most of the times except on Tuesdays and Thursdays. He introduced me to people as his ‘kid sister’ who wants to become like him. It was all fun. At the end of each meeting, I returned to my parents’ home in Abesan, Ipaja, Lagos. A few times, my dad had called to thank him for his efforts on my life. So, I never had any reason to be afraid of being with him.

    “Then, one Friday, we were in his home office, and he said, we had nowhere to go but that he will give me some materials to study. His wife had gone out. Some guests came around and left. It’s not that we were all totally alone. In fact, that will not be the first time I would be with him in such a setting.

    “At some point, he called to ask what I was doing; I told him I was reading the book he asked me to. He then said I should go back to the table. Few minutes later, he called me back and started telling that I was a very pretty and irresistible girl. I was flush with shyness. And before I could talk he started touching and caressing me. I tried to pull back as I asked him “But uncle, why are you doing this?”

    “He just dragged me close to himself, pulled me closer and forced his lips on me. I tried to push him back, but he was too strong for me. He held me so tight I was in tears within a few minutes. The only person that could help me was the gateman downstairs. But I didn’t know if he could hear me.

    “Everything lasted less than ten minutes or so. I was in tears. I felt as if the whole world had crashed in on me. As I got downstairs looking ruffled, it was as if the gateman guessed what had transpired from the way he stared at me. On getting home, I told my parents, who told the twins, and then, we were brought to you (the reporter).”

  • Beverly Osu  finds new  love

    Beverly Osu finds new love

    AFTER being dumped by Angelo her boyfriend in the BBA House, Nigerian representative in the Big Brother season 8 dubbed the chase, Beverly Osu has found love in the arms of another housemate, Bimp,the Ethiopia representative. Beverly and the Ethiopian guy are said to be hot now as sources said the cupid arrow which struck has made him to relocate to Nigeria.

    The rumour making the rounds is that are currently living together in the highbrow,Lekki area of Lagos.

  • ‘Actresses can’t be real because of wagging tongues’

    ‘Actresses can’t be real because of wagging tongues’

    Actress Uchenna Nnanna shares with Adetutu Audu, her journey into stardom. The Abia State-born screen star says God won’t be happy if she acts nude

    WHICH was your first movie?

    That was in the year 2004. I was still in school then. I played a minor role, though everybody in a movie is very important. There can never be a major role without minor roles. I interpreted the script so well that the producer and director picked interest in me. One of them even asked me ‘I thought you said this is your first movie’. And I said yes but that doesn’t make me a novice in the game. Of course, I was a Theatre Arts student, so I should be able to distinguish myself. The movie was entitled Last Meeting. After that, because of my performance, the producer called me for another movie entitled Holy Violence. Then I was always coming from school to take part in movies. After my NYSC, I decided to venture fully into the industry. There was this TV reality show – 12 Ambassadors of Nollywood – which I used to re-launch myself into the industry.

    Tell us more about the reality show

    The 12 Ambassadors of Nollywood was a reality TV show designed to search for talents across the length and breadth of the nation. Watchers of the Nigerian film industry say The 12 Ambassadors show, which screened an unprecedented 50,000 young, talented, energetic and enthusiastic Nigerian youths all over the country, is the single largest nationwide talent hunt in Nollywood’s history. It was sponsored by Unity Bank. The project was a deliberate effort to discover and cement the ties that bind us as a nation through the theatre; to search and bring out actors that will stand the test of time and make the country proud. Luckily for me, I emerged as one of the ambassadors and was rewarded with a car- I am even still driving that car till date.

    So would you say the show opened doors for you?

    It did. I did so many movies afterwards. I did War in the Palace, Angel of Terror, Silent King, Ibu and Beyonce, Thanks for Coming, Little Secret, and so many others. The truth is that I have been busy with movie jobs since then till today.

    How did you got your first movie role?

    I was not auditioned for my first movie because it was just a crowd scene that I appeared in. The very first movie that I went for auditioning was in the year 2005 and was entitled Divided Kingdom. It was such a difficult audition. The producer and director were looking for a character that could actually cry very well. At the end, I was able to get the role. I wouldn’t know why they picked me, but maybe I got what they were looking for. I was able to interpret the role.

    How would you describe you experience in the industry so far?

    Within this period, I have experienced the good, the bad and the ugly. It is not easy being in the entertainment world. You feel you are talented but you would come across 1001 people who might even be more talented than you are. So, at times it is not just all about the talent. It is God’s favour and grace that leads one through. In 2010, did a movie that took me outside the country to London. So it’s been good. Today, there is no embassy I walk into that I won’t get my visa. Seeing people appreciate you is another thing. I have done so many movies since then; I even did one where I had to shave my hair. It was another blockbuster.

    How much was involved?

    It wasn’t just because of the money involved; it is the passion for the job. At times if you think about the money, you wouldn’t even want to do anything of such. Apart from going nude, I don’t think there is anything I can’t do for the sake of acting. And this is because of the passion I have for the job.

    You mean you can’t act nude?

    I can’t, no matter what is involved. So many people don’t see anything wrong in it but I see lots of wrong in it. My personal principle and religious background wouldn’t allow me go nude on the screen. I came from a very strong Christian home; it is not the kind of things expected of me. I’m a strong Catholic; I have a reputation to protect. Most importantly, God wouldn’t be happy that I go nude. I’m not a porn star, for crying out loud.

    What have been your pains?

    People judge you when they don’t even know you! There is something someone who is not on the screen can do and walk away with, but not someone in the limelight. Tongues are always wagging on anything one does. One can’t even be real again. Just because you played the role of a prostitute everybody starts seeing you as a prostitute. It is painful at times.

    You lost your sister to a plane crash. How would you describe the experience?

    For almost one year, I couldn’t pray. I felt so bad; I asked why God would take away my sister. I loved her so much and it was like the entire world came to an end. I don’t like talking about it (cries). It was in the ill-fated Sosoliso plane crash in Port Harcourt, 2005. The plane burst into flames and behold my sister was inside. Her death still causes lots of pains in me, even after many years.

    Some of your colleagues are into lesbianism; do you have a different sexual orientation?

    God doesn’t approve it. Nobody has ever tried that with me. I think maybe it’s the way I carry myself. I’m too decent to be lured into such an ungodly act.

    As a pretty actress, how often are you sexually harassed?

    I’ve never been forced to bed because of movie roles. I’m not saying no one has asked me out. That is a different thing entirely. The way I carry myself won’t give anybody the effrontery to harass me. In Nollywood, I have been asked out, just as man would ask a girl out. It’s my choice to say either yes or no.

    What has life taught you over the years?

    I have learnt a lot about life. Besides, the death of my sister was also a big lesson to me. I now know that anybody can die anytime. I have this friend of mine, very pretty and currently on a wheel chair. She studied English at the University of Calabar; very nice girl, but today she is on a wheel chair. I have also learned that whatever God has planned for each and every one of us will surely come to pass, it might just be a matter of time. In general, I believe easy does it. I take life very easy. I have this philosophy of taking things the way they come.

  • Presbyterian Church warns against election crisis

    As Nigerians continue to express their condemnation of the poor conduct of thee November 16, 2013 governorship elections in Anambra State, The Presbyterian Church of Nigeria has blamed the “inconclusive election” on the high level of desperation by the political class and corruption, which has become endemic in Nigeria.

    Referring to the declaration by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) that the inconclusive election was caused by sabotage and subversion of the electoral process by an electoral officer, the Church cautioned INEC, the government, the political class and the generality of the citizenry that going by this report, it would be necessary to guard against any acts of manipulation and inducement that may mar the forthcoming general elections in 2015 to avoid any other political crisis that might destabilise the nation.

    The Church stated this in a communiqué issued at the end of the last quarter 2013 meeting of its General Assembly Executive Committee held in Calabar. In the communiqué, jointly signed by thee Prelate and Moderator of the General Assembly, The Most Rev. Prof. Emele Mba Uka and the Principal Clerk, Rev. Ndukwe Nwachukwu Eme, the church expressed support for the convening of the National Conference as a forum to discuss the issues and challenges to the peaceful co-existence of the people of Nigeria and the future of the nation. The Church recommended that there should be no “no-go-areas” and that the report of thee conference should be subjected to a national referendum to take final decisions.

    And while the Church condoled with the family, members of Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), and the government over the death of former ASUU president, Prof. Festus Iyayi, in a motor accident on the way to Kano for ASUU meeting, it commended President Goodluck Jonathan for his initiative to end the strike by university lecturers.

    The Church also alerted the government at all levels to the World Bank report released mid-August 2013 to the effect that 100 million Nigerians, approximately 70% of the nation’s population, live in abject poverty.

    “The people are hungry and have no access to proper health care. Socio-economic infrastructure are decaying and education, which should be the right of every child, has become the exclusive preserve of the privileged. This state of affairs is lamentable in a nation blessed by God with vast natural resources. The situation is further compounded with general unrighteousness, crass corruption, social injustice, religious violence, criminal activities, civil unrest, etc.” the Church urged the three tiers of governments to be alive to the primary duty of governance which is to manage public funds in such a manner that will promote the general well-being of citizens in accordance to the will of God for humanity.”

  • Create a captivating atmosphere

    Create a captivating atmosphere

    How do you create a Christmas atmosphere in this season of Yuletide? Yetunde Oladeinde offers tips.

    IN a few days it would be Christmas and you could feel the celebration in the air. Interestingly, Christmas décor is something that captures a captivating atmosphere. From images of Santa Claus, Christmas bells, twinkling lights and Teddies, the list of accessories is almost endless. If you have lots of money then you can allow an interior decorator to take care of the details without stress.

    Alternatively, you can do it your own way and save the cost. Doing it your way can be exciting once you understand the effect you want to achieve. First you have to understand where the major emphasis should be and play down on the other details stylish.

     

    Décor for Christmas should therefore take your interiors and exteriors into consideration. The big question now would be how you can achieve a classic and unique celebration.

    Sometimes, all your visitor needs is a first impression and you can decide to get them mesmerized from your doorsteps. Here you can settle for nature-inspired front door trimmings that would usher your guests for a special entry that’s as stylish as it is hospitable.

    You can also accent a bright white door with the deep colors of an evergreen wreath and garland. Wondering how you can achieve this effect? A decorative wreath and other adornments are the per

    fect welcome sights for guests to admire.

    Here you can tie on extra-wide red ribbons to complete the Christmas look and add graphic punch. In addition, you can add twinkling lights which add a soft glow at night and allow the door and decor to be seen from the street.

    Next you need to think of the size of your living room to know the décor that would be appropriate. If you have lots of space to play with then you can opt for a giant Christmas tree in bright colours like red, blue, white or green depending on your color scheme.

    Once you have Chosen the perfect tree, you can add festive decorations that match or contrast with the colour of the tree. This grand Fraser fir tree, with a subtle holly-and-bells theme, naturally makes a classic Christmas statement.

    The rooms, corridors and other parts of the house also need to be attended to creatively. Yards of textured burlap, vintage-style accessories, and a natural color palette can give the room a stylish organic feel.

    If you want to have a dramatic outdoor effect, then you can make your Christmas tree natural and decorate the garden in bright red and green. In addition, you can make use of table and chair covers with ribbons and accessories in Christmas colours.

     

     

  • Power for fulfilment of destiny! Enjoying divine visitation!

    Every child of God is accepted in the beloved (Ephesians 1:6). So, we were God’s choice before we were born. We have a glorious destiny in Christ as believers; but that destiny will remain unfulfiled until we are empowered to experience the fulfilment of divine plan.

    God’s empowerment is not theoretical; it is ordained for the fulfilment of our glorious and enviable destiny. Destiny is all about the discovery of divine plan and purpose. The Bible says: According as his divine power hath given unto us all things that pertain unto life and godliness, through the knowledge of him that hath called us to glory and virtue (2 Peter 1:3). So, by His divine empowerment, you have access to all things that pertain unto life and godliness.

    The empowerment of the Holy Ghost is all about accomplishment of supernatural feats and fulfilment of our glorious destiny (Isaiah 61:1-4).

    That is why everyone in the body of Christ must be baptized in the Holy Ghost. Otherwise, one may never be able to access God’s plan. However, it is not enough to be baptized in the Holy Ghost, we must strive to grow in power and see other dimensions of His glory.

    Wherever His power is, His glory is. His power is the attractor of His glory. You cannot see His power and miss it. Wandering away from God’s plan equals a life of struggles without end (Proverbs 29:18). Understanding God’s plan and walking in it are the key to the restoration of our total dignity and glory.

    The Holy Ghost is, therefore, the middleman who takes the plan of God for our lives and reveals it to us. Nevertheless, the Holy Ghost accomplishes this through certain channels.

    What then are these channels?

    •Vision: The unveiling of God’s plan as it relates to us is what we call vision. The Holy Ghost is the custodian of God’s plan for us as individuals. He is the one entrusted to unveil the plan of God for us as individuals (Joel 2:28).

    •Revelation: Revelation of the Word empowers the drive of vision to fulfilment. We need the revelation of the Word to drive any plan of God into fulfilment because that is the secret of our authority— because every Word revealed, is Word confirmed (Jeremiah 1:11-12).

    Therefore, visions and revelations are two main spiritual forces that guarantee fulfilment of destiny. But, we cannot experience true fulfilment without the empowerment of the Holy Spirit at work in our lives.

    How does the Holy Ghost empower us to fulfil destiny?

    •He unveils the plan of God for our lives (John 14:26; 16:13)

    •He sheds the love of God abroad in our hearts (Romans 5:5)

    •He enforces the restoration of all that the devil may have stolen from us (Joel 2:23-27)

    •He sanctifies us and makes us fit for eternity (1 Corinthians 6:11)

    We cannot fulfil destiny walking outside God’s plan. Nobody ever survives it. No matter the anointing on our lives, we need to be properly positioned in God’s plan to fulfil destiny.

    Friend, the power for the fulfilment of destiny is available, if you are a child of God. You become His child by confessing your sins and accepting Jesus as your Lord and Saviour. You can be God’s child now by saying this prayer: Lord Jesus, I come to You today. I am a sinner. I cannot help myself. Forgive me of my sins. Cleanse me with Your precious Blood. Deliver me from sin and satan, to serve the Living God. Today, I accept You as my Lord and Saviour. Thank You, for saving me! Now, I know I am born again! I will continue with this teaching next week.

    Every exploit in life is a product of knowledge. For further reading, please get my books: Anointing For Breakthrough, Understanding The Anointing and Anointing For Exploits.

    From December 10-14, 2013, at Faith Tabernacle, Canaan Land, Idiroko Road, Ota, many destinies will be transformed to higher levels of greatness at SHILOH 2013 tagged, Exceeding Grace. SHILOH is the annual prophetic gathering of the Winners’ family worldwide. Be there!

     

    I invite you to come and fellowship with us at the Faith Tabernacle, Canaan Land, Ota, the covenant home of Winners. We have four services on Sundays, holding at 6:00 a.m., 7:35 a.m., 9:10 a.m. and 10.45 a.m. respectively.

     

    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

  • Clergyman advices Jonathan on confab

    The Assistant Pastor in Charge of Province, 40 of The Redeemed Christain Church of God, Lagos, Pastor Goke Aniyeloye has called on President Goodluck Jonathan to allow the hope and aspiration of the people to be reflected in the proposed National dialogue.

    Aniyeloye made this known at the press conference organised last week ahead of the Special Anointing Service of me of RCCG, Testimony Chapel; Anwo Bustop, Akute, Ogun State holding on 8th of December, 2013.

    The programme tagged: Wipe my tears away will bring together thousands of Christian faithful and will feature prayers, bible teaching and prophetic ministration.

    According to him, the national conference will only succeed when the hopes, aspiration and needs of the people at the grassroots are reflected and pragmatic frameworks to address them are properly worked upon.

    He said “the national conference is timely as Nigeria have over 250 ethnic groups and we need to come and discuss together at this time on the way toward for our country in crises.”

    Aniyeloye noted that Nigeria was once the giant of Africa but we are now like grasshopper among the nations of the world because of wide spate of corruption, poverty, kidnapping, civil unrest and do or die politics that has drawn back the country in the annals of history.

    He attributed the increasingly spate of insecurity in the north to politicians who have vow to disrupt the peace of the country if they are not given the opportunity to rule which necessitated the need to discuss as Nigeria on how best we want to live together

    “We need to discuss on salient issues on governance, economy, education, human right, and other developmental issues that affect the common man in Nigeria”, he said.

    Aniyeloye noted that the special prayer programmes holds every last Wednesday of the month and is aimed at encouraging Christians to look up to God for divine help and sustenance in the midst of confusion and headache.

    There will also be a special anointing service on the second Sunday in December at the RCCG, Testimony Chapel, Anwo, Akute, Ogun State.

  • Cleric tells Christians to wake up from political slumber

    Christians in Nigeria in general and Lagos State in particular have been challenged to wake up from their political slumber, and take active part in politics if they are really desirous of establishing a government that will care for the generality of the people instead of what is obtained now.

    Rt. Rev. Solomon Gbetoso Kuponu, Bishop of Ijebu North, Anglican Church, stated this at a lecture he delivered last week at St John’s Anglican Church, Iju-Ishaga, during the silver jubilee of the Young Men and Women Christian Association (YMWCA) of the church. He spoke on the theme: Terrorism as it affects social and political life of Nigeria: Christian perspective.

    He described terrorism as an act of violence or threat that is unlawful and has an objective of exacting revenge, intimidating or influencing an audience. “Terrorism is one of the most challenging problems of our time and its effects are global in nature. Each time you take a plane, bus or train, you can’t help wondering whether this could possibly be your last journey,” he said.

    He stated the possible causes of terrorism as poverty, undemocratic government, alienated intelligentsia/intellectual class of people, indoctrination, ethnicity and charity but added that some of these reasons do not hold at all places. On the argument that poverty breeds terrorism, he stated that there are many places around the world where there are no terrorists at all despite the poverty level in these places like some poor countries in South America, Africa and Asia. He pointed out that North Korea and China are not democratic yet they don’t have terrorists, adding that those that kill do not only kill other people but kill even people of their own ethnic group and religion.

    He laid emphasis on religious indoctrination, alienated intelligential/ intellectual class of people and some misapplied charities as fuelling terrorism globally.

    He said Boko Haram has killed thousands of Nigerians and non- Nigerians since 2009, destroyed churches and businesses. Nigeria is a multi-religious country with many problems but that the most worrisome is terror attacks, he said.

    Terrorism as it affects Nigeria is more religion-based, he stated, adding that Islamic extremists are bent on Islamising the whole country except we stand up to stop them.

    Bishop Kuponu said the kind of government that Christ approves of is the type that cares for the people in general, especially the poor and the less-privileged in our society as Christ used to do and not the elitist, self centred and religion-biased government prevalent in Nigeria.

    He said unless Christians rise up as a body politically, evil will continue to reign in Nigeria.

  • When Nigerian  Navy thundered  in Australia

    When Nigerian Navy thundered in Australia

    ANCHORED among other frigates from other parts of the world, at Australian Navy Cockle Bay in the shadows of the iconic Opera House, the NNS THUNDER, with the Nigerian flag fluttering proudly in the gentle wind, was a sight to behold. Capt Clement Atebi the Commanding Officer of the NNS THUNDER, in his sparkling white Navy uniform, stood exchanging courtesies with visitors.

    “Incredible! You mean this is a Nigerian Navy Ship?” Steve Doug, one of the Australian visitors on board NNS THUNDER that eventful Sunday afternoon of 6th October, asked.

    NNS THUNDER was in Australia to participate in Australia’s International Fleet Review and Sea Power Conference to mark 100 years of the Royal Australian Navy. It was the first time a Nigerian Naval vessel was coming into Australian iaters. It therefore attracted considerable interest amongst Australians.

    The presence of NNS THUNDER was indeed a pointer to the fact Nigeria remains a maritime power in the West African sub-region and Africa. And our dear country whose armed forces and Navy have done so much through UN peace keeping operations in our sub-region pursuit and other parts of the world. The Nigerian Navy has rendered over five decades of distinguished service to Nigeria, protecting our maritime environment. It is also the most powerful in West Africa and helped to ensure peace and stability we enjoy in West Africa today!

    Certainly the entire sojourn of NNS THUNDER and its crew in Australian waters was a moment of pride; a golden opportunity to showcase and appreciate Nigeria as a maritime power. For many, the closest experience of life on a naval vessel is through TV documentaries.

    Therefore, coming on board the THUNDER was a first and real life experience of seeing the vessel not just as a war machine on the sea with complete modern communication equipment, but also a little town on its own; one which boast of an exercise bay, a clinic, a helicopter landing pad, a modern kitchen from where a complete range of delicious Nigerian culinary delight from Edikaikong to Tuwo shinkafa and Ogbono can be prepared and washed down with Nigerian beer and palm wine!

    So impressed was the President of the Nigerian Association of New South Wales of Sydney, Dr (Mrs) Olayide Ogunsiji, a Nigerian lecturer resident in Sydney, that she effusively affirmed from the deck of the vessel “our Association must give our naval officers something special for making us proud here in Australia.” And they did present some mementos to the crew before the vessel sailed from Sydney.

    The Sydney International Fleet Review was not only an event to parade a flotilla of naval vessels from over 30 nations; the International Sea Power Conference was equally of significance and deserves close attention of any maritime nation. Happily, our naval officers participated actively and contributed significantly to discussions during the conference.

    The Navy’s delegation to the Fleet Review was led by our affable, intellectually savvy and admirable Vice Admiral Dele Ezeoba, the Chief of Navy. The Conference provided opportunities for discussions and exchange of experiences by chiefs of navies and top naval fleet commanders from over thirty major maritime powers including the US, China, India, South Africa, etc.

    Topics discussed included Naval Diplomacy and Regional Power Projections, Role of Sea Power and Regional and Global Security, Combating Piracy and Local and International Terrorism, Securing Sea Trading Routes, Budget Pressure and other challenges facing navies across the world, etc.

    Today, piracy on the high seas has become a global problem costing the global economy as much as USD$12 billion a year. It has also been recognized that concerted vigorous global action by naval forces across the world is required to curb the activities of pirates; illegal drug and people smugglers.

    The event therefore provided opportunities for participating maritime powers including Nigeria, to share experiences and proffer solutions for the challenges of littoral nations with vast coastlines. The deliberations demonstrated that if our interconnected but troubled world, is to find solution to many of its problems, our Navies have important roles to play.

    Apart from the opportunity of training for the officers and ratings, what exactly was the meaning of the presence of the NNS THUNDER in Australia? It is important to take a cursory look at this dimension of the visit of the NNS THUNDER to Australia since it may not be too obvious to everyone. It is also necessary to disabuse the minds of our compatriots who are ever quick, cavalierly, to dismiss our foreign policy thrust, posture and international engagements.

    It is widely acknowledged worldwide, that among the various arms of the armed forces, the navy and naval ships in particular are best placed to project the diplomatic credentials of any country. Frigates, aircraft carriers, and other visiting naval vessels are essentially floating diplomatic Missions. Any naval vessel is a physical representation of any country at sea or any port where is anchored naval officers and ratings in their usual pristine brilliant white ceremonial uniforms-usually a sight to behold-provoke the question “where are they from?””

    In other words, naval vessels, such as the NNS THUNDER, undeniably serve as an effective instrument for naval diplomacy and projection of soft power. The NNS THUNDER while in Australia did as much and even more during the Sydney International Fleet Review. For us in the Mission tucked away in our quiet little corner in Canberra, the presence of the ship and women and men of our navy in their sparkling naval uniform was a thing of pride. Their presence and that of the Chief of Naval Staff and his team helped to shore up our efforts with the Nigerian community to project a more positive image of our country and combat the negative stereotypes.

    Today, the importance of our navy can never be more obvious. Safe passage at the Gulf of Guinea is now a must since our entire region and countries rely heavily on secure shipment of our oil and other commodities. Certainly at the Sydney Sea Power conference, the problems of our maritime environment which are similar to those of other maritime nations received a lot of attention with various policy recommendations.

    We also shared our experiences and the experiences of Nigeria’s delegation were good inputs. It was therefore our men and women were here with the NNS THUNDER and also to be part of that debate and the fleet review. Mr. President’s approval for the Nigerian Navy to participate in the Australian Fleet Review must, therefore, be applauded.

    The Australian Chief of Navy, Vice Admiral Ray Griggs, while chatting with his counterpart, Vice Admiral Ezeoba, stated: “Thank you for bringing the THUNDER here. Your presence indeed added a lot of value to this fleet review. We certainly have a lot to learn from each other.” Australian Minister of Defence, the Honourable Senator David Johnston, also echoed similar sentiments. He was full of praises for the NNS THUNDER and the professional conduct of its crew during the entire Fleet Review.

  • CAR: A failed state  gets worse

    CAR: A failed state gets worse

    Long classified as a failed state, the Central African Republic is going from bad to worse as rampaging militias plunge the country closer to genocide. Hannah McNeish reports.

    THE teeming hospital grounds in Bossangoa, a northwestern town in the Central African Republic (CAR), offers a glimpse into the worsening crisis the country has faced since a rebel alliance known as Seleka took power by force in March 2013.

    Over a thousand people are seeking shelter in the facility. Amid clouds of smoke from cooking fires, children sit listless, women pound maize and groups of men stare off into space.

    “We’re here because of the Seleka, who came to our village, looted, ransacked and killed,” said Prophete Ngay-bola, a father of eight with another on the way.

    “We are… I don’t even know what to call us. We have nothing now. I can’t even go to my house or fields. If they see me there, they’ll kill me.”

    “We’ve lost our houses, our fields, our goods. Houses were razed with all our things in. We are… I don’t even know what to call us. We have nothing now. I can’t even go to my house or fields. If they see me there, they’ll kill me.”

    Humanitarian and development indicators were dire before the coup, but now, amid increasing violence by armed groups and between communities and religious faiths, they are even worse: almost the entire population of 4.5 million has been affected; 1.1 million people outside the capital, Bangui, are estimated to be severely or moderately food-insecure; and there are almost 400,000 internally displaced people (IDPs), double the figure of just a few months ago.

    Around 65,000 people have fled the country, most to neighbouring Cameroon.

    “CAR was a failed state before. Now, it’s just worse,” said Amy Martin, country head of the UN Office of Coordination for Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).

    “We’re estimating over 1.5 million people who need assistance of various kinds, whether it’s health, nutrition, shelter, protection,” she said.

    But security concerns mean that aid agencies, whose vehicles have come under attack, can only guess at what’s happening in some areas, and Martin said the actual number of people affected by the crisis could be much higher.

    Adequate response is further hampered by a lack of funds: just 44 percent of the $195 million dollars sought to tackle the crisis has been forthcoming.

     

    DIRE SITUATION

    “In most of the country, we’re very worried about the level of violence we’re seeing and that we’re hearing about and [that we] get patients from in our hospital,” says Ellen Van der Velden, head of MSF Holland, which is operating in Bossangoa. The team has children under five recovering from bullet wounds.

    Over 36,000 people are seeking refuge at Bossangoa’s Catholic Mission, after fleeing a coalition of rebels-turned-“government” forces that Michel Djotodia, a northern Muslim, enlisted to bring him to power in the March coup.

    Made up of large numbers of mercenaries from neighbouring Chad and Sudan as well as most of the country’s former prison population, these forces are mainly Muslim, and have exacted a deadly revenge on mainly Christians in former President Francois Bozize’s homeland. France has warned that CAR is “on the verge of genocide” because of the spiraling sectarian violence.

    Self-defence groups calling themselves “anti-balaka” – armed with machetes, bows and arrows and spears – have sprung up and committed atrocities not only on Seleka but also on the wider Muslim community. Such inter-faith conflict is a new phenomenon in CAR.

    As armed groups trawl the area, looting, killing and razing crops and homes, villages on the 100km stretch of road between Bossangoa and the capital Bangui lie empty. The only signs of life IRIN found were goats waiting patiently for their owners.

     

    SICK AND INJURED

    Aside from the terror, people are suffering from illnesses as they hide in their fields with no shelter, medicine and food. Only the bravest or sickest take the highway to seek medical help at Bossangoa Hospital.

    “I’m absolutely worried that there are many cases out there that we can’t reach. Not only violence, but the malaria,” said MSF doctor Florin Oudenaarden. In the 10 days she has worked at the hospital, the MSF team there has seen four children die, as many come in so weakened by anaemia, malaria and malnutrition that it is impossible to revive them.

    Van der Velden says that aside from the violence, malaria is the biggest killer, especially among children. At a recent outreach clinic, 120 out of 200 children tested positive for it.

    A two-year-old boy with severe malaria was recently rushed to the clinic by the outreach team, only to die on arrival.

    “If we had got there a day earlier, we could have saved him,” she says.

    Among the latest child victims at the hospital are a skeletal boy hooked up to a drip and covered in foil paper, who can barely blink for lack of strength.

    Another is a four-year-old boy who screams between doses of painkillers, his legs suspended from the ceiling; he was shot through the hips during a recent attack on a gold mine 25km from Bossangoa. MSF’s surgeon doubts he will ever walk again; the bullet shattered his joint, requiring what would be a complicated and expensive procedure in the best of places.

     

    AID LIMITED

    Due to insecurity and a lack of funding, UN agencies are only working in the towns, and the time and manpower of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and MSF are limited compared to the scale of the crisis.

    “People are dying out there that can’t access healthcare, and that’s definitely a big concern,” says Van der Velden.

    “Our problem right now is that we cannot go beyond Bossangoa as we are underfunded,” says Pablo de Pascual, emergency coordinator for the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), which has a $20 million deficit in funding for CAR.

    UNICEF has carried out a massive vaccination campaign for under-fives, and MSF is also joining the fight against diseases such as measles, which have flourished in CAR in recent months.

    Oudenaarden, whose last postings were Syria and South Sudan, says that her team is doing “six or seven blood transfusions a week, which is very high compared to other projects I’ve worked with. We also see a lot of malnutrition, and malnutrition is going up quickly.”

    “We are planning to address high levels of malnutrition in the coming months,” says de Pascual. As the rains end, the country will start its lean season without anyone to harvest crops.

    With violence raging across the country’s traditional breadbasket in the north, Martin is also concerned about the lack of food, both for people there and in the rest of the country. Most market mechanisms throughout CAR have collapsed, and there is the blockade on trucks moving to the capital.

     

    TIME BOMB

    Each day, around 40 people arrive at Bossangoa’s Catholic Mission, a site spanning only 19 hectares, sparking fears about disease outbreaks. Humanitarian norms recommend 160 hectares for its current population.

    De Pascual says living conditions have been “deteriorating since the beginning due to a lack of access of basic public services and increasing numbers in the IDP sites,” sparking fears of cholera.

    Renate Sinke, MSF’s project coordinator in Bossangoa, describes the living conditions as “horrendous” and thinks the scene is set for an epidemic.

    “My non-medical opinion is that I think it’s a time bomb,” she says.

    The site has two open defecation fields, no hand-washing points and not a single shower. Still, diarrhoeal diseases are so far low.

    “We have now seven litres of water per person per day. Last week we had four litres – and it should be 15,” says MSF water and sanitation coordinator Rink de Lange. bThere are only 65 working latrines.

    “That means that, at this time, we have one latrine for 450 people, when the standard is one in 20. So that’s a massive gap that has to be filled. And of course the location of the camp is so dense that it’s hard to find places to build latrines,” he says.

    And people do not dare to leave for fear of encountering the ex-Seleka.

    Instability has pushed 70 percent of the nation’s children out of education, and seen 3,500 recruited into rebel forces.

    “We still hear stories of people living only 500m away from this place and don’t dare to go back into their houses,” says Sinke.

     

    SCHOOLS

    Instability has pushed 70 percent of the nation’s children out of education, and seen 3,500 recruited into rebel forces, and an unknown number recruited into the anti-balaka.

    “There are no children coming to school because of their brutality. How can they come to school? Kids can’t, parents can’t. We just have to stay like this,” says teacher Laurent Namneonde, who is now taking shelter in the mission’s school, where he taught for 10 years.

    Lucien Rekoi is luckier than most in Bossangoa, who fled only with the shirts on their backs. With a heavily pregnant wife, he made it to the mission with pots, pans, clothes and his identity cards.

    His daughter was born six days ago. He now scours the site looking for international aid workers who will lend her a western name, in the vain hope that this and his deceased father’s career in the French military might afford them a passport out of CAR.

    “I just want to go there [to France]. There’s nothing for this place now,” he says.

    Courtesy: IRIN