Tag: alive

  • Burnt alive

    Burnt alive

    • We do not have a civilized society when a seminarian is roasted to death

    The news of the killing of clerics, especially of the Catholic Church, is getting so familiar and common that it risks being jaded. The danger is that it will lose its power to shock, and dull our ability to react as humans to what is one of the great tragedies of this era.

    Recently, it was not just a kidnap attempt, though it failed. It was a killing. It was not that it happened, which gores our sensibility. It was its barbarism.

    Na’aman Danlami, a 25-year-old seminarian, was trapped in a rectory by people identified as Fulani Islamists and burned alive.

    It occurred at the St. Raphael’s Parish Rectory in Fadan Kamantan in Southern Kaduna, at the Kafanchan Diocese.

    When the assailants arrived, according to reports, they wanted to abduct the parish priests but they failed. The priests, Father Emmanuel Okolo and Father Monday Noah, resisted the criminals and managed to escape. Meanwhile, the seminarian Danlami was on the premises.

    The hoodlums then set the rectory ablaze, according to reports, with the knowledge that someone was inside.

    It is indeed unfortunate that we should witness this sort of heartless episode anywhere. Worse that it happened in a place of worship, comparable to a murder in the cathedral.

    The Bishop of the Kafanchan Diocese, Julius Yakubu Kundi, said, “The assault lasted more than an hour, but there was no reaction or support from the military forces. A kilometer away there is a checkpoint, but there was a total absence of reaction.”

    Read Also: Gunmen kidnap Catholic priest, six others in Enugu

    If it lasted an hour, and the military personnel did nothing about it, does it not reflect complicity? If it was complicity, it means the incident was more than an act of crime of the invading hoodlums alone.

    It calls for investigation, and it has to be transparent. Officers at a checkpoint cannot give any excuse why they looked the other way when hoodlums came during their tour of duty and committed such a crime against humanity. It must therefore yield information on the attackers, and whether they are linked with the military.

    If it was due to helplessness, then we must know why. Were they under-equipped or undermanned? The military brass, including the Department of Security Services, need to unfurl the facts.

    “Father Okolo and I are out of the house. It is brother Na’aman whose whereabouts we don’t know. Whether he’s there in the flames or they have taken him, or he has escaped we don’t know,” Father Noah said, adding that the parish had fallen under attack at about 8 p.m. This was before it was ascertained that Danlami had fallen.

    “This seminarian is the second member we have lost in the diocese at the hands of terrorist attacks by Fulani bandits,” Bishop Kundi said. He was referring to Father John Mark Cheitnum, the director of communications of the diocese, who was reportedly brutally murdered last year.

    Also in Kaduna, Ezequiel Nuhu along with his father were ferreted away, raising the number of such abductions in 2023 to 14 of Catholic priests in the sub-region of West Africa. In 2022, four Catholic priests were murdered and 28 kidnapped.

    It is no great consolation for fathers Okolo and Monday that they escaped. It carries with them a guilt that they were the ones who did not feel the trap of fire before expiring. But it reflects the foreboding lives of the priesthood today. Bishop Kundi words, “Let’s prove to our enemies that their arsenals of evil have failed again,” is only potent when we prevent it from reoccurring.

  • Missing Army chief wanted dead or alive

    The Army yesterday said it is determined to find the missing Maj.-Gen. Idris Alkali (rtd) dead or alive.

    A statement by Deputy Director of Public Relations, 3rd Armoured Division, Maxwell Khobe cantonment, Rukuba, Plateau State, Col. Kayode Ogunsanya, said: “Security operation is ongoing in Dura community of Du District, Jos South Local Government Area. The aim of the operation is to find the missing officer either dead or alive; if alive, he will be reunited with his family and if dead, will be given a befitting military burial.

    “Headquarters 3rd division urges the people of Dura Du to give credible information about the whereabouts of the missing general as handsome reward awaits a credible informant.”

  • Dead man balking court rejects Romanian man’s claim that he is, in fact, alive

    BUCHAREST, Romania — Constantin Reliu learned in January that he was dead.

    After more than 20 years of working as a cook in Turkey, the 63-year-old returned home to Romania to discover that his wife had had him officially registered as dead.

    He has since been living a legalistic nightmare of trying to prove to authorities that he is, in fact, alive. He faced a major setback Thursday when a court in the northeastern city of Vaslui refused to overturn his death certificate because his request was filed “too late.”

    The decision, the court said, is final.

    “I am a living ghost,” Reliu told The Associated Press in a phone interview from his home in Barlad, northeastern Romania.

    During the interview, Reliu was deeply emotional, starting off by saying “I think I am going to cry” and going on to voice rage and a desire for revenge against his wife, who now lives in Italy.

    “I am not sure whether I am divorced or not,” he said. “I am not sure whether she is married to someone else or not. Nobody will tell me.”

    Reliu explained that he first went to work in Turkey in 1992 and returned in 1995 to the first big shock of his marriage — his wife’s infidelity. In 1999, he decided to return to Turkey for good.

    They measured the distance between his eyes to see if it corresponded to an old passport photograph; they asked him questions about his home town, such as where the town hall was; they checked his fingerprints.

    “They decided that it was me!” he said.

    But authorities in Barlad were less convinced. He spent weeks trying to persuade them to issue him papers so that he officially “existed,” he said. When that failed, he asked them to overturn the ruling on his death certificate, issued in 2016, which also ended in failure Thursday on procedural grounds.

    Reliu said he would like to file a fresh lawsuit but has no money and suffers from diabetes, which makes everything more difficult.

     Source: NBC News

  • Buratai to troops: get Shekau dead or alive

    Buratai to troops: get Shekau dead or alive

    Chief of Army Staff Lt.-Gen. Tukur Buratai has restated his order to troops to capture Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau doed or alive.

    Gen. Buratai spoke at Camp Zairo, the former command and control centre of the terrorists in the Sambisa forest during an operational visit to troops.

    In 2017, the army chief gave troops a 40-day ultimatum to capture Shekau. The army last week offered a N3 million reward for information on the terrorist.

    Troops destroyed the camp in January in an operation tagged “Deep Punch II’’ and are now dominating the general area of the forest.

    The military sacked Shekau from the camp in December, 2016 but the terrorists have been launching pockets of attacks.

    Other locations visited by Gen. Buratai are Bita and Tukumbere, all settlements within the forest but almost deserted due to the insurgency.

    “Let me say congratulations. But, we must move across to wherever this criminal, Shekau is and catch him red handed. I want you to get him.

    “Mr President, Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces says ‘congratulations’ to all of you for recovering the Sambisa Forest.

    “As far as we are concerned, we have come to the end of this operation (clearing the forest of remnants of terrorists).

    “What is remaining now is the Lake Chad waters only and we hope to do that (clear terrorists from it) also very soon.

    “You all know these criminals are still on the run; these guys are on the run, you must make sure that you get them wherever they are around this area.

    “You must not allow them to escape. Everyday, you must go on patrol, lay ambush for them and you go on raids.

    “This is the time we have to consolidate and ensure that this place – Sambisa forest – is safe and never for these criminals to come back to it,’’ Gen. Buratai told the troops.

    The Chief of Army Staff said that he was in Sambisa and Camp Zairo to confirm their capture, destruction and domination by the gallant troops.

    “We are going to transform this place, apart from making it a training area.

    “We are going to have a modern defence establishment in terms of the provision of basic requirements for your comfort and indeed for your operations.

    “We are already making sure that the first set of facilities are brought here,’’ the army chief said.

    Gen. Buratai promised the troops a special package to boost their morale.

    “We are going to have some special packages for all of you that penetrated this forest.

    “We will make sure that your morale is high by making the necessary provision for you to be comfortable,’’ he added.

    On rotation of troops, the army chief said that plans were on to rotate those who had stayed long in the theatre of operation.

    “This is in our plan. I know that some of you were inducted here right from the depot but we are doing something for you to be properly deployed and properly accommodated as well.’’

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) gathered that 3,000 troops would be inducted into the Operation Lafiya Dole this week, to replace those who had stayed long.

    Commander, Operation Lafiya Dole,, Maj.-Gen. Rogers Nicholas, said with the capture of camp Zairo “the soul and mind of Boko Haram have been broken in Sambisa forest”.

    “They don’t have a place to hide. We are still going round to make sure that some of them that are hiding in holes, we intend to fish them out,’’ Nicholas said.

    He said that on assumption of duty in 2017, the chief of army staff tasked him to capture Camp Zairo and clear Boko Haram from the Sambisa forest.

    “Troops have finally cleared the forest of remnants and we are presently occupying camp Zairo as well as all the little settlements and camps within the forest.’’

    Staff Sgt. Dauda Mohammed, one of the troops who participated in the operations that finally destroyed Camp Zairo and clear the forest of remnants of terrorists, attributed their success to the Almighty God.

  • Buhari at 75: Why  God kept him alive

    Buhari at 75: Why God kept him alive

    LET me begin by telling a story. On June 1, 2015, the day I resumed work as adviser on media to President Muhammadu Buhari, he had admonished me: “Adesina, always tell me the truth. That is what I want from you. In this type of position I have found myself, it is very easy not to be told the truth. People will just tell you what they think you want to hear. But from you, I want the truth. As a General, I may argue, but please argue with me. Tell me the truth always.”

    Based on that blank cheque I’d been given, I went to the residence one evening last year to see the President. That was the time there was deafening talk of hunger from different parts of the country. I wanted to be sure that the talk was not being filtered from the President. Of course, I know him as somebody who reads newspapers religiously, and wherever we are in the face of the world, he asks for media highlights from Nigeria. So, he would not be unaware of what Nigerians were going through. But I still wanted to raise it with him.

    “Mr President, there is hunger in the land, and people are complaining. I know government is doing its best, but I just want you to be aware,” I said.

    Mr President responded: “I know, I know. I am aware of what people are going through. I have people in my own constituency back home, and I know the messages they send to me. But it is a passing phase. Our country was vandalized, and we found ourselves in this problem. But now that we are here, we will do our best. We will bring change to this country, and we are already seeing it in agriculture. This period of hunger will pass.”

    It was prophetic. The season of hunger will pass, and is indeed passing. Anyone that is honest will admit that things are looking up in Nigeria. The ravening clouds shall no longer be victorious. They shall not long possess the sky.

    I went away with one conviction from that night’s meeting: the poor matter very much to this President. He is not the type that people would tell they had no bread to eat, and he would tell them to eat cake instead. This is a friend of the talakawas, a man who loves ordinary people, and who wants their station in life to be improved. And those people know it. That is why they gravitate towards him, and repose so much confidence in him. He is their hero. Our hero.

    President Buhari turns 75 years today. But some six months back, how many could confidently say this day would come for the ramrod straight man from Daura? How many believed the President would come out of the severe medical challenge that had confronted him? It all began as a routine vacation cum medical check up in January, and few days after, the rumour mill was on overdrive. The challenge lasted till August, before the President returned home finally, and since then, he has been looking better by the day. Each time you now see him, there is a fresher glow, and you cannot but give glory to God on his behalf.

    But why was President Buhari kept alive, so much so that he is turning 75 today? Why did he pass through the sea of infirmity, and he was not swept away? Why did he pass through inferno, and the fire did not kindle against him? Big question. I don’t have the answer, but I can hazard some guesses, based on divine principles.

    Rigobert Song. Remember him? Song was the Cameroonian defender who played many years for the Indomitable Lions. He appeared at eight African Nations Cup tournaments, five as captain, and stood between Nigeria and victory many times. He became an idol, venerated by his countrymen and women. He retired to become a coach.

    Then late last year, Song was not on song again on the soccer pitch. He had a near death experience on October 20. He went down with brain aneurysm, and was in coma for two days. Doctors battled to save his life, and he was eventually evacuated to France.

    While the travails lasted, the social media was abuzz with news of Song’s passage. As someone who had followed his career over the years, I felt very sad. But this is the season of fake news. Song was not dead, he miraculously rallied back. He narrated his experience, which I found instructive, considering what our President also passed through:

    “I did not know what was happening to me…I did not even know I was fighting between life and death…All these people, they put God in trouble. Because everyone in this situation, they were praying-this is what I keep in my mind-God would have been in trouble. Everyone was praying, asking, ‘God, please don’t do that, don’t take Rigobert.’ I say thank you everybody for making me come back.”

    What song was Song singing? One of thanksgiving. Cameroonians who loved him bombarded God with prayers, ‘Please, don’t take Rigobert now.’ And God heard. He showed mercy.

    That is the same reason President Buhari is alive today. Nigerians bombarded Heaven with prayers. With supplications, intercessions, pleas for mercy. Muslims prayed in mosques. Christians prayed in churches. President Alpha Conde of Guinea declared 24 hours prayer for his Nigerian counterpart. Prayers were going on everywhere, both at home, and in the Diaspora. I can imagine God telling Himself: ‘I must answer these prayers. These petitions are too many. I must answer.’

    And God had mercy, a fact attested to by President Buhari himself. He said his return was a miracle, which only God could have done.

    Why did God keep our President alive? The Holy Books answer:

    “Blessed is he that considers the poor;

    God will deliver him in the day of evil.

    God will preserve him, and keep him alive,

    And he will be blessed upon the earth;

    And deliver him not unto the will of his enemies,

    And raise him up from sickness.” (Psalm 41:1-3).

    And this one in Surah At-Tawbah 9:128:

    “There has certainly come to you a Messenger from among yourselves. Grievous to him is what you suffer, for he is concerned over you and to the believers he is kind and merciful.”

    President Buhari is concerned about Nigerians, particularly the helpless, the ordinary people, and he has dedicated his life to serving them. And when he was near unto death, those ordinary people besieged Heaven with prayers. That Christian hymn says “dearer to God are the prayers of the poor.” And God truly answered.

    There is power in goodwill, we have seen it work. It worked for Rigobert Song, and it has worked for our President. Have a heart for men, particularly for the poor, the lowly, and the downtrodden. And see God rise on your behalf.

    Consider Tabitha (Dorcas in Greek), who lived at Joppa. She was full of good works, always doing good, and helping the poor. One day, she took ill, and died. Peter, one of the apostles of Jesus, was invited. He came, prayed, and said: “Tabitha, arise!” And the woman came back to life. That is what is possible, when you have a heart for the poor.

    In his New Year message last year, President Buhari told the country: “Living in the State House has not alienated me from your daily sufferings. These challenges are only temporary, we are working to make things better.”

    When news came a couple of months ago that Nigeria had exited from recession, what did the President say? “Until coming out of recession translates into meaningful improvement in peoples’ lives, our work cannot be said to be done.”

    In another broadcast, the President had stated: “All my adult life, I have always earned a salary and I know what it is like when your salary is simply not enough.”

    That is the man we follow, and serve. Millions would today follow him into battle blindfolded. Millions upon millions would vote him again and again, if he throws his hat into the ring. Happy birthday, Mr President. You have shown us how to care for the lowly and the poor, how to bear them in our hearts at all times, and how such pleases God, and brings mercy our way. Thank you for coming this way, thank you for offering yourself for service. .Adesina is Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to President Muhammadu Buhari

  • Couple seeks N2m to keep only son alive

    Couple seeks N2m to keep only son alive

    After three years of marriage, a teacher, Mr Babatope Okunola and his wife, Folashade, gave birth to their first and only child, Ireoluwa, two and half years ago.

    The joy Ireoluwa’s birth brought to his parents is gradually turning to apprehension, following the discovery last February that their child has a hole in his heart.

    Folashade, a nanny, said the diagnosis was made at the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH).

    She noted that as a result of the ailment, he can no longer attend kindergarten classes.

    Folashade said: “Early last year, I noticed that my son pants often and became dull. I took him to the hospital and was told he would outgrow the stage. Late last year, his palms and tongue started turning blue and he also became prone to squatting. By January this year his breathing rate increased and he sometimes loses his breath.  Last February, I took him to Ikorodu General Hospital, which referred us to LASUTH where various tests were run on him and the hole in the heart was confirmed.

    “We are to do the operation at Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospital (OAUTH), Ile Ife, Osun State. We should have done it last month but we don’t have the money. Our hope is to enrol him for next month’s session, but, we are to make payment this month.

    “So far, we have spent over N300,000 on his health, including a CT Scan Test  at a trauma centre in Ondo State, which cost N150,000. An X-Ray of the brain cost us N45,000 at University College Hospital (UCH) Ibadan, Oyo State and an Echo Test at a private clinic cost us N25,000. We did another X-tray at N3000 and a TG Test at N8000, among others,” she said.

    Her husband, Okunola, said the amount his wife quoted did not include feeding, transportation and accommodation to other states.

    Okunola said the N2million required for the surgery is fixed, adding that they would spend about two weeks in Ife, because they had to be there at least a week before the operation date till a week after.

    More money, he noted, would thus be required to pay for their stay in the town as well as other miscellaneous expenses.

    Okunola added: “We would be asked to buy blood and some materials which we do not know yet. We would also need money for post-surgery care.”

    He urged kind-hearted Nigerians to help save their son’s life.

    He added: “For donations, an account has been opened for him with Heritage Bank. The account name is Ireoluwa Okunola and account number is 1400117478. His mother can be reached on 08038256009 and I can be reached on 07032202472.”

    Founder of His Marvellous Grace Support Foundation, Mrs Oluwadamisi Ladega, said she was aware of Ireoluwa’s condition and had spoken with the Ranodu of Imota, Oba Ajibade Bakare about it.

    She said she and the Oba had written letters seeking assistance for Ireoluwa’s operation from the Lagos State Governor’s Office and the state’s Ministry of Health.

    Mrs Ladega said her foundation focuses on helping the less privileged, especially children and women.

  • Keep hope alive, Ademowo charges

    The Diocesan Bishop of Lagos and Dean Emeritus, Church of Nigeria, Anglican Communion, Most Reverend (Dr) Ephraim Ademowo has called on Nigerians to keep hope alive despite the nagging economic downturns.

    Ademowo, in his Easter message, said the nation will bounce back from recession with collective will and zeal.

    He called on government to explore viable options that will take the nation out of the wood, calling for political will to fight corruption.

    Extolling the importance of Easter, the cleric said it is very clear that no accomplishment can ever rival the victory of Easter.

    He urged Christians to remain steadfast in their service to Christ with the assurance that death is not the end.

    “Christ resurrection is the model and source of our future resurrection because Christ has been raised from the dead, the first fruits of those who have fallen asleep. Christ resurrection is our resurrection,” Ademowo said.

    The Ademowo also advised government to douse tension on the re-occurring xenophobic attacks to Nigerians in on all fronts.

    According to him: “The failure of governance to create an inclusive economy in Nigeria should be blamed for the fate of economic migrants to South Africa and other countries from where they are being deported and victimised every day.

    “The primary assignment of the government is to provide welfare and security of its citizenry.”

    The cleric, who urged Nigerians and Christians as we celebrate Easter to accede to the principles of which Christ died, rose and ascended.

    “The victory of Easter should lead us to the face of perplexities of life with fortitude holding up our banner with the assurance that because Christ lives, we too shall live,” said Ademowo.

  • Shekau is alive, and its official

    Shekau is alive, and its official

    BOKO Haram’s Abubakar Shekau has been killed in battle and revived so many times on newspaper pages that it is finally a relief that the federal government has acknowledged he is alive and well. Now, it is hoped, no one will ever again speculate whether he is mortally wounded in battle or not, or dead or alive. Until he is dead and his followers can confirm it, or DNA evidence is secured, there will be no more speculations from official quarters. It is doubtful whether any Nigerian, except some hardened Boko Haram insurgents, will rejoice that Mallam Shekau is alive. So, it is not a case of gloating over his escapades or his ability to wrong-foot the military. They just want the truth.
    However, long-standing public scepticism about the military’s hasty and unverified announcements of his death in the past years had been anchored on two legs. One is that whether he was dead or alive, the public didn’t really see how that weakened the resolve of the terror group, for Boko Haram had effortlessly mastered the art of replacing its leaders, sometimes with more vicious successors. And two is the fact that Nigerians recognised that Boko Haram had become an ideology, far transcending both its caliphate ambitions and identity, and purpose as a fighting force. So news about its leader’s death or even stories about the group being degraded or decimated were bound to be met with cynicism.
    Under the presidencies of Goodluck Jonathan and Muhammadu Buhari, military officers had addressed the press and claimed to have killed Mallam Shekau either in elaborate ambush or in direct confrontation. When the press asked for proof, the officers bristled. They pointed to a mark on his forehead and said some general things about his height and built. When the press remained sceptical, the military wondered whether patriotism had not become a scarce commodity among newsmen. There was even talk of enacting laws that should circumscribe reporting of the anti-terror war, considering how sometimes bellicose and unfriendly the press had become in reporting the counterinsurgency operations in the Northeast. Wiser counsel eventually prevailed.
    In openly and unprecedentedly acknowledging Mallam Shekau’s survivalist prowess, the Defence minister, Brig.-Gen. (retd.) Mansur Dan-Ali declared last week: “These insurgents have a way of putting on masks. There could be so many but we are looking for the real one. They have been using masks to portray Shekau in one incident or the other to give an impression that he has been killed so that we will relax. But we will not relax, we are on him.” Knowing that he needed to provide justification for the terrorist leader’s elusiveness and give hope of his capture or death some day, the Defence minister added: “I believe it is just a matter of time. It took America about seven to 10 years to get Bin Laden. So, we will get Shekau as soon as possible. The sect’s spiritual headquarters has been ransacked and vandalised. He (Shekau) is on the run. He may be hiding in one of the enclaves of the Sambisa Forest which we are dominating. We have opened up the place. We are using the place as a training area. The Army engineers will open up roads and we shall be patrolling and be ransacking that forest for the whereabouts of Shekau.”
    One of the remarkable things that agitated the public about Mallam Shekau’s rumoured death years ago was that every time military officers reported his death — never his capture — foreign intelligence organisations duly warned that such stories were exaggerated. One mistake was bad enough; two or three more, each asserting vociferously the killing of the elusive Boko Haram pimpernel, were egregious in the extreme. But like the improving counterinsurgency operation itself, the military has become more refined in both its propaganda and compliance with the laws of war. They must be commended for these improvements as well as their confession about Mallam Shekau’s prodigious survival tactics. The military has wisely recognised that whether he survives or not, the process of degrading the terror sect must proceed apace. But whether they also know that Boko Haram remains an ideology, no matter how inchoate, that cannot be extirpated by force of arms is another thing.
    More importantly, it will be helpful if the military return to their war college to study the fundamentals of that war, how military and police tactics fuelled the rebellion, the rebellion’s economic and social underpinnings, tactical and strategic blunders that prolonged it, and the lessons learnt. If they have not already done so, it may be time for the military to put together a study, following the Boko Haram war, to advise the government on the unsustainable deployment of military men in more than two-thirds of the country to carry out police duties. The shambolic manner the military initially and disgracefully fought the Boko Haram war was doubtless a product of many enervating years of decay and stasis occasioned by political and extraneous interventions which destroyed the military’s image and sapped it of its vitality, purpose and vision.

  • Eric Arubayi comes alive in ‘The Sound’

    Eric Arubayi comes alive in ‘The Sound’

    Departed singer, Eric Arubayi, has been immortalised as the anticipated video of his track, The Sound, hit the airwaves.

    Produced by Ekelly and Directed by Frizzle n Bizzle Films, The Sound is a soulful rendition of God’s faithfulness and ever enduring love.

    The chords in the background very much like the singer are soft and classical. At a point on the track, Eric’s voice is the most forthcoming instrument keeping in line with the solemnity of the track.

    The video portrays a beanie clad, unshaven Eric in a black T-shirt looking laid back signifying his vulnerability and perhaps even lowness. Then, he gets his hair cut and dons a three piece suit looking the part of the classic dapper man.

    He continues to sing of God’s goodness even as he gets touched up and styled till his transformation takes place.

    The emotive message behind this simple video is so poignant in that we are to stay grateful to God at our lowest and highest points. For many who knew Eric, this season is albeit a tough one but amazingly enough, this video is reminiscent of his message to all who loved him and believers alike.

    We are to stay thankful and remember that God’s love is indeed everlasting no matter how grim it might look on the outside.

    The late Arubayi died on Saturday, February 11, at the Delta State University Teaching Hospital after a brief illness. He was laid to rest in Abraka, Delta State last Saturday.

  • Cow-ed but alive!

    Have you ever been “cow-ed” — a euphemism for gored (or nearly), and you still live to tell the story?

    That was exactly the experience of an unnamed couple in Aba, Abia State, driving a Toyota Camry car with registration number Abuja FF 923 ABJ.

    Did you ever experience a stray cow, from nowhere, ram into your car-in-motion — gbaaaa! — smashing your windscreen into smithereens, two of its hoofs dangling awkwardly at you, even while you, on the wheels, and your wife, on the front seat, sit paralysed by fear?

    And your two children, on the back seat, of your saloon car?  Screaming and screeching away in panic, even as passers-by rushed in to free you from the snare?

    And the cow?  Some impressive scene!  Its great horns curling skyward even as its great head drooped, towards one of the front tyres; the animal itself sprawled on your hot bonnet, but is too dazed to feel the heat!

    According to a November 23 report in The Nation, this actually happened to a family, in the vicinity of 7-Up bottling plant, off Ogbor Hill, in Aba.

    “We came to clean our vehicle at the car wash; nobody knew where the cow emerged from,” an eyewitness volunteered. “We only heard a bang when the cow crashed into the car, which was approaching the junction to head into the town.”

    Just like that?

    The good thing though was that man, wife and children were saved and unhurt: “The woman and her husband were trapped (but) we managed to rescue them unhurt.”

    The Yoruba have a saying: those clear of the battle zone need not fear stray arrows.

    Many a cynical mind could argue that those were pristine times, well before the advent of stray bullets in peace time, so, so common in contemporary Nigerian urban centres!

    Still, stray bullets, no matter how bad, are a long way from stray cattle, smashing into cars and endangering people’s lives.

    But the bad news, from the report, was that cattle-related accidents appear routine in that corridor, no thanks to the nearby waterside cattle market, just by the Aba-Ikot Ekpene expressway; and cattle being led to the slaughter in the nearby expressway.

    More remarkably: this appears no nomadic cattle rearer-crisis but some more domesticated madness, of a government utterly failing to regulate the activity of local cattle dealers, thus endangering the lives of innocent citizens.

    The local branch of the Civil Liberties Organisation (CLO) is alarmed enough to have issued a statement, decrying the state of affairs: “CLO is worried about the dangers posed by the activities of cattle dealers,” rued Prof. Charles Chinekezi, the local CLO chair. “It has been a common sight to see stray cows, even at night-time, wandering and constituting nuisance to the environment.”

    The Abia government must act fast to end this menace. Those outside the battle zone near fear no stray arrows!

    Those who live and do business around Ogbor Hill, Aba, have a right to go about their business in safety and security. That isn’t too much to ask their government, is it?

    The government shouldn’t wait until everyone is cow-ed — and gored!