Tag: amputee

  • Nigeria’s participation in Amputee Nation’s Cup uncertain

    Pius Asaba, a member of the Amputee Football Federation for Africa (AFFA), has expressed doubts about Nigeria’s participation in the 2017 Cup of African Nations for Amputee Football (CANAF).

    Asaba told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Monday in Lagos that the Nigeria Amputee Football Federation (NAFF) had yet to pay its affiliation fees from 2014 to 2017.

    The former NAFF Secretary-General noted that NAFF was affiliated to AFFA, the official governing body of amputee football in Africa, and organisers of the biennial football tournament.

    “NAFF has an issue with AFFA as a result of inability to maintain its annual financial obligation for about four years now. This is affecting its participation.

    “This year, CANAF is coming up, and there is no way NAFF can take part in the football tournament without clearing the backlog.

    “This lingering problem has affected the development of the sport; it has pushed some amputee footballers to try their hands in other para sports,” Asaba said.

    He added that the federation was expected to pay an additional amount for failure to pay the affiliation fee in time.

    According to him, letters of reminder about the debt have been sent to NAFF through the Nigeria Paralympics Committee (NPC) – the parent body of physically challenged sports.

    “I hope a prompt action will be taken to pay up the outstanding amount.

    “The NPC is responsible for all disable sports. It is aware of NAFF’s debt to AFFA and promised to pay but, according to it, insufficient fund is causing the delay,’’ he told NAN.

    The official said that the organisers of the tournament had yet to decide on the dates for the competition proposed to be hosted by Ghana.

    NAN reports Nigeria’s team occupied the 4th position in CANAF 2013, having lost 3-1 to Ghana in a penalty shoot-out in a quarter final match in Nairobi.

  • Amputee footballers boycott training for dearth of competition

    Worried by dearth of competitions, amputee footballers no longer attend their training, leading their coach Victor Nwaewe, clamour for sponsorships from the corporate world and philanthropists.

    The National Coach of Nigeria Amputee Football Federation (NAFF) on Monday confirmed that the response of players to training activities has dropped since the beginning of the year.

    Nwaewe told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that the footballers observed their training on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays in the field behind Stadium Hotel, Surulere, Lagos.

    “Before now, our training used to be full and lively because of the huge turnout of players but things are no longer the same because the response has reduced.

    “But those who are passionate about the career makes extra effort to come for training and I try as much as I can to encourage them,’’ he said.

    He said that training was important as it was a way to keep the players in shape and prepare them ahead of national and international competitions which were not forthcoming.

    The coach while expressing displeasure in the state of affairs said that players were no longer inspired to commit their time to training and would have no ground to exhibit their skills.

    “The truth is that the players are not happy and can no longer continue to train aimlessly without any competition to showcase their skills and develop their talents.

    “Some have gone as far as doing other sports allows for their form of disability, one of our national player have changed to table tennis and his doing well,’’ he said.

    Nwaewe said the sport was meant to be a tool for integration for soccer, especially among persons living with physical challenges in their arms or legs with the help of crutches.

    He urged the NAFF board member to address the issue of sponsorship, which, according to him, has left the sport stagnant for a period of time.

    NAN reports that disabled athletes played amputee football with seven players on each team (six outfield players and one goalkeeper).

    Outfield players have lower extremity amputations, and goalkeepers have an upper extremity amputation, outfield players use loft strand (forearm) crutches and play without their prosthesis.

     

  • ‘I want justice!’ says amputee, whose leg was damaged by a driver

    ‘I want justice!’ says amputee, whose leg was damaged by a driver

    Ezekiel Yakubu, 30, whose leg was amputated after he was hit by a driver, cries out, saying he has been abandoned to suffering and penury. He is also not happy with the way the police and lawyer have gone about the case. Taiwo Abiodun reports

    Whilst the whole world was celebrating Christmas and preparing to breeze into the new year with joy and expectation, Ezekiel Yakubu, a panel beater is left to wallow in self-pity and cry his eyes out, having lost one of his legs to a reckless driver and abandoned to his fate.

    When The Nation met him in his one-room apartment at No 18, Otutu street in Owo, Ondo State, he was a sorry sight, as he and his family struggled to contain their emotions. Sighting this reporter, he managed to prop himself up in greeting, with the help of some members of his family and his two crutches. “See how they have rendered me useless for life,” he lamented, chocking back tears.

    “The worst part” he explained “is that they have abandoned me. Last year I was still with my two legs, and now I only have a leg and crutches. It is now that I really appreciate the value of having two legs.”

    Continuing, he said “I am a panel beater, but anytime my customers bring their vehicles for body works and see my amputated leg and broken arm still cast in iron, they turn back, knowing that I cannot do the job again. Even my doctors have warned me not to do any hard work. Naturally that translates to hunger, for me and my family. I used to be the breadwinner, but my hope has been dashed, while the lady who inflicted this on me is out there, walking freely. But I believe God knows best and will surely judge.”

    Simultaneously, he revealed the stump of his amputated leg to show how far it has healed, while his landlady, who had also come to sympathise with him, consoled him. Yakubu’s right leg has been amputated, while a metal is affixed to his arm, awaiting another surgery.

    The Kogi -born panel beater described his condition as pathetic and claimed that he has been cheated because he has nobody to defend or fight for him. He said the police and the lawyer who drafted the agreement, while he was in coma showed no milk of kindness, as they treated the case without levity, simply because there was nobody in high authority to fight for him.

     

    Black Saturday

    His travail began on a certain black Saturday around 8 o’clock in the evening, as he sat in front of his house on number 18, Otutu Street, Owo ( Ondo State), when a Jeep veered off the road and rammed into him, leaving his lower right leg a mangled flesh, tissue and splintered bones. Luckily, his pregnant wife had just left to fetch him his phone. He explained that that was how she escaped the horror of the night. His sister, who had also been with him that evening, had also left a few minutes earlier.

    He recalled that the incident occurred on March 8, 2014. A heavy flash of light hit his eyes, and before he knew what hit him, a massive metal rammed into him, and he found himself under the Jeep.

    “The Jeep mutilated my Okada where I parked it, and dragged me to another shop, where it also destroyed their well and generator. Later my leg, held by two shreds of veins was pulled out of the rim of the tyre. It had been crushed beyond recognition. ”

    And then he passed out

    He woke up to find himself on a bed at the Federal Medical Centre (FMC), Owo, Ondo State. “I did not know I had spent eight days in the hospital .It was when I heard my phone  alarm which usually wake me up for work go off that I came fully awake. In my subconscious, I thought it was time to go to work and made to get up, as usual. I looked up and saw a hanging leg; confused, I wiped my face to be sure I wasn’t dreaming. I tried to raise my leg up but could not .I also saw oxygen cylinder and pipes by my side; and then I felt a sharp pain on my thigh. I also saw that they had removed some flesh from my thigh (graft) and added it to the stump of my leg. By this time, I’d become fully conscious and begun to feel the pain. Real pain. It was then that the doctor on duty approached me and asked what colour of clothe he was wearing, apparently to know if I was indeed fully conscious.

    He narrated how I went through surgery and how he wasn’t even sure I would survive. I asked my sister who was by my side whether I was on a bike when I had the accident. I just started asking questions upon questions. Later, the whole episode was narrated and I was able to recollect all what happened and how they had to amputate my leg and put an iron in my upper arm.”

     

    Jeep not impounded

    What pained Yakubu most is that the girl, Bukola who almost snuffed life out of him did not come to visit him throughout his three months stay in the hospital. He said “it is only her mother who kept coming. When I asked why her daughter wasn’t visiting, she defended her saying she was afraid of being lynched.”

    Yakubu disclosed that the owner of the car spent about 200,000 naira, while Bukola’s father spent about 20,000 naira. Personally, Yakubu said he spent up to 800,000 naira, as he was receiving anti-tetanus injections three times a day for three months, with each injection costing about 2,000 naira. “At a point, when it became scarce,” he said “I spent 2, 500 naira purchasing each injection outside the hospital. I also spent money on feeding. My relatives were borrowing money and soon became beggars.”

    Scandalised!

    Even Yakubu’s neighbours feel scandalised that he has been so cheated. The food vendor whose generator was damaged by the vehicle lamented the neglect and said she insisted and her damaged generator, which was taken to the police station, was later replaced with a new one. She revealed that they were also made to repair the wall of the well that was damaged.

    Another resident who was in tears said “What pained us is the way and manner Ezekiel was treated. They thought they could cheat the young man because he has nobody, but I am happy that a newspaper will now expose them. Imagine, they went to a lawyer who drafted a ridiculous agreement just to let the driver get off for free after destroying him. They gave him 100, 000 naira and abandoned him, forgetting that God is there watching.”

    Chinedu Ojaja who lives in the neighbourhood said the agreement drafted was a cheat on Yakubu. “Why should they refuse to repair his Okada that was destroyed? Up till this moment, the okada, which is supposed to earn him income is lying destroyed at the police station, while the Jeep that inflicted the damages was not even taken to the station. Even the car’s registration number was not quoted in the agreement.

    Yakubu’s landlady also described the police’s attitude and the drafted agreement as callous. “Ezekiel’s wife is still a small girl with a baby. Is this how she’s going to be living for the rest of her life? Ezekiel is the one sponsoring his younger sister, Helen at Rufus Giwa Polytechnic. What becomes of the poor girl now? Do you know that I have not even set my eyes on the accused, who caused all this problems till date? I am begging the Inspector General of the Police to look into this case urgently.

    Yakubu’s wife and some of the residents recall how the owner of the car came that night and simply wanted his car removed, without any recourse to the poor man’s condition. She said the car was never even taken to the station, while her husband’s damaged okada was still lying at the Station.

    “Even the policemen who came to retrieve the car were dead drunk, as they threatened to shoot anybody who as much as got in their way.

    Ridiculous Agreement

    Another thing that baffled them was the manner in which an agreement was reached while the victim was still in coma.

    The accident occurred on the 8th of March and five days later (on the 13th of March), with Yakubu still lying in coma, an agreement was drafted by a lawyer and signed by the girl’s father, Chief Samuel Adegbegi. He promised to foot the hospital bill and rehabilitate him, but all these were not fulfilled.

    Speaking, Yakubu said “my sister was made to sign on my behalf that the father of Bukola would take care of the expenses in the hospital, replace my leg with artificial limb and rehabilitate me. They also wrote that my Okada should not be repaired. This was a bike that was parked in the compound and crushed by a veering jeep. I wonder how a lawyer could have drafted such agreement and a police adopt it just because I was in coma.

    I also learnt that the lady was detained for only two days and then released. Today, they are driving the vehicle about, and the girl is gallivanting around, saying I had been settled with 100,000 naira. Meanwhile, I have spent over 850, 000 naira, while they have only paid 220,000 naira. When I was discharged, the lady’s family brought 100,000 naira as compensation and I have not seen her since then,” he said . Investigation reveals that the said driver has no driving license while the car belongs to her boyfriend.

    Yakubu’s wife who is nursing a baby described the day as a bad day. She revealed that when it was time for her to be delivered, the doctor had opt for a Caesarian Section, owing to her state of mind, while her family members came all the way from Kogi with borrowed money to pay her bills and be with her.

    A remorseless Bukola

    When the lady, Bukola was contacted, she confirmed the incident. Asked about the whereabouts of the car, she said “I am not the owner; the owner has taken it away.” She also said it is true that jeep was never taken to the police station. Pressed further, she refused to disclose the owner of the car “I have settled the boy. What else does he want?”

    She claimed to be a Political Science student of one of Nigerian Universities. On another occasion, she said she has left for a polytechnic; and then again she said she is a student at a College of Education, but could not produce an identity card when requested. .

    Asked why she has neglected the victim, she retorted “He is lying .All these problems was caused by my father who promised and signed an agreement to give him money and rehabilitate him. My mother also used to go to him with money. My father paid the fees for the amputation of the leg, and after that he (her father) did not say anything again.”

    Bukola also said it is true that the victim was given 100,000 naira: “My mother paid 50,000 naira and the owner of the car also paid 50,000 naira .It was his mother who asked the doctor to amputate the leg. I think the guy is poor and needs money; that’s why he is talking like this. We gave him 100,000 naira. Isn’t that money? Does he want us to build a house for him?”

    On why they have not fulfilled their promise on the artificial leg, Bukola said “the artificial leg is 200,000 naira, but the owner of the car said he cannot purchase it, because it is too expensive. That is why we gave him 100,000 naira, so his wife could use it for business .I think he should blame his mother who said they should cut off his leg.”

    She also boasted that she is ready for the worst. “If you want to take me to court, go ahead. If it is prison, I am ready to spend 20 years in prison. We did not render him useless! I spent a week at the police station.”

    When contacted, the police confirmed the story.

  • ‘How a pastor made me an amputee’

    ‘How a pastor made me an amputee’

    An Abeokuta based pastor allegedly shot Azeez  Adeboye, a student and phone repairer.  The accused is allegedly boasting that nothing will happen to him because he is highly connected. Taiwo Abiodun reports

    The  case between  one Azeez Adeboye , 28, a National Diploma Two Accountancy student of the Moshood Abiola Polytechnic, Abeokuta  and one Pastor Olalekan Taiwo of The Redeemed Christian Church of  God (RCCG), Abeokuta resumed again  last Thursday, June 5, 2014 in a suit filed before an Abeokuta Magistrate Court 2 sitting in Isabo  area  of the city.

    The plaintiff, whose right leg had been amputated  as a result of gunshot fired by the accused, had  previously narrated  on March, 6, 2014 how he was shot by the accused, Pastor Olalekan Taiwo  on September 11, 2011, while on his way home after the day’s work.

    In the court last Thursday, the argument as to whether the pastor should be charged for attempted murder as the Investigation Police Officer accused Olalekan of or that the charge sheet should read infliction of injury came up while the Chief Magistrate, M.A. Akinyemi, asked the lawyer to the plaintiff/witness to make up his mind on what to charge the accused for.

    The magistrate then  gave 15 minutes to the lawyer to deliberate on the issue with his client. After the deliberation, the lawyer came back to inform the magistrate that the case should be treated as grievous injury inflicted on his client. He also wanted the case to continue and not settled out of court.

    The prosecutor, Mr Sunday Egbejale, called witnesses – the medical doctor, Oloko Mazeed who operated on the plaintiff at a state hospital. The doctor was put in the witness box to give an account of what he knew about the plaintiff/witness. According to the doctor the plaintiff/witness, Adeboye, was brought to him with his right leg battered with gun  shots, full of gangrene while he had lost pints of blood as he later gave him pints of blood in order to  save his life and to  stabilise him before  the surgery was performed on his leg.

    The doctor further narrated how the plaintiff’s leg was eventually amputated due to its worsened condition. The medical doctor tendered all the hospital case files and reports on the treatment. The counsel to the accused also cross-examined the medical doctor.

    The next witness that mounted the witness box was Morufudeen  Sharafat , the traditional native doctor who claimed to have removed six pellets from the plaintiff ‘s leg. He admitted that the plaintiff was his patient and that he removed six pellets from his leg but when he discovered that the bleeding was too much and he could not handle it, he quickly referred him to the hospital.

    The pellets were tendered in the court as exhibits.

    The magistrate, however, adjourned the case and further hearing to October 22, 2014.

    Speaking later to The Nation on Sunday, the plaintiff narrated how he suddenly became a one-legged man, limping and using crutches as a result of the brutality which he allegedly suffered in the hands of  the said man of God who took him to be an armed robber despite the fact that he showed him his school’ s identity card.

    He said on September, 11, 2011 around 8:45 in the evening, he was in the company of his two brothers, Ola Adebisi and Tunde Solidiq Yusuf. They were coming from his shop where he used to repair phones, and they were going home. They were all on a motorbike. They were stopped at Onward Street, Elega Area, around Bodelude. He said they met two men who sat under a tree. The men asked them to disclose where they were headed for, and they told him they were going to their house at Fadama.

    Adeboye also claimed that he and his brothers also  showed to the two men the two packs of Indomie, sachets of water and eggs they had earlier bought .

    The two men, according to Adeboye, “insisted that we were already late in the night.”

    He related further: “It was at this juncture that the accused, Olalekan, whom I discovered was a Pastor in the Redeemed Christian Church of God  started calling us thieves, insisting that we were on a robbery mission. I thought he was joking at first. Later he became serious and I brought out my student’s identity card  containing my matriculation number 08010327 , but he was still not convinced As this was going on, the pastor told his partner not to let us go and he went  inside to bring his gun. I pleaded and begged him that we were not thieves and I even told him to contact our in-law, Alhaji Adeniji, who lives in the vicinity,  and that my brother could call  him to identify us  or they should chain us till the following morning and take us to the police station.

    “But while saying this and pleading, the accused had come back with a double barrel gun and pointed it at me. Again, I pleaded, begging him in the name of God and all prayers that came out from my mouth, pleading to him not to shoot me. He refused to listen to me and said he had shot many like this as I would not be the first victim. He cocked his gun and shot my leg at a close range. I fell down writhing in pains. As this was going on, two Okada riders ran into us and held the man’s shirt that he would not escape.  The pastor ran home and brought some liquid for me to drink. Later, I was taken to Shalom Hospital at 71, Ilugun Road, Mokola, Abeokuta, where the doctor said he  he could not treat me  since I was shot at a close range. Then I was taken to a traditional herbalist who specialises in removing pellets. And he was able to remove only six pellets from my leg.”

    He was later taken to several hospitals where he was rejected. He was eventually taken to the state hospital at Sokenu, Ijaiye where he was put through days of intensive care and blood transfusion. When he was taken to the theatre for operation, it failed because the impact of the gunshot had damaged his leg. The doctor then advised that my leg should be amputated.”

    He said he spent about one year in the hospital and his family footed the bill along with a landlord on the street. The accused, he said, only visited him twice and did not turn up again. The accused, he also said, had not paid a cent of his hospital bill, and has been boasting about that he would be set free”

    He lamented: “Whenever I wake up and see my amputated leg, I feel like committing suicide. In fact, every day I wake up and see my amputated leg, I weep.

    “My colleagues are not happy seeing me like this. My girlfriend has run away, our relationship ended when the leg was amputated. I had stopped dreaming of my HND, I have only ND in Accounting .I bought one crutch for 18, 0000.”

    He said he attempted to commit suicide twice when he was feeling pains in the hospital. In his words: “I woke up and took a knife to kill myself but my mother suddenly woke up and saw the knife in my hand and took it.”

    He said the gun used by the accused, which had been tendered in court, has no license.

    The next hearing has been fixed for October 22, 2014.