Tag: angel

  • Angel, Ilebaye prank Adekunle with love letter from CeeC

    Angel, Ilebaye prank Adekunle with love letter from CeeC

    Big Brother Naija All-Stars housemates, Angel Smith and Ilebaye have written a love letter to prank their colleague, Adekunle with the idea that CeeC wrote it.

    The duo plotted to prank Adekunle who is in a relationship with Venita with the aim of upsetting the latter.

    Angel: “I said let me prank them, so I now wrote a love letter to Adekunle so that they would think it is CeeC. I spread CeeC’s perfume on the letter.

    Read Also: Ike apologises again for ruining Ilebaye’s stuff

    Ilebaye: “Adekunle would not really take it big. He would just let it slide.”

    Angel: “I need Venita to be the first person to see the letter.”

    Ilebaye: “That’s what I am saying. Adekunle is just going to take it slightly. He might just read it and let it go. But if Venita is the one to see it first, she would panic.”

    Angel inserted the letter in Adekunle’s jacket, but unfortunately for them, he saw it before Venita did.

  • Angel not in my league, says Kim Oprah

    Angel not in my league, says Kim Oprah

    Big Brother Naija house guest, Kim Oprah has stated that her fellow housemate, Angel isn’t in her league or class.

    She said Angel won’t be able to sit at the same table with her outside the house because she’s not is not on her wave length.

    Kim Oprah was seen complaining to Venita about Angel’s disparaging comments about her as they were working on a task.

    She then related how Angel had been thrown from her table on one occasion.

    She claimed that Angel had the courage to speak to her in this way when she was unable to even share a table with her while they were out of the house.

    Read Also: President and rule of law

    Kim claims that WizKid’s bouncer removed Angel from her table when she attempted to “famz” Wande Coal, who was occupying the adjacent seat.

    She continued by saying that Angel was almost hauled away by the bodyguard before she ordered him to drop her.

    She said: “Angel has the guts to talk to me like that during the task. Someone that can’t sit at the same table with me outside this house. She came to my table to famz Wande Coal and WizKid’s bouncer carried her out.

    “I had to tell him to drop her and that’s how she was left alone”.

  • BBNaija’s Angel lists top five housemates with strong fans

    BBNaija’s Angel lists top five housemates with strong fans

    Big Brother All-Stars Naija housemate, Angel Smith has guessed five housemates who would make it to the top five.

    Angel’s guesses were built on the presumed strong fan bases.

    She made this known during a conversation with Soma on Saturday, September 2.

    According to her, one of the house guests, Prince, revealed the names of the housemates.

    Read Also: Soma and I cannot work outside the House, says Angel

    Angel listed Adekunle, Alex, Soma, Angel, and Ceec as housemates with strong fans and high chances of becoming the season’s winner.

    Angel said: “Prince mentioned five people’s names. He mentioned Me, You, Alex, Adekunle, Soma, and Ceec.” 

  • Soma and I cannot work outside the House, says Angel

    Soma and I cannot work outside the House, says Angel

    Big Brother Naija All Stars housemate Angel Smith has thrown her in-house lover, Soma under the bus as she denies having anything serious with him.

    She claimed they ain’t compatible and cannot work outside the House.

    Soma had confirmed their relationship status as a ‘yes’ while responding to questions from the host, Ebuka Obi-Uchendu during the live show on Sunday.

    Read Also: Biggie strikes Ike, Soma

    In reverse, Angel while speaking with Ilebaye, said she has a boyfriend outside the House.

    According to her, they are mistaking sexual tension for love.

    “I don’t think Soma and I are compatible, I think it’s the sexual tension that we’re mistaking for love.

    “I have a whole BF outside and we don’t fight like this,” she said.

  • My mother once dated Dbanj, says BBNaija’s Angel

    My mother once dated Dbanj, says BBNaija’s Angel

    Big Brother Naija All Stars housemate, Angel Smith, has revealed that her mother, Titilala once dated musician Oladapo Daniel aka D’banj.

    Angel Smith shared this information with new house guest, Omashola Sholzy.

    Angel also revealed that her mother was well-known in the entertainment business in the past and, as a result, knew most of the people in that industry.

    Read Also: I almost committed suicide in March, says BBNaija’s Angel

    In the same conversation with Omashola, she disclosed that flashy celebrity Denrele Edun was one of her mom’s friends while she was growing up.

    She added: “My mum dated someone that was famous in the industry.”

    When Omashola pressed for the person’s name, Angel Smith whispered that her mother once dated D’banj.

  • BBNaija winner, Miracle receives SUV, prize money

    Organisers of this year’s Big Brother Naija reality show, have fulfilled their promises, as the winner, Miracle Igbokwe was on Monday handed a brand new KIA Seranto SUV, and cheque of N25 million.

    The event which took place at the Multichoice Nigeria Head Office, Victoria Island, Lagos, had other housemates in attendance.

    They include Angel, Khloe, Dee-One, Anto, Tobi, Cee-C, K.Brule, Nina, Alex, Leo, Khloe, Lolu, and Ahneeka among others.

    Regional Director, M-Net/Africa Magic, Wangi Mba-Uzoukwu, who thanked the housemates for the drama they brought on the show, disclosed that all former housemates will receive a DSTV explora with one year free subscription.

    Meanwhile, few weeks after emerging winner of the show, Miracle has be endorsed by his home state as education ambassador.

    Excited, the 24-year-old pilot and model announced the feat on Instagram, saying; “Chai!!! HIS Excellency!… My Governor!!…. Rochas Okorocha has busted my Farome!!… So much!!….. “Education Ambassador “Bless sir, I am deeply truly humbled.

  • Our plan, by BBNaija evictees  Angel and Ahneeka

    Our plan, by BBNaija evictees Angel and Ahneeka

    Ïf the guitar was his unique selling point, then one could say that having been stripped of the musical instrument in the previous weeks contributed to his fall. Angel, who appeared to have been glued to his guitar was deprived of it as it was perceived as a distraction to his relationship with other housemates.

    And as Ahneeka, his strategic partner leaves the house with him, many believe his ‘unpopularity’  has affected her, as she is seen as the stronger member of the pair in the eye of fans.

    Joining Ebuka on stage, Ahneeka said: “I don’t know how I’m feeling… I don’t want to be here so soon, but hey”

    Asked why she didn’t give Rico a chance, she said she has been friends with Angel, and that “Rico and I we were forced to be strategic partners.”

    For Angel, going forward, he “would want to be more than friends with Ahneeka,”

    Ahneeka returns to TV presenting and some modelling while Angel looks forward to shooting a film in May, and also release a song among other plans.

    Another notable revelation from this week’s eviction which saw Cee-C and Lolu (CeeLo) and Leo and Ifu (LiFu) continuing in the game was the Pepsi Roc Da Mat Challenge won by latter N2.5million each, an all expense paid trip to London for Pepsi One Fest event and one-year supply of Pepsi and Aquafina water.

    Dr Sid returned to the stage, singing ‘Open and Close’.

    The show continuew with a nomination session on Monday, and the next and last sets of pairing before the remaining housemates will play as individuals.

     

     

  • Avenging angel

    Avenging angel

    What intrigues a thinking man over the furore over Ibrahim Magu is that the Senate and the DSS want him to be an angel. The paradox is that, by finding nothing but fuss, they seem to have made him one.

    The President has stumbled twice over a stone by nominating him twice before the Senate and meeting rejection twice. But the upper chamber thinks it has won twice. Saraki, the Eleyinmi, must have indulged a gloating laugh. The DSS boss must have done same. Both must have found some time to say congratulations.

    Magu, the imperious soldier of morality, may have sulked in silence. But what would Muhammadu Buhari of the imperfect health be doing. What did he say when the word reached him that his pick was scuttled again.  Did he call the DSS boss? Did he ask his men to call Saraki, the chief comedian of law makers?

    The EFCC storm is about purity. We want to cleanse the system, of moral worms and thieving scoundrels. We need one with a pesticide, or shall we say, moralsticide. One who can clean the sink. So, it follows that everyone who wants to decide who gets the job must have moral high ground, must not be a sleaze merchant. So, by rejecting Magu, the DSS has presented itself as the angel. Saraki and his men have shown themselves angels. Buhari who nominated him has done so because he is angelic, and Magu must also be an angel.

    We all know that it cannot be so, and therefore, we are all kidding. The constitution was not made by angels or for angels. Nigerian citizens are no angels. When the United States constitution was being crafted, the authors knew this. Hence the main writer, James Madison, wrote: “If men were angels, no government will be necessary.”

    So, when they formed what is still the best constitution on earth, the U.S. founding fathers like Washington, Hamilton and Jefferson knew they were glorifying an imperfect document, but one with ambition, a revolutionary fervour and credo for human progress and equality. They confessed that it was a project that would be improved along the way. That explains the several amendments on the documents over the centuries.

    Ordinarily, one would expect that a man who wants to guard our coffers against thieves would be an imperfect person with a reasonable level of probity. But the Senate wanted a perfect man, so did the DSS. The irony is that they had a “perfect” man, as we could find. They found no fault with him. They wanted to find an appearance of a fault.

    They said he had paid for his residence improperly. It was not only an official residence, but he never touched the finances in the transaction nor contacted the persons involved in the deal. Like most persons in such positions, they move into their residences as he did. There were other allegations, which included boarding a plane with potential target of his investigation.

    The attorney-general cleared him of the charges, after issuing him a query. So, from all these, it means the only man who said the truth was Magu. That makes the Senate and the DSS purveyors of untruth. The seeming angel here is Magu.

    So, what does that make of the President? Buhari comes off as a weak angel. He should be the angel of angels. But it seems the arch angel is incapable of defending a lesser angel.

    So, what is the matter with DSS? I say, nothing. The DSS is a security agency rooted in the security history of this country. When we became a democratic people, did we retailor the DSS into a democratic machine? If we did, we have failed. The men who took over the reins of office from the soldiers still had military mindsets. They included men like Obasanjo and Danjuma. Of late, we learned from IBB that generals formed a military wing of our democracy, and they have exercised great influence on the polity since 1999. Let’s not forget that the OBJ years boiled over with impunity, and how could the security agents not flow with the strong-arm sentiment of the times? It means that our soldiers have freed themselves from the stronghold of the trigger. They have not plucked themselves from the jackboot style of the military era when security reports were not about facts but about intent. So, reports were tendentious, inspired by bias rather than investigations.

    So, we ask a simple question? Did the DSS not know these charges when Magu was first appointed in acting capacity? Secondly, did the President not contact them before nominating and re-nominating the man to the shark waters of the Senate?

    If the President didn’t, then we run a naïve executive branch. If the President did, then we have a cravenly presidency. Both are fatal to the concept of the presidential system. Why then do we have Senate whose wheel horses are under investigation presiding over the moral competence of their investigators? If correction lies in the hand that committed wrong, to whom shall we complain? But what Saraki and company are doing is to try to become angelic by intimidating the angelic. Or what Shakespeare noted in his sonnet, “double penance, to correct correction.”

    Neither am I saying that Magu is without his fault. The major fault, ironically, does not come off as devilish to them. That is, Magu’s dalliance with impunity and contempt for the rule of law. The Senate and the DSS see nothing there.

    Now, let’s see what the President does about his power. The greater target of all this is what may pass as Buhari’s enduring legacy: the war against corruption. The presidency and DSS tango reminds one of the Reagan years when Secretary of State Al Haig defied his boss, and said: “I’m in charge here.” Reagan would not let another snatch his glory.

    Magu is still EFCC boss, and he would be so as long as the President wants. The law is clear on that. I support him there as the avenging angel. Let him continue to haunt Saraki and his men, who think they can edge him out and force the President to pick someone else. My fear Buhari lacks enough dan iska in his soul to bait the Senate. If he does, there will be no peace in the Saraki enclave and the corruption czar can act with substantive result.

  • Adventure of a fat angel

    Angel Annie was still with Ginshi in the IDP camp in Borno , when she got a signal that something was wrong with Bisi. Bisi had gone home in preparation for her father’s wedding but had to be rushed to the hospital a few days later.

    Annie rushed to Bisi’s bedside immediately, while Angel Krioni came to stand in for her at the IDP camp. She did not like what she saw at all. Bisi was pale and looked very weak, the doctor said she was having a system breakdown and some of her organs were not working well.  Annie was scared for Bisi! If she died, what happens to all her dreams?  What of all her goals? Annie wondered to herself.

    There were many tubes running through Bisi’s mouth and nose. Aunt Naledi sat beside her bed praying for Bisi to get well. She had also lost a cousin to sickle cell before and she did not want to experience that type of trauma again.  Bisi hardly opened her eyes for the first two days, she was fed through a tube and did not even really know where she was. After about 76, hours she opened her eyes to see Aunt Naledi and her grandmother with tears in their eyes. They had been crying because even the doctors were getting scared. She tried to smile but they told her to just relax. Angel Annie knew that Bisi was not going to die, because she had not even fulfilled her destiny of finding a cure for sickle cell Anaemia.

    She was hospitalized for a week and her father’s wedding had to be postphoned till November. Aunt Naledi   wanted Bisi to accompany her for her pre-wedding shopping and she didn’t mind waiting until she was better. Bisi was so thankful to God for her new soon to be stepmom. They had bounded like sisters and Angel Annie had now begun to understand the great role Aunt Naledi was going to play in Bisi’s life and her brothers too. The angel was beginning to understand what the sky king had told her about the new person that would come into the commissioner’s family and help them all in their next phase of life after the death of Bisi’s mother.

     

    What roles do you think Aunt Naledi will play in the life of Bisi and her brothers?

    Send your answers to saturdaychildren@yahoo.com or akinwolererita@yahoo.com

    To be continued

  • Angel Ameyo

    This week marks the first anniversary of a touching death.  Dr. Ameyo Stella Adadevoh lost her life on August 19, 2014, in heroic circumstances. This piece, first published on September 15, 2014, is today reproduced in remembrance of an angel named Ameyo.   

    What does it mean to be characterised as angelic? Illumination came at the solemn Night of Tributes and Service of Songs organised to say a formal and final farewell to the departed Dr. Ameyo Stella Adadevoh who patriotically and heroically gave her life to save the country from a possible viral catastrophe.

    It was perhaps fitting that a team of ladies screened people with gadgets at the entrance and supplied sanitisers for use as the venue filled up gradually, which were obvious precautionary measures in the face of the ongoing battle with a killer virus.  By 6pmon September 11, Harbour Point, Victoria Island, Lagos, was ready for a review of the life and times of the doctor who succumbed to the deadly Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) which she had contracted in the course of treating the country’s first case of the bug, Patrick Sawyer, the Liberian-American who died of EVD on July 25. Tragically, Adadevoh herself passed away on August 19, less than one month after her life-threatening encounter with Sawyer.

    Adadevoh gazed at the population in the expansive space. She was frozen on a canvass framed with a garland of white, cream and green flowers; she wore a doctor’s white overcoat and a stethoscope was around her neck. Her striking portrait formed the background on the stage which had a table and chairs for three white-robed priests and a green-robed one. An orchestra of violinists and hornsmen performed impressively on the side and a choir in a colour-mix of blue, red and white completed the musical ensemble.

    Two large screens presented pictorial highlights of Adadevoh’s earthly journey, which were greeted by a gripping contemplative silence from the crowd. Her childhood years, growing up, her graduation from medical school in red gown and cap with scroll in hand, her wedding, motherhood, family life and social life, rolled out in photos before attentive and sorrowful eyes.

    ”There is no doubt that her death is hurtful and painful,” said the priest who delivered the homily. “She sacrificed her life,” he stressed, “and saved the country from an uncontrollable disaster”; but, he added, “she was not an accidental heroine.” He pointed out: “Sacrifice was her second nature and character.”  In his view, she had “a glorious exit” in the truest sense of the phrase, different from the clichéd use of the expression.

    The tribute session was revealing. Dr. Bode Karunwi, her mate in primary school and medical college, spoke about their 50-year friendship and called her “a faithful friend” in addition to being “a first-class physician.” It was Dr. Efunbo Dosekun who provided a penetrating glimpse of her final moments as she struggled with EVD while quarantined. Dosekun described their last interaction “before she slipped into coma.” In a moving narration, she painted a picture of how she had to speak to Adadevoh through the window because of quarantine regulations. She said Adadavoh had told Sawyer: “I won’t let you go because you would spread this virus far and wide.” Significantly, a Havard University medical professor whose tribute was read on the occasion touchingly said he hoped “Nigeria will one day reflect on her heroism and sacrifice in containing a deadly epidemic.”  So far, figures released by the World Health Organisation (WHO) indicate that eight people have died of EVD out of 21 cases.

    Adadevoh’s death was especially pathetic because she was, ironically, a victim of her professionalism, dedication to work and concern for the sick. A family member was quoted as saying, “She was not on duty on the day Mr. Sawyer was brought to the hospital, but she responded to the emergency. She left what she was doing to save a life.”

    Her commendably rare demonstration of respect for the Hippocratic Oath of her profession was noted by the Lagos State Commissioner for Health, Dr. Jide Idris. Following her death, he said of her role: “She it was who took the initiative to intimate the ministry concerning the index case; and substantially to her credit, the moderate containment achieved we owe to her and her colleagues.” Speaking of containment efforts, it was reported that Adadevoh had to “physically restrain” the infected patient from escaping from the hospital after he had been diagnosed with EVD.

    It is impossible to build scenarios or to imagine the scale of the public health crisis that would most likely have developed in the country in the absence of the thorough diagnostic efforts and a firm application of safety measures and standards, without a huge sense of gratitude to Adadevoh and others who worked with her in the management of Sawyer’s case.  There is no doubt that the professional intervention of Adadevoh and other health workers greatly reduced the  high possibility of a wide-spread dispersal of the virus, which  causes a haemorrhagic fever that can kill infected people in a week, although patients reportedly begin to show symptoms within three weeks of infection.

    ”Our tribute to her is our school song,” said an old girl of Queen’s School, Ede/Ibadan, Adadevoh’s alma mater, and the alumnae gave an enthusiastic rendition of the school song to end the chain of tributes. “Pass on the Torch”, they sang, in reference to the school motto.

    It is heartwarming that Adadevoh’s torch will be kept burning by a newly founded organisation, the Dr. Ameyo Stella Adadevoh Health Trust, which has been set up in honour of “her life of service to profession, community and humanity.” The source of the information announced that   “it will be a professionally run charity” dedicated to her ideals; and there was an approving applause at Harbour Point. He gave a contact email address: drasatrust@gmail .com.

    Before her death, Adadevoh, 57, had worked for 21 years at First Consultants Medical Centre, Obalende, Lagos, and became the Lead Consultant Physician and Endocrinologist. Interestingly, that evening at Habour Point, those who spoke called her Ameyo, which is a Ewe name for girls meaning “Girl born on Saturday.” Also, some of them called her an angel, which suggests a guardian angel.

    In particular, the representative of the association of endocrinologists said, “Our society will pursue national recognition which she so deserves”; and the people clapped.  It is noteworthy that a new petition on Change.org is asking the government to “honour the memory of Adadevoh with a National Posthumous Award”.  However, such consideration should apply not only to her. A nurse at the same hospital also died from EVD. Those who paid the ultimate price while carrying out their duties and saved many lives from Ebola even without having contact with them deserve credit.  A grateful country should reward their heroic self-sacrifice.