Tag: blood

  • Rotary drives voluntary blood donation

    Rotary drives voluntary blood donation

    Nigerians have been urged to make blood donation a way of life.

    The Medical Director of a diagnostic facility, Paramount Life Care, FESTAC, Lagos, Kenechukwu Obianodo, made the appeal at the blood donation camp organised by  the clinic with Rotary Club of Lagos-Palm Grove Estate, Nigeria (District 91100), as part of activities to celebrate Nigeria’s 57th independence.

    Obianodo said his facility partnered Rotary Club in blood donation because it has the equipment.

    “Blood donation is good. It leaves the donor better. And because we have fully automated pathology, we are good to go.”

    The club’s President, Atul Kshetry, said the reason for the donation was to  ensure that those in need of blood do not die due to lack of blood supply, and to encourage voluntary blood donation among Nigerians. The best gift to commemorate this 57th independence is to give blood because blood is life, he said.

    Kshetry said the club has a blood donation camp, which ensures monthly voluntary donation by volunteers.

    He said the club targets not less than 30 pints of blood. “The need for blood donation is very important because there is a huge shortage of same. The act of voluntary blood donation is not common in Nigeria, as in other parts of the world. By the Blood camp, we are creating awareness on the importance of voluntary blood donation, just as we also are targeting free donation of 1, 000 pints of blood. That will make blood sufficiently available through the Red Cross Club.”

    Kshetry said the major challenge facing the committee is to motivate Nigerians to donate blood voluntarily.

    “This is because Nigerians do not have the culture of donation. That is similar to India some 30 years ago. There was no culture but over time, the culture was built up. But in Africa, the problem still persists. This camp was done in collaboration with Paramount Life Care and the Lagos State Transfusion Blood Services (LSTBS),” he said.

    Obianodo added: “Pathology is the study of the overall response of your body to any foreign influence, i.e., disease. Actually, we use this knowledge to diagnose and treat your ailment. What we do is to carefully compare the normal structure and function of a human body (anatomy and physiology) to the abnormal structure and function we witness in an unwell human.

    ‘’Doing this is the most crucial phase and we take note of even the minutest details while adjudging the extent of your ailment because one slip can lead to an incorrect diagnosis, posing serious threat to your health. Our experts ensure that they are extremely careful while analysing the samples.

    “Paramount Life Care offers a  menu of pathology tests in its laboratory. We also provide a range of diagnostic assays covering. The  automated lab features includes: Barcoding of every tub,  zero-contact’ collection in vaccutainer, bullet sample transfer from collection room to lab, processing on automated track, direct interfacing of results from equipment to reporting software.

    ‘’We provide a range of diagnostic assays covering hematology, clinical chemistry, immunology, endocrinology, microbiology and parasitology, molecular biology,  cytology and histopathology,” he explained.

    He said this month was for prevention and screening for breast cancer.

    “Digital mammography is the most advanced equipment for the early detection of breast abnormalities. Early detection provides the best chance to treat breast cancer successfully.

    ‘’To assist women stay cancer free, we have other state-of-the-art women’s imaging services, such as full-field digital mammography, breast ultrasound, breast MRI and stereotactic biopsy.”

  • Blood in God’s temple

    Shock and awe! It was a dehumanizing spectacle to behold as worshippers were mowed down in droves by some demented gun men over suspected business deals that went sour. Elderly village men, women and children who were at St Patrick’s Catholic Church, Ozubulu in Anambra State for an early Sunday mass fell to the bullets of the attackers in an outing that had all the trappings of fairy tales.

    But this was no fairy tale at all. It was real and of all places, it happened well inside God’s temple. What a sacrilege! What a desecration of a place of worship and scant regard for the sanctity of human life. It was reminiscent of the deadly attacks of the Boko Haram terrorists as they bombed churches at the onset of their devious activity. The semblance of the attack with the modus operandi of Boko Haram insurgency perhaps, accounted for initial speculation that the dastardly offensive may have been the handiwork of that group.

    But this has nothing to do with Boko Haram terrorism. It is a new band of terrorism rooted in the insanity of some greedy businessmen whose unabashed love for money and material acquisition takes precedence over every other thing else. It does not matter who is involved. They care little about the consequences of their action as long as the lure of money is the propelling factor.

    In that vaulting urge, they could even kill their siblings and parents so long as money is involved. Ironically, all these are happening in a clime that places high premium on the sanctity of human life; a clime that reveres and accords high respect to places of worship. It is happening in a clime where even those with ill-gotten money seek supplication through the churches.

    Some of them after realizing the vanity of life and all that is material acquisition seek recompense by giving back to the church some of their ill-gotten wealth. So the church remains sacrosanct and inviolate for our people. Even in war situations, contending groups take utmost precaution not to attack churches. History is replete with accounts of people seeking refuge in churches in the face of persecution or war.

    So, what could have gone wrong with our psyche that we could find in our midst people who brushed aside these time-tested values to the extent of storming a church and opening fire on innocent people who had come for supplication? What is it except dementia that could have propelled a man to spread bullets on little children, poor old men and women for who places of worship remain their last hope in a world full of miseries? Many of the people in that church that fateful morning may have come there to ask God for their daily bread.

    Sadly, in place of high hopes that God will answer their prayers, what they got was the supreme price. What an uncanny irony. What a sad way to die.

    These were some of the puzzles that came to mind when news filtered that some gun men stormed an early morning mass session in Ozubulu and opened fire on worshippers.  At the last count, more than 13 innocent people had died while scores of others were seriously injured.

    Stories had it that the gunmen invaded the church in search of their target described as a very wealthy young man from that community who built the said church and donated it to the Nnewi diocese. As they entered the church, they went straight to where the man’s elderly father was seated and shot him dead. They also shot his wife before opening fire indiscriminately on the congregation. When they finished their deadly assignment, the entire church floor had turned into a river of human bold.

    It was a despicable scene of bodies of the young and old littered all over the church with human blood flowing like a river. What a sad scene to behold in the Lord’s temple. It was a scene of truckloads of the dead and the injured as they were being conveyed to the hospitals and the mortuary. And these were people who woke up from their houses, took their bath and proceeded to the church that early morning to pray to their creator and ask for one favour or the other.

    Condemnations have come from various quarters against the senseless and dastardly killings. Many have also called on the law enforcement agencies to do all possible to apprehend and unmask the attackers. The police in Anambra State said they have arrested some people in connection with the shootings. But they would want their identity to remain secret for now.

    There is no reason to doubt the claim of the police especially as they gave a hint of a festering business feud that is at the root of that resort to the law of the jungle. But they must act fast to unmask all those behind that heinous offence. This has become necessary because of the extant speculations which the police have been fighting hard to correct.

    We expect in the days ahead, that the full identities of all those who participated in the killings as well as their sponsors will be made public. It will be quite interesting unveiling the identities of the characters that took their private quarrel into the house of God. We would be delighted to know all those who had to snuff life out of innocent and helpless people who have no idea of whatever business deal that went sour between the feuding groups.

    If they are so possessed that they must take vengeance, why kill those who neither have knowledge of the issues in dispute nor party to them? As I went through the list of those killed and wounded, some surnames kept recurring suggesting that some families may have been wiped out in the process. It is very sad indeed that a sleepy village community could have such a calamity befall them. It has never happened in Igbo land.

    The danger in the extant killings is that it has the prospects of sending danger signals that our churches are no longer safe. That could scare people away from worship unless adequate security measures are taken to protest worshippers. In the urban centres, churches had since the advent of the Boko Haram insurgency, put in place security measures to protest their members. But this has not been the situation in the rural areas. With what has happened, the need for some form of security within church premises especially at peak periods has become urgent.

    The church leadership has been reassuring the public that the Ozubulu incident is an isolated case and worshippers have no cause to worry. That assurance could as well be the case. But it cannot substitute for some form of security within church premises. Bad habits spread fast and there is no guarantee that we have seen the last of such unconscionable and senseless killings.

    But at the heart of the killings is our lust for money and material acquisition. Something has gone awry in our society. Young men and women of today, do all sorts of bad things just to make money. Ironically, when they come back home with their ill-gotten wealth, parents care less about their source. They are hailed and given front seats in public places including churches. Because of the inability of the society to condemn questionable wealth, young people have come to see nothing wrong in acquiring wealth through hook and crook.

    This has had the net effect of swelling the ranks of people on the fast lane. Our public officers are not left out in this as we have seen in the looting of the public treasury by sundry characters masquerading as leaders. This country needs serious moral re-engineering for it to move forward. It is difficult to make progress in a society replete with rouges and sundry characters that are intent in cutting corners and wasting human lives on the altar of acquiring material wealth.

    My heart goes for the families of those who lost their dear ones and the injured in this atrocious act. May the almighty God they serve grant their souls eternal rest in His bosom and the injured quick recovery.

     

  • Need for young people to donate blood

    World Blood Donor day is commemorated yearly on June 14 across the world. The day serves to raise awareness on the need for safe blood and blood products, and to thank blood donors for their life-saving gifts.

    Blood is an important resource, both for planned treatments and urgent interventions. It can help patients suffering from life-threatening conditions live longer and with a higher quality of life, and supports complex medical and surgical procedures. Blood is also vital for treating the wounded during emergencies of all kinds (disasters, accidents, armed conflicts, etc.) and has an essential, life-saving role in maternal and perinatal care (World Health Organisation).

    The theme of this year’s commemoration set by the World Health Organisation (WHO) was: Give blood, give now, give often. It was carefully formulated to encourage people not to wait until there is an immediate family need or emergencies.

    Nigeria has an estimated blood need of about 1.4 to 1.7 million pints per annum. The current structure of voluntary blood collection has not been able to go beyond 10 per cent voluntary collection per annum. This is reflected in the WHO report, which indicates that 26 per cent of maternal deaths in sub-Saharan Africa occur due to the challenges in finding blood in real time.

    Consequently, a thriving blood ‘black market’ has been created, which is expensive and dangerous. It can cost anywhere from N15,000 to over N25,000 in emergencies for a pint of blood, more for rare blood groups. This is higher than the monthly minimum wage (N18,000), whilst also endangering the lives of donors who give serially for the payment they receive.

    These commercial blood donors can be paid anything between N1,500 and N5,000 every time they donate and this practice is especially common in Lagos. This currently makes up about 30 per cent of blood donations.

    Finally, family donations account for 60 per cent of blood supply. This means that, patients, especially pregnant women are forced to get family relations to donate to the hospital bank before they are treated or released. This situation is in dire need of reversal, if Nigeria is to attain a 100 per cent voluntary non-remunerated blood donation by year 2020, a goal set by the WHO.

    Young people have a huge role to play in making this a reality and it is a goal that can be easily attained with proper education. Nigeria, as the most populous country in Africa, has roughly 60 million youths of age between 18 and 35. Majority of this population would be healthy enough to donate at least three times a year.

    With our bourgeoning youth population and the high levels of education, it is appalling that we still suffer severe shortages of blood because of fear, traditional beliefs, cynicism and the need for payments.

    This writer established Haima Health Initiative to connect between patients in need of blood to eligible donors in Nigeria, using simple technology and education. We organise blood drives targeted at young people to fill up hospital banks and use social media as a tool to educate people on the safety of the process and dispel myths associated with it.

    Despite our challenges, there is usually quite a positive response from young people after their initial misconceptions and scepticisms have been corrected. It is essential that we take up the challenges that create problems within various sectors of society and provide simple, long lasting solutions.

    The occasion of this years’ World Blood Donor presented another opportunity for young people to become voluntary donors and give the best gift from the heart.

  • Lagos warns against infected, unscreened blood

    Lagos warns against infected, unscreened blood

    The Lagos State AIDS Control Agency (LSACA) has urged  residents not to buy blood for transfusion from questionable sources, but to patronise registered blood banks or centres.

    According to the agency, patronising approved centres is one of the surest ways to avoid contracting HIV. This, the agency said, is because the state has put in place mechanisms to ensure blood supply with zero risk of transmitting infectious diseases, especially human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).

    The agency’s Health Educator, Mrs Olusola Adebambo, who said this at the sensitisation on basic facts of HIV/AIDS for out-of-school youths’, (i.e. area/street youths) at Lafiaji Hall, Lagos Island,  said it was advisable to screen one’s status rather than using blood donation as the means of detection. Such untested blood could make blood supply risky and endanger patients.

    “HIV antibodies may take a few weeks to develop after infection of the virus. If you were recently infected, you might have a negative test result, yet be able to infect the recipient of your donation,” she said.

    According to her, the virus attacks the body and depletes its immunity and if no drugs or medical intervention are sought, it ends in Acquired Immune Deficiency (AIDS).

    Other ways of contracting HIV, she said, are through sharing of unstrerilised sharp/cutting instruments/objects, including blades, shaving sticks, needles and syringes. The virus can be contracted through unprotected sexual intercourse, from HIV+ mother (mother, who is infected with HIV) to her unborn child.

    Manager, Local Action Committee on HIV/AIDS, Lagos Island Local Government, Mrs Dupe Orolugbagbe, told participants that the state has a Law that protects infected people, hence, it is mandatory to respect their fundamental human rights, show understanding and love, and relate with them as, “you do to others and the way you would want others to relate to you”.

    The duo of Adebambo and Orolugbagbe challenged participants to ensure an AIDS-free generation in the state, and demonstrated how protective barriers such as male or female condom could be used to prevent contracting HIV.

  • ‘Edo records 1,589 free blood donors’

    The National Blood Transfusion Service (NBTS), Southsouth Zonal Centre, Benin City, has said it recorded 1,589 free blood donors from January to December last year.

    Mr. Peter Ezemede, the linkage focal person for the centre, in an interview with News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Benin City, attributed low turnout of free blood donors to people patronising  commercial blood donors.

    He said the centre would eliminate commercial blood donors.

    Ezemede said: “We have taken awareness campaign to churches, mosques, schools and markets to educate people on the importance of blood donation and its health benefits.

    “Every blood you donate will save a life and reduce the cost of blood.

    “Those who donate blood regularly will be free from diseases, such as hypertension and cancer. The exercise will stimulate their blood marrow to produce blood cell.”

    He urged people to support the Federal Government in providing logistics that would improve blood transfusion centres.

  • Rivers of blood, tears and sorrow

    SIR: The night has finally enveloped Rivers State, while darkness overpowered light and every sense of illumination therein. Goodness has taken flight in the ever buzzing Garden City, while rationality, level-headedness disappeared into Rivers thin air.

    How can a discerning mind dissect, decipher and subsequently, digest the orgy and cacophony of violence trailing Rivers State legislative re-run elections – where a number of citizens – both in uniform and civil-regalia were simply and gruesomely murdered in search of political powers?

    Where can we place last Saturday’s incidences in Rivers State, where a Police DSP (Alkali Mohammed) and his orderly where beheaded, and five policemen declared missing? How do we situate a state election where four personnel of the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) were killed and their weapons carted away by thugs and hoodlums?

    How do we quantify an election that was laced with explosions of all manners, abductions of NYSC members who the country co-opted into helping INEC to conduct efficient elections and other matters?

    Rivers last election was one baggage, too many. It was the greatest show of sham and shame the country ever superintended and participated in. It is the height of barbarism, crass and class ignorance in this part of the earth. It was our worst-ever show-biz in democratic practices, as well as our journey to civility.

    The world must have been dazed, utterly disappointed and astounded since coming out of that election. They would have been wondering if we quite understand what an election or democracy simply means. The globe would have dissociated themselves from the disgraceful dance and desecration of sanctity of human life in Rivers in the name of elections.

    In all these, the culprits are politicians – the desperadoes and the unrepentant. The do or die agents are usually the unseen hands behind the asinine things anytime, here. They were the reason behind those lifeless bodies, which blood flowed from, with those tears and sorrow inflicted on a nation, no one else.

    They assembled and grouped the callous and unleash them on everybody in sight. They employ and hire the evil doers to kill and destroy their traducers. And then, then go back to their homes to watch their fore-paid events take place as agreed with their field marshals whose only stock in trade is to maim.

    But malevolence must not subsist here. There should always be a limit to which heartbreaks should be allowed to happen in the country. Evil and its doers must be made to observe checkpoints and punitive measures in the nation, and not the reverse, where the depraved reign supreme today.

    Wickedness must not be carried out at will by its harbingers and merchants at ease any longer. People must be made to pay for taking another’s life as the law guaranteeing the rights to life stipulates. That aspect of the country’s legal framework must be observed in strict compliance as to ensure sanity in one’s relation to another.

    Things can no longer be taken for granted here if indeed, an “injustice to one remains an injustice to all.” The federal government in working consonance with the security agencies must leave no stone unturned in making sure the killers of its citizenry in the last Rivers electoral contest are caught and punished accordingly, in line with its avowal to protect lives, as that would renew the faith of Nigerians in the ability of government to protect its population.

    The Nigerian populace on the other hand, must resist being used by politicians to achieve their selfish interests before, during and after electoral contests. We must defy becoming a chess-ball in the hands of these politicians.

    • Gwiyi Solomon,

     Abuja.

  • Blood donation is harmless, says agency

    It  is not harmful to donate blood, Lagos State Blood Transfusion Service Executive Secretary Mrs Modupe Olaiya has said

    She spoke at the maiden monthly Rotary Clubs’blood donation camp held at the Rotary International Centre in Ikeja GRA, Lagos.

    She said the aim of the programme was to get enough blood to save lives, adding that only human beings and not animals could do so. Unless people donate, she warned, more lives would be lost. The shortage of blood plaguing most hospitals, she said, was preventable through more blood donation.

    Mrs Olaiya said we need between 70,000 and 100,000 units of blood yearly, adding that with a target of between 5,000 and 6,000 units monthly, we could make it.

    She said the state government was partnering Rotary to mobilise more people to donate blood voluntarily, noting that freewill donation is safer compared to when donors are induced with money.

    She said the Service has stationary units where people could walk in and donate as well as a publicity division for awareness.

    Last weekend, six clubs led by the Rotary Club of Palmgrove Estate held a camp to encourage members for blood donation.

    A former president of Rotary Club of Palmgrove Ramesh Bismal said the event was an initiative of the club during his tenure in 2014. He said the aim was to save lives, adding that one bottle of blood could save three lives. “We are targeting 1,000 bottles of blood in the district. It is a signatory project of the district. So far, or in one and half years, we have 690 bottles of blood from Palmgrove Estate.”

    He said the seven clubs would hold the blood donation camp monthly until they achieved their objective. Later, the programme would go national. “In Africa only few are donating blood, yet more people need blood. We will go to the markets, corporate organisations and media houses, among others to encourage people to donate voluntarily. We need the media to assist to create awareness on blood donation and remove doubts about the matter,” he said

    On the merits of blood donation, Bismal, a notable chartered accountant, said:  “Once you donate, you get a card which entitles you to free blood when you are in an emergency. Or your family members. Also, you are also free to check your blood.”

    Among those who donated blood at the camp was Rotary International District Governor-elect Dr Wale Ogunbadejo. He shares his experience. ”It was nothing new. I have been donating blood for 27 years. Our aim is to make blood donation more friendly. And save lives. We want awareness to be strong.

    “We are partnering the Lagos State government because we don’t have a blood bank for the blood to kept for use at hospitals.”

    Ogunbadejo dispelled the myth about the donation of blood, saying that people should not be afraid to donate. He said before one donates, he would be tested to know if he could. He said any one above 65 and some categories of women are not allowed to donate.

    He warned that more people would die if we stopped donating blood. “Take blood donation as voluntary. It is a life-saver,” he added.

  • Rawlings and Abacha’s blood money

    Like a witch undergoing the last purgation at death’s door, J J Rawlings’ tongue dramatically came unhinged last week in a fit of abominable rant, thereby diminishing whatever remained of his moral capital as possible hero of post-colonial Africa. He granted an exclusive interview to The Guardian published last Sunday. But by dabbling in the Nigerian affair in a manner that exposes shallow understanding of the nation’s history and greed for dollars, the man once fondly called “Junior Jesus” only succeeded in giving himself away as perhaps the ultimate political Judas.

    In retrospect, regardless of his canonization in the 80s and 90s in some quarters, there remains some murky aspects of Rawlings’ twenty-year reign in Ghana that the tide of history simply cannot sweep out of human memory. True, his political career – first as military lawgiver and later an elected president – was remarkable in populism. But beside that also is the tale of mass murder and impunity. Hundreds of opposition figures including outspoken journalists and independent-minded Supreme Court judges were assassinated or disappeared.

    Sadly, their unresolved cases are now more or less classified as part of Ghana’s political folklore. What all of this then fed in turn over the years was Rawlings’ sense of impunity. The underlying narcissist complex was very much on display in The Guardian interview under reference where he tried, though in futility, to rehabilitate the tainted memory of his benefactor and Nigerian dictator, Sani Abacha, whom he presented in flattering terms as “one hell of a nationalist and very patriotic” who “saved the country”.

    But when Rawlings chooses to speak so loftily of otherwise discredited Abacha, ascribing to him more or less the toga of a messiah, even after it had become public knowledge that he once received $2m ($5m?) bribe from the Nigerian despot, the joke is actually on the former Ghanaian president. At the last count, what Abacha stole and stashed away in foreign vaults was conservatively put at $5b. Now, all that the three former heads of state of Ghana were accused of embezzling and for which they were in 1979 summarily “sprayed like mosquitoes”, to borrow Rawlings’ own euphemism, is not up to five percent of Abacha’s loot.

    The eight top military officers Rawlings had executed in the great purge of 1979 without fair trial included Rear Admiral Amedume and General Roger Felli whose only crime was leveraging their official status to take bank loan! But the great Rawlings who often boiled in rage with blood-shot eyes at the mention of corruption while in power suddenly began to act funny few years ago when one of his political disciples, Tsikata Tsikata, was jailed by a succeeding administration over impropriety reportedly costing Ghanaian taxpayers a fortune. In a fit of anger, he sent invitations to journalists to a world press conference to lambast the executive and the judiciary for their temerity. Only for the session to be called off suddenly before the scheduled take-off.

    The story is told that Rawlings was tipped off that some of the journalists came armed with a mischievous question: whether he ever heard of the old story of eight officers killed in 1979 over alleged corruption. Of course, in a way, the leaking in 1998 of Abacha’s multi-million dollar bribe to Rawlings had confirmed the misuse and abuse of the nation’s resources in the deluded pursuit of influence or favour. By Rawlings’ confession, the donation was unsolicited. All he saw was a car pulling up and someone attempting to drag out a suitcase laden with dollars, right there in the open in Accra. Out of public decency, he reportedly waved the guy to hold it.

    He saved his next word till they had walked to a discreet corner. When he finally confronted Abacha’s emissary who he identified in The Guardian interview as Ismaila Gwarzo (then National Security Adviser) and described as “noble, quiet-looking, respectable-looking”, Rawlings claimed he was told the largesse was from Abacha. (With another NSA currently embroiled in the scandal of sharing $15b arms funds, we now know the seeds of infamy were sown in that office long ago.) NOW, listen to the sleazy words addressed to Gwarzo by the sitting president of a whole nation after apparently losing selfinhibition at the sight of mint-fresh dollars, sounding more like the would-be receiver of a stolen valuable weighing the risk: “I hear you people don’t provide assistance without the world hearing it with a twist.

    ” Then, he added: “Don’t think that when you bring this, whatever it is, that would shut me up from criticizing if I think you are wrong, or if I disagree”. To this “conditionality”, Rawlings quoted Gwarzo as retorting: “Sir, we need you more than you need us.” Well, the visiting NSA could not be more forthright. Abacha’s dollars was to buy the conscience of Rawlings and other African leaders as tyranny deepened in Nigeria. Against that backdrop, it then becomes easier now to situate the conspiracy of silence among the nation’s neighbours in the west coast and indeed across the African continent while sheer terror was being unleashed on the opposition in those dark days.

    Three kinds of fate awaited dissents then: grave, gulag or exile. Ostracized by the civilized countries over the June 12 crisis, the diminutive tyrant holed up in Abuja now sought to, in Wole Soyinka’s words, bring Nigeria down to his level. Under Abacha, Nigeria resorted to the company of fellow political reprobates. Abuja simply became the preferred destination of other dictators on the continent as well as political scoundrels and scavengers looking for what to eat under the guise “solidarity visits”. As the Rawlings’ testimony has revealed, there was an unending flow of suitcases of dollars as honorarium. Only a few like Nelson Mandela refused to be bought into turning a blind eye on the unspeakable evil unfolding in Nigeria then. Initially, Mandela’s attitude to Abuja was that of critical solidarity against western “meddlesomeness”, naively assuming a uniquely African solution could be found.

    By the time playwright Ken Saro-Wiwa, alongside eight others, was hanged after a sham trial on November 10, 1995, the South African hero finally realized he was dealing with a demon. Henceforth, he related to Abacha in that light. But the spell of dollars and the prospects of more briefcases would seem too overwhelming for the likes of Rawlings then to stand straight and speak in clear and unmistakable terms against the atrocities in Nigeria. And the free dollars from Nigeria would probably have gone unacknowledged publicly had Abacha not ended the way he did. When Gwarzo was held to account for the billions that had passed his hands under the guise of securing “national security”, he listed, among others, that Rawlings, yes the same revolutionarily incorruptible JJ, had quietly benefitted to the tune of $5m. Of course, the man so implicated was doubly discomfited. On top of the shame of being exposed would seem deep anger at being swindled. As Rawlings insisted in the interview, the amount counted in the briefcase Gwarzo handed him was actually $2m, not the $5m documented in Abuja.

    But Rawlings’ thunderous denunciation of corruption today would have made more sense had he taken a step further to furnish us with the details of how the $2m received was utilized for Ghana’s direct benefit to demonstrate the transparency he is ever quick to evangelize about. For instance, after Abacha’s courier departed, was the entire cash declared or partly to Ghana’s exchequer? How was it recorded: “unsolicited foreign aid”? “Stomach infrastructure” from Nigeria or – to ensure some confidentiality – simply a kind neighbour? These were the simple – yet critical – details the self-assigned anti-corruption warrior of Ghana conveniently chose to deny us. Perhaps, the dollars Rawlings collected could still have been justified as a fair price for his silence had the verbal diarrhea that permeated the entire interview not also led him into making a more colossal gaffe on MKO. Who, other than a psychopath with warped values, could have spoken so callously of the memory of MKO in the manner Rawlings did? Hear him again:

    “Some may not want to hear it. But the departure of that gentleman called (MKO) Abiola, the one who passed away, saved Nigeria from a probable explosion.” There are a few inferences to be made from the foregoing statement. An endorsement of the popularly held – though clinically unproven – notion that Abiola was willfully “murdered” via a cup of poisoned tea with a view to forcing a closure to the June 12 conundrum. Well, shedding the blood of the innocent may not mean much to a depraved dictator like Rawlings whose hands are still wet till date with the blood of three of his predecessors summarily executed in 1979. But rejoicing at MKO’s “departure” as the former Ghanaian leader did is to misread the historic portents of June 12, the cause of which he was unwilling to compromise.

    It was adjudged the fairest and freest poll in Nigeria’s electoral history at the time. Besides, in one single day, the nation’s age-old fault-lines of religion and ethnicity were miraculously healed. MKO, a southerner, defeated his challenger, Othman Tofa, in his native Kano in the north. The Muslim-Muslim ticket also broke the sectarian barrier by winning massively in predominantly Christian South-South and of South-East. These historic gains were sadly allowed to waste by treacherous Ibrahim Babangida and his perfidious apologists. Indeed, those unconscionable acts of yesterday partly explain the monumental mess Nigeria finds herself today. By the way, one hopes President Buhari would not succumb to the emotional blackmail in Rawlings’ effusive praise of him in that interview. Perhaps, it is time to renew the bid initiated in 1998. Upon discovery of the nocturnal payment that year, then head of state, General Abdulsalami Abubakar, had politely asked Rawlings to refund. A request he never dignified with even a reply.

    Now, with the receiver openly admitting collecting $2m from Abacha, it would not be out of place to ask EFCC to explore diplomatic means to ensure Rawlings made a refund in the spirit of the chastity the man himself speaks so passionately about today.

  • NGO to address blood shortage

    A Pentecostal church, High Life Church, has launched a non-governmental organisation (NGO), LifeBlood Nigeria, to address the gap in the quantity of blood supplied in the country.

    According to the church, a research by LifeBlood shows that Nigeria collects only 38 percent of the required blood each year.

    The Executive Secretary, Lagos State Blood Transfusion Service (LSBTS), Dr Modupe Olaiya, who was represented by Dr Samuel Alori, launched the NGO in Lagos on June 14,  the World Blood Donor (WBD) Day.

    Olaiya said blood transfusion was an essential component of healthcare, adding: “To achieve safe and adequate supply of blood, donation must be voluntary and regular. In line with the World Health Organisation (WHO) recommendations, blood donations must come from voluntary donors and all blood donations should be screened for infections prior to use.”

    Olaiya listed some of the enduring challenges in blood transfusion in Nigeria to include sub-optimal recruitment and retention of voluntary; non-remunerated blood donors due to wrong cultural belief and lack of awareness surrounding the issue as well as the dependence on family replacement and commercial blood donors.

    She said Lagos State Government established the LSBTC in June 2004 to regulate blood transfusion services in the state under the supervision of the state’s Ministry of Health.

    The vision, according to her, was to have a state where only safe blood is transfused in all appropriate health facilities; the mission was to provide safe blood through the recruitment of voluntary blood donors, the screening of every unit of blood for transfusion transmissible infections (TTIs), and the efficient processing of blood for all who require it.

    She said all blood transfused in public and private hospitals in Lagos must carry the logo of the LSBTC to show that the blood has been screened for TTIs.

    She commended LifeBlood Nigeria initiative and praised High Life Church for an excellent start with voluntary blood donation.

    The executive secretary also commended the global nature of the campaign, saying that LifeBlood’s goals were achievable.

    Pastor Carlton Williams of High Life Church enjoined the congregation and well-wishers to change the world, saying that the understanding of the church’s role in society must change.

    According to Pastor Williams, “The era of mere doctrinal purity is past. The time of limiting our expression of Christ to just understanding the plan of God for an individual’s life is past. This is the day when nations are impacted by the structures of the kingdom through you and me.”

    He continued: “The church is going to get into spaces that we are not known for. The church must shine with potent sustainable solutions that save lives and solve problems in education, business, media, arts and entertainment, government and all manifestations of religious life.”

    Also at the event was Mrs. Tosin Osofisan, the Donor Care Manager of the National Blood Transfusion Service (NBTS), Abeokuta Centre.

  • NGO to address blood shortage

    A Pentecostal church, High Life Church, has launched a non-governmental organisation (NGO), LifeBlood Nigeria, to address the gap in the quantity of blood supplied in the country.

    According to the church, a research by LifeBlood shows that Nigeria collects only 38 percent of the required blood each year.

    The Executive Secretary, Lagos State Blood Transfusion Service (LSBTS), Dr Modupe Olaiya, who was represented by Dr Samuel Alori, launched the NGO in Lagos on June 14,  the World Blood Donor (WBD) Day.

    Olaiya said blood transfusion was an essential component of healthcare, adding: “To achieve safe and adequate supply of blood, donation must be voluntary and regular. In line with the World Health Organisation (WHO) recommendations, blood donations must come from voluntary donors and all blood donations should be screened for infections prior to use.”

    Olaiya listed some of the enduring challenges in blood transfusion in Nigeria to include sub-optimal recruitment and retention of voluntary; non-remunerated blood donors due to wrong cultural belief and lack of awareness surrounding the issue as well as the dependence on family replacement and commercial blood donors.

    She said Lagos State Government established the LSBTC in June 2004 to regulate blood transfusion services in the state under the supervision of the state’s Ministry of Health.

    The vision, according to her, was to have a state where only safe blood is transfused in all appropriate health facilities; the mission was to provide safe blood through the recruitment of voluntary blood donors, the screening of every unit of blood for transfusion transmissible infections (TTIs), and the efficient processing of blood for all who require it.

    She said all blood transfused in public and private hospitals in Lagos must carry the logo of the LSBTC to show that the blood has been screened for TTIs.

    She commended LifeBlood Nigeria initiative and praised High Life Church for an excellent start with voluntary blood donation.

    The executive secretary also commended the global nature of the campaign, saying that LifeBlood’s goals were achievable.

    Pastor Carlton Williams of High Life Church enjoined the congregation and well-wishers to change the world, saying that the understanding of the church’s role in society must change.

    According to Pastor Williams, “The era of mere doctrinal purity is past. The time of limiting our expression of Christ to just understanding the plan of God for an individual’s life is past. This is the day when nations are impacted by the structures of the kingdom through you and me.”

    He continued: “The church is going to get into spaces that we are not known for. The church must shine with potent sustainable solutions that save lives and solve problems in education, business, media, arts and entertainment, government and all manifestations of religious life.”

    Also at the event was Mrs. Tosin Osofisan, the Donor Care Manager of the National Blood Transfusion Service (NBTS), Abeokuta Centre.