Tag: Boxer

  • Nigerian boxers set to conquer at Congo Africa Championship — Konyegwachie

    No fewer than 14 boxers are currently in camp under the supervision of the national team coach, Anthony Konyegwachie, preparing for the Africa Championship set for  June 17 to June 25 in Congo.

    Konyegwachie told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Monday in Lagos that the event is a qualifier for the world championship billed to hold in Berlin 2018.

    The coach added that his wards were expected to use the event to sharpen their skills ahead of other events lined up later in the year.

    “We are getting set for the competition which is the biggest for the athletes we have in camp.

    “The young boxers are new on the scene but we have the confidence that they can fly the nation’s flag high in Congo.

    “In the past Nigeria has always dominated the competition and it has been a programme we used to expose upcoming boxers to competitive matches.

    “The boxers have worked their socks off and are eagerly anticipating the competition to showcase their skills to the world and begin an international career in boxing,’’ the national coach added.

    Konyegwachie expressed optimism at the chances of the boxers’ to step into the shoes of their older colleagues who have travelled abroad for greener pastures.

    “Our boxing team comprises of seven soldiers, who along with their contemporaries, were drawn from the national boxing championship which held in Lagos in February.

    “They were the best in their categories and we are hopeful they can put up that same performance in their very first outing in Congo.

    “The likes of Efetobo Apochie and Efe Ajagba were heroes of this great competition and both have gone ahead to represent the nation at world championship and Olympics,’’ the coach said.

    He told NAN that four other boxers are also in camp preparing for the Commonwealth Youth Championship set to hold in Bahamas in July.

  • Canadian kick-boxer loses belt in Bayelsa

    Amidst the hardship and anxieties in Bayelsa State, residents recently smiled broadly and laughed hysterically, temporarily forgetting their economic challenges. A live sporting show organised by the Renew Entertainment in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State restored happiness to their faces.

    The owner of Renew, an engineer, Mr. Gospel Oboro, for the second time in a year brought a live kick-boxing competition to Yenagoa to thrill his audience and promote sports tourism in the state.

    Oboro brought a world kick-boxing champion from Canada, Mr. Anthony Ford, to compete with an African champion, Mr. Menia Nimi Jack. All roads led to Renew, a firm that combines bar, club and sports entertainment. The arena located at Azikoro Road became a destination of choice for residents.

    Dignitaries also attended the event. The Director-General, Tourism Development Agency (TDA), Mrs. Ebiere Irene, represented the government. The Deputy Governor’s Protocol Officer, Mr. Solomon Diepreye, was also in attendance.

    Among them are traditional rulers such as the Paramount Ruler of Opokuma Kingdom, HRH, Okpoitari Diangoli and Paramount Ruler, Ekpetiama Kingdom, HRM, Bubaraye Dakolo. The rubber dub master, Raskimono and another entertainer Stone Cold thrilled the audience.

    When the fight started, Prince Leo of the Nigerian Police defeated another fighter identified simply as Isidore from Cameroon. But the main fight between Ford and Jack was the motivation that lured the mammoth crowd to Renew.

    After a long period of contest, Ford conceded defeat following many bruises inflicting on him by Jack, who was declared the winner. Ford’s belt was subsequently handed over to Jack.

    Oboro said Renew had an intention to bring back live show business of sports to the Niger Delta region. He said the firm made history by going international to bring a world-title champion to Nigeria.

    “I want our people to enjoy what other people are enjoying. We decided to bring back live show business of sport to the Niger Delta. We bring new innovation and now we have gone international, which is first in history in Nigeria to bring the world title champion to Nigeria.

    “It is not easy. For more than three months, I have been doing alot of planning, talking to international communities. I would say that l am among the people that have entered the Guinness Book of Records as the only first person to bring the world title fight to Nigeria and mostly the Niger Delta”.

    Ebiere thanked Oboro for raising the stakes of kickboxing in the country. Addressing Oboro, he said: “Many people dreamed but never achieved it. Some persons came across obstacles and they turned back, but you persisted.

    “We went to the governor and he promised that this time next year, we will have much bigger kickboxing so that Bayelsa will become known for kickboxing in Nigeria and African as a whole.

    “We promise you that by this time next year, we are going to have it bigger and better and government is ready to back us up and we promise we are going to create an auditorium for both kickboxing and boxing.”

    Also speaking, Dakolo said the event was brought to the attention of the traditional rulers’ council at short notice. But he described the event as groundbreaking and asked the firm to engage in more publicity.

    He said such events would bring the youths to productive existence and rebrand the Niger Delta region. He expressed gratitude to the governor for his promise to elevate kickboxing and other combat sports in the state.

  • Boxer knocks back hired killer allegations

    Boxer knocks back hired killer allegations

    State prosecutors in Cologne are investigating star boxer Felix Sturm, who is alleged to have hired a hitman to kill his former promoter.

    “Our investigation targets Felix Sturm, his manager, and one other male person,” prosecutor Benedkit Kortz said, confirming a report in Bild.

    Sturm and his manager Roland Bebak are believed to have hired the third man to kill promoter Ahmet Öner, he added.

    Öner had previously organised bouts for the boxer, but the two parted ways after a serious falling-out.

    “This is a far-fetched story, it’s false and contrived,” Bebak said through a spokesman.

    “Such an accusation isn’t a joke, but deadly serious,” he added.

  • Wild, Wild  world of dogs: How safe is your  neighbourhood?

    Wild, Wild world of dogs: How safe is your neighbourhood?

    Gboyega Alaka attempts a critical look at the recent incident of dog attack on a four-year-old, paying specific attention to the inherent dangers of stray dogs on the loose, fatality of rabies infection, legal rights of citizens in the face of future challenges and more.

    It’s not unlikely that there is a dog in your neighbourhood. Put more succinctly, it’s not unlikely that there is a stray dog on your street or somewhere next door, foraging ‘harmlessly’ for pieces of bones, shreds of flesh, or just about anything your refuse can offer.

    Once in a while, there is actually a fine breed Rottweiler, Pug, English Mastiff, Boxer, Labrador retriever or German Shepherd next flat or somewhere behind the gate of that posh house on your street, purportedly being kept as a pet or for the purpose of security.

    What is, however, unlikely is whether people, who are voluntarily or involuntarily forced to live with these dogs, ever stop to worry or even recognise the danger inherent in these animals. True, dogs have been severally described as man’s best friend, but the truth is they also have a tendency to become man’s worst enemies – depending on which side of its temper you find yourself.

    For those who stop to think, do they ask questions? And if they do, do they go further by taking steps to forestall the possible danger? The unfortunate incident of four-year-old Omonigho Abraham, now undergoing treatment at the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, readily comes to mind here.

    His parents, Abraham and Helen Odia, recognised the danger posed by Jacky, the new dog brought into the compound by their landlord, Stanley Wisely, but did little more than a whimpering complaint to their arrogant landlord until the disaster occurred. Perhaps if they had recognised their rights under the law and taken the right steps, maybe – just maybe – their son, Omonigho, would not have been a victim of that deadly attack that left him dangling on the cliff of life and within a short distance of death.

    And maybe Omonigho would still have been enjoying his quiet anonymous life and his mother, who says she is tired of the sudden celebrity status the unfortunate incident has thrusted upon her, would still have been enjoying her quiet life, rather than answering monotonous questions from desperate journalists, “who just want to sell their papers.”

    It would be recalled that two dogs, Jacky and Ghaddaffi , being bred in their compound on Adegboyega Street, Igando, had invaded the Odia’s flat and made a meal of little Omonigho’s scalp, with only a last minute intervention by his mother proving to be his saving grace. Mrs. Helen Odia had braved the odds to go into the flat, after stick-wielding neighbours and a team of policemen had been too terror-struck to go in and rescue her boy.

    But if providence has been so compassionate with the Odia family, preserving their son’s life in spite of the deadly fangs of the hounds, and raising two state governors to stand by them and benignly tussle over their son’s medical expenses, some victims, and indeed families, have not been so lucky.

    Fatai Jimoh, then a 12-year-old, who lived with his father in Ajegunle, wasn’t so lucky, as he received a deadly bite from a rabid street dog and eventually gave up the ghost a few months later. Fatai had gone about his normal childish business after being bitten by the street dog and given a mere anti-tetanus injection by the owner.

    Unfortunately, Fatai was too young to understand the deadly implication of a dog bite and did not tell his father or any member of his extended family, who lived a few blocks away. Worse still, he swore his peers who witnessed the incident of the dog bite to secrecy, inadvertently digging his own grave. It thus happened that even when the symptoms of rabies manifested, and he displayed strange agitated behaviour and an almost violent rejection of water, generally struggling in the throes of death, nobody suspected a dog bite, let alone a rabid infection.

    The ready explanation was suspected food poisoning, until one of his peers unwittingly dropped the bombshell days after he had passed on. And so it was that young, bubbly Fatai, well-loved in the community, died a totally preventable and avoidable death.

    Many wondered why the owner of the dog, knowing fully well that his dog was not vaccinated, merely gave him a mere anti-tetanus and went away. Could it be that even he didn’t know? Or that he just wanted to fulfill minimal righteousness, avoid the expensive post-exposure treatment and vacate the scene?

    Like little Omonigho, five-year-old Edna also experienced her moment of terror that would subsequently instill in her a strong phobia for dogs, when she was chased and dragged all around the compound by a co-tenant’s dog in their Ikotun area home.

    Thankfully, she didn’t appear to have been bitten, nor was she chewed up. But Edna’s parents nevertheless took precaution and promptly took Edna for anti-rabies treatment.

    According to her father, Mr. Benjamin, there was no way he could have taken the risk of not taking her to the hospital for that vital post exposure treatment, “because she was so bruised and covered with blood at the end of the incident that we didn’t know if the dog actually sank its teeth in her skin or not. Besides, we didn’t know for sure if the dog had been vaccinated, or if the vaccination was up to date.”

    Moreover, he had seen someone die of rabies after a dog bite in the past, and the sheer horror of how helpless the victim died was something he would not wish for his worst enemy. Also, Benjamin had heard somewhere that the rabies virus can also be found in dogs’ nails.

    Yet despite these evident danger and hazard inherent in the mere presence of dogs in our environment, several are on the loose, and will probably always remain. To make matters worse, children go out of their way to tease some of these dogs and sometimes make them react violently, while some other people walk dangerously close, oblivious of the animals and whether or not they could be temperamental.

    Deji, an auto-mechanic in Olodi Apapa area of Lagos, reveals the prevalence of stray dogs that live perpetually on street rubbish in his area. If he were to do a headcount, Deji says he would count well over 20 of those dogs roaming the streets, hounding each other and most times engaging in wild street copulation.

    He also wondered why there is never any attempt to clear the streets of these dogs, not even vaccinate them, since the government is aware of the dangerous virus they carry.

    “From what I’ve read and heard, health workers in other countries usually arrest such dogs and get them off the streets, or in some cases vaccinate them from house to house. “And I wonder why they would not do that in Nigeria. I think you should let them know that such carrier dogs pose danger to everybody, including their own children.”

    Stray Dogs: Comparable only to lunatic on the loose

    According to Dr. Funmilayo Alao, a clinician and small animal practitioner, who runs Ized Veterinary by Governor’s Road Junction, Ikotun, Lagos and who incidentally is wife of the president, Lagos State chapter of the National Veterinary Medical Association, the potential danger of stray dogs is palpable.

    She agrees with the general public opinion that likens a stray dog to a lunatic on the loose and that must be avoided like a plague. “Even as a Vet doctor,” she reveals, “I don’t play with a dog I don’t know. If I see a stray dog, I simply move away from its path. That is not cowardliness, it is called wisdom. The reason is that I don’t know if the owner has vaccinated the dog or not; why then should I expose myself?”

    She declares that even the average dog keeper or breeder in Nigeria rarely takes the effort to vaccinate their dogs as and when due, thereby underlining the danger in those who have nobody to care for them. As a Vet doctor and from her privileged position as wife of the president of a state chapter of the Vet doctors’ association, Dr. Alao should know.

    To make matters worse, Dr. Alao also discloses that she has met several dog-keeping Nigerians, most of whom are educated, who always counter that they cannot spend a whopping N3,000 on vaccinating a dog, rationalising rather foolishly that “How much do we ourselves spend on Paracetamol?”

    But the Vet doctor says the danger of an unvaccinated dog is lethal and the danger of the rabies virus cannot be compared with the meagre N3,000 required to vaccinate a dog and keep it safe. “There is a very big danger in an unvaccinated dog bite. You can be infected with rabies and the implication is death, because it’s a viral infection. The only thing that can stop it is a timely intervention.”

    Worse still, she says the most vulnerable demography to deaths from rabies are children, because when they are bitten by dogs, “they hardly ever tell their parents when they get bitten by dogs” because of fear of being scolded. In the process, they also lose that vital moment, when their parents could have taken them out for that vital intervention treatment.

    According to Global Alliance for Rabies Control (GARC), a global body founded in the USA and largely behind the instituting of September 28 as World Rabies Day since 2007, and whose vision is a world free of human rabies, over 55,000 people die every year of rabies, 99% of them from the world’s poorest communities, where the people care least for vaccination or where the economic deprivation is so harsh that such exigencies can only rank at the lowest rung on their scale of preference.

    In Nigeria, even though the dangers of rabies resulting from dog bites (canine rabies) is well known, with virtually all the major tribes having well-known local names for it such as: digbolugi in Yoruba,  ciwon kare, (Hausa), ginnaji, (Fulani), ebua idat (Efik) and arankita (Igbo), control measures are still grossly underdeveloped, leading to its increasing spread and avoidable deaths.

    GARC is, however, of the opinion that a little, deliberate effort the world over, by governments and individuals through awareness, empowerment, access to accurate knowledge about the disease, an understanding that teasing or provoking animals like dogs can be dangerous and (most importantly) timely access to adequate treatment in the event of exposure to the virus could go a long way in successfully ridding our world of this preventable disease.

    Lion Dogs: From biting to eating

    The big question many in Nigeria have been asking, however, is: What could make a dog ‘progress’ from mere biting to eating a human being alive?

    According to Adeshina Samuel, a dog lover who has been keeping dogs for years and who says he diligently vaccinates and takes care of his dogs, “It could only have been hunger, as the natural dog reaction, even when you provoke it, is to growl, bark at you and bite. If you are fast enough to avoid the teeth, you get some vicious scratches, but not for it to now settle down to have you for lunch like we read in the case of poor Omonigho. So, for me, the owner must have been starving them. Except, of course, if the dogs have gone mad.”

    Alao, however, posits that first and foremost, it is likely that the dog (Jacky) had never seen the boys in that flat and was therefore not familiar with them. Secondly, she says it is absolutely unwise to suddenly bring a fully mature dog that does not know anybody around into the house.

    “I understand that the dog was recently brought into the house fully matured. This is another lesson that I always pass to my clients. Why bring a fully mature dog into the house? It’s just like when you go and buy a fairly used car. The truth is if the car was serving its owner well, he wouldn’t have had any reason to sell it. If you trace the history of that dog to where it was coming from, it is likely that it had become a nuisance in the neighbourhood. It is also possible that it was no longer respecting its owner and by the time a dog attacks its owner, that means it has become extremely dangerous.”

    To kill or not to kill?

    Curiously, the police allegedly called the complainant and father of the victim, asking what to do with the dogs, and threatening to return them to the owner if he did not give them any reply. Should this happen, the dogs will be returned to the same house where they’d wrecked so much havoc; something many consider unthinkable.

    A large section of public opinion is of the view that the police should do away with them, since they have tasted blood and are very likely to want to travel the same route if let loose again. Alao also thinks the best option is to put the dogs to sleep. She recalls that they were told back in Vet school that “once a dog kills a human being, it must sleep that day.”

  • 2014 Commonwealth Games: Boxer wants extra motivation for excellent performance

    2014 Commonwealth Games: Boxer wants extra motivation for excellent performance

    Olajide Fijabi, a national amateur boxing champion, on Wednesday appealed to stakeholders for complete support, to achieve a successful outing at the 2014 Commonwealth Games.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the Commonwealth Games are scheduled to hold from July 23 to August 3 in Glasgow, Scotland.

    Fijabi told NAN in Lagos that with the right cooperation from the federation and the government, the athletes could win accolades for the country at the Games.

    “The government should endeavour to support us, to ensure we perform creditably well. We have been training for a long time. We need that extra push from the authorities because it is not easy to represent the country internationally,’’ he said.

    Fijabi, who won a gold medal in boxing at the last National Sports Festival, said he was determined to make Nigeria proud at the Commonwealth Games.

    “Our coach is also helping us out, and with extra motivation, I know I will do my best to make Nigeria proud,” he said.