Tag: Cross River

  • Cross River community set for showdown with NYSC

    Cross River community set for showdown with NYSC

    All seems set for a showdown between the youths of Ogada community in Obubra Local Government Area of Cross River State and the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), whose orientation camp is located in the community.

    Their grievance is that in the 21 years of existence of the camp within their domain, they have had nothing to show for it in terms of social amenity of employment of their people.

    The youths from the area have therefore given the Federal Government an ultimatum to do something about the situation else there will be a confrontation.

    President of the Ogada Youth Development Association, Mr Obasse Ebenezer, sad, “This must be done before the next call up for orientation to avoid youth confrontation. Our quietness for 21 years in the face of obvious provocation should not be interpreted as weakness.”

    Ebenezer told Niger Delta Report in Calabar, “While we appreciate the Federal Government gesture for citing the NYSC permanent orientation in our community, we wish to categorically state that for the past 21 years of its existence in Ogada, Obubra Local Government Area of Cross River State, we the members of the host community have nothing to show in terms of employment as we cannot boast of a single permanent staff or social amenity.

    “Several appeals in letters from the Ogada community routed through the state to the Director General NYSC Abuja in demanding a quota for employment of our unemployed youths to compensate for the lost land given to the Federal Government without financial consideration fell on deaf ears.

    “In February 2012, the youths the Ogada Community had moved to barricade the road to the camp in protest for marginalization. The then Obubra chairman, Christopher Obasse and the Cross River NYSC Coordinator, Engr Ekereke Ibanga, advised the youths to shun the idea of blocking the road but rate her wait until embargo for employment is lifted. The NYSC state coordinator had earlier promised the youths during a meeting in his office in Calabar following an express demand for our fair share that the scheme will consider members of the host community as officers of the junior cadre as soon as approval is given for employment. He further advised the youths of graduate cadre to apply to the headquarters in Abuja, but none of such applications saw the light of day.

    “It is a sad story upon the lifting of embargo for employment we discovered that employment for junior cadre was concluded without any chance given to the host community. Regrettably some members of the host community who applied for employment in the graduate cadre were all swept under the carpet.

    “As peace loving and law abiding citizens, we the youths in consultation with opinion leaders of Ogada community has resolved that the Federal Government through the CG of NYSC should as a matter of urgency reach an agreement with the community over a certain quota of employments of our youths to compensate for the lost land which was given to the FG willingly by our people without financial consideration.”

    State coordinator of the NYSC, Ekereke Ibangha, said it was not his place to employ people.

    According to him, he had been confronted by the people over the issues when he first took over and he advised that they do a special letter to the headquarters to look into their matter since the camp was in their domain.

    “Most of what the people are demanding is beyond me. All I can say is that we always do the best that we can. When the orientation camp is open the people of the area still benefit as they do business there even though temporarily.”

    “I did a covering letter with the one they sent and they should be hopeful something would come out of it.”

     

  • Cross River closes U. J. Esuene Stadium for renovation

    The Cross River Government on Wednesday said it had closed the 10,000-capacity U.J. Esuene Stadium, Calabar to upgrade facilities for the 19th National Sports Festival.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Cross River will stage the sports fiesta, tagged “Paradise Games’’ in the stadium from November 23 to December 7 this year.

    Mr Patrick Ugbe, the Commissioner for Youths and Sports Development, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Calabar that the government was constructing an Indoor Sports Hall within the stadium complex.

    Ugbe, however, did not disclose how much the government planned to spend on the renovation.

    But a reliable source told NAN that the project was being handled under the “Special Projects Portfolio’’ in the governor’s office.

    The stadium became prominent in the sports circles when in 2013 it hosted virtually all of Nigeria’s qualifiers for the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil.

    It also served as home for the victorious Golden Eagles that won the 2013 FIFA World Cup in the United Arab Emirates on November 8.

    The victory made Nigeria to become the first team ever to win the U-17 World Cup four times, having won the competition in 1985, 1993, and 2007.

  • We’re under pressure to join APC, says Cross River Rep

    The representative of Calabar-South/Akpabuyo/Bakassi in the Federal House of Representatives, Essien Ayi, has urged the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to put its house in order. He said he is under pressure to join the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Speaking with reporters in Calabar, he said: “Well, it is true that, we have had a lot of defections in the house. It is also true that even some others are threatening to go, but all what I will advise my party, which I belong, is that they should sit up, if they don’t sit up, if we assume, if we take things for granted, it may be very difficult for us.

    “Whatever they can do to put the party back in shape and bring everybody together they should try and do it. A lot of us have been under pressure to join these other political parties. ?

    “I happen to be one of those who originally started the party. In Calabar south, we had a forum called Calabar South Forum, we merged with the Cross River Democratic forum led by the former and present governors of the state, which later transformed to the PDP in the state. Even the day that the G34 was inaugurated, I was at the Eagle Square; so I will say that I am one of the founding members of the party and within me, if they happen to allow the party go the way it is going now, it will pain me because I know how we suffered to make the party what it is today.

    “So my advice to the gladiators, because, there are so many gladiators, who are trying to show their power, they say when two elephants fight it is the grass that suffers. They should tread carefully so that they should not destroy our party.”

     

     

     

  • Obioma Imoke as   messenger of hope

    Obioma Imoke as messenger of hope

    It is often said that there are usually two sets of people in this world. Those who will be remembered when they leave this world for the problems they created, and those who will be remembered for the many problems they solved, the solutions they proffered for the myriads of challenges while they lived.

    And as human beings, the world remains the only stage, upon which, either as bad actors, we can only fret our part and get booed out or as good actors, we interpret our roles satisfactorily and get applauded out of the dais while leaving your captive audience roaring for more.

    In other words, the choice is always ours to make, either to be on the villainous or valiant side of history. For many, the latter road has often been the one less travelled or hardly taken at all. For to do so, requires strength of character, moral fibre and an angelic deportment.

    For a few who dare to walk this high road, they are enormously revered, recognised and celebrated, no matter their status or standing in the society. This was what stood out so poignantly on January 3rd, this year, when Her Excellency, Mrs. Obioma Liyel Imoke, the First Lady of Cross River State, made an addition to her years on this earth.

    Opting for an austere and quiet remembrance of that unique date, a handful of friends had converged on the Imokes’ humble abode to honour and celebrate Obioma Liyel Imoke, not just because she was a year older, but, more tellingly, for what she stoutly represents- an answer to a question, a solution to a problem, a silver lining in a horrendously dark tunnel of life and a necessity in the midst of hopeless millions.

    With a band of church choristers on hand to serenade the small gathering of well wishers, it was apparent that this was an occasion for a deep introspection rather than merry making.

    Growing up then as a child in the 60s, Mrs. Obioma Liyel Imoke had begun so early in life to discover the art of charity, care and compassion for the less fortunate around her. Call it her destiny, if you like. Truth is, it was a ministry she discovered on time and decided to run with it. And she has since been running with it.

    The daughter of Nigeria’s first anesthesiologist, Dr. T.I. Eze-Ashi, from Illah in Oshimili Local Government Area of Delta State, Obioma who was born in Lagos in the 60s, had her secondary and university education in Enugu, then Eastern Nigeria. This allowed her a blend of two cultures, western and oriental. The assimilation of these two cultures was to later shape her outlook in her journey through life. So, she learnt, as she was growing up, never to judge human beings from this skewed prism and narrow confines. For her, culture and language may differ, humanity stays the same.

    Given her romance with the Yoruba culture acquired while growing up in Lagos, with a blend of the Igbo way of life through her education in Enugu and culminating, ultimately, in her marriage to Senator Liyel Imoke from Cross River State, Mrs. Imoke can undoubtedly, run away with the epithet of a pan-Nigerian.

    Like the anecdotal elephant which was captured in varied perspectives by the six blind men of Indostan, so is Mrs. Obioma Liyel Imoke. She is different things to different people. To some, she is a friend through whom, radiates uncommon warmth. To her husband, she is as a loving hind and pleasant roe, the wife of his youth who ravishes him with tender loving care. But to a wider spectrum of Cross Riverians, especially widows, the indigent and the abandoned children, she is a total and committed mother, who, like a pullet, must nestle her hatchlings from the harsh and inclement weather. No doubt, the First Lady embodies of all the qualities rolled into one

    A committed crusader for the abandoned and the poor, a woman of charity and compassion, Obioma, while drawing on the art of giving and sharing, a strict diet on which she was delicately weaned as a child, was roused by the plight of children who not only saw their destroyed world in front of them, but children whose world was also rupturing around them, with no one to look up to, none to turn to, as they weathered through the storms and turmoil of their uncharted and uncertain future.

    Even though poverty may have been alien to the First Lady, she nonetheless has an idea of its insidious effect on human psyche. To her, poverty is not just about being hungry, naked and homeless. It is much more about being unwanted, unloved and uncared for. She identifies this as the greatest poverty that can vanquish any human race.

    As a rare gift to Cross Riverians including the vulnerable children, poor women and widows, Obioma Liyel Imoke is widely seen as an incandescent messenger of hope, an advocate of what it means to care and the necessity and joy of sharing the suffering of others.

    Having accepted the ministry of charity as her divine lot, she has continued to play the role of a “mother to the poor,” a symbol of compassion to the homeless, a regenerated hope to the hopeless in Cross River State.

    In fact, as a way of sharing in the core misery of the poorest of the poor and the very vulnerable in the state, she has, through her various mitigating and intervention efforts, rolled out quite a number of programmes and projects in order to make a difference in the lives of street and abandoned children, teenage mothers, widows and rural women, among others.

    For instance, her Destiny Child Centre (DCC) is targeted at not only to rehabilitate street children in Calabar but to make them useful members of the society. Similarly, Mrs. Obioma Liyel Imoke, to the delight of all, birthed the “Mothers Against Child Abandonment” (MACA), to help teenage girls put in the family way, but pushed out by their parents or rejected by the men responsible for their pregnancies, give birth and bring up the baby.

    Under this scheme, teenage mothers go through mentoring process and taught a trade or are encouraged to go back to school upon delivery, while the baby is looked after by the centre and re-united with the mother later.

    In like manner, the First Lady founded the Partnership Opportunities for Women Economic Realisation (POWER). This is one programme she initiated to change the economic status of women, especially those at the grassroots through business incubation centres, microcredit schemes channelled through cooperatives societies; encouragement to farm, sourcing markets for their produce and vocational training.

    There is also what she christens “A State Fit for A Child” [ASFAC]. It is a project aimed at encouraging the youth to realise and maximise their potentials through creative activities besides learning the virtues of patriotism, good citizenship and education. It also prepares beneficiaries for adult life and how to make the best of it.

    Another programme she enunciated is “Giving Life Opportunities to Widows” (GLOW). Through this strategy, widows in the state are identified, their challenges ascertained and addressed through financial and moral assistance. They are also taught vocational skills to become self reliant.

    Also from the stable of Mrs. Imoke is Breath of Life. This seeks to promote community targeted approach to preventing and controlling the scourge of pneumonia in Cross River State, with the target group as children.

    These intervention programmes are all dear to the First Lady’s heart because they affect lives in various ways.

    But as her humanity began to resonate in the state, media attention riveted to her and before long, the world began to turn its eyes towards Mrs. Liyel Imoke and her sterling work. In recognition of the template she has set, numerous awards began to tumble in. For instance, the Miss Africa USA pageant Organisation bestowed on her the Community Empowerment Award for her relentless efforts in uplifting and empowering women and young girls in Cross River State. Her charity drew the attention of the Pageant, both of whom share similar goals and values.

    Sometime last year, she was invited by the United Nations Secretary-General, Ban Ki Moon, to participate in a United Nations conference on education and was also appointed Education Ambassador by Mrs. Gordon Brown, wife of the former British Prime Minister. Her appointment as Education Ambassador was based on her role in ensuring that Cross River State children have unfettered access to education; for taking vulnerable children into resettlement homes and ensuring that each and every child was given equal opportunity to go back to school.

    As she marked her scaled-down birthday penultimate week, with a coterie of her well wishers, Mrs Obioma Liyel Imoke did so with her heart going out to about 300 children at the Destiny Child Centre, with whom she and her entire family spent their Christmas.

    Linus Obogo is the Personal Assistant to Governor Liyel Imoke on Research and Documentation.

  • Customs seizes N73m smuggled rice in Cross River

    Customs seizes N73m smuggled rice in Cross River

    Men of the Nigeria Customs Service in Cross River State in collaboration with other security agencies at the weekend seized 7, 623 smuggled bags of rice at the Ikang Beach in Bakassi local government area.

    The rice is suspected to have come from Cameroon.

    Area Controller, Bamidele Akande, said in Calabar yesterday that the duty paid value of the seized rice was N72, 634, 565. 20.

    Akande who is in charge of Akwa Ibom, Cross River and the Calabar Free Trade Zone Command, however said no arrests were made.

    He said his men successfully carried out the operation at Ikang having monitored the situation for about week on intelligence report.

    He said no casualties were recorded as not even a single shot was fired in the operation.

    He said he had to get the Navy, the Army, Department of State Services, the Police, and Civil Defence Corps to form a coalition to handle the situation at the weekend.

    He said the smuggled rice came in a boat which also had armed men but due to the overwhelming force of their joint team, were subdued.

    However none of them were arrested.

    He said investigations would begin immediately to get those who were behind the illegal business.

    If anyone was found culpable, he said such would be prosecuted before the seized goods would be disposed of following the court’s order.

    “You can imagine the danger this would have caused the economy if it had entered the market. We would continue to discharge our duties to the best of our abilities to stamp out illegalities and also protect the genuine importers. This is a hard lesson to the smugglers,” he said.

    Akande said they surpassed their target of N6.1 billion to generate N9.7 billion in 2013.

  • CALFEST: 2face, Davido, Iyanya others excite

    CALFEST: 2face, Davido, Iyanya others excite

    One would have thought that following the boisterous carnival activities of last Friday, the tempo of fanfare would subside.

    But Calabar, the ancient city of Cross River State, rose again, with renewed vigour, featuring top Nigerian artistes in a post- Calabar carnival concert.

    2face Idibia, Iyanya, Davido and Sound Sultan were an irresistible lineup for revelers, who thronged the main bowl of the U.J Esuene Stadium on Saturday night.

    Tagged “Calabar Rocks”, the 16,000 capacity stadium, at 8.00p.m., was literally bursting at the seams, as hordes of spectators got thrilled by the best of Nigeria’s musical gladiators.

    After what seemed like an endless wait by the music buffs, whose appetite had been whet by local acts, the crowd suddenly went haywire with the appearance of Sound. The act stood the most unwilling from their seat.

    If anyone thought the crowd was jaded by fatigue of the previous day jamz and the gyration on display on this sweaty Saturday night by the old, the young men and women offered no such hint.

    Nato C dished out some of his rap tunes much to the excitement of the music throngs who wound and wriggled while the act did his thing.

    The stadium erupted in ecstasy when the ‘Skelewu’ and ‘Omo Baba Lowo’ crooner, Davido, mounted the stage and got the crowd crooning and yelling along to his rave tunes. It was a moment they sure would live to remember in a long while to come.

    In what could be regarded as home-coming, it was the turn of Iyanya who was given a hero’s welcome by the crowd as he took to the stage.

    With his ‘Kukere’ and ‘Your Waist’ anthems, the singer, expectedly, wowed the crowd into a wild moment, singing and dancing to his native ‘Etighi’ dance steps.

    And then it was the turn of 2face to thrill the crowd. Tunes after tunes, the Nigerian multi-award winning music sensation got the crowd rocking back and forth, as the night wore on into the early hours of Sunday.

    It was not just a night of music alone, one of Nigeria’s finest comedians, Julius Agwu, thrilled the crowd with his rib-cracking jokes.

    It was obvious the fun- seekers wished the show didn’t end.

  • Imoke’s wife empowers widows in Cross River

    Imoke’s wife empowers widows in Cross River

    Majority of the widows in Cross River State are now fully empowered to be self-reliant, thanks to the First Lady, Mrs. Obioma Liyel-Imoke.

    The Nation can authoritatively report that the empowerment is manifested in the building of skills set for these women in marketing and distribution of Forever Living Products (FLP) range of health enhancing products.

    Confirming this development, Mrs. Imoke said FLP is a source of empowerment for those who are seeking employment and a guaranteed source of income, even when it is time for them to retire.

    According to the Cross River State First Lady, “Forever products are not sold in pharmacies, chemists or department stores; therefore these widows are registered into the FLP network and have become effective distributors and marketers of the products in the state.

    “There are no limitations or barriers for anyone who wants to succeed in the business of Forever Living Products distributorship; the network stands out among other marketing networks in the world and I recommend it to everyone,” she said.

    Mrs. Imoke was speaking at the serene Monty Suites, Calabar, as thousands of distributors gathered in a splendid end-of-year celebration of FLP family, to review performance for the year and strategise for 2014.

    FLP management had listened to Mrs. Glory Cobham, wife of Cross River State Deputy Governor, who, in Enugu, recently, solicited that her state hosts another FLP Success Showcase this year. Everyone in the distribution and marketing chain from across the country had come for the occasion, from fresh distributors to diamond managers, all mixing freely with governor and deputy governors’ wives, because, according to a source, “everyone is somebody in the FLP Family.”

    An elated FLP Managing Director, Nigeria/Benin Republic, Mr. Cornelius Tay, took distributors through the path under which they could build a profitable career in the marketing of what he called Aloe powered products.

    “We have established a leadership position in natural health products marketing and our responsibility is to retain our market leadership,” he said, adding that the only way to retain the leadership position attained by Forever in Nigeria was to become more aggressive in reaching more people.

    “We have to continue the good work of growing the multi-level marketing business in Nigeria and when we do that, we are sure our market share will increase and our distributors will benefit from more bonus incomes and more incentives.”

    Responding to what he called ‘the seven questions that demand answers from everyone in the world today’, Tay queried: “How can I be a healthier person? How can I generate more income? How can I be self reliant? How can I be more self-confident? How can I provide for my family? And how can I become more beautiful?”

    These questions, Tay said, have become more relevant in the 21st century because every man must be interested in what affects his family and the answers to these questions affect virtually every family.

    Reacting to the questions, Tay provided figures from the United States of America, UK and many countries that showed most deaths in the civilised society were occasioned by obesity and poor living habits.

    “We must aim at getting to the maximum life span that we can attain and this starts with healthy living”, he told the large audience of distributors, guests and media.

    According to the FLP Nigeria/Benin Country Manager, in all the uncertainties that pervade the world today, everyone had the capacity to create opportunities that could take them away from depending on others and live in an environment where they could be strong enough to provide adequately for their family.

    “The family unit is being threatened today by inadequate income and government has reached a point where it practically cannot cater for everyone. Therefore, anyone depending on another is simply adding his problem to other people.”

    He said the answer to economic difficulties and uncertainty in the world is therefore to engage in a profitable venture, which is to build a career in multi-level marketing which Forever Living Products offers over 12 million people globally today.

    Dr. (Mrs.) Ihort Achu, who started marketing Forever Living Products in 2002, and had earlier been recognised and decorated as Diamond Manager, one of the highest positions in the FLP marketing plan, gave testimonies on how after attaining several academic degrees she still did not find satisfaction or adequate revenue to cater for her family until she joined the FLP marketing.

    “I am giving a rundown of my several academic degrees because even they could not put enough money in my pocket, but today, thanks to FLP, in addition to making me travel around the world, Forever is putting enough money in my pocket.”

  • Imoke swears in  council chairmen

    Imoke swears in council chairmen

    Cross River State Governor Liyel Imoke has urged the newly sworn in local government chairmen to leave a legacy of transparent leadership.

    Speaking when swearing in 17 of the 18 council chairmen and their deputies, Imoke said as pilots of the affairs of their local governments, their responsibilities are important.

    Said he: “In the exercise of our responsibilities as public officials, these new chairmen have taken another step towards strengthening our efforts of building a democracy, which aims to enshrine and ensure the continuous socio-economic and political transformation of Cross River State.”

  • Cross River restates commitment to empower rural communities

    The General Manager of Cross River Community and Social Development Agency (CRSCSDA) Mr. Victor Ovat, has said the government has voted over N1 billion for the implementation of the Community and Social Development Project (CSDP) for next year.

    The project, which is a partnership among the World Bank, Federal Government and Cross River State governments, is designed to support empowerment of rural communities to develop, implement and monitor micro-social infrastructural projects; including natural resource management interventions in their communities.

    He also said the project which was supposed to be wound up this year by the World Bank had been extended to 2014.

    Ovat further said the state government had declared its intention to continue supporting the programme even if the World Bank eventually pulls out.

    “The governor has pledged that with or without World Bank funding, the project would continue. The Cross River State government has voted N1. 015billion for CSDP so that, with this, we can sustain the tempo of activities already started by the project.

    “Beyond that the World Bank has given an extension for the project by one year. We are expecting more money from the World Bank to support what we are doing,” he said.

    Ovat, who spoke during a training capacity workshop for beneficiaries of the project in the state in Calabar, lamented the poor culture of sustainability of projects in the country.

    His words: “We discover that we do not have a culture in Nigeria and Africa to look at projects post-completion. We look at projects only from the points of conception. So, once a project has been completed in terms of construction, we forget it. Nobody does anything about it. The effect is that, over time, we keep losing what we have done and keep looking for money to do new things. That is not a good way of going about life.

    “The developed world does not continuously replace but they always add to what they have because they have developed a culture wherein they try to manage to sustain what they have; such that the resources they have would be used to maintain and create additional infrastructure. But we have a culture of abandoning and doing new ones whether or not we have the resources.

    ”So, coming from this background, we want to drive this process that would bring about a change where people would now see or look beyond the completion stage of projects to after-completion. To do this, we know we need to engage the different stakeholders, create awareness and build their capacity. We want communities to set up committees that would manage their projects after completion. So, even after 10 to 20 years, the people would still be benefitting from it.”

  • Outrage in Cross River community over missing health worker

    Outrage in Cross River community over missing health worker

    There is outrage in Obanliku Local Government of Cross River State following the perceived reluctance of relevant authorities to follow up the disappearance of a health worker Mrs Helen Ilonge, from the area since September last year.

    Until her disappearance, the 48-year-old widow was the Coordinator of the Primary Health Care in neighbouring Bekwarra Local Government in the state and was said to be an outstanding worker who oversaw a zero mother/child mortality rate.

    For her five children life seems to have lost meaning and they believe their mother did not deserve what she got.

    Life for the children, who lost their father in 2000, has been traumatic and members of the Obanliku community feel more could be done about the situation in terms of following up the matter and making sure all culprits are brought to book as well as cater for the welfare of her children, given her excellent performance while she was working.

    A youth leader of Obanliku, Williams Alelele, said they would express their grievance at the Mountain Race which holds in the area to show the world the pains the community was feeling over the matter, especially the woman’s children.

    He said, “Mrs Ilonge got missing on her way to Obanliku from Bekwarra. We once demonstrated and they caught some people regarding the case but at the end of the day nothing has happened. We have not even heard anything about the case. The children are suffering. Nothing is going on. We feel that we would carry out a peaceful demonstration to make government do something about it. Even if she is not here, she left some other people to take care of. So we want to carry placards and do something at the mountain race as it is a world event so that the whole world will see it.”

    Eldest daughter of the missing woman, Mishael, regretted that it was at about the time her mother was to be sent abroad for further training that the unfortunate incident occurred, hinting of possibly foul play especially given that her mother was the source of envy to many people in Bekwarra due to the accolades she got for her performance at work.

    Twenty five-year old Mishael, a graduate of Banking and Finance from the University of Calabar recounted: “My mummy was abducted on September 23, last year between Ogoja/Bekwarra are. She was coming from a church programme. We tried her number through 24th her number did not go through. On 25th, a Tuesday, her number connected and it was someone else who picked it and demanded for money. The person demanded for N50,000 ransom sent through recharge cards – N25, 000 Glo and N25, 000 MTN.

    “We quickly did that and then, the person said he was quickly going to sell the cards and then release my mum. The person said they were at Ishi Eke, behind Ebonyi State University. So we quickly did that and the person promised he was going to release our mother as soon as he confirmed the recharge cards. The person switched off the phone. We did not hear from the person again throughout that day until the next morning when the number connected again and it was another person that picked and was requesting to speak to one Jombo. That one was not even patient. At least the person the previous day was patient enough to ask us to send something. The second day the person was very unfriendly. My mum is being kept somewhere and the police are not doing enough. I don’t understand. I am strongly convinced my mother is alive.

    “My mother is a God-fearing person and I know in her wildest imagination she would not believe that someone would mete out this kind of punishment to her. My mummy travelled with her handbag and travelling bag and she and my pastor’s wife where together at the convention. My pastor’s wife said she bought books and a lot of gospel CDs and an umbrella that Jesus boldly written on it. The title of one of the books she bought was Girls of Destiny. None of these has been seen. No evidence to show.”

    Mishael said she heard her mother shouting in the background for a door to be opened while one of abductors, who was later found out to be Ifeanyi, called her to get the recharge cards.

    “She was supposed to be sponsored abroad by the government for training because of her enviable record. So I think that is where this problem starts from – people who envied her. She was supposed to be abroad but now they have destabilized everything because they don’t want her to go anywhere. Some people have been boasting they will use their connection to frustrate this case and they will do my mother anything that she does not have people to fight for her. This matter cannot just be pushed away. We have spent money but keep making no headway. Why? The government should please help us,” she cried.

    What irks the mind of Mishael and her siblings even more now is the seeming complacence of relevant authorities in pursuing the matter.

    Ifeanyi and others were arrested and have been facing trial since. But they are aggrieved that one of the main suspects, a supervisor for health in the area, has never appeared in court for one day.

    “The number one suspect recommended by the Department of Public Prosecution (DPP) has never appeared in court and he keeps dodging. Is it that he is bigger than the law? This is eating us up and the government is not doing anything. Maybe because we are not connected or politicians or maybe because the woman is a widow. They have just left us to be fighting our own cause like that on all fronts.”

    Life has not been easy for Mishael, who shoulders the responsibility of looking after her younger ones, and her siblings.

    She says: “It has not been easy but we thank God for His grace and strength. My mother brought us up to know that in times like this, all our hope is God. The father to the d to fatherless and the God of the widows would not let us see shame. We have been praying and fasting. We have had sleepless nights.

    “I was about to turn 12 when we lost our father in 2000. She was still young. She could have married anybody if she wanted to but she did not want to. Instead she married her children. She lived and sweated for us. She lived in debt, borrowed to see us through school. That is why she has been so hard working, because of her children.

    “If they are saying they killed her, they should produce her body. Even if they have killed her she should be buried properly. They stopped her salary and they have forgotten about us. She was a government official and a very active civil servant. She was very productive in fighting so many diseases and she achieved a lot.

    “The Mountain race would not hold if the government does not intervene. You don’t know whether she is alive or dead. What are we living for? This woman has suffered for us and now we don’t even know where she is.”