Tag: daughter

  • Wole  Oladiyun’s daughter  set for altar

    Wole Oladiyun’s daughter set for altar

    The General Overseer of Christ Livingspring Apostolic Ministry (CLAM), Pastor Wole Oladiyun, must no doubt have derived immense spiritual satisfaction in the church’s annual solution night which took place a few days ago. But the real reason for his jubilant mood at the moment is the fact that he is about to be made a proud father. His daughter, Ayomide Oladiyun, is set for marriage.

    The 24-year-old amiable young girl attended Dansol High School before proceeding to Covenant University, Ota, Ogun State. Ayomide is a perfect blend of beauty and brain. She also bagged a master’s degree from Coventry University in the United Kingdom in 2013. She is currently the CE0 of Mimi Cakes, a highly patronised confectionery outfit located at Omole Phase One, Lagos.

    The beautiful look-alike of her adorable mother is set to wed in December and plans are in top gear to ensure it turns out a grand ceremony. Already, invitation cards have been sent out by the two families of Pastor Wole Oladiyun and Pastor Ayodeji Oke. The wedding ceremony will take place at CLAM church on Saturday 26th December, 2015 with a grand reception afterwards at CLAM Event Centre, Omole Phase 1, Lagos.

    The groom, Olumayowa Adeoto Oke, is a minister of the gospel and the General Overseer of Open Heavens Church in Dallas, Texas, USA.

  • Ayade fetes Mother and Daughter Pageant contestants

    Ayade fetes Mother and Daughter Pageant contestants

    The Cross River State Governor, Ben Ayade, last weekend doled out the sum of one million naira on each of the 11 families that contested at the maiden edition of Silverbird’s Mother and Daughter Pageant.

    According to reports, the pageant, held at the Cross River International Conference Centre, Calabar, involved 11 teams, each made up of a mother and daughter.

    Extolling the qualities of the family, Ayade said that a contest which celebrates family values should have no loser, as it will affect the confidence children have in their mothers. He described the pageant as a ‘life touching’ show.

    He said; “An event like this shows that culture has not departed from us. Anything involving mothers make me very emotional, because I remember the struggles of my mother while I was growing up and how her sickness started when we were becoming successful.

    “This event should have been for the mother and her son, because sons feel very strongly for their mothers more than daughters.

    “If I had one wish in this world, it will be that mothers die no more, and I will give an arm and a leg just to see my mother again and for her to see me as a governor today.”

    Results of the first edition of the Mother and Daughter Pageant were decided exclusively from the online votes of viewers.

    The team of Mrs Angela Nwangwa and her daughter, Gift, emerged winners of the pageant. Apart from the governor’s largesse, they also got N2 million cash and a family trip to Dubai as overall winner of the contest. The duo of Mrs Omo Alake and her daughter, Ife, emerged the first runner-up, while Mrs Thelma Ukpai and her daughter, Mercy, were the second runner-up.

    Apart from emerging winners, the Nwangwa team was also awarded the Most Innovative Mother and Daughter. Team Six was adjudged the Most Creative Mother and Daughter while Team 10 had the Best Outfit.

    Team 11 got the Most Photogenic Mother and Daughter, while Team Four won the prize for Special Relationship and Bond.

    In his remarks, the Vice President, Silverbird Group, Guy Murray-Bruce, said that the theme of the pageant was Circle of Life and it was to celebrate family qualities.

  • Babatunde Okewale gives daughter befitting wedding

    Babatunde Okewale gives daughter befitting wedding

    The love between a father and his daughter is not one bounded by time. Immediately his daughter informed him of her engagement, Babatunde Okewale envisioned her walking down the aisle in a high-octane wedding and spent every dime he thought necessary to make her wedding a special one.

    Now, not even the grandest of rhymes can correctly paint the picture of the high-octane wedding of Okewale’s daughter, Oladuni Okewale. It was indeed a remarkable scene that confronted guests at the fairy tale wedding the Chief Medical Director of St. Ives Hospital and Chairman W-FM Radio hosted in honour of his daughter, Oladunni.

    In a spectacular funfest, Dr. Okewale treated Oladuni and her groom, Babatunde Adetoba, to a top society wedding in Lagos last Saturday. The wedding ceremony, no doubt, will be remembered as one of the most memorable in the city of Lagos and within the circuits of Nigeria’s high society.

    The engagement ceremony was held penultimate Thursday at Sheraton Hotel, Ikeja, while the wedding proper held two days later at Dorothy Ikoku Memorial Anglican Church, Ladoke Akintola Street, GRA, Ikeja. The reception held immediately after at The Haven Events Centre, off Oba Akinjobi Street, GRA Ikeja, Lagos.

    Akin Tofowomo-led Suga Band was on stage to entertain guests at the well attended event.

  • Stray bullets kill mum, daughter

    Stray bullets kill mum, daughter

    •Robbers raid two banks in Lagos
    •Fleeing bandits drop N27m cash

    They were in their home, minding their business. Unknown to mother and daughter, there was terror on the street outside.

    Robbers laid siege close to their house in Festac Town, Lagos, shooting indiscriminately from a machine gun reportedly mounted at 23 Road Junction.

    It was like a movie scene  as they shot their way into two banks, carting away millions of naira. Their stray bullets hit mother and daughter at Block 8, 23 Road House, killing the child instantly. The mother reportedly died an hour later because help came late.

    Eyewitnesses said some of the robbers wore hoods; others were in military camouflage.

    Mrs. Jane Beluchukwu-Ndirika, a nurse and her 14-month-old daughter Nmesoma, were inside their two-bedroom apartment on the top floor of their three-storey building when the bullets pierced through the door and hit them.

    The late Mrs. Beluchukwu-Ndirika was a nurse at the Igando General Hospital in Lagos.

    Area E Commander of the Lagos Police Mr. Frank Mba whose jurisdiction covers Festac and environs, visited the house and confirmed that mother and daughter had died.

    Yesterday’s killings followed Monday’s killing of the Managing Director of the Lekki Free Trade Zone by some members of the community. 17 people were yesterday arraigned for the killing.

    The late Mrs. Beluchukwu-Ndirika’s friend, simply identified as Uche yesterday narrated in tears, how mother and child died.

    She said: “My friend could not get help almost an hour after she was shot, because the robbers were still on shooting spree.

    “It was terrible. They took their time. I cannot even explain, I do not know what to say. But I can tell you that my best friend and sister was soaked in blood and in pains for about one hour.

    “I do not live in Festac but I came to visit her and was about to leave this morning (yesterday). We have already put my bag outside and I was playing with her son.

    “Suddenly, we started hearing gunshots, it was scary, I have never heard anything like that. We peeped and saw people in army camouflage and some in suit. They took their time, and were shooting non-stop.

    “The bullets were just sounding from different directions. So, we hid at the back of the door. But the baby started crying and Jane went into the room and carried her.

    “The next thing I saw was something that moved like fire and in a very fast speed. The next thing I heard was Jane screaming.

    “She called out for help, by that time she had managed to put the baby on the bed in the room. She was becoming weak and going down, so I tried to hold her but could not.

    “So, I took one of her children’s clothes and tried to stop the blood flow, that was when I saw a hole on her chest. I was shouting for help but no one could come out because the armed robbers were still there.

    “I called her neighbours, who called the police but even the police did not come. The armed robbers were there for about one hour after shooting. My friend was soaked in blood. The baby’s blood also soaked the bed.

    “I watched my friend die and I could not do much to help her. Please do not even talk about police because they did not come out.

    “The armed robbers took their time; they were loading bullets into their guns and were shooting and discussing among themselves.

    “From this room, we heard them shouting and telling their colleagues to come out first; it looks like they were just enjoying themselves without interruption,” she said.

    Corroborating Uche’s story, one Mr. John Irabor, a neighbour to the deceased said stray bullets entered two other flats in the buiding.

    He told The Nation that Mrs. Beluchukwu-Ndirika was already dead by the time they took her to the hospital.

    “We took her to the hospital in my car. The truth is by the time I got into her apartment after the robbers left, she was already dead.

    “They mounted their machine gun just by the junction here. They were shooting repeatedly. I am very disappointed with the police because I personnaly called them. I called the Area Commander and I also called the state command’s Public Relations Officer, who assured me they were on their way.

    “Unfortunately, the police did not show up until the robbers had fled.

    “So, I came into the apartment and alerted other neighbours; we quickly took her to a hospital on 321 road (C close), but they refused to take her in and said she no longer had the pulse.

    “They told us to take her to a general hospital and we quickly rushed to the hospital at First Gate, where they issued her death certificate. We took her to The Lord’s Chosen, where her husband is a Pastor and after some time, we took her to Igando General Hospital, where she worked as a nurse.

    “She was confirmed dead at three hospitals. The baby also died. It was my son who carried the baby on a bike and rushed her to the hospital but by that time she had passed on too,” he said.

    The baby’s remains were wrapped and kept inside the room at the time of our reporter’s visit to the house yesterday. Neighbours and church members thronged the deceased’s residence.

    It was also learnt that a security man at one of the banks raided and another resident were hit by stray bullets.

    While the resident, who was in a compound, adjacent to that of the Ndirikas, was said to have had one of his fingers chopped off by stray bullet, it could not be ascertained where the bullet hit the bank guard.

     

  • How I won the heart of Oba of Benin’s daughter-86-yr-old ex-Science and Tech Minister Emovon

    How I won the heart of Oba of Benin’s daughter-86-yr-old ex-Science and Tech Minister Emovon

    Prof. Emmanuel Emovon was the Minister of Science and Technology during the General Ibrahim Babangida-led military administration. He is also a former Vice Chancellor of the University of Jos. He recently clocked 86 years and wrote a book about his life and the things that shaped his decisions. In this interview with OSAGIE OTABOR, Prof. Emovon, whose wife is Prof Adesuwa Emovon, daughter of Oba Akenzua II, reveals the secrets behind the success of his 57-year-old marriage and explains why he wrote a book to coincide with his 86th birthday. Excerpts: 

    Why did you choose to write a book about your life at 86?

    I have lived in this country for 86 years. I have made some contributions to the development of this country, no matter how modest it is. I didn’t want to close my eyes without those contributions made known to the public. I then decided to write this book. It has come at the late age. I wanted it to encompass everything that I stood for; every contribution I made to this country and my children in particular. Although some of them grew up with me, they may not have known all that I knew. So it will be a monument to them.

    I stood for some qualities: humility, hard work and honesty. Those are qualities you lack these days. I also stood for discipline, lack of which is the bane of our society today. There is no discipline. Anybody who reads will discern those qualities.

    How did you make out time to write the book?

    I retired from active service some years ago. Rather than sit back and watch events, I thought I could put what I did on paper, because a number of my friends told me to write something so that people will make reference.

    How long have you been married to your wife?

    We have been married since September 6, 1959. That is almost 57 years. We have been living together all these years. She is probably the only one that knows everything about me. Writing that book will fill the gaps in their knowledge of me.

    Were you not scared when you approached the daughter of a monarch for marriage?

    I had the courage to brace it because I was associated with a number of people from the palace and also attended the school where some of the daughters of the Oba attended. One started nursing ideas at that moment.

    What did you tell her that made her to accept you?

    It was not a question of sitting down and praising myself. Her brothers were friendly with me and they would have told her who I was. I broke the idea after walking round the family, ensuring that I would not have any opposition—the Oba, the queen, the brothers all said they would be happy. I was someone who had good character, which I thought was a recommendation for me. I was also promising because I was in the university.

    What is the secret of spending so many years as a married couple?

    There is no secret. What you need for any marriage to succeed is mutual confidence. Your wife must know your thinking just as you know hers. We must be honest with ourselves and, above all, there should be love. It was love that brought us together, and then we worked hard to sustain it. Both of us contributed to make the love blossom.

    People think princesses are bossy. What qualities of your wife swept your feet?

    That was the attraction to her. She was a humble person. She was not haughty and would not go out to announce that she is a princess. She was humble and firm.

    How do you feel being a son in-law to the Oba of Benin?

    I feel great.

    What pushed you to study Chemistry?

    I started out by wanting to become a medical doctor. I did the entrance examination to the University College and passed, but there was no scholarship to study Medicine. The Benin Native Authority called BNA, which encompasses seven local government areas today, advertised for people to be sponsored in the university. I was so sponsored but on condition that I did science and not medicine. I then had no choice but to do science. My choice of Chemistry was after my intermediate examination. I did so well that I was offered a college scholarship. I decided to study Chemistry.

    Why is there is a dearth of science teachers?

    Having a enough science teachers or researchers has been a problem in this country. A solution was suggested some years back that admission into the university should have 60 per cent science and 40 per cent arts and social sciences. A number of people find science difficult, particularly mathematics, physics and chemistry. Biology is made up of things we can see, but subjects like physics and chemistry look abstract. You don’t see them as you see plants and animals. That is why there is a dearth of science teachers. Only a few of them get to read science in the university.

    Since I wanted to study medicine and I diverted into the sciences, there was a disparity in the question of remuneration for social science teachers. Teachers were not well paid. They were looked down upon for a long time in this country. If you studied social science, the sky was the limit. But if you study science, it was said that you would end up in the classroom. Most people gravitated towards the arts and social sciences rather than science. The impression that those subjects are difficult is still there.

    As a former Minister for Science and Technology, what things did you put in place?

    Before I came in, there were two other ministers who were appointed by Shehu Shagari. I was an official of the Science Association of Nigeria and, of course, the Academy of Science. We pressurised the Shagari administration to set up the Ministry of Science to have a voice in the cabinet of his government. He agreed and appointed one Sylvester Ugwu. He was teaching English at Nsukka. After him, there was another person.

    The Buhari coup came and the new administration thought that there was duplication of efforts. He decided to merge education with science and technology and they became one ministry. When Babangida came, he resuscitated the science and technology ministry and I was appointed the minister.

    People were not too enthusiastic about science and technology. They did not see any direct relationship between science and technology and the economy. I did my best to ensure that the public was oriented to adopting science as a way of life and as a basis for economic prosperity. We had a number of structures. Raw Materials Research and Development has a big establishment. There is the pharmaceutical research, the Social Science and Technology complex in Abuja. The Seed Bank also provided safety for seeds. They preserved the seeds of plants that were getting extinct. Those things are still subsisting.

    I reorganised the research institutes to become more oriented towards productivity because we had results. I set up a lot of committees which yielded fruits; like the committee consisting of bankers, industrialists, deans of science and technology in the universities and the institutes themselves.

    What do you think would make science and technology develop?

    We have taken some positive steps to make sure that the sciences are ingrained in this country. Everybody is now aware that science and technology should be the basis for economic development. Places like the Asian Tigers invested in science and technology. That was how they caught up with Europe. One thing that is lacking in us at the moment is the will. With good remuneration, you can get people to carry out research. Some of them are beginning to come back because we have taken a positive step to ensure we get to the right place in 2020.

    How do you spend your time?

    I am a chief of the Benin Palace. I spent my time at the palace, stay at home, do some reading and play some games. During my youthful days, I was a sportsman. Even though my legs are not strong enough, I still play snooker and others.

    You played cricket in your secondary school days. Why do you think the enamel of cricket is yet develop in the country?

    It is unfortunate because cricket is not just a game, it teaches morals. Unfortunately, the equipment for cricket is expensive. In those days, it was only government colleges that played cricket. The mission schools were not interested. They played football but not cricket. In my school, Edo College, we played cricket because we had a big field, which is lacking these days in most schools. When I got to the university, I continued playing cricket. They are trying now in this country to raise a team to compete in the world cricket games, but the effort is concentrated in Lagos.

    What steps do you think should be taken to develop cricket at the grassroots?

    They cannot develop cricket at the grassroots here like they do in the West Indies. Over there, cricket is the alternative to football. You don’t hear about football there. Every person plays cricket in the West Indies. It is an expensive thing and government has not been too willing to fund the game as it should. The balls are expensive.

    Lack of quality education has been the bane of the country’s development. What steps should be taken for us to get to the right place?

    Government should regard education as the bedrock of development. We are still lagging behind in the literacy level. We should be able to invest in education so as to provide the necessary infrastructure, which is in a shambles. Government should concentrate on improving facilities at the universities. Investment is the basis and good monitoring with the money provided. UNESCO has said 25 per cent of national income should be devoted to education. What they release is pittance to what is needed.

    Did you allow your children determine the courses they studied?

    Somehow, I did guide them, but not force them. They have their interest but I still tell them stories of what I wanted to do.

    What lessons did you learn from your father that shaped your personality life?

    The first is discipline. My father was a disciplinarian, so he ensured that we were all disciplined. The second thing is selflessness. He thought us to be generous. My mother always gave people the bean cake she used to fry. Steadfastness, firmness and humility were the things that stand me out.

    You said that you got scholarship from the Benin Native Authority. Why can’t the present day Benin Traditional Council continue same to help indigent students?

    The structure is very different these days. The BNA took overall management of the whole of Benin Division. In those days, we had the Benin Province. We had a lot of forest which yielded money for the BNA, which has been taken over by government and over-exploited by the people through issuance of licenses. These were sources of income and BNA was reputed to be one of the richest in the west of those days until all the changes now occurred. There were only three local government areas in Benin Division.

    Why they cannot do it now is that whatever allocation came to them went through the state government to the local government. How much of that money came to them, I don’t know. The type of council set up also drains money. You have all sorts of departments. The amount they were getting in those days was pittance.

    What is your advice to the younger generation?

    They must adopt the spirit of discipline and hard work. Mountains are not climbed by merely looking at them. Many youths want to get to the top without work. They don’t have patience and honest living. They should be determined. Why did you choose to write a book about your life at 86?

    I have lived in this country for 86 years. I have made some contributions to the development of this country, no matter how modest it is. I didn’t want to close my eyes without those contributions made known to the public. I then decided to write this book. It has come at the late age. I wanted it to encompass everything that I stood for; every contribution I made to this country and my children in particular. Although some of them grew up with me, they may not have known all that I knew. So it will be a monument to them.

    I stood for some qualities: humility, hard work and honesty. Those are qualities you lack these days. I also stood for discipline, lack of which is the bane of our society today. There is no discipline. Anybody who reads will discern those qualities.

    How did you make out time to write the book?

    I retired from active service some years ago. Rather than sit back and watch events, I thought I could put what I did on paper, because a number of my friends told me to write something so that people will make reference.

    How long have you been married to your wife?

    We have been married since September 6, 1959. That is almost 57 years. We have been living together all these years. She is probably the only one that knows everything about me. Writing that book will fill the gaps in their knowledge of me.

    Were you not scared when you approached the daughter of a monarch for marriage?

    I had the courage to brace it because I was associated with a number of people from the palace and also attended the school where some of the daughters of the Oba attended. One started nursing ideas at that moment.

    What did you tell her that made her to accept you?

    It was not a question of sitting down and praising myself. Her brothers were friendly with me and they would have told her who I was. I broke the idea after walking round the family, ensuring that I would not have any opposition—the Oba, the queen, the brothers all said they would be happy. I was someone who had good character, which I thought was a recommendation for me. I was also promising because I was in the university.

    What is the secret of spending so many years as a married couple?

    There is no secret. What you need for any marriage to succeed is mutual confidence. Your wife must know your thinking just as you know hers. We must be honest with ourselves and, above all, there should be love. It was love that brought us together, and then we worked hard to sustain it. Both of us contributed to make the love blossom.

    People think princesses are bossy. What qualities of your wife swept your feet?

    That was the attraction to her. She was a humble person. She was not haughty and would not go out to announce that she is a princess. She was humble and firm.

    How do you feel being a son in-law to the Oba of Benin?

    I feel great.

    What pushed you to study Chemistry?

    I started out by wanting to become a medical doctor. I did the entrance examination to the University College and passed, but there was no scholarship to study Medicine. The Benin Native Authority called BNA, which encompasses seven local government areas today, advertised for people to be sponsored in the university. I was so sponsored but on condition that I did science and not medicine. I then had no choice but to do science. My choice of Chemistry was after my intermediate examination. I did so well that I was offered a college scholarship. I decided to study Chemistry.

    Why is there is a dearth of science teachers?

    Having a enough science teachers or researchers has been a problem in this country. A solution was suggested some years back that admission into the university should have 60 per cent science and 40 per cent arts and social sciences. A number of people find science difficult, particularly mathematics, physics and chemistry. Biology is made up of things we can see, but subjects like physics and chemistry look abstract. You don’t see them as you see plants and animals. That is why there is a dearth of science teachers. Only a few of them get to read science in the university.

    Since I wanted to study medicine and I diverted into the sciences, there was a disparity in the question of remuneration for social science teachers. Teachers were not well paid. They were looked down upon for a long time in this country. If you studied social science, the sky was the limit. But if you study science, it was said that you would end up in the classroom. Most people gravitated towards the arts and social sciences rather than science. The impression that those subjects are difficult is still there.

    As a former Minister for Science and Technology, what things did you put in place?

    Before I came in, there were two other ministers who were appointed by Shehu Shagari. I was an official of the Science Association of Nigeria and, of course, the Academy of Science. We pressurised the Shagari administration to set up the Ministry of Science to have a voice in the cabinet of his government. He agreed and appointed one Sylvester Ugwu. He was teaching English at Nsukka. After him, there was another person.

    The Buhari coup came and the new administration thought that there was duplication of efforts. He decided to merge education with science and technology and they became one ministry. When Babangida came, he resuscitated the science and technology ministry and I was appointed the minister.

    People were not too enthusiastic about science and technology. They did not see any direct relationship between science and technology and the economy. I did my best to ensure that the public was oriented to adopting science as a way of life and as a basis for economic prosperity. We had a number of structures. Raw Materials Research and Development has a big establishment. There is the pharmaceutical research, the Social Science and Technology complex in Abuja. The Seed Bank also provided safety for seeds. They preserved the seeds of plants that were getting extinct. Those things are still subsisting.

    I reorganised the research institutes to become more oriented towards productivity because we had results. I set up a lot of committees which yielded fruits; like the committee consisting of bankers, industrialists, deans of science and technology in the universities and the institutes themselves.

    What do you think would make science and technology develop?

    We have taken some positive steps to make sure that the sciences are ingrained in this country. Everybody is now aware that science and technology should be the basis for economic development. Places like the Asian Tigers invested in science and technology. That was how they caught up with Europe. One thing that is lacking in us at the moment is the will. With good remuneration, you can get people to carry out research. Some of them are beginning to come back because we have taken a positive step to ensure we get to the right place in 2020.

    How do you spend your time?

    I am a chief of the Benin Palace. I spent my time at the palace, stay at home, do some reading and play some games. During my youthful days, I was a sportsman. Even though my legs are not strong enough, I still play snooker and others.

    You played cricket in your secondary school days. Why do you think the enamel of cricket is yet develop in the country?

    It is unfortunate because cricket is not just a game, it teaches morals. Unfortunately, the equipment for cricket is expensive. In those days, it was only government colleges that played cricket. The mission schools were not interested. They played football but not cricket. In my school, Edo College, we played cricket because we had a big field, which is lacking these days in most schools. When I got to the university, I continued playing cricket. They are trying now in this country to raise a team to compete in the world cricket games, but the effort is concentrated in Lagos.

    What steps do you think should be taken to develop cricket at the grassroots?

    They cannot develop cricket at the grassroots here like they do in the West Indies. Over there, cricket is the alternative to football. You don’t hear about football there. Every person plays cricket in the West Indies. It is an expensive thing and government has not been too willing to fund the game as it should. The balls are expensive.

    Lack of quality education has been the bane of the country’s development. What steps should be taken for us to get to the right place?

    Government should regard education as the bedrock of development. We are still lagging behind in the literacy level. We should be able to invest in education so as to provide the necessary infrastructure, which is in a shambles. Government should concentrate on improving facilities at the universities. Investment is the basis and good monitoring with the money provided. UNESCO has said 25 per cent of national income should be devoted to education. What they release is pittance to what is needed.

    Did you allow your children determine the courses they studied?

    Somehow, I did guide them, but not force them. They have their interest but I still tell them stories of what I wanted to do.

    What lessons did you learn from your father that shaped your personality life?

    The first is discipline. My father was a disciplinarian, so he ensured that we were all disciplined. The second thing is selflessness. He thought us to be generous. My mother always gave people the bean cake she used to fry. Steadfastness, firmness and humility were the things that stand me out.

    You said that you got scholarship from the Benin Native Authority. Why can’t the present day Benin Traditional Council continue same to help indigent students?

    The structure is very different these days. The BNA took overall management of the whole of Benin Division. In those days, we had the Benin Province. We had a lot of forest which yielded money for the BNA, which has been taken over by government and over-exploited by the people through issuance of licenses. These were sources of income and BNA was reputed to be one of the richest in the west of those days until all the changes now occurred. There were only three local government areas in Benin Division.

    Why they cannot do it now is that whatever allocation came to them went through the state government to the local government. How much of that money came to them, I don’t know. The type of council set up also drains money. You have all sorts of departments. The amount they were getting in those days was pittance.

    What is your advice to the younger generation?

    They must adopt the spirit of discipline and hard work. Mountains are not climbed by merely looking at them. Many youths want to get to the top without work. They don’t have patience and honest living. They should be determined.

  • Woman, daughter arrested for alleged child trafficking

    The intelligence department of Abia State Police Command has arrested a mother and her 19-year-old daughter for suspected child trafficking.

    The police said both women allegedly sold a baby newly delivered by the younger one.

    A statement signed by the state Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO) Ezekiel Onyeke said, “The arrest of the duo was as a result of intelligence report received by operatives of the department.”

    Onyeke said that the mother whose child was sold was given N10,000 to take care of her immediate needs while part of the money was used to pay for her apprenticeship where she was learning a trade.

    The police said that one Martha Ajuzieogu who operates an illegal maternity home in her residence conspired with a certain welfare officer named Ngozi and one Amarachi, both at large, and others shortly after the delivery to sell the baby.

    Also, the police have foiled a possible clash between rival cult groups Vikings and Ayez at Abia State Polytechnic, Aba.

    Four suspected cultists were arrested while a locally-made pistol from one of the suspects.

    Onyeke said, “Upon information received by the intelligence unit of the police in Aba, Abia State that Vikings and Ayez secret cults were warming up for a clash on 30th September 2015, our men moved in…with the school security outfit.”

    The four suspects were said to have made useful statements to the police.

     

  • Mother, daughter arrested for ‘child trafficking’

    The police in Abia State have arrested a mother and her 19-year-old daughter for suspected child trafficking.

    A statement by the police spokesman Ezekiel Onyeke, said the duo was arrested following a tip off.

    “The arrest of the duo was possible after an intelligence report received by operatives of the intelligence department said Chinasa Chidi delivered sometime in January.

    “Chinasa’s mother, Eziaku Chidi, with the help of Martha Ajuzieogu, who claimed to be a midwife with Lawato Hospital at Osisioma, and Amarachi (now on the run), sold the child for N150,000 to a yet-to-be identified buyer.”

    Onyeke said Chinasa was given N10,000 to cater for her immediate needs while part of the money was used to pay for her apprenticeship.

    Eziaku and Martha told Chinasa that her baby died and the body was thrown into a pit.

    Martha’s husband, Stanley Ajuzieogu said he tried unsuccessfully to stop his wife from the illegal transactions.

    The command also arrested four suspected cultists from the Abia State Polytechnic. A locally-made pistol, with a round of live cartridge, was recovered from them.

  • Help! my daughter is dying

    Help! my daughter is dying

    •Girl needs N3m for heart surgery

    Eight months after her case went public, three-year-old Teniola Bashorun is yet to get the N3million required for her heart surgery in India.

    The girl is diagnosed with a hole in her heart.

    Her father, Kehinde Bashorun, said they have been nursing the ailment for three years and that help is yet to come.

    He also said the sickness has deprived his daughter from schooling and has also stopped her from mingling with her peers in the neighbourhood.

    “We have been taking her for medical check up for the past three years with the little money we got from people. But, the situation became worse two weeks ago when she began to excrete blood. I rushed her to Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH) because I thought I was going to lose her and since then, she has been feeding on drip,” he said.

    The primary school teacher also said he is now a debtor because he has been borrowing money to manage her sickness.

    He said: “So many times, she becomes unconscious. She urinates and excretes uncontrollable on her body. I have been with her since she has been admitted because my wife is nursing a set of twins.

    “I was told that if we don’t act fast, her heart may fail to pump blood,” he said.

    To save Teniola, an account has been opened at Ecobank with number: 2961198124 under the name: Bashorun Felix Kehinde. The Bashoruns can be reached on 08188275717 and 08028561402.

  • ‘My daughter has made me rich

    ‘My daughter has made me rich

    Emmanuella Chire, 10, has made her mother a millionaire. Adetutu Audu reports.

    SOMEWHERE in Jos, Plateau State, a ten-year-old girl has changed the fortune of her family through the Peak Milk ‘Reach for Millions’ promo.

    To 10-year-old Emmanuella, it was like a normal game, but with hope of getting something out of it. Not really for herself, but her dear mother.

    When she saw the advert of the 60th anniversary Peak ‘Reach for Millions’ promo on television, her attention was focused on every tin of peak milk purchased by her mum. Like an addicted habit, she kept sending codes on the tins as directed in the advert.

    She later informed her mother who is an Immigration officer about the promo, but she never took her daughter seriously because she does not believe in promos.

    Emmanuella’s mother, Mrs. Franca Chire told reporters at the prize presentation ceremony that she never believed in promos hinging her reasons on lack of trust on past promos she has come across.

    According to her, “Actually, I never believed in promos, when my daughter told me about Peak ‘reach for millions’ promo, I thought it was one of those fake promos where only families of organizers are always the winners.

    “So, when my ten-year-old daughter, Emmanuella Chire told me that there is a promo concerning Peak milk going on, I waved it aside.”

    Unbelievable luck

    In defiance to her mother’s stance on promos, little Emmanuella who is a JSS 1 student would not relent; she kept sending codes until she got a response.

    A response that soon brought  fortunes to the family, she was informed through a text message that she has just won a million naira in the Peak ‘Reach for Million’ promo!

    As expected of a little girl, she ran to her mother to show her what she’s got on her phone. Mrs. Chire claimed she did not believe what she saw, and had to read and read again.

    “So, when I collected the phone from her and read the message, I read it again and again and still couldn’t figure what’s in the content. I gave the phone back to her and asked her to go and wait for me till I finish what I was doing.

    “So, when I finished what I was I doing, I read the message again and it was clearer. When I started seeing ‘you have just won N1 million in the Peak 60th anniversary ‘Reach for Millions’ promo. Keep your pack to claim your prize…’ and so on.  I started thinking how do I tell my girl this thing is real in spite of my discouragement and all that. So my daughter was right all the while, Peak milk promo is real, my daughter has won N1 million in a promo, one amazing million naira!”  She added joyfully.

    Doubting Mrs. Chire and her ‘golden’ daughter, Emmanuella were full of Joy at the cheque presentation ceremony. She narrated how she discouraged her little daughter and even told her “she was wasting her time and credits.”

    “When my daughter told me that there is a promo going on, I waved it aside. But she would not let me rest; she kept on sending codes on every tin of Peak milk we bought.  In fact, I once told her she was wasting her time and credits but she would not listen.

    “However, we decided to buy more Peak milk, of course we’ve been taking the milk for years even before she was born.  So, I was not buying the brand because of the promo, we bought it for usual consumption.”  Mrs. Chire narrated

    After the cheque presentation, the joyful immigration officer said “it was all like a dream, so my daughter is now a millionaire through Peak amazing million-naira promo.”

    The Jos based Immigration officer however disclosed how what she described as ‘a rare gift’ will be invested in her little girl’s future.

    “Well the money will definitely have positive impact in our lives, there will be a huge relieve in the area of her education and other sundries. Of course our plans with the money are obvious as her education will definitely be on top of our priority and again we will get at least a plot of land and do some other little investments as well.” She explained.

    Mrs. Chire however thanked FrieslandCampina WAMCO, makers of Peak for the laudable promo she claimed she never believed in.

    In her words, “We give glory to God for this marvelous gift from peak and of course we thank the entire Peak family for this rare reward for patronage.”

    Peak ‘Reach for Millions’ promo is part of 60th anniversary celebration of the Peak brand in Nigeria. The promo is targeted towards rewarding consumers for 60 years of loyalty and patronage and also to build brand love with consumers who have been consistently consuming and are willing to consume more of Peak.

  • Driver arraigned for impregnating neighbour’s 16-yr-old daughter

    An Ikeja Magistrate’s Court, yesterday ordered the remand of a 45-year-old driver, Ganiyu Afolabi, for allegedly impregnating a 16-year-old girl.

    Chief Magistrate Tajudeen Elias, ordered that the accused be held in prison custody until September 9, when the court would deliver its ruling on his bail application.

    Prosecuting Sergeant Jimah Iseghede told the court that the accused, who lives at  Ayinde Close, Meiran, a suburb of Lagos, is facing a three-count charge of sexual assault, defilement and attempt to procure abortion.

    Iseghede said the alleged offences were committed sometime in May at the accused residence.

    Iseghede alleged that the accused had called the 16-year-old victim to his room under the pretext of sending her on an errand and defiled her.

    “When the victim told the accused that she had missed her menstrual circle, he procured a drug for her to use but the girl told his mother and the accused was apprehended,” Iseghede said.

    He said the offences contravened Sections 137, 145 and 259 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2011.

    The accused pleaded not guilty.