Tag: DEAD

  • Ex-SGF Saleh dead

    Ex-SGF Saleh dead

    •Saraki, Yuguda mourn

    The former Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) and elder statesman, Aminu Saleh, is dead. He was 87.

    He died at the Federal Medical Centre, Azare in Katagum Local Government Area of Bauchi State yesterday morning after a brief illness.

    A family source, who spoke to The Nation in confidence, said Saleh would be buried on Wednesday (yesterday) evening according to Islamic rites.

    He is survived by one wife, 13 children and several grandchildren.

    Among his children are Sagir, the former deputy governor of Bauchi State and Kabiru, his eldest son, who is an engineer.

    Senate President Abubakar Bukola Saraki yesterday expressed sadness at the demise of Saleh.

    Saraki added that the late Saleh was one public officer, who was very diligent and patriotic in the discharge of his duties to his fatherland.

    He commiserated with the government, family and the people of Bauchi State and prayed the Almighty God to grant him eternal rest.

    Ex-Governor Isa Yuguda described the death of the SGF as a great loss to the country.

     

  • PDP chieftain, 12 others shot dead in Benue

    PDP chieftain, 12 others shot dead in Benue

    Unknown gunmen yesterday shot dead a Peoples Democratic Party ( PDP) chieftain, Chief Atoza Hidan in Katsina Ala, Benue State..

    Also shot dead around Yoyo District in the town were12 other people after an attack the gunmen launched on the settlement. According to an eyewitness Chief Hidan was shot while inspecting a work done at his building near the Federal Low Cost Housing estate in Katsina Ala.

    He was said to have been killed in the presence of his police orderly and his assistant, who were with him at the site of the building project.

    The gunmen were said to have arrived on a motorcycle and immediately opened fire on the Second Republic lawmaker who was sitting under a tree.

    He was said to have been shot in the head by the gunmen who fled immediately, giving him no room to survive.

    The killing of Chief Hidan brought to seven the number of PDP members killed by unknown gunmen in Katsina Ala in recent times.

    The son of the late politician and the immediate past commissioner for commerce and industry, Terfa Hidan, described the death of his father as shocking and unfortunate .

    In a telephone interview with The Nation, the son of the deceased described his father as an easy going man and wondered the motive behind his killing .

    Police spokesman, DSP Austine Ezeala, confirmed the incident, saying that 14 persons had been arrested with armed and ammunition in Makurdi in the last one week .

    He said investigations had commenced to fish out the culprits

  • Ex-FUTA VC, Ilemobade, found dead

    Ex-FUTA VC, Ilemobade, found dead

    •Driver, security guard are suspects

    A week after he was “abducted”, former   Federal University of Technology, Akure (FUTA), Vice-Chancellor, Prof Albert Ilemobade’s body was discovered yesterday in a store in his Ijapo home in Akure, the Ondo State capital.

    The store, a small isolated room outside the main building ,is where cables are kept.

    It was learnt that the former Chairman of the Committee of Vice-Chancellors was “murdered” by his driver, Yemi, and guard Daniel.

    Prof Ilemobade retired from FUTA in 1995 after serving two terms as VC.

    He was almost 80.

    The suspects were arrested in Ogun State while trying to sell the late Ilemobade’s car.

    Sources said they  confessed during interrogation that the Sport Utility Van (SUV) belonged to their boss and that they “murdered” him.

    His decomposing  remains have been taken to the morgue.

    The late Ilemobade, his driver and guard were last Monday declared missing.

    It was initially believed  the former VC was abducted, prompting relatives, church members and friends to pray and call for his release.

    The Vicar-in-charge, Vinning College of Theology, Akure, Dr. Ayodeji Fagbemi, described the death as shocking, saying many thought he was kidnapped.

    He said: “We were together in church on Sunday. It was Father’s Day last Sunday and, as usual, he was very active in our Bible study, making his contribution. During the time of thanksgiving, he danced.

    “On Monday morning, we were called that he was missing. It was a very disturbing development for us. We came here straight away. The police and all of us met at the gate.

    “Right from the front, the gate was padlocked. There was no way anybody could get in. Mama was inside and we were out there. We could only exchange words. Later, we called someone to cut the padlocks.

    “When we entered, we saw his wristwatch just in front of the security post within the compound. We also found that his slippers had been flung to the other side of the road. We noticed that his red car had been taken away.

    “We have since been around, church members, friends and everybody to support them, to encourage Mama.”

    Fagbemi said he sent a text message to his phone number and his children were doing the same to encourage him.

    He said: “It got to a stage that we were all getting agitated, wondering why it was taking time to release him.

    “We were still hoping that with our efforts and prayers and efforts of the security operatives that his abductors would be apprehended and that he would be returned to us.

    “Everyday, our people have been coming here to pray. Even today, we still prayed for him. But I was called to come and see them here. In fact, mama was resting.

    “I was told that he was actually killed. It was a shocking one. I had to go back to the church to disperse the people and tell them the news. While we were thinking that he was taken away, he must have been killed here.”

    A  source in the family said the late Ilemobade might have been killed because he just bought a new vehicle.

    “Papa bought a vehicle recently and since then we have got information that they wanted to steal that vehicle.

    “Earlier in the year, he was trailed by some unknown persons who wanted to snatch his vehicle, but he escaped. I think it was that vehicle that they wanted to sell.

    “I can’t imagine that our gateman was even the brain behind this. Papa took him as his son.”

    The Rector of the Federal Polytechnic, Ile-Oluji and ex-FUTA Deputy Vice Chancellor, Prof Emmanuel Fasakin, said Nigeria had lost a very great scholar.

    Fasakin lamented the manner in which Ilemobade was murdered, stressing that he did not deserve to die  a “cruel death”.

    He said: “Ilemobade was an international scholar. He was an erudite academic.

    “He was two-time FUTA Vice Chancellor and Chairman, Committee of Vice Chancellors. He was the main core of FUTA. The achievements were very tremendous during his tenure.

    “He was recognised all over the world. We’ve lost a very great scholar. For him to have died this kind of death, it is just too wicked, too cruel and too cheap for a man of his status. It is a terrible sin for whoever perpetrated the act,” Fasakin said.

    Commissioner of Police Isaac Eke confirmed the incident.

    He said he had been contacted by the Ogun State Police Command, adding that the two suspects had been arrested and that they would be paraded today.

  • Our nightmares as neighbours to the dead

    Our nightmares as neighbours to the dead

    The checks our correspondent made revealed that some residents had been living in horror as a result of their daily experiences with the cemeteries. Yet, a casual visitor to the area would be alarmed at the seeming equanimity with which the residents, including school children, view the huge number of burials that are done in their neighbourhood every day.

    While mourners wore long faces as they walked slowly in groups of two, three or more, talking in low tones, school children walked past them playfully and without any sense of feeling or concern for the grim atmosphere surrounding them.

    A resident, who pleaded not to be named, expressed surprise when asked whether the huge number of burial activities the residents witness daily, particularly the children, could have an adverse effect.

    “How can the burials have any negative impact on the children?” he retorted. “You saw them playing as they walked past the mourners. This is something they see almost every day. So I don’t think it has any negative impact on them.”

    Yet, there were residents of the street who said their experiences had not been palatable since they moved into the area. Many of them said they had developed a fear for ghosts, commonly referred to as phasmophobia or spectrophobia. Consequently, their thoughts, actions and movements are hinged on the happenings around the cemetery every day.

    Alhaja Siti has lived in the area for more than six years. Her house, a bungalow, is bounded by three cemeteries, one behind the house, another one to the right and the third only a short distance away. The elderly woman believes that most residents of the community live in fear as a result of what they see on a daily basis.

    She said: “It is impossible for one not to be fear-stricken living in this kind of environment. No matter how long you have lived here, you will at one time or the other get traumatised by the large number of cemeteries encircling the area. Only somebody who has lost every sense of human feeling would see what is happening here and still have his emotions intact.

    “For me, the trauma is not about having graves all around the area. It is about the sight of bereaved families who come to bury their dead relations amidst tears, not once or twice every day. On some occasions, some people would just come and dump dead bodies in the cemetery without any attempt to put them inside a grave. Such sights leave one emotionally wrecked and that is what we see and live with everyday.”

    At night, Siti said, the fears of the residents are heightened, especially those with a phobia for ghosts. “It is almost impossible to pass through certain areas of the community at night because you will develop goose pimples as unusual breeze blows you. Presently, we have five cemeteries in the area, but it would have been six if not that the plan to create another one was resisted by the people.

    “This move, though rejected by the people, forced many tenants out of the community because they could not come to terms with how the dead could populate an area that is meant for the living.”

    Another resident, who pleaded anonymity, said: “We want the state government to come and do something about it because it is not good for us. We have our children living with us and all they see here would have a way of affecting their psyche.”

    Although it was afternoon and the sun was shining bright, Kaseem Najium could not veil his fears for ghosts in the area. Tall and dark, Najium’s phobia for ghosts is such that he does not patronise any trader he is not familiar with in the area, especially at night.

    He said: “I don’t buy what I eat or use in the house from people that I don’t know very well. I don’t mind going outside the area to buy whatever I need. If I must buy anything here, it must be from somebody I know intimately.

    “The reason is very simple: we are living in a community surrounded by cemeteries. Some of the corpses could transform to human beings and begin to sell one thing or the other. If you buy something, especially edible products, from such a person, would your life not be in crisis?”

    Najium added: “I have read and heard accounts of dead people that transformed into human beings and go on to engage in business activities until a person who used to know her ran into her. I can bet that all the people that bought and ate what she sold would never be balanced again. I don’t want to be a victim of such and as a result would do everything possible not to fall into that trap.”

    For years, Ganiu Rasheed has operated as an okada (commercial motorcycle) rider in the Morkaz area of Agege. But while he described himself as bold and willing to take risks, he said there was no amount of money that would tempt him to take a passenger to Jafojo area once it is past 7 pm.

    He said: “I won’t take anybody to Jafojo area after 7 pm, no matter the amount you offer me. It is risky and I would not put my life on the line because of money. Everything in life is not about money. When you carry a passenger to that area late in the night, you are likely to be carrying a ghost, and if it happens that the passenger is a ghost, the trip may have unpalatable consequences.

    “We have heard numerous stories like that, but they are not what one can be narrating publicly. If the passenger is not a ghost and you are to carry him or her across the numerous cemeteries in the area at night, you may run into spirits, and if you are not lucky enough, you may not return the way you went there.

    “These and several others are the reasons why many of us would not dare go near the community late in the evening. I have personally been warned against it and would not do otherwise. It is only the stubborn fly that goes to the grave with the corpse.”

    Another resident, who simply identified himself as Adewumi, said, as a bachelor, he finds it difficult wooing ladies in the area because for fear that they might be ghosts parading themselves as human beings. For him and many of his friends, an abiding code of conduct is to stay off strange girls in the neighbourhood, no matter how beautiful they are.

    “I can’t date any lady in this area, no matter how beautiful, because it is an unusual environment. The reason is borne out of the fear of taking a ghost home. We have read and heard of men who wooed and took some women home and later found that they were ghosts. It may sound like a fairy tale, but I have never treated it with kid gloves. Even if I know the lady’s parents or her house, I would not give in to wooing her.

    “I have fears about the cemeteries and as a result, I don’t stay outside the community till late in the night. If for any reason I am outside the community till late in the night, I would pass the night in any of my friends’ house. When you come into the community late at night, your whole being may suffer some psychological crisis.”

    Akpan James did not bargain for what befell him when he went out in search of an apartment. After a fruitless search, the Akwa-Ibom State-born man was overjoyed when the agent told him he had found a good place for him.

    With the fear that he might lose out once again, he quickly paid for the apartment without even bothering to ask about the location. But no sooner was he taken to the house than it dawned on him that his new apartment is surrounded by cemeteries.

    But in sspite of his fears, he has lived in the area for 10 years because he has not been able to raise enough money to rent another apartment.

    He said: “I have been living here for the past 10 years, but I never wanted to stay here in the beginning. It happened that when I was searching for accommodation, the estate agent did not give me any inkling that the building is tucked in the middle of burial grounds. He brought me here through another street and made it appear as if that was the only street leading to the area.

    “It was after I had paid and was planning to move in that I noticed the building is surrounded by cemeteries. Immediately I saw this, I went after the agent to ask for a refund because I felt it would not be psychologically healthy for me and my family to be seeing graves and people coming to bury their deceased friends and relations every time. But all my efforts to have them refund my money failed.

    “All they told me was that I should just manage and live in the house till my rent expired. I heeded their advice because it would not be possible to get the money I paid refunded in full. If they wanted to refund the money, I wouldn’t have got half of what I paid because all the middlemen involved in the business had taken their shares and gone their various ways.

    “I thought I would leave once the rent expired, but I couldn’t because of financial challenges. I have developed thick skin to the cemeteries. I have no fear whatsoever about them. In fact, back in my hometown, I sleep on my late father’s grave because he was buried in my room and I have my bed on his grave, and since I have been sleeping there, I have not had any reasons to be petrified.”

    James’ neighbour, Goodness Samuel, is eager to move out of the area. Her fears, which are often heightened whenever she is pregnant, she said, make her to have nightmares.

    She said: “I can’t wait to move out of this environment. It is horrifying for one to be seeing graves around every minute of the day.

    “My fears about the cemeteries were heightened when I was pregnant. I was scared stiff because I didn’t want to dream about it at night. I always made sure I wiped the thought away from my mind before going to bed so that it would not end up forming what I would dream about at night. One of the steps I took to achieve this was to always take a longer route that has no cemeteries around it. That was what I did all through the time I was pregnant, although it was very strenuous.

    “We are not the only people that are terrified by the cemeteries. Commercial motorcyclists also don’t come here late in the evening. When you ask them to take you to this street, they would refuse, saying that they don’t go to cemeteries. They often refer to us as cemetery tenants and that, to me, is demeaning.

    “I am prepared to move out right now if I have the wherewithal. If my landlord asks me not to pay rent anymore, I will leave if I have the means. Even if he dashes me the whole building, I will not stay. I will only sell it to buy another house elsewhere.

    “I was scared when my family newly moved into this area because I found it strange and unhealthy to live in the middle of cemeteries.”

    But Mohammed Awale, a resident of the community, is not in any way perturbed by the presence of the cemeteries. For him, cemeteries are the last home for all mortals and therefore should not be feared by humans.

    He said: “I have no reason to be afraid of the cemeteries because that is the final home of every one of us. The people in those graves were human beings like us before they transited to the world beyond.

    “I have never encountered any ghosts since I started living here eight years ago. I am a believer and I believe that we all came from Allah and unto Him we shall all return. Guided by this belief, I have no reason to be scared about the cemeteries or hounded by stories being told about ghosts. I don’t believe in all that.”

    Mohammed’s line of thought was shared by Hauwa Sule, a trader. As a business woman, she said she sells to everybody without bothering if they could be ghost.

    She said: “I don’t have any reason to be scared of the cemeteries or the corpses buried there. Why do I have to be scared in the first place? I am here today, tomorrow I may be there with them, and if I am there, I would not have any reasons to be haunting the living. If you look at it from this point of view, you will not have any reason to be worried about the burial grounds and their contents.

    “As a business woman, I also don’t have any reasons to suspect that any customer may be a ghost, as long as he or she is not patronising me from the grave or casket. Since I have been selling goods to people and collecting money from them, none of the notes has told me that it is a ghost’s money.”

    Mohammed Sanni also says he is not disturbed by the happenings in his neighbourhood even though his house is surrounded by cemeteries. This, he said, is based on his religious beliefs.

    “I have no fear of any ghost at all. I have lived here for more than five years now, and I can tell you that I have never had a single encounter with any ghost. Moreover, I am a Muslim, and with that, there is no particular reason for me to say that I fear this or that about the cemeteries,” he said.

    Sanni’s friend and popular comedian, Funky Mallam, laughed away the talk of ghosts harassing the residents. “How can somebody who is dead drive fears into me?” he asked. “That sure is not possible. The cemeteries are home for the dead and we are living. So, we have nothing in common at all.”

    Speaking on the impact that regular burial activities in the area could have on a growing child, a psychologist, Lateefat Odunuga, said it might not be pleasing for a growing child to live around cemeteries.

    She said: “From a psychological standpoint, the emotional and behavioural state of a child living around the cemetery can be signified as miserable with lots of negative symptoms.

    “Some researchers have identified associated psychosocial symptoms such as somatic distress, preoccupation with the image of the dead, sadness, anger, intensified feelings of loneliness, fear, depression, loss of established patterns of conduct. This makes some of these children try hard to read books as the environment in which they reside is extremely quiet.

    “Some developing children are faced with myriads of challenges, such as not having friends around to visit them and inability to mix with other children in the area thus bringing about peer isolation. The social expectations of a child include making friends and learning societal cultural values. This might not be so in the case of children who live around cemeteries.

    “Inferiority complex can be developed amongst these children due to the kind of environment they find themselves. Also, some of these children might not be happy with their parents for bringing them to live in such environment.

    “Children in this category might engage in some disorders that can be threatening due to the frustrations they encounter in living in such environment.”

    Odunuga narrated the experience of a young school boy to drive home her point. The boy named Hassan, she said, became tired with going to school, because he alongside his brother had to pass through a cemetery.

    “Hassan and his brother routinely had to cross a cemetery to get to school. They had no choice because it was the only route that leads to their school. The uncomfortable silence and the aura of death oozing out of the environment gave them goose bumps.

    “Seeing people gathered with such sad faces and tears, the sight of caskets and digging of graves make them sad and perturbed.

    “They see people pouring sand into the grave with tears in their eyes and sadness in their faces. Although they may not know why, they know it is not for a good reason. The problem of death concerned him very early in life as this was never a pleasant experience for him.”

  • Contaminated Gin:  70 confirmed dead in Rivers

    Contaminated Gin: 70 confirmed dead in Rivers

    The Rivers government said on Sunday that 70 of the 80 persons who took contaminated local gin, also known as Ogogoro earlier this month, had died.
    Dr Nnanna Onyekwere, Director Public Health Services, Rivers ministry of health, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Port Harcourt on Sunday that two of the survivors had visual impairment.
    He said the cases were reported in Woji and Gokana communities in the state.
    ‘’ So far, in the past one week, we have not had any more deaths or new cases. The situation has been under control.
    ‘’ In the beginning, it started somewhere in Woji and by the time we had the last count, we had about 80 persons tracked down, who took the drink.
    ‘’ Out of which 70 had died , the rest survived while two had visual impairment as a result of the drink,’’ he said.
    According to Onyekwere, the state government had liaised with the relevant stakeholders, especially dealers of the local gin, to educate and enlighten the people on current happenings.
    ‘’ The state has done so much already. We started with public enlightenment with grassroot mobilization in collaboration with the National Orientation Agency and Road Transport Workers .
    ‘’ Luckily, with the Federal Government’s announcement banning the gin, NAFDAC and the police are now working with us . We have achieved success in terms of control,’’ he said.
    Onyekwere said the state government had done a line listing of those affected, getting their level of disability or those who lost somebody because government wanted to assist them. (NAN)

  • The king is dead; long live the king!

    I remember President J.F. Kennedy’s  famous and everlasting inaugural speech  on that wintry morning of January 1961 when as the youngest President of the USA said among other things how the work of government is never done not in one term or even according to him in our life times. It was a prophetic statement because he was soon cut down by an assassin’s bullet even before he finished the first term. Of course he said other things like ask not what your country can do for you but what you can do for your country. He idealistically said that America’s foes and friends alike should know that the baton  of the defence of freedom has been passed  on to a new generation of Americans nurtured in war and ready to pay any price in the defence of  liberty and freedom where ever they are threatened. Americans lapped it up especially coming from the mouth of the dangerously handsome young president. No American president can say that today and be applauded unless of course those Americans on the lunatic fringe of the Republican Party and their running dogs in the so-called Tea Party.

    When a king or Queen dies in England, the continuity in government is captured by the saying the king is dead long live the king. Amongst the Yoruba the same sentiment is contained in the statement Baba ku Baba ku meaning father has died but he lives on in the next oldest member of the family. All these preambular statements are to emphasize that the work of government is continuous and is never completely done by any regime. This is however not an excuse for inertia or clueless performance.

    The government of Jonathan now belongs to history and when the dust has settled and the healing hands of time have passed over the events of recent times, the judgement on his regime may or not be severe. The usefulness of such historical judgement will serve as a warning or compass to the successor regimes. What we can call instant history is that the Jonathan administration has fallen below expectation. This apparent failure can be seen in the collapse of the economy less than a year after the current reduction in crude oil price. What this means is that we were eating our fruits and seeds at the same time like a foolish farmer. Many critics including this writer had warned ad nauseam that the drunken financial fashion the country was being run was not sustainable. The stupendous salaries and allowances paid to members of the executives and legislators at local, state and federal levels were heavy enough to sink the ship of state. Now chicken has come home to roost. There is no fuel to run our homes and the national economy. Power generation is now just over 1000 megawatts and with no diesel the country would soon grind to a halt. Recently I went to Abuja and in the absence of aviation fuel, I had to return to Lagos by road something I had not done in 20 years. Most states of the federation stopped paying salaries since January with the consequence of parents being unable to pay their children’s school fees. Since quite a large percentage of parents now send their children to fee-paying private primary, secondary and tertiary institutions many young people are at home idling their lives away. The result of growing unemployment and underemployment is armed robberies complicating the already existing insecurity problems associated with Boko Haram and cattle rustling in the northern part of the country. Even the apparent reduction of militancy in the Niger Delta creeks is still early to be celebrated and the spreading spate of kidnappings for ransom constitutes reason for worry. The infrastructural deficit on our roads, rail, sea ports and the danger of inadequate aviation infrastructure are enough to overwhelm any government.

    Does it then mean that the outgoing administration was an unmitigated failure? The answer is not clear cut. What is clear is that the administration is not ending well in view of the fact that the country has ground to a halt. There is no electric power from the companies allegedly fronting for political big-wigs and there is no diesel to power individual generators and even those who have not been paid for six months by their governments have no money to buy petrol and diesel if they are available and they are not. I feel sorry for the outgoing president that he is ending his regime in a whimper and in an anti-climax. The only positive thing this government will be remembered for is the Almajiri schools inadequate as they may be in number. Certainly not the mushroom universities established for political considerations and the welter of private universities for profit licensed by the Jonathan administration.

    But what is to be done? The Buhari administration cannot be expected to perform a miracle when it is burdened by local and foreign debt of over $60 billion. It can at the same time not fold its hands and do nothing. It must not take on too many things at the same time but should tackle the problems one at a time unless where the problem has interlocking relationship for example the problem of power has bearing on appropriate pricing of petroleum products. Security and infrastructure are related and so is security and employment. Money, lots of it will be needed to tackle the myriad of problems facing the country. We must move away from a situation where only salaried workers alone pay taxes while the rich and the famous hardly pay taxes. If people do not pay taxes, then they won’t have a sense of ownership of the government. No matter how small, people would have to pay something to fund their government. Value Added Tax (VAT) must also be increased substantially because these are in most cases luxury taxes on the class most able to bear them. I have said this before: states should be advised to levy property and land use taxes to run their governments rather than relying on federal allocations which are really unearned petrol commissions.

    It is very gratifying to note that the incoming government says it will focus on agriculture and solid minerals exploitation. I will want to enter a caveat here. We heard this before. If we are going into agriculture, it must be massive agricultural business through loans to young graduates who want to go into the business as well as loans to existing farmers who have proved their ability and seriousness. Government must prohibit imports of agricultural products where we have comparative advantage. We should not be importing vegetable oils and rice. We should stop importing wines, champagne and hard liquors in order to conserve our foreign reserves and restore sanity to our country especially our youths who are on slippery slope to drunken degeneracy. We must ensure that our concentrating on solid mineral exploitation is not another Abacha freebies given  to powerful and well connected people in the name of solid mineral exploitation In this regard let big foreign companies be invited and provided tax holidays to encourage them to get involved in our new plans.

    Let the new administration recover as much money as possible from what have been stolen and use the proceeds to embark on massive public works by direct labour of our youth. This will generate enthusiastic support for the government and reduce youth anger and unemployment. The first 100 days will be crucial and government must ensure that it is not business as usual. We can no longer afford this and we have lost so much ground already and the people can no longer wait for action to tackle the problems of this country. We are down and it can not be worse than this and we can only go up. The best way to start while the iron is hot is to eliminate the so-called oil subsidies that have ended subsidizing the lavish and opulent life styles of politicians, plutocrats and oil oligarchs in our country. Everybody is fed up with the humiliating scarcity of fuel in an oil producing country and if the only way to solve this problem once and for all is to throw importation and sale of refined petroleum  open to all who have the capacity while fixing our refineries, then that is the reasonable thing for government to do  and  the question of subsidies will  be gone forever.

    Finally, what is left for most of us  to do is to wish our former President Jonathan, good luck in the years ahead and President Muhammadu Buhari Godspeed in the journey of piloting the ship of state.

  • Femi Robinson, Village Headmaster, is dead

    Femi Robinson, Village Headmaster, is dead

    Femi Robinson, who first acted the role of Village Headmaster in the now rested soap opera, Village Headmaster is dead.

    The veteran actor who was also pioneer Director of Programmes, Ogun State Television (OGTV) died yesterday morning at Ayodele Hospital, Fagba, Ifako Ijaiye, Lagos. He was 74. He would have been 75 in September.

    He acted alongside the likes of Justus Esiri and Chief Olusegun Olusola.

    ‘He was a great man,’ his son, Wole Robinson said. ‘He tried as much he could to change the world.’

    In an interview he granted to Newswatch newspaper in January, Robinson who studied Botany at the University of Ile-Ife (Obafemi Awolowo University) said he was sad to be a Nigerian because the country did not focus on getting solutions to her problems.

    “When I say I regret living in this country, it’s because I have done a lot of things to help this country. When we were having problems with buying and selling, I started a television programme called: Shopper’s Guide; that was what later gave rise to the establishment of National Agency for Food Drugs and Administrative Control (NAFDAC).”

  • Laughing at the dead?

    Laughing at the dead?

    Suddenly President Jonathan shows compassion to Chibok, Buni Yadi and Immigration job victims!   

    You want to be president or campaign for one?  Take your cue from President Goodluck Jonathan, and you would probably end up as a study on how not to be both!

    For a third of his first-term tenure, the president left undone things he should have done.  But in the final lap, with its inevitable electioneering, he now goes on an over-drive — perhaps with manic determination to cover what he had not covered; or undo the harm his lethargy had done!

    True, it is never late to right wrongs; after all, perhaps the greatest anti-Christ of all times, Saul, became Paul, one of the greatest propagators of the gospel of Christ.  Still, the way President Jonathan goes about his lethargy-to-overdrive change oozes blind panic and seasoned cynicism.

    This has driven not a few to ponder: so if there were no looming elections, this president would not rouse himself?  And if all the buzz is election-driven, would he not most likely revert to his culpable lethargy, the instant he is gifted a second term?

    These theatrics, when applied to intense citizen tragedies, requiring instant state empathy but met none, are well and truly disgusting.  Take the twin tragedy of Chibok and Buni Yadi.

    At Chibok on 14 April 2014, Boko Haram kidnapped 276 girls (57 escaped, leaving 219), to intense global outrage.  These pupils of Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State, were writing their Senior Secondary School Certificate (SSSE) examination.  Despite the mass revulsion at seizing the girls, neither President Jonathan nor any of his top officials visited the tragic town to empathise with the community, despite the president’s bounden duty to provide security for all citizens.

    Earlier on 25 February 2014 at the Federal Government College, Buni-Yadi, Yobe State, Boko Haram terrorists also slew, in their sleep, 29 pupils.  After reportedly putting to the knife the poor and tender souls, the deranged savages set the school ablaze, thus charring the pupils’ remains!  Unlike Borno State-owned Chibok, Buni-Yadi is a Federal Government-owned school.  Yet, again, neither the president nor any of his top officials visited to commiserate.

    But all that has changed with the advent of electioneering  — to the reported deep fury of the victim communities.  At Chibok, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, finance minister and coordinating minister   for the Economy, visited to lay the foundation of a new school building, complete with security watch towers, state-of-the-art laboratories and other facilities.  She pledged studying there would be a delight; and the new facility’s security gadgets would avert any future Chibok kidnap tragedy.

    But would that bring back the girls?  That appeared the big question from the Chibok victims’ association of parents.  Could they then possibly embrace the new school in lieu of their missing girls, when, had the Jonathan government acted swiftly, most of the girls would probably have been saved?  And had the Presidency been alive to its duty, none of the Chibok 276 would have come to harm’s way?

    Only unbridled cynicism, driven by baseless electoral optimism, could have lured any government to such an insensitive strategy.

    At Buni-Yadi, the community pointedly told the visiting Federal Government delegation that their so-called commiseration came a year too late; more so when the attacked school was a Federal Government facility.

    The visits condemn President Jonathan: both for lack of empathy (no timely emotional support for the victims) and serious dereliction of duty (for preventing the attack); and culpable cunning: election-induced sympathy, which audaciously pitches a second term, even if the visit itself was symbol of the government’s incompetence at security, its most basic task.  So, how can proven incompetence attract a renewed mandate?

    The Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) recruitment deaths scandal is another turf on which the Jonathan government engages in a sickening gallery play.

    The NIS tragedy was a hideous racket, which produced a grotesque result: no less than 16 dead, in an abortive search for elusive jobs.  No less than 700, 000 youths, paying, according to Wikipedia, an application fee of N1,000 each, applied for and attended the consultant-handled job interview, and NIS para-military drilling process.  But alas, only 4,000 spaces were available!  The deaths resulted from stampede and crushes, at different stadia nationwide “interview venues”, on 15 March 2014.

    After this soulless extortionist scandal, President Jonathan announced a cancellation, promised the youths their N1,000 application fee refund, automatic jobs for the wounded and cash compensation to the family of the dead.  Then, all went quiet — until electioneering, March 14: almost exactly a year after the tragedy, and less than two weeks to the postponed presidential election!

    The leading opposition, All Progressives Congress (APC) has dismissed the announced N5 million compensation to relatives of the dead, and fulfilled job promises to the injured, as “taking advantage of the NIS deaths” for cheap electoral reasons.  That would appear a valid accusation, even if the president must redeem his pledge, made under particularly tragic circumstances.

    The galling point, however, is the survival of Abba Moro, Interior minister, under whose charge the tragedy took place.  Despite the outrage, Mr. Moro, a protégé of Senate President, David Mark, survived.  But the sad trade-off that guaranteed Mr. Moro’s job would become apparent with the Mark-pushed Senate ministerial endorsement of Musiliu Obanikoro, even with his scandalous involvement in the Ekiti audio rigging tapes.  As Jonathan stood by Mark on Moro, it would appear, Mark also stands by Jonathan on Koro!

    Devious manoeuvring, to willy-nilly retain a job, at which a first-term performance screams incompetent, appears to drive the president.

    This tactic would explain the unilateral 30 per cent salary cut for the president and his federal executive (no crime; but it cannot be done without the input of the Revenue Mobilisation Allocation and Fiscal Commission), the halving of electricity tariff (which should be the forte of the regulators, Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission, and not an executive-induced fiat) and the bunching together of the National Youth Service Corps three-year honours list (a desperate grab at approval and legitimacy, on the eve of a crucial election).

    President Jonathan appears on the roll: a festival of cant, in the final push to the election.  It is both cheap and un-presidential.

  • 11 persons feared dead in Port Harcourt attacks 

    •Police: no comment

    No fewer than 11 persons have been reportedly killed in Port Harcourt, the Rivers state capital, in attacks by unknown gunmen and cultists.

    Two persons were killed during a bullion van robbery in the state University premises last Friday.

    Five persons were said to have been killed in a hotel in Oroworukwo community in D/Line axis of the state capital. Four  were killed at the Marine Base.

    While the hotel killing was linked to cultism, the reason for yesterday’s is yet to be identified.

    Police spokesman  Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP) Ahmad Mohammad declined comments on the incidents. He said: “I am not going to comment on that.”

    The Nation learnt that the suspected cultists stormed the hotel, shot dead the victims and escaped. Some other persons were injured.

    The police, said a source, have deposited the bodies at the mortuary.

  • Coach Musa Abdullahi is dead

    Coach Musa Abdullahi is dead

    Former Flying Eagles coach Musa Abdullahi passed away on Sunday afternoon.

    The former U-20 national co-ordinator, Ajakbo Ahmed, who worked with Abdullahi from 2006 till 2007 at the U-20 Canada 2007 World Cup, confirmed the incident to SportingLife.

    The former U-23 assistant coach Musa died at his country home Koto Karfe, Kogi State yesterday few minutes past 3pm  after a long battle with stroke.

    Abdullahi’s  right hand side  has been paralyzed since 2007.

    He has since been buried according to Muslim rite around 5pm at the Koto Karfe burial ground after prayers were offered for his soul.

    He left behind his wife Hajia Bilikisu Musa and four children.

    Abdullahi was appointed as a Deputy Director at the Sports Council in Kogi State when the state was created in 1991 after moving to his country home from Kwara State.

    Abdullahi led the Golden Eaglets to win silver medals in the U-17 FIFA football tournament in Trinidad and Tobago in 2001.

    He was the head coach when Nigeria won the silver medal at the All Africa Games at the Abuja 2003.

    The Kogi State-born administrator was the assistant coach to coach Bonfere Jo when the Dream Team 1 won the Gold medal at the Olympic Games in Atlanta in 1996.

    He was also assistant coach to Fanny Amun when the Golden Eaglets won Gold at the FIFA/Kodal U-17 World Cup in Japan ’93.

    “Coach Musa Abdullahi was a very nice man and he has paid his dues. He has coached national teams. May Allah grant him Aljana Fridous and give his family the fortitude to bear the loss. Apart from working with him at the U-20 team on our way to Canada 2007, I was so close to him and he was a great person who cares for everybody around him,” the former U-20 national coordinator, Ajakbo Ahmed told SportingLife.