Tag: death

  • Retiree held for neighbour’s death

    The police have arraigned a 68-year-old retiree, Alade Akeredolu, before an Ebute Meta Chief Magistrates’ Court for alleged murder.

    Akeredolu allegedly pushed his neighbour, Fatai Taiwo, 61, to death. The incident happened at Gbasemo Street, Aga, Ikorodu, Lagos.

    Prosecuting Sergean, Kehinde Omisakin told the court that the accused committed an offence punishable under Section 221 of the Criminal Laws of Lagos, 2015.

    “The accused, it was learnt, always held morning devotion with his family by 5 O’clock. It was learnt that the deceased’s wife complained that the noise affected them while sleeping.

    “An argument ensued between the two families which led to a fight. But the accused was said to have pushed the deceased to death. The incident occurred on January 29 around 6am,” the prosecutor said.

    Magistrate T.A. Elias changed the charge against the accused to manslaughter.

    Elias adjourned the matter till March 20.

  • ‘God will disappoint those who wish the president death’

    ‘God will disappoint those who wish the president death’

    Apostle Daniel Aguocha of Divine Solutions With Favours Assembly, Kaduna, on Sunday led a prayer session for President Muhammadu Buhari`s sound health.

    The priest appealed to God to elongate the President`s life with good health to enable him fulfil his God-assigned assignments.

    Aguocha led the prayer during a thanks giving service in honour of Mr Charles Uka, a civil servant and a member of the Church, who turned 58 years.

    He said that no man can cut shot the life span of President Buhari until he fulfilled what God had ordained him to accomplish on earth.

    ‘‘I assure you that God shall disappoint those who wish the President death before his time.

    ‘‘God shall replenish his health and he will be with us until his time is right, ’’ he said.

    He assured Nigerians that better days lay ahead in spite of the current hardship being experienced across the nation.

    The clergy urged the people to be patient, adding that things would get better at the appointed time.

    ‘‘What is expected of us is to intensify our prayers for God to increase the strength, health and wisdom of our leaders to lead us well, ’’ he said.

    He called on parents to inculcate good habits and entrench noble character in their children, to grow and become useful to themselves, their communities and the nation.

    Uka explained that he was in the Church to thank God for keeping him thus far.

    He equally urged Nigerians to be grateful to their leaders and pray for their success for the good of all. (NAN)

  • Police arrest man for allegedly hacking mother to death

    Osun Police Command says it has arrested a man who allegedly killed his 85-year-old mother with a machete.

    The police spokesperson in Osun, Folashade Odoro, said in a statement in Osogbo that the suspect, allegedly machete his mother, Mrs Taibat Ayiola, to death at Akinleye Village near Osu on Friday.

    “The reason for the killing is yet to be ascertained because the suspect has not given any reasonable cause for his action.

    “The corpse of the victim had been deposited at the OAU Teaching Hospital, Ile-Ife for autopsy while the case is under investigation,” said the police spokesperson.

    Similarly, the police in Osun said it had arrested a 45-year-old man in Ikirun on Thursday for allegedly killing a man who bought a piece of land from him.

    The police said the man was killed when he asked for a refund. (NAN)

  • Death wishes of unlearning nation

    SIR: The president went on a break for about a week and news infiltrated the media about his ailment. The knack for spreading false hood about public figure is quite legendary in Nigeria.

    The country has been on the rumour path since independence and it is not just part of African culture to let truth out in piece and euphemism to suffer children and the unwise. It is considered as part of our heritage in handling royal matters. We have shattered the myth in the archaic system of governance in form of monarchy and traditional systems in mainstream governance by replacing it with democracy. The deliberate clouding of information with sentiment is not democratic. Electorate ought to know about elected leaders and what is happening in their offices on time.

    It has been taken as fashion to hide information under the guise of security. It doesn’t only generate anger but hatred for leaders who perfect the act of hiding information about themselves to the masses who elected them. There is a very thin line between hiding the truth and lying. When the government tries to train citizens in the act of lying by hiding information and playing with it deliberately; it is a harbinger of bad omen. It is out rightly wrong when sincere concerns of citizens are taken for granted; you might never get best of wishes from them.

    We do not seek to violate human right of the president and the elected officials, when the need arises for some key information they have to give it. To prevent citizens from spreading rumours and negative insinuations about their persons, updates are necessary and important. If they are hell bent on their old ways of hiding information from people, they should be prepared for the worst in what is imagined and said about them. We have to learn from history that our wishes and rumours are very strong, no matter how immaterial, false and abstract they are.

     

    • Peters Unekwu Onyilo,

     Federal University Lokoja,

    Kogi State.

  • Osita Ike: Death  as nuclear festival

    Osita Ike: Death as nuclear festival

    Death steals in the unkindest of moments. There were no signs, whatsoever, that Prince Osita Ike was on his way out. Aged 54, he had countless dreams ahead. I should know because we were more than friends. A lot of commentators have had their say that Osita was not the literary type like his legendary father, His Royal Majesty, Eze (Prof) Vincent Chukwuemeka Ike, Eze Ikelionwu XI and author of Toads for Supper, The Potter’s Wheel, The Naked Gods, Sunset at Dawn, Expo 77, The Chicken Chasers, Our Children are Coming and others. Now let me get the cat out of the bag, for Osita Ike did publish a collection of poems entitled: Festivale Nucleare, way back in 1986, when he was 24 years old.
    Born on June 12, 1962, he passed away on December 17, 2016. Osita used his poetry to truly encapsulate the life he would live. It is said anything not worth dying for is not worth living for. Osita fought the good fight and died for a worthy cause.
    Tears welled up in my eyes as I picked up the copy of Osita’s poetry collection Festivale Nucleare, which he autographed for me on March 20, 1987 with these words: “To a dear friend Maxim Uzoatu with best wishes.” He writes out his full names on the book’s title page thus : Ositadinma Adeolu Nnanyelugo Olusanya Ike, sumptuously representing his Igbo-Yoruba parentage. Published by Oyster St. Iyke Editions, the book bears the dedication: “for mum and dad, Adebimpe Olurinsola and Vincent Chukwuemeka Ike.” The Osita Ike Enterprises, Publishing Division, has addresses via P.O. Box 638 Bauchi and P.O. Box 9113 Lagos.
    In the Preface to Festivale Nucleare, Osita Ike writes: “This is my first published work apart from articles and essays on radio and in magazines. It is also the end of an experiment and the first finished product from Osita Ike Enterprises born in 1986.” We do know that Osita died as a result of asthma complications, and he did live his entire life dedicated to the fight against asthma. As he revealed in Festivale Nucleare, he set up a body to fight asthma, writing: “In July 1986, OSFAN, the product of a vision, was born to join in the fight against respiratory afflictions, especially Asthma. OSFAN – Osita For Asthmatic Nigeria, seeks to drum up support for NISASMA – the Nigerian Society for Asthmatics in particular. OSFAN is also planning a sponsored cycle run from Ibadan to Lagos in December 1986. I also intend to see this anthology out by then and proceeds from its launching are pledged to the work of OSFAN and NISASMA. You are all therefore, cordially invited and requested to join hands and lungs with the asthma vanguard.”
    He, indeed, made out a form at the back of the book, which he encouraged his readers to fill in and send contributions, in cash or kind and pledges, straight to NISASMA. He asked the pointed question “Is Asthma a killer?” and promptly answers: “Yes, it is!!!” He then made the appeal: “Please help to control Asthma.”
    According to Osita Ike, “Some people can live for weeks without food, some can live for days without water, but no human being, however highly placed, can live for minutes without air. The biggest concern of the ASTHMATICS is how to breathe well. There are over two million (2,000,000) ASTHMATICS in Nigeria. Many of them are children. During an attack they fight for every breath. ASTHMA can strike at any age irrespective of sex or creed. Thousands of Nigerians die from the disease every year. It is a matter for NATIONAL CONCERN. ASTHMA is a distressing, disabling, hereditary and non-contagious disease. However, it is preventable, controllable, and treatable.” Osita Ike’s dogged fight to stop asthma in its tracks was carried on with his customary gusto until the selfsame accursed disease stopped the fight mid-flight.
    A committed soul from the very beginning, Osita Ike was an only son, indeed an only child. The heir to crown, he dared not to be sheltered in the hood of royalty. He cultivated a network of friends, largely from the families of his father’s friends such as Chinua Achebe’s children, Chinelo and Ike, Chike Momah’s daughter, Ada, Prof Emovon’s daughter, Osa, Prof Ukoyen’s daughter, Adia etc. He was an accomplished member of the Boys Scout movement as a child. He was elected the Secretary-General of the Students Union Government of the University of Jos.
    An avid motorcycle rider, he enjoyed travelling, such as recalling the trip that took him “through Kaduna to Jos and Bauchi, back through Jos to Enugu, Ndikelionwu (for the laying to rest of our late Rev. Canon Chief W.N. Mbonu) to Aba, Onitsha, Awka, and five weeks and several poems after the initial departure, back through Ijebu-Ode to resume classes with my students at The Polytechnic, Ibadan”. He once “hitched a ride from Ibadan, in the cabin of a Fiat trailer carrying wheat offal to Kaduna.”
    He was an irrepressible promoter of music and the creative arts, and enjoyed the hobbies of photography, politics, fishing and gardening. Little wonder his collection of poetry, Festivale Nucleare, “spans a wide range of emotions and subjects, from the satirical and political to the amorous and rib-tickling humorous.”
    Osita made bold to say in life that he would have been a trader if not for his parents, who were distinguished pathfinders in the course of education. The mother, Adebimpe, wrote new chapters into the book of librarianship in Nigeria while his renowned novelist father served as the Registrar of the West African Examinations Council (WAEC).
    Osita Ike was the Principal Consultant of Oyster St Iyke Limited, a Public Relations and Communications consultancy. He was an active member of both the Public Relations Consultants Association of Nigeria (PRCAN) and the Nigerian Institute of Public Relations (NIPR). John Ehiguese, the President of PRCAN, was stunned by Osita’s sudden death, stating: “We mourn our dynamic and enthusiastic colleague, whose commitment to the public relations profession was never in doubt. No doubt the outpouring of emotion and tributes since his sudden transition are confirmations of how well he played his part in the advancement of his cherished profession and his belief in humanity. We pray that God Almighty comforts his aged parents, wife, children and all whose lives our brother and friend, Ike, impacted on.”
    An unwavering lover of his homeland where his father reigned as Eze Ikelionwu XI, he avidly promoted the Ndike books and the cultural festival that held every October, that is, following the September hosting of the New Yam Festival. Popularly known as Jizospikin, to wit, the child of Jesus Christ, Osita Ike was indeed, larger than life and death.
    Osita’s death literally tore apart Facebook. Let’s end on the note of December 21, 2016 post by Anita Aggrey: “A wonderful, kind-hearted giant has been called to eternal rest and glory. I’m still reeling from the shock of Prince Osita Ike Jizospikin’s sudden departure. It is not necessary to have met someone physically in order to be impacted by their uniqueness. Prince Osita was one of the loveliest, kindest, most humble of gentlemen: no detection of pomposity or arrogance despite his royalty. Always encouraging and good-natured. Never for a second imagined he would not be here with us. May the Holy Spirit comfort his family and friends. Our loss is Heaven’s gain. By God’s grace we will eventually meet on the other side of eternity some day. Rest well in Father’s bosom until then our Prince.” He is survived by his aged parents, his son and his daughter.

  • Death and the sick countrymen

    You are right – this headline is a parody of Death and the King’s Horseman, the Wole Soyinka classic, specially cited in his Nobel Prize for Literature win.

    If you link this parody to yet another WS play, Madmen and Specialists, you might just chafe at the madness that has seized the Nigerian populace, in the rash orchestration of the “death” of a man alive but taciturn; by the voluble that claim life but, by their spiteful conduct, are dead and rotten.

    Just as you ask in that ultra-dark play, Madmen, who is the madman and who is the specialist, you begin to wonder, in this morbid fever: who is the dead and who is the living!

    Indeed, another WS great, The Man Died, his Civil War prison memoirs, holds the clincher: the man dies in them, that cannot arrest their beastly id!

    The Buhari death wish is, therefore, the philosophical death of those who somewhat wish their nemesis would vanish — some Greek classical drama-like deus-ex-machina, come to spring them from the dire comeuppance of their past crimes!

    Well, long may they endure their well-earned anguish! No matter the dark plots of anyone, only God, the Almighty, gives life; and only he, can decree when one’s time is up. And he is not, it appears, about to serve as their deus!

    But pray, what is the hubbub over the purported death of a 74-year old? That his sun is setting at noon, though he lives into young old age, given the Biblical term of three-score-and-ten?

    That he is one of the irredeemably corrupt, selfish and venal he is sacrificing his old age to battle, so that younger Nigerians would have a future?

    Or that he has made his peace with corruption, like the Nigerian client priests of sleaze, who now bait catastrophe by goading their congregation to free murder, to trigger faith and ethnic chaos, a potent but satanic device to divert attention from a dire ethical crisis, and retain the old corrupt order?

    Only in Nigeria — where the most vulnerable, are also the most gullible, and therefore, the most voluble, in pushing their own destruction!

    Which explains why the madness is less with the vicious few, mainly ultra-corrupt elements, that have a serious axe to grind with President Muhammadu Buhari and his government.

    Acute and strategic lots, those! Indeed, life for Buhari is sure death for their nefariousness, outside of which they have no life! So, these vile elements would cook up just anything, no matter how absurd, to survive.

    You can, therefore, understand the grand folly of the virulent robots that amplify the evil agenda of the well-oiled corrupt machine, even if yelping from temporary pains, from a rotten order being put right. But whoever gains without pains?

    How did we get to this terrible pass, which merrily canonizes the vile as saints but demonizes the righteous as devils?

    Col. Azubike Nass, an Enugu-based retired army officer, offers an apt Biblical parallel. That dream in Biblical Egypt, in which seven lean cows swallowed seven fat ones. That decoded, translated to seven years of boom, preceding seven years of bust.

    However, unlike Pharaoh that deliberately stored grains during the bumper years, for the lean and agonizing years, Nigeria blew everything as if there wouldn’t be tomorrow. Despite his huffing and puffing, the profligacy started under President Olusegun Obasanjo. By the time Goodluck Jonathan happened on the presidency, the last of the family silver was up for pawn!

    But just as there was a manic seller in President Jonathan and his crowd, there were no less crazed buyers in unconscionable Nigerians, spanning the religious (dis)order, the media, the traditional institutions, the judiciary and other equal-opportunity hustlers, that always think actions have no consequences.

    That explains the 2015 election-time bazaar, by a president more than desperate for re-election, and was cocky he had enough cash to splash.

    But even with this open secret, of an old order sacking the collective till, just to sate the insatiable greed of its partisans, why is there so much uproar in the street, so much so that not a few romanticize sheer anarchy, just because there is no quick fix?
    It is tough, you must admit, when the pocket hurts. Reason scampers before irrational rage. A hungry man, after all, is an angry man.

    Still, at the expense of a more secure and less corrupt future?

    That echoes another Biblical parallel: in the post-Red Sea wilderness, between Egypt and Canaan, the Promised Land, the stiff-necked Israelites barked at Jehovah to either divine instant el-dorado, or pronto, return them to old slavery in Egypt!

    So, what is the present rumble aimed at? To return Nigeria to post-2015 era, where the common wealth, as could be seen from the many ongoing cases of alleged sleaze, was conquered treasure of a few? And then after, what?

    Turn the clock back to 1984, the first coming of this same Muhammadu Buhari, as military ruler. To be sure, that government was high on impunity (more than any military government before it); and had a quaint idea of mechanical “discipline”, in the whip-coerced queues its War Against Indiscipline (WAI) programme decreed.

    But what came after it? The Ibrahim Babangida and Sani Abacha era. The one liberalized corruption and democratized poverty. The other was epitome of the head of state as an irredeemable thief!

    The cumulative destruction of that era, birthed Obasanjo’s delusion of grandeur, Umaru Yar’Adua’s tragic power captivity and Jonathan, as Nigeria’s unsympathetic undertaker, led to the meltdown that made the Buhari second coming inevitable.
    Pray, is Nigeria fated to moving round in futile circles?

    Still, the Buhari Presidency must accept fulsome blame for its own self-crucifixion. How can a government, ranged against virulent enemies, wilfully refuse to beam what it is doing, in a time of excruciating pains, which calls for citizen understanding, empathy and support?

    This bizarre stand has handed its enemies the knife to slaughter it at will, and the tar to demonize it, to their heart’s content.

    Make no mistake: a casual foray into the social media shows a sizeable number of genuinely disillusioned citizens. But very many too would appear paid hacks, hired to cook fake news, fan hideous hate, float silly rumours and give the most innocuous of policies the most bizarre of slants.

    Viciously turning the social media into an anti-social tool appears a well-funded billion-naira business! As for the traditional media, the most hysterical may well be those refusing to admit the era of free money is gone!

    That racket may be a journey to nowhere. But it won’t abate, unless the government mounts a vigorous and well-funded counter-campaign: hope against its enemies’ agenda of hopelessness, love against virulent hate, facts against diabolic rumours, and a systematic and deliberate projection of its accomplishments, to silence the nay orchestra, now making hay.

    That is Buhari’s only way out of the present self-crucifixion.

    Meanwhile, those who killed themselves, by the hate of wishing others dead, had better wake up from the dead!
    It is a national emergency. Every life is needed for salvage.

  • 2016: In life and death, art rules

    2016: In life and death, art rules

    Last year was a mixed grill for the art sector. The sector bubbled with exciting creative events across the country despite the economic downturn, but it mourned some of its own. EVELYN OSAGIE reviews happenings in the scene in the outgone year.

    January 2016 came with its drama. Nothing prepared the hearts of the arts sector players and enthusiasts for what was to come. Without time to prepare, recession came upon the citizenry, forcing all sorts of adjustments. But the arts, its players and art lovers would not be daunted.
    Due to the economic downturn, critics say but was a most trying period for the sector, yet the arts flourished. New art galleries were opened, even as a few were closed. Theatre and cinema flourished with some shows selling out.

    The fight
    The year began with a shocker when a prominent member of the Lagos art community, performance artist Jelili Atiku was arrested by the police on Monday, January 18 and hurriedly arraigned and remanded in Kirikiri Maximum Prison for three days. He was accused of conspiring with Fatai Oluwa, Lasis Muraina, Adede Goloba and Monsurat Fasola to commit felony – public disturbance – with his performance on January 14 along Ifoshi Road, Ejigbo.
    The arts community went on rampage, with the Committee for Relevant Art (CORA). It petitioned Lagos State Governor Akinwumi Ambode over the detention and harassment of the artist. He was released on bail on Wednesday, January 20. At the end of his travail, Jelili urged “the local, state and Federal Government to look at issue of security in Nigeria”.
    As the arts community was about breathing a sigh of relief, the Artists’Village within the premises of the National Arts Theatre, Lagos was ‘attacked’. This time, the space, known for its rich creativity, was demolished, following an alleged directive from the National Arts Theatre General Manager, Kabiru Yusuf, on Saturday, January 23.
    Again, the community protested the matter. Led by the Nobel laureate, Prof Wole Soyinka, they called for investigation into the demolition.
    He urged the Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, to look into the problems of the affected residents, their damaged properties and provide temporary accommodation for artists whose structures had been demolished pending compensation for the artists and rebuilding of such structures.
    Soyinka urged that the displaced artists and their works be relocated to the vacant offices of the National Film Corporation (NFC) and the Centre for Black Arts and Africa Civilisation (CBAAC) at the National Theatre.

    The arts blast
    However, January was not all about protests. Arts flourished despite the biting recession. More than any other year, the events calendar of Goethe-Institut Nigeria was packed with programmes across genres as diverse as video and sound art, spoken word and performance art, electronic music and graphic novels. And the turnout was just as much. It began the year with a spoken word advocacy event, marking the 16th International Literature Festival in Berlin.
    The event, put together by AJ House of Poetry, Goethe-Institut Nigeria, PEN International and other literary platforms in Nigeria, was also part of the worldwide reading for poet and art curator Ashraf Fayadh facing execution in Saudi Arabia for exercising the freedom he found in his art. It held at Freedom Park, Lagos. The event opened Institut to many more throughout the year, such as literary crossroads.
    The British Council was not left out. It began the year with its Lagos Theatre Festival founded in 2013. It had 109 shows, 35 companies and 5,500 theatre goers in attendance. The festival was part of the British Council UK-Nigeria 2015/16 season. The council also held a performance project, Acting Together, supporting communities across the North and the Niger Delta, such as Yinka Shonibare, iconic Wind Sculpture Victoria Island in Lagos and Laura Aldridge’s textile workshop and installation of ceramic vessels in Abuja, entitled: Go Woman Go!
    The visual artist had a flourishing year as diverse exhibitions by established and newcomers held across the country. Lagos had a major share. Victor Ehikhamenor made a comeback with his Infinite Treasures II in Terrakulture. Omenka gallery and Nike Art gallery also had their feel.
    2016 was an eventful year for QDance Center. Founded by celebrated Nigerian dancer and choreographer Qudus Onikeku, held master classes, dance/photo exhibitions and a command performance. Onikeku’s dance creation, We Almost Forgot, first premiered in Berlin, and later in Lagos and Abuja. It featured six dancers and an actress from six countries (Nigeria, Gabon, Morocco, Algeria, Madagascar France).
    As part of activities commemorating Lagos State’s golden jubilee on May 27, 1967, tagged: LAGOS@50, the Vision of the Child (VoTC) literary and painting arts competition was used to begin its chain of artistic events. With the theme, Sisi-Eko@50: Ageing gracefully? Or Na So-So Pancake?, the 2016 edition featured pupils from 200 public and private schools (primary and secondary). The anniversary continues as Lagos Under The Lens (50 Films about Lagos). It will hold every Monday till May, this year.
    Former Delta State Commissioner for Higher Education Prof Hope Eghagha and University of Lagos (UNILAG) don presented his long-awaited biography of his kidnap.

    Birthdays and awards
    Acclaimed thespian Taiwo Ajai-Lycett rolled out the party drums to celebrate her 75th birthday. She unveiled her book Just Sharing at the MUSON Centre, Onikan, Lagos. The event was graced by dignitaries, such as Chief Olusegun Osoba, Mrs Francesca Emanuel, Mrs Iretiola Doyle and Mr Tunde Kelani, and Ambassador Folake Marcus Bello.
    Last year, Soyinka clocked 82. The organisers of Wole Soyinka International Cultural Exchange (WSICE) marked his birthday a colloquium and an exhibition at his country home in Abeokuta, Ogun State.
    The ancient town of Iseyin, Oyo State, was agog when Soyinka visited it. The Nobel laurate was there for the Ebedi International Writers Residency. At the event, the administrators of the residence honoured Soyinka and three other iconic writers by naming its rooms after them.
    Soyinka not only unveiled the plaques for the rooms but instituted an exchange programme between Ebedi and the Wole Soyinka Residency in Abeokuta.
    The “publisher of publishers”, Chief Joop Berkhout, celebrated his 50 years of publishing. It was organised by the Centre for International Advanced and Professional Studies (CIAPS) in Lagos.
    The “Bariga boy” Segun Adefila turned 44 last year. The founder of Crown Troupe was celebrated by the art community with cerebral and theatrical events.
    The Committee of Relevant Arts (CORA) held its 25th anniversary. With the theme, 25 Years of Culture Advocacy: What gains? What prospects?, the art community thronged out in their numbers to celebrate its contributions to the development of the sector.
    Nigeria’s Broadway-like musical drama, Wakaa! The Musical, toured London last year. The Bolanle Austen-Peters Production has landed a slot in London’s world-class theatre district, and became the first Nigerian musical to make it to the Shaw Theatre in the British capital.
    Abubakar Adam Ibrahim won last year’s $100, 000 Nigeria Prize for Literature sponsored by Nigeria LNG Limited (NLNG). His novel, Season of Crimson Blossoms, emerged winner from a total 172 entries received for the contest.

    The sector mourn its own
    The news of the death of the literary icon Capt. Elechi Amadi (rtd.) came as a big blow to the art community. He died at 82 on June 29 and was laid to rest at his family compound in Aluu, Rivers State, on December 3. Several activities were held in his honour.
    And by September 4, the world woke up to the death of award-winning novelist and one of the pioneers of oral literature Prof. Isidore Okpewho. He was buried at Gate of Heaven Cemetery, East Hanover, New Jersey, United States on Saturday, September 17.
    As if on rampage, the wicked hands of death took away the son of the late Saro-Wiwa, Kenule Bornale Saro-Wiwa Jr on October 21. He reportedly died after a heart attack, and was buried on November 11, in Bletchingley, London.
    Death also visited the family of foremost novelist and traditional ruler, Prof. Chukwuemeka Ike, and took way his son Prince Osita. He was 54. He reportedly died of asthma attack on December 17.

    Festivals
    Besides, exhibitions, book presentation, recognitions, anniversaries and deaths, diverse artistic festival held last year. Renowned writer Ngugi Wa Thiong’o made Nigeria’s headlines when he visited the ancient city of Abeokuta to attend the Ake Arts and Book Festival. Ngugi feasted with other younger renowned writers, such as Okey Ndibe,Alain Mabanckou, Helon Habila, Laila Lalami, Petina Gappah, Teju Cole and others, at the festival.
    Last year’s edition of the Lagos State Book and Art Festival (LABAF) by the CORA was in honour of the 20th anniversary of the death of Ken Saro Wiwa. It had as theme, The Terror of Knowledge.
    The sixth edition of Lights Camera Africa!!! Film Festival held in Lagos, and the seventh edition of the Eko International Film Festival screened 30 films. Last year, the festival’s founder, Mr Hope Okpara partnered the US Department of State using film as a tool for change and for youth empowerment.
    And in Enugu, the Life in My City (LIMCAF) held with over N3 million worth of prizes won. It is the largest gathering of young artists, patrons, scholars, gallery owners and other stakeholders in the visual arts in Nigeria.
    The poets were not left out. From Night of the Spoken Word in Abuja, Dike Chukwumerije’s travelling poetic cum musical drama entitled: Made In Nigeria to the Lagos International Poetry Festival, the performance poets kept their voices and the stage alive.
    As 2017 begins, no doubt the sector holds promise for key-players and enthusiats.

  • Merchants of death

    It was a season of love and sharing. A season when people looked out for one another. A season when a neighbour went out of his way to bless a fellow neighbour. A season when we wished one another compliments. But for the people of Southern Kaduna, it was not a time for compliments. Rather, they hid from one another because nobody knew who was who again. For them it was a hate season. The town was literally at war when it should be celebrating the season.

    It was December when the predominantly Christian community was looking forward to Christmas. Families had prepared for the festivities and were waiting anxiously for December 25, the Christmas Day. Then, the unexpected happened. Herdsmen struck in the community, leaving death and destruction in their trail. Southern Kaduna has always been a boiling cauldron. It is a place where people are known to operate on short fuse. The people are easily irritated and can do anything in a fit of anger. This was, however, not the case last month.

    The herdsmen came with a mission to loot and  kill and they had their way. They levelled many towns in Southern Kaduna and killed hundreds of people. For those who do not know, Southern Kaduna people are not lily livered; they can hold their own against any individual or group. They hold tenaciously to their Christian faith and can do whatever it takes to defend what they believe in. But the herdsmen stole in on the community as they have been doing in some other parts of the country. The government should have done something about these herdsmen long before the Southern Kaduna tragedy considering the havoc they have been wreaking on some parts of the country in the South.

    I had thought that they would never strike in the North because they are from there, but they have proved me wrong with their attack on Southern Kaduna, which is the hotbed of agitations in Kaduna State. Whenever Southern Kaduna boils, the country reels under its tremor. Kafanchan is a community in the south of Kaduna. In 1987, there was a religious crisis there which nearly ripped apart the state. The aftershock was felt in Lagos, the federal capital then. Former military President Ibrahim Babangida, who visited Kafanchan, described what happened as the ”civilian equivalent of a coup”. Painfully, 29 years after, the nation seemed to have learnt nothing from that bitter enterprise. If we had, we would have nipped the herdsmen’s attack in the bud.

    The herdsmen have done their worse in Southern Kaduna. They destroyed houses, farms, churches and a cemetery. What happened in Southern Kaduna was sheer madness. The herdsmen went berserk, killing, maiming and looting. The scale of destruction showed that it was a predetermined and well coordinated action. Only God knows what their quarrel with the Southern Kaduna people is about. Whatever it is, should they have resorted to bloodshed to resolve the matter? These herdsmen just love the smell of blood. This is why they are wont to kill and maim to prove their point. What point are they proving? That they are stronger than others or what? Or that they are above the law?

    It is disheartening that these herdsmen have been killing people and getting away with it. How come they have not been called to order? Do they have some powerful people behind them? Those who say they have strong backers may not be wrong after all because of the way they have been carrying on. I do not want to think that the government is deliberately keeping quiet and allowing these herdsmen to run riot across the country. The earlier they are brought to book the better before these attacks snowball into ethnic clashes. The Southern Kaduna mayhem is all the more serious because the herdsmen still struck under the nose of the police that were sent to restore order. Where were the police when this happened?

    The curfew that was imposed on the town also meant nothing to them. On Christmas eve, Goska and some other communities were attacked. If this could happen with a curfew in place and the police on patrol, will it be wrong to say that these herdsmen are being shielded? I do not want to sound like an alarmist, but we have to say things as they are in order to find a lasting solution to this crisis. We cannot just continue to watch while herdsmen, whether Fulani or from outside the country, are killing, maiming and looting at will. We must do something about them before it is too late. And the police must lead the battle to stop them. By the time one or two are made to face the law, the others will know that the game is up.

    But if we continue to treat the issue with kid’s glove, they will also continue to attack and kill people across the country. The Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) has said that 808 people were killed and 53 villages destroyed in the mayhem and declared Sunday as a day of mourning. ”We are to pray fervently for our Southern Kaduna brothers and sisters who are victims of these wanton killings and also for the peace of our dear country Nigeria”, CAN said, adding : “The silence over the ongoing genocide in Kaduna in the last few weeks speaks volume about the perceived official endorsement of the dastardly and ungodly acts”.

    It is the government’s silence on these killings that is making people to impute motives on where President Muhammadu Buhari stands. I believe that the president stands for the country and he said that much in his inaugural speech on May 29, 2015 : ”I belong to everybody and I belong to nobody”. There is no better time than now for him to prove that statement. Where are these marauding herdsmen from? Kaduna State Governor Nasir El-Rufai says they are from outside the country. Some people describe them as Fulani. Where they come from does not matter. What should be of concern to us is stopping their murderous act before it balloons into war.

  • Hospitals of death, tears and sorrow (2)

    In this concluding part of his series on the state of tertiary health facilities in the country,  Assistant Editor ADEKUNLE YUSUF reports that the regular harvests of woes in the public hospitals  will continue unless the right structures are put in place

    The trouble with Nigeria’s hospitals

    A glorified general hospital! That is exactly how a resident doctor described the University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital (UITH), Kwara State, where he works and undergoes obligatory residency training to boot. He begged to be anonymous to avoid the wrath of the management. But by the time The Nation spent some days observing activities in the ailing hospital last month, it was apparent that the disillusioned resident doctor was not being uncharitable at all, for it is an open secret within the state that the apex hospital does not have what it takes to be so called. Like the stream of patients thronging the health facility daily in search of succor, UITH, as it is currently, is too terminally ill to live up to its billings.

    Even from its entrance, the necessary usual hospital ambience that usually provides a helpful psychological bulwark or reassurance for the sick is evidently lacking. First, the road network within the hospital is also in an appalling condition, with broken down drainages and mostly dirt roads that are decked with potholes. Perhaps with no conscious attempt at landscaping or beautifying the environment, the complex, which is primed to be a five-star hospital for about 5 million people in Kwara State and its environs, is enveloped in dust last month.

    As for the buildings housing the various critical sections in the hospital, they are evidently substandard and poorly designed, to say the least, as cracks everywhere on the walls that are begging for repainting easily advertise the teaching hospital, which began operations in a temporary location in 1992 and moved to its permanent site in 2010, as an antiquated facility. From one section to another in the hospital, it is not unusual for the eyes of patients and their family members to be assailed with dilapidated ceilings, while entrance doors and other building accoutrements have mostly decayed or worn out. And without any space or facilities for patients’ family members, it is a daily affair at almost every turn seeing crowds sleeping or sitting on the bare floor or mats at every time of the day.

    But the problems of the apex hospital are not limited to physical issues, for the institution is indeed being seriously held back by the “curse of sub-optimal equipment,” as another resident doctor described it. In separate interviews, doctors disclosed that medical facilities in the wards do not only always break down at UITH; they do so regularly that it often casts a pall of frustration on the morale of enthusiastic workers. And going by the murmurs of medical workers, each time any major equipment packs up, it often takes minimum of six months before it is fixed. For instance in the radiology department, tools such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computerized tomography scan (CT scan), which are taken as a given in any teaching hospital that is worth the name, hardly function at UITH. Last month, workers in radiology department said the hospital’s only MRI usually works for only one week before it breaks down, adding that it has now become a recurrent migraine that is militating against efficiency and optimum service delivery. “The MRI here is substandard. I can’t remember when it works for more than a week because it always breaks. Unfortunately, it always takes a couple of months before management repairs it.”

    In the course of investigations, it was further discovered that UITH did not enjoy the luxury of having a functional x-ray machine for the greater part of both last year and this year. Why? The ones in the hospital broke down and repairing them became a luxury. Also this year, medical hands who are fed up with inefficiency told The Nation that the teaching hospital did not have one single functioning x-ray machine for an upward of six months, forcing a teaching hospital owned by the federal government to resort to referring patients to private facilities and laboratories, which are also not easily accessible due to long distance away from an institution tucked in the outskirts of Ilorin, capital of Kwara State. Designed as a 500-bed health facility, UITH is still surprisingly lagging behind in many subspecialties of medicine, unlike most of its counterparts in the country.

    Being an apex hospital, it will be expected to see specialists in virtually all areas of medicine plying their trade in the institution, but the opposite is the case. For example, one resident doctor lamented that “it is sad that we don’t have specialists in some subspecialties of surgery and in internal medicine as a whole, leaving the ones available overworked.” Some four years ago, when UITH started nephrology and successfully carried a renal transplant, it was said to be the much-needed elixir that would herald the beginning of great things for the hospital. However, that was the end of the good news because a coterie of distractions seemed to have clogged the hospital’s march towards progress, for no other transplant sessions, which would have helped the system grow and carve a niche for itself among its peers in the subspecialty, had been done since then.

    Another migraine is electricity conundrum in a federal facility that does not enjoy a dedicated power line like most of its peers in the country. The result is that power outages have crippled clinic sessions, sometimes lasting for hours, condemning doctors and nurses to resorting to torchlight or phone light during surgical operations in a federal facility whose management claimed it uses a whopping N16million to settle diesel bill every month. “It is distressing because I want to be proud that I am working here. But at the moment, I cannot bring anyone I love or recommend anyone to come here for treatment. There is no water sometimes. I have to be sincere because most of us working here are just doing because of our salaries. The system here is not helping us at all,” one doctor lamented.

     Unfortunately, as bad as things are, treatment costs do not reflect the state of affairs.  According to Khadijat (surname withheld on request), a teacher who recently delivered a baby at the VIP section of UITH, the services and facilities are too poor compared to the prohibitive charges. Before using the facility, she paid N60,000 deposit first, apart from  N10,000 being charged daily for the bed space. “It is only VIP in name; there is nothing to suggest that it is VIP except in the payment. No electricity. Mosquitoes traumatize patients. Nothing works there,” she complained bitterly. Like Khadijat, a well-to-do patient who sustained multiple injuries of bones was recently managed by top echelon of medical workers in the hospital, mostly consultants and professors, for over a year without any meaningful recovery. Surprisingly, after deferring to advice from more discerning friends, the woman received succor and was able to walk again in less than three months after she quit the services of UITH for a private orthopedic hospital in Abuja.

    Like its counterpart in Ilorin, the Ahmadu Bello University Teaching Hospital (ABUTH) in Zaria, Kaduna State, is the shame of a nation. Although its vision says it wants to be a healthcare facility that is “second to none in Nigeria and comparable to any center in the world,” the current state of the hospital shows that it is achieving the exact opposite. To say the least, ABUTH scores poorly on aspects of what make a tertiary hospital tick, at least judging from the state and condition of the buildings housing the various wards and offices to the general environmental sanitation in the facility. For upward of a week in August, when The Nation was monitoring activities in the apex hospital, leaking sewages dotted several sections of the complex, leaving users wondering what is wrong with the hospital. Of particular places that are eyesores as a result of leaking sewages are the labour ward, hematology and medical laboratory.

    Although Professor Lawal Khalid, CMD, painted a picture of Eldorado regarding activities in the hospital, it is glaring even to the blind that all is not well with ABUTH. Among other things, the CMD boasted that all the state-of-the-art medical facilities, including the ones procured through the Vamed initiative during the administration of former President Olusegun Obasanjo, are in good shape because of good maintenance culture in the hospital. He also added that he always leaves no stone unturned in ensuring ABUTH enjoys electricity supply twenty-four hours a day, which he says costs the sprawling complex a fortune in terms of diesel and other consumables for power generating sets.

    However, three days after, a protest by the resident doctors erupted in the hospital, with placards bearing messages that thoroughly indict and condemn the failure of management in the hospital. The protesting doctors were irked that environmental sanitation in the hospital is so poor that one of their members was bitten by a poisonous snake at the staircase of the surgical wards. As if that is not enough, the unlucky doctor “almost lost his life as he suffered envenomination as the hospital cannot provide anti-snake venom for its doctor on duty for over 36 hours after the snake bite.” During the protest, the resident doctors’ union condemned the “deplorable state of health facilities” in ABUTH, which it also described as astonishing. They went further to lament that there is a chronic shortage of resident doctors in the hospital, adding that the last time ABUTH recruited its last batch of doctors was in 2012, which has created a big vacuum in both service delivery and learning. “Investigations such as x-ray, ultrasound and MRI have to be postponed due to faulty machines. A hospital that has a transfusion unit but which cannot produce blood components due to lack of cold centrifuge cannot be differentiated from a general hospital. Residency training, which is the bedrock of specialization, is at its lowest as currently it is less than 8 departments that residents can comfortably complete their rotations without going for outside postings due to lack of or partial accreditation of the various units,” the resident doctors said.

    As unpalatable as the ABUTH story seems to be, the situation report is not anything different at the teaching hospital arm of the Kaduna State University, also in Kaduna State. The hospital, which started off as a general hospital and later renamed Barau Dikko Specialist Hospital, became a teaching hospital in 2012 when the need arose for the state university to have a medical school. However, since it was accredited by the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN), nothing significant seems to have been done so far to make Barau Dikko Teaching Hospital ready and competent to provide clinical education and training as expected of a five-star hospital. Besides the constraint of being crammed in a small space, there is little opportunity for expansion. Although the state government is currently upgrading the facilities with two buildings,  as it is sandwiched that

    But if you conclude that the teaching hospitals above are the only ones that are distressed in the country, you will be in for a rude shock by the time you reach Ibadan, capital of Oyo State, where the University College Hospital (UCH), Nigeria’s first and most ambitious teaching hospital that provides clinical education and training to various categories of health professionals, is sited. Built during colonial rule, the medical facility that was officially opened to the public for the first time on November 20, 1957, cost the then British colony a whopping sum of 4.5 million pounds. No doubt, UCH still parades arguably some of the finest architectural masterpieces in the country, being the most well-designed apex hospital. Right from its magnificent doorway, a well-manicured patch of lawn that generously beds it with breathtaking scenery adorns the environment, bestowing it with the right ambience befitting a preeminent medical center of its status and stature.

    However, as you escape from the peripheral aesthetics and descend deep into the dusty bowels of the wards and clinics in a hospital once rated as fourth best in the entire 52-member Commonwealth, you are most likely to have a slight mood swing, if you are not instantly filled with a gushing sense of foreboding about a paradise lost. Last month, when The Nation was in the hospital, Luqman Ogunjimi, outgoing president of the UCH chapter of Association of Resident Doctors, but he declined to grant an interview. “We are not happy,” he repeatedly said without elaborating. Pensive, saying At UCH, it is highly possible for patients to contact diseases before leaving the gigantic facility, no thanks to the current sorry state of affairs in the hospital. , there is a high likelihood for patients to contact diseases

    But this does not suggest, in any way, that doctors in the hospitals have not been crying for help in the face of crippling challenges. After calling off a four-month strike in August last year, the resident doctors were bitter that clinical service delivery was being hampered by infrastructural collapse in the hospital, such as non-working elevators (with attending health implications for members of staff), lack of reagent and laboratory materials, disposables like gloves and so on. Also, in a communiqué they issued after calling off one of their strike actions last year, resident doctors, who form the bulk of medical hands that manage patients, vented their spleen over the deplorable condition under which they are made to work. They are particularly unhappy that they “have been reduced to sleeping in cars when on call-duty.” This, they complained, is understandably so because “UCH call-rooms are extremely indecent and deplorable or totally unavailable.”

    Besides the fact that the available call-rooms are in bad shape, it is learnt that ad-hoc call rooms, most of which are attached to patients’ side-room toilets, are also grossly insufficient. Over the years, to make the call-rooms usable after repeated appeals to the management to renovate them have reportedly fallen on deaf ears, many doctors have resorted to making efforts to fix some of the dilapidated call-rooms, on a surface level though. Apart from dilapidated call rooms, doctors complained of delay and non-promotion of members, even after meeting all requisite conditions, unremitted pension fund deductions/refusal of enrolment of members on the Contributory Pension Scheme and non-implementation of the Federal Government’s directive of 2013 and conditions of service.

    Although it also has its own challenges, Usmanu Danfodiyo University Teaching Hospital (UDUTH), Sokoto State, is like a giant among dwarfs, when compared with its counterparts around the country. Established in 1985 and relocated to its present location in 1989, UDUTH has grown to over 800 beds, including having two health centres in some parts of Sokoto state, which it manages under one budget.  In 2008 when our number of staff was about 1500, we were getting N48 million as monthly subvention to run the hospital. At the time, its number of consultants was just 28. Even then, it was not enough to manage the hospital. Now that it has grown and expanded in number of beds, equipment, personnel and varieties of services; currently has over 2,066 workers, with over 90 consultants. Sadly, instead of the overhead to rise along with the expansion, it is the opposite.

    Now UDUTH enjoys a paltry N7 million as monthly subvention, having been experiencing a gradual reduction over the years until it reached its current level. Yet the hospital pays between N15 to N16 million every month as electricity bill for power supply that is anything but stable. And for the hospital to enjoy electricity twenty-four hours per day, it coughs out additional N6 to N8 million every month for procuring diesel and other items to fuel the power generator sets. This means the overhead from government cannot even pay for electricity supply and diesel needs, let alone take care of obligations requiring gargantuan financial expenses for the teaching hospital to meet public expectations.

    By the time The Nation was in Sokoto last August, medical engineers in UDUTH were busy installing new facilities in upcoming sections such as its new open heart surgery, kidney transplant, cancer section and other special health services that the rich often jet abroad to have. To the credit of the current leadership of the hospital, an ultra-modern Aliyu Magatarkarda Wamakko Medical Library, fully built and equipped by the immediate past governor of Sokoto State, makes it stand out from its peers. Unlike some other teaching hospitals battling with recurrent breakdown of facilities, UDUTH is surprising adding to its stock of modern equipment. Asked the secret behind this, Dr Yakubu Ahmed, the CMD, said he achieved the feat through public-private partnership to help in stemming the tide of the much-talked about medical tourism. Preparatory to the arrival of the set of facilities, Dr Ahmed said his hospital has trained medical engineers to maintain the equipment.

    A similar achievement in Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital (AKTH), Kano State, is being hampered by bureaucratic bottlenecks. In the hospital, private-public partnership is equally working to the benefit of users, as philanthropists keep assisting AKTH with building and equipment of centers for treatment of drugs, cancer and other ailments. However, instead of enjoying the full benefits of the investments, government has often delayed in approving employment for medical officers that will man the units. According to Professor Aminu Zakari, the CMD, some people have been interviewed and found worthy but getting the supervising authority to approve their employment is dragging the system back.

     

    As poor health funding

    imperils Nigerians

    Despite Nigeria‘s regular pledge to improve healthcare spending to scale up service delivery in the sector, successive governments have not matched words with actions, even as the country’s indexes on healthcare service delivery continue to plummet. With abysmal record of universal health insurance coverage and the deteriorating out-of-pocket spending, annual budgetary allocations to the moribund sector have not only been paltry, they have also failed to attain the minimum standard recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO).

    Perhaps that was why stakeholders in the health sector were disappointed last year when President Muhammadu Buhari, who was voted into office on the mantra of change, presented his first budget. In the budget, which drew unnecessary controversies and sparked unprecedented delays in passage, a paltry sum of N221.7 billion was appropriated to the health sector, far below public expectations. Many experts had expected a health budget higher than previous years, considering the numerous challenges facing the sector. Although the 2016 budget of N6.08 trillion was lauded for being big on capital spending (N1.8 trillion compared with N557 billion appropriated for capital expenditure by last administration in 2015), capital spending on health did not enjoy a better lease of life.

    But paucity of fund has always been a common feature of the country’s health budget. It would be recalled that N262 billion (1.7Billion USD) was allocated to health 2014 of which 82 per cent went to recurrent expenditure. The N262 billion allocated to health was about six per cent of the total budget and second only to defense, education and finance (finance includes debt servicing). It was slightly less than the N279 allocated to health in 2013. The 2013 budget allocation to the healthcare sector, on a per capita basis, was N1, 680 as against WHO recommendation that governments spend a minimum of N6, 908 per head, on providing healthcare services to their citizens. The gap of N5, 224 per head at the Federation level was too wide to be filled by autonomous spending from state governments.

    Although WHO recommends that all developing economies should earmark 11 per cent of their annual expenditure for the health sector, this has consistently been observed in the breach by successive administrations. In 2001, a paltry N14 billion was allocated to health sector. It grew to N19.5 billion in 2003, amounting to only 2.5 per cent of the 765 total budget. In 2005, the sector’s fortune improved to 5.5 per cent of, only for it to nose-dive to an abysmal 1.8 per cent out of N2.1 trillion in 2006. In 2007, N52.5 billion went to the sector out of N2.31 trillion total expenditure, which is just 2.28 per cent. Even with N89.45 billion out of N3 trillion budget in 2008, Nigeria occupied a space in the WHO book of defaulters.

    That is not the only anomaly. Annually, budgetary allocation to healthcare delivery is being made worse because about 80 percent or about N80 of every N100 allocated to the ministry is expended on paying personnel in the sector, leaving just N20 of every N100 for capital expenditure. Experts insist that all the 20 federal teaching hospitals and 22 federal medical centers have been left in the lurch over the years as a result of this unthinking budgetary/spending pattern. With almost nothing as subventions, it is practically difficult if not impossible for the top medical facilities to maintain existing facilities or acquire modern medical equipment, engendering a playing-the-ostrich tendency among political office holders and affluent Nigerians who travel abroad to take care of their healthcare needs, while the teeming masses who cannot afford to travel abroad make do with the poorly-equipped and under-resourced local hospitals.

    Unknown to many, Nigeria also has one of the lowest healthcare spends per head, even when compared with country peers in Africa. South Africa spends about seven times more per head on healthcare than Nigeria does, while Angola spends about three times more per head than Nigeria. Medical professionals maintain that Nigeria’s healthcare spend per head, which the 2012 World Health Statistics report put at US$67, was paltry in comparison with more developed countries. For example, a report had it that the United States healthcare spend per head stands at $7000, that of Switzerland is US$6000, while the average healthcare spend per head among countries of the Organisation for Co-Operation and Development (OECD) is put at US$3,600. The true import of low government spend on healthcare is that Nigerians, irrespective of their economic status, are forced to pay for healthcare delivery directly from their incomes or out of pocket expenses, as WHO prefers to call it.

    According to WHO, the level of out-of-pocket payment is a major indicator of the state or quality of healthcare delivery available in a country. Another report showed that out-of-pocket expenses in Nigeria, which accounts for over 70 per cent of the total healthcare expenses in the country, is one of the highest in Africa. For example, out-of-pocket expense in Ghana is about 29 per cent, in South Africa it is just 17 per cent, while it is just 10 percent in Angola. Health sector professionals explain the danger of high out-of-pocket payment, saying it could lead to tragic deaths, especially if increasing number of patients is unable to afford the cost of healthcare, thereby denying people access to healthcare.

    Unfortunately, this is telling off on Nigeria’s records, deemed one of the worst healthcare statistics in Africa. For example, about 143 children die out 1,000 births before their fifth birthday in Nigeria, a terrible record surpassed only by Angola in Africa. The African average is 119 for children dying before their fifth birthday. In Kenya, the average is 85, in Senegal 75, in Ghana 74 and in South Africa 57. As for life, the average Nigerian had a life expectancy of just 54 years in 2009, just about the average in Africa, but well below 62 years for Senegal and 60 years for Ghana. For Nigeria, the situation has hardly improved over the years. Yet Nigeria was ranked 152nd in the 2016 report of the African Human Development Index, released by the United Nations Development Programme, UNDP,  in Nairobi, Kenya, last August. Consequently, the country retained its 2014 status as there was no forward or backward shift from the computation. Nigeria’s HDI value for 2014, according to UNDP’s 2015 report, was in the low human development category, positioning it at 152 of 188 countries.

     

    Brain drain, dearth

    of professionals  

    By the WHO standard, Nigeria, with an estimated population of 180 million, requires at least 300,000 medical doctors to be categorized as a medically safe country. It recommends 1 doctor to 600 patients (1:6). But achieving this standard has remained an elusive dream in a country plagued with acute shortage of medical practitioners. According to Professor Mike Ogirima, President of the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA), the membership database of the professional body has 87,000 doctors on its list. However, out of this figure, only about 45,000 are currently plying their trade in Nigeria. The rest, he added, are either outside of the country or dead. Sadly again, majority of the doctors working in the country concentrate in the big cities and towns, while many hospitals in the rural areas, where the teeming majority of Nigerians reside and eke out a living, are crying for medical hands.

    Situating the figures within local realities, what this means is that a doctor in Nigeria has nothing less than 4,000 patients to manage – almost seven times more than 600 patients suggested by the global health body. This implies that the nation currently has a deficit of about 250,000 doctors. In 2015, Professor Folashade Ogunsola, Chairman of Association of Colleges of Medicine of Nigeria, was quoted as saying Nigeria had a deficit of 237,000 doctors to meet the WHO standard. Given the increase in population without a corresponding increase in the number of doctors, the deficit keeps rising in an alarming rate. It means Nigeria requires close 100 years to meet the recommendation doctor-patient ratio, since it currently produces less than 5,000 doctors yearly.

    As Nigeria groans under the pangs of inadequate medical professionals, doctors and nurses trained with Nigerian taxpayers’ fund swell the ranks of medical system in more developed countries. Professor Ogirima said “nothing less than 20,000 Nigeria-trained doctors are working in America, and maybe another 15,000 in the European countries.” It is a fate that befalls almost every African country, as more prosperous countries that have resources to train medical workers now resort to poaching from Africa, leaving the continent where the heaviest global burden of diseases resides more vulnerable. In a recent report, brain drain of doctors costs Africa over $2 billion annually, as African clinicians seek work in more prosperous nations. Medical experts are emigrating to the West due to poor pay and low level of scientific research, listing Nigeria, Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe as countries that have suffered the worst economic losses due to the clinical brain drain. The recent Ebola crisis, which caught some countries unawares, highlighted the continent’s doctor shortages.

    While Nigeria, Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe have emerged as biggest losers, Australia, Canada, Britain and the United States have benefited the most from recruiting doctors trained in Africa. Kenya’s Education Secretary Dr. Fred Matiangi, who urged African governments to stem the dangerous tide, said doctors moving to work abroad cost sub-Saharan Africa up to $2 billion invested in training the clinicians. “The migration of trained health workers from poorer countries to richer ones exacerbates the problem of already weak health systems in low-income countries battling epidemics of infectious diseases like HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis (TB) and malaria and lately, Ebola. The number of qualified doctors moving abroad to work in the West has been high over the years, where nine sub-Saharan African countries have ended up losing $2 billion as the clinicians seek work in more prosperous nations,” he said during the 6th Annual Medical Education Partnership (MEPI) symposium in Nairobi, Kenya.

    This was also the subject of a study by Canadian scientists, published in the British Medical Journal. Led Edward Mills, chair of global health at the University of Ottawa, the study called on destination countries to recognize this imbalance and invest more in training and developing health systems in the countries that lose out. “Many wealthy destination countries, which also train fewer doctors than are required, depend on immigrant doctors to make up the shortfall. Developing countries are effectively paying to train staff who then support the health services of developed countries,” the report concluded.

    As one of the country bleeding Africa dry of medical professionals, British health service system benefited from an influx of foreign doctors and nurses up to 190,000 doctors and nurses from outside the EU in just eight years. According to a figure in the British Home Office, work permits were issued to 22,090 doctors and 165,780 nurses from non-EU countries between 1999 and 2006 alone. The British Department of Health confirmed that 101,329 extra doctors and nurses joined the NHS over the same period. Of the non-EU figure, at least 64,000 doctors and nurses came from African countries, increasing from 2,600 in 1999 to 17,620 by 2010. In 2006, the British Home Office gave work permits to 4,615 nurses and 650 doctors from African countries. It also issued 15,705 work permits to Zimbabwean nurses and 8,505 to Nigerian nurses in 1999 alone, including 1,610 and 600 respectively, in 2010. In 2003, a staggering 1,510 work permits were also approved in UK for medical personnel from Nigeria, 5,880 from South Africa, 2,825 from Zimbabwe and 850 from Ghana, forcing Who to organize a world brain drain summit in Uganda.

    Although the estimates for Nigeria were not known, governments in Uganda and South Africa spend $21,000 and $59,000, respectively, to train a doctor – only to see many of them migrate to richer countries. “Among the nine sub-Saharan African countries most affected by HIV/AIDS, more than $2 billion of investment was lost through the emigration of trained doctors. Our results indicate that South Africa incurs the highest costs for medical education and the greatest lost returns on investment.” The findings suggested the benefit to Britain was around $2.7 billion, and to the United States was around $846 million. Australia was estimated to have benefited to the tune of $621 million and Canada was $384 million better off.

    To arrest the drift, WHO adopted a code of practice in 2010 on international recruitment of health personnel, which highlighted the problem of doctor brain drains and called on wealthy countries to offer financial help to poorer ones affected. Among other things, the code was hailed particularly for its significance and possibility to help sub-Saharan Africa, which suffers from a critical shortage of doctors despite having a high prevalence of diseases such as HIV, TB and malaria. But whether this is achieving any positive result or not is anybody’s guess. In 2007, appalled by the global offensive of medical poaching, South Africa signed an agreement with Canada to put a stop recruiting South African health personnel through the back door. Whereas, Nigeria, one of the poor countries infamously tagged doctor-producer nations, does not have a seamless arrangement on how to immerse an average of 4,000 doctors it trains annually into internship institutions.

     

    Explaining the

    NHIS conundrum

    Since former President Olusegun Obasanjo made history as the first Nigerian to register with the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS), when he formally launched the scheme in 2006, nothing much has been achieved beyond the fanfare. Fifty-six years after gaining independence from colonial rulers and more than ten years after NHIS came on stream, the scheme, which was designed to achieve universal healthcare access by eradicating the regressive out-of-pocket payment system, is still beset with numerous challenges, though some of the teething resistance and speculations about the novel system have largely been overcome.

    Although the drafters of NHIS law crafted it with the lofty goal to provide universal healthcare access in a country of about 180 million people, experts say the scheme has only captured about three per cent of the population, rendering it almost useless and ineffective in the face of mounting national health maladies. Chief in the scheme’s bag of woes is the law setting up the NHIS itself. In the wording of the Act setting up NHIS, which was signed into law by General Abdulsalam Abubakar (now retired) on 10th of May, 1999, it is only mandatory for only federal government employees and private sector businesses with 10 or more employees to register with NHIS. Unfortunately, the majority of public sector workers work for Nigeria’s 36 state governments and 774 local government areas, not federal government. And since the law does not make it mandatory for them, most state government employees have elected not to join the NHIS, robbing the scheme of the bulk of revenue to shore up its finances.

    As for the private sector where the lion’s share of Nigerian workers ply their trades, most companies don’t register their employees with the government, perhaps to also avoid paying the right taxes and other obligations. According to experts, because of the loose monitoring cum enforcement system as well as loopholes in the law, many companies in the private sector have also devised other ways of sidestepping the scheme, leaving far less than 2 per cent of Nigeria’s GDP re-invested into healthcare sector. The import of all this is that the vast majority of employees in the country find themselves working without joining the NHIS – to the detriment of the citizenry and the sector itself.

    But critics lament that the labour unions, which should have insisted on having all workers join the universal healthcare net, have also not helped either, for efforts to enact legislations that would force employees to contribute to their own healthcare plan with salary deductions have continually met brick walls erected by the unions. According to the President of Nigeria Medical Association (NMA), Professor Mike Ogirima, before Nigeria’s moribund health sector can enjoy any significant improvements, the law setting up the NHIS needs to change, including making enrolment mandatory for all public and private sector workers. This, he added, will force more people to join the NHIS, especially from the 36 states. The more people enroll in health insurance, the consultant orthopedic and trauma surgeon believes the cheaper it will be for every Nigerian to reap the humongous benefits inherent in universal healthcare which the NHIS seeks to deliver, but which it is currently ill-equipped to provide.

    Going by the views of healthcare professionals, the public also needs more enlightenment regarding what health insurance truly entails, especially the benefits therein, so as to engender a better public perception and support. Currently, according to them, many people have next to nothing knowledge or information about NHIS and what it does, which makes the scheme still largely unpopular in a country where the health sector is in a shambles. And for many Nigerians not to continue to view health insurance as just another monthly expense that is not worth adding to their already bloated bills, industry players call for public advocacy and education so that the citizenry can start seeing health insurance as an investment that can save them lots of money and agony in the event that a health problem suddenly develops. But achieving this also demands an expansion to the scope of NHIS. As it currently works, health insurance does not cover treatment for patients needing renal dialysis, organ transplants, heart surgery and other ailments on its exclusion list because they are deemed to be very expensive to manage. Analysts insist that a situation where subscribers to NHIS still have to be burdened with out-of-pocket payment whenever they have unforeseen cases will certainly not make the scheme a popular idea in the country.

     

    Experts chart the way forward

    From UDUTH to ABUTH and other teaching hospitals, the consensus of CMDs is that any hospital that runs on generators can hardly lay claim to best medical services, because all attempt to excel will be hampered by erratic power supply, among other things. The NMA boss, Professor Ogirima, also advocated an improvement in the funding to the sector, insisting that universal healthcare coverage that can be achieved through making everybody to subscribe to the NHIS. But all this is not happening, at least for now. What this means is that the thick pall of frustration and depression hanging over Nigeria’s health sector will continue to thicken.

     

  • Hospitals of death, tears and sorrow (1)

    Hospitals of death, tears and sorrow (1)

    With crippling challenges of dilapidated infrastructure, obsolete medical facilities, dearth of professionals, teaching and paucity of funds to contend with, teaching hospitals have been reduced to centres of regrets and heartbreaks. Fresh from a two-month tour of these ailing facilities, Assistant Editor ADEKUNLE YUSUF reports that the regular harvests of woes in the public hospitals may not abate until the right structures are in place

    As far as miracles go, his is a classic example of life after death – or so it would seem. A businessman with unrivaled panache, Chukwudi Michael, 62, was traveling on a luxury bus to Enugu State, with a heart filled with grandiose business ideas. But contrary to all expectations, the journey turned into a nightmare for him and other passengers after the bus crashed into an oncoming vehicle and fell into a ditch near his destination. Seven passengers, including three children, were instantly killed. That was four years ago.

    An accident victim unluckily caught in the crossfire of over-speeding, Michael survived by the skin of his teeth, but not without sustaining multiple devastating injuries that left him unconscious, almost clinically dead, for days. As he and other survivors lay on the roadside writhing in pains, help became a luxury at a time it was most needed, since no vehicle was willing to transport them to a hospital. And when a truck finally volunteered to help after about an hour, the businessman was made to share a space with dead bodies.

    Despite being in a coma for two weeks, Michael woke up to the sounds of hope – thanks to the gifted hands that nurtured him back to life at the University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital (UNTH), Enugu State. This kick-started his slow but steady return to recovery in the intensive care unit, which served as his abode for almost two months. Three weeks ago, he was a grateful heart in Enugu, thanking God for saving him from the clutches of death, which would have cut him down in his prime. The grandfather, who was also effusive in his praises for UNTH, was all smiles as sounds of revelry issued into the night.

    But as Michael and his family luxuriated in ecstasy, Funmilayo, wife of Femi Adebayo, a business mogul, was not that lucky. She was hale and hearty until she drove herself to the University Teaching Hospital (UCH), Ibadan, capital of Oyo State. Her mission: she wanted to know her cancer status. On that fateful morning on January 25, 2016, she was accompanied to the hospital by her house help, Odunayo. A meticulous woman who would not leave anything to chances, Funmilayo, 58, chose to undergo tests following the death of Toluwalade Akinola, her sibling who died of cancer last year. But in the process, she did not only lose her right to know her medical status, the process led to her untimely demise, leaving her well-to-do husband and family grieving.

    Not ready to accept explanations for her passing away, a heart-broken Adebayo cried foul, alleging that a medical murder had taken place.

    “My wife was killed by the carelessness, negligence and incompetence of the doctors,” he insisted.

    Ready to draw a battle line with the management of the teaching hospital, the millionaire businessman called for an urgent  autopsy, enlisting the services of two prominent Senior Advocates of Nigeria (SAN) to force the hands of a reluctant management to accede to his request.

    “I was somewhere holding a meeting in Ibadan and my maid, Odunayo, who came with her to the hospital, informed me on phone that her madam was not feeling fine in the hospital. I was disturbed because of the simple fact that what could have happened to somebody who drove herself to the hospital to meet up her 9a.m. appointment?”

    But by the time Adebayo reached UCH, he got the surprise of his life.

    “I overheard her telling them (doctors) that she was no longer interested in the test and that they should normalise her system and allow her to go home. She was seriously in pain and told them to allow her to go.” The business mogul said the doctor told him that he put gas into her when it was discovered that she had intense pain. Because the pain refused to subside, Funmilayo was taken to the x-ray to see what was amiss. And realising that the lungs and intestine were not okay, she was asked to undergo surgery immediately.

    “We went for  x-ray to see what went wrong. After that, they said they had to take her for surgery because the lungs or intestine was not okay and I said the lungs or the intestine that were okay before the test began, how come you were saying she had perforated intestine? At that level, I suspected that maybe the gas was too much and the intestine has been damaged in the process,” he narrated how his wife’s ordeal unfolded.

    However, as he was contemplating what to do next, another doctor approached him, asking him to pay N110, 000  immediately or forfeit further intervention for his better half.

    Despite Adebayo’s readiness to pay any amount, the woman died, even without reaching the precincts of the surgery room, leaving a livid husband to fume and fume to no avail.

    Much like Adebayo and his household in Ibadan, Ausbeth Udebu has been reduced to a psychological wreck, having been endlessly tormented by the agony of sudden bereavement. He is yet to come to terms with the discrepancies between the laboratory diagnosis for which Ngozi, a secondary school teacher and wife of 15 years, was admitted and the cause of her death at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH), Idi Araba, Lagos. She died during the Easter break this year, plunging the family into chaos. Precisely, on March 25, Ngozi was referred from a Catholic hospital in Mushin to LUTH. She was diagnosed of ulcer, while the autopsy conducted after the death showed that she died of asphyxia, a medical condition arising from loss of consciousness due to the body’s inability to deliver oxygen to its tissues.

    Udebu, an estate developer, insisted that professional misconduct by the doctors and nurses led to the death of his wife and mother of four children on Easter Monday. Narrating the sequence of events that led to his wife’s demise, he recounted that it all started on that Good Friday after the family observed mass at St. Dominic’s Catholic Church, which ended about 6pm.

    “I was with my friends when my phone rang. I was asked to come back home because my wife was in pain,” he said.

    Udebu, who said he initially assumed it was one of the usual gimmicks to bring him home, ignored the call to head home. However, when his daughter persisted, arguing that the pain was not the usual discomfort the deceased used to experience during her menstrual cycle, a dutiful husband abandoned his friends and hurried home.

    “I took her to Regina Mundi Catholic Hospital at Mushin. We were referred to LUTH. At the LUTH Accident and Emergency, we were received when they saw the referral letter. After a while, they traced the veins and took two bottles of blood and told me to go and do test at Pathcare, which I did and the result was ready by 6am.”

    On returning to the ward, the doctors had written another scan investigation, which Udebu  did within an hour.

    “Unfortunately, all through this time, my wife was still writhing in severe pain. She was in extreme pains that I have never seen before. After collecting the results, I went straight to the pool of doctors so that they can analyse and maybe take actions. But I got the shock of my life as they asked me to wait until they were ready for ward round. I went back to my wife’s bed, which was the first on the line in the section and, unfortunately, she was the last to be seen.”

    The estate developer, who accused LUTH doctors and nurses of negligence, lamented that he had to wait for over 90 minutes before “they could see us on a case that was supposed to be treated as an emergency.”

    His words: “We waited patiently until they came.  They looked at the result and said all the vital parameters were in place and in order.  They asked me if she had ulcer before and I said no.  They even asked me about the kind of food she liked and ate. They were asking me some questions ordinarily I would not have answered but just because I wanted them to attend to my wife I managed to bring up myself to answer them all.  At the end they concluded that it was ulcer that was disturbing her.

    “That gave me so much hope that they would recommend something for me and my hope was high. They wrote all the drugs for me. Of all the things they wrote, the things they had in their pharmacy was the box of gloves, disinfectant and spirit and cotton wool. The drugs Gascol and other injections were not available, which I bought outside. There was no improvement and they wrote another drug and specified a particular brand that I managed to get after a lot of trouble.  This was now on Sunday. We were now moved to the ward because we were told we had stayed up to 48 hours when the rule was 24 hours.”

    But at LUTH, there is a caveat that no patient relations can stay with his or her patient in the ward. Despite all entreaties to allow somebody to stay overnight with his wife, the nurses held their ground. “It was like a drama when I questioned how two nurses would take care of 35 patients in a ward. She said by their training they know how to give priority. I wasn’t convinced but I had to give in. They made me to go and buy oxygen mask at about 9:30 pm; they tested it and assured me it was working.”

    However, by the time he returned to the hospital the next morning, it was a rude shock that perched on his nose like a recalcitrant bird following a buffalo.

    “I looked at where I left my wife the previous night. They had already drawn the curtain. I knew what that meant because I lost my uncle in LUTH. They were trying to prevent me from seeing her, but I resisted and I saw the lifeless body of my wife, the love of my life for 15 years and mother of my four children laid dead. They never called me; I included my numbers on every form I filled but they never called me,” he protested. Promptly, he demanded an explanation about the death of Ngozi. The hospital asked him to pay for the autopsy, which he did. But when the result was out, it had that his wife died of asphyxia, which is miles away from the scan and laboratory results preceding the treatment.

    Udebu, who recalled that there was no light in the accident and emergency ward, said it was a big challenge to find another vein when the first part of the intravenous fluid got blocked.

    “I had to use the use the torch of my phone in order to help the doctor trace the vein. There was no ventilation. Even the window in the room could not be opened. My wife was restless and uncomfortable. I tried to force it open but I couldn’t,” he lamented.

    He continued: “During my wife’s stay, the toilet was unusable. The floor was water-logged and I had to personally wade into the toilet to carry the bed pan she used for toilet. No patient could go into the toilet to use it. It is a terrible thing,” he said.

    But if the treatments meted out to Adebayo and Udebu were utterly reprehensible, how does one describe the cause of commotion and confusion galore at the Olabisi Onabanjo University Teaching Hospital (OOUTH), Sagamu, Ogun State, last October? To her family’s chagrin, Ajarat Muftau, 40, suddenly went missing three weeks after she was admitted at the hospital owned by the state government. The mother of four, who was undergoing heart-related issue in the teaching hospital, was declared missing by her husband, Muftau Muritala.

    But that was his only headache. He also accused the hospital management of not showing concern about her whereabouts, forcing the Sagamu police division to wade in. This led to the arrest of some hospital personnel, including the chief security officer and nurses on duty. Her family heaped her disappearance from the hospital’s female ward on the negligence of the nurses. They also lamented that police investigation into her disappearance was slow, adding that no progress had been made in finding the woman since she went missing.

    It was learned that Ajarat was receiving treatment for a heart-related disease at the hospital after going into a coma on October 13. She was admitted to the emergency and accident ward of the hospital, before being later taken to the female ward, where she went missing after regaining consciousness. “She was supposed to go for treatment at the hospital on October 19. But on October 11, her condition got worse. We rushed her to the hospital and I was told to pay N10,000 admission fee, which I did. She was placed on oxygen all through that day. In the evening, I went to pay for a scan she was to have the following day. At about 10am the next day, some nurses wheeled her into the x-ray centre for a scan.

    “She was taken to the female ward after the scan. A doctor came to attend to her and she was served a meal. After she finished eating, she said she wanted to rest. Her elder sister, my second wife and my mother, were with her in the ward. They were later told to go outside. I went into the ward around 12pm to check her but she was not on her sick bed. There were about six nurses in that ward. They told me to check her in the toilet. My relatives outside joined me and we searched everywhere but we couldn’t find her. We rushed to the gate to inform the security men and they said they didn’t see any patient. Meanwhile, the nurses didn’t help us to search for her until they handed over to their colleagues on afternoon duty,’’ he said.

    An enraged Muftau’s brother, Taofiq Muritala, a lawyer, said he had petitioned the Ogun state commissioner for police, Ahmed Iliyasu, to thoroughly investigate the case.

    Attempt by The Nation to speak with OOUTH’s Chief Medical Director, Prof. Alfred Jaiyesimi, was turned down. In a text message, he said he is not authorised to speak about the hospital and its activities, being a civil servant.

    Another heart-rending case took place on the morning of July 6 this year, as millions of Muslims around the world filed out in resplendent attires to celebrate the end of Ramadan, tragedy struck in the homes of Rasheed Akeyede. Instead of merriments and revelries that the day demanded, it was sobbing and wailings that rented the air, as neighbours and other sympathisers were forced into compulsory mourning mood over the demise of Fatimah, who died in questionable circumstances. It was the mourning of a woman who gave her all to support her husband, despite her unsuccessful efforts to secure a white-collar job.

    Her journey to the great beyond started on the 30th day of Ramadan, almost three hours to the sunset, when fasting Muslims would break their Ramadan fast. Having just worked on the beads jewelry for her friend ahead of the festivities, Fatimah decided to put her kerosene stove together to cook beans for her husband. But as she attempted to fetch onions in the kitchen cabinet, the holder of Higher National Diploma from the Lagos State Polytechnic saw drop of blood oozing out of her private parts, which was unexpectedly. Her pregnancy was just eight-month-old.

    But when blood kept coming profusely, she called the mobile phone of her husband, Rasheed, a graduate of Agricultural Extension from Ladoke Akintola University of Technology (LAUTEC), Ogbomosho, Oyo State. With the arrival of Rasheed, a petrol attendant at one of Total filling stations, the couple headed for Epe Primary Health Care Centre in Ita Opo on Ijebu Ode Road, from where they were referred to the Epe General Hospital.

    Hardly had they settled down than the doctor on duty called on the husband to source for blood, informing them that a caesarian section might need to be carried out on her. From that point, she began an unexpected journey to the grave on the eve of July 6. She died after a caesarean operation on her, but the baby girl survived.

    After the operation, she needed blood transfusion badly, but which “some hospital workers deliberately made impossible to get,” as Rasheed put it. An enraged husband attributed her loss to the negligence or dereliction of duty on the part of some health workers in the hospital.

    With tears running in rivulets down his cheeks, he carpeted the health workers that allegedly mismanaged his wife’s case. “All efforts to save Fatimah were truncated by the health workers whose attitude to saving life was questionable.

    “I met the laboratory attendant already sleeping. We had to knock the door for nearly 10 minutes before he opened the door. We told him that we needed two pints of blood for a pregnant woman in critical conditions, but he told us the blood is not available,” a heart-broken Rasheed said. He added that the laboratory attendant was gracious enough to provide contacts of different hospitals in the state that can supply the blood. But as fate would have it again, all the numbers were called but none was available. “When this was brought to the laboratory attendant’s attention, he called his boss, one Mr. Okunu, who later helped to call a private line belonging to another health officer in Ikorodu General Hospital. That was why we headed for Ikorodu for the blood. I couldn’t go to Ikorodu, but my brother followed them while I was asked to stay back to enable me buy other recommended drugs needed for the surgical operation and attend to other needs.”

    Then a new condition surfaced: N7,500 must be paid to enable him use the  ambulance that would convey the blood from Ikorodu General Hospital. With the condition met, he also coughed out N9,000 for the two pints of blood, each costing N4,500. “To my surprise, the lab attendant at Ikorodu General Hospital insisted that she would not give us the blood, saying that nobody told her anything about blood but Sallah rice. Before the woman could release a pint out of the two pints needed, my brother had to call me and I gave the phone to Epe General Hopsital lab attendant who then pleaded with her and she eventually released one pant.”

    But on returning to the hospital with a pint of blood, the doctor said the family should look for all possible means at this point to get blood. “Around 12:20am, three of my wife’s brothers arrived with their parents, saying they were ready to donate the needed blood, since they have the same blood group. The lab attendant insisted that they can’t take unscreened blood. I pleaded with the attendant to make use of the o’positive blood in the bank that the doctor is saying the woman is in a critical condition, but he stood his ground. The lab attendant argued that the deceased had 24% blood when she was brought in, saying that with a pint of blood already gotten from Ikorodu, she should be able to sustain till the morning,” Rasheed said.

    The lab attendant, again, called Okunu on another private line who told the family to go to Lagos Island Hospital for the blood. The young widower added that the hospital management insisted that he must pay another N7,500, just as the driver of the ambulance insisted on seeing the receipt of the payment before he could start the engine of the ambulance. He rushed to make the payment. At this stage, while waiting for those who went to source for blood, the doctor suggested that “we used the unscreened blood provided I was ready to sign an undertaking, lamenting that my wife was dying, but the lab attendant said he would not allow the use of unscreened blood.” Shortly after, Rasheed said he heard the doctor scolding the nurses for failing to give adequate attention to his wife as instructed.

    “On getting to ward 3 to call the doctor, I saw my wife’s lifeless body already packed, with wool in her nose and mouth while her feet were tied together. That was when the doctor announced to me of her passage at 3:30am. To me, it was the height of betrayal on the part of the doctor and the lab attendant, who I have begged for almost 8 hours to consider the use of the available blood when we couldn’t get what we needed on time,” he narrated amidst tears.

    Even infants and children generally, despite their pristine innocence and extreme vulnerability, hardly enjoy humane handling in public hospitals. The following cases, which involved children, are as blood-curdling as they are hair-raising. It was barely four hours after Fatimah lost the battle of life at Epe General Hospital, but the hospital saw nothing wrong in further jolting her grieving husband. It simply asked Rasheed to take the baby away, saying it was the deceased mother that was admitted, not the few hours’ old baby she left behind.

    “Just about few minutes after we buried my wife in accordance to the Islamic rites, pressures were mounted on me to come and carry the baby. I had just finished raising money to enable me pay the remaining hospital bill because the hospital management insisted that I pay the balance before they could release her body for burial. A nurse told me they have no business with the baby, saying that it was the mother they admitted and since the mother is dead, they couldn’t take the custody of the baby for any reason because there is no space in the hospital. I told them that we were ready to pay whatever it takes to take care of the baby at least for the night because we didn’t have the wherewithal to nurture the baby as she is too young for our care.

    “I told them there was no single woman to take care of her (the baby). My mother-in-law, who came to the hospital collapsed on hearing the news of my wife’s death. The woman was rushed to a hospital in Lagos where she was admitted due to the shock of her daughter’s death. All my pleas didn’t move them. It was disheartening to know that until someone helped me to call the Commissioner for Health, Dr. Jide Idris, before they decided to admit the baby. It was when he intervened that they began to give us VIP treatment and agreed to admit the baby.”

    Indeed, it was Idris’ prompt intervention that saved the baby, who was later discovered to be unable to breathe properly.

    “The following morning when I went to the hospital, I realised the baby was supported with oxygen. She couldn’t breathe independently. That was when it became clearer to me that the health workers were heartless. I wondered what could have happened if I had taken the baby home as they insisted. At this time, we reached out to the commissioner on her situation report. That was when the commissioner, again, threatened to deal with all the staff of the hospital if the baby died like her mother. So, the baby was transferred to Massey Children Hospital in Lagos Island, where she spent three weeks before she was discharged.”

    Now, almost  seven months after the unfortunate incident that led to her mother’s death, the baby she left behind does not seem to be as healthy as expected. Up till now, she hardly opens her eyes or cries, a condition which experts attributed to circumstances surrounding her birth. Baby Fatimoh has since been taken to the Federal Medical Centre in Owo, Ondo State.

    As Rasheed braces for a new lease of life, he said has started receiving threat messages. This started the very day he honoured the invitation of Dr Idris, where he denied authoring a letter purportedly written to commend the hospital where his wife died. “You are joking with ur life but you don’t know. Very soon we shall see if the police & soldiers can protect you 4 dis Epe,” the text message to his phone read.

    But if Rasheed’s experience is disgusting, John Okafor’s (also known in Nollywood as Mr. Ibu), who also had a dose of inhumane care prevalent in Nigeria’s public hospitals, can lead to criminal liability. This incident, which led to the death of his two-year old son at LUTH, took place in January 2011, shortly after his wife and son were released from the den of kidnappers in Enugu. Having secured their release with a ransom, he moved his family to Lagos. That was his undoing, as his son fell ill afterwards, and diagnosed as having inflammation of the liver.

    “The hospital suggested that he should be scanned. At the same time, I was informed that I could take my son out of the hospital to get the scan done elsewhere. But the same people later declined, saying that everything had to be done in the hospital because he was too weak to be taken outside. After a while, I was told that there was no electricity in the hospital. When I asked if there was no standby generator, they said there was no fuel in it. I offered to pay for fuel only to be told that the man that operated the generator was not around. When I left the place and got back later, the man still had not returned.”

    Later, Okafor said he found out that his son needed blood transfusion, which along with other things, was not attended to till the boy eventually died.

    But, like many voiceless Nigerians who are made to nurse a permanent wound after a distressing experience in the hospitals, Okafor seems not to have forgotten the heartbreak even with the passage of time.