Tag: death

  • Death will be that undiscovered country…

    Death will be that undiscovered country that we shall all visit. In that country, everybody will be stripped of titles and accumulated wealth. Nobody will be referred to as “Your Excellency,” “OON, CON, GCON” “Africa’s richest billionaire” and so on. In that country, the truth of our follies and the septic belly of our idiocies shall become even more pronounced and visible to all. Those of us, the billionaires particularly, who send so-called “prayerfully powerful” Alfas on holy pilgrimage to Mecca to seek for Allah’s forgiveness and infinite mercies on their behalf shall realize that they had simply been foolish. No amount of prayers-by-proxy, sacrifices and so on, shall move Almighty Allah to forgive them and grant them eternal peace and paradise if their handiwork is tantamount to evil.

    They will all die eventually. It wouldn’t matter if they are buried in Victoria Court Cemetery or Atan Cemetery; it wouldn’t matter if their remains are unrecoverable in the event of their demise in a ghastly accident or assassination. Immediately they pass on, they shall begin to pay for their handiwork like the rest of us. They shan’t escape the trials of the grave.

    No priest, highfaluting ceremony of absolution from ‘original sin,” redemption and so on shall ennoble the Christians among us with the “infinite grace” of Almighty God if they remain evil at heart. If they like, let them build as many gigantic Churches and temples as they like, let their offerings and tithe tower beyond the rafters and sky-high, it won’t make them pious before God.

    No priest or Alfa can intercede with God on our behalf. We shall all die: President, governor, first lady, special advisers, ministers, accountant, journalist, activist, dibias, babalawos and so on. And even our tiniest depravity shall be summoned to witness against us.

    Those who profess to be godly live like they answer to some blind, stupid, and partial god. Almighty Allah is not stupid, silly or blind. Jehovah is neither partial nor handicapped by greed for worship houses, outlandish sacrifices and exaggerated humility. Chineke, Eledumare is surely no perverted wimp that we could corrupt by wile and insincere tokens of sacrifice and worship.

    He will judge us all according to our handiwork. In the face of such imminent reality, it’s amusing to see the ruling class administer our lives like they are answerable to no one. It’s even more bizarre to see our youth lend themselves as willing tools to the antics and designs of the ruling class. Many a self-styled professor of truth and champion of the masses’ rights have become junkyard dog and dunghill mongrel for the same ruling class they used to criticize.

    Talk is cheap really and Nigerians love to talk a good game. That is why everyone: literate, semi-literate and illiterate, display flawless capacities to decipher and summarize the political and socio-economic problems afflicting Nigeria, just for the fun of it or the benefit of applause.

    Besides a few good men and real heroes who have staked their lives and personal comfort to protest the gross ineptitude and bestiality of the ruling class and the society at large, most of us have accepted to remain acquiescent. When we are criticized for being unacceptably docile, we respond that there is infinite wisdom in choosing our battles wisely and keeping our mouths shut.

    Nonetheless, we continue to mount the soapbox in our living rooms, around our dinner tables and in the ubiquitous ‘beer parlours’ criticizing our leaders, casting blames and justifying our pathetic and apologetic existence.

    The tragedy subsists in our customary lamentation about the state of the Nigerian nation; every time our conscience is roused with a damning report, as it is still customary of us, more racist politicians and activists suggest that we split and go our separate ways touting it as the only solution to our league of extraordinary problems.

    There is no wisdom in secession unless it serves to eliminate the same bogeys that make Nigeria a living hell for us. Secession, I maintain, is the fruit of ‘reason’ that we need to be wary of and I will continue to say this hoping every prospective muscle – that is, the youth – by which the separatists hope to achieve their dreams of dissolution, would listen and learn to let the secessionists risk their skins and their lineages to actualize their platitudes.

    Let every political godfather, public office hopeful and so on send their sons and wives and daughters on to the streets to wield cutlasses, guns and bombs. Let the ruling class recall their children from their Ivy League schools and exclusive mansions abroad to march on the streets and hack to death perceived oppositions to their political ambitions. Let every youth from humble background and the breadlines mobilize instead to collectively seek an end to the ruling class’ reign of terror.

    Violence and bloodshed is never the answer. Secession is never the answer to our woes.

    The biggest misconception about separation, insurgence, self-determination or whatever the separatists choose to call it is that it could be peaceful and that the end result would be a conscientious and citizenry-centred dispensation.

    It’s all dirty, greedy politics. The separatists want the youth to fly the flags of their dream nations, they want everybody to brandish a bumper sticker that bellows, “Death to the Federal Republic of Nigeria!” They call anyone that’s anti-war and anti-secession, “pacifist,” “traitor” or whatever colourful adjective suits their rage. Then they promise the youth a prosperous future and better fate under their dream nation. Consequently, youth that ought to know better buy into such farce and they all begin to dream and talk of the great uprising that would set them free from the living hell Nigeria has become.

    Even when we see through the promises of the separatists, we choose to ignore it for the love of paltry inducements and instant gratification. It’s about time the Nigerian youth started postponing immediate gratification and endure hard sacrifices spurred by conviction that the future can be better than the past.

    But we face a far more difficult problem at our moment in history. What do you promise youth who have been told they can have anything they want, who are repeatedly urged to seek the best of all possible circumstances without shedding sweat for it? How do you tell them that “the good times,” as they have known them or heard of them, will definitely come back?

    The Nigerian youth needs a new vision to help them deal with reality, a promising story of the future that helps them let go of the pains and disappointments of the past. We need a grand vision of possibilities that Nigerians may pursue and dream on: the country’s rich socio-cultural and political tradition, the right of all citizens to larger lives. Such dreams should never be about getting richer than the guy next door or accumulating obscene wealth for applause and to show off but the right to live life more fully and engage more expansively, the elemental possibilities of human existence.

    Sophistry and deceit are the springboards from which our civilization evolves. Add mediocrity, mindlessness and greed and you have a perfect representation of the contemporary youth. We were wrong to think it a matter of years and decades that we would improve in citizenship and tact. We forget that true citizenship essentially translates to being an emissary of truth, hope, superior culture and progress to the benefits of the literate and unschooled.

    It should above all be the appendage of that fine adjustment between reality and the growing knowledge of life – an adjustment which discovers the secret of civilization and the solution to its seemingly intractable problems. Insanely, to this end, we apply bigotry in politics and religion. Thus by every manner of faith we commit the worst of inhuman transgressions – like terrorism and mass murder, inordinate lust for wealth and acclaim.

  • Ajasin Varsity shut after student’s death

    Ajasin Varsity shut after student’s death

    Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba-Akoko (AAUA) in Ondo State has been shut indefinitely following the death of a student, which sparked violence on  campus. The management suspended the ongoing first semester examination and ordered students to vacate the campus immediately

    A statement by the Acting Registrar, Sunday Ayeerun, said the move was to prevent a breakdown of law and order.

    The deceased, Daniel Afolabi Ojo, a 200-Level Economics Education student, was said to have fallen off an over-speeding motorcycle on his way to the examination hall. As he struggled to get up, he was knocked down by another motorcycle. The accident happened on Friday outside the campus. The victim was rushed to the school Health Centre, from where he was referred to the Federal Medical Centre in Owo. CAMPUSLIFE gathered that the victim died on the way to Owo.

    When the news of Daniel’s death got to the campus, the students went wild, destroying properties in and around the school. The protesters vandalised vehicles at the school’s Health Centre and the university restaurant. They also destroyed shops around the campus.

    Efforts by the Deputy Vice-Chancellor, Administration, Prof Francis Oyebade, to placate the protesters failed.

    In response to the violence, the management closed the school and sent students home. Ayeerun said the school had set up an investigative panel to look at the cause of the protest.

    The statement reads: “The school authorities have announced the immediate closure of the institution. This followed the destruction of properties within and outside the university by some students over the death of their colleague, who was involved in an accident outside the campus on Friday.

    “The ongoing examination has been suspended, while all students have been directed to leave the campus and Halls of Residence immediately. Students would be informed when to resume for the examination. The management has also set up a panel to look into the protest to guard against future occurrence. Parents and guardians are hereby informed of this development.”

    On Monday, security operatives, comprising riot policemen and soldiers, were deployed to maintain peace as students left the school.

  • Police Sergeant dies in Lagos hotel

    Police Sergeant dies in Lagos hotel

    A Police Sergeant identified as Jude Nwadudu has been found dead in a hotel located at Iju, a Lagos suburb.

    Nwadudu was said to have gone there for a ‘good time’ with his female friend during the Easter holidays when the incident occurred.

    It was gathered that the deceased after relaxing with the unnamed lady, went into the bathroom to freshen up but slipped.

    He was said to have hit his head on the floor and became unconscious, prompting the lady to raise alarm for people to come to his rescue.

    The Nation gathered that the father of four was rushed to a nearby hospital, where he was transferred to the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH), where he eventually died on Easter Sunday.

    His companion was said to have been invited for questioning and was released after her statement was documented.

    It was learnt that the deceased whose wife’s also a Sergeant, was recently transferred to the Special Anti-Robbery Sqaud (SARS) headquarters of the Lagos State Police Command from Kogi state.

    The state command’s spokesperson, Dolapo Badmos, a Superintendent of Police (SP) could not be reached for official response at the time of filing this report as she was said to be in a meeting.

     

  • Death to a charlatan

    • Reverend King, just convicted to hang for murder, got his just desserts.
    But the Nigerian state must stop condoning such fatal impunity

    The February 26 Supreme Court verdict confirming the death sentence by hanging on Chukwuemeka Ezeugo, aka Reverend King, General Overseer of the Christian Praying Assembly (CPA), a Lagos-based religious commune, is a just close to a horrible saga.  King was first convicted for the crime by Justice Joseph Oyewole, then of the Lagos State High Court, on 11 January 2007.

    King would hang for murdering Ann Uzor, one of his church members, by setting fire on Ann and five others, after accusing them of “fornication”.  He accused a male church member of sleeping with another female, his “dedicated maid”, at which no other male must look. Yet, the “man of God” had wives and children!  In anger, the pastor reportedly drenched the sorry six with petrol and set them ablaze.  Ann died.  But the others survived the inferno.

    Such was the extent of Ezeugo’s abuse that one of the victims, turned principal state witness at his trial, said the pastor gave her a ring to press his sole ownership of her.  The maid, an unmarried young woman, served the pastor stark naked; and was an object of ceaseless sexual and physical abuse, since the CPA “King” was reported to be a very violent man.

    Not only did Ezeugo brutalise his CPA church members, he also terrorised people in his church neighbourhood; to the extent of even raiding the surrounding houses and conscripting the defenceless to his brand of worship.  He was also reported to have flogged  mercilessly his flock, for the most routine of infractions, no matter their age, marital or even societal status.

    Such was King’s notoriety that many of his former neighbours are urging Governor Akinwunmi Ambode to sign with despatch the pastor’s death warrant, and quickly carry out his execution.  Even Justice Sylvester Nguta of the Supreme Court, who read the lead judgment in the final sentence, was so grimly impressed by King’s sheer savagery that he remarked it was like a scene from a horror movie.  But that horror movie was real!

    Let justice take its toll.  But beyond crime and punishment, why does Nigeria tolerate continued cases of gross citizen abuses in religious communes?  Even with his sentence, many of the deluded votaries still believe he would walk free, with a good number of the congregants changing their surname to King!

    Before Reverend King was Olufunmilayo Immanuel Odumosu, self-named Jesu Oyingbo (Jesus of Oyingbo), who for many years on end, in Lagos, brutalised his brainwashed religious captives, and subjected them to blatant sexual perversion; in many cases, incest: Immanuel was not averse to having children by mother and daughter!

    As the abuses mounted, neighbours in his Maryland, Ikeja commune, played dumb.  The government itself lived in denial, until his death in 1988; and the bitter row over his estate.  Those rows led to bitter legal cases, which revealed the rot in Jesu Oyingbo’s commune.  That eventually led to the Lagos government’s seizure of the estate.

    Inasmuch as the right to faith is guaranteed under Nigerian law, the government should strive to protect citizens from charlatans like Rev. King, the late Jesu Oyingbo, and other hundreds, if not thousands, on the religious landscape, whose atrocities are yet hidden.  For the government to succeed, however, neighbours of these communes should blow the whistle the moment they notice anything untoward.  The police too should do their duty, should they get such reports.

    That Reverend King would hang for his crime should serve as a grave lesson to other religious charlatans.   But as prevention is better than cure, the Nigerian government and people must develop a zero tolerance of such abuses.

  • Man remanded for ‘stabbing’ mum to death

    An Ebute Meta Chief Magistrate’s Court in Lagos, on Friday, ordered a 30-year old man, Ibrahim Oniyide, to be remanded in prison for allegedly stabbing his mother to death.

    Chief Magistrate B.O Ope-Agbe ordered that the accused be remanded in Ikoyi Prisons, pending the release of legal advice from the Director of Public Prosecution (DPP).

    Oniyide is facing a-count charge of murder.

    His plea was not taken.

    Prosecuting Sergeant Jimah Iseghede told the court that the offence was committed on February 5 at about noon on 3, Olubunmi Christopher Street, Abule-Egba, Lagos.

    He alleged that the accused stabbed his mother, Taiwo Oniyide, 50, to death with a kitchen knife.

    The prosecutor said the accused had a disagreement with his mother and stabbed her to death in annoyance.

    Iseghede said the offence contravened Sections 221 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2011.

    The case has been adjourned to March 8, pending legal advice from the DPP.

  • As the naira duels onto death(1) (How to regrow a shattered nation)

    As the naira duels onto death(1) (How to regrow a shattered nation)

    Baron von Clausewitz, the great German military historian and philosopher of war, had noted that war was the continuation of politics by other means. Had he lived in our brave new world of modern technology where you don’t actually need to put troops on the battle ground to subdue an enemy, he would have learnt that economic contention among nations is the continuation of political warfare by other means. Economics is the brutal game of market domination that human societies engage in to maintain political control.

    In this war of all against all, there are nations like Nigeria that are singularly unlucky in the sense that they also boast of enemies within in addition to external adversity. As this column once noted, Nigeria is crawling with enemy nationals who are bent on bringing the nation to heel either economically or religiously if they fail to bend the political configuration to their will or whim.

    A nation is particularly vulnerable to economic brutalization if a significant section of the populace or fractions of the political elite query the basis of its political foundation or reject the socio-economic architecture on which the authority and legitimacy of the state is anchored. Such barely veiled hostility often eventuates in an armed critique of the state which leads to an outright destruction of the economy or in creative sabotage and more covert forms of aggression which take their toll on the economy. For any nation, internal peace is the first precondition for internal prosperity.

    This past week, Nigerians watched helplessly as their national currency and supreme symbol of sovereignty, the naira, engaged in a duel unto death with the world’s major currencies. It was an unequal struggle; a futile and ultimately senseless contention. It was like watching a puny paperweight enter into the boxing ring with a primed heavyweight at the zenith of agonistic exertions. It was like watching one’s own economic funeral.

    The national currency was taking a cruel pounding. The apocalyptic meltdown of the naira, long predicted, appeared finally on the way. An eerie disorientation seems to have descended on the entire nation. There was a feeling of utter despair and despondency. Anybody who was in Nigeria this past week would know what is it to be suddenly caught in the equivalent of an economic tsunami.

    Helplessness and fright seized the nation particularly since no one appeared to be in charge. There was no economic communiqué; no bulletin of strategic efforts to reassure a dazedand distraught citizenry. Beyond President Buhari’s stout and patriotic refusal to devalue the naira which was made on a foreign soil, there was nothing else to hold on to, and even this in itself was not nearly enough.

    While Buhari’s compassion for the poor and the Nigerian masses is not in doubt, it is also becoming obvious that seventeen years after the termination of military rule, successive Nigerian rulers often treat the citizens as if they are errant children of some paternalistic ruler who is often bemused or exasperated by their demands for accountability and transparency. In the face of a crippled economy and rising tension, this demand for open government is going to be a flashpoint of confrontation in the coming months.

    While the British pound sterling appeared to have completely disappeared from open bidding, the naira suffered sharp and significant losses against the rampart and relentless dollar. By midweek, one dollar was rumoured to have been exchanging for four hundred naira. It was the worst moment for the national currency since independence.

    By Wednesday morning, Nigeria’s legendary luck seemed to be on a fortuitous rampage once again. The naira seemed to have miraculously rallied against the dollar. Word went round that the naira had firmed up at about two hundred and fifty to the single dollar. There were smiles of relief. Hitherto obdurate and obstinate banks were calling on customers to renegotiate abandoned forex demands. Suddenly, the Basic Travelling Allowance which had long kicked the dust became available again, or so it seemed.

    But it was all a cruel hoax. What is not available is simply not available and cannot be conjured by any fiscal humpty dumpty. By Thursday, the naira was exchanging for three hundred and fifty naira to the dollar and the downward spiral seemed set to continue. Never in the history of the nation has the national currency been subject to such steep gyrations in the pit of fiscal hell; such wild fluctuations of fortune. It was as if Nigeria of the seventies was another country entirely.

    Indeed, it may well be. Having smelt blood, the IMF started calling for the massive devaluation of the naira. It is a text book shibboleth straight out of the con book of monetarist economics and utterly lacking in society-specific rigour. The IMF has learnt nothing and forgotten nothing. In the brutal game of economic domination, any non-Western country that listens to the economic subterfuge of the IMF and other accessories of western economic and political hegemony has willingly obtained a suicide pill.

    It is instructive to note that while the western powers have been urging China to revalue its national currency to bring it at par or at parlousness with international economic imperatives, the Chinese authorities actually went ahead to devalue theYuan renminbi. By dint of hard work, foresight, hyper-nationalism and prudence, the Chinese hold all the aces whereas a profligate and promiscuous nation like Nigeria holds none at all.

    It is indicative of the grim fiscal calculus even among economic allies that America is asking Britain not to contemplate leaving the EU while the Americans would never contemplate joining a comparable union on their own continent. America needs an EU-compliant Britain as a buffer against the hordes from the European backwaters. Let them tarry first in good old Britain, the island of state compassion. As big and spacious as it is, America encourages immigration only if the immigrant is ready to work and lift himself by the bootstraps without eyeing state largesse.

    On the other hand, Britain, the wise and wily survivalist, is strategically ambivalent about the bogus confederation of unequal states that is the EU. The British authorities have noted that the Welfare state is not designed for mass-migration because the whole tradition is based on the ethics of work and thrift without the prospects of immediate gratification. It is not for Balkan no-hopers looking to latch on to the apron strings of a nanny state.

    Britain has also faulted the wisdom or desirability of foisting a unified currency like the Euro on countries with different national cultures and economies. It is a recipe for economic disaster the like of which has hobbled mainland European continent in the last decade. Even the Greeks, bearers of Hellenic Civilization and descendants of Alexander who went all the way to Asia, are shouting that their country should not be turned to a “warehouse of souls” and haven of choice for migrants stranded by choice.

    Having been ringside spectators in their own economic funeral this past week, Nigerians must now know what it means to be at the receiving ends of the punitive game of economic domination that nations play. The weak and the meek will not inherit the earth or its abundant resources. If they do temporarily, they will fritter them away or be forced to surrender them by superior economic forces.

    This is not a new game in town. It has been happening ever since man emerged as homo economicus. The original impetus for a protective state came principally out of the need to protect and guard the fruits of human labour and rudimentary entrepreneurial endeavour. Those who are historically minded will now recognize Lord Lugard’s infamous “Dual Mandate”—obtained without any duality—and the sudden appearance of Commodore Matthew Perry’s frigate on Japanese shores as acts of bullying and economic aggression by stronger states against weaker nations. By the same token, the Boxers’ rebellion in China was not a sartorial uprising but an instance of fierce resistance against economic bullying by the dominant imperial power of the age.

    As we have hinted above, the economic destruction of Nigeria rests on both external and internal factors and forces. The combination of external forces and enemy nationals can be very devastating indeed. Externally, the international conspiracy to bring the oil bonanza to an end is too well known to delay us here. But it was good while it lasted. At least it gave the world the countervailing economic centre of Dubai and its glittering emporium.

    But this is small beer compared to the modern hell-hole of Nigeria in all its seething homophobic aggravations. Oil has ruined Nigeria. While the immediate internal cause of the economic meltdown of the nation and the run on the naira is the wholesale looting of the economy by the last administration in perhaps the most criminal and treasonable example of state larceny ever witnessed on the benighted continent, there other equally pressing factors.

    The first is the existence of anunproductive and unimaginative political elite that has not progressed beyond the hunter-gatherer phase of human existence. The consequence of this is the reliance on oil and a monocultural economy which made it impossible to grow other productive sectors of the economy. Second, the activities of enemy nationals who engage in covert economic sabotage or who actively take up arms against the nation such as we have seen in the Boko Haramwar or the resurgence of pipeline vandalization in the Niger Delta.

    To all this, we must add the hilarious incompetence of the Central Bank of Nigeria which rather than add the value of intellectual sophistication and conceptual rigour to the macro-management of our economy often hands out humongous donations from our national till when it is not funnelling scarce foreign exchange to Bureau De Change on a weekly basis. This is then shared out among smugglers and other crooks who import second hand goods which thus killsoff the urge to produce what we must consume. With such enemy nationals, a nation does not require much external adversity to come unstuck.

    The conclusion we have been avoiding must now be pressed into service. Nigerians are collectively in denial, unable to confront ourselves with the hard evidence. The truth must now be told if only because of its invigorating and liberating tonic. The truth is that as it is at the moment, Nigeria is broke and broken; economically defeated, politically vanquished as a result of structural debility and has only survived being militarily defeated by a rag tag religious insurgency by the skin of the teeth.

    Being in denial will not set us free. Nigeria at the moment resembles a land that has suffered a saturation bombardment in addition to carpet bombing. The moral, political, economic and spiritual devastation reminds one of Hiroshima after the nuclear holocaust of the Second World War.

    When a people are this roundly defeated, devastated and deflated, they need to go back to the drawing board and to first principles. The change Nigeria requires is both internal and external. This nation will not be cleansed of corruption and graft until we have internally purged ourselves and reordered or reengineered the Nigerian psyche. Apart from leading the war against corruption, President Buhari should also be at the vanguard of a campaign for a wholesale ethical reorientation of Nigerians and the fashioning of a new national ethos that will drive development and democracy.

    Whether the retired general has the temperament or the wherewithal for this Herculean project remains to be seen. Modern contention among nations has shifted largely to the market place and one can now see why in certain countries economic sabotage is treated as grand treason punishable by death. If the retired general from Daura fails to confront the political, economic and intellectual debris of a collapsed nation, the fear is that he will be setting the template for a routine dissolution of whatever remains or for the emergence of an even more radically ruthless and uncompromising ruler in the long run. Next week, we bring thoughts about how to regrow a shattered nation.

     

  • Wailing as man allegedly stabbed to death by lawyer-wife is laid to rest

    Relations, friends and associates of Adebayo Oyelowo Oyediran Ajanaku allegedly stabbed to death by his lawyer-wife, Yewande, in Ibadan, Oyo State, on Friday wept uncontrollably as his remains were interred in his hometown, Gbongan, in Ayedade Local Government Area of Osun State.

    Lowo, as he was popularly called was allegedly killed on February 2, 2016 by his wife after a dispute at their residence in Akobo area of Ibadan.

    On sighting the hearse bearing the white casket of the deceased at St. Paul’s Cathedral Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion), Oke Osun Diocese, Gbongan, many in attendance at the funeral service burst into tears.

    Many of the deceased”s family members, relations and friends, who were wearing black customised T-Shirts with the pictures of Lowo and inscription tagged “Justice4Lowo,” launched into emotions asking the deceased to avenge his gruesome death.

    At the end of the funeral service, his body was lowered into the grave at St Paul’s Cathedral cemetery along Gbongan-Osogbo road.

    Among those in attendance at the church service were the deceased’s business partner simply called Mr. Mikkel; wife of the Olufi of Gbongan, Dr. (Mrs) Magret Ronke Oyeniyi; Professor Tunde Makanju; Justice Bolarinwa Babalakin, who was represented by his personal assistant, members of Gbongan Progressive Union, among others.

    In a sermon entitled “The Greatest Question of Life”, by the Dean of St. Paul’s Cathedral Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion), Oke Osun Diocese, Gbongan,  Venerable Paul. O. Farotimi, the deceased’s family members were advised to take solace in God.

    The cleric said: “Life is a cycle. Life is a stage, we all play our part and leave the stage. Lowo left the stage when the ovation was the loudest. He left as a hero. There are many questions in this life that remained unanswered. Since this unfortunate incident, we have asked the question why his wife killed him. Why did he go back and sleep in the house after the quarrel had been settled.”

    The cleric went further to ask the Ajanaku family to immortalise the name of Oyelowo so that generations yet unborn would know him and his far- reaching impacts.

    The cleric added: “The death of Lowo tells us that we can die at anytime, anywhere and anyhow. We have to prepare to meet our saviour. Situations like this should make us think about our life.”

  • Overhaul of ‘death’ sector

    This is a column that seeks to mould, shape societal values  and  protect the interests of consumers, citizens and touch other broader relevant topics under the column: ‘TRUE VALUE 360’. It is an interactive column as suggestions, complaints; day to day experiences are welcome.

    This week’s edition is STARVATION AND THE COMMON MAN.

    Some analysts have propounded various theories about Nigeria being an accident waiting to happen or an accident happened already or that we will break up by a particular date etcetera, etcetera but we thank God we are still standing today and will keep standing by His Grace. One of the reasons given is that Nigeria comprises of unlikely bedfellows occasioned by forced marriage of various tribes. Many issues are begging for attention but today we are looking at the topic: STARVATION AND THE COMMON MAN.

    There is a saying that a hungry man is an angry man. A hungry, angry man will never be reasonable in action and thoughts that is if he can think at all. Nigeria’s business economy to date is driven by government policies and because of the 2015 transition/ change of government process, a lot of business decisions were put on hold which had the ripple effect of making the year very hard on the citizenry. There is cash squeeze in the economy and investors are threading carefully to venture into new grounds; there has been massive disengagement in public and banking sector for various reasons, the private sector and small business enterprises are also not left out of the hopefully temporary financial and economic pains.

    Citizens without steady income have become desperate and have devised various deadly means to survive. Lagos in particular has been witnessing serious impunity in recent times. The masses get handouts or income from the middle class but the middle class are also broke at the moment, reason why the hungry masses are resorting to terrorizing citizens.

    Traffic jam in Lagos has reached an unprecedented scale and you cannot guess or predict the duration of trips to any destination in Lagos anymore.

    It is a common daily occurrence for citizens to be robbed in these traffic jams with individuals losing personal belongings such as handsets, windscreens, handbags etc in recent times. These acts are being perpetuated by petty thieves and idle touts who have no means of feeding; some of them will ordinarily not go this route but out of desperation they become criminals as unemployment rate is one of the major issues we have not been able to deal with.

    It is also common to find young men in their middle to late twenties ogling at women who are old enough to be their mothers and even grandmothers, not out of love interest but so as to get some extra feeding or survival income. These set abound everywhere from concerts, to salons, clubs and even on the streets. Our remaining values are being eroded at the twinkling of an eyelid; let us save our youths as they are our future.

    Yes, we are overwhelmed with various urgent issues, but this menace will only escalate if a temporary solution is not found immediately.

    If we cannot resort to the Bread and Circuses option, and it may be unrealistic to attain 80- 100% employment at the moment; we should endeavor to provide our own version of succor to the unemployed.  Provision of at least a meal per day (without the circus) should be considered for the unemployed in every local government either through the local government authorities or through a special agency that will ensure that the meals get to the right persons, the country can afford it. This will reduce crime rate and petty robbery. This will also create employment for new sets of personnel.

    Of course, I am not making a case for lawlessness or male prostitution here; to me it is an aberration, it is better to provide an immediate survival alternative than to leave the menace to come back to haunt us all. We already have enough on our hands in combating sophisticated crime, let’s not increase the number.

     

    Reactions are welcome.

  • Family escapes death as truck crushes car in Benin

    A family of three Wednesday morning escaped death by the whiskers when a truck carrying wood crushed their Toyota Land Cruiser jeep.

    The family made up of the father, wife, nine months old baby and a family friend just stepped out of the car when the accident occurred.

    Driver of the truck marked XC 194 AGB was said to have attempted to avoid hitting a seven-year old boy when he rammed the truck into six cars including a taxi marked BON 519 XC.

    It was learnt that the truck crushed the legs of the boy.

    Narrating how his family escaped death, the lucky father who gave his name as Osaro Otasowie said he wanted to go inside the bank alone but the wife insisted that they followed him into the bank.

    Osaro said he was full of praises to God for averting tears from his family.

    His words, “I parked my vehicle and decided to go into the bank. I came out and my wife said they will go with me. We all went into the bank.”

    “When we came out, I saw a crowd and asked what happened; they said a truck hit a little boy. I was told the boy broke his leg. I later saw my car under the truck.”

    “My wife, my nine months old baby and my friend were with me but God saved us by using my wife to tell me that they should join me.”

    Another truck that reportedly had brake failure also crushed a red Pathfinder jeep by First Junction along same Akpakpava road.

    The driver of the jeep was said to have been seriously injured in the crash.

     

  • Train crushes man to death in Kano

    A man suspected to be drunk was on Wednesday night crushed to death by moving train in Sharada area in Kano.

    An eye witness told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Kano on Thursday that the incident happened around 8:00 pm.

    According to the witness, who requested anonymity, the deceased might have slept off on the rail track when the moving train crushed him to death.

    NAN learnt that residents of the area saw the mutilated remains of the man the following morning.

    When contacted, the Police Public Relations Officer of the state command, DSP Magaji Majiya, said the matter was yet to be officially reported to the police.

    He said that he heard of the incident from people who called to find out from him.

    Majiya said he had directed the Divisional Police Officer in charge of the area to investigate the matter.