Tag: death

  • Anguish and death

    Anguish and death

    RIDO VILLAGE.  For those who have never visited this sleepy community in Chikun Local Government Area of Kaduna State, the village by reputation should be a paradise where the inhabitants live their lives in peace and pleasure. It is easy to visualise the wide roads, magnificent houses, good health infrastructure and like many other oil-bearing communities in the Niger Delta, a 24- hour electricity supply from the oil companies.

    It should be in a vintage position and those who dream of the village as an Eldorado could be forgiven.  In the whole of Northern Nigerian, it is the only ‘oil-bearing’ community; for 34 years, it has played host to the Kaduna Refining and Petro-Chemical Company Limited (KRPC), a subsidiary of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).

    But in Rido, things are not always what they seem. It is not in Niger Delta, but all the trappings of oil pollution, gas flaring and the attendant health problems are common. It could be described as the oil community in the midst of the Sahara. The village is locked in a fierce battle with the oil company and some of its contractors over alleged indiscriminate dumping of waste products from the refinery.

    In early December, harmattan had descended on the village leaving the streets dry and dusty.  All over the community, a hail of dust had settled on the mud houses and every other living thing including domestic animals. As one moved through the very dusty and uneven Rido roads, a sad and depressing atmosphere was visible. The air was chocking and many of the people went around with long faces. Poverty was evident on almost every structure, animal and human in the village.

    The KRPC was designed to refine crude oil and also produce a wide variety of petroleum products some of which are used as Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG), Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), Automotive Gas Oil (AGO) or Diesel oil, Kerosene, Fuel Oil and Sulphur, according to the NNPC website.

    The KRPC also has one of the largest lubricating oil complexes in Africa and some of its products include: Base Oils, Asphalt (Bitumen) and Waxes. The KRPC was initially designed to produce 60,000 Barrels Per Stream Day (BPSD) but was upgraded in 1986 to 110 BPSD.

    The refinery itself was a product of the need to satisfy the northern market’s demand for petroleum products which the government thought would be more cost effective than transporting refined oil from Warri by road or rail. The refinery thus served the whole of the northern region with refined petroleum and petro-chemical products.

    The refinery, built by Japanese company, Chiyoda Chemical Engineering and Construction Company, occupies 2.89 square kilometers. It is a well laid out plant with different sections clearly laid out. A high, long wall separates the oil-rich Rido from the poor Rido and stretches several kilometers. The road that passes through the refinery is long and smooth and  the plant is adjoined by beautiful gardens and posh lawns. There are flowers by its walls and gates and several signposts urge visitors to “help keep our lawns beautiful.”

    The KRPC has made tremendous progress in 34 years; business has expanded and profits soared. Like other refineries in Nigeria, the KRPC has constantly flared its gas. According to the locals, the fury of the flames could be felt in all of Rido irrespective of the time of the day. But the prosperity witnessed by the refinery is one sided; the green lawns and beautiful gates, well tarred roads and well oiled executives all ended by the gates of the refinery. The rest is hell and this is where the 40,000 inhabitants of Rido village live.

    A community and the oil company

    On Sunday, December 14, 2014 around 3pm, a huge protest was underway in Rido community. It involved men, women, children, invalid, the cripple and the aged. About 1000 members of the village gathered in the village square. It is a small space in-between four rectangle shaped houses. There is no finesse about this square as it consists of only dust and sand.  The protesters displayed several banners calling for justice for the long suffering people of the community. Others spoke about environmental justice for the villagers, while a banner reads: “What is good in the South is good in the North, Environmental Justice for the Dead Children and Poisoned People of Rido.”

    Mariam Shuaibu was very prominent in the protest. She is a short, middle age woman with broken teeth and tough look.  Shuaibu is no ordinary woman; she is the women leader of Rido community and one of its most outspoken activists. The women and men alike look to her and her never ending energy and commitment to the cause of Rido.

    Shuaibu could reel off all the things that were wrong with Rido on the tip of her fingers. “We have disability in this village; many of our children are disabled and some of them have speech defect. We have lost some children in this community and it has affected our husband’s sexual performance as they cannot satisfy us sexually because of the gas flare that we are exposed to.” For this litany of woes, there is only one direction the blame would go: The KRPC.

    About 1000 members of the community agreed with Shuaibu. According to them, the village has endured 34 years of consistent gas flaring, which has left the community paralysed, a number of its indigenes dead and several more disabled.

    There are more accusations against the company; the residents say since the refinery was established, only eight indigenes have been employed. In August 2014, Shuaibu wrote to the KRPC asking that the youth be employed. “Since the company was commissioned in 1980, only eight people from the area had been mandated to be working as staff and we now have excessive unemployed youths roaming about the street looking for daily food upon all the smoke we are inhaling from the plant of the company which harm us always,” she wrote.

    Shuaibu did not get the dignity of a response. “Anybody you see in the refinery from this community working there is a cleaner, earning between N5,000 and N10,000 per month,” a resident said.

    But more worrisome is the state of the community, there is no tarred road and the presence of the government is lacking. The residents say when it rains, about 70 percent of the roads become impassable. The KRPC dug one borehole which at the time of the visit has been abandoned; some residents alleged that the water from the borehole was contaminated. The hospital in the village was built with Debt Relief Gains of the Federal Government, while the KRPC built one school block for the community.

    The villagers are simple farmers and their market attested to it. Farmers brought simple vegetables and pepper to the market for sale in the evenings, while itinerant food sellers occupy almost every available space on the dirt floors. The biggest commodity in Rido is not the oil but food.

    Toxic waste: two years of open sore

    There are many questions begging for answers about toxic waste from the KRPC dumped on the community allegedly by a contractor around June 2012. Is it true that the waste dumped inside Rido community was toxic? Could the waste have been responsible for the death of about 1000 birds in Biams Takai Farms and could it have been the cause of the strange illness which afflicted children and adult about the same time?

    More importantly, could the waste have been the cause of the violent death of at least five children in the village, who died some weeks after the dumping of the waste, following severe illness, which involves abdominal pain, vomiting and body weakness?

    The answer to this puzzle is dependent on the persons one is asking as the village is polarised between the supporters of the KRPC and the villagers. Most of the villagers are on one side, while the village head, Sirkin Rido, Hamisu Haruna, and some of his chiefs are reportedly on the side of the oil company.

    The Nation’s investigations began where the whole problem started on Dokaje Street, where the waste was dumped. Nothing remained of the waste now but dry and irritating grass. But about 500 meters away are the remains of Biams Farms, which reportedly recorded massive financial losses. Some of the structures had collapsed, while the chicken pen had less than 10 birds remaining.

    But the farm had not always been like this, according to a farm worker, who declined to give his name. There were cows and over 3,000 birds, eggs were plentiful and profit soared until the fateful day when contractors from KRPC dumped alleged a fatal waste on the farm.

    According to a letter of complaint written by the farm to KRPC on July 4, 2012 and signed by one Mrs. Maimuna Isa, which was obtained by The Nation, the waste was allegedly dumped between June 10 and 14, 2012, the farm began recording high mortality of its birds from June 10 and peaked on June 14 when more than 500 birds died within three hours. The farm believes the death is a direct result of the waste from the KRPC.

    The letter read:  “We wish to state categorically that being bird handlers for over 10 years, this phenomenon (bird mortality) is not unconnected with the dumped harmful waste. The proximity of the farm to the dump site and action of the wind helped to disperse the harmful powdery substance into the farm and environs.”

    The Nation traced the Farm Manager, Folorunso Ganiyu, who was a witness to the incident and who said he performed a post-mortem on the dead birds to ascertain the cause of death. “When the mortality began, we were losing between five and 10 birds a day. I started using some drugs and did a post-mortem on the dead birds. I opened the viscera and knew they inhaled some obnoxious gas because if it is a mere respiratory problem, it shouldn’t cause death.  We also called our doctor who did a post-mortem and discovered blood in the lungs of the birds. The wind brought some substances from the waste and they settled on our feed, contaminating them and poisoning our birds. The smell is like tear gas.”

    Ganiyu said the farm recorded massive losses and is back to square one. “We lost over 1,000 birds; those that survived became weak and egg production dropped and they too began to die. The post-mortem showed they had liver problem; we had to dispose of the birds to protect the other farms. We spent millions to raise those birds and we didn’t make any thing on them, now we are back to square one,” he lamented.

    But it is not only Biams Farms that recorded losses allegedly associated with the waste dump, many people in the village did too. To 59-year-old Abdulahi Adamu, who is crippled in both legs, the deaths witnessed in the village is a direct consequence of the toxic waste.  “Anyone in this village knows we are in a critical condition because of the toxic waste that was dumped on this village. If you go to the Niger Delta, you will see good roads and schools and hospitals, but here, it is not the same and the waste has killed some of our people,” he said.

    Alhaji Saidu Liman told The Nation that he lost three children to the toxic waste; the old man looked wasted and tired. He also said he lost 10 cows, seven goats and some of his surviving children had various health problems.

    The residents are not happy with some leaders who are alleged to have been compromised and allegedly being used to thwart every effort made to get redress from both KRPC and Chembache investments. One of the aggrieved residents is the woman leader, who is extremely bitter about the alleged ignoble role, allegedly played by a particular leader.

    Another spokesperson, Abdulrazeez Lawal Gwarjo, also insisted that the waste was responsible for the deaths and destruction unleashed upon the village. He took The Nation to some of the victims who lost animals or children; there are many also who were sick.

    Hassana Godwin said she fell sick as a result of the waste dump, but more serious is that her brother lost his son in the consequence of the incident. She was bitter against the said leader, accusing him of denying the fact of the boy’s death.

    “My brother lost his son called Monday during the waste dump; we went to him (leader) but he denied that the boy was dead. All of us got sick, we are suffering here,” she said. Gloria Joseph who originally came from Akwa Ibiom but has lived in the village for 20 years said: “Please, help us; we are suffering. I almost lost my son during that time. The children just got weak, the vomit was horrible and they lost lots of body fluid. All of us were in the hospital; please help us,” she said.

    The dumping of the waste in Rido has assumed a gigantic proportion in the lives of the villagers. The incident has also been given the name, Bola, which is used to describe the dumping of the waste. “The waste caused many problems in this community; many people suffered because there was firewood inside. The women picked these and used in cooking; the smoke they inhaled caused them to vomit and their stomach ached,” Harrisu Habibu, the youth leader of Rido, said.

    Habibu also said the community went to complain to the KRPC but got no response; he said even two years after the disaster, the oil company is yet to compensate the community. There is so much bitterness against the embattled leader; it was gathered that he rarely sleeps in the community and not easily accessible. The following day after The Nation first interviewed the residents, it was gathered that the leader held a meeting with some people. According to sources close to the meeting, the leader complained about The Nation’s visit and decried the actions of some youths in the village who spoke to us.

    When our reporter requested for an interview, the leader said he was in a meeting and could not respond. His voice sounded cold and harsh. Many text messages sent to him went unanswered as well. When it was gathered that he was in Rido, The Nation returned to the village to wait for him in his residence. After a long wait, The Nation was calmly informed that he had gone to work and the time of his return unsure.

    Several phone calls later, the leader finally declined an interview, directing The Nation to go through the proper channel which he did not specify.  But from media interviews he granted after the incident, he denied any knowledge of death in his village and aligned himself with the KRPC that the waste was non-toxic.

    Deadly toys

    The toxic waste, which allegedly caused death and destruction, may have had a limited effect if the villagers had understood the toxic nature of the waste. It was gathered that when the waste was dumped, children went to forage on it looking for toys to play with. Many of those who did fell sick. The women were not left behind as they also went in search of firewood, which they used in preparing the evening meal. The smoke generated from this caused much upset in the village.

    The animals were not left behind; dogs went in search of food on the dumpsite and, according to the villagers, many of them died from eating from the dumpsite.  Reports of the strange happening soon reached Kaduna and several agencies of government were deployed to investigate the matter.

    On June 19, 2012, the KRPC invited the Kaduna State Environmental Protection Authority (KEPA) to sample the alleged waste. Even though KEPA officials declined to speak to The Nation, the report of the investigation dated July 10, 2012, was, however, obtained from sources. From the sample collected by KEPA, most of the chemicals were found to be “within acceptable limit.” Therefore, in the final analysis of KEPA, “The confirmatory test shows that results obtained are within acceptable limits, therefore, the refuse dumped is not harmful to the environment and public health.” The report was signed by one Lawal M. Usman, Director Laboratory Services.

    But there are curious observations in the report. Some sections of the chemicals were marked “not determined,” which could be due to lack or faulty equipment to perform the test. For example, tests on Phenols, Hydrocarbon (IR method), Arsenic (mg/I), Cyanide (mg/I), Total Chromium, Selenium, mercury, oil and grease content and Taste were all not determined.

    The National Environmental Standard and Regulations Enforcement Agency (NESREA) officials went to Rido on June 29 after the waste had been evacuated by KRPC amidst tight security and took soil samples of the site. The result also came back that the samples were not toxic.

    The Federal Ministry of Environment also released a report on the waste, dated February 13, 2013 and signed by Mrs. O. O. Babade, Director Pollution Control and Environmental Health. The report concluded: “A careful harmonisation of our findings with the report of KEPA and NESREA makes it difficult to link the alleged loss of poultry and human lives as reported, confirmed the waste not toxic to the alleged waste dumped at the affected sites.”

    The Kaduna State House of Assembly also mandated its Committee on Environment on July 10, 2012 to investigate the matter. In a report submitted to the House by Hon.  Haruna Inuwa, the committee said it held meetings with members of Rido community, Ministry of Environment, KRPC and Chikun local government and concluded that: The contractor, Chembache Investment, was mandated to dump the refuse at KEPA approved site at Kakau along Kaduna-Abuja Highway; that the contractor breached the terms of agreement with KPRC and KEPA law number 7 of 2012, Section 27 (2).

    The House also said Biams Farms did not present any evidence to support its claims and  the death of Monday Madaki Liberty  was not supported by medical evidence. The Sirkin Rido also did not have any knowledge of any death in his domain. The House also wants KRPC to ensure the supervision and monitoring of its contractors and KEPA to ensure strict compliance with environmental laws.

    The Nation contacted Ganiyu, who is also a veterinary doctor, with this new evidence. He said the result from KEPA cannot be relied upon because the parameters are faulty. “The parameters they used do not correlate at all, so the result cannot be relied upon. An environmentalist has carried out a research and says it is toxic, how can NESREA depend on a report that KEPA sent? Does KEPA have the necessary facilities to conduct such a test? We have forensic tests from NADFAC and National Forensic Laboratory, which returned a toxic verdict, so which laboratory should we believe?

    “If they said the waste was not toxic, then there is no need to have a special place for dumping it. If it is that harmless, they should have been comfortable dumping it anywhere. They have done something wrong and they cannot apologise, instead, they are treating it with negligence.”

    Ganiyu also faulted the House of Assembly report, which he described as lopsided and unfair. “There are two things to note in the way the committee conducted its investigations. When you do an open hearing, you should have all the sides to the dispute in attendance. But KRPC was not represented; they sent in a report to the committee and it took it,” he said.

    He also picked holes in the committee report, which, he said, does not have details of the proceedings. “There should have been a step-by-step report of what was said at the hearing. This was not there, the House just passed its judgment, how did they arrive at their deductions?

     

    A minority report

    The report of these organs of government appeared to have effectively put paid to any hope of compensation for the people of Rido; it was also a life line that Chembache Investment had been looking for.  When confronted with the reports of the agencies, many of the residents dismissed them. “When the NNPC and others came, they did not visit the village, they only went to the palace of the Sirkin and didn’t come to see us here,” Shuaibu said. Many of them expressed anger over the conduct of KRPC officials, who first visited the site. “They didn’t even want to see the sick people, they just said the waste was not from them and they told us to go to court,” a source said.

    About three weeks after, KRPC came to evacuate the waste under heavy security with the workers wearing protective gloves, according to information gathered by The Nation. A resident observed that if the waste was non-toxic, the workers should have exposed themselves to it.

    But a Civil Rights Organisation, Kaduna Integrity Group, came to the rescue of the villagers and engaged the services of an independent laboratory to conduct a test on the waste. According to a report, dated July 27, 2012 by the laboratory, Analchem-YGT Hydro Technologies Ltd, which was exclusively obtained by The Nation, the material evidences seen at the site were described as bags of caked “Caustic Soda Pearls”. The shipment information on the consignment indicated it belonged to KRPC with Order No: 179 from D.I. s.r.i Via Maurizzo Gonzaga, 201230 Milano, Italy.

    “The wastes were, therefore, suspected to be expired caustic soda that may have arisen as a consequence of over-stocking and or poor storage or exposure to moisture due to its hygroscopic nature at the KRPC warehouse,” the report read.

    The report further said: “Caustic soda is a white odourless solid substance that is hygroscopic, that readily absorbs moisture from the air. This chemical is listed on the Right to know Hazardous Substances list and on the Special Health Substances List as a serious hazard because it is cited by the US Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), Department of Transportation, National Fire Protection Agency and the Environmental Protection Agency.”

    The report noted that available materials indicate Caustic Soda is strongly corrosive (hazard class 8) and a powerful irritant which can cause severe burns and permanent damage to any tissue it contacts. The report said the death of birds from Biams Farms may be due to the inhalation of aerosols arising from exothermic reaction associated with raindrops on the chemical waste. The report also explains that dogs may have died due to the inhalation of aerosols and irritation due to skin contact.

    The report, which was signed by the President and Lead Consultant, Yakubu Tilde, also posed some questions regarding effective monitoring and supervision of contractors by KRPC’s Safety Department. Left with no option, some members of the community dragged the KRPC, NNPC and Chembache Investments ltd to court. Among the plaintiffs were Shuaibu, Saidu Lima and Biams Farms. Among several declarations and reliefs sought by the plaintiff was general damages of N25 billion.

     

    A briefcase company

    In all the reports on the waste dump, all the blame has been laid at the feet of the contractor, Chembache investment Ltd. On June 22, 2012, the KRPC issued a query to the contractor which was answered by Chembache on July 5th. Part of the response reads: “We view the incident that occurred as an obvious omission on our part. It was not a deliberate act to create an unpleasant situation that would portray KRPC in bad light knowing full well that KRPC is a responsible corporate organisation.

    “As you are aware, we have executed several jobs in your company in line with the terms and conditions of terms stipulated in the contract agreements and brief often before the commencement of any job. All these we have satisfactorily adhered to.

    “What transpired in the course of executing the clean up site is highly regretted. We owe KRPC our sincere apologies for having dumped waste on an undesignated place. It was never our intention to create such an awkward and uncomfortable situation. We understand and acknowledge the mistake and resolving the matter,” the Managing Director, Chidi Onwuegbuche wrote.

    But the ‘victims’ have raised series of questions regarding the qualification of the contractor Chembache Investment. When The Nation tried to get in touch with Chembache Investment, the company has only one listed address in Kaduna, which is Kaduna State Urban Planning Development Agency ( Kasupda) building, 73, Kachia Road, Kaduna South. The Nation was directed to ask for one Adaora.

    When The Nation arrived at the address, there are more than 10 tenants in the building selling different goods, including a supermarket, a phone shop and a pharmacy. Several road side sellers lined the front of the building including a suya merchant. After many hours of fruitless search, The Nation was able to find Adaora and she did not look like an industrial waste disposal official. Chembache Investments, a leading contractor for the KRPC, a subsidiary of the NNPC, operates in Kaduna from a small shop in Kasupda building facing Kachia Road, where plastic chair, tables and buckets are sold.

    Adaora, who claims to be a niece of Chidi Onwuegbuche, conceded that the shop belongs to Chembache Investments but that the Director had gone to Imo State for the New Year holiday.  She said that was the official address of Chembache Investment Ltd and in the absence of the Director, she acts for the company. She refused to divulge any other information but on pressure, she agreed to call Onwuegbuche, who spoke to The Nation on telephone.

    Onwuegbuche said: “Yes, it happened in 2012 and the waste was actually from the refinery; we were not instructed to dump it there. It was the villagers who wanted to get the woods that asked us to do so. It is not the whole waste and we don’t dump wastes in communities because we have where we dump them. The case is in court, we won the first round and they are suing us for N25billion now.”

    The Nation went to KRPC office but without prior appointments was not allowed entry.  The reporter made several phone calls to the mobile number of Idris Abdullahi, the Public Affairs Manager of KRPC, which went unanswered. Several text messages to his number were not answered as well until the time of going to press.

    Because NESREA had conducted some tests on the wastes, The Nation met with the state coordinator, Sharif Ibrahim, who denied knowledge of the incident. Ibrahim said the agency was established in Kaduna in October 2013; therefore, he had no documents on the incident. He said his agency had asked for a meeting with KRPC but it has not gone through.

    He acknowledged that the agency had worked in Inlowo village in Kachia local government in February 2014 over a complaint of oil polluted wells, which proved to be true. He said to verify the claims of the people of Rido, a test on the borehole should be conducted to verify the purity of the Rido water. He promised to carry out the test in February 2015.

    There are questions if Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) was carried out by KRPC. Even though the company was established before the enactment of the law, the law demanded that an environmental audit should be done every three years. There must be health surveillance too; from all available information, it is not certain KRPC fulfilled any of these obligations.

    Sources inside the National Oil Spill Detection and Response Agency, (NOSDRA) said the agency had instructed KRPC to draw up a Gas Flare Out Strategy (GFOS) which should be submitted to the agency. KRPC is yet to do this, according to top sources.

    A generation of abnormal children

    There is a generation in Rido which has not known peace or good health. Many in this generation were born with disabilities or they simply grow into them. In the village, they are called the ‘smoke generation.’

    Every child born after the refinery was built belongs to this generation. While those with the means have left the community, others with no choice remained. In Rido, it is a curse to be born here, almost. Not all the children survive to adulthood and many who did have one form of disability or the other. Take Hassana Nura, for example, at the age of four, she cannot talk and had a massive bow leg- a very common disability in children of Rido- and it seems her growth just suddenly stopped.

    Nura was brought into the assembly of protesters and shown to The Nation. Questions were posed to her but she remained silent with a confused look on her face. Kabiru Shuaibu was brought. He had been developing a growth problem for nine years which had made his backside to carve inside, so he had to walk sideways. At the age of 10, he was just in Primary Two and had difficulty learning.

    Nura and Kabiru are not the only children who stopped growing in Rido, Haruna Rabiu too. At the age of 16, he is a perfect picture of an eight-year-old. When he was brought, many of the adults kindly informed the reporter that he was no small boy despite his looks.

    There were many children with speech problems, like 15-year-old Zainab Abubakar; she finds it difficult to construct words and her speech was halting. According to her mother, she was born with the speech problem and there was never a time she was able to speak freely. “There are about 200 children with this kind of sickness,” said Abdulrazak Lawal, who is also one of the village spokespersons.

    For many months, little Zaharawu Liman had been kept inside the house by her parents, who claimed she was going blind. For fear of going blind, she was kept in darkness, buried in her fears which to the five-year-old seems to assume the form of reality every day.

    When she emerged from her darkness, her face was swollen in places and her eyes were bloodshot red. It was apparent she was in pain and unaccustomed to the bright lights as she squinted severely in frustrated attempt to adjust her sight. Her right eye was particularly affected, dripping with sticky substances that had partially shut down the eye. To anyone seeing her for the first time, this disease would be an advance stage of Conjunctivitis. But the adults rejected this idea, insisting Zaharawu’s disease had gone on for many months.

    Apart from the abnormality of a halt in growth development and other diseases, the parents of Rido have had to bury some of their children and the woman leader was very angry about it. She spoke excitedly and angrily in Hausa, using her hands in wild gesticulations to drive home her point. She accused the refinery of culpability in the deaths of the children of the village in Rido, death lurks around for the children and it usually gets them before they reach their teenage years.

    70-year-old Sabo Maikaji should know. A wrinkled old man, aged more by poverty than anything else, he wore a dirty blue caftan under which two other apparels are visible, he pushed himself through the crowd and insisted on telling his sad story. The smoke that is coming from the refinery is killing us; two of my children died because of the flare they inhale, they had stomach upset and at the end, they started vomiting some black substances and before we can get them to the hospital, they died,” he said.

    Maikaji’s two children Hajara and Yahaya, three and two years respectively died within three days of each other. That was seven years ago. But his case is still incomparable with that of Alhaji Saidu Liman, who lost three children to the deadly toxin allegedly from the KRPC.

    “I lost my three children; after they inhaled the toxic waste, they started having stomach ache and before we can treat them they died,” Liman said. The names of the dead are: Mailafia, Sherif and Fatima all under 10 years old.

    Nura Badamasi also had tales of woe about his children. In 2012, his wife gave birth to a set of twins but within weeks, one of them fell sick. “She fell ill and I held her to my chest and ran to the hospital. I was very afraid and determined to save her, but on the way, she died.

    “The other one took ill as well; we took her to the general hospital but she did not survive. I lost my twins to the work of the refinery,” he said. But his woes were just beginning, his four older children also fell ill one after the other; the symptoms were all too common. It was the same symptoms with the other sick children in the village, that is, stomach ache, vomiting of black substances and then hospitalisation. Four of my children also fell sick and we had to transfer them to the general hospital in Sabon-Tasha where they were treated. Even now, from time to time they still fall sick,” he said.

    Lababatu Sanni, found her way to the front of the crowd. She had a large blue hijab, which left only her babyish and pretty face. She did not smile even though a smile would have further lightened her pretty but sad face.  Lababatu is 25 years old but she looked much younger, her problems began long ago when she was born with a speech defect which had refused to abate over the years. But this is the least of the worries of Lababatu, who though married with three children, lost two of them allegedly to the toxic dump on the community. It was the usual scenario: abdominal pains, vomiting and certain death.

     

    Contaminated air and water

    The people of Rido also complained about their source of water, which has allegedly been contaminated by oil residue from the refinery. They also complained about the air which they claimed had caused severe health problems for the children.

    “If you dig a well, you will see many particles inside it and this has caused health problems for us, especially for the children. Now, in this village, those who can afford it drink pure water,” Harisu Habibu said. This is especially so for Islamic Scholar, Suleiman Abdulkadir, whose children fell sick and were hospitalised. “The doctor asked us the source of our drinking water and I told him. He said my children should not drink from that water again because it is contaminated,” he said.

    It was a different sort of contamination that affected Ibrahim Mataki’s children, In August this year, he claimed to have spent about N200,000 to treat his children of various diseases. At Biba Hospital in Tundun Wada, his children were treated for several ailments, including abdominal pains. The same is also true for four-year-old Rabiatu Abubakar, who has fallen ill of constant fever and diarrhea.

    In the whole of Rido, there are few cases that can match that of Amir Zuberu, a three-year-old invalid. According to his brother, Illiah, he has never spoken a word and has never walked.

    Illiah brought his brother out and shielded his face against the sun. Amir is a curious case, his legs are weak and foundling, his head is bigger than his body and he cries all the time.  Though three years, he looks like a ten-month-old baby.

    Illiah told his story: “Amir was not born like this; in fact, he was not born in this village but one month after he was brought back in to this village, his problems started. We have gone to the hospital but there is no solution. I know it is because of the gas flare in this community, if not, why did he fall sick only when he came into this community?”

    Some of the sick children never really get well. Such is the case with Abdullahi’s daughter, who has been bleeding for many months. “The doctors said it is the smoke that we inhale that is causing all these problems,” Abdullah said. In Rido, the children cry without ceasing, there is hardly a household without a sick child and in houses where there are no sick children, they are probably dead.

    But the case is far from over, even though the KRPC was not in operation when The Nation visited the community, the villagers live in a temporary relief. “We dread when they will start again,” Abubakar Saheed said. He has cause to be anxious as he said his entire household fell sick during the toxic waste saga and has been in constant ill-health.

    “When they flare the gas, in the afternoon it is heat and in the night you could see the black smoke. That is what we have been inhaling and it is the reason for all these sicknesses,” he said.

    Some of the victims of the toxic wastes were said to have been treated at the Barau Dikko Specialist Hospital in Kaduna. The Nation met the Chief Matron, Hannatu Garba, who said the hospital has been undergoing renovation for two years and there would be difficulty in tracing the specific cases of the victims. “If you can get the cards, please bring them, that is the only way we can trace their case files,” she said.

    In the meantime, the land is dry and dusty with the wind blowing in different directions. There is no evidence that Rido is a host community to an oil company, as the air had the scent of poverty, sickness and despair. There is another thing which is synonymous with Rido, however: “If you go around Rido, you only see cases of death,” Abubarkar said.

  • ‘How monarch escaped death’

    ‘How monarch escaped death’

    The Oluwa of Lagos and Apapa, Chief Mukaila Lawal Oluwa, has told a Lagos Chief Magistrate’s Court, Ikeja, how he miraculously escaped two attempts on his life by some members of his family.

    He was testifying in the trial of Abayomi Shamsideen Oluwa (62), Ismaila Abayomi Oluwa (67), Tajudeen Ototo Oluwa (58), and Muse Adegboyega Oluwa (56).

    They are facing a three-count charge of conspiracy, forgery and threat to life.

    They pleaded not guilty and were released on bail.

    Oluwa said there was an attempt on his life last November 21.

    He said he was in the family office at Apapa when he had the news that a family land had been fenced without being sold.

    “On moving to the place, I sighted the defendants with other hoodlums, from afar, getting close to Nwokolo Street, Apapa, running towards us, carrying dangerous weapons.

    “I saw the danger and quickly alerted my driver to make a U-turn and so we did and escaped. This was the second threat on my life by the defendants,” he alleged.

    According to him, the defendants, who had instituted series of litigations against his promotion from the chieftaincy to Obaship, in spite of a Supreme Court judgment which was delivered in his favour, allegedly forged a court stamp and a principal registrar’s signature and put up a notice, purportedly from the court.

    “This forged notice was pasted on the wall of my palace and all areas of our homestead, including Araromi, as well as Lagos Island, including my official residence, creating fear in the mind of my people and other residents. As a result I received various telephone calls. They also published a notice in The Punch newspaper in March 2013 as a result of which I received telephone calls from friends and relatives asking me whether I have been removed from the palace,”he said.

    He alleged that the defendants took part of a ruling by Justice Ibironke Harrison of the Ikeja High Court and superimposed words that did not emanate from the judge.

    He tendered the ruling in Suit No: LD/1420/2010, delivered on April 22, 2013 by Justice Harrison as an exhibit.

    In the ruling, Justice Harrison had observed: “From a closer look, it appears that a portion of a regular and valid order of court was super-imposed by whatever electronic means on the said public notice which was alleged to be issued under the hand and seal of the presiding judge.

    “The court agrees with the counsel for the first defendant that the above nefarious act was carried out to give the impression that the said document originated from the court and while the claimants counsel attributes the said action of the defendants (which included smuggling an order that was not granted by the court into the purported public notice) as over zealousness; the court finds that it amounts to forgery and that the said action was condemned in the strongest terms as it was intended to mislead and confuse, and the intention was completely mala-fide,”the judge had ruled.

     

  • Governor talk na do, stop the death traps

    Like a prophet, the Niger Delta Report sounded a warning on dangers posed by roadside markets in Yenagoa, the capital of Bayelsa State. The article which was published last Friday lamented that buyers and sellers sit on a keg of gunpowder and roam a minefield on each market day.

    On Saturday, a day after the publication, the keg of gunpowder exploded and the mines detonated. Tragedy occurred in Swali market, located along Swali Road, Yenagoa. A trailer rammed into the roadside market, killing one person and injuring seven others.

    The trailer with number plate, XY 259 FST, also destroyed four tricycles and goods on display at the market. The list obtained by the Niger Delta  Report from security agents at the scene of the accident showed that three male adults, three female adults and two female children, were the casualties.

    The names of casualties according to the list are, Chigozie Chukwu, 26; Ogadinma Chukwu, female; Juliet Emmanuel, female; and Alao Abule.

    Others are Eyo Edem Okon, male, 27; Chinyere Uzoma, female, 42; Lawrence Okon; and Ade Emmanuel, female.

    Bystanders, market women and men as well as sympathisers cried and discussed the unfortunate accident. The trailer, carrying an escavator,  was descending the Swali bridge when the acident occurred. The unidentified driver lost control of the heavy-duty truck because of brake failure.

    The dead victim of the crash, whose name was given as Edem Okon, was dragged by the vehicle more than 100 metres before the driver eventually rammed into the market.

    Okon would not have died. Nobody would have been injured if the government had heeded the warning that roadside markets should be relocated to other safe places. In fact, even if the government had acted immediately by moving into such markets to enforce “operation leave the road”, the death and injuries would have been avoided.

    But how much does the government care? How much does it value the lives of its subjects? As far as relations of government functionaries are not among the casualties, who gives a damn? Instead of remedying the situation, persons who pose to be government agents collect dues from traders who occupy the road to make a living.

    Undoubtedly, similar accidents would continue to happen until the ministries of environment, trade and investment and other relevant agencies of the government take steps to build befitting markets in the capital city or take effective actions to ensure that the cramped markets do not overflow to the roads.

    Following the tragedy, some residents of Yenagoa metropolis, have asked the state Governor, Mr. Seriake Dickson, who is fondly referred to as “talk na do governor”, to redeem his promise of building ultra-modern markets in Yenagoa.

    They insisted that traders would confine themselves in such modern markets instead of selling on the roadsides that expose them to risks of accident.  A resident, who identified herself simply as Patience further lamented the conditions of the existing markets in Yenagoa.

    Indeed, the government does not need much prodding from its subjects to build modern markets and regulate commercial activities. It is the right thing to do to enhance the capital status of Yenagoa, remove environmental hazards and stop avoidable accidents caused by roadside markets. For now, Yenagoa seems to be the only capital city in the country without a regulated, organised and well-mapped out market.

    Until the government responds to the yearnings of its subjects, the dangers will continue to loom and the warnings of the Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) and environmental experts will continue to be relevant.

  • Court martial: Three soldiers appeal death sentence

    Court martial: Three soldiers appeal death sentence

    Three of the 12 soldiers sentenced to death on September 15 by a court martial have challenged the rulling at the Court of Appeal, Abuja.

    The men, Igomu Emmanuel, Stephen Clement and Andrew Ngbede  faulted the trial leading to their conviction and urged the court to quash the decision.

    They raised 11 grounds of appeal in their case filed for them last Thursday by their lawyer, Godwin Obla (SAN).

    The appellants said the charge on which they were tried and convicted “is vague, disjointed, imprecise and incoherent”, adding that they did not understand  it.

    They argued that not only were their names not stated on the charge, it also violated Section 36 (6) of the constitution, which entitled an accused to be informed of the details and nature of the offence for which he was charged.

    The appellants further argued that the General Court Martial erred in law and came to a perverse decision by convicting them in respect of the offence of conspiracy and failed to consider the defence of  alibi, which they raised, but which was not investigated by the court martial.

    “The General Court Martial erred in law and thus occasioned a miscarriage of justice when it disregarded the objection of the defence counsel raised before and at the arraignment of the appellants on the defective nature of the charge brought against them.”

    The soldiers said they were charged and convicted at large under Section 114 of the Armed Forces Act and that the charge did not tie the offence they allegedly committed to any of the subsections of Section 114 of the Armed Forces Act.

    They said Section 114 did not define the offence of criminal conspiracy as an offence known to law.

    The appellants argued that the first count of the charge “is ambiguous, uncertain and defective”, because they were charged under Section 114 of the Armed Forces Act, but punished under Section 97 (1) of the Penal Code Law.

    They also faulted the third count of the charge for being “uncertain and defective” because they were charged under Section 95 of the Armed Forces Act, which provided a punishment of life imprisonment if convicted, but were sentenced to death under Section 106 of the Act.

    The appellants said the General Court Martial based its decision on an equivocal, indirect, negative, uncorroborated and suspicious circumstantial evidence in convicting them.

    They said the General Officer Commanding (GOC) 7 Division, Maj.-Gen. Ahmadu Mohammed, whom they were accused of attempting to murder, was not invited by the prosecution to give evidence on the alleged attempt on his life.

    The appellants also noted that no ballistic evidence was produced to show that it was their shot that hit Maj.-Gen. Mohammed’s car.

    They contended that none of the witnesses identified any of them as the person who shot at the GOC’s vehicle, and that the court martial merely relied on circumstantial evidence, which did not lead conclusively and indisputably that any of their shots was the one, if any, that hit the rear right door of the command’s Sport Utility Vehicle (SUV).

    No date has been fixed for the hearing of the appeal.

     

  • Amnesty opposes death penalty for 12 soldiers

    Amnesty opposes death penalty for 12 soldiers

    The Amnesty International has opposed the court marshal of 12 soldiers and  the death penalty imposed by a military court in Abuja.

    The military court, three weeks ago, convicted 12 solders for mutiny after they fired shots at their General Officer Commanding (GOC) in Borno State.

    The Amnesty International Media Director, Susana Flood,  at the weekend, said the organisation was opposed to death penalty notwithstanding the offence.

    The statement reads: “The reason we have not said anything about the conviction is because we are unable to monitor the trial to be able to say it is fair, which is very important for us. We have to back our comment with fact.

    “We oppose death penalty in all instances. In case of the soldiers, we are opposing their death sentence. We are looking at the trial to study all that transpired”.

    She noted that human right abuse would not just end one day, but scored the organisation high on the success recorded.

    “If you look at our work on the death penalty and you examine the statistics when we started campaign against death penalty, which was over 20 years and compare to now, you will see that a number of countries executing prisoners have decreased.

    “Sadly, Nigeria is still executing. Eliminating death has been a slow bit of progress, but you can see the achievement we have made around the world”.

  • Death at the synagogue

    Apart from the festering insurgency, two other recent events have combined to constantly keep the nation in the prying eyes of the international community. These are the outbreak of the Ebola disease and collapse of a five-storey building at the Synagogue church in Lagos. Though not essentially related, both have had the net effect of taking heavy tolls on human lives and will continue to dominate public discourse for quite sometime.

    This is more so as those who lost their lives in the two incidents were both Nigerians and foreigners.

    Not unexpectedly, world attention has for the greater part of the last two months been primed within our shores. And for a country that has not been rated high in managing crisis situations, it is to be imagined the avalanche of negative reportage these would have generated.

    Surprisingly however, our leaders were able to effectively and efficiently manage the first such that no less a body than the World Health Organization (WHO) came out to score us very high.

    Though the Liberian-American, Patrick Sawyer who imported the deadly virus into the country concealed information on his lethal ailment thus exposing others to mortal danger, our health professionals moved in quickly to arrest further spread. The efficiency with which they worked, posted positive results through minimal deaths such that today, the country has been adjudged free of the virus. This is something to cheer.

    But if the handling of the Ebola outbreak was an instant success, that of the collapse of a five-storey building at the premises of the Synagogue Church of All Nations in Lagos, left much to be desired. Ironically, the synagogue was the first place of worship visited by a medical team from both the Lagos State, the federal government and the WHO to solicit the cooperation of its general overseer, Prophet T.B. Joshua not to admit Ebola patients into his premises. They had then politely told him that the virus spreads very fast and is not one of such ailments that could succumb to faith healing.

    Joshua promised to work with the team to ensure that the virus does not spread by not admitting people from the affected countries and suspending some of his healing programmes. So he was part of the story that turned out as the successful management of the Ebola outbreak in this country.

    Ironically, the same church was to turn out the theatre of a monumental calamity some weeks after through the collapse of one of its buildings. Reports had it that the building collapsed while many visitors, mainly foreigners were having their lunch. Initial reports on the suspected cause of the collapse were sketchy, but there was some convergence that the building went down while construction workers were busy adding additional structures on it.

    While many were said to have been trapped at the various floors, rescue work could not commence early as the church officials and worshippers were alleged to have prevented rescuers access to the place. Even those who would have been saved had quick response arrived, lost their lives through delays arising from the inexplicable hostility of the church officials and worshippers.

    The church was to come out some days later to allege that the collapse was as a result of terror attack by the dreaded Boko Haram insurgents. In a video clip it showed to the public, Joshua claimed a plane had hovered around the building before it finally went down. Both Lagos State and the federal governments are investigating the incident. But Lagos has had to suspend action or further comments on the incident to avoid jeopardizing the inquisition of the federal authorities.

    Before now however, the state government had made it clear that the ill-fated building was originally approved as a two-storey building. It also said it had no records that approval was given for the additional three floors which were being added when the calamity occurred.

    From all indications, the Lagos State government has clear ideas of the issue at stake being the approving authority. Without prejudice to whatever the federal government panel is doing, it is certain that its job will be incomplete without the cooperation of the host government. It is not clear how that panel intends to work. But much of the information it requires to determine the cause of the collapse are with the Lagos State government.

    It would therefore have been more rewarding to build a synergy with the host government on the matter. The way things stand, the state government does not feel it should continue with its own inquisition to avoid conflict of interests. That is why it has suspended all activities on the matter. But that is where the problem arises. At what point will the state government come into the matter again? Or will it come out with its findings after the federal panel would have unveiled its results? These are some of the posers that seem to suggest there should have been collaboration between the two levels of government.

    The type of synergy that was called into action to curtail the immediate spread of the Ebola virus ought to have formed the plank for the investigations. With such collaborative efforts, all issues relating to the unfortunate incident would be fully examined and recommendations to forestall future occurrences made.

    It is still not late for the federal authorities to expand the panel to include relevant authorities of the Lagos State government. A situation in which the state government has now been forced to stall action on the matter awaiting the federal panel is not the best approach to it.

    The issue is of immense public interest and it will be counter productive if the two governments come out with different versions.  The right thing therefore is for both parties to work together, harmonize positions and come out with a common position.

    Joshua had introduced the terrorism theory. It should be investigated. But even before its outcome is known, it would appear such a theory will definitely lack in scientific validity. This writer will stand to be proved wrong.

    Beyond these, the nation must have been heavily embarrassed that as we were still giving out the casualty figure as 44, the South African President, Jacob Zuma went public to announce that 67 of their citizens had died in the incident. That really opened up public eyes that if one single country could lose 67 people, the fatality would have been much higher. And it came to pass. That country alone lost 84 citizens.

    The blame has been placed at the door steps of the church for its hostility to rescuers. The panel must get at the root of it. Those found culpable should be made to face the full weight of the law. The South African people are so piqued by this singular incident that their youths have vowed not to allow Joshua into their country until he has accounted for their dead compatriots. They also vowed to sue him. That is a measure of the outrage the incident has generated. The world is awaiting the outcome of the findings. We must demonstrate very unambiguously that the law is no respecter of persons through appropriate punishment to identifiable culprits.

  • Death at the synagogue

    Apart from the festering insurgency, two other recent events have combined to constantly keep the nation in the prying eyes of the international community. These are the outbreak of the Ebola disease and collapse of a five-storey building at the Synagogue church in Lagos. Though not essentially related, both have had the net effect of taking heavy tolls on human lives and will continue to dominate public discourse for quite sometime.

    This is more so as those who lost their lives in the two incidents were both Nigerians and foreigners.

    Not unexpectedly, world attention has for the greater part of the last two months been primed within our shores. And for a country that has not been rated high in managing crisis situations, it is to be imagined the avalanche of negative reportage these would have generated.

    Surprisingly however, our leaders were able to effectively and efficiently manage the first such that no less a body than the World Health Organization (WHO) came out to score us very high.

    Though the Liberian-American, Patrick Sawyer who imported the deadly virus into the country concealed information on his lethal ailment thus exposing others to mortal danger, our health professionals moved in quickly to arrest further spread. The efficiency with which they worked, posted positive results through minimal deaths such that today, the country has been adjudged free of the virus. This is something to cheer.

    But if the handling of the Ebola outbreak was an instant success, that of the collapse of a five-storey building at the premises of the Synagogue Church of All Nations in Lagos, left much to be desired. Ironically, the synagogue was the first place of worship visited by a medical team from both the Lagos State, the federal government and the WHO to solicit the cooperation of its general overseer, Prophet T.B. Joshua not to admit Ebola patients into his premises. They had then politely told him that the virus spreads very fast and is not one of such ailments that could succumb to faith healing.

    Joshua promised to work with the team to ensure that the virus does not spread by not admitting people from the affected countries and suspending some of his healing programmes. So he was part of the story that turned out as the successful management of the Ebola outbreak in this country.

    Ironically, the same church was to turn out the theatre of a monumental calamity some weeks after through the collapse of one of its buildings. Reports had it that the building collapsed while many visitors, mainly foreigners were having their lunch. Initial reports on the suspected cause of the collapse were sketchy, but there was some convergence that the building went down while construction workers were busy adding additional structures on it.

    While many were said to have been trapped at the various floors, rescue work could not commence early as the church officials and worshippers were alleged to have prevented rescuers access to the place. Even those who would have been saved had quick response arrived, lost their lives through delays arising from the inexplicable hostility of the church officials and worshippers.

    The church was to come out some days later to allege that the collapse was as a result of terror attack by the dreaded Boko Haram insurgents. In a video clip it showed to the public, Joshua claimed a plane had hovered around the building before it finally went down. Both Lagos State and the federal governments are investigating the incident. But Lagos has had to suspend action or further comments on the incident to avoid jeopardizing the inquisition of the federal authorities.

    Before now however, the state government had made it clear that the ill-fated building was originally approved as a two-storey building. It also said it had no records that approval was given for the additional three floors which were being added when the calamity occurred.

    From all indications, the Lagos State government has clear ideas of the issue at stake being the approving authority. Without prejudice to whatever the federal government panel is doing, it is certain that its job will be incomplete without the cooperation of the host government. It is not clear how that panel intends to work. But much of the information it requires to determine the cause of the collapse are with the Lagos State government.

    It would therefore have been more rewarding to build a synergy with the host government on the matter. The way things stand, the state government does not feel it should continue with its own inquisition to avoid conflict of interests. That is why it has suspended all activities on the matter. But that is where the problem arises. At what point will the state government come into the matter again? Or will it come out with its findings after the federal panel would have unveiled its results? These are some of the posers that seem to suggest there should have been collaboration between the two levels of government.

    The type of synergy that was called into action to curtail the immediate spread of the Ebola virus ought to have formed the plank for the investigations. With such collaborative efforts, all issues relating to the unfortunate incident would be fully examined and recommendations to forestall future occurrences made.

    It is still not late for the federal authorities to expand the panel to include relevant authorities of the Lagos State government. A situation in which the state government has now been forced to stall action on the matter awaiting the federal panel is not the best approach to it.

    The issue is of immense public interest and it will be counter productive if the two governments come out with different versions.  The right thing therefore is for both parties to work together, harmonize positions and come out with a common position.

    Joshua had introduced the terrorism theory. It should be investigated. But even before its outcome is known, it would appear such a theory will definitely lack in scientific validity. This writer will stand to be proved wrong.

    Beyond these, the nation must have been heavily embarrassed that as we were still giving out the casualty figure as 44, the South African President, Jacob Zuma went public to announce that 67 of their citizens had died in the incident. That really opened up public eyes that if one single country could lose 67 people, the fatality would have been much higher. And it came to pass. That country alone lost 84 citizens.

    The blame has been placed at the door steps of the church for its hostility to rescuers. The panel must get at the root of it. Those found culpable should be made to face the full weight of the law. The South African people are so piqued by this singular incident that their youths have vowed not to allow Joshua into their country until he has accounted for their dead compatriots. They also vowed to sue him. That is a measure of the outrage the incident has generated. The world is awaiting the outcome of the findings. We must demonstrate very unambiguously that the law is no respecter of persons through appropriate punishment to identifiable culprits.

  • ‘Training traditional birth attendants can reduce infant, maternal death’

    ‘Training traditional birth attendants can reduce infant, maternal death’

    Wife of Lagos State Governor, Dame Abimbola Fashola has said training traditional birth attendants (TBAs) is in line with the vision of the state to reduce infant and maternal mortality during childbirth.

    According to her, training of this cadre of healthcare professionals in modern and essential skills in child delivery will support the government to achieve its goals.

    Mrs Fasholoa spoke at the First Convocation of TBAs at the Lagos State College of Health Technology.

    She said TBAs play important roles in the communities, stressing that they should be valued because of the services they render.

    Nigeria, she said, is among countries with the highest rate of infant and maternal mortality, adding that this should not be.

    Mrs Fashola said: “One of the obvious reasons for high infant and maternal death ratio (IMDR) is that expectant mothers in the communities prefer the services of TBAs who do not have formal knowledge on the modern and essential skills in child deliveries and other precautions.”

    The training of the TBAs, she noted, would help to reduce infant and maternal death significantly, and even to “zero level” because the exercise will be done more regularly and across the country.

    She enjoined the beneficiaries to put to use the skills acquired during the training to ensure qualitative delivery.

    Special Adviser to Governor Fashola on Public Health, Dr Yewande Adeshina advised the TBAs to operate within the capacity of their job.

    She said the hospital remains the best place for delivery, adding that TBAs can be helpful by referring critical cases to health facilities where expectant mothers can deliver unharmed.

    Dr Adeshina warned them to know their limit because unnecessary delay can cause preventable deaths of mother and child.

    Chairman, Lagos State Traditional Medicine Board (LSTMB), Dr Bunmi Omoseyindemi said the TBAs were trained through collaboration between the college and the board.

    The TBAs, he said, have been classified as Community Based Health Workers (CBHW) by the National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA), stressing that their training was a strategy to improve healthcare coverage in the communities.

    “This is in line with the World Health Assembly (WHA) strategy on development of traditional medicine to improve health care coverage. This made the World Health Assembly pass some resolutions to recognise the importance of traditional medicine to provision of essential health care, especially to populations with limited access to healthcare system.

    “Traditional medicine was recognised as one of the resources of primary healthcare (PHC) services that could contribute to improve health outcomes, including the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs),” he said.

    Omoseyindemi said the TBAs are involved in assisting in the birth of newborn in developing countries but they are largely self-taught or informally trained.

    “They provide additional services, practical help and education as well as counselling to women. Although they cannot substitute for skilled providers, they can contribute to the survival of mothers and newborns by facilitating access to needed information, clinical services and support,” he said.

    He said their role usually reflects the culture and social structure of the communities, adding: “In some communities, a TBA may be a full-time worker who can be called upon and who expects to be paid in cash or in kind.

    Omoseyindemi said 110 TBAs graduated from the college after successful completion of their programmes.

  • My close shave with death

    SIR; I do not know whether to laugh or to be forlorn about how fear has become a citizen of our country, living daily with us. I am an undergraduate. Few days after the Nyanya car park bomb blast of April 14, I went to my dad’s place at Mararaba, Abuja to spend the weekend. He had told me there was a surprise for me, so I went in enthused anticipation. On the day I was to come back to school, he brought out a package from his room and handed it over to me. I looked at it, desperate and tensed. On the carton was an image of a laptop. I smiled from ear to ear, screaming for joy: “Daddy has fulfilled his promise at last!” A brand new laptop!

    After thanking him, I set out to school.

    I boarded an El- Rufai bus when I got to Mararaba junction. I spotted a vacant seat close to the front and plopped into it, dropping my heavy bag on the floor. The bus hadn’t moved yet because the driver intended the seats to be fully occupied, with some passengers standing, if possible.

    I was famished, so I decided to go down to get a seven up or sprite – my favorites. I left my bag where I sat, to secure the space and because it was heavy; my new lap top was in it. I was holding the drink and was just about collecting my balance from the vendor when I heard shouts from the bus. I turned abruptly and saw people jumping off the bus through the windows and doors. I saw fear on their faces, about three adults flying from one window at the same time. They ran as soon as their legs touched down.

    “Bomb! Bomb!” was all I heard.

    I snatched my money and raced into the bus. Quickly, I snatched my bag, jumped down and joined in the running. I had not run up to 20 metres when I noticed I was being chased and fingers were pointed at me.

    “Catch am! Stop that boy” they ranted.

    Confused, I stopped running. I received a heavy blow behind my neck that confused me the more.

    “Wetin dey dis bag!?”

    I bent to open it for them to see for themselves but I was stopped.

    “Shegen yaro. You wan kill am with us ko? Dan banza”

    “It’s my clothes, school books and laptop” I said with a creaking voice.

    “Why you drop down from the bus?”

    I raised the can of Sprite I held in reply.

    “So you no be boko boy?”

    That was when I understood their hostility.

    “Open the bag. Where you dey school?” they asked, amidst murmurs, laughs and side talks. The crowd was enormous by now.

    I opened my bag and opened my wallet that has my I D card.

    “University of Abuja”. One read aloud, comparing the face on the card with the one in front of them.

    “Sorry o” one said finally. “Na condition make krafish bend”

    I forced a smile, realizing that never again will Nigerians feel secure; never again will we have the trust we had for each other. Never again.

    •Joseph Joshua

    Abuja

  • Death trap called Port Harcourt-Owerri Road

    Death trap called Port Harcourt-Owerri Road

    The Port Harcourt-Owerri Road is one of the important highways that link other states such as Abia and Cross River, among others. During its good days, travelling from Owerri to Port Harcourt took less than one houtr. The road was smooth, making the journey easy and comfortable.

    Unfortunately, the once-smooth road has become a nightmare, especially around the boundary between Imo and Rivers states.

    Daily, many commuters lose their lives in avoidable road accidents and armed robbery attacks.  on the bad road

    The Federal Government road, which links the Southeast and South south states, has become a death trap to travellers and those who are indigenous to the boundary communities of Umuapu and Umuagwo in Imo State.

    The situation worsened after the road was abandoned by the contractor handling its rehabilitation, even though the Rivers State axis was completed before it was abandoned at the boundary between the two states, thus raising the suspicion of possible political sabotage.

    Before its deterioration, a journey from Owerri to Port Harcourt which took less than one hour now takes nearly a day because of the tortuous road.

    The road contract, awarded to the Arab Contractor at N23.1 billion by the Ministry of Niger Delta Affairs, was facilitated by the Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives, Hon. Emeka Ihedioha, in 2009. But, years after, the road has remained a major headache for users, especially Imo citizens.

    Recounting his ordeal on the road, a commuter, Mr. Kingsley Onuegbu, appealed to the Federal Government to declare the road an emergency, adding that the its poor state has brought untold hardship to the people.

    He said: “Plying the road now is a great risk as it has totally collapsed. Most times, armed robbers ambush travellers on the bad spot, especially when vehicles break down and are trapped there for days. We are appealing to the government to prevail on the contractor to return to site and put palliative measures on the remaining portion of the road to help road users until major repairs are carried out.”

    A resident of a boundary community, Chief Felix Ekurumuo, regretted that members of the community had suffered a great deal on the road.

    “We are praying and waiting eagerly for the government to come to our aid by fixing the road. We now live in perpetual fear as a result of increasing cases of robbery on the bad part of the road. Sometimes, we stay awake all night for fear of robbers who ambush travellers nearly daily. Any traveller who is unlucky to ply the road late may not live to narrate his experience.”

    An official of the Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC), who spoke in confidence, said over 32 deaths had been recorded on the failed part of the road in the last four months. He addrf that except drastic measures were taken to fix the road, the casualty figure would continue to rise.

    “Those plying the road for the first time are at more risk as they may not know where the potholes are. We have to rescue accident victims nearly on daily basis. It is painful because they were avoidable cases.”

    Also decrying the state of the road, Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha urged the Federal Government to urgently fix the Port Harcourt-Owerri Road to save the lives of Nigerians who ply the road, lamenting that avoidable deaths have been recorded on the road as a result of accidents and armed robbery attacks.

    The governor, in a statement signed by his Senior Special Assistant on Media, Mr. Sam Onwuemeodo, said the road has become a death trap where Imo citizens and other road users lose their lives to accidents and armed robbery attacks.

    Okorocha, who could not come to terms with why the contractor handling the road should stop work at the point the road connects Imo State, doubted if the contractor’s action was political, adding that all Nigerians, irrespective of political and religious affiliations, use the road.

    He said: “The implication is that the area has become not only a nightmare but also a death trap so much so that Imo people now go to Port Harcourt through Aba in Abia State which is also another story of its own. The Umuapu area in question is better seen than imagined and it is a Federal Government road. That is why some people are beginning to read political meaning into the whole scenario.

    “The most annoying aspect is that there are Imo sons and daughters in Abuja who claim to be very close to the Presidency or to the Federal Government; even, there are those who claim to be power brokers at the National Assembly and they could not influence anything with regard to the disturbing condition of the road under reference. They pass through the road very often and none of them could muster the courage to talk about it.

    “To say the least, it calls for concern that a contractor handling a major road project such as the Port Harcourt-Owerri Road could get to Imo State axis and abandon it and nobody seems to care about the development. Those from the state who drop the name of Mr. President in the state for one reason or the other cannot use their over-estimated political muscles to ensure that the contractor goes back to site and complete the job.”

    Continuing, he said: “When the road is completed, government and people of Imo will be happy and the commendations will go to the Federal Government. We need to be saved from the inconveniences the road has continued to cause Imo people in particular and Nigerians in general.

    “It is important to remind Imo sons and daughters who drop the name of Mr. President on every slightest issue to bring that connection to bear by influencing things to ensure that the Umuapu side of Port Harcourt-Owerri Road is fixed without further delay in order to halt further deaths and robbery attacks on that side of the road.”

    On the road, Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Prof. Viola Onwuliri said the Federal Government had released N1.2 billion to the contractor who, she said, is creating another access road, pending when the rains stop for full work to begin.

    She added that: “Mr. President has directed the Ministry of Finance and the Niger Delta Affairs to ensure that the funds required for the project are provided, as well as appropriation of huge funds in the current budget to ensure that the road and other federal roads in the state are fixed.”