Tag: death

  • Synagogue death toll hits 45

    Synagogue death toll hits 45

    Fashola calls for inquiry

    NAMA probes mystery aircraft

    Joshua shows ‘video’

    Rescuers were still busy yesterday at the Synagogue Church of All Nations (SCOAN), Ikotun on the outskirts of Lagos where a building collapsed, killing 45 persons —as of yesterday.

    When the incident happened on Friday, 17 were said to have died.

    Many are believed to be trapped underneath the six-storey building.

    The church has declined comments on the number of persons in the building when it collapsed. Besides, it insists that nobody died in the incident.

    Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola was at the scene yesterday. He called for an inquiry.

    Government officials have said there was no approval for the erection of additional floors.

    Commissioner for Physical Planning Olutoyin Ayinde, who was on Fashola’s entourage, said the church’s engineers were yet to  present their permit to make such modifications.

    Ayinde said: “Our meeting with the prophet was a closed-door meeting but it surrounds the collapsed building. It is a sad situation; lives have been lost and many others have been rescued.

    “We use this opportunity to express our sympathy to the affected people.

    “We have no proof that the church had permit to add to the existing structure. We have asked the engineering team to meet us and for about two hours now, no member of the team has come.

    “We also have questions for them. Even if the building does not have approval, it ought to be built professionally. We have asked for their team and we hope in the course of the week, they would get to us.

    “It is necessary to take the final inventory before we can say the number of people affected. Right now, we do not know how many people are involved. When a final inventory has been taken, the ministry of special duties will take a decision as regards relieve,” he added.

    On whether the ýgovernment plans to seal the premises, Ayinde said: “There are no plans for that yet until investigation as to the cause of the collapse has been concluded.

    “I have said I have no proof of a permit. Maybe they have one and are yet to show us. We will give them the opportunity to defend themselves and action can only be taken after investigation has been concluded.”

    But the General Manager, Lagos State Building Control Agency, Mrs. Abimbola Animashaun, affirmed that the church had no approval.

    She said: “We have investigated and found that they had no approval for the additional structures. Even the main church, which they have added about three floors on, was sealed two days ago, but it is now open.

    ”You cannot have an existing building and start putting up more buildings on it. Before you can do anything like that, you must confirm that the structure is still stable and can stand additional buildings.”

    The Nation gathered that the collapsed building, which was a three-storey that had another three added to it, had been vibrating for sometime before it collapsed.

    It was also gathered that over 200 people were in the building, most of them having lunch at the basement, while the construction workers were on the sixth floor.

    There were many foreigners, according to sources.

    Mattresses, clothes and other household items, including air-conditionersý, were seen lying in the rubble of the building. Besides, a foul odour oozed out of the site.

    Fumigants were being distributed to the workers.

    National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA), Red Cross, medical personnel from the state and federal governments  and Lagos State Building Inspection Agency personnel were all at the site as excavation continued.

    The workers were on the sixth floor, cutting the rods to create an opening to into other floors.

    The Nation gathered that all the 130 people rescued alive and the 45 dead were removed from the sixth floor and the basement, which are the only areas the workers have been able to access.

    It was also observed that most of the pillars of the collapsed building were still standing.

    Confirming the death toll, NEMA’s Southwest spokesman, Ibrahim Farinloye, said the cause of the collpase was still being investigated.

    “We were able to work overnight and so, as at now (6pm), we have 130 rescued alive and 45 dead. Nobody can say what caused the collapse. But from the footage shown to me, where all the foundation of the building was shaking before it caved in, it could have been caused by the additional structure.

    “Investigations will confirm what really happened. You can see that some of the beams and blocks are still intact. So, some of the permutations cannot be ruled out.

    “We are working on worst case scenario that the foundation might have been weakened, which would have led to the collapse.”

  • Lagos APC shocked

    The Lagos State chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has described the late veteran journalist, Dimgba Igwe, as a pace- setter, who played a leading role in charting the course of journalism. It described his death as shocking and a big loss to journalism, “which is in dire need of competent professionals to steer it to greater heights.”

    In a statement by its Lagos State spokesman Joe Igbokwe, APC said it was shocked by the manner the veteran journalist was killed by an errant driver while jogging near his home.

    It sympathised with the family, friends and colleagues of the late journalist and urged that everything should be done to investigate the death.

  • The man Dimgba Igwe

    The man Dimgba Igwe

    Frontline journalist and one of Nigeria’s foremost media administrators and author, Pastor Dimgba Igwe, who died yesterday has sent shock waves across the media industry.

    He was known to many people at home and abroad largely because of his total devotion to his first love, journalism – for the past 30 years. Dimgba Igwe, ace journalist, publisher, author, biographer and pastor, was a role model to many practising and aspiring journalists. Along with his long-time journalist friend and business partner, Mike Awoyinfa, he had mid-wifed some hugely successful newspapers, including the now rested Weekend Concord, The Sun and lately Entertainment Express and Sunday Express respectively.

    After the pioneering roles they played at the now rested Weekend Concord newspaper and The Sun newspapers, in 2011, Dimgba Igwe and Awonyinfa set about recording another landmark in the Nigerian media with the establishment of a newspaper entirely devoted to reporting the entertainment industry called Entertainment Express.

    The newspaper hit the newsstand in June 2011. The duo were still engrossed in taking their new project to Olympian height when death came calling yesterday.

    After a pioneering role they played at the now rested Weekend Concord newspaper where they distinguished themselves as journalists par excellence and lately, The Sun newspapers, Mike Awoyinfa and his friend, Dimgba Igwe are set to record another landmark in the Nigerian media with the establishment of a newspaper entirely devoted to reporting the entertainment industry.

    He  met his co-traveller, Mike Awoyinfa, at the Sunday Concord newspaper, and ever since then, they have been long standing friends. According to Igwe, “We discovered we are kindred spirits.” Speaking about the late Publisher recently, Awoyinfa said, “Dimgba complements my weaknesses, he adds to my strength. Only God knows why we came the way we are, even twins are not that close. We lean on each other and celebrate and mourn our woes together. We do everything together and I learn everyday from him, because he has his own areas where he is stronger than myself. Intellectually and spiritually, he is above me in certain respects.  Sometimes, we do disagree to agree again, we know how to tolerate ourselves and we are not the greedy type,” Awoyinfa described his late friend.

    The late Igwe was a hard worker. To many staffers at the outfits he managed while alive, he was something close to a slave driver. He loves to work and had actually planned to keep working for as long as his legs can carry him. To him, the idea of retirement was a strange one.

    “Basically, when you say that you have retired, it is just a way of describing the fact that you are no more in paid employment, where you go to work at a certain time and return home later in the day; and at the end of the month, you are paid by that particular medium. No! It could also mean a transition to a different aspect of life. One plays some roles at the board level as in the case of The Sun newspapers or the Express, where we are Board members; so, one still plays a guidance role,” he once said.

    On why he keeps muting business ideas even while neck-deep in his busy schedule as a media manager, Igwe said he got his kicks from looking at the many system failures that characterise the Nigerian polity.

    “We (Mike and I) have also decided to develop a niche that had always been part of us. When we go abroad and talk to some of our other colleagues in the media, the things we describe are completely strange to them. They cannot imagine that you could do a business and then you would still buy a generator, drill your own borehole or even contribute to rehabilitating roads. So, this absence of infrastructure is absent out there. They have taken all that for granted. So, if you are a manager in Nigeria and you succeed, then, you can excel anywhere in the world.”

    Aside journalism, Igwe, before his death and expectedly, alongside Awoyinfa, established his mastery of another form of writing. Together, the duo is unarguably the most renowned biographer in the country today. While they were still in various paid employment and after they decided to be on their own, the duo wrote the biographies of more Nigerians than anybody else has ever done.

    “We have always done this simultaneously with journalism, which is writing books. And you know that this niche actually started 15 years ago when we wrote a book called 50 Nigeria’s Corporate Strategists. The irony is that I can’t even find a copy of this book now because it was stolen. We have printed three editions of it and they all sold out. It is a book that profiles 50 corporate leaders, trying to distil their management experiences and trying to work out case studies of how businesses are managed in our very peculiar terrain,” the late Journalist said of their exploit as biographers.

    A man of many parts while still living, Igwe truthfully and of course correctly, described himself as a complicated person. According to him, being a Pastor and at the same time a businessman, he comes across to different people in different ways.

    “It is a bit complicated because as you know, I am a pastor of a church. And as a pastor of a church, it depends on the activities of the day. I wake up, relax and set my agenda. After my prayers, exercise, break-fast and all that, I head for my study to work. One of the ironies is that I have three offices and I am about to have one more. I have an office at home, there is another one at the Express, while I also have an office in the church; and as a matter of fact, Corporate Biographies, which is our publishing company, is also making an office for me.”

    A consummate journalist till he breathed his last, the erudite media manager was never tired of propagating the many powers of the average journalist. To him, there was hardly any other profession as endowed with power and authority to positively impact on their society.

    “Journalists have residual advantages. What are these residual advantages? They have exposure and access (to information) and they are always operating in the written word every day of their lives. However, a journalist has to beware of the tempting attraction of routine.”

    One other thing Igwe would be remembered for was his detribalised nature. He never wanted to know where the reporter or Editor is from. The person, not the background, was his interest. And he carried this nature right into all his other human relationships.

    “For me, it’s a question of synergy of ideas. If you find somebody that your ideas flow with, it’s easier to work with that person.  I don’t look at people in terms of where they come from, but I look at their hearts. If the heart of a man is good, whether he’s Hausa, Yoruba or Igbo is irrelevant to me. Personally, I have always been positively affected by the people outside my tribe than the people from my tribe. I’m a detribalised Nigerian. I look at human beings in terms of their quality.”

    With the death of Igwe, the Nigeria media industry has lost another firebrand professional, a type that is not easy to replace.

    Igwe’s death, my saddest day- Kalu

    The publisher and chairman of The Sun Group of Newspapers and New Telegraph, Dr. Orji Kalu, has described the death of the vice-chairman of the media conglomerate, Mr. Dimgba Igwe, yesterday, as the saddest day of his life.

    In a statement by his media adviser, Mr. Ebere Wabara, Kalu, who is in London, said in a telephone conversation, that he was devastated by Igwe’s death. He declared: “Igwe, apart from being my kinsman, was one of the founding pillars in the establishment of The Sun. He worked tirelessly with others to ensure the instant success story associated with our tabloid today. I will surely miss his professional advice, camaraderie and brotherliness,” Kalu said.

    Kalu enjoined God to strengthen his family and associates to bear this irreparable loss, pointing out that “journalism has just lost one of its brightest minds respected for analytical writings right from his National Concord days. This is indeed my saddest day,” Kalu declared.

    On why he keeps muting business ideas even while neck-deep in his busy schedule as a media manager, Igwe said he got his kicks from looking at the many system failures that characterise the Nigerian polity.

    “We (Mike and I) have also decided to develop a niche that had always been part of us. When we go abroad and talk to some of our other colleagues in the media, the things we describe are completely strange to them. They cannot imagine that you could do a business and then you would still buy a generator, drill your own borehole or even contribute to rehabilitating roads. So, this absence of infrastructure is absent out there. They have taken all that for granted. So, if you are a manager in Nigeria and you succeed, then, you can excel anywhere in the world.”

    Aside journalism, Igwe, before his death and expectedly, alongside Awoyinfa, established his mastery of another form of writing. Together, the duo is unarguably the most renowned biographer in the country today. While they were still in various paid employment and after they decided to be on their own, the duo wrote the biographies of more Nigerians than anybody else has ever done.

    “We have always done this simultaneously with journalism, which is writing books. And you know that this niche actually started 15 years ago when we wrote a book called 50 Nigeria’s Corporate Strategists.

    He was shining star of Nigerian journalism, says APC

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) said yesterday that with the death of Pastor Dimgba Igwe, Nigerian journalism has lost a shining star.

    The party, in a statement in Lagos by its National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, expressed “shock and sadness at the sudden death of such a vibrant, cerebral and wonderful person, who has been a constant star in the constellation of Nigerian journalism for decades, without compromising his personal and professional integrity.”

    It condoled with the family and friends of the late Pastor Igwe, and prayed that God will give them the strength to bear their loss.

    APC asked the police to find and bring to justice the driver of the vehicle that knocked him down while jogging around his residence.

    ‘’Words are not enough to describe the huge loss, to his family, friends, profession and indeed our entire nation, that Igwe’s death represents. But we are sure the achievements he recorded in his lifetime will forever be a source of pride – and indeed a soothing balm – to all,” the party said and prayed for the repose of his soul.

  • ‘25-yr-old’s death sad’

    ‘25-yr-old’s death sad’

    Edo State Commissioner for Women Affairs and Social Development Mrs. Blessing Maigida has described as “unfortunate” the death of a physically-challenged man, simply identified as Danjuma (25), whose lifeless body was found last Wednesday in front of his uncle’s home at 12, Oza Street, Benin City.

    Mrs. Maigida said her ministry took care of the late Danjuma for several months after he was dumped at a dump site by his uncle, Mr Friday Arase, and aunt, Madam Josephine, who lives at Ugbiyoko in Benin.

    She said her ministry and security agents reconciled the deceased with Madam Josephine, who accepted him following a promise that the ministry would assist her in caring for him.

    The commissioner dismissed rumours that Project Charilove, an organisation that caters for children with special needs, offered to take custody of the late Danjuma, adding that, the organisation does not cater for adults.

    She said Madam Josephine would be arrested, if the police ascertain that she dumped her nephew on the street.

  • Ebola death toll hits 887, says WHO

    The World Health Organisation (WHO) has said the death toll from the worst record outbreak of Ebola has reached 887.

    This is an increase of 158 since the global health body released figures on July 31.

    WHO, in a statement yesterday, said there have been over 1,600 cases of Ebola since the disease emerged in Guinea earlier this year.

    The news comes as Nigeria announced yesterday that it had confirmed a second case in Africa’s most populous nation. The patient is a doctor who treated the man who died in Nigeria last month.

    According to WHO, there have been 358 deaths in Guinea, 255 deaths in Liberia, 273 deaths in Sierra Leone and one in Nigeria.

    The United States plans to send 50 health experts to West Africa to contain the Ebola outbreak that has left hundreds of people dead in three countries.

    “This is the biggest and most complex Ebola outbreak in history,” Dr. Tom Frieden, a director at the U.S. Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, said in a statement.

    “It will take many months, and it won’t be easy. But Ebola can be stopped. We know what needs to be done. CDC is surging our response, sending 50 additional disease control experts to the region in the next 30 days.”

    Frieden said the 50 experts from the CDC will work to combat the outbreak and help implement stronger systems to fight the disease.

    The Ebola virus causes viral hemorrhagic fever, which refers to a group of viruses that affect multiple organ systems in the body and are often accompanied by bleeding.

    Early symptoms include sudden onset of fever, weakness, muscle pain, headaches and a sore throat. They later progress to vomiting, diarrhoea, impaired kidney and liver function – and sometimes internal and external bleeding.

    Though the U.S. had not treated an Ebola patient until last week, the CDC has spearheaded efforts to prepare for the deadly virus. It helped create an isolation unit at Emory University Hospital, which is being used to treat American doctor Kent Brantly, who contracted Ebola in Liberia and was evacuated to the facility in Atlanta over the weekend. A second American patient, Nancy Writebol, is being evacuated from Liberia to the same isolation unit. She is scheduled to arrive today.

    Emory is one of four U.S. institutions capable of providing such treatment.

    But in the nation’s hardest-hit and not as prepared, the reality is grim. Even in the best-case scenario, it could take three to six months to stem the epidemic in West Africa, Frieden said.

    Ebola spreads through contact with organs and bodily fluids such as blood, saliva, urine and other secretions of infected people.

    It has no cure, and the most common approach is to support organ functions and keep up bodily fluids such as blood and water long enough for the body to fight off the infection.

    So far, the outbreak has been confined to West Africa. And it has affected health care providers as well.

    Ebola claimed the life of a director at a hospital in Liberia’s capital, Monrovia. Dr. Patrick Nshamdze tested positive on July 29 after falling sick for two weeks. He died on Saturday.

    In Sierra Leone, where government officials have asked citizens to stay away from work, the military has deployed at least 750 medical officials to 13 locations, military spokesman Col. Michael Samura said.

    Health officials are screening incoming and outgoing passengers at the country’s main international airport with a device that takes people’s temperature from their eyes at a distance.

    Anyone showing signs of fever is taken away to have their blood tested for Ebola.

  • ‘Death, please come now’

    ‘Death, please come now’

    •Breast cancer patient needs N7m to survive

    Some months ago, I was only worried about my children; now, I am in deeper pains. Every second now, I pray for death to come quickly and take me away. God will take care of my children should I die. Death must come now, if help refuses to come my way”

    Writhing in pains amid tears yesterday, Mrs Oluwabunmi Olabiyi, who has been battling breast cancer for over three years, prayed for death.

    Holding our reporter by his leg, the mother of three said: “This pain is too much for me to bear any longer; please, help me beg death to come now!”

    Mrs Olabiyi’s looked despondent as she stared at her swollen arms in self-pity. “God will raise people to help you; be hopeful,” a relation pleaded as he broke down in tears.

    Mrs Olabiyi realised something might be wrong when her last child, Emmanuel began to refuse to suck her right breast.

    Whenever she tried to force the breast on the boy, he resorted to crying.

    “He was always crying each time I attempted to force it on him. Suddenly, I noticed a lump in my right breast, following which I sought medical attention,” she told The Nation.

    She was told at the hospital that she had developed breast lump, but she wasted no time to get it removed on April 22, 2010.

    Mrs Olabiyi thought her troubles were over until a few months later when another medical diagnosis revealed a cancerous growth in the same breast.

    At that point, her fortunes began to decline. However, her family rose to the occasion. But with no financial help from anywhere, she underwent her second surgery on June 10, 2011, during which the breast was removed.

    Her hope of returning to business got a boost when she raised a loan.

    When she felt better days had come, armed robbers broke into her shop near her Ijoko, Ogun State home. Mrs Olabiyi was still smarting from the setback when yet another medical diagnosis gave her a shocker: Her second breast has been infected with cancer!

    As the infection festered, she sought help from the public through an account with the Zenith Bank under the name: Bunmi Olabiyi, with number, 1004542305. Reason: She needs N7million to help her undergo treatment in India.

    Family sources said the efforts yielded about N300,000,  which has gone into chemotherapy, a temporary treatment aimed at weakening the cells of the cancer. She has been doing this pending when she can raise the N7million.

    The Nation gathered yesterday that she might be sent out of the Bariga, Lagos-based hospital where she has been for some time, for lack of funds.

    Mrs Olabiyi was born about 34 years ago in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital, where she obtained her first school leaving certificate.

    The third girl in a family of six, with only two survivors, she lost her mother at a tender age, following which she was sent to Lagos to learn a trade.

    Luck smiled on her as she grew to become a successful business woman.

    She got blessed with three children – two boys and a girl – before her ailment started.

  • Death trap as federal road in Ondo

    Death trap as federal road in Ondo

    One of the federal roads in Ondo State linking the Southwest to Abuja, the federal capital, is more of a death trap than a good passage for motorists. DAMISI OJO reports.

    Travelling to Abuja from Lagos through Ondo State is now more of a danger to motorists as the Ipele – Idoani – Isua – Kabba – Abuja highway, one of the two major link roads to the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), from the southwest is in a terrible shape.

    The road, one of the federal roads in the state begging for attention is not only in a deplorable state but is also littered with trailers and other heavy duty trucks trapped on the bad portions of the highway, thereby adding to the danger faced by other motorists who manage to navigate the potholes and other failed portions of the road.

    Any traveler particularly between Idoani in Ose local government and  Isua, Akoko Southeast local government area of Ondo State would witness how chains of trailers are trapped for days and weeks on this road.

    Unfortunately, these heavy duty trucks prefer this road because it is devoid of steeply hills, dangerous slopes and sharp bends.

    This is unlike the deadly Akungba – Oka route with dangerous points, specifically Oke – Oka hill, Okia-Oka deadly slope and the deadly sharp bends at the end of the slope, where hundreds of people had met their untimely death.

    A visit to the area by “The Nation” revealed that most heavy duty trucks ascending the Oka hill usually roll back as a result of their inability to climb the hill causing serious accident resulting in damage to life and properties.

    Likewise, trailers, descending the Oka-Okia long slope with a sharp bend at the end  usually lose control due to brake failure killing dozens of other road users.

    Records at Oka and Iwaro police stations confirm thousands of lives that had been lost on that road.

    The deplorable condition of the Ipele route which is presently cut-off and out of use at Ifira – Sosan – Isua Akoko has forced trucks to divert to the dangerous Akungba – Oka route, causing serious havoc to cars and buses.

    A road user and public analyst, Mr Olasehinde Idowu blamed the federal and Ondo state governments for abandoning this important road which is a gate way from the southwest to the  East and Abuja, the seat of the federal government.

    According to him, both Ondo State and Federal governments should note that the cost of abandoning Ipele – Kabba – Abuja Road project is the precious lives and properties that are being lost on Akungba -Oka route on a daily basis.

    He lamented that the refusal of the Federal Government to repair the road in the last 20 years  has portrayed the insensitivity of the government to the pains of the people.

    Idowu noted that some trailers also divert through Idoani – Idogun – Ipesi – Ifira to Isua to avoid the bad spots on Ipele road thereby causing serious damage to this trunk B road belonging to Ondo State government.

    One of the political office holders in Ose local government who spoke in confidence said the number of lives that had been lost to road accident on Oka – Okia hill and slope outnumber those lost to the Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDs) that we spend billions of naira to control.

    He queried the rationale behind the failure of both federal and state government to repair the Ipele Road to prevent further killings on the popular Akungba – Oka route, stressing that Ipele route is more suitable for heavy trucks.

    Officials of the Federal Ministry of works and Federal Roads Maintenance Agency(FERMA) said the road is not on the priority list, but added that efforts were on to ensure that federal government pays attention to it as a good alternative to Akungba-Oka Akoko-Isua-Abuja route.

    A top government official at the State Ministry of Works who also spoke in confidence said the road in question belongs to the federal government.

    He however said the dwindling state allocation has not assisted in focusing on such gigantic project, noting that this would have been worthwhile especially for the mere fact that it is the citizenry of Ondo State that are making use of the road mostly.

  • Our close shave with death in Kaduna blasts -Injured survivors

    Our close shave with death in Kaduna blasts -Injured survivors

    July 23, 2014 might have passed like any other day, but not so for 37 innocent Nigerians who are currently receiving treatment in major hospitals in Kaduna. They will remember the day for yers to come as a black Wednesday.

    That was the day a twin bomb explosions rocked the Kaduna metropolis. The blast dispatched no fewer than 49 persons to the world beyond. Their 37 kinsmen are also in agonising pains just because they were unlucky to be at the right place at the wrong time.

    At the time of writing, majority of the victims were at the military hospital in the heart of Kaduna metropolis, receiving treatment on mattresses placed on bare floor.

    One of the injured survivors, nine-year-old Abubakar Usman, had left his family house at Hayin Damani in company with two of his siblings to Kawo Market to shop for Sallah wears. It was in that process that a deafening sound swept his feet off the ground.

    Damani said: “I heard the sound and the ground shook. At first, I thought I had gone deaf with the echoes of the sound from the explosion resounding in my ears. I could not hear what people were saying any longer. And I thought that was all until I tried to get up but could not. That was when I started feeling pains in my legs.

    “Some government workers came an carried me. They brought me to this place and told me that my leg is broken.”

    While two of Abubakar’s siblings survived the blast, he may have to celebrate his Sallah on his sick bed at 44 Army Reference Hospital. He sustained first degree burns and a fracture on his left leg.

    For Abdulrazak Suleiman, a generator repairer, it was the drive for business that turned him into a victim of bomb blast. His shop is located on Kano Road, about two kilometres to the scene of the incident. He told our correspondent that he was only honouring the call by a client to come and check a faulty generator.

    “I received the call with excitement, believing that I was going to make some money because I had been sitting down all day long without a job. So, I quickly jumped on my bike and rode down to Kawo.

    “On approaching my client’s shop, I was suddenly thrown off my bike and I hit my head on the ground. I still thank God that I didn’t die,” he said.

    Suleiman was being treated for head injury on account of the incident.

    A female victim, also at 44 Nigerian Army Reference Hospital, identified as Habiba Adamu, said she had travelled all the way from Birnin Kebbi to attend the grand finale of Sheik Dahiru Bauchi’s Ramadan Tafsir. She said she arrived in Kaduna safely, and like many other admirers of the Sheik, she waited to wave at the great Islamic scholar as he was driving out of the venue of the Tafsir.

    She said: “I was at the roadside when the Sheik passed. So, I wanted to leave immediately too, but I didn’t know what happened next until I woke up in the hospital in the night.

    “Now, look at me, It is as if hot water was poured all over my body. If I had known, I would not have left Birnin Kebbi yesterday. Now my children will have to celebrate Sallah without me.”

    At Yusuf Dantsoho Memorial Hospital, the victim still on admission there was a young man whose eye was blown off by the blasts. He was crying for help from government so that he could be flown abroad for treatment.

    The 18-year-old man named Ahmadu Bala was in critical condition on his hospital bed when The Nation correspondent visited the hospital.

    Narrating his ordeal to our correspondent in a faint tone, he said he was caught by the blast after leaving the venue of the Ramadan lecture by Sheik Dahiru Bauchi.

    According to him, “I was on my way back from the Tafsir (Ramadan lecture) at Murtala Square when I heard a loud sound. Before I knew what was happening, I found myself on the floor far away from where I remember standing.

    “I felt my head was very heavy. Before I realised it, my right eye had been blown off by the bomb and I lost consciousness. I was rushed to Yusuf Dantsoho Hospital here by a good Samaritan, as I was told after I regained consciousness.”

    The bomb victim said he came from a village called Labar, near Jaji, in Kaduna State just to attend the Sheik Dahiru Bauchi lecture. He pleaded with the concerned authorities to come to his aide so that he could stay alive.

    “I am pleading with the Kaduna State Government to look into my plight and take an urgent measure to save my life and the lives of others affected by the bomb,” he said.

    The Nation gathered from a source at the hospital that out of the five victims brought to the hospital, Bala’s case was the most serious. “His right eye is blown off. When they brought him in, we quickly took him to the operating room, took care of the wound and he is now stable and partially responding to treatment,” a male worker in the hospital said.

    He however said that Bala needed to be flown abroad for treatment. “We suggest that the government should, as a matter of urgency, fly the young man abroad for proper treatment because his eye as well as part of his skull was affected by the blast. If it is not treated promptly, the wound can get infected and it may have a long-term effect on the victim,” he said.

    He added that five victims of the bomb at Alkali Road were brought to the hospital when the blast occurred on Wednesday, but four of them came in with minor injuries and had been treated and discharged.

  • ‘Oscar partied soon after Reeva’s death’

    ‘Oscar partied soon after Reeva’s death’

    Paralympian murder-accused Oscar Pistorius partied less than two months after he shot and killed his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp, the Sunday Times reported.

    A businessman, who asked not to be named, told the newspaper that Pistorius had arrived uninvited at a party that the businessman was hosting in Illovo, Johannesburg, on April 6 last year.

    Pistorius is currently on trial, charged with murdering his girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp, whom he shot dead through a locked toilet door at his Pretoria home on Valentine’s Day last year.

    Pistorius has claimed that he shot Steenkamp by mistake after believing there was an intruder in his house.

    On Sunday, the newspaper quoted unnamed sources, reportedly guests at the party in April, who said that, at the event, Pistorius had appeared subdued at first, but after drinking heavily, had taken to the dance floor as well as tried to flirt with a woman – who rejected him.

    Recently, reports emerged that Pistorius had been involved in an altercation with businessman Jared Mortimer at an upmarket club, the VIP Room, in Sandton, Johannesburg, last Saturday night.

    Mortimer told The Star newspaper that Pistorius had been intoxicated at the time and had insulted President Jacob Zuma.

    Subsequently, Pistorius’s uncle, Leo Pistorius, released a statement, on behalf of the family, in which he said that the athlete’s move to venture into a public space while the trial was under way had been unwise.

    He said the family had witnessed Pistorius’ “escalating sense of loneliness and alienation. This, we believe, is underlying some of his self-harming behaviour.”

    Leo Pistorius also refuted Mortimer’s version of events, saying the businessman had been the “aggressor” in the incident and was “peddling untruths”.

    Pistorius’s murder trial is set to resume on August 7, when final arguments are expected to be heard.

  • McIlroy’s rumoured love interest Nadia Forde escapes death

    McIlroy’s rumoured love interest Nadia Forde escapes death

    Rory McIlroy’s new potential love interest was lucky to escape serious injury after flipping her car six times in a serious motorway crash.

    Nadia Forde has been spotted out with McIlroy in Dublin following his split with world number 15 tennis star Caroline Wozniacki but was lucky to walk away unscathed after a wet weather smash in Warwickshire.

    The 25-year-old model lost control of her Fiat 500 in rainy conditions on the M40 before crashing into the motorway’s central reservation and flipping the vehicle six times.

    Forde was taken to hospital as a precaution in the early hours of Sunday morning due to a blow to the head but was later discharged.

    Her spokesman said: “Her guardian angel was working overtime. It was a real scare and the car was a complete write-off, but she is fine.”

    The singer is expected to take time out from promotional work for her new single as she recovers from shock.

    McIlroy is busy preparing for The Open, which he begins as third favourite today.