Tag: death

  • Mark visits Buhari  over daughter’s death

    Mark visits Buhari over daughter’s death

    Senate President David Mark yesterday visited former Head of State and pPresidential candidate of the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC), Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (rtd), on a condolence visit following the death of his daughter, Zuliaha.

    Mark was accompanied by Kaduna State Governor Patrick Ibrahim Yakowa.

    The senator noted that no man has control over when to die, adding that all religions accept that every human being would die.

    He said: “Your Excellency, I have to condole you and sympathise with you and the family on the loss of our daughter. For all us, one thing that is accepted by all religions is death.

    “It must come and everyone of us at his or her appointed time at a time that Almighty Allah decides. We don’t have control over it; the same way we don’t have control over when to be born. Allah did not consult our parents, He didn’t consult us before we were born. So, we are all His property and when He is going to take us away, we have no right to ask Allah to consult us. But we pray that the souls of those who have left us will rest in the bosom of Allah.

    “We must glorify Him for whatever happens. So many people have died with nobody to even take their bodies to where they could get a befitting funeral.

    “So, when Allah gives us the opportunity to bury our own, it is also a time for us to honour Him and glorify Him. We should not question Him.

    “Sir, I pray that you have the courage and the fortitude to bear this loss. I also pray that Allah increases your faith, because He is the one who has given and He is the one who has taken away.

    “Therefore, sir, on behalf of the Senate and the National Assembly, I would like to offer my very sincere condolence and sympathy.

    “I am also informing you that we remember you in our prayers and we put the family in our prayers.”

    Buhari expressed gratitude to Mark for the visit.

    He recalled that he had expressed a similar appreciation to President Goodluck Jonathan who he said personally called him and sent a condolence letter.

    The former Head of State described Mark as someone he had enjoyed long time relationship with, from his days as governor of Niger State.

    Others with the Senate President included former Kaduna State senator, Ahmed Mohammed Makarfi and the senator representing Kaduna Central, General Sani Saleh, among others.

  • Deadly stomach cancers on the rise

    Deadly stomach cancers on the rise

    The American Cancer Society reports a record one million new worldwide

    cases of stomach cancer and 800,000 deaths per year.  Stomach cancer has

    been found to be the fourth most common type of cancer and the second

    leading cause of cancer death.

    It is reported that 1 in 114 men and women are at significant risk of

    developing stomach cancer at some point in their lives.  Stomach cancers

    are especially prevalent in the African and Hispanic populations.

     

    *Lifestyle induced cancers*

     

    The risk factors for stomach cancers are very similar to other lifestyle

    induced cancers.  The leading causative factors include smoking, a poor

    diet, lack of physical activity and obesity.  Proactive lifestyle changes

    such as quitting smoking and eating a diet rich in vegetables can reduce

    the risk of developing stomach cancer.

     

    Stomach cancers are known to be more prevalent in men over the age of 50,

    individuals with type A blood and have a history of a H. Pylori bacterial

    infections.  H. Pylori infections are also known to contribute to stomach

    ulcers.

     

    *Do I have stomach cancer?*

     

    Many cancers are actually chronic or long-term in nature.  Cancer’s

    complicating factor is that you don’t know you have cancer until you have

    symptoms.  Individuals that develop stomach cancer commonly have poor

    lifestyle choices for decades and do not know that it is silently

    developing.

    The signs and symptoms of stomach cancers are very similar to other

    gastrointestinal conditions.  You could be at risk if you have heartburn,

    indigestion, nausea or other ulcer-type symptoms.  Other concerning

    symptoms include abdominal pain, discomfort, bloating and a sense of

    fullness.

    Any symptom should not be ignored. Symptoms may not indicate cancer but

    they do indicate that one’s body is not functioning properly.  Lifestyle

    factors play a significant role in maintaining and improving how one’s body

    is able to heal and function.

     

    *Vitamin D3 prevents cancer*

     

    Vitamin D acts more like a hormone than a vitamin. Like a hormone, it has a

    huge impact on how genes express or fail to express themselves. In fact,

    one in every 25 genes in the human body interacts with vitamin D. This

    means that deficiencies may weaken the genetic infrastructure of our body

    and place us at risk for diseases such as stomach cancer.

     

    Without vitamin D our immune system is incapable of producing certain

    antimicrobial substances, leaving our body unable to fight off bacteria,

    viruses and cancer. A vitamin D deficiency will prevent the body from

    killing off precancerous cells before they turn into full-fledged cancer.

    According to the Vitamin D Council, the human body needs from 3,000 to

    5,000 IU daily. Besides preventing cancer, vitamin D is also needed for

    strong bones and calcium absorption in the body.

     

    *Eat cruciferous vegetables *

     

    Broccoli is one of the best cancer-fighting foods on the planet.  This

    super-vegetable is loaded with various nutrients that have been found to

    benefit various cancers including stomach.

    Sprouts of broccoli have been found to be the most beneficial.  A direct

    cancer-inhibiting nutrient can be found in greater concentrations in the

    sprouts than the full mature plants.  Cabbage and cauliflower have very

    similar properties.

    Go with your gut.  Talk with your healthcare professional if you suspect

    something is not right.  Prevention is the most important technique but few

    truly value lifestyle interventions until it’s too late.  Take proactive

    steps to reduce your risk today.

     

     

    Dr. Cory Couillard is an international healthcare speaker and columnist for

    numerous newspapers, magazines, websites and publications throughout the

    world. He works in collaboration with the World Health Organization’s goals

    of disease prevention and global healthcare education. Views do not

    necessarily reflect endorsement.

     

    Email: drcorycouillard@gmail.com

     

    Facebook: Cory Couillard

     

    Twitter: Cory_Couillard

  • A season of death: Justice Kayode Eso; Justice Promotion= injustice to accused; Customs: Don’t burn, Donate!

    A season of death: Justice Kayode Eso; Justice Promotion= injustice to accused; Customs: Don’t burn, Donate!

    This November is the season of death. Death is hurrying to make the 2012 quota, just like government’s budgetary ‘last quarter’ mis-spending rush. With the murdered victims of Boko Haram bombs, cattle-farmers wars and floods we also see major deaths in politics, medicine, media and law. No one is ever old enough to die. Professor Bayo Olumide, eminent neurosurgeon, Alhaji Lam Adesina, Dr Olusola Saraki Mr Bode Alalade, broadcaster par excellence and now Justice Kayode Eso. He was the Truth and Reconciliation Icon, true Nigerian, author of books and ‘executive lawlessness’, primus inter pares, legal stellar light, doyen of arbitration, outstanding conversationalist, with great wit. It was always a pleasure to be in his presence. He was partial to the youth and an inspirational iconic role model whenever he graced an Educare Trust activity. Many will recall him being the trial judge who found Wole Soyinka ‘not guilty’ as ‘the man with the gun’ at NBC, Dugbe. May his large heart and soul Rest In Perfect Peace. Amen. With these deaths, governments and media producers have again lost the opportunity to fund historical and motivational documentaries, interviews, Nollywood and radio programmes on making and broadcasting the ‘life and times’ of these great men. Unfortunately, in spite of the well-known anticorruption efforts of Justice Kayode Eso and others, the judiciary is still suspected of corruption, and also stands accused of unnecessary injunctions and adjournments.

    A small inexplicable observation on the legal learned world: The recent celebrated and well deserved elevation of certain justices raises an important legal, moral and economic question while the National Assembly and the Legal Council are preoccupied with deliberating on weighty issues like gay marriage, constitutional review and plea bargaining. Why does the judiciary always make an ‘ass of itself’? Imagine a judge trying several complex cases some for 19 months. Suddenly she is promoted with ‘immediate effect’. If this happened in another professional, business or family sphere we would be in court claiming damages for ‘breach of contract’, ‘deception’, ‘false pretences’ et cetera. Remember this was believed to be the problem at the heart of the Justice Salami affair –to get him out of the way, kicked upstairs. The result is that the cankerworm of injustice breaks out right in the judge’s chambers and the courtroom. If the judges themselves were victims of such injustice would they not be up in judicial arms? Can a country like Nigeria, not known for its expeditious justice delivery service, really afford such expensive judicial ‘luxuries’ or delays? Unfinished cases are abandoned even as we celebrate well-deserved judicial promotions. Later another judge has to start all over again.

    Social science departments, lawyers’ groups like the NBA and FIDA and NGOs like JDPC and Consumer Protection bodies should compute the huge multimillion naira cost of this cause of ‘delayed justice’, cost of a retrial in emotions and frustration, in repeat legal fees and transportation and feeding, the cost to the accused and witnesses, the cost to the country-all totalling N50-100m for such elaborate cases and unquantifiable ‘judicial inconvenience’ by police, prisons, prisoners, witnesses, litigants and lawyers. This cost does not take into consideration the well-known judicial slogan that ‘justice delayed is justice denied’. Would it not be better to promote the judge, start the new salary grade but keep him or her as a judge of that court until he or she has finished all existing cases expeditiously, cleared the courtroom desk? Fellow Nigerians, languishing in prison ‘awaiting trial’ and innocent till proved guilty, should be protected from such judicial licence. We are happy when judges are promoted but it is good judicial judgement to ensure that they finish all cases pending before abandoning the court. Indeed why do judges not set aside several days for continuous hearing of a particular case to prevent the ‘adjournment syndrome’.

    Another socio-legal conundrum: On TV we regularly see goods, drugs and tyres being burnt by Customs or NAFDAC or NDLEA. Environmentally speaking tyres should never be burnt in the open because they environmentally toxic substances which pollute the air badly and also damage the lungs of passers-by, even NAFDAC and Customs officials. Tyre burning should be banned nationwide by a Law ‘Burning of Tyre Prohibition Act’. Burning may be the only option to disposal of seized hard drugs if you do not breathe in the drug filled air around the fire, but why does Customs burn all seized goods? Many such endangered goods are not harmful and are still good enough to save lives if donated to the needy flood victims, and repatriated prostitutes from Italy, freed trafficked persons, orphanages, Red Cross and religious organisations known for their non-corrupt humanitarian work. This would be punishment enough for the smugglers. Fund-raising for these groups is a difficult task in Nigeria. So why this ‘seized wealth to waste’ burning? If the authorities burn tyres, a known major pollutant method, why do they not burn the ammunition and guns they seize and what happens to them? So why burn sieved frozen chicken, rice, cloth and clothes in a country where environmental pollution from smoke is a major problem and 70% of the country is in poverty? Customs should be legally empowered and forced to give seized goods to an independent ‘Bureau of Smuggled and Recovered Property’ or NEMA for forwarding to recognised NGOs, orphanages and handicapped schools. Let the poor, not environmental pollution, benefit from seized goods.

     

  • Death toll in Taraba riots hits 10

    The Councillor representing a ward in Ibi Local Government Area of Taraba State, Alhaji Abubakar Sadani, yesterday said the death toll in the riots that engulfed the state has risen from four to 10.

    The Chairman of the local government, Isiaku Adamu, on Sunday, said at least four people were killed.

    Adamu said the violence broke out after a Christian vigilance group killed a Muslim resident, who insisted on going through their illegal checkpoint set up to check church attacks in parts of the North.

    Boko Haram has claimed responsibility for most of the attacks.

    Police spokesman Amos Alaoye said calm has returned to the area after the deployment of troops.

     

  • Death in the air

    Death in the air

    Stowaway’s body in the wheel well of aircraft raises fresh poser about security at our airports

    THE shocking discovery of the body of a young man in the wheel well of Arik Air’s Airbus A340-500 at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport (MMAI), Lagos, after the aircraft arrived from New York, United States of America, is an eye opener that defines the nature of human desperation as well as the limits of human endurance. A statement by the airline said: “The body was discovered when engineers were conducting a routine check on the aircraft that morning. The identity of the man is not known as there was no form of identification on him. However, we are able to establish that the body has been in the wheel well for more than a day, suggesting that the stowaway originated from Lagos. Curiously, a bottle of medicine produced by a local pharmaceutical company was found on the body, lending credence to the suggestion that the stowaway may have boarded the flight from Lagos.”

    The undercarriage compartment of the plane, where the corpse was found, is where its tyres are stored and it is spacious enough to accommodate a full-grown human being, although experts claim that anybody who hid in that part of an aircraft would most likely be suffocated when the plane is flying. The fate of the stowaway in this case proves the experts right as the compartment is not pressurised like the cabin of an aircraft, and it is not heated, so, survival is almost impossible even if the person is not crushed by the wheels after a flight that took several hours. The stowaway was apparently hoping for divine intervention as a Bible with an American flag drawn on the back cover was also found on the body.

    It is a puzzle that the stowaway was not caught before the plane took off from Lagos, nor was he discovered before the aircraft flew back from New York; rather, he was found as the airliner was preparing for another flight out of the country. Were there no checks before the flights from the Lagos end and the New York end?

    On the balance of probability, it is likely that the stowaway boarded the flight from MMAI, rather than JF Kennedy Airport, New York, which would make it a tale of calamity in the search for greener pastures. We really wonder what imagination inspired the desperado to belittle the life-threatening risk involved in his escapade. What romantic visions of Uncle Sam triggered his move to go to America at all cost? The desperation evident in this tragic incident suggests that we may be living in a social environment that rarely inspires hope in some people. But surely, such extremism cannot be a reasonable way out. Did he hide to avoid paying the fare as is usual with stowaways? How did he plan to beat immigration checks in a foreign land?

    It is disturbing that this is not an isolated occurrence. In March 2010, a Nigerian, Okechukwu Okeke, was found dead in the nose wheel compartment of a Boeing777 aircraft belonging to the United States carrier, Delta Airline, parked on the tarmac of the Lagos airport.

    These incidents imply a serious breach of security. The airside is supposed to be a restricted area, which raises the possibility that such stowaways might have received assistance from insiders in the form of airport security officials and ground-handling personnel. How such stowaways gained access to the airside when they weren’t officials of an airline or handling company, or agents of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) surely beats the imagination and indicates lax security, which needs to be addressed urgently.

     

  • Rev King urges court to quash death sentence

    Rev King urges court to quash death sentence

    Condemned Christian Praying Assembly leader Chukwuemeka Ezeugo (alias Rev. King) yesterday urged the Court of Appeal, Lagos, to quash the death sentence passed on him by a Lagos State High Court, Ikeja.

    He urged the court to allow his appeal, saying Justice Joseph Oyewole erred in several respects and miscarried justice.

    Ezeugo’s lawyer Olalekan Ojo adopted the appellant’s brief.

    The respondent, Lagos State Government, represented by Solicitor-General Lawal Pedro (SAN), also adopted its brief.

    Ezeugo was convicted and sentenced to death by hanging on January 11, 2007, for the alleged murder of a church member, Ann Uzoh.

    He was arraigned on September 26, 2006 on a six-count charge of attempted murder and murder.

    The prosecution said he poured petrol on the deceased and five other persons.

    Uzoh died on August 2, 2006, 11 days after the incident.

    Ojo filed a notice of appeal on January 16, 2007, containing 16 grounds of appeal against the judgment.

    On June 10, 2008, the Appeal Court granted him leave to argue an additional 16 grounds of appeal through an amended notice of appeal filed on June 15, 2008.

    Ojo said Ezeugo did not commit the crime because he was not present at the scene.

    He said Uzoh had, in two statements before her death, said she got burnt in a generator accident and that the cleric was not responsible for her injuries.

    Ojo said the Investigating Police Officer (IPO) tendered statements which said Ezeugo was not responsible for the burns which led to Uzoh’s death, but they were not admitted in evidence.

    The lawyer said had those “vital exhibits” being admitted by the judge, “they would have cast doubts on the case of the prosecution.”

    He added that Justice Oyewole’s refusal not to admit the exhibits in evidence “occasioned a great miscarriage of justice.”

    Ojo urged the appellate court to determine whether the judge was right in raising suo motu (on his own) the issue of the admissibility of exhibits P1 and P4, which were oral evidence in which Uzoh reportedly stated that the burns she suffered were from a generator accident.

    He also asked the court to determine “whether or not the judge was right in expunging from the record exhibits P1 and P4, as well as oral evidence in which the deceased declared that the injuries were from a generator accident and that the appellant was not responsible for the injuries.”

    The lawyer added: “An aspect of fairness and impartiality that a court should exhibit is that it must not raise an issue suo motu and resolve it against a party without having heard the party against whom the issue has been resolved.”

    But the state urged the court to uphold Justice Oyewole’s verdict.

    “We urge your Lordship to dismiss this appeal,” Pedro said.

    He said the Evidence Act permits the expulsion of inadmissible evidence, as the judge was the master of the evidence before him.

    Pedro said there was enough corroborating evidence, both written and oral, upon which the conviction was secured.

    The court reserved judgment till a date that will be communicated to parties.

     

  • NANS mourns with family of girl flogged to death

    NIGERIAN students over the weekend commiserated with the family of Miss Chidimma Ukachukwu who was allegedly flogged to death for not doing her home work.

    Chidimma was a Junior Secondary School student of Saint John of God Secondary school Awka before her untimely death.

    The students, under the umbrella of National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS), said they investigated the circumstances that led to the death of the student and actions of all the interested parties.

    NANS, in a statement, signed by its Deputy Senate President, Senator Nwachukwu Okpalaoka, said they visited the parents and the commissioner for Education, Dr (Mrs.) Uju Okeke, as well as the teacher at the centre of the saga.

    The statement reads: “Late Miss Chidimma Ukachukwu died after she was flogged for not doing assignment but the teacher had no bad intentions as she was not the only student that was flogged.

    ‘’The teacher did not flog with all her might but corrective flogging to make the student better for her parents and society.

    “We condole with the family of late Chidimma , urging them to take heart on the demise of their beloved daughter . We urge them too to commit everything to God Almighty who knows why it happened that way.”

    NANS, however, warned teachers who derive joy in corporal punishment to “desist from such and find alternative ways of disciplining their students and pupils across the Federation to avoid a repeat of such unpleasant incidence.”

  • They walk through the valley, but fear no death

    They walk through the valley, but fear no death

    What is life like for octogenarians and nonagenarians? Do they occasionally fear death? And what interests them? ODOGWU EMEKA ODOGWU and NICHOLAS KALU, who spent time with them, report

     

    Many of them are left without their spouses of several decades. Some have even lost children.

    Chief Olatunbosun Falana, 85, used to beg for food. His fellow Ekiti State compatriot, who is also 85, Mrs. Ojuolape Oladimeji also used to beg for what to eat.

    The case of another Ekiti indigene,Mrs. Felicia Ishola, believed to be over 105 years, was not really different.

    But, thanks to a Social Security Scheme introduced by the Dr. Kayode Fayemi administration, their stories have now changed.

    Mrs. Ishola said: “Fayemi will not cry in old age. He will not bury any of his children. He will get favour of people in this world and that of God.”

    But for old people elsewhere, they are on their own. Government has no plan for them on the last lap of their lives.

    Creek Town, Cross River State-born Elder Effiong Aye has been able to cope with life at old age because he retired as principal of the famous Hope Waddell College, Calabar and still receives pensions to support himself.

    Aye, who was born in 1918 in Creek Town, lost his wife Miranda in March this year.

    Aye said he nurses no fear of death.

    He said: “I don’t have any fear of death. I just feel the time was coming, when I don’t feel myself active like before. My limbs are getting weaker and weaker. And I knew that time was coming. It is coming now. Already, I am getting fed up. Most of my friends don’t live again. They are all gone. You see new generations coming up here. But that one is left to God. He dictates. But I still feel myself alright.”

    At 94, Aye says he does not stick to any diet. “I just eat normal food like everybody else; gari, rice, beans and so on. I am not on any special diet,” he said.

    However, Aye says he has not tasted meat in the past 50 years. “Christ never ate meat,” he said.

    He believes he is in good health, except for the occasional malaria fever. He enjoys moral and financial support from his family.

    A prolific writer, with over 10 books authored by him, Aye spends most of his day reading. At the moment, he is revising the second edition of the Efik dictionary.

    He said: “I don’t joke with that one (reading). I read a lot. In fact, that is what I spend most of my time doing here in my study. I don’t write much now. But I read a lot,” he says as he reads a few lines from the Efik dictionary he is working on without the aid of his glasses.

    “I mostly stay inside these days, doing a lot of reading. For instance, this (second edition of the Efik dictionary) a big job to be done.”

    His routine is a bit different from Etubom Enian Essien, 92.

    From 1951 to 1984, he was a member of the Eastern House of Assembly. Now he is the clan head of Ikoneto.”

    He was reading by the window of his 19 Anderson Street, Calabar home when our reporter called on him. He said contentment is the reason for his long life.

    “What I would say is contentment. When you are contented with what you have and are, you don’t have problem,” he said.

    At 92, Essien drinks beer, though sparingly, and still smokes cigarettes.

    On whether he is on any special diet, he said: “No, no. I just live an ordinary life. Eating the normal food everybody else eats. I am not particular about any food. I eat cow meat, goat meat, fish and so forth, I don’t discriminate.”

    Like Aye, he spends most of his time reading. He does not go out often. “I scarcely go out, except when I go to church.”

    He reads without glasses. “I can read without my glasses, except the writings are too tiny,” Essien said.

    Essien said after his 85th birthday, he started experiencing general weakness.

    On how he gets cash to get by, he said: “As a clan head, I have a monthly stipend which I use in maintaining myself. All my children are grown up and on their own now, but they still take proper care of me.”

    The widower says he does not worry about death. “Well, you know, I don’t fear death. After living to the age of 92, what else would I fear? In fact, if you look around here, you do not find anybody of my age.”

    Essien goes to the African Club once in a while to fraternise with friends and drink a bottle of beer. “I drink beer twice a week. Yes, I still smoke cigarettes till now,” he says.

    For Madam Enyiuche Mary Obuekwe, a trader, baker and farmer, there is no need to fear death after living for four scores and a year.

    The widow, who lost her husband about 10 years ago, still washes her clothes and sweeps her house. “I cook my food the way I want it because children of nowadays don’t know how to cook food that has taste. They only know how to cook with maggi cube.”

    She is not on any special diet. But, she does not consume excess sugar.

    She has, however, had to battle heart-related problem. She was flown abroad by her children for treatment. Since then, she has had to take medications for high blood pressure.

    Mrs. Obuekwe said: “I am not afraid of death. If it comes now, I will welcome it. I have accomplished my mission on earth. I am just enjoying additional life now. But I always ask God to make sure I am not going to die through accident. I want to lie down on my bed and pass on and I will be smiling home while going the Lord.

    “The only people that are afraid of death are people who did not keep anything in the world. I have left my foot prints in the world and I thank God for that.”

    Pa Samuel Chukwunweike Nwadiogbu, 80, a farmer, mechanic and retired Police Inspector, spends most of his time praising God these days.

    “Once I wake up as early as 5am, I will pray to God with my entire family for protecting us over the night. On Friday, I go to Friday class in my parish but if it is other days, I will relax and take care of the house while the children go to school. So, the only thing that keeps me busy now is church activities. I am a member of the choir. I don’t work any longer, because I have retired now,” he said.

    Old age has affected his memory. He says he easily forgets things now.

    That started three years ago.

    He said: “I will be discussing with you; but immediately you go away, I will forget all we have said, unless you remind me about that.”

    He still washes his clothes because his wife is not always at home because she is usually with the children.

    He too does not fear death. In his words: “I know that one with God is with majority. I am not owing anybody. So, I am not afraid of death at all. So, I thank God for the good health He granted me. That is why I kept praising God day in day out at home and in the church.”

    Chief Shedrack Onuohaegbunam Mbanefo, who is still four years away from becoming an octogenarian, looks as though he is more than his age. He is on special diet, such as vegetables and proteinous foods. Doctor has also got him to stay away from alcohol and avoid anything that contains sugar.

    One of his eyes is weakened. He too said he is not afraid of death.

    “The only thing I ask is that I don’t bother my children and relations on sick bed before death. I don’t want to be urinating and defecating on the bed before death comes. I see that as punishment. So, I want to die while strong,” he said.

    Unlike Nigeria, Europe and America have plans for the elderly, especially the weak. Sick old people in Britain are treated free of charge by the National Health Service, which is funded by general taxation. Poor and frail old people are given free help with washing, dressing and cooking.

    When old people become so infirm that they can no longer make a cup of tea, they may be nudged into a care home, but at her own cost, unless they are particularly poor.

    Mr. Geoffery Chima, the National Vice Chairman of the Association of Federal Public Service Retirees (AFPSR), said there must be a ministry for the elderly.

    He said: “We want our own ministry because it will help to ensure that we are properly taken care of. There are more than 15 ministries in the country today, which all the pensioners retired from. So, it is better for a ministry to be created for us. The process of establishing a task force to take care of pensioners who embezzled pension funds should be eradicated. Nigeria should be serious with their pensioners like other countries.”

    A nongovernmental organisation (NGO) known as the Senior Citizens Advocacy Network of Nigeria (SCANON), has advocated adequate healthcare, transportation, and care givers, among others to promote the well being of the senior citizens.

    The chairman of the group, Rear Admiral Christopher Ehanmo (rtd), at the official inauguration of SCANON earlier this month, said the Senate passed a bill entitled: “National Agency for Elderly Persons (Establishment) Bill 2009 (SB.15)”.

    However, the House of Representatives did not pass the bill and therefore the bill could not be sent to Mr. President for assent.

    “We believe all the senior citizens in Nigeria will actively participate in this important and timely crusade of our efforts to improve the well being of the elderly persons in Nigeria”, he said.

     

  • 10 die in JTF’s reprisal  for officer’s death

    10 die in JTF’s reprisal for officer’s death

    A military officer was killed yesterday in an attack on a patrol vehicle in Maiduguri, the Borno State capital.

    Two soldiers, who are also members of the Joint Task Force (JTF), were critically injured in the attack.

    The killing of the officer, a lieutenant, by an Improvised Explosive Device (IED), angered the task force’s men who shot sporadically, leading to the death of no fewer than 10 people.

    The IED was buried on Lagos Street, near the NUJ Press Centre. It went off at about 7.15am as the JTF patrol vehicle was passing by. The lieutenant, sitting in front of the vehicle was killed.

    A few minutes later, another bomb went off in a residential apartment facing the spot of the first blast. Military sources said a middle age man who was believed to be coupling the explosive device was the victim. He died.

    The JTF spokesman, Lt Col Sagir Musa, in a statement said two soldiers were injured. “It is feared that two soldiers sustained injury,” he claimed.

    Soldiers reportedly shot sporadically in the area particularly Gwange Ward adjacent the scene of the blast. Over hundred houses, shopping mall and offices were set ablaze while thousands of residents in the area were displaced. Gwange is believed to be one of the flash points of the Boko Haram activities in the city.

    Heavy shootings were heard in the city as most residents remained indoors. Many of the employees of the University of Maiduguri could not access their offices because the Lagos Street was barricaded.

    Sources said the soldiers “believed many residents were aiding the activities of the sect.

    Deputy Governor Zanna Mustapha inspected the area. He appealed to Boko Haram members to lay down their arms. “If they say they are fighting for the sake of Allah, people are suffering and if they say they are fighting for people, our people are still suffering. Just see what they have put people into now. It is really sad.”

    He said government would assess the extent of loss by the people and see how it could be mitigated.

    There was heavy security around the construction site of a Chinese firm in the city yesterday following the killing of one of their colleagues and his aide at Gubio, north of Borno state.

     

  • Death threats on reporter

    Two human rights groups, Nigerian Democratic Awareness Forum (NDAF) and Ikwerre Citizen for Democratic Movement (ICDM), have condemned death threats on a reporter, Precious Dikewoha.

    Dikewoha, an indigene of Ubima in Ikwerre Local Government Area of Rivers State, has gone into hiding, following threats on his life by persons suspected to be politicians in the community because of a report he authored in the Nation Evening Express.

    He said his phone is being inundated by callers, who threatened to abduct and kill him over the report.

    NDAF and ICDM, in a joint statement yesterday in Port Harcourt, the state capital, urged Governor Rotimi Amaechi and Commissioner of Police, Mohammed Ndabawa, to unmask the perpetrators.