Tag: die

  • Two die, 18 injured in boat mishap

    •As inferno roasts man, 32

    Two persons were at the weekend confirmed dead, while 18 others sustained injuries following a boat mishap along Lagos waters.

    The incident which occurred on Friday morning along the Ojo-Tin Can on the Lagos Island waterway was said to have been prompted by an accident involving a passenger boat and a dredging boat.

    It was learnt that the operator of the passenger boat was reckless and could not see oncoming boats because instead of standing, he sat down.

    “They could not see the other boat from his sitting position, and before they could point out the other boat, they were already on it” he added.

    The Nation gathered that deceased were the dredger boat’s operator and his assistant, just as it was learnt that the injured victims are currently being treated at an undisclosed hospital in Ojo.

    The passenger boat was said to have ran into a stationary sand dredging boat around Coconut.

    When the accident occurred, The Nation learnt that local divers immediately, made to rescue the deceased after which they were rushed to a hospital in Coconut where they were confirmed dead.

    The divers also swiftly moved to rescue the other 18 passengers.

    According to a source, some of those who could swim made their way to a nearby island, while the local divers and fishermen who were around, helped in rescuing others.

    In another development, a 32 year old man, was on Saturday consumed by an inferno that razed a residential building in the Lagos suburb.

    The victim, whose name was not given, was said to be at 15, Arabic Crescent, Ojokoro in Ijaiye, a Lagos suburb.

    Confirming the developments, Southwest spokesman of the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), Ibrahim Farinloye, said the deceased had been deposited in the morgue.

    He stated that the fire service responded to seven other fire calls on Saturday, adding that about four others have been attended to at the time of filing this story.

  • Three Boko Haram suspects die in car explosion

    Three persons suspected to be members of the Boko Haram died on Tuesday in a suicide mission at Bajoga, Gombe State.

    A source told our reporter that the incident occurred at dusk at one of the security checkpoint at the entrance to the town from the Northern axis.

    The source said the vehicle used by the insurgents, a white Toyota Hilux, sped into the barricades on the road and went off in an explosion as the security agents at the checkpoint ran away.

    Police spokesman, Fwaje Atajiri, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), who confirmed the incident yesterday, added that none of the security operatives was affected.

    Atajiri said the take-off and final destination of the insurgents could not be ascertained because the three occupants of the vehicle died in the explosion.

    Also, the police command yesterday paraded 22 armed suspects, who had allegedly been terrorising the state.

    Three of the suspects, who were said to have operated in a tricycle – popularly called Keke NAPEP – rammed into an articulated vehicle at the Federal Low Cost as they attempted to evade police arrest.

    The others were reportedly arrested at Buba Shongo, Kagarawo, Jan Kai and Jakadafari areas of Gombe, following tip-offs from the public.

    Atajiri urged the public to inform the police on suspicious individuals, movements and activities.

    The spokesman said the command would treat the information with prompt attention and utmost confidentiality.

    He warned youths with criminal intents and those involved in kalare (political thugs) activities to desist.

  • ‘I thought I would die’

    ‘I thought I would die’

    •Survivor of kidney ailment recounts ordeal

    With her Sunday best on, she had every reason to roll in the mud in appreciation of God’s rare kindness to her. And everyone around her was not surprised when she praised Him to high heavens for, against all odds, being lucky to be counted among the living.

    A year ago, 48-year-old Elizabeth Chima almost surrendered to death no thanks to a chronic kidney disease. Her health condition assumed an unbearable dimension and death seemed the only option.

    She developed the terrible ailment two years after the death of her husband. Today, the storm is over for Elizabeth, following a successfully kidney transplant in India, six months ago.

    She was all-smiles at the Saint Michael Church, Alapere-Ketu in Lagos when, joined by well wishers and other members of the sanctuary, she heartily said “thank you Lord” as a thanksgiving service.

    She openly appreciated God for giving her a second chance to live to nurture her six children. Her friends and neighbours from her Ketu residence were not left out. They all dined and wined with her.

    While her dark moment lasted, Elizabeth was always lying helpless in the hospital. Her only companions were some well-meaning Nigerians who empathised with her through the media, family members, friends and her children. She needed to raise the sum of N7 million to make her whole again. And luck eventually smiled on her.

    After the service, the woman spoke with this reporter at her residence. She gleefully affirmed that her health condition “is now perfect.”

    “I want to use this medium to thank Nigerians for coming to my rescue during those trying periods. And I pray that God shall reward everyone bountifully,” she said.

    She recalled: “I said I had got to the last bus stop when all hope seemed lost. Even in the eyes of the nurses and doctors, I could see doubts, but within me, my mind remained strong. The pain was too much to the extent that at a time, I didn’t think I would survive. At first, I asked: is this how my journey will end?

    “I knew there was no way I could raise the N7 million needed for the operation. I looked around; there was nowhere. So, I just said if I survived, I would be thankful to God and if otherwise, fine. But honestly, I never thought I could make it. That I am alive today is by the grace of God. On many occasions, I fainted at the hospital and they would use oxygen to revive me. So, I am very grateful to God and to everyone that made my journey through hell a success.”

    A major lesson the ailment taught her, according to her, “is that if you don’t have money, learn how to be graceful to God.”

    She had good words about the doctors who supported her fight for survival. She said: “Whenever I was rushed in, you would see doctors running to attend to me.”

    Though she has surmounted the challenge, it is too early for her to do strenuous works. But she hopes that by the end of next year, she will be able start up something for sustenance.

    “I am not a lazy woman. My children are the ones feeding me and buying my drugs among other needs now. I don’t have any money since I cannot run around now,” she said.

     

  • Two die in Ogun cults clash

    Two die in Ogun cults clash

    Two persons suspected to be secret cults’ members have been killed and others injured in  a pre-dawn attack and counter-attack between rival groups in Ijebu-Igbo, the headquarters of Ijebu North Local Government Council Area, Ogun State.

    A gun battle between two warring cult groups –  Eye Confraternity (the Air Lords) and the Aiye Confraternity (the Black Axe) was said to have begun around 3:56a.m at the Aleke Oke-Sopin area of the town.

    Residents were thrown into panic as they were woke up by the sounds of sporadic gunshots.

     

    The dead were identified as 28 year-old Abiodun Adeniye and Taiwo Yusuf (24).

    Their remains have been deposited at a morgue in  the town, awaiting a post-mortem examination.

    The  Police Public Relations Officer, Olumuyiwa Adejobi, who  confirmed the incident, told reporters that cutlasses, pairs of scissors,  guns, expended bullets, live cartridges, cults’ paraphernalia and charms were recovered from the groups.

    Adejobi, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), added that the clash informed why the Commissioner of Police, Mr Ikemefuna Okoye, directed all anti-crime teams in the state  to relocate momentarily to Ijebu for adequate protection of lives and property, particularly during the Ojude Oba festival.

    Adejobi said the police would not relent in its efforts in tackling activities of cultists  in any part of the state “via robust intelligence and sophisticated policing.”

    He appealed to  Ogun residents to collaborate with the police and other security agencies to succeed in the war against cultism and security of lives and property.

  • A President to die for

    Let me tell you of your precious heritage. It seems to be mine too even though I refuse to subscribe to such wretched norm. Yet no matter how much I try to deny its tragic course, the ties that bind arrests my heart, as it does, yours.

    And so do we live with whatever grotesqueness survives. Hence this year as all others, our dearest hopes have been wasted and crushed. Every hour manifests as twilight and Nigeria for all her seductiveness and charm, is tainted by the hopelessness we swore to end.

    Our best image is still desolate and austere, because we remain unfaithful to a land whose promising years again, slither from our grasp. A new dawn beckons but we have chosen to betray its silvery spokes of promise and luck. Thus today, the sun rises to set at mid-morning and practiced joy scorches and breaks under the spokes of premature daylight.

    Perhaps you disagree, but we are still that clueless bunch, grumbling and cursing in our ratty sheepskins, cringing from familiar hardships we have learnt to bear while we sleep with the demons from whose designs our tragedies emerge.

    Again we are set to elect familiar ogres we do not know to power. Some of them we know we ought to shy from but we would still go ahead to vote for them, won’t we?

    Granted the reins of hope come 2015, shall we choose misery and tragedy undiminished? Shall we choose ruin over rebirth; distrust over trust; shallowness over depth and puerile platitudes over the precision of promising logic?

    Shall apathy and greed compute desire’s trajectory? Will worded daydreams mature beyond impotent fantasies and delusions of grandeur? Come 2015, we shall know if truly, we had endeavoured to install the leadership for which our hearts beat. We shall remember today with despair or joy, and wonder if truly we endeavoured to explore the souls of Goodluck Jonathan, Muhammadu Buhari and so on that we may ascertain the one whose heart truly thrums the percussion to die for.

    We shall remember our candidates’ claims and persuasions to power and how base sentiments or elevated logic convinced us of their suitability for the posts to which they aspire. Whose politics promises change we can believe in? We should get to know in a few months if Mr President does not chicken out like he did last time, from the national presidential debates and shadow debates – platforms by which we could assess his excuses for manifesting on our psyche and realities as Nigeria’s worst excuse for a President ever.

    Will Jonathan chicken out? Will he demand that advance copies of questions be made available to candidates that studio audience be prevented from posing questions to candidates, like he did during the last elections?

    The raising and dashing of expectations is at the heart of almost every great political drama as it is in every ill-fated political dispensation. In our case, the manifestations are quite ridiculous. Hence the urgent need for the conveners’ of future debates to aspire to the highest standards of organisation and conduct.

    How, for instance, shall the studio audience be selected? With what assortment of citizenry shall it be comprised? Will it for instance, include able representatives of the proverbial average man on the street? What of the unemployed…the teacher, student, police, aged, journalist, handicapped and market women of the sidewalk? Will they be excluded again because some self-styled opinion leader believes it would be too demeaning and counter-productive to include them?

    Forget the organisers; the success of the process would eventually depend on you and me. Let us hope we are accorded fair and able representation. And if that be the case, let us begin to hope that representatives we choose aspire to the highest standards of conduct and representation, for our sake.

    And having chosen our representatives, let us endeavour to ponder the questions that we ought to ask. Let us attempt to ask the questions that truly matter and demand such answers that will indeed, drill them, analyse them and beam as much of their adroitness as their incapacities to the world.

    This is the moment we have been waiting for; the moment in which, practiced as our candidates may be, we should reveal the men apart from the boys, the wise from the foolish, the realist from the idealist and most importantly, the candidate who is tone-deaf and incapable of identifying with our fears and heartfelt yearnings.

    This is the moment we pay good mind to the issues that matter, the moment we make each candidate defend his antecedents in governance and private enterprise. Let us make each candidate defend his daintily clad manifesto as we judge how confidently and pragmatically he proffers solutions to the problems that persist and smother. We could demand – albeit uncompromisingly – that every candidate explains for instance, what impacts his Niger Delta palliative and intervention in the sad fate of LafargeWAPCO’s host communities would have on peasant poetry in the areas.

    We should ask the questions that test and confound that we may get to ascertain the indignation of our self-acclaimed patriots at the squalor of our living condition even as we question their promises of modern and affordable housing, true federalism, fiscal prudence, quality health, education and so on. We could ask how they would pay for these things and at what cost to you and me.

    We should make each candidate define his philosophy of social reform and his psychology of welfare governance to the benefit of the grassroots. And let us be wary lest we pass over the best-credentialed candidate just because our sentiments and gut counsels us to do so. Such wantonness will reflect unabashed lack of visceral understanding that the assessment of a presidential candidate involves as much test of you and me – as it does, every candidate aspiring for our votes.

    Let us seek that ineffable quality the writer, Katherine Anne Porter, had in mind when she defined experience as “the truth that finally overtakes you.” Let us be guided by our past and present encounters with every candidate till date.

    Our ideal President should be ruthless and compassionate, visionary and pragmatic, cunning and honest, patient and bold, combining the eloquence of a poet with the timing of a jungle cat. He should transcend the borders of our racial divides so effortlessly that it seems reasonable to expect that he can bridge all the other divisions – and answer all the impossible questions – plaguing Nigerian public life. He should encourage every valid expectation as he does our most fantastic yearnings – promising greatness at least, not entirely in the abstract.

    He should understand that statesmanship and valour need to be planned not blurted and that there are all sorts of questions and consequences to ponder before he takes the next politically expedient step every time. He should be able to scorn or at least tone down to a minimum, the arrogance implicit in leadership and corruption characteristic of power.

    He should understand the simplicity implicit in strength and the ruthlessness unspoken in humbleness. He should be able to overturn all the standard political assumptions simply by being himself. And we should get to love him for it and want more of him.

  • ‘The world is QUIET while we DIE’

    ‘The world is QUIET while we DIE’

    In this second part of The Nation’s special investigative series on the impact of LafargeWAPCO’s cement production on its host communities, OLATUNJI OLOLADE, Assistant Editor and KUNLE AKINRINADE, highlight the agonies of the people of Ewekoro, host to the cement company’s chimney and factory complex

    EWEKORO looms like a gothic platitude slipshodly carved along the graying highway that leads to Abeokuta, Ogun State’s capital city. From a distance, the cool and indiscriminate glare of sunlight seems to desecrate it like a tomb. Closer, the people and houses in the community take shape like a stream of accidental shadows, their hard noises striking one’s face and making the senses numb with momentary clarity. It is their noiseless undertones that, however, evoke intense feelings of awe and curiosity. Sad desperate glances of the natives inspire a thirst for buried narratives that they miserably learn to endure as unreal jests made by death.

    “Everything dies in Ewekoro. Life is harder every minute. Day by day, we awaken to the sad reality of watching our community suffer a hard and gruesome death. Life is not what we thought it would be like living as neighbours with LafargeWAPCO,” says Musulumi Balogun, the Igbakeji Baale (deputy village head) of Ewekoro.

    “But we try to make the best of what is left of our lives. Every day, we have to endure the same ordeals that have been afflicting us for over 40 years…look around you, you will find that Ewekoro has been completely destroyed.  Nothing works here anymore. Our land is dead. The only surviving river we have now is polluted, taken over by weeds and a vicious swamp. It is unsafe to venture into it either to fish or make irrigation for farmland. We don’t even have the land we could farm anymore. The little crops that survive on our land are hardly fit for consumption, they are perpetually contaminated by fumes and cement dust from LafargeWAPCO’s chimney,” laments Balogun.

    The 70-year-old village chieftain and grandfather laments the death of life and agricultural economy that made Ewekoro an attractive township to many a fortune hunter and agricultural entrepreneur back in the days when the land yielded to industry and cash crops. Balogun bemoans the declining fortunes of his once thriving community, claiming that the arrival of the West African Portland Cement (WAPCO) now LafargeWAPCO, spelled great doom for Ewekoro although the natives chorused with joy and lofty expectations at its arrival pre-independence era.

    “If our fathers knew this is what we would be reduced to, they would have been more careful in giving up our land. They were never paid for the land. They were only paid for the crops on it…My extended family received a paltry N210 for the crops on hectares of my family land. When the money was split amongst my father, barely N0.50k got to my father,” reveals Balogun.

    “None of our children wishes to live here anymore. Many of them have fled to the suburbs and cities of Lagos and Abeokuta in droves. They leave because there is nothing for them to do over here. There is no profitable work or business opportunity for them to take advantage of,” says a buxomly old lady who sells food by the neighbourhood trailer park. Dusting her pots, pans and eating utensils free of cement dust, she bemoans the current state of Ewekoro, claiming it was a shame that the presence of LafargeWAPCO, rather than improve the lot of her community, compounds its woes with several hardships.

    Odofin of Ewekoro, Olalekan Omotayo, also complains of non-existent economy and business opportunities for the youth. “Nothing survives in this town. By training, I am an electrician and electrical contractor but I hardly get any decent business to do in this town. The last time I got some menial job to do was about three months ago; sometimes, I spend a gruesome four months without making decent kobo. This terrible situation is responsible for the mass exodus of youths from the community to seek livelihood in the suburbs of Lagos and Abeokuta and sometimes, even farther.

    “The cement dust destroys everything. It blows into our homes, stains our windows, and settles on our furniture and clothes destroying everything. It has destroyed several cars too. A friend of mine who came over here to establish a car dealership had to flee after three months because cement dust released by LafargeWAPCO’s chimney destroyed the windshields and frames of his vehicles. Eventually, he counted his losses, closed shop and deserted our community before he suffered more grievous losses,” recounts Omotayo.

     

    A tragic story of devastation and neglect

    The decline of Ewekoro bears a striking resemblance to the degeneration of neighbouring Olapeleke where the people engage in a desperate struggle to pick up the pieces of their lives from the melancholy of collapsed buildings and socio-economic ruin allegedly foisted upon them by LafargeWAPCO’s limestone mining in their area.

    Residents of Ewekoro complain of cement dust pollution, vanishing rivers, and a comatose agricultural economy. With anguish, they recall Ewekoro’s promising years. According to the natives, before LafargeWAPCO arrived in the community in the late 1950s, Ewekoro, like Olapeleke, was a prosperous community; farming was the mainstay of the rustic community’s economy and its thriving agricultural economy produced cash crops including ofada rice, yams, cocoa, plantain, palm kernel and maize at great profit. But no sooner did LafargeWAPCO venture into the region than the once burgeoning agricultural subsector began to suffer irredeemable decline, they allege.

    “The only benefit we derive from being neighbours with LafargeWAPCO is that due to its presence in our community, electricity supply here (in Ewekoro) is more stable but people who came  from Sango and environ to enjoy the electricity have fled due to the excessive cement dust pollution of our community by LafargeWAPCO,” says Risikat Balogun, Otun Iyaloja of Ewekoro.

    Risikat laments that besides destroying their homes and other valuables, cement dust from LafargeWAPCO’s chimney settles on their farms and contaminates their vegetables. “The cement dust released by the company’s chimney settles on our crops. Take ewedu (vegetable), for instance, oftentimes, we have to wash it vigorously to cleanse it of cement dust but once the water dries off, it shows up with patches of cement dust stains all over. This makes it extremely difficult for us to sell our vegetables in the market place. Left without a choice, we are forced to eat it like that as no one would buy such contaminated vegetable at the market,” she reveals.

     

    When distrust and disillusionment sets in…

    The Nation initially encountered hostility from the natives during preliminary visits to Ewekoro. And the reason is hardly farfetched: “We have received several visitors from the media in the past. They all claimed to be interested in drawing attention to our plight but they have always come to deceive us. After interviewing us, they promise to publish and broadcast our story to the world but they have never kept their promise. Just recently, journalists came from a prominent TV station (name withheld) to do a story about our predicament here but after touring our community to record its widespread devastation, a senior staff of LafargeWAPCO invited them into the company in our presence. And that was the last we heard from the TV crew. Our story hardly gets published, and the few times it gets published, what is reported is usually very different from the truth,” claims Balogun.

    As the deputy village chief bares his mind, a buxomly aged woman scurries to the door and starts making frantic gestures at him to keep his mouth shut but the 70-year-old father and grandfather tells her off, claiming no one could hurt him for speaking his mind. “At my age and with what I have gone through in this life, I don’t think the fear of any reprisal can keep me from saying the truth as it is…it’s better I say the truth now. It’s better we scream for help now; if we don’t, our children will grow to inherit the bleakness and hopelessness that we inherited from our fathers,” he says.

     

    LafargeWAPCO’s ‘elder support’ and other token

    The Nation findings reveal that the people of Ewekoro, like their neighbours in Olapeleke, are stuck in a cycle of tokenism that has them jostling for “paltry sums” given to them annually by LafargeWAPCO. While the latter prides itself over its commendable Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) initiative in the area, the people of Ewekoro dismiss the company’s claims, arguing that whatever form of support the company gives to their community as a form of CSR, it will never be enough palliative to the damage it wreaks on their neighbourhood by its production activities.

    “What they have been giving us has never been enough. A good example is the so-called elder support they give to us. They ask us to suggest beneficiaries of the fund and when we do, they give each beneficiary N50, 000 but when the beneficiary gets back to the community, he or she shares the money with 20 other people. At the end, what often gets to each beneficiary,  usually N2, 000 or thereabouts,  is usually too ridiculous to be acknowledged,” says Balogun.

    Hence going by his disclosure, while LafargeWAPCO claims to give N50, 000 to support an aged person annually in Ewekoro, what actually gets to the beneficiary and other recipients, is a measly N2, 000.

    The village chief contends that the amount LafargeWAPCO devotes to CSR in Ewekoro is too meagre and unrepresentative of the immense profit the company grosses from its mining and cement production activities in the local government area. Recently, LafargeWAPCO published audited reports and profit accounts of its business enterprise in the country. Key extracts of the audited report and accounts of the company for the year ended December 31, 2013 show that the company’s profit earnings after tax grew by 92 per cent to N28.2 billion in 2013 as against N14.7 billion recorded in 2012. Profit before tax grew by 30 per cent from N21.3 billion to N27.7 billion and turnover increased by 12 per cent to N98.8 billion as against N87.9 billion in 2012.

    Many of the residents are bitter because they feel that their representatives are not representing their interests as they expect them to. Pleading anonymity, a member of the traditional council alleges that some of their leaders will never do anything to actually protect the interests of their community. According to the chieftain, such leaders are wary of offending the management of LafargeWAPCO by crying out to the government and other stakeholders for help. “They fear that if they do, they will lose the lucrative contracts they get from the company periodically,” reveals the village chief.

     

    Intrigues made in Ewekoro

    At The Nation’s first visit to Ewekoro, Baale of Ewekoro, Satar Lawal, refused to comment on the degree of devastation suffered by his community, claiming that he would only react after The Nation has spoken to LafargeWAPCO. Satar claims that LafargeWAPCO has really tried for Ewekoro community, stressing that the company discharges cement dust on his community only when its equipment are down with fault.

    The reality is, however, very different from Satar’s claims; while he defended LafargeWAPCO, The Nation copiously took photographs of the cement company’s chimney that towers directly behind his palace as it dispelled cement dust excessively on to the community. It was also very instructive to note that the company’s equipment were not down due to any fault at the time the pictures were taken.

    Soon after The Nation’s visit to Ewekoro, Satar and three others, including the Chairman, Lafarge Host Communities’ Employment Committee, Chief Olaleye Olalekan, Baale of Akinbo, Chief Rasheed Balogun, Baale of Egba Ajegunle, Chief Joshua Oniyitan and the youth leader for the 12 communities, Segun Oniyitan called a press conference to address crucial environmental issues affecting Ewekoro local government area (LGA). They urged the company’s management to consider their safety and do something to mitigate the impacts of its operation on them and the environment.

    The 12 communities they claimed to represent are: Olapeleke, Akinbo, Oke  Oko, Egbado, Sekoni, Olujobi, Papalanto, Ewekoro, Egba -Ajegunle, Elebute, Alagunto and Itori. While the first eight communities are situated on areas referred to as ‘limestone belt,’ the four others though have limestone, but quarrying of it can’t take place there as they are homes only to the LafargeWAPCO plants and chimney.

    Satar and company want the dust and smoke emissions from the company reduced drastically to zero level. They also want the company to relocate the people of Oke  Oko Sekoni and Oke  Egbado communities to safe locations away from the cement company’s quarry sites since the villagers are prone to the effects of blasting at the quarry. The traditional rulers urge the cement plant management to also install efficient dust collection technology at the plants to protect residents against air pollution.

    Although they commended the company’s donation of a borehole, transformers, a health centre, classrooms and the introduction of Lafarge Apprenticeship Training School for their youths, several residents of Ewekoro allege that the benefits they supposedly enjoy from the cement company’s touted CSR efforts are barely noticeable in the throes of widespread devastation they suffer by the company’s persistent discharge of cement dust into their farms, homes and airspace.

     

    Our communities trust and support us, says LafargeWAPCO’s spokesman

    In an exclusive interview with The Nation, Ade Ojolowo, Corporate Communications Manager (CCM) of LafargeWAPCO, however, argued that the company is doing its best to make life easier for residents of its host communities. “We are not only doing certain things, but also doing those things which are of utmost priority to our host communities.  Whenever there is a challenge, we solve it together,” he claims.

    “You will recollect that the leaders of the same two communities (Ewekoro and Akinbo) granted an interview to The Nation where they said pollution occurrences have reduced by at least 75 per cent. That figure is a conservative figure on their part; we have achieved quite more than that.  The truth is we are not resting on our oars, but you know, if anybody wishes to say anything about cement companies in a manner that will generate interest and pity, dust must be mentioned,” argues Ojolowo.

    The LafargeWAPCO image-maker highlights measures being taken by his company to guarantee a hazard-free living environment for its host communities: “Ewekoro I and 2 Plants utilise one of the most modern electrostatic precipitator systems for dust control of the kiln. This system ensures that the emissions from the stack are below both the Nigeria standard as well as international standard; both cement plants have over 200 dust control equipment (DCEs) installed across the process lines for emission controls and each of our plants have regular scheduled maintenance to keep our equipment in good working conditions resulting in good energy management and lower emission levels,” he claims.

    Ojolowo argues that the factory sweeps and wets the roads to control fugitive dust, adding: “Our cement mills are enclosed in buildings to keep noise and dust levels low and we conduct a monthly Community Relations Committee meeting with our communities and keep them abreast of developments, hence our communities trust and support us.”

    A people’s heartfelt prayer…

    Not a few residents of Ewekoro nonetheless, disagree with Ojolowo, Satar and company’s claims. According to Imam Bashir Adeola of Ewekoro Central Mosque, there is no gainsaying that they are forced to live under a perpetual cloud of pollutants and cement dust discharged by LafargeWAPCO’s chimney.

    “We wish to be relocated. We want LafargeWAPCO to relocate us to a better neighbourhood complete with decent living facilities and standard. We wish to be relocated to a housing estate similar to the one in which LafargeWAPCO shelters its staff. They cordon us off here (in Ewekoro) behind a fence in a completely destroyed community while they keep their staff in a safer and far better environment. Our community is the goose that lays the golden egg LafargeWAPCO currently feeds fat upon; let the cement company compensate us for exploiting our land and damaging it. We deserve to be compensated,” says Balogun.

    “Nobody cares what happens to us…nobody. We are dying here and the world is quiet about it. Everybody sees LafargeWAPCO and reads of its business successes in the newspaper but how many people actually know that poor people like us, suffer heavy consequences and pay heavy penalties for the company’s exploitation of our land? I am pleading as a mother, a wife and citizen of Nigeria, let the government come to our aid. The world should come to our aid. We are dying over here,” cries Risikat.

     

    Worrisome research findings

    In a recent study carried out to determine the toxicity and mutagenesis of cement dust on plants and animals in Ewekoro by a research team from the Department of Cell Biology and Genetics, University of Lagos (UNILAG), it was discovered that cement dust emission from LafargeWAPCO’s chimney is toxic to plants and animals in its host community. The research team, led by Yahaya Tajudeen (Ph.D) Cell Biology and Genetics and including J. Okpuzor and O. Oladele Esther, monitored the cytotoxicity and mutagenesis of cement dust using Allium cepa (Onion bulbs) test model.

    Healthy purple variety of onions (25-32g) was purchased from Sango-Ota market, Ogun State. Eighty of the bulbs were grown in the dark for 48 hours in beakers containing 100 ml of tap water at ambient temperature until the roots have grown to about 2-3 cm. The 40 viable bulbs were selected and used for the research. The 40 viable Allium bulbs selected were divided into four groups of 10 Allium bulbs per group. The control group (group 1) was kept in a cement dust-free environment in the same climatic zone, about 6 km from the company. The test groups (groups 2-4) were exposed to cement dust at about 100 m from the cement factory for two weeks,  four weeks and six weeks, respectively. At the end of the exposures, the onions across the groups were taken to the Environmental Biology Laboratory, University of Lagos. Elemental analysis of the onion bulbs was done by Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy using UNICAM model 969 Spectrophotometer and cytotoxicity and mutagenicity of the elements in the onions were determined using Allium test.

     

    Results: The concentrations of the elements detected in the test groups were significantly higher than the concentrations of the elements detected in the control group. Furthermore, significant differences exist among the concentrations of the elements detected in various test groups and the amount increased with the length of exposure. For example, the final mean concentration of aluminum in the control group is 0.033 mg kg-1, while the final mean concentrations of aluminum in groups 2, 3 and 4 are 0.063, 0.103 and 0.293 mg kg-1, respectively. Moreover, the final mean concentration of chromium in the control group is 0.003 mg kg-1, while the final mean concentrations of chromium in groups 2, 3 and 4 are 0.008, 0.012 and 0.021 mg kg-1, respectively. Finally, the final mean concentration of lead in the control group is 0.0004 mg kg-1, while the final mean concentrations of lead in groups 2, 3 and 4 are 0.008, 0.013 and 0.020 mg kg-1, respectively.

    The results of the elemental analysis of the exposed onion bulbs, according to the team, supports earlier findings that establish that apart from the basic constituents of cement dust, the  burning process in cement manufacture produce poisonous substances such as particulate matters, dioxin, heavy metals, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide and volatile compounds.

    “This research reveals high concentrations of calcium, silicon, aluminum, chromium and lead. The results further confirm that cement factories are one of the great polluters of the environment with the release of poisonous dust and gases. Considering the short period of exposure and the high levels of the elements detected in the exposed onions, it shows that the cement company is badly polluting the environment…Our results reveal high frequency of chromosome stickiness, c-mitosis, chromosomal bridges and fragmentation, multi-polar anaphase, bi-nucleus chromosome and vagrant chromosome.

    “The results of this research clearly show that the environment surrounding the cement factory is highly polluted with poisonous gases and elements. The effects of these pollutants had shown in chromosomal aberrations in the exposed Allium cepa (Onion bulbs). Definitely, all other organisms including man in the cement polluted environment will be experiencing similar problems. Apart from the fact that we need to protect ourselves, the integrity and population of plants and animals around cement factories must also be protected.

    “This is because man depends on plant and animal for survival and the chromosomal aberrations may be transferred to them. Therefore, environmental pollution from cement factories must be checked by using efficient dust collectors and dust-filters. Cement companies must put in place new machines and technologies and must ensure prompt packaging and transportation of both finished product and left-over cement kiln dust. The use of hazardous waste substances as fuels should be discouraged and there must be a policy on minimum distance from cement companies in which settlements and farming activities will be allowed. Finally, the use of medicinal plants as detoxifiers should be introduced to people living around industrial areas. These will go a long way in preserving the populations of plants and animals as well as health of humans in polluted environments,”advises Dr. Yahaya and company.

    Another scientific study carried out to determine air quality in the vicinity of LafargeWAPCO’s Ewekoro cement production zone reveals that the company’s production activities release air pollutants into its host community and surrounding environment. The research which was carried out by a team from the Department of Environmental Management and Toxicology, Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta (FUNAAB), Ogun State, over six months was recently published in the European Centre for Research Training and Development, United Kingdom (UK)’s International Research Journal of Natural Sciences (Vol.1, No.2, pp.34-42, June 2013). The investigation sought the concentration levels of potentially harmful toxic metals in groundwater, tree barks and top soil in the vicinities of LafargeWAPCO’s production plant while determining effect of cement production and its contribution of air pollutants such as Total Suspended Particle (TSP), Thoracic Particulates viz inhalable sizes and gaseous pollutants: Carbon monoxide (CO), Sulphur dioxide (SO2), Oxides of Nitrogen (NOx) and Hydrogen sulphide (H2S) to the environment. A total of six sampling points which include the Production plant (starting point), Administrative office (400m), Cement mill (800m) and neighboring communities (Ewekoro, 500m, Ajobiewe, 1, 000m, and Agbesi Estate, 1, 500m) were used.

    The cement company’s production plant reportedly had higher concentration of particulate matter with aerodynamic diameter size of 10 compared to other locations and “Ewekoro community had the highest concentration of particulate matter with aerodynamic diameter size of 2.5 i.e. PM2.5 followed by Agbesi Estate and Administrative office area,” according to the research findings.

    The research team stated in its report: “Greenhouse gases such as Sulphur dioxide (SO2), Nitrogen dioxide (NOx), Carbon monoxide (CO) and Hydrogen sulphide (H2S) were observed in vicinity of the cement Company. The most important environment, health and safety performance issues facing cement industry are atmospheric releases including greenhouse gases emission.”

    The team concludes that “there is need to reduce the rate of emission during cement production to the minimal level by using air trapping devices.” In a separate study carried out by a team from the Department of Chemistry, Lagos State University (LASU) to determine trace metals characterisation in environmental media in Ewekoro cement production belt, it was also discovered that poisonous metals are present in soil, groundwater and tree barks at contamination level in the area. In the study, a total number of 15 groundwater samples, 10 top soil samples (0 15 cm) and 10 plant bark samples were collected.

    At the end of the study, the team surmises: “All the metals investigated were found present in the three environmental media under consideration at contamination level. The study reveals more of pollutants that are air bound than that of soil and water. Trace metal such as cadmium and iron were observed higher than the allowable limit in groundwater.

    “This portends a serious health threat to the inhabitants of this community whose groundwater is the main source of water for drinking and domestic needs. The continuous accumulation of these metals, if not checked, could result in pollution status with possible lethal effect to both terrestrial and aquatic organisms within the environment and beyond. Hence, the need for strict compliance on environmental rules and regulation by the cement production factory, to ensure safety of man and the environment.

    The cement industry in Ogun State is one of the worst polluters of the air in the state, according to a Federal Environmental Protection Agency (FEPA) draft final report entitled, “Towards an Environmental Action Plan for Ogun State.” The report, a World Bank Assisted Project, authored by Dr. Kunle Adamson, over one decade ago, states categorically that the “Ewekoro Cement Factory in Ogun State has already been cited as emitting very high particulate levels by the Nigerian Environmental Study Team, Nigeria’s Threatened Environment: A National Profile.”

    The production of one ton of cement, according to expert opinion,  involves the pulverisation of about 2.6 – 2.8 tons of raw materials, clinker, gypsum, oil or coal to mention a few and between 5 to 10 per cent of these finely pulverised materials are agitated and suspended as dust.

    The situation no doubt calls for urgent intervention from the government in order to protect the lives of  humans, plants and animals living in LafargeWAPCO’s host communities.

    The sad, sorry nature of the devastation in Ewekoro resonates in 11-year-old Semiu’s juvenile wish that the government stops LafargeWAPCO from “polluting our community with dust.”

    Until the government responds, embattled children like Semiu and grandparents like Balogun will continue to live in squalor and feed on a poisonous diet of water and crops contaminated by LafargeWAPCO’s cement dust.

  • ‘Police must reinstate me before I die’

    ‘Police must reinstate me before I die’

    Mr. Martin Kayode is not a happy man. For years, he served the police in Delta State. He was supposed to have retired from the Nigerian Police Force in February  but he was dismissed before then and not even a 2005 Federal High Court judgement ordering his reinstatement worked in his favour.

    Nine years after the court judgment, Martin, who was a Sergeant as at the time he was dismissed, is battling to be reinstated. The Police Service Commission, in a letter by its Secretary,  E Gonda and dated June 7th 2010, asked Martin to report to the Inspector General of Police for deployment.

    The letter reads,:“In line with the policy of the Commission to obey all court Judgments and in compliance with the Order of the Federal High Court in Suit No. FHC/B/CS/112/2003 issued on the 12th day of April 2005, the Commission hereby reinstates you into the Nigeria Police Force with effect from 04/04/2001, the day you were dismissed.”

    In another letter to the IG, the PSC requested that Martin be made to undergo refresher course with a view to updating him.

    Martin, in an interview,  said he was not told what his crimes were after he was arrested while serving as a member of a Federal Tax Force of the Petroleum Products Marketing Company (PPMC) and was in charge of posting policemen on duty to guard pipelines in Warri.

    According to him, “I joined the police in 1979 as a Constable and I was dismissed from the police through a signal with Ref No. DT03112 on May 2001. I joined to serve my country. I served in Federal Tax Force in Delta State and other places. My problems started when I posted some policemen to Oregha River beat.

    “I ordered the arrest and detention of four out of the five police that went out for duty that night for not arresting pipeline vandals that came to vandalise pipelines at their beat. I was later arrested and was asked to resume duty after an orderly room trial.”

    Sgt. Thomas said the police officer who reviewed the case dismissed him and others from the Nigerian Police for conspiracy and economic sabotage.

    He said he filed a writ of summons at the Federal High Court in Benin and court gave judgment in his favor in 2005.

    He said, “After waiting for reinstatement, I filed contempt against them. The PSC went to court with my reinstatement letter, the letter was sent to the IG, till today, the IG has refused to obey the PSC or the court.”

    “I don’t want to die like this. The police must reinstate me and pay me my full benefits as a DSP.”

  • ‘Please, don’t let me die’

    ‘Please, don’t let me die’

    •Blast victim seeks overseas treatment

    The well-lit room was bright,but around the youth all was dark. A huge blood-soaked bandage was woven round his head, covering his battered eye.

    “Please, don’t let me die,” he kept on crying.

    Ahmadu Bala’s right eye was blown off in Wednesday’s bombing in Kaduna. No fewer than 82 people died in the incident. Officials said 39 died.

    “Please, fly me abroad; I don’t want to die,” Bala ,18, cried on his bed at the Yusuf Dantsoho Memorial Hospital in the city.

    Bala recalled how he was caught up in the blast after leaving the venue of the Ramadan lecture by Sheikh Dahiru Bauchi.

    He said: “I was on my way back from ‘Tafsir’ (Ramadan lecture) at Murtala Square when I heard a loud sound and 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. 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, I was told after I regained consciousness.”

    Bala came from Labar, near Jaji, Kaduna State, to attend Sheikh Bauchi’s lecture.

    He added: “I am pleading with the Kaduna State government to look into my plight and save my life and the lives of others affected by the bomb.”

    The Nation gathered from a source that of the five victims brought to that hospital, Bala’s case is the most serious.

    “His right eye is blown off. When they brought him, we quickly took him to the operating room, took care of the wound and he is now stable and partially responding to treatment.”

    He said 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 and if it is not treated promptly, the wound can get infected and it may have a serious effect on the victim,” he said.

    Five victims of the Alkali Road bombing were brought to the hospital, but four of them who had minor injuries were treated and discharged.

  • Two die as vehicles collide

    Two persons died Saturday night in an accident involving a Pathfinder Sport Utility Vehicle (SUV) and a commuter bus popularly known as “molue.” Three others were injured in the accident, which happened at the Iyana-Ipaja area of Lagos State.

    An eyewitness, Pastor Toyin Lawal, said the accident occurred around 10.30 pm, said the SUV and the bus collided and dragged each other into the canal close to Pleasure bus stop near Iyana-Ipaja bus stop.

    He said state emergency response agencies and the police swiftly responded to calls and made spirited efforts to salvage the situation.

    Assessing the collision and subsequent impact on the mangled SUV, Pastor Lawal said the government need to do a lot to assess vehicles and drivers plying the roads in order to save lives. “The molue had its propeller completely pulled out, while the SUV was reduced to the size of a Volkswagen car due to the impact,” he said.

    Pastor Toyin said though government has tried to bring sanity into the road, a lot still have to be done to secure the lives of Nigerians. He said a lot of the drivers refuse to carry out proper maintenance on their vehicles and rather prefer to manage as long as the engine works.

    Speaking with The Nation, the General Manager, Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA), Dr Femi Oke-Osanyintolu said the agency recovered two bodies who were occupants of the Pathfinder Jeep at about 3am, while the occupants of the bus escaped alive, adding that three others sustained various degrees of injuries.

    He gave the names of the dead as: Alhaji Akinsola Al-Amen, 64, and Nuyideen Tiamiyu, 50, who drove the Jeep.

    Oke-Osanyintolu said from information made available to LASEMA, the Jeep had a burst tyre and in an attempt by its driver to stabilise it, the car ended colliding with the equally fast-moving molue bus and they both dragged themselves into the canal with a great impact.

    He said the Jeep was marked: FKJ 516 AL, and the molue: FKJ 201 XH, adding that the two dead bodies had been handed over to their families and were buried yesterday according to Islamic rites.

    The owner of the molue, Mr Emmanuel Ufomba, told The Nation on phone that he was not in Lagos, adding that he had sent his people to the police station handling the matter to find out the position of things.

    “I have not been able to obtain further information yet from the people I sent,” he said.

  • Four die in Katsina auto crash

    Four people were reported to have died while six others sustained various degrees of injury in a car accident on the Katsina-Batsari Road at Sabon Garin Malam Yahuza village in Batagarawa Local Government Area.

    It was learnt that the accident involved two vehicles and a motorcycle.

    The Katsina State Commander of the Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) Habu Dauda said two the vehicles involved in the accident were a Toyota Saris, with registration number, KTN 380 DK, as well as an Eveco Tipper, with registration number LMS 97 XA.

    Dauda said four people died and six others, comprising three males and three females, were in jured.

    The FRSC commander added that the injured were receiving treatment at the Katsina General Hospital.

    He attributed the crash to careless driving and dangerous overtaking.

    Dauda said no items were recovered from the victims.