Tag: discovered

  • How we discovered our brother’s body, by siblings

    Two siblings of the 50-year-old lawyer, Symphorosa Otike-Odibi, who was allegedly stabbed to death by his wife, Udeme,  yesterday narrated how they found his body.

    They told a Lagos High Court that they discovered their brother on his matrimonial bed, with his genitals and intestines cut off.

    The deceased’s friend, Mr. Stanley Grange-Koko, also testified.

    The widow, Udeme, 48, is facing a two-count charge of murder and misconduct preferred against her by the state.

    Udeme reportedly committed the offence on May 3, at their Diamond Estate, Sangotedo, Lekki, Lagos home.

    She pleaded not guilty and was remanded in Kirikiri prison.

    Led in evidence by Attorney-General Mr. Adeniji Kazeem (SAN), Grange-Koko said the deceased’s younger sister, Dr. Anwuli Akwukwuma, called him around 2am on May 2 to go to the deceased’s home and check what was happening.

    Grange-Koko said he went there, but could not enter the house.

    He said no one answered when he knocked the gate.

    Grange-Koko said he returned to his house, but rushed back to the deceased’s home when Akwukwuma called back, expressing fear that life might be involved.

    He said he went with his wife.

    “When we got to the estate, we called the security men to go with us. On arriving at the place, we climbed the fence to gain entry to the compound.

    “We broke the front door to gain access to the house because nobody answered us,” Grange-Koko said.

    He said he ran upstairs and saw blood on the floor, adding that he traced the deceased to the bathroom and bedroom.

    The witness said together with the security men, they broke the door and entered the deceased’s room.

    He said they saw him lying on the bed with his wife, Udeme and there was blood everywhere.

    “The deceased’s intestines were outside. I ran out and met his sister heading for the room. I tried to stop her from entering the room, but she ran past me and entered,” Grange-Koko said.

    He said the sister ran out of the room and shouted that her brother was dead.

    Grange-Koko said the defendant was taken to hospital.

    “When I got to the deceased’s home and saw him lying on the bed with his intestines out, I checked him and saw that he was already cold. I noticed that he had died,” he said.

    Otike-Odibi’s sister, Akwukwuma and younger brother, Andrew, who were the second and third witnesses, corroborated Grange-Koko’s evidence.

    Akwukwuma said she called Grange-Koko because he lived in the same estate with the deceased and was his friend.

    She said their mother informed her about the quarrel between Otike-Odibi and Udeme, adding that the deceased had complained to her that his wife attacked him with a knife.

    Justice Adedayo Akintoye adjourned till October 10.

  • How Amosun’s wife discovered Eaglets’ goalkeeper

    How Amosun’s wife discovered Eaglets’ goalkeeper

    Akpan Udoh, one of the players of the UPLIFT Football Team, sponsored on soccer training to the Udinese Football Club in Italy by the Wife of the Governor of Ogun State, Mrs. Olufunso Amosun in 2013, is currently making waves at the ongoing FIFA U-17 World Cup Chile 2015.

    Udoh, who is Nigeria’s number one goalkeeper at the ongoing tournament, was one of the 22 young football players discovered by Mrs. Amosun’s football talent hunt programme in 2013.

    The UPLIFT Under-15 Grassroot Football Talent-hunt was organised by the Wife of the Governor of Ogun State during the 2013 Easter holiday amongst all public secondary school students in Ogun State.

    For the whole duration of the training, elimination and selection process, the competition had in attendance the likes of Mr. Jim Colston, a renowned scout for the English Premiership League in the United Kingdom and Nigeria’s celebrated ex-international, Chief Olusegun Odegbami as well as Football Ambassador, Mr. John Fashanu.

    Talents discovered at the competition were then sponsored by the UPLIFT Development Foundation (Mrs. Amosun’s Foundation) to Udinese Football Club, Italy, for a two-week training camp.

    While some of the other UPLIFT football players have joined various football academies to improve on their skills, others have been featuring in different local football competitions to showcase their talents.

    Born in July, 1999, Akpan Udoh a student of Akesan Community High School in Iperu Remo in Ogun State, at the time of discovery, now displays sterling performances. This was evident in  Nigeria’s matches against the United States of America and Chile, the host country where Nigeria beat the USA by 2-0 and thrashed Chile, the host country by 5 goals to 1.

    With these results, Nigeria now tops the Group A with 6 points and has progressed to the knockout stages. Udoh and his colleagues under Coach Emmanuel Amuneke will face Korea Republic this midnight.

    Nigeria is currently defending her FIFA U-17 World Cup title she won at the United Arab Emirates in 2013.

  • ‘How I discovered my potential’

    ‘How I discovered my potential’

    Mrs. Omolara Adebimpe Obasi, teacher, entrepreneur and motivational speaker, is Managing Director, Divine Fish and Farm Products and President, God Is Able Cooperative Farmers Group, an umbrella body for fish farmers and allied businesses. Mrs. Obasi, who set up shop a few years after the death of her husband, looks back with nostalgia but yet thankful for taking the bold steps, which has made her independent today. She spoke with Ibrahim Apekhade Yusuf  

    For Mrs. Omolara Adebimpe Obasi, life has been one tough journey indeed.

    She was living the good life, with a family well-fed and everything in their proper place. But all that soon fizzled out with the death of her husband in 2005, as her life literally crashed like a pack of cards and a chapter of accidents opened.

    First, a mysterious fire one night razed her apartment, where she lost all her personal effects, including her school certificates, thus making the prospect of getting a new job almost impossible.

    Speaking in a chance encounter with The Nation, the HND graduate of Business Administration from Ogun Polytechnic, Ogun State, (now MAPOLY) momentarily recounts the sad episode of her life.

    “I was once a teacher. I taught for well over 10 years in a private secondary school. But I had to resign because the job became a routine and on top of that the salary was meagre and irregular and could hardly meet up with my family responsibility as a widow,” she recalls.

    Thus, the need to meet existential needs forced her to veer into business from teaching.

    “After resigning my appointment as a teacher, I went into the business of buying and selling farm produce like garri, rice, beans, yam and others. I travelled upcountry to Kano, Delta, Edo, Port Harcourt, etc. Unfortunately in 2006, I was involved in an armed robbery attack along Ogbomoso road, in Oyo State, and I lost everything. I came back home dejected and was at a quandary as to what to do next.”

    A firm believer, she prayed fervently for divine grace with a view to reinventing herself. And all roads seemed to point to farming.

    “Before then, I was involved in subsistence farming at home. I kept a garden at the backyard. I decided to go into farm full blast. In 2008, the Lagos State government organised catfish farming training which I took part in. In 2009, they followed up with training on the processing of catfish and I equally went for it and there and then decided to specialise in the processing of catfish instead of rearing because the latter requires intensive capital.”

    Convinced that fishing is where her destiny lied, she started in 2008 by buying and processing catfish, which she packaged. Despite the initial teething problems encountered, she kept at it. She moved around offices to sell her wares.

    Omolara, who can best be described as a cool, calm and collected person and has been consistently pursuing her passion in the last few years, comes across as one woman who knows what she wants and how to go about it.

    A good mixer and mobiliser, the mother of three, whose youthful looks belies her 47-year-old age, recalls that her business experienced a complete turnaround with the advent of the Rural Finance Institution Building (RUFIN), a rural finance scheme for farmers and allied businesses being implemented in 12 states across the six geo-political zones over a seven-year period and specifically targets marginalised groups such as women, young people and those with physical disabilities backed with funding support from the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), a UN agency.

    “We formed a cluster of farmers, under the umbrella, God Is Able Cooperative Farmers Group in 2009, through which we have been pursuing our vision of contributing to the food basket of the nation. We have been holding court and have our meeting days. When RUFIN programme came it was announced on radio, TV and the social media. I registered online.

    “I received training on business planning from RUFIN. I didn’t have a plan but after the training, I put up a plan for myself. I set up a farm for myself and bought two plots of farm through RUFIN loan from First Bank Microfinance in 2011. I accessed the sum of N200, 000, added N250, 000.

    “I was able to build up a farm factory through the initial loan from First Bank and followed it up with another credit facility from Bowen Microfinance, which I ploughed back into the business.”

    Ever reinventing herself, she has partaken in different programmes aimed at building her skills set in the area of fish farming. “Two years ago, I went to the Republic of Benin for a capacity-building training on fish farming and I have been involved in other numerous trainings. I’m committed to farming and farming alone.”

    Little wonder she spares no effort to ensure that she is actualising her vision of making catfish a stable food in every home.

    The woman, who easily describes herself as a full-time farmer, says matter-of-factly: “I really don’t buy much, I eat mostly what I produce in the farm.

    “I want to make my product, Alfa fish, a household name like Indomie which is in every home. My vision is to produce and sell catfish at rock bottom price, that way it is easy for anybody to make a purchase. As we speak, the product is selling itself; I don’t have a marketing team as it were. It is mostly on referrals, it sells and advertises itself.”

    Interestingly, in the last three years, she has built a value chain in the business mainly through distributorship.

    “God has given us the grace to cover at least six states and still counting. Abuja was where I got my first customer outside Lagos State. However, the state that is taking our goods more is Kogi State. We also have customers in Jos, Kaduna, Kano, Lokoja, Abia, Anambra. When Abuja began to buy, most of my customers I didn’t know them…

    “At least 80 per cent of my customers I don’t know them. What I do is that they pay to my account and I make sure I deliver on schedule. Wholesale price is N1, 000.  So the distributors now have to add their own margin at their different locations. They cover their transportation.”

    Omolara, who has since acquired the sobriquet, ‘Alfa fish’, on account of her newest passion, which is rearing, processing and selling branded catfish under her own label, says business has been good.

    She makes an estimated profit of N50, 000 per week, which is an average of N200, 000 monthly, which is not bad for a woman, for whom suffering became a metaphor of existence when she lost her husband.

    With her foray in business, her social standing has improved significantly. Her life is back on an even keel as she is now a household name at Igbopa London, Abule Eko, an agrarian community in Ijede, Ikorodu, Lagos.

    “The more my customer base grows, the more I need to expand. Right now, I produce every week. It is my desire to build a packaging room, oven centre, processing centre, changing room, the store because we’re looking beyond Nigeria.”

    The next step for her, she says, is the export market. She is already in talks with NAFDAC to get the products certified.

    With a can-do spirit as hers, that dream will not take much longer to materialise.

  • ‘Wonder’ capsule to detect cancer, others discovered

    ‘Wonder’ capsule to detect cancer, others discovered

    Here is some good news for cancer of bowel patients. The ailment can now be treated. Treatment is also available for colorectal cancers.

    Dr Anthony Sonade, a United Kingdom (UK) trained gastroenterologist, who specialises in diagnostic and preventive colorectal cancer,  has introduced PillCam Capsule Endoscopy for the management of such cancers.

    PillCam Capsule Endoscopy is a high technology diagnostic tool which can be used for investigating and managing gastrointestinal tract diseases.

    According to Sonade, PillCam Endoscopy is like a capsule, encapsulating a camera. In addition, the package has data recorder, sensor belt and Rapid 8 software.

    Sonade said: “I have practised for over two decades and it has been difficult for professionals to diagnose problems with small intestine and the bowel.  Most patients are opened up for diagnoses, which are painful to them.  The PillCam capsule is a size of large vitamin capsule with camera, which is able to take 80, 000 images (pictures) i.e. 40 pictures per second of the whole gastrointestinal system.

    “Before the patient swallows the Pill, she or he is purged as the capsule passes through the gastrointestinal tract, it starts transmitting images and data wirelessly to a data recorder worn by the patient. Once the procedure has been completed, the video images are downloaded from the data recorder onto a computer with the Rapid 8 software and then reviewed and translated by a skilled physician, who will look for abnormalities or a healthcare provider trained on that,” Dr Sonade stated.

    He said the capsule is a single use, adding: “Once the images are interpreted, and for example, if cancer is detected, it will be located, or if it has spread. That diagnosis will assist the physician to set to work in removing the cancerous growth.”

    The groups of people that cannot swallow the capsule are, “people that are vomiting and cannot keep fluid down; amazingly, expectant mothers can take the capsule. I have seen a pregnant woman who was bleeding. We did top and bottom endoscopy on her but could not find the cause. So we placed her on the capsule, a perfect diagnosis was made and she was treated and mother and the growing foetus were ok,” said Dr Sonade.

    Already the Society for Gastroenterology and Hepatology in Nigeria (SOGHIN) is collaborating with Inscope Global Resources Limited, the company that markets the device in Nigeria, and Dr Sonade sheds light on this: “I have been able to negotiate a price for Africa, with the manufacturer. Dr Funmi Lesi of Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH) is the front for the society, who I am discussing with, so that more physicians can use this for their patients, because screening, timely and accurate diagnoses are sine qua non to prompt treatment.

    “The success rate of the use is 90 percent. We used to think the size was an issue, but the capsule has a special coating on it and is easy in Paediatric care. So if a paediatric can get it down successfully and paediatricians get the diagnoses right in them, then we are proud. Any hospital that needs same can place order, and we deliver, there is no problem with storage as we deliver to the physician’s schedule with his patient.”

    His colleague, Dr Seyi Adeeko at Inscope Global Resources Limited, added that the Pillcam capsule will be deployed by medics investigating patients who are exhibiting symptoms such as diarrhoea, constipation, abdominal pain, or bleeding; screening for early-stage colorectal cancers and polyps with a full and complete view of the colon and for monitoring pre-existing conditions, such as inflammatory bowel disease (IBD).

    On why he chose to work hand in hand with the expert, Dr Adeeko said: “Dr Sonade is a man that knows his onions. He trained in the UK and chose to come back to Nigeria, his fatherland with this innovation. He has transversed the field of Gastroenterology; diagnosis and long term management of inflammatory bowel diseases (ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s); diagnostic and therapeutic gastrointestinal endoscopy (gastroscopy and colonoscopy); investigation and management of dyspepsia, IBS and change in bowel habit; pancreatic and liver diseases and the latest Capsule endoscopy. He is leading development of IBD services and is the principal investigator of IBD studies. He is also regional lead for Bowel cancer screening.