Tag: Doctor

  • Medical doctor kidnapped in Delta

    A medical practitioner, Dr Felix Ukpeteru with the Ughelli Central Hospital, was on Friday reported abducted by a gang of kidnappers from Ughelli town in Ughelli North council area of Delta state.

    The Nation gathered that the father of two and a pediatric expert was abducted along Isoko road by Otovwodo Primary School, Ughelli.

    Giving details of the incident, a senior police officer at the Ughelli ‘A’ Division police station, said: “He was abducted on Friday night and whisked in another vehicle suspected to driven by the hoodlums.”

    “We recovered his light brown Toyota SUV jeep with registration number UGH 184 AE which was left at the scene of the incident and efforts are already in motion towards rescuing him and bringing the perpetrators to book.”

    Confirming the incident, the State Commissioner of Police, Mr. Zanna Ibrahim said: “We were able to confirm that he had closed from his place of work at the Central Hospital, Ughelli at about 4pm before he was kidnapped and his abductors have already established contact with his wife.”

  • Body of doctor who jumped into Lagoon yet to be found

    Body of doctor who jumped into Lagoon yet to be found

    Officials of the Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA) and the Lagos State Waterways Authority (LASWA) are still searching for the rescue/recovery of the medical doctor, Allwell Orji who jumped into the Lagos Lagoon on Sunday.

    As at 2pm on Monday, local divers and marine boats were patrolling about 10 miles radius from the suspected point of contact for a possible location, said LASWA’s Managing Director, Ms. Bisola Kamson.

    LASEMA’s General Manager, Adesina Tiamiyu who was at the scene said it would be wrong to assume if the doctor was dead or alive, adding that they would rather wait till he was found.

    Tiamiyu however noted that the water tides around the place he jumped.

    He said: “We are still searching for the body. We have expanded the search to go further than the point it happened. We have told local men around to watch out for any floating body and we have engaged local divers to look around for us. Patrol boats are in the water going round. We would continue to search for him.

    “The family is traumatised at this point and unwilling to speak on the issue. I want us to respect their wishes please. We have established contact with the family and expressed government’s sincere wishes to them. We would also go back at a time they feel better because we would like to know what happen so that Lagosians and Nigerians can learn a lesson or two from it.

    “It’s an unfortunate situation. But what do we do? The driver is with the police. The police would be more involved in the investigation. If we are able to pick one or two things, we would pass it across. I am not aware of any suicide note. His phone and car are with the police.”

    Emergency workers hinted it would take at least 24 hours more for the body to float, adding that there was a possibility he might never be found.

    According to them, he body could be stuck in the ground, if the part he landed was muddy. They also said there’s a possibility the water tide might have pushed him to another location.

  • Update: Drowned doctor showed no sign of depression at work

    Update: Drowned doctor showed no sign of depression at work

    The medical doctor who jumped into the Lagos Lagoon on Sunday, Allwell Oji showed no sign of depression when he was at work last Friday.

    Co-staff at the Mushin branch of the hospital told our reporter on Monday morning that Oji  was usually on night duty.

    It was learnt that the deceased is still single.

    Further inquiries about Oji was referred to the Surulere headquarters of the hospital.

    In what appeared to be a suicide, Oji jumped into the Lagoon  at 4:45pm on Third Mainland Bridge while on his way to Victoria Island where he was going to attend a Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN) meeting.

    Oji, who left from his house at Abule Ijesha in Yaba, was said to have told his driver, Henry Ita, to park his Nissan Sports Utility Vehicle (SUV) marked LND476EE at the Adeniji Adele end of the bridge on the excuse that he wanted to pee. As he came down, the doctor was said to have climbed the bridge’s rail guide and jumped into the ocean.

    Search for Oji’s body by officials of the Lagos State Emergency Management Authority (LASEMA) and security agents is still on.

     

     

     

  • Doctor jumps into Lagos lagoon

    Doctor jumps into Lagos lagoon

    •Police lead rescue operation

    In what appeared to be a suicide, a medical doctor, Allwell Oji, jumped into the Lagos lagoon yesterday. The incident happened at 4:45pm on Third Mainland Bridge when Oji, 35, was on his way to Victoria Island where he was going to attend a Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN) meeting.

    Oji, who left from his house at Abule Ijesha in Yaba, was said to have told his driver, Henry Ita, to parked his Nissan Sports Utility Vehicle (SUV) marked LND476EE at the Adeniji Adele end of the bridge on the excuse that he wanted to pee. As he came down, the doctor was said to have climbed the bridge’s rail guide and jumped into the ocean.

    Oji is said to be a staff of the Isolo branch of Mt. (Mount) Sinai Hospital.

    A commercial bus passenger, who gave his name as Uche Magnus, said the doctor jumped into the ocean immediately after he came down from his vehicle.

    Magnus said: “I saw everything clearly from where I sat in the commercial bus I was in. The man came down from his jeep and jumped into the water instantly. We all screamed and begged the commercial bus driver to stop. I saw the man when he jumped but nobody could identify the spot where he drowned in the ocean.”

    In the ensuing confusion, Ita was said to have called Oji’s mother and pastor. Both arrived the scene some 30 minutes after. It was learnt that the sympathisers at scene called the Lagos Police emergency unit, which deployed Rapid Response Squad (RRS) riders and marine police to the scene.

    When The Nation got to the scene at 5:30pm, the Divisional Police Officer (DPO), RRS Area Alpha Commander and Officer-in-Charge of Marine Police Team were coordinating rescue operation. The response team of the Lagos State Emergency Management Authority (LASEMA) was also at the scene.

    At 5:50pm, Oji’s SUV and his driver were moved to the Adeniji Central Police Station.

    When asked to explain how the incident happened, Ita, who was yet to come to terms with the incident, said could not utter a word as he was being led into the DPO’s office. He folded his arms and looked at the floor.

    Oji’s mother was restless, as she was being consoled by the pastor. The pastor came out of the DPO’s office to pray beside Oji’s SUV. As he said the prayers, he moved round the vehicle with the hope that the rescue opera

    The Nation was not allowed to speak to the driver. At the time of this report, operatives of RRS and Marine Police Unit were still searching for the victim.

    General Manager Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA), Adesina Tiamiyu, confirmed the incident.

    He said: “The Agency received a distress call about a man who parked his grey coloured Nissan Sports Utility Vehicle (SUV) with registration number LND 476 EE at about 4.50pm today Sunday, (yesterday) around Adekunle, inward Third Mainland Bridge and jumped into the Lagos Lagoon.

    “Preliminary investigation at the scene revealed that the man, said to be medical doctor named Orji, was driven by his driver. He suddenly ordered the driver to pull over, got out of the car and suddenly jumped into the water from the bridge.

    “The vehicle and the driver have been taken to Adeniji Adele Police Station for further investigation, while effort is on going to recover his body from the Lagoon.

  • Medical doctor arrested for killing own mother

    The Ogun Police Command said it had arrested one Dr. Emmanuel Ogah, who allegedly stabbed his biological mother to death.

    In a statement issued in Abeokuta Saturday by its Public Relations Officer, DSP Abimbola Oyeyemi, the command said the arrest was sequel to a complaint by the elder brother of the suspect, Cletus Ogah.

    It said the elder brother reported at Itele Ota Divisional headquarters that his younger brother had stabbed his 62 year-old mother, one Janet Ogah, to death.

    The command said that following the complaint, the DPO of the division, CSP Lukman Raheem, led detectives to the scene at No 16, Ololade street, Lafenwa, Itele Ota , where the suspect was arrested.

    “Preliminary investigation revealed that the suspect, who has just finished his NYSC programme, came back home three days earlier and had been having issues with the deceased since then.

    “In his statement, the suspect claimed that his mother was in the habit of insulting and disgracing him in the presence of her apprentices, and that frustrated him into taking her life,” it said.

    According to the command, the corpse of the deceased, a food vendor, has been deposited at the Ota General Hospital morgue, for autopsy.

    It said that the State Commissioner of Police, Ahmed Iliyasu, had ordered the immediate transfer of the suspect to homicide section of the State Criminal Investigation and Intelligence Department, for further investigation. (NAN)

  • A doctor in politics

    A doctor in politics

    Title: Mimiko’s Odyssey – A biography of revelations
    Author: Olu Obafemi
    Reviewer: Wale Okediran

    History is replete with an array of medical doctors who have also been politicians. Some of the famous ones are the Latin American Revolutionary Leader, Che Guevara, Hastings Kamuzu Banda of Malawi, Agostinho Neto of Angola, Salvador Allende of Chile, Francois Duvalier (Papa Doc) of Haiti, Gor Harlem Brundtland, First Norwegian Female PM, Houphoet Boigny of Ivory Coast, Nain Ramgoolan, PM of Mauritius, as well as the great Mahathir Bin Mohammed of Malaysia, who before his voluntary retirement from politics, led his country to one of the greatest economic renaissances of the century. While some of these doctors were highly successful politicians, some were not that good and in the cases of President Banda and Papa Doc, went on to become full blown dictators.

    Coming back home to Nigeria, Nigerian doctors have been involved in politics since the 18th century when in 1908, Dr. J K Randle and Dr Orisadipe Obasa formed the Peoples Union, the first political party in Lagos and perhaps, in Nigeria, although some historians considered PU as just a political association while the first real political party in Nigeria was the NNDP formed by Herbert Macaulay in 1923.  Since then, Nigerian doctors have come a long way in their involvement in politics. There was Dr. Koye Majekodunmi who served as the administrator of the then Western Region during the constitutional impasse of the ‘60’s, as well as Dr Samuel Manuwa, the first Nigerian Chief Medical Adviser who acted as the country’s Consular General anytime the CG was on leave.

    Medical doctors who became state governors include Prof Ambrose Alli, Peter Odili, Bukola Saraki, Chimaoroke Nnamani, Chris Ngige, Emmanuel Uduaghan, who was also succeeded by another medical doctor, Ifeanyi Okowa.  Also remarkable are former Secretaries to State Governments, Senators and Members of the House of Representatives such as Bisi Odejide, Dalhatu Tafida, Jubril Aminu, Martins Yellowe, Olorunnimbe Mamora, Aminu Safana, Wale Okediran among others, not to talk of Heads of Parastatals, Commissioners and Local Government officers.

    No other form of employment is as quite consuming as that of a politician.  Apart from the daily demands of your political office, the demands on your time by your political party and constituents are enough to drain the best out of any politician. With all these problems and uncertainties, it then becomes a puzzle why a medical doctor will want to leave the peace and certainty of his medical practice for the murky and uncertain, and especially in Nigeria, violent world of politics.

    It is also true that to succeed as a Doctor/Politician demands a high dose of late night stamina, optimism, self-confidence and brinkmanship. A cynical writer once remarked that these ingredients are essentially the same needed for gambling! Luckily, the book portrays Rahman Olusegun Mimiko as having all these characteristics. This was confirmed by no less a figure than Barrister Adegoke, a foremost Ondo State politician; ‘’If there were 24 hours a day for politics, Mimiko would be active throughout. There was a meeting we started at about 9pm and we went as far as 2am, but Mimiko was as bright as if we only just started the meeting. Some others at the meeting were already sleeping and snoring but not Mimiko. I had to ask him if he was on drugs and he said no. I have not seen anyone who can work like him.”

    Rudolf Virchow, the famous German Pathologist had as far back as 1847 made that great observation that, Medicine and Politics are both social sciences in the sense that they are involved in the socio-economic good and advancement of man and society. This was after the then young scientist had released the report of his investigation of an epidemic of typhus, which had occurred in Upper Silesia currently located in Poland. In the report, Virchow concluded that the cause of the epidemic was caused by “mismanagement of the region by the Berlin government.” His recommendation that democracy be allowed to thrive in Silesia dramatically changed the lot of the kingdom for the better.

    Judging from his ability to successfully marry Medicine and Politics, it is obvious that in addition to Awolowo, Mimiko was also a disciple of Virchow. In narrating his personal life, the book discusses how for many years, an hectic schedule as well as an obsession with Medicine and Politics almost made Dr Mimiko to forget to get married. As he himself put it; ‘’I never addressed my mind to marriage for a long time. It got to a stage that my friends said they were going to organise a bachelor’s eve party for me and I could go and marry any time I liked. The decision to get married took me like forever’’. On this note, I think we all have to thank the First Lady, Mrs Olukemi Mimiko for agreeing to marry this old man, if not, he would have remained a bachelor forever.

    The successful doctor/politician career of Dr. Mimiko can also be attributed to  his spouse, Olukemi, who doesn’t object to long separations, to coming second, to being admired and petted, but sometimes ignored. Perhaps the first shock Mrs Mimiko had as a politician’s wife was the invasion of the family’s privacy. Hear her: ‘’There has been no secret room in my house down to the bedroom. They would come in to have a meeting and he will just tell me; ‘Please excuse us for a while.’ I will put food on the table longing to have a quiet time with my husband and children on the table but before turning back, people would sit round and I won’t even have a place to sit’’.

    As the book, MIMIKO’S ODYSSEY aptly revealed, being a medical doctor and politician has several challenges. The first challenge for Rahman Mimiko was that of getting parental and sibling support to wade into the topsy-turvy political climate of Nigeria. In this respect, Dr Mimiko’s father, a consummate believer in the social good of medicine, with a passionate avarice for politics did not want his beloved son to practice politics. According to Barrister Adegoke; ‘’Papa did not like politicians. He believed that politicians are rogues, thieves and dishonest people. He wanted Olusegun to be like one of our fathers in Ondo, Dr Olamide Akinsete, who was the first person to establish a private hospital in Ondo State’’. To show how deep his contempt to politics was, the senior Mimiko was not even impressed with Segun Mimiko’s inauguration as a commissioner, an event which many people considered to be the beginning of the young man’s political career. Asked to name his happiest moment in life, Mimiko senior was unequivocal as he named the day Abass his youngest son visited Mecca.

    As a student, Mimiko experienced the challenges of combining medical studies with political activism.  As he put it in the book; ‘’I must confess, then I was spending more time with politics and less with my medical education. I got away with this until the third year when I flunked a class’’.

    However, in accordance with the Hippocratic Oath which doctors are sworn to, Mimiko brought dignity and nobility to his political performance. Judging from the copious accounts in the book of the Health and Welfare policies and programmes he initiated and implemented with international acknowledgements, one can say with all certainty that Olusegun Mimiko has greatly succeeded in this respect.

    Prof Olu Obafemi concluded MIMIKO’S ODYSSEY by summarising the thrust of Olusegun Mimiko’s political ideology: ‘’This career duality of medicine and politics was a progressevist tradition cultivated from home and nurtured at school. In addition to being a means of rendering service to the people in later life, it has enabled Olusegun to chart a path as a courageous politician and kind-hearted statesman’’.

    Mimiko’s political ideological stand, to my mind, seemed to be a blend of those of two of his professional seniors, the revolutionary Che Guevera and the socialistic Mahathir bin Mohammed. As can be recalled, Guevara, just like Mimiko, was radicalised as a young medical student by the poverty, hunger, and disease he saw all around him as a youth. Also like Mimiko, Mahathir’s experience from his busy and successful medical practice, which catered for the poor and downtrodden, enriched his tenure as Prime Minister, with Malaysia experiencing a period of rapid modernization in addition to a tremendous economic growth and a series of bold infrastructure projects.

    Olu Obafemi’s MIMIKO’S ODYSSEY is well researched and beautifully written. What makes the book exceptional is the author’s ability to maintain a suspenseful narrative in the midst of a gamut of facts, interviews and personal anecdotes. Just like Pa Mimiko, not everybody likes politics and politicians, but the book succeeded in provoking, delighting and impressing. It is a fascinating documentation of a landscape readers will surely want to wander in again and again.

  • Doctor arraigned for ‘fraud’

    A doctor, Akolawole Michael (43), was, on Wednesday, arraigned at a Magistrates’ Court in Ado-Ekiti for alleged fraud.

    Police prosecutor Sgt. Oriyomi Akinwale told the court the accused committed the offence in January 2013 in Ado-Ekiti.

    He alleged he obtained N900,000 from Babalola Olawale, a junior doctor, under the guise of selling six plots of land to him on Afao Road.

    The accused pleaded not guilty. His counsel, Busuyi Ayorinde, applied for his bail, promising the court he would not abscond.

    The prosecutor objected because Michael had jumped bail in the police station.

    The Magistrate, Taiwo Ajibade, granted him bail at N100,000 and two sureties. She adjourned the case till February 15.

    In another development, a teenager, Abubakar Sodiq (18), has been sentenced to one month imprisonment by a Chief Magistrates’ Court in Ado-Ekiti.

    Police prosecutor Sgt. Bankole Olasunkanmi told the court  Sodiq committed the offence on January 31 about 01:30 pm at Okese Street, Ado-Ekiti.

    The accused, who pleaded guilty, admitted he stole a Techno Y2 phone valued at N18,000 belonging to Mrs Oriloye Simbiat in her shop.

    He said the owner raised the alarm and passers-by intercepted him.

    His counsel, Mrs Florence Nwadishi, said he had not benefitted from the proceeds of the crime and was a first time offender.

    The Chief Magistrate, Idowu Ayenimo, sentenced him to one month imprisonment with an option of N5,000 fine.

  • Four suspected kidnappers die as police rescue doctor

    Four suspected members of a kidnapping gang that whisked away a medical doctor last week at St. François Hospital in Onikan, Lagos, have been killed.
    They were gunned down inside the Ibeju-Lekki forest on Friday during an operation carried out by the police to rescue the man identified as Dr. Ajayi.
    It was gathered that security forces stormed the forest Friday night and battled the kidnappers, killing four of them in the process.
    The police, it was learnt, recovered a gun, the vehicle that was used to kidnap the doctor, as well as many clothes suspected to belong to other victims.
    According to the Lagos Police Command spokesperson, Dolapo Badmos, a Superintendent of Police (SP), Dr. Ajayi was successfully rescued around 9:10pm and has been reunited with his family.
    She confirmed that the kidnappers kept him inside the thick forest, adding that the deceased died during a gun duel.
    “The command would do everything within its means to rid Lagos of criminal elements,” said Badmos.

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  • Fake doctor arrested in Ekiti

    A fake doctor has been arrested in Ado-Ekiti, Ekiti State capital, by the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN).

    The state Chairman of the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA), Dr. Sunday Omoya, who spoke at the weekend to round off this year’s Physicians’ Week, urged the public to be vigilant on whom they consult on health matters.

    He said: “The NMA, in partnership with MDCN, set up a monitoring team to tackle quackery.

    “The man was reported to the police and was arrested after a screening conducted by the local government where he had worked for 11 years showed that he was parading fake certificates.

    “We reported to the commissioner of Police and the man will soon face prosecution in court.”