Tag: Family

  • ‘We work as a family’

    ‘We work as a family’

    Atsuko Toda, a development expert from Japan, is the Country Programme Manager, International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) in Nigeria, an arm of the United Nations dedicated to assisting the rural poor get a new lease of life through numerous intervention programmes. In this interview with Ibrahim Apekhade Yusuf, Toda shares her riveting experience working in Nigeria in the last two and half years, her work ethics and style, among others. Excerpts: 

    Working in IFAD Nigeria

    In all the countries where International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) works, there is a Country Programme Manager with a Country Programme Office. With regards to the management style that we experience in Nigeria, as you mentioned, I have been here for two and half years and we just closed and completed a programme in the north. We are starting a programme in the middle belt and then we have also a programme in the Niger Delta and the management style we experience is that there is a lot of room for improvement in delegation because you find that with Nigerian leadership, all the powers are centred on the leader. But the ability to delegate, set goals and responsibility needs to be clarified so that team work can be improved. It’s something that we really need to work on, that’s number one.

    As I said, the number one issue of delegation in leadership and team work needs to be strengthened. Secondly, with regards to management, the other thing is strengthening institutions. I think in terms of institutions and administration, that’s another area that truly needs a lot of work, in order for initiatives like Rural Finance Institution Building Programme (RUFIN) to become much more sustainable in Nigeria.

    I think we work in the agriculture sector but sustainability is a major challenge and the reason why it has remained such a major challenge is there are successes which are demonstrated by the government, by the funders, by development partners, by the NGOs, but they tend to become isolated packet of success, which have not scaled through.

    I think more recently with the Transformation Agenda, the Minister of Agriculture, Dr. Adesina Akinwunmi, has been trying much more to align everything to the Agriculture Transformation Agenda.

    But still, in terms of execution, institutional capacity to follow that up, to monitor it to date, to have good data, these are all challenges that we need to look at.

    First impression about Nigeria

    With regards to my experience in Nigeria in the past two and half years, before I came to Nigeria, I think I heard lots of stories about Nigeria, you hear about the corruption, violence, robbery and stuffs like that.

    But actually when one comes, one realises how hard working the people are. You have people who are just struggling to make ends meet. There is a lot of innovation, freedom, thinking and there is a lot of good people, there is a lot faith.

    For me, it’s been such a very wonderful experience working here and everyday brings a new challenge and new experience. I think Nigerians are so industrious. Having said that, I think the difficulty again is that sometimes we get stock in bureaucratic procedures which are difficult and transparency is not necessarily always there. So that’s something that we struggle with. However, I think really working in Nigeria has been such a joy and living here and experiencing the differences of each of the regions in the Niger Delta, in the middle belt, in the north, we have very different organisational patterns that we see, and that’s been very interesting. I think working here has taught me a lot about Nigeria and I wouldn’t want to work in any other African country if I had the choice.

    About RUFIN

    RUFIN is a seven-year programme designed to improve the performance of member-based non-bank rural finance institutions to enable them develop to sustainable rural microfinance institutions in the programme participating states.

    The goal of this programme is to improve the income, food security and general living conditions of poor rural households, particularly women-headed households, youth and the physically challenged.

    RUFIN covers 12 states with three local governments from each of the states participating. 36 local governments are involved. Specifically, in the North West/North East zone states we have Adamawa, Bauchi, Katsina, Zamfara. In South West/North Central zone states, we have Benue, Nasarawa, Lagos, Oyo while in South East/South South zone states we have Anambra, Imo, Edo, Akwa-Ibom respectively.

    Now with regards to RUFIN and how to position it, it is one of the pillars of the Agriculture Transformation Agenda, to provide access to finance for smallholder farmers, which are majority of the farming population in Nigeria today. What we thought is, Nigeria does not lack liquidity, there is money in the system.

    However, for smallholder farmers to access it is very difficult. So, what we try to do is to go to the customers, go to the hinterland and ensure that they form groups. Once they form groups they don’t need collateral and also once they form groups they start savings so they can do internal lending. Once you save, another person saves, they can actually take turns in getting credit, that’s number one.

    Seconding because of the good collateral they can get loans from microfinance banks and financial NGOs. So, the idea was to harness the strength of the existing institutions, build their capacity to reach the rural populace. And we wanted to show that microfinance can be a business. That microfinance banks and financial NGOs if they can actually mobilise depositors’ savings they can make profit collecting deposits and lending on interest. And this is a relatively virgin market which still needs to be explored because of a lot of the population are not financially included.

    So, we believe that it is a business opportunity; we don’t believe it is charity. We see microfinance as a business and that’s what we have been trying to promote through RUFIN.

    Management style

    On a personal note, my management style encourages delegation. I invest people with responsibility and try to give them the tools to work with. I would consider myself really fortunate to have the crop of excellent colleagues that I’m working with. These are people who are very professional in their own right and have continued to support the vision of the programme that we do.

    Even though I have worked in the development community in the past 14 years,  here in Nigeria, I think I must give it to my colleagues here when it comes to taking initiatives because as locals, they understand the terrain better much than I do and I really do appreciate their expertise and local knowledge.

    I don’t try to micromanage at all and this is because as I said, I believe in the expertise of my team, and once I see you have what it takes to deliver on a project, I just push it to you and see how you succeed with it. If there is a problem along the line, I expect you take responsibility afterwards as we find ways of resolving the issues.

    Idea of staff motivation

    For me personally, I like to commend the efforts of my colleagues all the time. We see ourselves as family and as such try to look out for each other. The workplace environment is such that encourages cordiality. There are no barriers as such because we all share the common vision and do everything within our power to make sure we achieve the set goals. Where this is being delayed for whatever reasons, we also try to sit down together and iron out those grey areas.  So, it might interest you to know that in the last two and half years, I have worked here, we have had zero staff turnover. We work like one big happy family, feel the pain of each other and try to be there for each other as best as we can. So, if you have such a workplace, where there is such an understanding, you really have to count yourself lucky. So, I feel very lucky to have this kind of workplace environment.

    But one thing is clear, here we don’t necessarily place monetary value on everything. One best way we try to reward our staff is through additional training to scale build their skills set and everybody is happy and grateful for that because the kind of training we give ordinarily is not easy to come by. Such trainings are geared towards preparing them for the future endeavours and they are made for life. So, that’s our own way of saying thank you and encouraging our staff to do more.

    Lessons Nigeria can learn from Japan

    In Japan, after the Hiroshima bombing and all, we sort of looked inwards to see how to rejuvenate our country from the ashes of the war. It took quite a lot of efforts for us. But we were able to surmount all the challenges through a dint of hard work, unity of purpose and common faith in our strength as a people. So, looking back after the terrors of that war to where we are today, the common thing story that runs through and truly resonates is that with peace and unity of purpose, a country can achieve anything and everything it sets out to achieve. Nigeria can take a cue from that.

    Love of local cuisine

    When it comes to local cuisine, I’m an adventurer. In the last two years and more, I have tried everything from amala, egusi, tuwo, semo, bitter leaf soup, rice, pepper soup, but not the draw soup… (laughs).

    Legacy for Nigeria

    What I would most likely want to be remembered for after my exit in Nigeria is that most of the programmes we have brought on board are better sustained with the same drive and vision just as it was in the beginning. I’m concerned about sustainability, of growth and development.

  • A family of valedictorians

    A family of valedictorians

    Members of Olise family of Rivers State were the cynosure of all eyes at the convocation of the Bowen University (BOWEN) in Iwo, Osun State. Two of their children graduated with a First Class. ISAAC ATAYERO (200-Level Mass Communication) writes.

    The Ninth Convocation of the Bowen University in Iwo, Osun State, may have come and gone, but it would linger in the memory of the graduands and their families.

    For the Olise family of Rivers State, it was a day of double joy. Two of the family members, Olisseloke and Amoka, graduated with a First Class, with the former emerging the best graduating student.

    He graduated with a Cumulative Grade Point Average (CGPA) of 4.93 in Economics and her brother, Amoka, was the best graduating student in Computer Information Technology (CIT), giving their medical doctor parents a double joy.

    Olisseloke could not hide her emotion when she was called out to receive academic laurel, describing day as most exciting in her life. She said her days on campus were those of hard work, discipline, commitment and sacrifice.

    She recounted her many experiences, which motivated her to dream for excellence. The Olises’ immediate and extended family members thronged the event to celebrate their children’s feat.

    What does Olisseloke have to say about the feat? She said: “I did not plan to be the best graduating student, but I always want to be the best I can be.” To her, the achievement came as a surprise.

    However, Olisseloke did not get the laurel  on a platter of gold. She passed through challenges to achieve the feat. Many did not know Olisseloke was admitted for into a pre-medical programme before she decided to transfer to Economics and started all over again.

    Another interesting thing about the valedictorian, which her colleagues did not know, is her love for novels. She said she is a fan of works by Steven Erickson, Stephen Backster and Jim Butcher. “I had to devise a means to overcome the challenge of reading textbooks, such as novels and getting myself focused on the textbooks,” she said.

    For the mother, her children’s feat was a journey designed by God. Mrs Tamuno said: “For every obstacle they faced, God found a way for them to overcome. Words cannot express how I feel. I am totally happy and excited; I don’t know how to express it.”

    Olisseloke, like her mother, also acknowledged God’s helping hand before she could overcome the challenges she faced during her academic journey. “I thank God because I know that nobody can do anything by himself,” she said.

    She advised her junior colleagues to be the best and do everything with a mark of excellence. She said: “There is no point wasting your time doing something if you won’t do well. They must aim at excellence and be the best.”

    She also advised them to see the restrictions in the university as a way of concentrating their minds on their studies and motivating them towards excellent grade.

    Her favourite moments on campus, Olisseloke said when she met “many cool people”. What she did not like? “It is the bell ringing.” Referring to the sound of the morning bell that wakes students from sleep.

    She added: “You can avoid the Students’ Disciplinary Committee but you can’t avoid the sound of the morning bell.” She said she was relieved that she no longer had to deal with the daily ringing of the bell.

  • Rotary to strengthen family values

    Arrangements have been concluded to flag off this year’s edition of Family Week of the Rotary District 9110. It will hold from December 9 to15 at the Lekki-African Beach Resort.

    The Rotary Family Day was set up to celebrate Rotarian families and their spouses and also to reward and celebrate its dead members, in a bid to develop good rapport with outsiders; increase membership and build family bonds.

    The event will feature activities such as visit to the orphanage homes and other less-privileged people.

    In a chat with the Chairman of the Family Week programme, Mrs Omotunde Lawson, she gave a rundown of activities of the event and the reasons the group set aside a day for its families.

    “During that weekend, we will form a formidable team and increase our family bonds.

    “We will make donations to the motherless babies’ home and have a party with the less-privileged, after which we will head out to the resort for a novelty match between our parents. The event will climax with a dinner on that Friday.

    “It promises to be fun-filled with indoor and outdoor games, a family luncheon on Saturday and an award ceremony where there will be a raffle draw.

    “Items to be won include two airline tickets; gifts ranging from DSTV, a weekend getaway for couples at Golden Tulip Hotel FESTAC Town and a treat at fitness centres.”

  • Family Family s release of son’s body

    Samuel Eze of Umucheke village in Umunze, Orumba South Local Government Area of Anambra State has demanded the release of his brother’s body from the police.

    Samuel’s younger brother, Emmanuel, was allegedly shot dead about two weeks ago by a police officer on his way home from a nearby grocery store.

    The incident occurred during a protest.

    Narrating how his brother was killed, Samuel said the deceased was not part of the protest.

    A petition has been sent to the police commissioner. It was signed by the Chairman of the village union, Sylvester Madumere and the Secretary, Livinus Nwafor.

    They urged the police to release the body for burial.

    The petition said: “The police officer, who perpetrated the act, should be arrested and prosecuted. Compensation should be paid to the deceased’s family, as he had people depending on him.”

    The chairman said the community was still in shock. He described the late Emmanuel as a quiet and easy-going person.

    The Nation learnt yesterday that the elders and leadership of the village visited the Divisional Police Officer (DPO) of Umunze Division, who assured that the matter would be looked into.

    “But one week after, nothing has happened. The body of the deceased has been seized,” our source said.

    Police spokesman Uche Eze said: “We are willing to release the body, but we cannot do this except the family comes forward.”

    He added that no sane policeman would shoot a person except he constituted a threat to the society or to policemea.

    Eze recalled that on the day of the protest, the protesters torched a hotel and advanced to the police station to burn it, but the police dispersed them.

    Recounting how his brother was killed, Samuel said Emmanuel sold palm kernel and had just returned from the market.

    He went on: “About 4pm, my brother headed for a nearby shop to buy soap, but he was shot in the head by a policeman.

    “On that fateful day, protesters from Ndikpa village, whose plots of land were sold, protested the arrests of their colleagues (youths) by the buyer. They were on their way to the police station when some officers stopped them. One of them shot Emmanuel, who had just bought a soap he wanted to use to bathe.

    “We have no reason to suspect anyone because we are landlords to the police in Umunze. We have a cordial relationship with them.

    “The way my brother was killed is suspicious.

    “He was not one of the protesters. We have been neglected by the police. After the incident, nobody has apologised to us. The most painful thing is that we have not seen our brother’s body.”

  • Too busy for the family

    Too busy for the family

    On the surface, Mrs. Gladys M seems to have it all. She has a good job in a managerial position in a top company which comes with a fat pay cheque and other perks of the job. She has all the comfort money can buy and even more. But there’s something missing in her life that no amount of money can buy for her and that is time, especially time with her two children and husband.

    Gladys is one of those Lagosians whose nature and location of workplace have turned them into ‘nocturnal workers, who move around only at night’. With her office located on Victoria Island, Lagos, the lady leaves home by 4.30am every working day and returns home between 11:30pm and midnight, “depending on the traffic,” as she pointed out. “During the week, I’m like a single woman because I hardly see my family. The children are asleep when I leave for work and already sleeping on my return at night. As for my husband, he’s on his own! At weekends, I sleep nearly throughout Saturday and half of Sunday. It’s the two maids we have who are practically raising our children as my husband works too and his job makes him travel a lot,” she stated.

    Besides doing all the domestic chores in the house, the maids also drop the children, aged eight and six years old, at the private school they attend. “I only know they are at school when the maid who has dropped them calls to report that they have gone to school. I don’t even know their teachers as it’s their father who attends meetings at the school whenever they invite us for one. They have been at that school for their whole lives because I started dropping them at the crèche attached to the school when they were barely three months old.”

    Mr.  Njoku  Obi,  a retired banker,  also shared his experience. He told The Nation that he was hooked to drinking coffee and chewing  gum to remain awake on a daily basis for close to 10 years that he travelled from Igando, a suburb of Alimosho Local Government Area of the State to Victoria Island.

    “Working in Victoria Island and living in Igando, was a hell. The human in me was gone and I became more of a robot all through the years I travelled from my area to the Island. Imagine waking up by 4am and leaving home by 4:30am just to beat traffic.  After beating the traffic on the mainland, I always had that of the Island to contend with. After closing late in the evening, it  was equally horrifying going back home.

    “At times, one ends up getting home around 11: 30 pm or midnight.  On a traffic-prone day, one might get home around 1:00am. When it so happened, I would only manage to sleep for three  hours before my alarm rings for me to start preparing for the day’s work.

    “I was always groggy with sleep whenever I set out to drive to the office every morning. The same thing happens to other road users too, so it was common to see people hitting one another in traffic because they were dozing.  I was always had packs of coffee and chewing gum in my car that I always consumed while on the road and at work to remain awake. It was an inevitable addiction that was causing untold harm to my health.”

    He lamented that he could not give good attention to his children all through the period. The situation, he said, was aggravated by the fact that the wife was also embarking on the same routine life.

    “I was forced to prevail on her to resign her appointment because we had abandoned our parental responsibilities to our house helps and became total strangers to our children. It was a terrible thing because if the house helps had had some bad influences from outside, some unpalatable things could have happened to our children and that would have made all our struggles to be meaningless. I was also forced to resign thereafter because the stress was too much for me to bear,” he added.

    Ibe, an employee of one of the  leading oil companies in the country, also recalled his travails shuttling from his residence on the mainland to his office in Lekki every day. After several years of enduring the pains, he was forced to relocate to the Island.

    His words: “I used to live in the Isolo area of the Lagos mainland. Every working day, I would leave for work between 5:20am and 5:30am. The purpose was to beat the traffic and get to the office early. It always took us about two hours to get to the office, as we often got to the office  around 7:30am. This means we spent an average of two hours to get to the office. My office is at Lekki. Our normal closing hour is 4:30pm. In spite of that, I  wasn’t getting home  until between 8 and 9pm. Sometimes, it was worse. And you know, it was the same routine for many years.”

    The situation, he said,  had direct effect on his work and his health. “Yes, of course, it does. I ended up arriving at the office tired and edgy. I often took  time to settle for the day’s work. You can be sure that in such situation, it affected my productivity.Let me tell you, there was no day that passed then that I did I not take pain reliever in the morning and evening. Besides, the stress was making my blood pressure to rise. It became absolutely unbearable.

    “As time went on, I was tired and  had do something about it. That was the reason I ended up relocating to Lekki. And the difference was immediately obvious. Since I relocated,  It takes between 10 to 20 minutes to get to my office. I no longer have any need to be taking pain killers like before. My productivity, I am sure, has improved. Added to that, I am no longer as stressed as I used to be”.

    Busari  Musiliu, a resident of Sango Ota, Ogun State, said he was constantly eating kolanut and taking energy drinks to keep awake as he shared his predicament going from his area to work in Victoria Island. After several years of going through the rigorous travelling, he resorted to squatting with a friend living close to his place of work.

    “I would have died if I had continued to move from Sango Ota to Lagos Island every day.  There was a time that I fell seriously ill because I wasn’t resting well. The substances that I was taken had caused serious damage to my body.  I would wake up early in the morning and get back home very late in the night. By the I would be leaving the house my children would still be sleeping and by the time I would get home late in the night, they would have also gone to bed. I didn’t have any time for myself and always got angry and ever ready to sting like a bee because I was constantly stressed up.

    “After recovering from the illness, I was attacked and dispossessed of my valuables by hoodlums when I was going to work early one morning. These experiences made me to begin to seek for a close place to my office where I could squat. Luckily for me, I got a colleague who offered to assist me. I leave home on Monday morning taking along a few personal effects for the week and go back home on Fridays to spend the weekend with my family.”

     

    Day care, crèches to the rescue

    Indeed, for busy career mothers and fathers, day care centres, crèche, nurseries and the like are a God-sent. For such parents without live-in relatives like grandmothers, aunties and cousins who can act as carers for the newborn, a crèche is the next viable alternative when the nursing mother has to resume work at the end of her maternity leave.

    “After I gave birth, my mother came to spend some time with me. But she returned to the village three weeks later and I was alone with no helper. I had no choice but place my baby in a day care when I resumed work as I could not take him to work! He was just about two months old then. I felt bad about it but what could I do? It’s the bad economy that has made many women become their families’ breadwinners. In the past, our mothers and grandmothers  did not have to work in offices and other corporate environments. They worked mostly in the farms and they took their babies with them strapped to their backs. Today, society has changed. I can’t take my baby to my workplace as it’s a financial institution. It’s not allowed. Day care centres and crèches are the next alternative,” stated a mother of three who did not want her name in print.

    These city women’s experiences are reflective of the realities of parenting and child rearing in a mega city like Lagos. For many busy parents striving to work hard and bring in enough money to meet the family’s needs, it’s a hard choice they have to make. “It’s a choice between working to make money to enable you live a particular lifestyle or staying home to care for the children and living in penury,” stated Gladys.

    In many cases, child rearing and family life take the back seat, while the pursuit of money wins.

    To fill in the gap are nannies, house maids, crèches, play and nursery schools who now act as ‘surrogate mothers’ to the children. While the parents are busy at work, these carers feed, clothe, change nappies, rock them to sleep, soothe them when they cry, play with them and generally perform the functions which mothers, by their natural dispensation, are supposed to play.

    Our reporter met with one of such carers, Lydia Solomon, at a crèche at Ikeja who spoke on the onerous tasks of caring for other people’s children. The lady, who has been working there for four years, disclosed that the crèche opens for business as early as 5am to receive the children. “These working mothers sometimes leave home as early as 4 am. Many work in offices in Marina, Victoria Island, Lekki, Ajah or even Epe.” For the return journey home from work, Solomon stated that, “It all depends on the work schedule of each working mother. Some return to pick their children at 5pm, some at 8pm, some at 10pm while for others, we have to take them to their homes at 11pm.”

    Being separated from their mothers from such early ages can be traumatic for the children as she stated: “If the children had just started coming to the crèche, they feel bad. Some react by crying or clutching to their mother’s arms or body. But after a while, they get used to being dropped with us. It’s especially bad for breast-feeding babies. For such children, when it is their breast-feeding time, they cry and cry and there is nothing we can use to pacify them. They just keep wailing until the time passes. In such a situation, we have to keep petting them until they cry and sleep. When they wake, we continue the petting and after a while, they start playing.”

    One challenge most of these carers have is the lateness of parents in picking their children in the evenings. On this, Sarah David, a carer at a nursery at Apapa, noted: “Most parents don’t keep to time, they come late to pick their children. This is because they know the nanny is competent and capable and they feel their baby is safe with her, so they are relaxed. The last baby most times leaves my place very late like 9pm or 10pm. I’m not really impressed with  parents that pick their children at such odd hours; at least 6 pm in the evening is okay.”

     

    Separated too young

    To David, being separated from their parents so young does not portend well for the emotional well-being of the children which could lead to problems for them in the future.

    “The parents should allow love to flow between them and should have the conscience that, ‘my child is somewhere and I need to see him.’ When parents come late, the baby is already asleep, so what time do you have to spend or have love to share with the child? And very early the next day, you bring the child back to the day care.”

    Speaking on the issue and the challenges of caring for the children, Joy Udeh, another carer at a day care in Lagos, stated: “Some parents come late to pick their children. We drop our phone number because when it’s too late, we close so they have to come down to our own house to pick them. We work every day except Sunday. A dirty person who finds things irritating or is wicked and heartless cannot do this type of job.

    “It is very difficult to take care of the children and never easy because at times they cry, disturb, mess up the place. As a person doing this, you have to be very patient. Even when you want to get angry, you hold yourself back. I take them as my own children, put them on my back, teach them things like poems and do things that make them happy.

    ”Some parents are naturally lazy and it has become a habit that whenever they have a baby, they enrol them in care centers. We start taking in babies from two months old.”

    Not all parents like the idea of leaving their children in day care centres and crèches. Mrs Ene Osekhe, an Apapa, Lagos resident frowns at it, declaring: “I can’t keep my child in a day care center. Some people choose their job over their children. I love my child and I can’t leave him for anybody. That is why I decided to engage in business instead of working in a company. It takes the grace of God to care for children.”

    Due to the long hours these children stay apart from their parents, with time they begin to see their carers as their ‘real’ mothers, as Solomon noted: “Well, babies who are still breast-feeding still recognise their mothers. That is because, once the mother puts her breast in his mouth, the child sees the mother and the sense of identity is there. But for others who have stopped breast-feeding, they are more attached to us than their mothers. There are some who even do not want to go home in the evening. We have to keep shouting, ‘your mother is here, or your dad is here.’  Some of them after a while start calling us mommy. This has happened many times.”

    To experts, such early separation between a parent and child, the period when the most bonding should take place between them could have incalculable emotional and psychological damages on the child.

     

    Psychologists speak on the consequences

    Dr Leonard Okonkwo is a psychologist and he has this to say on the matter: “In as much as it is sometimes avoidable for parents to drop their kids with other people and go to work because they have to make ends meet, most of the time, it doesn’t augur well for the children. This is because it denies the parents and children or rather it discourages the necessary bonding that a child needs as he or she grows up. It is generally believed that a child’s personality grows as the age rises.

    “So all that happens to a child at that early age is very important. So when you leave a child of that early age at the mercy of day care, people who are usually two or three with so many children to care about, that necessary bonding becomes missing. And then when you have such deficiency in the bonding, other issues could develop later on that can affect the child eventually as the child grows up.

    “Of course there are health issues too. When a child does not develop the way he or she ought to develop, the child can develop some level of insecurity, which can be carried on to later in life. When you have so many children to take care of, it is certain that you cannot give everyone of them adequate attention. That is the problem that is likely to be seen in a day care. And that leaves the children with a sense of insecurity and anxiety, which may manifest much later in life. It could even lead the children to a mind situation, where they find it hard to trust people later in life.

    “That is the reason we should commend the Lagos State government for elongating the maternity leave. It is important. Nursing mothers need time with their children. They need to wean their children.”

    He blamed the situation on the bad economy and the level of poverty in the society. “If people were to be gainfully employed and not go far from home, some of these problems can be avoided. In a situation where you have two parents in a home and one can adequately sustain the family with his income, there will be no reason for the wife to be rushing out to work from home every day.

    “On the other hand, it is difficult to say that both parents should not work because there are challenges. They have to pay house rent, pay school fees, and then feed and protect their children. So it is difficult to determine for parents how or what they should do or not do in earning income, more so when it is not illegal. But as much as possible, there should be a lot of balance. No matter the job parents are doing, they should as much as possible have time for the children.”

    To Dr Tony Okeregbe of the University of Lagos, the effects of such early separation can be far reaching, affecting the child till adulthood and the society as well. “Definitely, being brought up by nannies, maids and other carers besides the parents can affect children’s socialisation. The family is the primary and first social unit; it’s the way you nurture the family that will affect the society as a whole. These days, many parents abandon their parental responsibilities and the upbringing of their children to nannies, maids and schools while they chase after money.

    “Can you believe that some even forget to pick their children from school like a case we had some time ago? Because of craving for material wealth and striving for survival, they don’t find the time to be with the children, to train or inculcate proper values in them, teach them real values of life. They believe money is everything and is the solution to all problems. These children will now be at the whims and caprices of society, to the outside world and whichever dominates wins. This is the reason for such anti-social behaviours like drug taking, cultism, prostitution, crime and other antisocial activities,” he stated.

    He advised parents to make the necessary sacrifice to spend time and train their children themselves instead of leaving the responsibility to others. “Their primary assignment as parents is the children and the family. Maids should not bring up children, it’s not their job. It’s the parents’ duty. If you know you won’t have time and rather focus on your career, then don’t have a family. It’s not by force!” he said.

    Continuing, he added: “As a course adviser in this school, I see students at 17/18 years old who are still like babies. They are not well trained or know anything about life. There are some of these young people who, due to bad experiences with maids, have been affected psychologically. They find it difficult to develop associations and relationships with people because they were violated and abused as children by the maids. We have one like that here. She has a very negative view of relationships because she did not have parental care; the care came from the maid who exposed her to things she should not have as a child.

    “Today, she finds it difficult to trust people. There were boys who were exposed to sex at a very young age and grew up having warped views about sexual life and relationships. So the effect of all these can be devastating on the children and the society generally.”

    Perhaps, it’s in a bid to avert such scenarios that have led some working mothers to leave their jobs and stay home with the children.

    Said Solomon: “Yes, there have been such cases. But for a working mother who is already used to going to work, resigning to come to sit at home, could be a trauma too. So it is better that she still finds some kind of work to do around her or which will enable her to also look after the baby. But the truth is, not many female city dwellers nowadays can really take care of babies and little children. Most of them depend on crèche or pre-school, even when they are not working mothers.

    “However, there are women who have resigned because of their children. A case in mind is a child who used to be regularly sick at the crèche. The husband had to tell the wife to resign to come home and look after the child.

    “There was also a case of a family who used to return late from work. The husband gets home at 8pm, while the wife gets home at about 11pm. The arrangement was that I bring the child home at few minutes to 11pm. Sometimes I get there, the woman is not back, when I wait, the husband will be unusually friendly with me. So, I stopped going there but they were not happy. They begged me to continue. But I couldn’t because I didn’t want to break their home.”

  • Family, police fight over ex-militant’s body

    THE controversy surrounding the missing body of an ex-militant leader, Ken Nweigha, is now a subject of dispute between his family and the police in Bayelsa State.

    The ex-militant leader, popularly known in the creeks as Daddy Ken, died in controversial circumstances in police custody in 2011.

    The mother of the deceased, Mrs. Agnes Nweigha, had dragged the police to the Federal High Court, demanding, among others, for the release of her son’s body for a befitting burial.

    The court granted her prayers and mandated the police to unconditionally release the corpse to the family.

    Following the delay by the police to obey the order, the family members, through their lawyer, Osom Mackbere, filed a contempt proceeding against the police.

    It was gathered that the police, out of fear of the contempt suit, wrote a letter to the family requesting it to attend the exhumation and handing over of the body.

    The letter, which was dated October 15, was signed by ACP Assayomo Emienbo.

    The police said the exhumation of the corpse had been fixed for yesterday after due consultation with the Chairman of Yenagoa Local Government Area.

    But it was learnt that the family gave the police conditions to partake in the process.

     The family, in a letter by Mackbere which was dated October 20, demanded an “autopsy, forensic analysis or pathological report on the certainty of the remains before the consequent hand over to avert wrong identity”.

    It urged the police to employ utmost caution in complying with the court’s order, especially as it relates to the remains of the deceased.

    Following the family’s position, the police called off the exhumation.

      The police were said to have told the family that a new date for the exhumation would be communicated to them.

  • Oshoala dedicates award to fans, family and teammates

    Oshoala dedicates award to fans, family and teammates

    For the first time since the 9th African Women Championship started in Windhoek, Asisat Oshoala emerged as the Most Valuable Player of yesterday’s semi final tie between the Super Falcons of Nigeria and the Bayana Bayana of South Africa.

    Before yesterday, skillful Delta Queens forward, Ngozi Okobi was the first Nigerian player to win the award while Rivers Angels left back, Ngozi Ebere won the prize in Falcons’ game against Zambia.

    It appears the lanky Oshoala chose the most auspicious moments to shine as her two goals in yesterday’s semi final game orchestrated the elimination of arch rivals, the Bafana Bafana of South Africa.

    Apart from the goals she scored, Oshoala was a constant threat to the defence line of the South Africans with her pace and skill.The South Africans have their captain and defence strong woman, Janine Van Wyk to thank for checkmating Oshoala after she has done the damage.

    Speaking to SportingLife after the game, the Canada 2014 U-20 Women’s World Cup star dedicated her award to her fans, family members and teammates for their unflinching support since she burst into global limelight last August.

    “I want to dedicate this award specially to my fans, family and my teammates who have shown tremendous support to me all these while even when I’m not playing well.

    “Their prayers and words of encouragement have kept me going in this tournament and I want to say a big thank you to them. I’ll continue to do my best in every match I have the opportunity to play”she added.

  • Family, others hold 10th year for slain pilot Agbeyegbe

    Family, others hold 10th year for slain pilot Agbeyegbe

    Ten years after he was killed by suspected assassins, the family of Captain Jerry Agbeyegbe, Aviation industry players and associates yesterday held a 10th year remembrance anniversary.

    The event was held at the family’s home in Ifako Ijaiye, Ogba, Ikeja, Lagos.

    The late pilot was the General secretary of Nigeria Aviation Safety Initiative (NASI), the aviation safety watchdog.

    He was killed on October 12, 2004 on the Oworonshoki axis of the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway.

    Agbeyegbe was critical of issues affecting air safety in the country.

    He was also a former president of the National Association of Aircraft Pilots and Engineers (NAAPE). Agbeyegbe led a safety campaign in the industry in the late 1990s and 2004.

    The late pilot also led many protests against the liquidation of the former national carrier, the Nigeria Airways Limited and the take-off of Virgin Nigeria Airways.

    He was consistent in his clamour for safer airspace and the need to ensure that navigational aids at the airports were calibrated.

    Agbeyegbe was Nigeria’s foremost airspace system inspection specialist with over 25 years experience spanning corporate and charter, training school, commuter airline, regulatory authority and special application-aerial inspections operations.

  • Family seeks Osun’s intervention in royal crisis

    Family seeks Osun’s intervention in royal crisis

    A ruling house in Iwo, Osun State, Gbaase Royal family, has urged Governor Rauf Aregbesola to allow justice to prevail in the selection of Oluwo.

    A contestant from the ruling house, Prince Adewale Abdulrasheed Akanbi, made the appeal in a letter.

    He asked the governor to study the history of the selection and installation process and ensure justice.

    Akanbi said since the demise of the Oluwo, Oba Asiru Olatubosun Tadese, who died on February 19, 2013, after ruling for 21 years, there had been attempts to manipulate the selection process.

    Akanbi said: “We are appealing to the government of Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola to save Iwo. Your government is of God because God was the one that vindicated you over your enemies. You have been a victim of injustice and fraud. So, please don’t allow that same injustice boat to sail during your tenure.

    “Gbaase ruling house has been deprived for over 450 years and most especially, my own family, which is a direct descendant of Olayilumi, has been marginalised and denied the access to my family rights through fraudulent practices for over 650 years after the untimely death of Parin.

  • Family asks court to set aside consent judgment on father’s estate

    Family asks court to set aside consent judgment on father’s estate

    Children of the late Dr Oladipupo Popoola Sogbetun have approached a Lagos High Court, Igbosere, for an  order to set aside the consent judgment entered by Justice Oluyinka Gbajabiamila on October 5, 2010.

    The children, who alleged fraud in the process of securing the consent judgment,  also asked the court to set aside  steps taken concerning  their late father’s estate.

    Some of them, who are claimant in the suit are , Mrs Bolaji Delano; Mrs Omolara Bamgbose; Mrs Foluso Ishola; Ms Sumbo Sogbetun and Ms Debola Sogbetun.

    Joined as defendants are: Ms Adeola Sogbetun (first defendant); Mr Osokayode Sogbetun (second defendant); Barin Epega&Co (third defendant)  and Probate Registrar (fourthdefendant). They also included anyone acting through defendants, or on their behalf, to deposit in court the title documents of all properties forming part of the estate of late Dr  Sogbetun.

    The consent judgment, which they want the court  to set aside, provided that the estate of the deceased should be wound up and all the properties( excluding those expressly mentioned) sold and proceeds from the said sale shared equally amongst the beneficiaries named in the Will dated August 17, 1979 upon, which Probate NO. PHC/27574 dated November 15,1996, was granted by the High Court of Lagos State.

    The judgment amongst others provided that the joint firms of Clarks & Moore and Yinka Mosanya & Co (counsel to all parties) shall, in relation to the estate, deal with all legal matters in Nigeria and all title documents to the properties be handed over to the Solicitors for safekeeping

    In a motion on notice brought pursuant to Order 39 of the Lagos State Civil Procedure Rules 2012, the claimants/applicants are asking  the court to restrain the defendants/respondents, their privies acting through them or on their behalf, from managing, administering, interfering, dealing or selling/entering into possession of any property forming part of the estate of the deceased pending the determination of the suit.

    The claimants, in the motion filed on August 11, by their counsel, Kennedy Atuenyi of J.D Oloyede’s Law Chambers, want the court to appoint an administrator pendente lite to oversee the estate, pending the determination of the suit.

    They also prayed the court for an order directing the defendants to deposit the title documents of all properties forming part of the estate of the late Dr  Sogbetun in court.

    In an affidavit in support of the motion deposed to by Lateef  Ayeni, a counsel from Oloyede’s chambers, the claimants averred that they, together with the second defendant, had instituted an action against the first defendant, in Suit N0; M/548/07, to seek the court’s intervention and respite to check the wrongful administration and management of their late father’s estate.

    In the earlier suit,  they were represented by the law firm of Clark & Moore as applicants, while  Yinka Mosanya &Co represented  the defendants.

    According to them, both parties were disposed to settling the matter amicably, which resulted  into the purported terms of settlement dated September 20, 2010, prepared by their counsels.

    They, however, contended that the purported  terms, which was filed in court, was at variance with the true intendment of the parties and therefore, alleged it to be a fraud.

    The terms of settlement, according to them, was signed by the claimants’ counsel in that suit without their authorisations and that both parties were not privy to the said terms before the same was filed on their behalf.

    They further contended that the said  terms of settlement was moved to be entered as judgment in that suit by the parties’ counsel without the instruction and/or consent of the claimants,

    They also contended that  the said  terms of settlement was entered as the judgment of the court on October 5, 2010.

    They averred that despite several admonitions by the claimants to the third defendants (Barin Epega &Co) not to go ahead with the sale of the properties comprising the estate of their late father, the third defendant went on with the sale of the properties and has in fact, sold one of the properties at Itire with the collusion of first and second defendants regardless of the claimants herein’s objection to same.

    They, therefore, want a declaration that the consent judgment entered pursuant to the aforesaid  terms of settlement on October 5,2010 by Justice Gbajabiamila in the aforesaid suit No. M/548/07 is null, void and of no effect whatsoever, because it was obtained or procured fraudlently.

    They further want an order of perpetual injunction, amongst others, to restrain the defendants and/or anyone acting through them or on their behalf from managing, administering, interfering, dealing in and/or selling any property, forming part of the estate of late Dr Oladipupo Popoola Sogbetun and a penalty of N1 million against the first, second and third defendants. Also, in a letter to the third defendant, Barin Epega and  Company by the claimants’ counsel,  the law firm was asked to refrain from any further attempt at selling or dealing in properties comprised in the estate pending the outcome of proceedings taking out to nullify the consent judgment.

    The law firm, in its reply dated October 29, 2013, said the facts culminating in the consent judgment as well as an examination of the case filed belied the facts raised by the claimants that  the winding up of the Estate was a germane trust of their instruction to counsel.