Tag: Fear

  • Fear of new polls shift rises

    Fear of new polls shift rises

    APC seeks sanction for PDP leaders

    NGOs rise for Jegaa

    There are fears that the March 28 and April 11 elections may be shifted.

    The elections were originally slated for February 14 and 28. They were shifted because the Service Chiefs told the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) that they could not guarantee security. They asked for six weeks to defeat the Boko Haram insurgents troubling the Northeast.

    “The same reason is likely to be advanced in making a case for another postponement,” a source said last night.

    The Service Chiefs, The Nation learnt, will tender the military’s recent gains in the war against Boko Haram to make the case for another postponement.

    The military says it has made much progress in the anti-terrorism war, retaking towns captured by the terrorists and making arrests.

    But, the popular thinking, particularly  in the camp of the opposition, is that another shift will allow the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to perfect its strategies to stay put in office by manipulating the elections.

    The strategies include:

    •the sudden push for the removal of INEC Chairman Prof. Attahiru Jega and;

    •the campaign against the use of the Permanent Voter Card (PVC) and the Card Reader – two key elements of a fraud–free election, according to INEC.

    The PDP insists that many would-be voters are yet to get their cards. Besides, the party says the Card Reader may go faulty.

    Almost 80% of would-be voters have got their cards. INEC says there are spare card readers, should some suddenly go faulty.

    Some civil society organisations have stepped up their campaign that the elections should hold as scheduled.

    The opposition All Progressives Congress (APC) yesterday said there were fears that another postponement was in the smithy.

    Nigerians United for Democracy (NUD) held a rally in Lagos on Saturday to insist on the sanctity of the election dates and the guarantee of INEC’s independence and the security of its chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega’s tenure.

    The group also expressed their rejection of military rule or any Interim Government in whatever form.

    The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) and a group of civil society Organisations under the aegis of the Nigeria Civil Society Situation Room (Situation Room) urged the Federal Government and other stakeholders to ensure that the elections hold as rescheduled.

    They frowned at moves by some individuals to discredit the leadership of the National Electoral Commission (INEC) and urged the government to ensure the protection of the commission’s “independence, impartiality and credibility.”

    They said the measures were required in “protecting and defending the credibility of the electoral system.”

    This was part of conclusions by both bodies after a meeting to examine the “Pre-Election Report and Advisory on Violence in Nigeria’s 2015 General Elections,” issued by the NHRC as a measure to forestall election-related violence, protect human rights and bring accountability to bear for violations of human rights during the general elections.

    NHRC and the CSOs stressed the need for the “protection of the independence, impartiality and credibility of the INEC as the body constitutionally entrusted with responsibility for   organising elections in Nigeria.”

    They expressed their commitment to ensuring the prevention and mitigation of violence, including the need to ensure   the existence of a credible capability to address election-related violence and hate speech.

    In a statement jointly signed by the Chairman, NHRC, Chidi Odinkalu and Head, the Situation Room, Clement Nwankwo, both bodies have agreed to establish a joint Technical Working Group to work together in developing clear Rules of Engagement together with protocols for monitoring compliance by security agencies (including the police, military, internal security or para-military units) that may be deployed for election duties in 2015 General elections. The Working Group shall report not later than the 10 March 2015.

    “The Situation Room and the NHRC called for politicians from across the political divide to close ranks in protecting and defending the credibility of the electoral system.”

    The APC said the PDP was scheming to shift the elections because it planned to perfect a rigging plan. It called for sanctions against the party’s leaders, should the elections be moved.

     

  • The fear of Buhari…

    Their wish was that he would not emerge as his party’s candidate in the February 14 presidential election. But when the All Progressives Congress (APC) picked Gen Muhammadu Buhari as its standard bearer, the bottom fell off the plan of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and its supporters. Since Buhari picked his party’s ticket in a keenly contested primary in Lagos last December 10, they have been running from pillar to post to run him down.

    Rather than the trouble envisaged by PDP, APC has been waxing stronger and stronger since the primary. The image of its candidate has also been soaring.

    What is the magic that has made Buhari a phenomenon all over the country today? Where two or more are gathered the topic is usually the forthcoming election. And the discussions normally end with this poser: ‘’who will you vote for?’’. Even though Buhari and PDP’s President Goodluck Jonathan are not the only ones contesting the February 14 election, Nigerians have reduced it to a contest between the duo. Surely, to all intents and purposes, it is going to be a two-man race.

    So, when people ask: ‘’who will you vote for?’’ they accompany the question with: ‘’Buhari or Jonathan?’’ In most instances, you find people answering: ‘’Buhari”. The APC candidate has become larger than life. Even little children, who are not eligible to vote, have joined in asking eligible voters to ‘’vote for Buhari’’.

    What do you make of the frontpage photograph in the Sun of Tuesday, where Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola carried a small boy to his bosom for shouting ‘’APC, Sai Buhari’’ during a rally in the town of Apomu? Such little boys can be seen in rallies across the country, whether held by APC or PDP, singing the praise of Buhari. If children, men and women are this crazy about Buhari doesn’t that say something about the presidential election, holding nine days from today?

    I have heard some people say unequivocally that Buhari will win, if the election is free and fair. Our people are afraid that their votes may not count, that is why they add the caveat, if the election is free and fair. They believe that the government is desperate to remain in power and would do anything to win the forthcoming elections, beginning with that of the president on February 14. Though the president has given us his word that the elections will be free and fair, many do not believe him. To them, it is dangerous to take the president’s statement at face value; so, they are asking Nigerians to remain vigilant so that their votes will count at the end of the day.

    If the elections are going to be free and fair, they posit, this must be seen in the way the president’s supporters are going about campaigning for him. You do not drum support for your candidate by beating the drums of war. You do not root for your candidate by maligning his arch opponent. You do not campaign for your candidate by tearing down some of the institutions of state as the PDP Presidential Campaign Organisation tried to do over Buhari’s School Certificate result. Of course, back then,  Buhari could not have joined the army in 1961 without the prerequisite qualification, which is the school certificate.

    The army admitted that Buhari had the certificate, but added rather shamefully  that it could not be traced in its records.  Does that mean that Buhari’s school certificate which he tendered along with other documents on joining the army is missing? According to former Director of Army Public Relations Brig Gen Olajide Laleye, ‘’records available indicate that Major General Muhammadu Buhari applied to join the military as a Form Six student of the Provincial Secondary School, Katsina, on October 18, 1961…the entry made on NA Form 199A at the point of documentation after commission as an officer indicated that the former Head of State obtained the West African School Certificate in 1961 with credits in relevant subjects.’’

    If this entry was made in Buhari’s form, it follows that he must have submitted his school certificate to authenticate his claim. Moreover, the Selection Board would  have asked for the original, at least, for what we today call ‘’sighting’’ and copies kept in his file. Those copies are what the army is today telling us are missing. We do not want to join issues with the military over this matter, especially regarding the aspect of  its record keeping, which has given some people in PDP the munition with which to attack Buhari, its former Commander-in-Chief.

    These PDP soldiers went haywire in their bid to paint Buhari black. They claimed that  Buhari is not qualified to stand for election because the army could not produce his result. How could the army produce his result when it was not the examining body?  From the outset, these henchmen made it known that they won’t spare Buhari even when their principal, the president, had promised issues-based campaign.

    Unfortunately, the presi
    dent’s agents are not inter
    ested in issues; they are more interested in disparaging Buhari. But the more they do that the more they draw support for the general from the mass of the people. Certificate or not, they say, it is ‘Sai Buhari’. This is what the president’s men want to stop at all cost. Yet, the harder they try, the harder they fall. The controversy over Buhari’s certificate has been laid to rest with the release of his result by his alma mater some two weeks ago. Yet, the PDP is  not satisfied.

    In a saner society, the certificate issue would have been dead and buried by now. But we are dealing with people with no moral scruples. Rather than bury their heads in shame and apologise to Buhari, they have resolved to feast on a dead issue. To them, the certificate saga remains a live issue; that is why they have the audacity to say it was forged. With its bogus claim, PDP is  not calling to question Buhari’s reputation, but is challenging the integrity of the Katsina school and Cambridge University.

    PDP and its men do not know the meaning of the word, integrity. This is why they are going about telling barefaced lies. To give their lies a veneer of truth, they tampered with the certificate to meet their ulterior motive.  If they could do this, what will they not do to win the election?

    They claimed that Buhari forged his certificate. Who is a forger in this case? What do you call those who tampered with a document sent from a school? Artful forgers? Should we still be talking of this certificate or their plans for the country, if they have any? Since they have nothing to offer, they have found it difficult to talk about issues.

  • How I overcame my initial  FEAR over my husband’s choice  as Buhari’s running mate—Osinbajo’s wife Dolapo

    How I overcame my initial FEAR over my husband’s choice as Buhari’s running mate—Osinbajo’s wife Dolapo

    Wife of the vice presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Mrs. Dolapo Osinbajo, is the founder of Women’s Helping Hands, a non-governmental organisation passionate about empowering battered women and victims of sexual abuses.  She spoke with SUNDAY OGUNTOLA on her husband’s aspiration, her family life and the Nigeria of her dream. Excerpts:

    What was your initial reaction when you heard that your husband was going to be nominated as All Progressives Congress (APC) vice presidential candidate?

    My initial reaction was that of apprehension.

    Why?

    Because I knew I would have to share him with others, I mean political associates, official functions and all the likes. And I would rather have him to myself alone. So, that was my initial reaction.

    So, how were you able to overcome that?

    I guess I realised that the handwriting was always on the wall; that this was what he is being prepared for. If you look at what he has done over the years, you will realise that the Lord was preparing him for a time like that. I realised and remembered that. That put my fears aside and I told myself I had to allow the Lord do what He wants to do with him.

    I shouldn’t be selfish but release him to accomplish for Nigeria what God has been putting in his heart. His works, like I said, over the years and his experiences in public life have all pointed to the fact that he is a man for a season like this.

    So, are you comfortable so far?

    With what?

    With how the campaigns have gone so far and how the APC is moving on?

    Comfortable is not a word you can use at this point, considering what the nation is right now. But in terms of the campaign, yes, things are being done in a noble way. Things are different from what they used to be in the past. I believe that things will take a turn for the best for this nation.

    Do you believe he is up to the task ahead?

    I don’t think I am in the best position to answer that (laughter). But I think he is the best man in the whole world. One thing I can say is that we have been married for the past 25 years and every day, I get to respect him the more. He is very kind and lovely. I have never met a man more caring than he is. He is the most caring person I have met.

    There are things Nigerians don’t know about him that only you can tell us about. What are some of these things?

    Well, I will just say he is a lovely and kind man. He loves to a fault. He cares a lot. His life is all about caring and giving. When he was Attorney-General of Lagos, he proved that over and over again. Our church currently runs two free schools through his initiatives because we are interested in people.

    One has run for a year and the other one just started. In the school, there is no tuition, registration or any fee. They are entirely free. They don’t pay for books, stationeries, uniforms or feeding. One of the schools is in Obanikoro, while the other is in Okota in Lagos.

    We also run a soup kitchen in the church that we run now and the one we ran before. The soup kitchen provides food for the students every day. No child gets to the schools except he or she is poor. So, these are some of the many things he does for people to show his love.

    Won’t these stop if he gets elected as Vice President?

    Not at all. If you know my husband, he is a thorough and meticulous person. He doesn’t get into something until he has figured everything out. What will happen is that he would be able to do more as a Vice President on a larger scale.

    The ones that he is going now, he has structures in place to handle them whether he is around or not. They are not just about him because other members of the church contribute. He has people everywhere running stuff that are from his heart.

    I believe if he is elected, he will have more opportunities and platform to do much more for the people.

    As a very private woman, how are you preparing for life as a public figure?

    Honestly, I can’t tell. There is nothing I am doing or intend to do. I just trust God for grace. I am in His hands and I believe He won’t take me there and leave me stranded. I am just in His hands for whatever He wants to do with me.

    Your book, They call me Mama, details your activities with street urchins in Lagos Island. What on earth was driving you to have anything to do with such people?

    (Pauses) I don’t even know how to answer that question. That was just my life at that time. That was my own expression at that time. I am really thrilled I could reach those people in many parts of Lagos. When we started, they started introducing us to their friends in other parts of Lagos.

    They were really my family members at that time and for me, Under Bridge was the safest place in Lagos. I felt so safe there that you couldn’t just move any close to me once I was there. The boys loved me so much they wouldn’t allow even a fly come close to me. For me, it was the safest place in Lagos.

     Do you still get to see or meet some of those boys?

    Of course, I do. For the book presentation, I asked two of them to come so that people could see what we have done. One of them just got married in Benin and introduced his girlfriend to me before they married. He is now such a gentleman. He couldn’t even talk the way he used to before. The other one we took under the bridge at 11. Today, he has graduated on scholarship. We had many of such transformation stories coming from these boys. They were good guys who only found themselves in situations they couldn’t help and I am glad God used us to lift them up.

    When they finally realised who you are, how did they feel?

    Well, they just knew I was their mama, someone who cares so much about them. They didn’t know my background or husband’s status in the society. I was only giving them lunch, releasing them from police stations and visiting them in prisons.

    So, I was just someone who loved them. Then, one day, one of them came across a newspaper cutting of a picture we took during the presentation of a book written in my husband’s honour when he left as Attorney-General. The function was at Muson Centre. So, one of them saw the picture and they couldn’t get to believe it was me.

    That Sunday, they showed me the newspaper and wanted to know if it was me. I had to persuade them that yes it was me but it has not changed anything. Immediately, they started feeling uncomfortable and I assured them that I care for them, regardless of the differences in our status. Until then, they just called and saw me as mama, a church pastor that they could talk to and run to with any challenge or trouble.

    Supposing you become the First Lady to the Vice President, what new initiatives will you bring to the office?

    There is no office of First Lady to the Vice President.

    But you will be playing some roles, won’t you?

    The only role I will play is to look after my family, especially my husband, so that he can concentrate and do the works committed to him. That, to me, is the only assignment expected of me. There is nothing more. As long as I can help my husband to do a good job for the nation as a mother and wife, I am done.

    What is happening to your legal practice?

    I studied law but never practised. Studying law helped me to understand my husband’s stories and cases when he returns home.

    How can you convince an ordinary, average woman out there that your husband is deserving of her vote and those of her family members?

    All I will just say is that he won’t let them down. He is a good, caring man. If he could take care of me well at a personal level, he will look after women more than well if he is elected.

    If he succeeds in becoming Vice President, what do you imagine will happen to Nigeria?

    I sincerely believe there will be a great turnaround. He will do Nigeria and Nigerians good. He will change things and will never cheat or shortchange them.

    Do you believe he will win this election?

    I believe so with all of my heart.

    Not minding he is contesting against the incumbents?

    Yes, not minding that. I believe change is coming and Nigerians will witness it through the APC.

    How is your typical, average day like lately?

    I don’t have an average day because what I want to do determines how the day runs. I have now two shelters for battered women and victims of sexual abuses. One is on the Island and the other on the Mainland.

    It is a non-governmental organisation called Women’s Helping Hands and we get to hear heart-breaking stories. One is that of a woman whose husband held down and battered with hot iron. She was so scary when we saw her.

  • The growing fear of digital disasters

    The growing fear of digital disasters

    From Internet of Things (IoT), the world is graduating to Internet of Everything (IoE). The world has become a global village, with people reaching any part at the click of a button. But these benefits pale into insignificance because of the risk of digital disasters, LUCAS AJANAKU reports.

    The world has become a global village courtesy of the internet, which has bridged the gulf that existed in the past. Aside sending electronic mails (e-mails), it is now possible to make video calls on Facebook while Skype is also available for people to make internet calls.

    To underscore the boom in the industry, there are now the Internet of Things (IoT) and the Internet of Everything (IoE).

    A free online knowledge platform, Wikipaedia, defines IoT as “the interconnection of uniquely identifiable embedded computing devices within the existing Internet infrastructure. Typically, IoT is expected to offer advanced connectivity of devices, systems, and services that go beyond machine-to-machine communications (M2M) and covers a variety of protocols, domains, and applications. The interconnection of these embedded devices (including smart objects), is expected to usher in automation in nearly all fields, while also enabling advanced applications like a Smart Grid.

    “Things, in the IoT, can refer to a wide variety of devices such as heart monitoring implants, biochip transponders on farm animals, automobiles with built-in sensors, or field operation devices that assist fire-fighters in search and rescue. Current market examples include smart thermostat systems and washer/dryers that utilise WiFi for remote monitoring.”

    According to Gartner, there will be nearly 26 billion devices on the IoT by 2020 while ABI Research estimates that more than 30 billion devices will be wirelessly connected to the IoT by 2020. A recent survey  done by Pew Research Internet Project, a large majority of the technology experts and engaged Internet users who responded—83 per cent—agreed with the notion that the Internet/Cloud of Things, embedded and wearable computing (and the corresponding dynamic systems  will have widespread and beneficial effects by 2025. Thus, it is clear that the IoT will consist of a very large number of devices being connected to the internet.

    Integration with the Internet implies that devices will utilise an internet protocol (IP) address as a unique identifier. However, due to the limited address space of IPv4 (which allows for 4.3 billion unique addresses), objects in the IoT will have to use IPv6 to accommodate the extremely large address space required.

    According to United States (U.S) technology giant, Cisco Systems Incorporated, the IoE is the “bringing together of people, process, data, and things to make network connections more relevant and valuable than ever before-turning information into actions that create new capabilities, richer experiences, and unprecedented economic opportunity for businesses, individuals, and countries.”

    Cisco said in nearly all industries, including retail, an accelerating innovation curve is reshaping the business landscape. It argued that in this environment, barriers to market entry are falling, customers are demanding new ways of interacting, and margins are compressing.

    Cisco economic analysis and research indicated that this value would be driven by the IoE — the networked connection of people, process, data, and things. Cisco predicted that $14.4 trillion of value (net profits) would be at stake globally for private-sector companies over the next decade, based on their ability to harness IoE

    However, what will determine how the country benefits from these enormous benefits IoT and IoE bring to the individuals and corporate bodies is how far the authorities are able to secure the internet. Director, Public Affairs at the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), Tony Ojobo said the internet remained an unregulated public platform.

    Chief Executive Officer, Disc Communication Limited, Bayo Banjo said cases of banks’ security being breached are just a tip of the iceberg. According to him, what is happening now that is being termed cyber crimes are not cyber crimes, but “cyber-assisted crimes” because when the real cyber crimes come, the effects will be disastrous to the nation. Banjo, who is the President, Nigeria Internet Group (NIG), urged the government to take urgent steps to address the situation. He said hackers are not old men, but young boys who are adventurous and willing to explore.

    Chief Executive Officer, Teledon Group, Dr Emmanuel Ekuwem, agreed no less with Banjo. According to him, the threats on the cyber space are real. He said banks, telcos, cards are increasingly coming under attacks. He said the air traffic controller at the nation’s airport could also be breached, warning that such a development will unleash colossal damage on the nation.

    President, Association of Telecoms Companies of Nigeria (ALTON), Lanre Ajayi, said wherever and whenever there are economic and social activities, threats are bound to be lurking in the corner. He said the cyberspace has opened up a huge vista of business opportunities while social websites such as Facebook, WhatsApp and others have strengthened social bonds among people without borders. He identified cybercrimes to include but not limited to cyber espionage, cyber terrorism, child online abuse and cyber exploitation.

    This year’s Zurich Cyber Risk Report, created in collaboration with the international think-tank, Atlantic Council, warned that ‘cyber-risk management professionals need to look beyond their internal information technology safeguards to interconnected risks, which can build up relating to counterparties, outsourced suppliers, supply chains, disruptive technologies, upstream infrastructure and external shocks.

    It added that a ‘build-up in these risks could create a failure on a similar scale to the 2008 financial crisis. Such interconnected risks are compounded when a company outsources the management of its servers, information technology and cyber security to focus on its core activities. Little information may be known about the third party’s information security or business continuity safeguards and it may also in turn outsource activities to other companies.’

    Group Chief Risk Officer & Regional Chairman Europe, Zurich Insurance Group, Axel Lehmann, wrote: “The internet is the most complex system humanity has ever devised. Although it has been incredibly resilient for the past few decades, the risk is that the complexity, which has made cyberspace relatively risk-free can – and likely will – backfire.

    “Organisations are unknowingly exposed to risks outside their organisations, having outsourced, interconnected or exposed themselves to an increasingly complex and unknowable web of networks.

    “Few people truly understand their own computers or the internet, or the cloud to which they connect, just as few truly understood the financial system as a whole or the parts to which they are most directly exposed.”

     

    Interconnectedness, recipe for disaster

     

    Zurich noted in its report that the internet is the most complex system humanity has ever devised – “and our track record of successfully managing complex systems is far from perfect.

    “The internet is highly interconnected and tightly coupled with society, meaning that (as in other such systems) a small failure or series of them in one place can cascade, producing an outsized impact elsewhere,” the report noted.

    Movement of data into the cloud is now the vogue with data centres springing up everywhere. While some have servers in the country, others have offshore. Should a major cloud service crash or be compromised, the effects of such a failure would cascade to all systems and businesses dependent on it everywhere.

    Though these threats are mostly targeted at businesses and governments, these days, even the most mundane of tasks get coupled and linked to the internet. Thus, the growing complexity of the networks puts the entire system at greater risk of attack.

    Zurich said: “On the internet, it has been easier to attack than defend for decades. The original architecture of the internet was founded on trust, not security – software is still poorly written and secured, and the system is so complex that it is difficult to defend. Systems in which one set or participants have asymmetric advantages, year after year and decade after decade, must hit a tipping point when there are more predators than prey.”

    Ajayi identified that phishing (identity theft), spamming, denial of services (DoS) and viral attacks are now real. Huge mails are now sent to people’s servers the weight of which disallows useful mails to get to its destination, leading to DoS.

    The report noted that in time past, cyber attacks and incidents online have only really broken “things made of silicon” and impacted networks in a digital sense. However, this will not always be the case.

    “As the internet connects increasingly with real life, in places like the smart grid interconnection with the electrical power infrastructure… cyber incidents will break things made not of silicon, but of concrete and steel.”

     

    Way forward

     

    Analysts say the passage into law of the cyber security bills pending in the National Assembly is one way to wriggle out of the quagmire. Former Director-General, National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA) Prof Cleopas Angaye, said the quick passage of the cyber security bills pending before the National Assembly into law and training of lawyers and judges about the new crime may help the situation.

    Executive Vice Chairman, NCC, Dr Eugene Juwah says the war against cyber crooks cannot be fought on a stand-alone basis since internet is a borderless enabler. He urged global collaboration, especially in the area of cross border harmonisation of laws and regulations.

    Another general consensus among stakeholders is the need to create awareness about the inherent dangers lurking in the internet. Then registration of all information technology (IT) professionals in the country will assist. Other recommendations included embedding security in the software to reduce the rate of vulnerability; insurance should also be considered.

    Zurich, however, recommended that risk managers, regulators, and organisations with system-wide responsibility need to focus more on resilience and agility rather than simply prevention.

    “In an increasingly interconnected world, risks can strike quickly and from any direction – so, too, is it equally critical that those affected are able to respond quickly to ride out the shocks,” the group said.

  • Buhari and fear of change

    SIR: Of the chunk of problems facing Nigeria today, corruption and bad leadership, save the security crisis, stand out. In a sane society, and I believe Nigeria is one, solutions will be sought and men of strong and incorruptible characters drafted to champion the fight against economic and moral indiscipline.

    It has become clear that the little or staged attempts to tackle corruption have failed woefully and that there is the need for a shining example of a disciplined and incorruptible figure in the most coveted office of the presidency. If there is a general agreement among Nigerians, it is that General Muhammadu Buhari stands for discipline and principle. Of all the adjectives used to describe him, incorruptible and disciplined always stick to him.

    This should be easy then, isn’t it? The voters should simply troop out and try to change the nation’s fortunes by voting for a corrupt free Nigeria. But that has failed to happen, on three occasions. The status quo was maintained and now we are here.

    The reason for the failure of the retired general to secure the electorate’s mandate, is that we (most of us at least) are afraid of change. Change would mean that corrupt leaders will be apprehended and monies will be recovered. Change would mean that oil theft and bunkering would be frowned upon. Change would also mean a whole lot of other things that a lot of Nigerians are used to, and seemed normal, but would have to drop.

    One other reason why the mass sympathy for General Buhari and the yearning for change have failed to convert into votes is that we are afraid of what would become of our lives if this change materializes.

     

    • Sulaiman Aliyu

    Gwagwalada, Abuja

  • When fear of Ebola is not beginning of wisdom

    When fear of Ebola is not beginning of wisdom

    After surviving the deadly Ebola Virus, many would have expected British nurse William Pooley to stay away from Sierra Leone where he contracted the disease. But, the nurse is not afraid, as he has returned to the Ebola-stricken country to help fight it

    He should be afraid. But fear seems to have no slot in his heart. At the heart of his boldness appears to be the belief that once you have been cured of Ebola, you are unlikely to have it again.

    This immunity and the love of the people of Sierra Leone is making British nurse William Pooley return to the country where he was hurriedly flown out after contracting the deadly virus.

    Pooley is now back in the country where he caught the deadly virus as he prepares to rejoin efforts to tackle the epidemic.

    Pooley said he was “delighted” to return to Sierra Leone as he attempts to prevent “as many unnecessary deaths as possible” from the disease.

    The 29-year-old is due to arrive in the capital Freetown tonight before he resumes work tomorrow in an Ebola isolation unit run by UK medical staff, King’s Health Partners said.

    He became the first confirmed Briton to contract Ebola and was flown back to the UK in August. He was treated at the Royal Free Hospital in London.

    Pooley said: “I am delighted to be returning to Sierra Leone to join the King’s Health Partners team. I would like to once again thank the team at the Royal Free Hospital and the RAF who provided me with such excellent treatment and support.

    “But the real emergency is in West Africa, and the teams out there need all the support we can give them.

    “I am now looking forward to getting back out there and doing all I can to prevent as many unnecessary deaths as possible.”

    Pooley will be working in the isolation unit at Connaught Hospital where he will train local staff and help to set up new isolation units, after previously treating patients in a government hospital in Kenema.

    He will join the King’s Health Partners team, a partnership between King’s College London and three NHS trusts – Guy’s and St Thomas’, King’s College Hospital and South London and Maudsley.

    Dr Oliver Johnson, programme director for the King’s Sierra Leone Partnership, said: “It is fantastic that Will has chosen to join our small team here at Connaught Hospital.

    “The situation here in Freetown is getting worse by the day and so Will’s experience and commitment will be vital as we do everything we can to stem the flow of cases.

    “The best way of stopping Ebola spreading even further is to fight it at its source and I look forward to working with Will to do just that.”

    Last week, Pooley said he was preparing to return to West Africa to help deal with the Ebola epidemic because it is “something I need to do”.

    Speaking in Whitehall in central London, he said he knew his family and friends would be worried but they should be reassured by his potential immunity to the virus.

    “There is still a lot of work to do out there and I am in the same or better position than when I chose to go out before,” Mr Pooley said.

    “I know my mum and dad are worried but they support me because they know this is something I have to do.

    “My potential immunity is very reassuring for them, or at least it should be, and I will be returning in a more organised fashion than when I was out there originally.”

    Last month Mr Pooley, from Eyke in Suffolk, reportedly flew to the US to undergo a blood transfusion to help an American being treated for the virus.

    More than 4,500 people have died from Ebola, mainly in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.

    Britain’s latest Ebola aid flight carrying vital medical supplies landed in Freetown yesterday, International Development Secretary Justine Greening said.

    It was the UK’s sixth aid flight and carried almost £900,000 worth of medical equipment needed for the 92 bed treatment facility in Kerry Town, including blood banks, centrifuges and protective equipment such as goggles and gloves.

    Mr Pooley was treated with the experimental drug ZMapp and left hospital on September 3 after making a full recovery.

    The UK, which has committed £125 million to tackling Ebola, has put pressure on other wealthy countries to do more to combat the spread of the virus.

    The Prime Minister has written to European Union leaders calling for them to double their contribution to one billion euro (£800 million).

    Ms Greening said: “As part of Britain’s £125 million response we are building six treatment centres across Sierra Leone which are vital to controlling and defeating the Ebola outbreak.

    “We will provide direct care for up to 8,800 patients over six months and this latest flight has delivered the kit needed to provide treatment for Ebola victims.

    “Britain is committed to helping Sierra Leone defeat this terrible disease and we are calling on the international community to ramp up its efforts.”

    Meanwhile, Ms Greening told Sky News’ Murnaghan programme that the UK was “well prepared” for the “handful” of cases experts had predicted were likely to occur in the country.

    “The risk to the UK remains low,” she said. “In the meantime the most effective thing we can do is the work that we are doing with Sierra Leone to help them combat Ebola there.”

    Shadow international development secretary Jim Murphy said the UK was “doing well” in the scale of its response but other countries had to do their bit.

    He told the Murnaghan programme: “The fact is the founder of Facebook Mark Zuckerberg has given many more times the donations than countries like Italy. Ikea, the furniture warehouse, has given more or about the same as Italy.

    “So there are countries that aren’t doing enough and we have to say that publicly and we have to try and persuade them. But if countries like Italy won’t do their bit we have also got to embarrass them.”

    His return to West Africa coincided with the U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel order for the creation of a 30-member expeditionary medical support team to be able to provide emergency help in the event of an Ebola crisis in the United States.

    A Pentagon spokesman said  yesterday the team of five doctors, 20 nurses and five trainers could respond on short notice to help civilian medical professionals. A statement from Rear Admiral John Kirby said.

    Three cases of Ebola have been diagnosed in the United States, prompting widespread concern about the potential spread of the virus. A Liberian man fell ill while on a trip to Dallas, Texas, and died on Oct. 8. Two nurses who treated him contracted the disease.

    Kirby called the team “an added, prudent measure to ensure our nation is ready to respond quickly, effectively and safely in the event of additional Ebola cases.” He said it would consist of critical care nurses, doctors trained in infectious diseases and trainers in infectious disease protocols.

    “They will not be sent to West Africa or elsewhere overseas and will be called upon domestically only if deemed prudent by our public health professionals,” the statement said.

    The team is drawn from across the military services include 20 critical care nurses, five doctors trained in infectious diseases and five trainers in infectious disease protocols.

    The team will go to Fort Sam Houston in Texas for training in infection control and special protective equipment. Training is expected to start within the next week.

    Kirby said the team won’t be sent to West Africa or elsewhere overseas. He said members would be called up for service in the U.S. only if needed by public health officials.

  • Bomb:  PDP desperate to create fear, says Edo

    Bomb: PDP desperate to create fear, says Edo

    •Ize-Iyamu: governor to blame   

    Edo State has described the claim of a bomb attack in Benin, the state capital, and subsequent statement credited to a politician, Pastor Osagie Ize-Iyamu, as another phase of alleged desperation of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to causea crisis.

    The government said it was intended to spread falsehood and sow fear in the minds of the people to simulate a crisis.

    Commissioner for information & Orientation Louis Odion said this in a statement yesterday after Ize-Iyamu spoke to reporters in Benin, blaming Governor Adams Oshiomhole for the explosion of an improvised explosive device (IED) at a mini-estate belonging to him.

    The explosion reportedly occurred at about 10:30pm on Saturday night at the estate located on Dennis Osadebey Avenue in the state capital, which also houses Shalom Dental Clinic, being operated by Ize-Iyamu’s wife.

    But Odion said no sooner had the purported “bomb attack” been reported by an online medium with further claim of bomb explosion within Government House, whenIze-Iyamu quickly called the media briefing to accuse the governor as the explosion’s mastermind.

    The commissioner noted that the report of a bomb explosion at the Government House was “patently false”, adding that “by Ize-Iyamu’s account and his haste to accuse Comrade Oshiomhole of culpability for a supposed crime yet to be investigated, we are persuaded to believe he is merely acting out a script”.

    The statement said it was “laughable that any sane man” would be “targeting an obscure clinic that is, at best, now moribund.”

    It also reads: “Mr. Ize-Iyamu’s wild allegation fits into PDP’s jaded style of stage-managing assaults on its agents to be used as pretext by its thugs to attack officials of Edo State Government and agents of the APC.

    “Again, Mr. Ize-Iyamu’s reference to cultists being engaged against PDP is ironic and laughable. Even as President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Comrade Oshiomhole was known for his non-violence philosophy. On the contrary, Edo people know those with the history of cultism and violence dating back to their school days.

    “Against the backdrop of this latest purported attack on his wife’s clinic, which we believe was stage-managed, we wish to alert the police to put Pastor Ize-Iyamu and his co-travellers under close watch as allegations of this nature had always been the prelude to staging an attack on APC members in the past.

    “Again, we call on the PDP to look within its ranks to get to the root of the attack on a former member of the Edo State House of Assembly, Mr. Rasaq Momoh.  We also call on the police to thoroughly probe top leaders of the PDP for the attack on the Edo State Legislative Quarters penultimate Saturday.”

    Ize-Iyamu, while briefing reporters on the explosion, alleged that Oshiomhole had consistently threatened him ever since he dumped the APC for the PDP.

    “This is a clinic built by my wife. Oshiomhole cannot destroy my property. I received a call from one of the occupants of the house at about 10:45 yesterday (Saturday) that an explosive had been detonated at the compound. I quickly rushed there and I actually found out that a bomb was detonated.

    “The security agencies saw the wires and batteries used across the road as well as the footprints of the people. The target obviously was my wife’s clinic, but the bomb detonated at the gate house. To God be the glory, the security had strolled to parade the compound when they bombed the gate house.

    “I want to say that I am not too surprise at what happened, though the dimension is shocking. I categorically say that I hold the governor of Edo State, Adams Oshiomhole, responsible for what has happened.”

     Also, the state Police Command confirmed yesterday that an improvised explosive device (IED) was responsible for the explosion at the estate.

    Deputy Public Relations Officer, Ejiroro Ahwara, in a statement, said the IED was made up of two tiger batteries of 1.5 volt each connected to a long wire, adding that it was thrown into the estate from the outside.

    It said the explosion only affected the surrounding ceiling boards at the estate security post and part of the main gate.

    He said some suspects have been arrested while the IED has been recovered by the bomb disposal unit for analysis.

  • Fear grips community over cultists’ clashes

    Residents of the Toll Gate area of Mushin, Lagos State, moved about with measured steps and bated breath yesterday. Obviously, they were unsure of when next they would hear sporadic shootings by their enemies within – cultists of various nomenclatures that had for long locked horns in supremacy tussle.

    The tranquility of the area was rudely terminated again last Tuesday when during the clash by the rival cults from Fadeyi and Mushin areas, a youth was shot dead on the neighbouring Railway Line.

    The day before, a 32-year-old young man, who was simply identified as Tunde, was reportedly beheaded by some cultists who stormed the place in large numbers. They were said to have taken away the victim’s head.

    A resident who spoke with this reporter early yesterday on Okanlawon Lane, said. “We no longer enjoy sound sleep here. Even during the day, everyone is in fear because these cultists have become terrorists here. We don’t know where to run to because the presence of policemen at the Toll Gate near us here means nothing to them.

    “The killing of last Tuesday was the fourth in three days. The cultists came in large numbers. We were told that they were joined by others from Somolu, Bariga and Ebute Metta. They came in at night when everyone was in deep sleep and got the boy (Tunde). I hid myself and my only son under my bed.”

    When asked about why they were at war, the resident said: “What we learnt was that they came on a reprisal over the arrest of a leader of one of their gangs called Toba following a violent class that rocked the area over three months ago. As things are, we can only appeal to Governor Babatunde Fashola to work with the police to secure this area because we are in deep trouble.”

    A pepper seller on the rail line was asked why she was yet to display it by 10.45 am yesterday. Palpable fear was all over her as she replied: “My son, one has to look well here now since these bad boys won’t stop fighting. Did you not hear that they beheaded two young men last week? Since we are not sure of when next they will come with their trouble, we must be watchful. In fact, I’m contemplating staying at home for some time now because I cherish my life.”

    A suspected worker at the Toll Gate who spoke with The Nation said human traffic across the rail line to and from Mushin had thinned down because of the notoriety of the area.

    “You can observe that the whole place appears desolate. If you were familiar with this area, it used to be busy with various activities. Even beggars are afraid to do their “business” here now as they too don’t want to die,” she said.

    Though she said policemen attached to nearby Alakara Police Station had joined hands with those at the Toll Gate to keep watch over the neighbourhood, she maintained that more must be done by the authorities to protect lives and property in the area because of the dangerous weapons being used by the hoodlums.

    Sources from the state police command hinted yesterday that the incessant clashes in the area were being seriously investigated as efforts were being made to secure the area as well as other parts of the state.

  • EBOLA fear rules the land

    EBOLA fear rules the land

     

    From Lagos to Calabar,  Akure to Kano and Kaura Namoda to Enugu, Nigerians are gripped in the fear of the deadly Ebola virus after the news filtered out that it had claimed its first Nigerian victim: a nurse who came into contact with the index case of the deadly virus in the country.

    The fear, which started building about two weeks ago when the presence of the deadly virus was first announced in the country, has heightened among Nigerians, cutting across class, profession, religion or creed.

    In the words of a medical doctor who spoke with The Nation, “Matters are no longer at ease in the country.”

    Aside from the human casualties of the virus in Nigeria, checks revealed that the virus is already destroying businesses, depriving the people of their means of livelihood and threatening total confusion in the nation’s health sector.

    While medical practitioners now exhibit unusual fear in dealing with patients brought to their hospitals, irrespective of what ailment the patients suffer from, food vendors and bush meat sellers are beginning to feel the pains as people now avoid such delicacies like lepers.

    Traditional hunters are not left out of the loss of livelihood, as they are now compelled to eat their games themselves or leave them to rot.

    Before now, the stretch of road between Ikorodu and Ijebu-Ode, two cities in Lagos and Ogun states, had been a popular stretch for lovers of bush meat. Every day, the bush meat market along the road used to be a busy scene as the women smiled home at the end of every market day, but not anymore.

    When The Nation visited the market during the week, the faces of the bush meat sellers told the story that all was not well. They were full of groaning and frustration as they spoke about the development.

    Bush meat sellers’ frustration

    In Lagos, Kosefobamu Lateef is sad over his loss of revenue. She said sales have been hampered since the outbreak of the deadly virus was reported.

    She said: “There have been no sales since the campaign against the consumption of bush meat began. Our customers have run away, leaving us to suffer untold losses. Before the campaign began, I used to sell between 20 and 30 bush meats every day. But that is no longer the case.

    “These days, I sit in the cold from morning till night without anybody coming to ask what we are selling. This place that was formerly experiencing high traffic has become a ghost town. It has become a no go area for people all because of a campaign that is unfounded.

    “Ebola is not in grasscutter. it is not in antelopes. It is not in monkeys. Neither is it in porcupines.  If they want us to bring our bush meats for tests, we are ready. We are prepared to make our hunters go into the bush, kill fresh bush meats and give them to the government and medical practitioners to subject them to laboratory tests to know if they have Ebola in them. It is a fallacy that bush meat is the cause of Ebola.

    The popular bush meat spot along Isaac Boro Expressway in Yenagoa,, Bayela State, which before now was a beehive of activities, has become a shadow of itself.  Areas like the Otiotio Junction and the Julius Berger axis of Azikoro end of the expressway, all popular spots for bush meat like antelope, grass-cutter, wild pig, hedgehog and monkeys, have been deserted, leaving the meat sellers frustrated.

    James has for a long time sold bush meat at the market, but the current development leaves him a sad man. “You can see that my shop is deserted. It has been difficult to sell bush meat since this Ebola alert started. I have not been able to sell anything,” he lamented.

    Another dealer, who identified herself simply as Mrs. Vivian, observed that bush meat was being treated like a taboo since the Ebola alert.

    She said: “Bush meat, for now, is like a taboo to many because of the reports linking the virus to wild animals. Customers are avoiding bush meat right now, so we have to stop preparing it.”

    At the popular Atimbo bush meat joint in Calabar, Cross River State, operators said patronage had dropped since the outbreak of the virus.

    One of them, Grace, said: “Although people are still coming to eat meat here, I have heard some of them saying that bush meat is killing people. Is it today that people started eating bush meat? At one time, they said beans was killing people. At another time, they said it was Indomie noodles. Tomorrow they will say people should not eat cow meat. My business is not doing badly because of this news. I am still selling well, but I would say not as much as before.”

    Another bush meat seller, however, complained bitterly about poor patronage.

    He said: “People are no longer buying bush meat.  We have told the people that supply us meat to reduce the quantity they supply because patronage has dropped. Even people who used to eat bush meat before when they come here have stopped eating it. They would rather eat cow leg or any other thing, but not bush meat.”

    In Akure, Ondo State, people who usually patronise eateries and joints where bush meats are part of the menu have reduced tremendously. Findings show that the people now prefer joints where fresh fish or cow meat are served.

    In Edo State, the consumption of bush meat like monkeys, porcupines and others has dropped, following reports that the Ebola virus could be contracted from consumption of bush meat.

    At the popular Madam Ogbelaka ‘buka’, the proprietress said she had to stop losing money by removing bush-meat from her list of delicacies.

    Another operator, popular for fresh palm wine and bush meat, is counting his losses, as the spot has become deserted.

    At several markets like Uwa, Yanga, Osa and New Benin where bush meat is sold in Benin City, sellers lamented low patronage. The sellers said they have resorted to consuming the meat themselves since their customers are scared of buying, even when the prices have crashed.

    Vice-Chairman of Edo State Bush Meat Sellers Association, Mrs. Comfort Omoruyi, said they were dumbfounded when customers told them that the government had ordered that bush meat should not be eaten again.

    She said: “Most of our customers have stopped coming. In fact, most restaurants, fast food centres and major hotels in Edo State have stopped selling bush meat over the fear of Ebola.”

    In Uyo, Akwa Ibom State, sellers of bush meat are already counting their losses. Alwins Mike Akpan, the Managing Director and CEO of Eden Garden Resorts, located at Afaha Oku, Uyo village road, is sad. More than 60 per cent of his daily sales come from bush meat.

    According to him, his daily sales from bush meat have reduced from N40, 000 to N1, 500.

    He said: “The Ebola virus has affected patronage here a great deal. We are not selling again because of the fear of Ebola.”

    In Delta State, Ogbolu community, a suburb of Asaba, is home to many relaxation joints that serve bush-meat delicacies. The proprietors of the over 100 roadside ‘bukas’ in the area are lamenting the negative impact of the Ebola virus on patronage.

    Daniel Asuzu, proprietor, Uju Bar and Restaurant, said his business has experienced about 80 per cent decline since the Ebola scare started. He said that customers now only request for fish, goat meat and beef  pepper soup.

    He said: “People still come here to eat and drink, but they often request for fish pepper soup, because they have heard about the Ebola virus. They are afraid of eating bush-meat as they do not want to die. The Ebola virus is affecting our business. Before now, my bar sold between 40 and 50 plates of bush-meat pepper soup. But with the Ebola virus in the media, we now sell between five and ten plates daily.”

    Mrs. Ngozi Okolie, a neighbour and owner of Chibudem Bar and Restaurant, said she and her family members had to eat the bush-meat meant for sale when the scare started, thereby incurring a loss of over N20, 000, following the refusal of customers to eat it.

    In Warri, Mr Ofei Isah, an ardent bush-meat consumer, said he now only eats his favourite meal of bush-meat only when it is cooked at home by his wife. “I don’t trust anybody to cook my bush-meat well enough for it to be safe. They would usually rush it, but if I or my wife cooks it, we take our time doing it at the right temperature to ensure that if there is any virus, it does not survive. The fear of Ebola is real and everybody must protect himself without being prodded,” he added.

    In Ondo State, the Commissioner for Health, Dr. Dayo Adeyanju, held a sensitisation meeting with public and private health practitioners in the state, as part of efforts to create awareness on the deadly virus.

    Already, the state has designated three hospitals with facilities to quarantine any suspected case in the state. The centres are the Federal Medical Centre, Owo, for the Northern Senatorial District; State Specialist Hospital, Akure, for the Central Senatorial District and the State Specialist Hospital, Okitipupa, to take care of the South Senatorial District.

     

    Hunters count losses

    In Akure, Ondo State,  the camp of the hunters association are struggling to come to terms with the news linking the deadly Ebola virus with the consumption of bush meat. One of its executive members said the hunters had lost patronage. He, however, assured that bush meats are safe for consumption.

    In Lagos, a hunter, who identified himself as Tijani, said Ebola had deprived him of his means of livelihood. He said: “I have stopped going to hunt for animals for commercial purposes because nobody buys it anymore. I only hunt for the consumption of my family. They say it is bush meat that causes Ebola, but we have not contracted it since we have been eating bush meat.

    “It has made people like me jobless and dependent. I have been a hunter for the past 40 years and do not know of any other business that I can go into at this age to earn a living.”

    Apprehension among health workers

    Since the news broke that a doctor and a nurse who came in contact with the first reported case of Ebola virus in Nigeria contracted the virus, health workers across the country have begun to express serious concern and caution in handling their patients.

    A nurse, Miss Stella Esimaegu, is presently at a loss over what to do with her job. Her fiancé has given her the option to quit her job or lose him.

    “My fiancé has warned me to stop my nursing work because of Ebola. He said I would go into another business. I am confused over what to do because I love nursing, but at the same time I don’t want to lose my fiancé.”

    A medical practitioner, Dr Fatokin, advised caution. While he is not scared, Fatokin said he is approaching every patient with caution and in line with laid down guidelines on how to handle patients in hospitals.

    Another medical practitioner, Dr. Labaika Adeyemi, advised his colleagues to take up the battle and stand by their patients. According to him, in cases like this, the doctor remains the hope of the people and should adhere to the dictates of their profession.

    He, however, advised that caution should be the watchword. “The only thing is that we should be cautious when handling medical cases.”

    When The Nation visited some hospitals in Edo State, some nurses were seen wearing face masks and attending to patients.

    A doctor said he was exercising caution when attending to patients.

    Another doctor who asked not to be named said: “It is not an outbreak, and as such could be curtailed. I saw people wearing masks and gloves. We don’t rush to attend to cases again. We have to be very careful because nobody wants to die.”

    Also, a matron, who pleaded anonymity, said she is not afraid of contracting Ebola virus because she was trained to care for patients. She said Ebola, just like other diseases before it, would soon become a thing of the past.

    According to her, “We cannot say because of Ebola, we should push patients away. My nurses cannot tell me that they are afraid because when I take the lead, they will follow. However we are careful, but it is God that protects.”

    In Bayelsa State, doctors have started taking precautionary measures when dealing with their patients.

    Some of the nurses told The Nation that they no longer rush to receive patients even in emergency situations.

    A nurse at the Federal Medcal Centre (FMC), Yenagoa, Esther Odifi, said the Ebola virus had compelled them to observe the universal precautionary measures before and after handling patients.

    “Normally, we were taught the universal precautionary measures of wearing gloves and washing our hands after each medical procedure,” she said.

    Also, Dr. Ogidigba Peter, who works at a private hospital in Yenagoa, lamented the difficulties faced by medical practitioners since the Ebola scare. He said Ebola became a big challenge because of its nature.

    “It is not just a challenge, it is a big challenge. The direct people at risk are the medical doctors. Seeing that the Ebola virus is similar to every common fever, its early symptoms are more or less like the symptoms of malaria fever because there is fever in Ebola and there is fever in malaria. Weakness of the joints is a symptom of malaria as well as the virus.

     

    Hunters consult oracle over Ebola

    As part of efforts to find a solution to the Ebola scare, some stakeholders in the bush meat business in Edo State have taken steps to curtail the spread of the disease.

    A bush meat seller, Osasogie Salami, said they had resolved to seek spiritual means of stopping the spread of Ebola virus with a view to boosting their business.

    He said: “For now, only few people who are yet to believe the existence of Ebola do come to patronise us at Uwa Market. I ate monkey meat yesterday and I am still alive,” she said.

     

    Burden of unpaid loans

    Some bush meat sellers said that when their businesses were booming, they took loans from micro finance banks to expand. But the women are now gripped with the fear of running into serious debts.

    Mrs. Egwuatu expressed worries over the development and her future. She said: “I took a loan of N200, 000 from a microfinance bank to boost my business. I had invested everything when the news broke that people should do away with bush meat. The microfinance bank called me last week to ask for part of their money, but I promised them that I would pay it this week.

    “Unfortunately, I have not been able to raise a dime to give them. It never occurred to me that things would be worse off this week than it was last week.  Right now, I don’t know what to tell the officials of the bank when they come to me. I am afraid because I don’t know what they would do with my life.”

    Mrs. Lateef also bared her minds on the issue. According to her, “So many of our colleagues have fled Lagos State because they took loan from microfinance banks to buy bush meat but could not pay back. How would they pay back the capital and the interests when there have been no sales?  I took a loan of N2 million and as I am talking to you now, I don’t know how I would pay back.

    “From the way things are even going now, I am automatically out of job because it is obvious that we would close shops. If it happens that I close my business tomorrow, where would I begin from? This is the only business I have been engaged in all my life.

    “From this business, some of us have built houses, train our children in higher institutions, send our children abroad and also accomplish other things in life. We equally pay tax and permit to the governments at all levels. After all these years of investment in this business, it is not easy to go back to square one.”

  • The fear of failure

    Many believe that the fear of failure is why students study in classrooms at night. Does this hold true for students of the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN)? TOYIN ALI (200-Level Law) writes.

    After hours of lectures and class work, many students are usually tired and return to their hostels to relax. While relaxing, some doze off without revising what they learnt in class earlier in the day.

    Others, after eating, return to the classroom to read and revise classwork. Yet, some others play all night.

    For students of the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN), the fear of failure is the beginning of wisdom. Whether at night  or  during the day, it is not unusual to see students reading in classrooms. Some move to the most silent spot in the school library, while others prefer corners of classrooms and open spaces.

    Determined to get a good grade, Taiwo Olatunbosun, a 200-Level Law student keeps vigils in lecture theatres. For him, a vibrant legal practitioner must be well read and be abreast of important cases. Taiwo planned his schedule when the semester started and keeps faith with it till.

    “I believe reading all the time is the best way to achieve academic success. This is why I planned my schedule ahead of school timetable,” he said.

    Students who believe that academic excellence is not without sacrifices flock to the classroom to burn the proverbial midnight oil. At UNILORIN, academic activities begin at night. Lecture rooms are jam-packed with students attending tutorials.

    From the University Park, students move in large number to the academic blocks for night reading. To them, it is the best way to prepare for examinations.

    However, it is not all students reading overnight that are there for the business. Some are there to cause distraction; others it is to merry.

    The academic engagement of Abdulmumeen Abdullah, a 500-Level Engineering student, is  triangular in pattern. “I go for lectures and come back to my hostel, and then return to night class, this is the best way to keep up with my dream,” he said.

    Abdulazeem Ologuntere, a first year student, said: “I have been given orientatation before I gained admission that night class is key to academic success. Even on my first day on the campus, I was in night class to read even though we had never been thought anything then. I want to make it a habit, so that I won’t have cause to read for another entrance exam.”

    The Students’ Union Building is not also left out; students sit at comfort spots to read. The edifice has a well-furnished basement and common room with good seats. The spot also serves as a night joint for fun seekers on campus.