Tag: friend

  • Nine ways to celebrate a friend without breaking the bank

    Nine ways to celebrate a friend without breaking the bank

    Friendship is one of life’s greatest treasures, and showing appreciation for those who stand by us doesn’t always require lavish spending.

    While society often emphasizes pricey gifts or outings, true friendship flourishes through thoughtfulness, effort, and shared memories. Whether it’s a birthday, milestone, or simply a “just because” moment, you can make your friend feel cherished without straining your wallet.

    Here are nine creative and budget-friendly ways to celebrate your friend:

    1. Record a voice note or video Message

    Express your appreciation in a voice note or a short video, recounting the impact made in your life and the memories shared. It’s a thing they can replay whenever they need encouragement.

    2. Write a heartfelt letter

    Nothing gets deeper than a personal letter, where you put in your feelings on paper, highlighting your favourite things together, and letting them know how much they mean to you.

    3. Make a photo collage

    You do this by gathering your best pictures together and creating a digital or physical collage. Also, add funny captions to give it extra flavour.

    Read Also: Oluremi Tinubu marks birthday with call for national library completion

    4. Plan a movie night

    You can invite them over for the night or to a cinema, grab popcorn, and watch your favourite shows together, or even videos of your company. It’s the company that counts. It’s called ‘Netflix and chill.’

    5. Organise an outdoor picnic

    Grab a mat, simple snacks, and drinks. A park or open space can turn into a perfect hangout spot. Play board games, card games, or even multiplayer phone games. Laughter is guaranteed. Also, share memories, funny moments, and challenging times.

    6. Create a memory jar

    Write short notes about your funniest, most touching, or unforgettable moments together, and drop them in a jar, so that they can pick from it and read one whenever they need a smile or to ease a burden.

    7. Give a social media shout-out

    Celebrate them publicly with a heartfelt caption, throwback photos, or even a creative reel on different social media handles, expressing your gratitude towards them.

    8. Help them with something they’ve been putting off

    Celebrate them by lightning their load, helping with cleaning, assignments, or errands they’ve been trying to catch up on.

    9. Surprise them with a handmade gift

    DIY gifts carry a unique personal touch, as they’re created from scratch. They may be simple, but they’re priceless in meaning. It can be a bag, accessories, clothes, etc.

  • Friend, not fiend

    Friend, not fiend

    The trend of mowing down policemen must stop in the interest of the society

    The news report that not less than 229 police officers were gunned down within 22 months between January 2023 and October 2024 is frightening. It is a confirmation that so much has gone wrong with the soul of the society.

    One of the features of a state is that it has a handle on the levers of security. It was enough for policemen to be armed with batons in those days, and scoundrels would scamper. It is no longer so. Insurgents, bandits, terrorists and all manner of criminals now described as gunmen would take on policemen anywhere, anytime. Unfortunately, this is no longer restricted to any part of the country. The Boko Haram insurgents in the North East, bandits of the North West, agents of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) of the South East, militants and oil thieves of the South South, ritualists and kidnappers in the South West have all made efforts to snatch the monopoly of violence from the state.

    How did the country get to this sorry pass, and what could be done? The Nigeria Police Force (NPF), being a civil force, is meant to protect the ordinary people, operate as professionally as possible. By doing so, and being armed, the NPF is meant to exert minimum violence in the course of performing its responsibility. However, in recent years, it has become the primary target of criminals who see police officers as the obstacles on their way to perpetrating evil in the land. Thus, in many parts of the country, criminals are known to have gone to police stations to gun down policemen on duty. They are known to have taken on men deployed to ensure security on the road, and safeguard lives and property, especially when we all are asleep at night and armed robbers or assassins choose to strike, using the cover of darkness.

    They deserve to be well treated by the state that they represent, and the general public for whom they work. Statistics showing that 118 were killed in 2023, and 111 in the first 10 months of 2024 is an indication that something should be done urgently to change the established order. This would include the quality and mode of training, use of technology, ramping up the number and funding of the force. Rather than the usual rancour between the force and the Police Service Commission over who should be in charge of recruitment, promotion and discipline, this time calls for all stakeholders to put heads together to fashion out new strategies and tactics to make the police force more effective and efficient.

    In this wise, we call on President Bola Tinubu, not only as the Commander-in-Chief and Chief Security Officer of the Federation, but also as Chairman of the Police Council to get personally involved in working out a way of making it more modern.

    It is good that so much is being voted for purchase of modern equipment for the Nigerian Armed Forces that has already been dragged outside their primary duty of warding off external aggression and securing the country’s territorial integrity; but unless the police force is equally equipped to regain its composure and command respect, the country would continue to be embroiled in insecurity, and many of the men in uniform would remain target of attacks by enemies of the state.

    While the force itself and many of those in authority remain opposed to establishing state police, the NPF relies so much on the sub nationals for its operations. To reduce the pressure on the men of the force, there is an urgent need to approve the establishment of state police, properly trained and armed. This would necessarily necessitate amending the constitution that makes provision for “a Nigeria Police Force” and as such precludes state forces. This, of course, is not new as we have pointed out in previous editorials, as we had even Native Authority Police all over the country in the First Republic.

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    We are not unaware that the integrity of the policemen has been compromised for some time. Some policemen have been caught receiving bribe from accused persons, carousing with women of easy virtue and even young ladies in detention. It is true that many have been disciplined when allegations against them are proved, but much more should be done to weed out the bad eggs. And, more importantly, there is the need to tighten the recruitment process and training scheme to keep out potential black sheep.

    As we make deliberate efforts to protect the public, we must ensure that those fighting to keep us safe are secured. The police force cannot rely on kinetic means of keeping out the bad elements; it needs to step up its engagement with the populace. It needs intelligence from the people in performing its functions. The slogan “police are your friends” should resonate more with the people who should begin to see them as friends indeed.

    In areas ravaged by terrorists, men of the Nigerian Armed Forces have realised the need to bond with the people if they are to succeed in their mission. The police authorities could borrow a leaf in their own interest and ours.

  • Teenager kills friend, dumps body in septic tank

    Teenager kills friend, dumps body in septic tank

    • Suspect kills friend, dumps body in pit 

    A 19-year-old, Yakubu Tanko, has been arrested by the Niger State Police Command for killing his friend and dumping the body in a septic tank.

    It was learnt that Tanko entered into 14-year-old Sikiru Tajudeen’s room in the Tundun Fulani area of Minna, and hit him with a stick he took from the kitchen.

    Tanko confessed that after he hit the deceased, blood rushed out and he left him lying dead on the bed and went away.

    “I returned two hours later and put the body ina sack until about 8pm. I then borrowed a wheelbarrow and took the body to an open soak away close by and dumped the body inside. I thought nobody would see the body again,” he confessed.

    On why he killed his friend, Tanko said ‘I personally planned it and did it’.

    Police spokesperson Wasiu Abiodun said the deceased was reported missing at the Bosso Police Division as his family said they found his trouser, a stick, and a stone with blood stains inside his room.

    “A day later, the community found the body after tracing a strange odour coming from a septic tank within the community. A sack was found with Sikiru’s body inside it.

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    “Further findings from the community pointed to Yakubu Tanko and he was immediately arrested. He confessed to the homicide during interrogation while he admitted that the deceased was his friend,” Abiodun said.

    He added that the suspect has been transferred to the State Criminal Investigation Department (SCID) for further investigation.

    A suspected serial thief, Babalola Daniel, has allegedly killed his childhood friend, Evangelist Opeyemi Oyelakin, dumped the body in a pit and stole the deceased’s motorcycle.

    Babalola also allegedly sold the motorcycle for N130,000 in Ibadan.

    He was said to have committed the offence on March 15 in Ondo town.

    According to the police, Daniel has been stealing motorcycles since 2021 from various towns such as Akure, Ekiti, Ilesha and Ife.

    Sources also said Daniel and his accomplice, Sikiru Mutiu, asked the deceased to convey them to their farm at Oke-Igbo Area. But, getting there, Mutiu gripped Oyelakin from behind while Daniel hit his head with a stick and stone until he died.

  • Food and fruits: friend, frenemy or foe?

    SIR: Chief Audu Ogbeh, Agriculture Minister, sometime ago in a piece published by a national daily titled, ‘Nigeria, global standard in food production and trade’, wrote “What you eat, if you eat well, will determine your state of health and your longevity as a human being. Unfortunately, most of the time nowadays, we are actually eating poison because of the way we handle our food production. From the seed we cultivate, to the fertilizer we use, to the chemical we spray, to the way we process the food, or even preserve the food, or package the food, we are determining whether we are eating well or eating badly.”

    Inarguably, of the three basic needs of man – food, clothing and shelter, food is number one and the most important. Food is the primary reason most people work. Lack of it may not only cause health challenges but also it is capable of spelling doom for a whole nation. Communal clashes over land disputes in rural areas are not just tussles for pride and supremacy, but an ultimate battle for ownership of an unending source of food. In fact, lack or insufficiency of food in a country can lead to revolt and unrest. Food security is as important as life security.

    The nourishment we derive from the type of food we take is a function of how these foods are produced, processed and packaged. As important as the food we take is to the body for good health and survival, so also we can be endangering our lives with this same food going by the processes involved in the preparation.

    Our foods get contaminated and poisoned in many ways by our own farmers. These ways include the crude ways of openly drying cassava and fish (fresh and smoked) by the roadside, use of adulterated fertilizers (mixture of kaolin and sharp sand), unsanitary processing environment, use of rusty iron equipment , like locally fabricated pepper and tomatoes grinding machines among others. Most of our foods pass through these processes, to mention a few and end up in our bodies. The culture of overcooking most of our foods has saved us a lot from grave dangers these contaminated foods portend, it is the reason some of those who consume these foods are not attacked by diseases.

    Last year, the Director General of National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), Prof. Moji Adeyeye warned Nigerians to avoid fruits ripened with calcium carbide. She said consumption of such carbide-ripened fruits can cause organ failure, several diseases, including cancer and death. Some unscrupulous farmers and traders hasten the ripening process of fruits to meet high market demand for huge sales at the detriment of consumers.

    Our friendly and nurturing foods and fruits may become not only frenemies but killer-foes if proper care and attention are not paid to how they are processed. It is expedient to say here that, we must cultivate and maintain personal hygiene when dealing with foods especially. Fruits should be thoroughly washed under running water before consuming. Fruits, which are important sources of many nutrients and vitamins responsible for building the body’s immune system, may end up damaging the whole body system if artificially ripened ones are consumed. Food should also be thoroughly cooked as well too.

    Precautionary measures should be taken to ensure that our food and fruits, when consumed will not play the reverse role of ‘enemies’ by attacking the body rather they will play the defensive role of ‘friends’ to the body.

    In the words of former British Prime Minister, Winston Churchill (1874 – 1965), “Healthy citizens are the greatest asset any country can have”. So if we carefully pay attention to our health as a nation through what we eat, then Nigeria can boast of great assets.

    If that food which is meant to take care of us turns to harm us, then it is no longer food, it is poison which in turn becomes our enemy.

     

    • Kayode Ojewale, Idimu, Lagos.
  • Saying goodbye to a loving mother, sister and friend

    Since August, when our dear mother, Mrs. Goldcoast Dickson (Mama Gogo), was called to be with the Lord, my family and I have passed through what is clearly the worst period of our lives.

    Mama Gogo was hale and hearty and only complained of pains in her right leg about December last year. By January this year on returning from pilgrimage to the Holy land of Israel which she insisted on embarking on despite the pains. I asked the doctors to repeat her rounds of routine checks at the Bayelsa Diagnostic Center. Results at the center revealed suspicious lesions in her body, consequent upon which she was immediately sent off to London for further checks. My younger brother, Akpolagha who was at the time in London took her to the Hospital where further tests confirmed the lesions were cancerous.

    My world almost came to an end when I heard that the diagnosis was cancer and that the organ affected was her lungs. This meant that at the time we confirmed it, the cancer from the lungs had already spread to all parts of her body, which was the cause of the pain in her right leg she earlier complained of. Surprisingly, previous tests and examinations in Yenagoa and Abuja could not detect the cancer until then. It proved to be a fast growing and aggressive form of cancer for a woman who never smoked.

    This was the beginning of several agonizing months that followed as she immediately started a battery of tests and treatment regime in London. We again transferred her to the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston Texas, USA. The cancer proved to be too aggressive and defied treatments and efforts to contain it. She finally returned to her creator on the 8th of August 2018. I was comforted however, that I and other members of my family were with her in her final moments.

    Although there was no written record of her birth, by available accounts she was born over 72 years ago to the family of Oruama Nipe, one of the earliest sailors from this area popularly called Captain Nipe and Areambrado of Indiamazi in Sagbama community. Mama Gogo was the third of four children; Afani, Queenmary and her only brother Kumasi Akpi, who died in 2006 as a serving Superintendent of Police. Her two surviving elder sisters are here with us today aged about 79 and 76. In their family, there was an age gap of three years between one child and the next.

    Her sailor father whose children all bore names of either marine vessels he worked on or popular port cities he visited as a sailor named my mother Goldcoast. Queenmary was a British vessel her father worked on at some point, while Afani is a popular native Ghanaian name, popular amongst Ijas who went to Ghana at the time. Goldcoast was the colonial name for present day Ghana and Kumasi is a port city in Ghana. She was his favourite child and he gave her the pet names Atabeniere (meaning, a wealthy woman from the sea) and Goldcoast colony.

    As a child learning to speak, I could not pronounce the name ‘Goldcoast’ correctly. My infant tongue twisted her name as Gogo and that became her name until her death. Everyone including my father, her mother and siblings called her Gogo.  She often cautioned me jokingly, however teaching an important lesson that my tongue should never be used to make any negative pronouncement as it could stick.

    My mother was a kindhearted, soft-spoken, decent, loving and caring woman. Everyone in my father’s household and community, to her father’s household, family, community and indeed all who encountered her even for a brief moment, felt her positive infectious personality. Her community here at Angiama fondly calls her Ebikomboere (meaning the woman that brings good things)

    It was not a surprise therefore that even in her sick bed in the United Kingdom and in the United States of America, she was more concerned about the health, wellbeing and welfare of others. she would crack jokes and engage in lively discussions with the doctors, nurses and care-givers most of whom developed strong bonds with her. Being fully aware of the severity of her illness and the impending loss of this warm personality, some of them would leave her bedside to secretly shed tears.

    I want to thank all the doctors at the Bayelsa Diagnostic Centre, those in London and the Doctors, nurses and caregivers at the M. D. Anderson Cancer Centre in Houston Texas, USA, for their care and the expression of willingness to support the Goldcoast Dickson Memorial Cancer Centre and other charitable activities to be instituted in her honour.

    In addition, all my associates, appointees, and friends who have encountered her even for a brief moment, felt her warmth and motherly disposition. Each one of them has a story to tell. She can never be remembered for throwing the weight of her status around either by conduct or in speech. She was always in the background, ever supportive and prayerful. She never lost her maternal instincts to care for people around her despite her critical health condition at the time.

    Whenever we I visited her with friends, she would ensure that we all ate groundnut and farina and would entertain us with drinks and everything else that she had. Then she would crown it all with a motherly embrace before I left her presence. This had been the practice between the two of us for the past over thirty years. I never left her presence without that special embrace, the  last of which was on her sick bed in America. We had agreed that her children and most of her grandchildren would be around to spend the summer holiday with her in the United Stares to keep her company. Most got there, only for her health to nosedive suddenly about a day or two later. When I got the news of her deteriorating health, I rushed down to see her. She passed on the 8th of August 2018, two days after my arrival in the company of her loved ones and family.

    Clearly, my siblings and I miss her love, support and prayers. Although I particularly miss her embrace, I am confident that in the course of her time with us, I have recurve blessings, prayers and embraces that will last a lifetime.

    Interestingly, it was after she had passed on that I learnt of the several groups of young couples that she quietly mentored. In my fathers community and her own, she will be remembered for her acts of kindness, soothing words and respect.

    She asked me to build a market in Toru-Orua and kept reminding me that it had to be completed ‘for her women’ (as she put it). On one of my last visits to her, she again demonstrated her compassion for the needy by making suggestions of certain rural women to be allocated stalls. These were the women who in her view, needed to be supported and encouraged to become entrepreneurs. I am happy that the market has been completed and I reported so to her before her passing. We were both looking forward to it’s commissioning, having told her of my desire to name it after her.

    Being the last wife, my mother was both a wife and like a daughter to my father. She was younger than his first child, a male who died at infancy and slightly older than his first daughter Siliki. Even in this large polygamous household, she endeavoured to make a success of her marriage.

    My quintessential mother was the center of love, unity and care for the family. I saw her cook all my father’s meals with uncommon diligence and she was indeed a great cook. She loved and cared for him till his death in 2011 at about the age of 86. She passed on as the only surviving wife.

    Mama Gogo, was more than a mother to me. As her first child, she was my elder sister, my friend, confidant and my prayer warrior. Growing up in the village in those difficult days, in the 70s and 80s, my mother and I farmed and fished together to feed the family. I can tell first hand, how she struggled with the pregnancy of all my siblings compounded by the challenges of farming, fishing and maintaining her home.

    I recall my first trip to the secondary school. My parents had escorted new to the waterside to board the Lagos-Amassoma boat en route Toru-Ebeni where my school was situated. My mother started crying perhaps wondering how I would cope and care for myself since I was only about 12 years old and that was my first time of being separated from her for a protracted period. Perhaps the memories of the tines we spent kept the tears in her eyes since I always accompanied her to all her farms and everywhere else. I still remember the stories she told me and the joy she exuded whenever we caught some fish. She would say, ‘oh my children, we will eat today’. And on the day we were not so lucky, you could see the sadness envelop her face.

    I often tell the story of her forthrightness, integrity, love and sacrifice. As typical of most of the women in the village, they would fish at night, return early in the morning to cook for their families, set out to the farm and return at night to start the cycle Al over again.

    One of such nights, in 1981 while this wonderful woman was fishing, drums of diesel totaling five floated towards her canoe. She was initially afraid since it was dark and the floating object could have been anything but she summoned courage, quickly took out her fishing net and solicited the assistance of another woman named Bekeyeibo who was also fishing nearby. Together, they moved the drums to shore. That ended her fishing for that night. My mother informed my father and they both handed over the drums of diesel to the community as lost but found items.

    Prior to this event, I had dropped out of school for over half a term because my father had explained that the downturn he was experiencing in his business at the time made it impracticable for my brothers and I to continue with our education. For thus reason, he decided that I, being the youngest, make the sacrifice of dropping out until his financial situation improved, though he acknowledged that I was the most promising academically. I recall my mother getting angry and crying, trying to change a situation that was beyond her control. Growing older, I now understand her feelings, frustration and anger at the time.

    Not too long afterwards, the owner of the drums of diesel who had lost them to heavy rain and erosion from a far-off location came enquiring community after community. Of all the drums of diesel he lost, only those found by my mother were reported. Typical of my dad, he told the owner that they were only custodians and unconditionally released the drums of diesel. To show their gratitude and appreciation for her unassailable integrity and selflessness, the owner rewarded them with 90 Naira. My parents from the money, gave 30 Naira to the other woman  who assisted her. With 60 Naira remaining, my mother gave me that unforgettable, triumphant, soothing and re-assuring look only a loving mother could saying, “My son, you would be heading back to school tomorrow”.  What a relief! That was how I was able to join my classmates after almost loosing a term. The entire school had feared that I was not returning.

    She taught us love, respect, tolerance and compassion. She gave encouragement, love, care to my siblings and I, our spouses and her grandchildren. My mother cultivated a special bond with all her sons-in-law and daughters-in-law. She cooked, fed, sang and danced to the delight of her grandchildren, teaching them the Ijaw tradition whenever she had the chance to, addressing each with the special names she gave them, as I also do. They all have fond memories of her that will last their entire lives.

    Throughout her life time in the village, I never saw my mother quarrel with anyone. She was a peaceful, sympathetic and compassionate person. She would give her last meal and money to anyone in need. My father often joked that trading was not my mother’s strength as she was  always giving out her wares on credit and was too sympathetic to demand for payments.

    Her greatest gift was prayers. When later in her life she knew Christ, she became a prayer warrior, praying and fasting frequently. She attended all devotional services of the family and later on of the government when I became Governor. At the end of every morning devotion she would embrace me and make pronouncements of blessings and protection over me.

    Whenever I was in a political battle or facing a challenging situations,  my mother will fast and pray and then tie her wrapper around her breast. While embracing me, she would proclaim as my father often did, the ancestral titles and blessings of my worthy ancestors which the Ijaws call Kile and the Yorubas call Oriki, to remind me that I am from a long line of great ancestors, warriors and kings who were not intimidated nor defeated. She would tell me to go and return in peace with victory and triumph. To the glory of God, my parental blessings and prayers have always earned me victory and triumph till date and I believe always. As most of you may already know, I am a product of two proud and rich cultures; Kpadia and Obu families of Orua in Tarakiri kingdom and the Fidipote royal house of Ijebu ode

    My parents taught me to live a simple life. They taught me contentment, honour, courage, compassion and prudence. My father was the epitome of courage, honour, integrity and hard work. I learnt from him the ability to say no when no is the right answer irrespective of what others may say and, that time and God vindicates the just. while my mother taught me love, humility, compassion and hard work also.

    Like my father, my mother never bothered me for anything personal even as a governor. She was always concerned about my wellbeing, progress and success as well as the wellbeing of others and never about what she could benefit or gain materially.

    She prayed and constructed a bank of prayers enough to last my siblings and I for a life time. I had hoped as well as she did that she would recover and return home for thanksgiving. Knowing the severity of her illness, I prayed for more time for her, I did not expect the end would come as suddenly as it did. My desire was to see her by my side when I rounded off my term as governor and have more time for my family, with my mother playing her usual supportive role, which she did so well.

    She was the best and sweetest mother anyone would ever wish for. Just as she always said, if there was another life, she would love to have me and my siblings again as children, I too say, ‘if there is another life, I would have none as a mother except her’.

    On behalf of my family and all the communities involved in the ceremonies for the interment of my mother, I would like to once again thank everyone for the enormous outpouring of grief and sorrow all through this trying period of mourning. In particular, we remain eternally grateful to all Nigerians for sending us your thoughts and prayers and for offering us your shoulders to cry on. I am also appreciative of your prayers for the repose of her soul and for us her family to bear her departure with fortitude.

    My mother is not the only one to have died of cancer. It is common knowledge that cancer is one of the leading causes of death the world over. It is fast decimating our population herein Nigeria and in the Niger Delta especially.

    That is why in memory of her life and all that she stood for, my family and I, through the Seriake Dickson Foundation, have decided to establish the Goldcoast Dickson Memorial Cancer Centre in Toru-Orua, the community where she spent over 60 years of her life. And in her compound in Angiama which is her paternal home, the family has decided to build a nursery and primary school, as well as a clinic all in her honour. I know that my mother would have loved that. She will be laid to rest in the chapel constructed in her honour as was her wish.

    Accordingly, the family will be inviting friends, public – spirited individuals and the public to support the foundation in this regard. I am exceedingly grateful to all the individuals, business leaders and organizations that have directly and indirectly indicated their readiness to partner wuthering us now and in the future.

    For as long as we live, we will always miss our mother.

    Dearest Mother, Sister, Friend and confidant, rest on the perfect bosom of the Lord. You ran a good race, rest till we meet again.

     

    • Dickson is Governor of Bayelsa State.
  • Nigeria is a leader, friend, key partner, says U.S.

    The United States (U.S.) has described Nigeria as an indisputable leader in Africa, a friend and a key partner of the U.S.

    In a statement by Secretary of State Michael Pompeo on the occasion of Nigeria’s National Day, the U.S. government congratulated Nigeria and its people on the nation’s independence anniversary.

    Pompeo said: “I would like to convey warm wishes to the government and people of Nigeria on the 58th anniversary of your independence. Nigeria remains a key partner and friend of the United States.

    “Through its strengthening democracy, its dynamic economy and the great entrepreneurial spirit of its people, Nigeria is a leader in the region and beyond.

    “We count on Nigeria to continue its leadership through free, fair, transparent and peaceful elections in 2019.

    “The United States offers our continuous support to Nigeria in its efforts to expand trade and investment, counter-terrorism, ensure regional stability and tackle corruption.

    “As you celebrate the anniversary of your independence, please know that the people of the United States celebrate with you.”

  • Family of five, friend die mysteriously in Ogun

    A family of five died in mysterious circumstances on Wednesday night at Old Aiyepe road in Sagamu area of Ogun State.

    The family included father, mother, three children and a family friend.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) learnt that the family newly moved from their rented apartment into their own property but died the first night in the house.

    The house was suspected to have been fumigated with “killer chemical”.

    One of the sympathisers, who accompanied the bodies to the Olabisi Onabanjo University Teaching Hospital (OOUTH) in Sagamu, said the owner of the house, a borehole driller, just spent a night in the new house.

    The sympathiser, who identified himself simply as Tony, said the neighbours perceived a foul odour yesterday, which attracted them to the house.

    According to him, neighbours raised the alarm, which attracted the attention of the police.

    The remains of the deceased have been taken to the mortuary at OOUTH.

    Hundreds of sympathisers besieged the Accident and Emergency Unit of the hospital, wailing uncontrollably over the incident.

    Police spokesman Abimbola Oyeyemi, an Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP), said the command would get to the root of the matter.

    Oyeyemi said investigation into the matter had begun to unravel the mystery behind the deaths.

  • When is the policeman your friend?

    Sir: A few weeks ago the Police Command in Ogun State supplied a surprising answer to this poser during a time of unrest in some communities in Ota, the state’s industrial powerhouse. The people of Onibuku, Baba Ode and NAHCO sent an SOS via SMS to the Commissioner of Police Ahmed Iliyasu, asking him to dispatch his men to restore order.

    Within minutes the police chief called back, desiring to know the precise nature of the security breach and the exact location of the troubled areas. He was briefed and informed that members of the Omo Onile (land grabbers) in the area were disturbing the peace of the community through preventing landowners from developing their property. They were said to be seizing the tools of the workmen after beating and maiming them. This resulted in stampede, leading to residents shutting down business activities and withdrawing their wards from school. A resident reminded the police boss that there was a law passed by the state government that criminalizes the forcible entry of property by Omo onile. The law also forbids them from unleashing bodily harm, with a breach attracting severe penalties including death.

    The briefing ended with the CP Iliyasu promising that he would act to prevent a breakdown of law and order.

    In less than an hour after the conversation that night, residents of Onibuku, Baba Ode and NAHCO were surprised to see fully armed policemen in patrol vehicle combing the community for arrest of suspects. The presence of these law agents continued for days to hold the troublemakers in check. The hope of the people is that there would be lasting peace in the area. The residents also want the Ogun government to set up a task force to enforce its law on land grabbers.

    The point is that a friend in need is a friend indeed. The prompt response of CP Iliyasu to the cry of those citizens in Ota would make the people believe in the slogan, Police is your friend. They reached out to him in their distress and he didn’t fail them.

    CP Iliyasu’s action has bombed out the distressing view that the citizens must bribe the policeman before his duty. Of course there are several bad eggs in the force who have given wings to the perception of the police as a corrupt and severely compromised and irredeemably rotten organization. Iliyasu has proved that all you need to change society or an organization is a good and selfless leader.

    If our police and all other state actors would play their constitutional roles, then they must bear this in mind: they are a creation of the people and they owe us a debt of selfless service all year round as long as they are in state employ. They are our servants, not our lords and masters, even if they bear lethal arms. Such weapons are to protect us, not to persecute us.

    Again there must be a deal here. The society needs to invest massively in an organ of state in whose hands you are placing your life and property. If you want the best from him you must give him your best. On this score, we have failed the police!

    We must applaud those in our midst who, even as the odds we speak of in the society or in the state are raging to frustrate the delivery of patriotic service, are refusing to give up. They will do their work without being bribed. The land needs more of them to populate and drive our failing institutions.

     

    • Banji Ojewale, Ota, Ogun State.
  • Donald Trump, Israeli’s friend or foe?

    Donald Trump, Israeli’s friend or foe?

    With friends like the 45th President of United States of America, Donald Trump, Israel possibly needs not worry about the danger posed by Hamas – the Palestinian resistance movement. Gaza is firmly under the heels of Hamas which unapologetically remains hard put to recognize the state of Israel. Last Wednesday, December 6, President Donald Trump acted true to character as a renegade President of US to unilaterally recognize Jerusalem as the capital of the State of Israel. He even dared to announce the relocation of the US Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem!

    Of course there is already a bagful of his renegade policies; repeal of Obamacare, renege on Climate treaty, reversal of the deal with Iran, reversal of Cuba-America detente, ad infinitum! No country parades such a president mid-way in the first term! True to expectation, amidst global outrage which trails Trump’s diplomatic provocation, Hamas leader Ismail Haniya declared the US decision on Jerusalem as “war declaration against Palestinians”. He called for a new “Intifada”, an uprising.

    The critical question begging for an answer is what manner of a friend of Israel is Trump, who through sheer political brigandage pushes Israel back to the brink of intifada (a Palestinian insurgency manifesting in series of violent acts and attacks against the Israeli occupation lasting from December 1987 to 2014 in which both the Palestinians and Israelis buried their dead)?  A received African wisdom has it that “a close friend can become a close enemy”! With friends like Trump, Israel does not need to worry about Hamas leader Ismail Haniya. This is another paradox of Middle East’s intractable conflicts; both the enemies and so-called friends of Israel achieve same goal: keeping the state of Israel in perpetual war of attrition!

    Reading through the 1250 plus word counts of President Donald Trump recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel reminds me of the opening sentence by Simon Seberg Montefiore in his preface to his best-selling “Speeches that Changed the World” (2005). According to Simon, a “great speech does not just capture the truth of the era; it can also capture the big lie”. President Donald Trump’s speech is comparable to Adolf Hitler’s demagoguery of September 1938. According to Donald Trump, his predecessors had invoked “waivers” refusing to move the US embassy to Jerusalem or to recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital city. Apparently, Trump did not invent the idea of Jerusalem as the Israel’s capital after all, contrary to his verbal appropriation and empty grandstanding. Why should Trump then be “holier than the Pope”, even when we have just witnessed many devilish details (tear gas, stone-throwing, shootings and killings!) in the aftermath of his unthinking self-serving diplomatic adventure?

    Former American presidents correctly set their eyes on peace in a war-torn region. This explained their measured discretion in applying the controversial 1995 American Jerusalem Embassy Act. It is tragi-comedy that a trigger happy President Trump bent on diverting attention from his domestic woes needs a diplomatic blunder to prove his “courage”!

    Elie Wiesel, a celebrated writer and Jew survivor of Nazi Germany had long warned us about the “perils of indifference”. It is refreshing the world had risen in unison to condemn President Trump for reinventing violence in Jerusalem and almost putting on hold the peace process in the Middle East.  According to Pope Francis, Jerusalem’s status should be preserved and needless conflict avoided. At his weekly general audience at the Vatican, Pope Francis observed with “…a heartfelt appeal to ensure that everyone is committed to respecting the status quo of the city, in accordance with the relevant resolutions of the United Nations.”

    “Jerusalem is a unique city,” he added, “is sacred to Jews, Christians and Muslims, where the Holy Places for the respective religions are venerated, and it has a special vocation to peace.”

    To Secretary General of United Nations, Antonio Guterres, “Jerusalem is a final-status issue that must be resolved through direct negotiations between the two parties on the basis of the relevant Security Council and General Assembly resolutions, taking into account the legitimate concerns of both the Palestinian and the Israeli sides”. “In this moment of great anxiety, I want to make it clear: There is no alternative to the two-state solution,” he said. “There is no Plan B.”!

    Only Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu who hopes to politically profit from domestic Palestinian red-hearing, (just like Trump!) hailed Trump’s recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital. Most peace loving Israelis are not as excited as Benjamin Netanyahu and Trump. For instance, notable Israeli politicians such as Meretz leader Zehava Gal-On, a serving member of Knesset from 1999 to 2017 observed that moving the US embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem could inflame the entire region. She warned that such a unilateral move could displace peace. “Moving the embassy could serve Netanyahu but could bring about an unnecessary explosion.”

    Ayam  Odeh, Chairman of the Joint List, said: “Trump is a pyromaniac who could set the entire region on fire with his madness” adding that Trump’s  grandstanding  “proves decisively that the United States cannot remain the sponsor or arbitrator in negotiations between Israelis and Palestinians”. The African Union Commission also rightly questioned the United States’ decision to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of the State of Israel. The Chairperson of the African Union Commission, Moussa Faki Mahamat, noted with deep concern the decision. According to AU, the decision “will only increase tensions in the region and beyond and further complicate the search for a solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.” He reiterated the solidarity of the African Union with the Palestinian people and its support to their legitimate quest for an independent and sovereign state with East Jerusalem as its capital. The chairperson spoke the mind of Africans in calling for a Middle East solution, “based on the existence of two states, Israel and Palestine, living side-by-side in peace and security, within the framework of relevant African Union and United Nations pronouncements.”

    It is really true that bad friends like Trump will prevent Israel from having good friends. By the way, I searched in vain for Nigeria’s position on the latest Donald Trump’s diplomatic reckless adventure in Jerusalem. It’s time President Muhammed Buhari worked his talk at the 2017 UN General Assembly in September on key foreign policy issues such as Middle East crisis. Increasingly, Nigeria’s voice is lost on topical international issues. At best Nigerian foreign policy has become reactionary, reacting than setting agenda for genuine global discourse.

    Lest we forget – the late Nelson Mandela rightly observed that “We know too well that our freedom is incomplete without the freedom of the Palestinians.”

     

    • Aremu is a member, National Institute, Kuru Jos.
  • My childhood friend, my brother!

    A friend is one that knows you as you are, understands where you have been, accepts what you have become, and allows you to grow”-William Shakespeare.

    Perhaps, the above captures very succinctly the relationship between my childhood friend and brother, Dr Christian Ngozi Umeh (Gallant Pieces) and I. Umeh was snatched away in his prime, by the cold hands of death three weeks ago.

    I don’t really know how and where to begin. I lack words. Yet, I should be in position to write a book on the life and times of my childhood friend, Ngozi Gallant Christian, Pieces Umeh (NGCPU) as he fondly abbreviated his initials.

    My predicament stems from inability to come to terms with the sad reality that Gallant can disappear from my sight just like that. That the company and affection we shared through the years have been truncated by the wicked hands of death. And a relationship that has been the admiration of many, crashed when its fruits were beginning to fully mature.

    All those who knew Gallant well either from childhood or later in life can attest that we are two of a rare pair. Not many know the genesis of our relationship or how long it has lasted. Two of us may not even fully account for how it all started given our age at that time.

    This is because the friendship is as old as our ages minus our age the day we enrolled at St Jude’s primary School Ikpa-Eluama Osina in the present Imo State. That was the period you were required to place your right hand across your head to touch your left ear as a criterion for admission into the first class in the primary school.

    If your right hand touched your left ear, then you are qualified for admission and vice versa. So we found ourselves in that preparatory class together with other mates. I cannot recall how we started as friends so early in life or the incident that brought us close. But my guess is that our performances in that rural primary school class could have been the bond. He was very eager to learn and highly elated each time he performed excellently well. I still recall the exclamation he made the day our teacher announced he scored 80 per cent in one of the subjects. The whole class burst into deep laughter when he exclaimed: uwa a a a…( the world….) as the teacher called his name and announced his score. He was enthusiastic to learn; very hungry for knowledge, always trying to show his peers that he has something more to offer.

    Even at that tender age, he had learnt some French language from one of his cousins COC Umeh who was then in a secondary school. It was from him that for the first time, I learnt bonjour monsieur was a French equivalent for good morning sir. He pronounced monsieur badly as I came to realize when I started French years after in my secondary school. So he was above his peers in such innovative issues and somehow, we got attracted to each other due to competition to excel.

    St Jude then prepared pupils for admission into St Mary’s primary school which was the senior arm of the Catholic primary school. I had thought two of us completed two years at St Jude before proceeding to St Mary’s until his cousin Jasper Umeh who was also with us( but in a different class) told me a fortnight ago he left briefly to Alaogidi primary school Uhualla due to some political pressure.

    However, we rejoined in primary four at St Mary’s after the transition from standard to primary in the school calendar system and were together until we took the First School Leaving Certificate. My younger sister, Chinwe used to remind me of how he usually escorted me to my Aunty’s house- the Ebosie’s in Uzii after school each time my father sent me on errand there. The distance is not less than 10 kilometres to and fro. Chinwe lived with my Aunty after our mother’s death very early in our lives. She reminds me of how we usually sneaked to the backyard to pluck some pear as we left.

    While in primary six, we took common entrance examinations. He was later to attend Earnest Gems Grammar school Akokwa while I attended Holy Ghost Juniorate, Ihiala. Our friendship continued throughout our secondary school period especially during holidays. On completion of his secondary career, he enrolled at the famous Christ the King College, Onitsha (CKC) for his Higher School. We met again at the University of Ibadan when he was admitted to read Geography in the same faculty of Social Sciences. There, the comradeship continued. At Ibadan, we had other friends like Dr Chika Ohia and late Dr Linus Dim.  We worked together and shared common vision regarding the progress of our town, Osina.

    In liaison with other friends in other universities: Bernard Nnagha and JO Eze both at the University of Ife then, Christian Maduekwe and Lambert Eze, UNN, we built a formidable relationship that changed the course of history in the community for the better. Issues relating to this are for another occasion.

    Suffice it to say we all enjoyed our relationship. We trusted each other and enjoyed the confidence of each other. Between two of us, the confidence was much stronger because of our childhood experiences. We were with each other after our national service and when we secured our initial appointments. We spent our initial salaries savouring and oiling our relationship. Such was the story until responsibility set in after we started marrying one after the other.

    For some reason, two of us were among the last in the group that married. And when it came to choosing his marriage sponsors, my wife and I were his choice. He was also the Godfather of my first son at baptism. We understand the chemistry of each other and have never had cause for serious disagreement even with our personality differences. He was quiet, non controversial and largely apolitical. Yet, we found common grounds to cohere.

    He taught for some years at Abbot Girls’ Secondary School Ihiala, in Anambra State before securing appointment as a teaching assistant at the Alvan Ikoku Federal College of Education, Owerri. While at Alvan and in very quick succession, he enrolled for his post graduate diploma certificate in education and Masters Degree at Imo State University, Owerri. On successful completion of the two programmes, he went for his doctorate degree which he successfully obtained within record time.

    He rose fast to the rank of Reader/Chief lecturer at Alvan. Dr. Umeh also held so many positions in the college: Head of Department of Geography and Environmental Science, chairman School of Social Sciences Teaching Practice Committee and departmental project coordinator among others. He has many publications.

    Umeh exudes a lot of wits and very famous for inventing interesting and sharp remarks, many of which his circle of friends cannot forget in a hurry. Those witty sayings still dominate our discussion till date. The frontiers of his knowledge are wide covering the sciences, medicine, engineering and architecture.

    A versatile and humorous person, Gallant will be highly missed by his numerous friends. He showed considerable determination to live even in the face of the odds. He displayed an uncommon resilience and doggedness as he battled health challenges in the last couple of months. It is sad he eventually succumbed to the wicked hands of death. Gallant will be missed by his family, his friends and all those who came into contact with him.

    May the God almighty grant his soul eternal rest in His bosom and the family, the fortitude to bear the sad loss! May I end this tribute by quoting from Lisa Whelchel: “There’s something about childhood friends you just can’t replace”. Gallant, I miss you and will continue to miss you until we meet to part no more. It was indeed a sweet friendship that refreshed the soul-proverbs 27:9.