Tag: girl

  • Girl goes missing after clubbing

    Girl goes missing after clubbing

    Where is Annabel Nzubechukwu Edeh? The whereabouts of the 300-Level English Language and Literature student of the Nnamdi Azikiwe University (UNIZIK) in Awka, Anambra State, remain unknown, six weeks after she joined her friends to visit a night club off-campus. OLUCHUKWU IGWE (500-Level Chemical Engineering) reports.

    They were six girls, who went to Lounge 24 Gaga, a nightclub in Awka, the Anambra State capital, on September 17. They are Calista, Uju, Lovelyn, Ada, Chika and Annabel. All of them are friends and live close to one another. When they returned to their hostels the following morning, one of them – Annabel – could not be found.

    Where is Annabel? This was the question classmates of Annabel Nzubechukwu Edeh could not answer. The 300-Level English Language and Literature student of the Nnamdi Azikiwe University (UNIZIK) in Awka has not been seen anywhere, 43 days after she went to the night club with her friends.

    Was she kidnapped? Is she dead? These are some of the questions being asked by her distraught family members and friends. She is the only girl in a family of three.

    Annabel, 24, a native of Enugu State, was last seen on Wednesday, September 17 evening, when she left her Paradise City Hostel in Iyiagu Estate, Awka.

    When she was leaving the club, Annabel reportedly left at midnight with a guy she met at the club. That was the last time she was seen.

    Annabel’s friend and hostel mate, who simply gave her name as Ifeoma, said after clubbing, the girls decided to find a place to sleep before returning to their hostels. But Annabel, she said, told her friends she wanted to go with Mmiri, a male acquaintance, she met at the club. She was said to have told her friends that she was in need of money, which could have informed her decision to go away with the guy.

    When she did not return in the morning, it was learnt that Ada and Chika called Annabel’s phone but were disappointed to hear a male voice claiming to have found the phone on the ground and asked the ‘owner’ to come for it.

    Ada and Chika, it was gathered, retrieved the phone and contacted Annabel’s elder brother, Ifeanyi, who reported the matter at the State Criminal Investigation Department (SCID) in Awka.

    CAMPUSLIFE learnt that Ada and Chika were detained for alleged complicity but were later released on bail.

    When contacted on the phone, it was learnt that Mmiri claimed Annabel left his house at 3:30am when she refused to enter his room.

    But, after the conversation, Mmiri reportedly switched off his phone and stopped going to a popular bar, where he drinks with his friends. He is nowhere to be found.

    Our correspondent’s efforts to speak with Annabel’s friends she went to the nightclub with were futile. All of them declined to comment on the issue.

    Annabel’s roommate, Ukamaka, gave an account of what happened when she spoke to CAMPUSLIFE on telephone.

    She said: “Annabel told me she was going to the club that evening. Her friends, Ada and Chika, waited in the compound till they were joined by their other friends. I had a premonition of the incident in a dream I had the previous night. I told her not to go to the club but she refused. When the other three girls arrived, they all left together. When she did not return in the morning, I called her line but nobody picked. Later, a man claimed he found it.”

    Asked to describe the kind of person Annabel is, Ukamaka said that her roommate is a good Christian and hardworking, saying Annabel is a good tailor. “I believe Annabel is a victim of circumstance,” Ukamaka said.

    Ifeanyi said his family remained devastated by the incident. “We are devastated at the moment. When I received the news, I travelled from Onitsha to Awka to report the matter at the police station. The matter is still being attended to at SCID and “B” Division. We have even gone spiritual to seek God’s help to find my missing sister. Our Dad is late but mum is highly disorganised.”

    Ifeanyi said the matter had been reported to the UNIZIK management.

    When CAMPUSLIFE visited Annabel’s mother in Onitsha, she fought back tears as neighbours consoled her. She said: “I warned my daughter to stay clear of bad friends, but she would not listen. When she was admitted in a hospital a few months ago, my spirit never accepted the kind of girls who visited her. Now, they have done their worst. I can’t see my daughter, now. Where is my only daughter? Annabel was seven months in my womb when my husband died.”

    Mrs Edeh said she had consulted a prophet, who confirmed to her that her daughter is alive but held captive somewhere. She claimed that the prophet informed her that it was Annabel’s friends that facilitated her ‘abduction’ and threatened to sue them if her daughter did not return within days.

    She added: “All I am asking is the safe return of my daughter. I have no other girl. If she was kidnapped, those holding her would have called us. I am confused. We are only praying to God and hoping that she returns home safe and alive. I am pleading with anyone, who knows her whereabouts, to give useful information that can help us to locate her.”

     

  • Canada partners firm on international day of the girl

    Canada partners firm on international day of the girl

    The High Commissioner of Canada to Nigeria, His Excellency, Mr. Perry J. Calderwood,  recently celebrated the International Day of the Girl by hosting a roundtable  to discuss how media and private sector partners can invest in adolescent girls to promote girl safety and empowerment.  The discussion was led by Girl Hub, an NGO working in three African countries to address the needs and rights of adolescent girls.

    The High Commissioner and Girl Hub welcomed representatives from the media and private sector, congratulating them on the inaugural partnering event, and encouraging all parties to find innovative ways to achieve tangible and sustainable results on protection and empowerment of girls.

    The International Day of the Girl is celebrated on October 11 each year.  The day promotes girls’ human rights and aims to draw global attention to the gender inequality and abuse that many girls suffer worldwide.  In line with this year’s theme, Empowering Adolescent Girls: Ending the Cycle of Violence, the principal objective of this roundtable event was to motivate, inform, engage, and equip the media and private sector to focus on girl safety, a key dimension needed for adolescent girls to thrive.

    High Commissioner Calderwood stated that, “Violence against women and girls is pervasive in many communities worldwide and takes many forms.  We must redouble efforts to overcome such violence and to create societies in which women and men are equal. Today’s discussion launches a new and promising collaboration between civil society and business that has the potential to unleash a ripple effect of change,” a phenomenon that Girl Hub popularly refers to as ‘The Girl Effect’.

    Canada is committed to the view that equality between men and women is not only a human rights issue, but is also an essential component of sustainable development, social justice, peace, and security.  Canada is a world leader in the promotion and protection of women’s and girls’ rights and gender equality.

  • Here comes UNILAG’s most beautiful girl

    Here comes UNILAG’s most beautiful girl

    Damilare Babajide, a 400-Level Law student, has emerged the most beautiful girl at the University of Lagos (UNILAG). She defeated 14 others to win a brand new Toyota Matrix in the pageant organised by the Conference of Faculty Presidents in collaboration with Sulcata Entertainment. CHARLES AGU (200-Level Mass Communication) reports.

    Last Sunday evening, the place to be for students of the University of Lagos (UNILAG) was the Indoor Sport Hall. The expansive hall could not contain the students, who flocked there to witness the coronation of Miss UNILAG.

    The students described the show as the biggest social event on the campus this semester. It was organised by the Council of Faculty Presidents (CFP) in collaboration with Sulcata Entertainment.

    It all started with a red carpet reception, where guests and contestants spoke to reporters about the event. No fewer than 15 female undergraduates participated in the contest.

    The pageant was boring at first but the contestants brought colour to the show when they appeared on stage for a group dance. Walking elegantly amid applause by the audience, the girls displayed choreographed dance steps.

    Popular hip-hop artistes led by Burna Boy and Run Town entertained the students. There were also campus artistes, who doled out rocking vibes to the audience members’ delight.

    The contestants were called out one after the other for the stage act, during which they sang and danced to showcase their musical talents. They did pantomime, stage drama and vocal renditions . One played the keyboard.

    The nation’s rich culture was also on display. The contestants appeared in attires peculiar to their culture.

    Clad in beautifully-designed gowns, the girls, one after the other, took to the runway for the judges and audience members’ assessment.

    Then, it was time for elimination. After a unanimous verdict, five of the girls were shortlisted for the final round.

    The five contestants were grilled by judges. Asked why she joined the contest, Damilare Babajide, a 400-Level Law student, said she was in the competition to realise her dreams to empower women, drawing applause from the audience.

    There was pindrop silence as the judges read their verdicts on each contestant. At the end, Damilare was announced winner. She was presented with a brand-new Toyota Matrix. She also won several endorsements from entertainment firms to start her pet project.

    Yaggy Energie, a youth empowerment group, promised to give her N100,000 maintenance fees for the running of her programmes.

    Adaobi Nkemadu, a Distance Learning Institute student, and Sarah Itoje, a Sandwich student, were the first and second runners-up.

    Damilare, who remained dazed several minutes after she emerged winner, said: “It still feels strange, like it has not happened yet. I am still trying to find my voice because I never believed I could win this pageant even though I have everything it takes to win. The feat means a whole lot to me; it is an opportunity to create a better environment for myself and girls out there. It also means new opportunities for me.”

    Asked what her pet project would be, she said: “I will create a platform to bring women together and make them realise their latent abilities.”

    If girls understand that they have potential to affect our existence in positive ways, she said, the world would be a better place.

    Consolation prizes were presented to other contestants. The runners-up received smart phones, which were donated by Techno Mobile. The first runner-up was given free taxi vouchers for one month. Others got Techno gift bags.

    When students were asked who among the contestants would have been their choice as Miss UNILAG, they unanimously chose Ifeoluwa Olaniyi from the Department of Environmental Science. She was presented with Galaxy Tablet by an online retail store, Regal Buyer.

     

  • History as girl bags first class in Radiography at UNICAL

    History as girl bags first class in Radiography at UNICAL

    Eteng Rajuno has made history by becoming the first student to bag a First Class in Radiography at the University of Calabar (UNICAL).  She was honoured at the eighth Induction and Oath taking of the College of Medical Science. STANLEY UCHEGBU (Accounting) reports.

    The induction at the College of Medical Science of the University of Calabar (UNICAL) was remarkable. Although it was the eighth oath taking at the Radiography and Radiological Sciences departments, it was special. An inductee, Ms Eteng Rejuno, made history by bagging a first class, the first since Radiography was introduced in the school in 1981.

    It was a moment of joy for the graduates, as they took the oath. The inductees filed into the  Conference Centre of the UNICAL Hotel venue, beaming with smiles. They were joined by their family members and friends.

    Of the lot admitted into the department five years ago, 61 were lucky to complete the programme. To the management, the ceremony was a turning point in the history of the institution and the Radiography Department.

    The Vice-Chancellor, Prof James Epoke, led other principal officers, including the Medical Science Provost, Prof Saturday Etuk, represented by his deputy, Prof Edisua Itam; Dean of the Faculty of Allied Medical Science, Prof Anne Asuquo and Dean of the Faculty of the Clinical Science, Prof Maurice Asuquo.

    Others were Registrar, Radiography Board of Nigeria (RBN), Mr Michael Okpaleke, Cross River State Chairman of Association of Radiographers of Nigeria, Mr. Otu Asinyang, Medical College Secretary, Mrs. Uduak Akang, Head of Radiography Department, Dr Nneoyi Egbe, lecturers and medical practitioners, among others.

    Prof Epoke urged the inductee not to tarnish the reputation of the profession, saying the institution was known for producing sound radiographers. He told the inductees to shun unethical practices that may erode the value of the profession, adding that the RBN would not hesitate to withdraw certificates of erring members.

    “Today, history is made in the Department of Radiography. We produced the first student to be graduated with a First Class in the department. And this makes the event remarkable. I will enjoin you to always seek knowledge and make the best of your career,” he said.

    Prof Etuk, whose speech was read by Prof Itam, described radiography as an evolving profession, stressing the need for constant update of knowledge to meet up with challenges and demands. He urged the inductees to see themselves as new breeds that would bring about advancement in the profession.

    Okpaleke advised the graduates to improve on the knowledge they acquired in school and be conversant with new techniques. He said: “Knowledge you have acquired is just the foundation, you are expected to improve on it. You must be abreast of trends on the field and make a success of it. You need to continuously develop yourself in new techniques because the practice of today is different from what we had in the years past.”

    In his lecture entitled: Ethical basis for improving radiography service delivery, Dr Egbe demonstrated with diagrams how to maintain radiation dose and therapeutic need of patients in line with best practice. He said a radiographer owed a patient an enhanced service.

    The high point was the oath taking session, which was performed by Okpaleke and Dr Egbe.

    Eteng had Cumulative Grade Point Average (CGPA) of 4.5 – the highest recorded since the institution started awarding Bachelor degree in the discipline. For the feat, Eteng bagged seven honours, including automatic employment in the school after her National Youth Service.

    Others best students are Emmanuel Agiande, who was the best in clinical proficiency, and Mabington Okwuonu, best in leadership creativity.

    Speaking on behalf of the graduates, Eteng praised the department’s lecturers and parents for their efforts in making their dreams come true.

    She said: “We thank the management, the college authorities, our parents, friends and well-wishers for the roles they played in ensuring that we are being inducted today. We specially appreciate our parents for their financial and moral support.”

    The inductees presented gifts to their lecturers and donated a generator to the department. This was done by Mabington,  a former president of Nigerian Association of Radiography Students.

  • Govt flies abandoned girl to Abuja

    Govt flies abandoned girl to Abuja

    It has been confirmed that the Federal Government has moved the Chibok girl, Susan Ishaya, abandoned by Boko Haram, to Abuja for further treatment.

    She was moved from the Police Hospital in Yola on Saturday to an undisclosed location in Abuja where she is receiving treatment.

    Susan’s identity is yet to be confirmed or her parents identified, since the parents, who travelled to Yola to meet her with the Vice Principal of the Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok were unable to see her because she was flown out without their knowledge.

    The Director of Publicity, Kibaku Area Development Association (KADA), Dr. Manasseh Allen, spoke yesterday in Abuja at the gathering of the #BringBackOurGirls advocacy members.

    He said it would be important to Susan’s recovery if she was reunited with her parents.

    His words: “She was moved by security agencies to Abuja from Yola yesterday. Her location has not been disclosed to us, they are working on her medical condition first before they can acquire any information from her.

    “They have found out that she is still incoherent,  she keeps repeating herself and at times she keeps repeating statements, which means we cannot depend on her words for now, but our leaders are in touch with the authorities and government. As I speak to you now, there are people on standby waiting on the military authorities so that they can have access to Susan and ensure proper medical attention is given to her before we can go on with whatever can come after.

    “No parent has made any contact with her. As I’m speaking to you, no one can say she is from Chibok because no one is yet to meet her.

    “My concern is that in every rehabilitation, family is essential, even in the healing process. So it is essential that Susan is reunited with her family as soon as possible so that the process of her psychological healing will be complete.”

  • Let the girl child breathe

    Let the girl child breathe

    Women leaders from across the Southwest gathered in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital last week to champion the cause of the girl child in a society where the specie seems increasingly endangered more than before.  BISI OLADELE and TAYO JOHNSON captured the import of the gathering

    It was exactly 148 days after over 230 girls were abducted by members of the Boko Haram sect at Chibok, Borno State. It was also the week when cases of rape of young girls flooded Nigerian newspapers and the electronic media.

    With the theme of the third National Women Summit focusing on the well-being of the girl child, the occasion, which drew notable women from both the public and the private sectors for practical talks on the plight of the girl child, was apt.

    The summit, which was organized by the Oyo State Officials’ Wives Association (OYSOWA), had “Girl Child Empowerment: A Challenge for All” as its theme. It was held at Lekan Are Hall, Kakanfo Inn, off Ring Road, Ibadan with delegates from many states and women groups across the nation.

    Wives of governors of Oyo, Ogun and Ekiti states joined Oyo State officials’ wives in their hundreds to discuss the challenges facing the girl child in Nigeria. They also found solutions, raising hopes for a safer, brighter future for young girls in the country.

    The First Ladies at the event are Mrs Florence Ajimobi (Oyo), Mrs Olufunso Amosun (Ogun) and Erelu Bisi Fayemi of Ekiti State respectively.

    Setting the tone for the summit was the renowned social crusader and activist, Dr Joe Okei-Odumakin, a woman that has spent the last 15 years championing the cause of democracy and women emancipation.

    Okei-Odumakin, in her charge to the participants, urged the women to demand immediate rescue of the girls abducted by Boko Haram members in Chibok on April 15.

    The activist, who is Coordinator, Women Arise for Change Initiative, lamented the untold hardship which the abducted girls have been subjected to for 148 days with government seemingly helpless in rescuing them.

    She highlighted the plight of the Chibok girls, moving participants to pity for the young victims of terrorism. The crowd of participants  enthusiastically responded to her request for a united call for the girls’ rescue.

    She explained that some of the abducted girls, who escaped from the captivity of the terrorists, narrated their harrowing experiences of serial rape and other abuses to her, urging Nigerians not to give up in demanding their rescue.

    Odumakin listed peculiar challenges facing the girl child in the society to include poor feeding or care, early or child marriage, victimization for alleged witchcraft, physical and sexual abuse, child labour, trafficking and prostitution.

    To overcome these and other challenges, the social crusader said children must be empowered with good education, stressing that girls and boys must have the same access to equal and quality education.

    She lauded the wife of the Oyo State Governor, Mrs Florence Ajimobi, for organizing the summit yearly with the aim of highlighting the plight of women and finding solutions to them.

    “I salute Mrs Ajimobi for realizing how important the girl child is. This empowerment requires the efforts of all. The more we believe that the girl child is important to the survival and progress of our society, the better for all of us.

    “To the Chibok girls, we will never forget you. You are heroines.” Okei-Odumakin said.

    In her welcome address, Mrs Ajimobi recalled that the first two editions of the summit, which dwelt on women issues, were successful, adding that they served as a motivation for this year edition.

    She described the project, which includes sensitization and empowerment, as a way of re-invigorating, enlightening, educating and promoting women in the society.

    Explaining the rationale behind the theme for the 2014 edition, Mrs Ajimobi said: “We deemed it necessary this year to concentrate on the girl child rather than women because most of the future of a woman is usually determined from when she is a girl. This is when her character is formed; this is when she develops her personal ideologies and idiosyncrasies. This is when the foundation that will make or mar her future is usually laid.”

    She said the greatest way to empower the girl child is through education. “Education is all-encompassing; it goes beyond the formal education that is received within the four walls of a classroom and usually includes informal education such as teaching of customs, socio-cultural values, traditional norms, courtesy and etiquette.” She said.

    In his keynote address, Governor Abiola Ajimobi consented that women are able to achieve great feats in the right environment. He added that they are an integral part of the development process of any nation.

    Having identified the many ways girls are poorly treated in Nigeria, Ajimobi disclosed that his administration has taken several steps to empower girls and women.

    He said: “Education is the most important tool to empower the girl child and women. Hence, we focus on the tripod of the pupil, teacher and teaching facilities. Though we focus on children collectively, we have great respect for the girl child.”

    Hon. Justice Olajumoke idowu Aiki of Oyo State High Court in her lecture on” Law Enforcement and Government Policies that Foster Empowerment for the Girl Child,” said the topic was crucial at a time in world history when combined negative factors of poverty, economic recession , family instability have ravaged humanity in general, with the girl child worse hit.

    She said: “Nigeria signed all the laws guiding the girl child act. Among them is the prohibition or punishment of child marriage and betrothal, which stipulates that anyone that breaks the law will be fined N500,000 or five years in prison.”

    In addressing the law enforcement issues affecting the girl child, the judge urged the government at all levels to embark on policies which will foster the protection of the right of the girl child.

    She stressed that the internal and external aggression confronting the girl child must be eliminated.

    Another lecturer, ýMrs Grace Atim, of the Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution, Abuja, who spoke on the ‘Right of the Girl Child,’ said investment in girl child should be prioritized by all.

    Atim posited that a girl child seemingly grows up in an environment where she is made to believe that she is inferior to the boy, adding that she is further vulnerable to societal discrimination, marginalisation, oppression, rape, stereotypes against the girl child that is reinforced by cultural and traditional beliefs.

    “People prevent the girl child from going to school and subject them to early marriage in the name of religion. No violence on girl child is justifiable. If we want a peaceful atmosphere and rapid development in the country, we shouldý indulge in girl child education,” she said.

    The Oyo State Commissioner for Culture and Tourism, Princess Adetutu Adeyemi-Akhigbe, spoke on: “The Girl Child: An Asset for Sustainable Cultured National and Tourism Development”.

    She underscored the involvement of women in culture as up to 50 per cent. The commissioner insisted that women maintain tradition and build strong communities through proper rearing of culture, producing handcrafts, using natural medicines, speaking local dialects, weaving traditional dresses and performing traditional songs.

    She further called on the government and Non-Governmental Organizations (NGO) to help create an enabling environment for the girl child to grow, noting that women representatives at the management level in different organizations have increased in number tremendously.

    According to her, given proper education and an equal footing with the male child, they would perform more.

    In her recommendation as a solution to the empowerment of the girl child, she said: “Leadership training programmes should be organized to disabuse their minds from the relegating image misconstrued by the society. At the home front, parents should give equal opportunities to the girl child with their male counterpart to grow and compete in the world. Parents should constantly disabuse the mind of the girl child of any religious beliefs and status quo and practices that can limit their aspirations in life.”

    Another facilitator, Princess Oyefunke Oworu, who spoke on Entrepreneurship and Self Dependent for a Girl child, emphasized the importance and role of education, stressing that there was need for a massive empowerment for the girl child.

    Oworu, who is the Commissioner for Trade, Investment and Cooperative in the state, highlighted the various vocational skills women from different part of Oyo State are known for and implored women to go for any of them to improve their economic strength.

    She stressed that the advent of the Internet and modern technology has created easy access to sell their goods and make good profit.

    ý”Empowerment and vocational skills are keys to development and the progressive advancement of the girl child. Empowerment increases the participation of women in politics and gives an edge to the girl child anywhere,” the commissioner said

    She disclosed that more vocational training centres would be built to facilitate the girl child empowerment in the nearest future.

     

  • Head girl bags five awards

    Head girl bags five awards

    All eyes were on Sarah Benson as she made repeated journeys to the podium to receive various awards during the Valedictory/Prize Giving Day of Livingstone College Ikorodu  last Friday at Ikorodu Town hall.

    Sarah, who was the Head Girl of the school’s Ogba annex, clinched the overall best graduating student, best in Physics, Special Ambassador, Leadership and Best Science Student awards.

    Addressing the graduating SS3 pupils, the guest speaker and a senior lecturer at the Faculty of Law, National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN), Mrs Nimisore Akano, urged them to take their education seriously and use it to impact positively on the society.

    “Put what you have leant into good use and impact positively on your friends, family and the society at large. Getting education is just a part of it, the use you put your education is the most important. Make sure to better the situation from the way you met it with the education that you have acquired, and always strive to achieve excellence,” she said.

    Founder of the school, Dr Kola Olusola Chriswealth, in his message titled: Buried treasures, urged the graduands to discover their talents and use it to develop the society.

    The Acting school Administrator, Mr Abayomi Oluwagbemiga Adeniji, urged the pupils to make judicious use of their time and be disciplined.

    “My message to all the graduating student is that time is a concept you cannot ignore. Your time is limited; do not waste it living someone else’s life. You have exactly the same number of hour per day that was given Steve Jobs, Barack Obama, Goodluck Jonathan etc; therefore you can do great things than them,” he said.

    One of the graduands, Miss Simbiat Awolaja, praised the workers for their caring attitude.

    “The members of staff of this school have been so wonderful. Sometimes, if I did not have money for school fees and I pleaded with them to give me time, they used to allow me to for few days,” she said.

     

  • This eight-year-old girl needs N2.6m to survive

    This eight-year-old girl needs N2.6m to survive

    An indigent family in Ikare, Akoko North East Local Government Area of Ondo State has appealed to governments, corporate bodies and public spirited Nigerians to come to the aid of their eight-year-old daughter Saidat Saliu who has a heart disease.

    Mr and Mrs Adeyemi Saliu whose daughter was diagnosed with heart disease two years ago said they cannot afford the N2.6million needed to rectify the defect in her heart at a foreign hospital.  The primary two pupil of Cornerstone Nursery and Primary School, Ikare Akoko, was on October 2012 reported by the Medical Director of Comprehensive Medical Centre, Iwase, Oka Akoko, Ondo State, Dr E.A Olorunfemi to have developed signs and symptoms of heart disease when she was three years old.

    According Dr Olorunfemi these signs made the hospital authorities to refer her case to a cardiologist who carried out some investigations on her and discovered that the girl has congenital heart disease.

    The October 2012 health report on the little Saidat made her parents who are peasant farmer and petty trader respectively, to take her case to the Kanu Heart Foundation.

    Noting that the patient, Saidat is from indigent family that can hardly afford to even buy the basic palliative drugs for the girl, the foundation in November 2012 launched an appeal to save the life of the little girl.

    The foundation according to an SOS letter dated November, 30 2012, revealed that Saidat’s condition then required an urgent open-heart surgery abroad due to the absence of the requisite medical facilities for “this risk” surgery in Nigeria.

    As at the time the appeal was launched, the foundation sought to raise a total sum N1,632,000 to subsidise the cost of treatment, accommodation, transportation and feeding throughout the duration of her stay overseas.

    According to the letter, the foundation could not on its own shoulder the responsibility of the cost of the treatment, stressing that she was under close medical observation as her case was severe while her doctor advised that the surgery be carried out urgently to avoid complications.

    Unfortunately, the appeal did not yield the desired result as the parent could not raise the N800, 000 which was the 50 per cent of the money required for the surgery.  Saidat was thereafter taken back home.

    However, the condition of the little girl, who is now almost eight years old, has deteriorated which compelled her parents to rush her to Wesley Guild Hospital Ilesha, Osun State.

    According to the father, they had been going to the hospital since last year and this has gulped all what the family could raise.

    The frequent visit to the hospital had been affecting her education as she is now in Primary Two when many of her peers are already in Primary Four.

    Ironically, the family, which could not raise N800, 000 in 2012, is now been told to urgently look for N2.6million for Saidat to live, due to the deteriorating condition of her health and the rate of inflation Any assistance for little Saidat should be channeled through her father’s bank account at Skye Bank with the name Saliu Adeyemi, account no 1761694126 while he can be reached on telephone number 07066132323.

  • What I want from President Jonathan – Golden girl Maryam Usman

    What I want from President Jonathan – Golden girl Maryam Usman

    Golden girl Maryam Usman is still savouring her weightlifting performance which not only won her gold but sent tongues wagging in the ongoing Commonwealth Games here in Glasgow.

    Maryam dumped her Samoan opponent Ele Opeloge after lifting 155 kg to become the Queen of the Weightlifting  of the Commonwealth Games.

    Yesterday, Maryam, who is still being mobbed by athletes at the Games Village, made a passionate appeal to President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan to host them just as he has done to footballers.

    ‘’There is only one thing I want. I want President Jonathan to host us just like he has done to footballers’’,  the  75 + kg lifter from Kaduna requested.

    Reflecting on the rivalry between her and Opeloge, Maryam confessed that she was rattled when the Samoan opted for 161kg to upset her from winning the gold medal.

    ‘’I was shocked but prayed against it. She knew that the only way to win the gold was to lift more than me. But there was no way she could have lifted 161kg. She is not a world champion. Such lifts are meant for champions. And when she tried and could not lift it, I fell on my knees and the rest is history’’, she said as more athletes queued to take autographs and others to take pictures.

    Maryam, who is making her second appearance at the Commonwealth Games, was a silver medalist at the XIX Games in New Delhi.

    ‘’I was tired of winning silver medals. I did not want another silver at the Commonwealth Games after winning one in India. I was focused and did not allow for distractions. There was more pressure on me from officials and athletes. But, I was calm and I thank God for answering my prayers.’’

    Maryam also won three gold medals at the African championships in South Africa. She also scooped a bronze medal at the Paris Championship in 2011 as well as yet another bronze at Russia 2012.

    ‘’I cherish this medal more than other medals’’, she said with her trademark smile that reveals her immaculate white teeth.

    ‘’That is why I want our President to extend his gesture of hosting footballers to us. That will spur us to do even more in the Olympics. It gives us a sense of belonging other than thinking that our country is only appreciative to footballers’’ she said.

  • The girl-child needs education’

    To mark the annual International Day of the African Child, the Basic Education Africa (BE Africa), in partnership with other concerned non-governmental bodies, has sought urgent attention to the fate of the girl-child in the country. It was at a seminar tagged: “Basic Education for All – A Focus on Girl-child Education.”

    It was held at the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs (NIIA), Victoria Island, Lagos to raise awareness on the plight of children in Africa, and on the need for continued improvement in their education.

    Seasoned speakers at the event, who were drawn by the BEAfrica founder and chairman, Ms. Abimbola Okoya, included: Director, Oando Foundation, Ms. Tokunbo Durosaro; founder, Slum2School Project, Mr. Otto Orondaam and Ms. Daphne Akatugba, The Future Project Nigeria. Mrs Olusola Adeola moderated the question and answer session.

    The theme of the seminar was hinged on the fragile fate of girls’ education in Nigeria as being recently threatened by the recent kidnapping of over 200 girls in Chibok, Borno State by Boko Haram.

    Ms. Durosaro who spoke on “Promoting a Holistic and Sustainable Approach to Enabling Access to Quality Basic Education,” said about 10.5 million children were out of school in Nigeria, adding that in Northern Nigeria states about two-thirds of primary age children are out of school.

    Durosaro who said 17.21 per cent of children that are out of schools in the world are Nigerians, added that one in every six out-of-school children is a Nigerian.

    She said the barrier to quality education in Nigeria is inadequate budgetary allocation, saying that what the government is putting into education was against the international board recommendation monitoring education in Africa.

    Durosaro also said that when people’s standard of living is poor, they would never have time to think of school, adding that they would rather think of scouting for daily survival. She said the way forward is to increase the private sector participation in the education sector.

    Orondaam, who spoke on “Basic Education for All: Making it a Reality for the disadvantaged child in Nigeria,” emphasized that cities are more developed than communities because educational focus is more on urban areas than rural.

    “Slum still exists in some communities because they have not seen a good reason why a child should go to school. All these happen due to poverty and lack of faith in Nigeria,” he said.

    Ms. Akatugba, who spoke on “Education and the Future Generation: Advocating for Equality in Access to Quality Basic Education in Nigeria” said despite the country’s progress in education since 1999 in Millennium Development Goal (MDG), over seven million school-age children still do not go to school, while at least 17 per cent of those who attend schools do not complete primary school education.

    Akatugba said that in some states, poor parental view on formal education for the girl child is still high. She said it is worsened by early marriage for girls in some areas and a situation where their boys and girls engagement in income-generating activities to supplement household income in the South Eastern and North- Eastern parts of the country.

    She advocated the expansion of partnerships and with the civil society and ministries to stop the gender disparity.

    The Baale of Omole Land, Chief Taiwo Bakare, said every community should know its role in the education of girls in its environment. He urged traditional rulers to lay good examples by sending their daughters to schools.

    He added: “Schools in the community should also encourage these girls to learn by providing suitable and conducive environment for learning.”