Tag: harmattan

  • 10 essential tips to stay safe during Harmattan season

    10 essential tips to stay safe during Harmattan season

    The Harmattan season is characterised by cold, dry, and dusty air, which can be challenging for many people.

    To help you cope with this season, here are 10 life-saving tips:

    1. Stay hydrated: Drink plenty of water to prevent dehydration.

    2. Protect your eyes: Wash your eyes regularly to avoid red eyes.

    3. Cover up: Wear a mask or towel to cover your nose and mouth when it’s dusty.

    4. Limit outdoor activities: Avoid or reduce outdoor activities, especially if you have allergies.

    5. Stay warm: Wear clothes that keep your body warm.

    6. Get medical help when needed: Seek medical attention if you experience running, itchy, sneezing, and a stuffy nose.

    7. Keep your home dust-free: Keep doors and windows closed to prevent dust from entering.

    8. Moisturise: Use moisturisers to prevent dry skin and dry palms.

    9. Protect your lips: Use lip balm to prevent cracked lips.

    10. Stay informed: Be aware of the risks associated with the Harmattan season, such as asthma and allergies, and take necessary precautions.

    Additional precautions should be taken by:

    – Asthmatic patients: Always carry your inhaler and avoid dust as much as possible.

    – Sickle cell disease patients: Drink plenty of water, avoid outdoor activities, and keep warm to prevent attacks.

    – Children and the elderly: Provide closer care and warmth to prevent hypothermia.

    Incorporating foods rich in antioxidants and omega-3 fatty acids can also help. Eat foods like beans, carrots, tomatoes, and peas, and consume foods high in omega-3 fatty acids, such as salmon.

  • 2023-2024 harmattan, dustier, hotter than no other

    2023-2024 harmattan, dustier, hotter than no other

    About this time in Nigeria every year, the SADs have a field day for which every one prepares against according to one’s health challenges. The SADs are the Seasonal Affective Diseases. They are peculiarities of the transition from one season to another, and of the seasons themselves. We have been in the harmattan season from December last year and should be through with it at the end of this month or in early February. Since I have known the harmattan, which connects the rain season with the dry season, it has been a transitional season of cold and dust. It is another phase of the weather which, like the rain season, many asthmatics do not like. The rain makes the environment greener and the air filled with plant pollen which may aggravate symptoms of asthma. The cold and the dust of the harmattan may do the same and more. In particular, the dust of the harmattan may freight airborne germs into homes and offices and into food in the kitchen or on the dining table. There appears to be no cold this year, but a much bigger offloading of dust and scorching heat everywhere, ahead of the heat season even heat strokes, heat death, measles and cerebrospinal meningitis.

    Nigeria’s weathermen, I mean the meterologists, were sluggish this year in forewarning the public that the harmattan this year would be more brutal than any other. Ghana’s weathermen gave public warnings before Nigeria’s roused themselves from slumber. Thank goodness they ever did, warning of the need to wear nose masks as we did for COVID-19. That was when respiratory and other infections reared their heads, especially in Abuja. Many families came down not just with cough and other problems, some persons developed tonsilitis which may be fatal. Happily, the doctors sprang to their feet in aid of whoever had infections and could afford their bills. Persons who could not sought relief in natural medicines.

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    Nature is forever unbeatable. It remains the season’s master even in a well curtained 23 window house designed for natural ventilation and minimum dust inflow. Last week, I overheard the complaints of a gentleman about this season. He designed his house as just described to protect his pocket from electricity expenses of air conditioning, and to safeguard his health from the environment.  The curtains held dust, could drop them off in the laundry over five minutes and, in another five minutes, be ready to run on their tracks. In the cold, rain weather and in the harmattan, the special curtains kept the house warm. But guess what? Today, he needs to add an equal number of curtains to hold back the dust, and that would mean a warmer house in this harmattan heat with no air conditioners or electric fans. For houses which have air conditioners, where is the electricity to run them. How many persons can run electricity generators as they did until about eight months ago when petrol price went up?. Anyway, man is an adaptive being and, so, we all should adapt to the weather to beat the SADs.

    Something happening?

    We journalists are trained to have A LONG AND SHARP NOSE FOR NEWS, otherwise we would not be the REPORTERS we are proud to be called. It is an instinct. Different professions have different instincts. The reporter tends to embody many, if not all, instincts in THE LONG AND SHARP NOSE FOR NEWS. Even around my house, it didn’t take me long to discover that  the neighbourhood was “farming” a “catfish”. From my bedroom or study at different times of the day, I easily figured two cars parked in different locations  watching over a third or its passengers. I do not see them. The manner of their signalling gave them out. One car would branch off from the others at a road junction and become stationary in the rear. The other support car would move about 50 metres ahead of the man’s car. The signalling cars have different horn sounds. One car hoot may signal attention “TO OTHERS” Another car may signal “READY TO MOVE”.  Even when persons I shared this experience with did not seem to trust my judgement, they soon discovered regularity could mean something.

    Climate change?  

     In their reportorial work, journalists are dissatisfied with the surface  of an event which, to many persons, is THE NEWS. The news, for them, always lie deep beneath. That’s why they dig up the FIVE Ws and one H… Who, what, why, when, where and how? Thus, the news about 58 years ago was not that the deputy Premier of the then Western Region of Nigeria refused a handshake offer from a senior political leader of the region to the embarrassment or amazement of guests at an important official government function. That was surface news. I learned of the news beneath the news about 25 years ago in the company of Mr Nduka Irabor and Mrs Harriet Lawrence who, together with me, had a memory lane interview with this gentleman from Modakeke, Ile Ife, who was trying to make his son succeed him in politics. I was 15 years old, 58 years ago and an avid newspaper reader at school and during the holiday. So, I knew of this well publicised event. When I asked him why he put his hands in his pockets, it turned out that political adversity was not the cause as was erroneously widely reported in those days. He told us the other gentleman wore a ring on one of his right fingers which he suspected was for diabolical manifestations.

    Hot harmattan

     We are wondering why the weather is so hot during the harmattan  and we are pulling off our dresses when we should be wearing woolen dresses, but we only end up shrugging our shoulders and leaving the question for scientists to thrash out for us. Already, they have inaundated us with noises of Climate Change.

    Almost every country is hosting at least one major international conference every year on Climate Change.They are showing other countries  how climate change is affecting their land forms, human geography and economy to inform them their adaptations and new businesses evolved from their  new human existential trajectory. Thus, we are all talking about climate change and blaming it on the burning of firewood and charcoal for energy or on the exhaust of factory machines and motorised vehicles. May we not all be looking at surface news? Could there be no triggers for climate change beneath the orchestrated  surface news? In all of these, only few persons remember the unforgettable EDGAR CAYCEE, “the man who saw tomorrow”. He predicted with accuracy or near accuracy some of today’s events. He predicted, also, future events, including the coming of a powerful Star, much more powerful than all the stars combined, to rearrange the cosmic forces and re-shape the earth as well in all ramifications. In some spiritual circles, this Star is known as THE GREAT COMET. Besides Edgar Caycee’s, there are many prophesies about It, including spiritual descriptions by PROPHET EZEKIEL. I had the priviledge in the 1990s to review several times and in different perspectives in THE GUARDIAN newspaper of the book of American journalist TOM KAY on this subject titled WHEN THE COMET RUNS. The book is a compendium of prophesies about this Star. The bottom line is that it would cause gargantuan climate and weather catastrophies on earth, “suck up and high” water bodies on earth, generate earthquakes, floodings, overturn social, political and economic systems, cause disappearance of several coastal lands and bring up from the seas some lands which sank millenia ago and were overrun by water. One of these is believed to be THE LOST CONTINENT OF ATLANTIS, displaced by the ATLANTIC OCEAN when diminutive moon, the Earth’s nearest cosmic neighbour, was empowered and lowered towards a degenerate  master civilisation called Atlantis to eliminate its aberrations from the surface of the earth. Some thinkers say, however, that the Atlantean story is philosophical fiction. Edgar Caycee and other seers say it is real. A risen Atlantis will wholly or in part surely devastate the present land forms with displaced Atlantic ocean water. The Atlantic ocean is the world’s second largest ocean after the Pacific Ocean. It commands a depth of about 8,605 meters, occupies 24 per cent of the Earth’s water surface area, is about 17 per cent of the earth’s surface and spreads 85.13 million square kilometers, according to goggle. Re-surfacing of Atlantian land would surely displace Atlantic ocean water on coastal cities and nations, including the coast of West Africa. Japan may disappear. So may many islands and some parts of England. In my days as a teenager picnicking at the Lagos bar beach, there were many cherubim and seraphim churches, restaurants and hotels, including the famous OCTOPUS owned by the benitie family on this beach land. Much of the land has given way to the Atlantic Ocean. Goggle says the beach land lost two kilometers between 1905 and 2005.

     Edgar Caycee foresaw a religious war in which Arab armies, close to victory in present day United States, would be swallowed by a major earthquake which may destroy Western civilisation and return mankind to near primordial beginnings. Imagine an earth without airplanes, electricity, internet, telecommunications, pharmaceutical medicines, packaged foods, ships and motorcars, among others! That is the picture painted, also, in DOOMSDAY 1999, by Charles  Berlitz who unites religion, philosophy and science to predict a new apocalypse in all corners of the earth. Although catastrophies of the nature painted by Edgar Caycee did not happen in 1999 to bring mankind on their knees as suggested in this book, scientists do not believe dramatic changes will fail to occur sometime. They have proof ours is not the first civilisation of humans to live on earth. For example, the Earth’s magnetic poles which make its structures stable have often shifted their positions, causing dramatic changes. Edgar Caycee said they would, again, and that a huge lake would appear in Sahara Desert,  orign of the dust of the present and previous harmattans. When he made this prediction, science was unaware of a huge underground water reserve beneath the Sahara desert. Now, it is known that there is a number of acquifers there. One of them  called Nubian sandstone acquifer system holds the equivalent of 500 years Nile River Discharge embedded in North Eastern Sahara desert. Its area covers North Eastern Sudan, North Eastern Chad, South Eastern Libya and Egypt. The water is said to be irreplenishable. Who knows, however, if new rivers to be cut inland by waters by a risen Atlantis would feed its receptacle? Since the prediction of Edgar Caycee,”the man who saw tomorrow”, the Earth’s second largest acquifer, underground water body, has been discovered beneath the Sahara  desert. Will it be intruded upwards? If it is, where will the present desert sand go?

     When I described the moon  earlier as the earth’s diminutive neighbour, it was in relation to the size of the giant star or The Great Comet we are told is on its way to the earth. From one of the descriptions of it, our sun may appear to us like a diminutive star. We may not see the twinkling stars at night. This was why, a few months ago, I jumped out of  bed at about five in the morning one day on hearing from VOA Africa programme that scientists had discovered a star several light years away which was shining more than one million times brighter than our sun. I mentioned this information on this page at that time, and some of the readers of this column tracked it for a while.

    Harmattan 2023-2024  

    It is past midnight as I write today January 03, 2024. The sun went down a long time ago. I am sweating all over, especially from the armpits from where I hardly sweat even in the heat season.

    Harmattan  

    In previous harmattans, I took one capsule of 1000 heat units of Cayenne two times a day to beat the cold and wear light clothing. In this one, I tie wrapper indoor like my friends in the east of Nigeria, except when I have guests. Producers of satchet water called pure water are cashing in on the heat. My household consumes about 10 bags of 20 satchets every week. Last week, the price of one bag rose from N200 to N250. One satchet sells for 25 Kobo, so the minimum anyone can buy are two satchets. Everyone, everywhere, is buying and drinking water to replace water lost to sweating. Poor fellows, they do not realise it is not only water that needs replacement. That is why they are weak, if not run down, despite the volumes of water they consume. Sweat removes minerals and electrolytes from the body. It is the electrolytes and minerals doctors try to replace through “drips” in a run-down person. Sweating takes away sodium, potassium, calcium and especially, but sodium in larger quantum. This is why sweat tastes salty.The more water a thirsty person drinks without some sodium in it, the more water the kidneys will run out  because it is sodium which keeps water in the body. Sodium deficiency is dangerous for several reasons. According to goggle, this may include, but is not limited to, nausea and vomitting, headache, confusion, loss of energy, drowsiness, fatigue, restlessness irritability, muscle weakness, spasms or cramps, seizures, coma, insomnia or even death. Therefore, it is advisable to add a pinch of sea salt or natural salt to meals or to a fourth  glass of water. Sea salt has about 40 chemical substances other than sodium which neutralises the dangerous side effects of table salt or bleached salt. When they are readily available, I prefer the biochemic sodium salts. Some of them are NATRU MUR (sodium chloride), NATRUM SULPH (sodium sulphate) and NATRUM PHOS (sodium phosphate) in the 6x tablet dosage. Of equal benefit are the biochemic potassium salts, kalimur, Kali sulph. Some persons prefer ORT powder from the pharmacy.

    Some persons go for water loaded fruits especially the REFRIGERANT types. As their generic name suggests they refrigerate. Among them are cucumber, melons, leafy greens, butter milk, mango, lemon, curd, Avocado, coconut, mint, chamomile.They have potassium which prevents collapse of cells and is good for preventing elevated blood pressure in some cases. Dehydration in blood vessels may cause “THICK BLOOD” and reduction of flow surface area to prevent AIR LOCK in which case air replaces fluid and dams blood circulation.

    Air- borne diseases cannot be ruled out in the avalanche of dust everywhere.Breaks in the skin surface are vulnerable. So are the eyes. One of the best remedies for eye infections is Bitter Kola eye drops. I do not advise that it be made at home because of the possibilities of infected gadgets. Therefore, I prefer the pharmaceutical grade made by professor Bukunola  Adefule Oshitelu, an opthalmologist. EYE BRIGHT eye washes and teas are good, too. So are eye antioxidants herbs such as bilberry, marigold flower extracts, for their lutein, zeazanthin, asthazantin and other carotenoids, nettles for hay fever or hives, vitamin A, C and E, selenium and zinc.  Vitamin A requires zinc for bio-availability in the eye. This should be a season, also, for GINGKO BILOBA. It puts blood not only in the brain but in the eyes as well. Eye doctors should have been warning that  the sun is penetrating and harsh on the eyes. Eyes which do not have adequate nutritional protection may develop cataracts and glaucoma or these conditions in festering stages may be worsened by them. This is why it is important to protect the eyes not just with dark eye glasses but with those ones which block the damaging blue spectrum of sunlight from reaching the eye.

    For those persons whose respiratory systems are weak and tend to succumb in whatever degree to dust, I suggest, they do not mind that orange is now selling for N100.  Remove the PEEL, but do not throw it away. It is a great medicine for cough as it is for bronchitis and asthma. Eat the peeled orange minus the seeds. The fruit sacs have lots of bioflavonoids which are anti-inflammatory and immune boosting apart from helping to build collagen. The peel may be eaten after it has been ridden of germs in a saline solution or in white cider vinegar solution, if the teeth are still strong to munch it. It may be parboiled and eaten with any meal. The water should not be thrown away. Orange peel has lots of ANTI-HISTAMINE. That is one of the medicines the doctor prescribes for asthma and other respiratory system conditions, and its cost can put a hole in the pocket these days. I do not advise that it be dried and kept for future use because fungi may infest it and this would cause another problem. So, use it fresh or purchase the factory made orange peel powder or extracts. As I said, this is a great medicine.

  • Take 100 per cent fruit juice during harmattan, says expert

    A health and wellness advocate, Dr. BisiAbiola, has urged Nigerians to embrace consumption of 100 per cent fruit juice in order to reduce dehydration in this harmattan season.

    Dr. Abiola, during the December edition of Chivita-sponsored health and wellness dialogue, also warned against indulging in excess sugar consumption during the yuletide. She advised individuals to take pure fruit juice instead, as it is healthy and highly nutritious.

    According to the health and fitness expert, the dustiness and coarseness that is associated with harmattan in most parts of the country calls for increased intake of pure fruit juice as an essential survival strategy for both adults and children.  ”Quite often, we talk about celebration without considering the fact that you can only have fun when you are healthy. What is your nutritional objective as Christmas and the New Year approach? Of course, this is a season of indulgence, but as a health-conscious individual, you must select your meals and drinks with your overall nutritional goal in mind. And I think pure fruit juice is definitely the way to go,” she said.

    The wellness expert also urged individuals to adopt a healthy lifestyle to help reduce the risks of cardiovascular diseases such as high blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes, obesity and heart diseases. She said that balancing one’s diet with pure fruit juice consumption could reduce the severity in the case of individuals who are suffering from such challenges. “The available evidence relating to 100 per cent fruit juice consumption indicates modest benefits for blood pressure, while there is also an emerging trend revealing inverse associations between 100 per cent fruit juice consumption and risk of stroke. Overall, this suggests that 100 per cent fruit juice is an appropriate choice of beverage for a heart healthy diet,”she stressed.

  • How to stay healthy during harmattan

    How to stay healthy during harmattan

    It’s that season of the year again, that is usually characterised by dusty and dry wind. And this predisposes many of us to cold and flu. For those of us who love the Harmattan season, our love for it comes at a price. According to experts on health, the change in the environment with results in Harmattan brings about an increase in the emergence of common cold and flu which is always very rampant in children and adults during the period, in fact, it’s usually difficult to spare anyone. Therefore, Nigerians should concern themselves with how they should prevent themselves from those infections.

    What are the differences between cold and flu?

    Differentiating common cold from flu, scientists, explained that common cold manifests with a trilogy of symptoms: sore throat, blocked nose, and cough. There are more than 200 viruses that can cause the common cold, but rhinoviruses are by  far the most common culprits.

    The flu, they said is caused by the influenza virus, of which there are three types: influenza A, influenza B, and influenza C. “Common colds and flu share many symptoms, but an infection with influenza often also manifests with a high temperature, aching, and cold sweats or shivers — a good way to tell the two apart”.

     

     Why do we have cold and flu?

    The experts further explained how these viruses normally try to break our bodies defence mechanism, and gain entrance through the noses.

    The report stated that once a virus has penetrated this defence mechanism, the immune system takes control of fighting off the intruder. Phagocytes, which are specialised immune cells, engulf and digest viruses. But cold air has also been linked to a decrease in this activity.

    This explains why we are actually discouraged from using dirty fingers to touch our eyes, nose, or mouth, because these are the gates to the body.

     

    How to ward off cold and flu in harmattan

    The best way to protect yourself is by washing your hands with soap and water frequently, avoiding touching your eyes, nose, and mouth, and staying away from people who are already infected.

    These rules also apply to influenza. The CDC recommends a yearly flu shot as the best way of preventing infection.

    However, should you fall prey to harmattan virus; there are natural remedies to help you out.

     

    Natural remedies for

    cold and flu.

    • Take Vitamins Supplement:

    One of the ways you can live healthy or stay healthy during harmattan is to take vitamins supplements as much as possible. Some may be prescribed by the doctor or you buy supplements like Vitamin C which keeps the body safe at this time but for children, you can give then syrup of Vitamins at this time. The primary function of this vitamin supplement is to prevent harmattan related diseases and other diseases such as scurvy, flu, cough etc which may affect people, adult or babies when exposed to this dusty winds.

    • Wear thick clothing:

    Another thing you need to cope and live healthy during harmattan is to wear thick clothing. Wearing thick clothing helps to prevent cold infection or over exposing the chest to cold symptoms which is one of the best healthy things to do. You can keep your children or babies safe and warm by wearing thick cloth for them at this time.

     

    • Use Balm / Body Moisturiser:

    Harmattan causes dry skin, dry lips, lips cracks, skin cracks etc but you can manage this by using lip balms on your lips, and applying moisturising cream on body and leg. Using this is healthy due to the oil contents it contains. It prevents the skin surface from various irritations that may occur due to harmattan. And one of the best ways to keep babies safe at this time is by rubbing their body with shea butter or any wet skin lotion that prevents the skin from dryness.

    • Eat fruits:

    Just as we highlighted about Vitamins in (1), fruits is also good to eat during harmattan because it contains Vitamins and mineral which prevent diseases and also increase the body metabolism. Not only that, fruits also contains water and fiber which aid digestion and ease the passage of faeces from the body. If you don’t have access to fruit in your area, you can still get some fruit juice that contains naturally processed fruits and not sugar coated juice.

     

    • Use fomentation:

    You can also cope and manage the harmattan period by applying fomentation on your skin, leg, arm especially anytime you want to sleep during the night and day when the cold condition is intense and cold. Some people do rub their babies with mild fomentation after bathing the kids in the morning; it keeps them warm and prevent diseases.

    • Bathe with warm water:

    One of the ways to stay healthy during harmattan period is to bathe with warm water in the morning and night. This will keep the body warm and free of cold and other flu symptoms. You can also bathe little children with warm water as well, it also keeps them warm and prevent the children from contacting flu or other related disease.

    • Avoid cold drinks:

    Harmattan period is not a time of drinking cold drinks but a period where hot water or warm drink is preferred. Cold drinks or cold water during harmattan period is not healthy because it may lead to cough, flu, sore throat, catarrh etc.

    • Stay indoor:

    Harmattan is a harsh condition and to stay healthy and keep warm during this condition, you need to stay in-door if you don’t have anything to do outside. The condition contains cold, dry and dusty wind but staying in door will help you stay healthy and safe.

     

    • Drink hot tea:

    You can also stay healthy or live healthy during harmattan period if you occasionally drink hot substance like tea probably in the morning and night. It keeps you warm and free of flu or other cold related diseases.

    In conclusion, the health tips listed above are the different ways you can keep yourself safe. You just need to stay indoors, drink hot tea, avoid cold drinks, bathe with warm water, eat fruits, take vitamin supplements, use vaseline and wear thick clothing materials.

     

    • Source: http://www.afrabchem.com/
  • Harmattan: Lagos records 40 fire incidents – Commissioner

    Harmattan: Lagos records 40 fire incidents – Commissioner

    About 40 fire incidents were recorded in different parts of Lagos State over the weekend, the Commissioner for Special Duties and Intergovernmental Relations, Mr Seye Oladejo, has said.

    Oladejo disclosed this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Sunday at scene of fire outbreak at a plastic factory in Oshodi.

    NAN reports that no life was lost in the fire which started at the raw materials store of the factory.

    The commissioner attributed the escalation in fire incidence to the return of harmattan weather to the state.

    “We noticed the escalation of fire incidents since Friday when we had a sudden change in weather as harmattan suddenly came back.

    “Since then, we have recorded about 40 fire incidents in different parts of the state.

    “Fire incidents are mainly caused either by accident or sheer carelessness on the part of our people,’’ the commissioner said.

    He appealed to Lagos residents to be more careful, especially as regards the storing of petroleum products in homes.

    “As a government, we will continue to respond but we will be happy if the incidents are reduced to the barest minimum; our duty is to secure lives and property of our citizenry,” he said.

    Oladejo said government would continue to improve its emergency response services by acquiring more sophisticated equipment for effective disaster management in the state. (NAN)

  • Harmattan: NCAA warns pilots over poor visibility

    Harmattan: NCAA warns pilots over poor visibility

    •Agency says flights may be canceled , delayed 

    The Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) has cautioned pilots about the hazards associated with harmattan dust haze prevalent in some parts of the country.

    The agency issued advisory circular on how avoid accidents caused by such weather.

    Its spokesman Sam Adurogboye stated that the circular was in line with the forecast made by the Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NIMET), which predicted the occurrence of moderate to severe outbreaks of dust between November 2016 to March 2017.

    It predicted that it would on many occasions reduce Horizontal visibility significantly.

    He stated that the effect of the harmattan is comparable to that of heavy fog, which might considerably reduce air – to – ground visibility.

    He said similarly, aerodrome visibility might fall below the prescribed minima and in severe conditions dust haze could blot out runway, markers and airfield lighting over wide areas making visual navigation extremely difficult or impossible.

    Adurogboye stated that where terminal visibility fell below the prescribed weather minima, flights were bound to be delayed, diverted or cancelled.

    “Pilots are therefore directed to observe that adequate departure, en-route and destination weather information and briefings are obtained from NIMET prior to flight operations, exercise maximum restraint when adverse weather is observed or forecast by NIMET and ensure that flight operations are scheduled with adequate input from NIMET to minimise delay or cancellation of flight operations,” he said.

    Pleading with the travelling public for understanding and not to be lawless should flight has to be delayed or cancelled, the flight crew were asked to adhere strictly to the prescribed weather minima for each of the airports, as violation would be viewed seriously.

  • Harmattan: Fun, fear and fury

    Harmattan: Fun, fear and fury

    In the past few weeks, the harmattan haze has been blowing and biting really hard across the country. Almost everyone admits that it is so cold and the intensity is extra-ordinarily high compared with the experience last year and beyond. In this report, Yetunde Oladeinde, Assistant Editor (Lagos), Kolade Adeyemi (Kano), Yusufu Aminu Idegu (Jos), Chris Orji (Enugu), Nwanosike Onu (Anambra), Odunayo Ogunmola (Ekiti) and Oseheye Okwuofu (Ibadan) take a look at its impact across the country and how Nigerians are coping.

    The harmattan season, for many, is expected at the tail end of every year and it is known to usher in the new year. Many Lagosians, therefore, begin to take a number of measures to protect their eyes from dust particles and the skin and soles of the feet from peeling, and lips from cracking as soon as it breezes in.

    Surprisingly, this year’s experience is different, tougher and lasting longer than any recent memory. Extra measures are therefore being taken to combat it, while it translates into an opportunity for those who deal in items required to combat it to make more money. 68-year-old Fatima Ajani did not mince words when she declared that she is hardest hit by the harmattan in Lagos.”I come out briefly in the afternoon because I am asthmatic and the dust is not good for my health at all. I have cold and I have been sneezing ever since it started.”

    Excessive sneezing, cough and catarrh are some of the symptoms that result from impact of this cold dry dusty wind peculiar to the West African sub-region. Unfortunately, the season is not a very good one for people suffering from respiratory conditions like asthma, as the cold, dusty weather tends to aggravate it.

    Notably, the Meningitis epidemic, usually experienced between February and May in the northern part of Nigeria is an aftermath of the harmattan.

    It also triggers sickle cell crisis in those who suffer from the disease. There is also an increase in the incidences of diarrhoea and food-borne illnesses, due to the dust that settle on foods not properly stored or washed before consumption.

    The rapid change in weather condition came as a surprise to Nigerians all over the country because it has not been like this in a long while. Residents of Ibadan city and environs have been groaning over the harsh weather and they have been devising ways to cope with the season.

    Like in other parts of the country, many people are forced to wear two to three clothes, in addition to thick pullovers to combat the weather. In some schools in Ibadan, proprietors say they are considering the possibility of adjusting the school time-table because the morning sessions are less participatory at the moment.

    Mr. Gbenga Ajayi, proprietor, Genius Model School, Omi-Adio, Ibadan, complained over the attitude of the pupils in the classes, while stating that school attendance has dropped significantly as some of the children who have health challenges cannot brave the harsh cold weather.

    “This is a very unusually cold weather and we are considering changing the school from morning to day school because of the children. But we must first of all get the consent of the parents. I don’t think we have witnessed this kind of weather in recent time. It’s very different,” Mr Ajayi said.

    Investigations also revealed that the poor weather condition has resulted in increase in respiratory diseases among children and old persons. “As I am speaking to you now, I have my own burden; I could not sleep in the night because of cold, fever and body pains. And this is exactly what many people are complaining about. But we hope it will not last beyond necessary because it would mean a different thing for the health of the people,” Alfred Banjo a retired civil servant and resident of Ibadan said.

    An expert in climate matters and lecturer at the University of Ibadan, Dr Ibidun Adelekan, however, described the weather change as normal, and attributed it to growing climate change.

    The climatologist also noted that there are many benefits of the harmattan season, as harsh as it appears. She said many farmers would be happy with the weather condition because of the increased benefits derived from it.

    She listed some of the negative impacts to include poor visibility that hinders air transportation, and increase in respiratory diseases among the populace.

    Explaining the factors responsible for the intensity of the weather condition, Dr Adelekan said: “We have the north east wind from the Sahara and it is usually very cold. So, now the wind from the Sahara is over Ibadan and that is what has brought the harmattan now. The second factor is that at this time of the year, we don’t have clouds. So, because we don’t have clouds, the radiation or energy has been able to escape rapidly into the space especially at night; unlike when we have clouds during other times of the year. Because this radiation is escaping into the space, it is usually cold at night and early hours of the morning.”

    Continuing, she said, “The third factor is the pressure over the Sahara, and because the high pressure is there, the inter-tropical discontinuity, the ICD, will not be able to lift it away. Currently, that is the boundary zone between the north east wind coming from the Sahara and south west wind coming from the Atlantic Ocean. The ICD at this time is around the coast. So the wind is over Ibadan at this time.

    “What determines the movement of the ICD is the high pressure. As long as you have a region of high pressure over the Sahara, the ICD will tilt downward and that is what determines the intensity of the harmattan now. But once the high pressure reaches over the Sahara, the ICD will now move up so that we don’t have cold wind over Ibadan or this part of the country.”

    In Ado-Ekiti, Ekiti State, the situation is no different. The change in weather has altered the way of life of residents of the state capital and surrounding towns and villages, who have been devising various means to suppress the effects of the harmattan. Many residents now wake up later than they used to because the effect is felt more in the early hours of the day. Those who are self-employed are in the majority of this category, as they are seen to have control over their time.

    Core civil servants, school teachers, uniformed personnel, health workers however have no option but to defy the harsh weather and go to work.

    The Nation also gathered that families now ensure that they have enough hot water at home with which they take their bath every morning before setting out for the day’s activities.

    A resident, Mrs. Bola Ogidan, said: “My children and I now monitor supply of power everyday in order to heat water for bathing. You know electricity is not regular in Ado-Ekiti and its environs, so we always wake up in the night anytime power is restored to heat water. This has become our practice since harmattan commenced because none of us can afford to bathe with cold water.”

    Wearing cardigans has also become a compulsory norm for school pupils and students going to school.

    Some parents have also gone ahead to make arrangements with their children’s schools authorities to converge their wards at ‘safer’ places like their homes, rather than usual bus stops where they would be exposed weather.

    As it is, it is only bread sellers and those selling wares at motor parks who defy the weather to target early morning travellers from for sales.

    At Old Garage, Bisi and Erekesan markets in Ado-Ekiti, sellers of cardigans, sweaters and other thick clothes are smiling to the bank. A dealer in cardigans at Old Garage, Mr. Cosmas Njoku, told our correspondent that he has made huge profits since the harmattan period began, wishing that it continues.

    Njoku said: “The type of harmattan in town now has not been witnessed in a very long time and this has made many people to change their way of dressing because they need thick dresses to protect themselves. My brother, I will not deceive you, I have made a lot of sales in the last three weeks because of the effects of this cold weather. Many people have been coming to my shop to buy cardigans and pullovers.”

    Another group of people ‘enjoying’ the harmattan season in Ado-Ekiti, Ikere-Ekiti, Aramoko-Ekiti, Omuo-Ekiti and other communities are tea sellers. A visit to Atikankan area in Ado-Ekiti and Fagbohun Shasha Market in Ikere-Ekiti which are dominated by Hausa traders showed that many people flock to tea joints early in the morning to drink hot tea and fight the cold.

    A Hausa trader who gave his name as Hamisu told The Nation that “business” has been booming since harmattan began baring its fangs in the state.

    He explained that more customers have been trooping to his stand to take tea in the morning, revealing that he now makes thrice what he used to make as profit.

    Investigations also revealed that even churches are not left out, as some are now adjusting their programmes to protect their members from the impact of the weather.

    In addition, residents now go out with ointments, which they apply on their lips and hands to tackle the dryness that comes with the season.

    Meanwhile, farmers are happy, as they believe that the prolonged harmattan bodes well for farming in the year.

    In Anambra State, the intensity of the harmattan is equally severe. Some of the residents, especially motorcycle operators, otherwise known as okada, now come out a bit late, while commuter bus transport operators and other vehicle owners now wind up their vehicle glasses.

    In the same vein, those who have air conditioned vehicles no longer put them on.

    Mrs. Nwando Elendu Offor told The Nation in Awka that harmattan is the best period for her husband and not herself.

    She said this year’s harmattan has being stronger than in recent years, adding that at times, she stays indoors till 1pm, while covering her entire body.

    She is however thankful that it has not come with any devastating effect.

    A pregnant working woman, who did not want her name in print, told The Nation at Freedom Square Cyber café in Awka that this year’s harmattan has brought cough and catarrh to many families, including hers, because of its severity.

    Also, Mr. Hycinth Odia complained that harmattan has never been his friend over the years, not to talk of this year’s edition that has persevered.

    He said the only way he has been able to withstand the cold at night and early morning is through cuddling his wife and his pillow.

    A Nollywood actress and senatorial candidate of the Advanced Congress of Democrats (ACD) in Anambra Central Senatorial zone, Lolo Oby Okafor, told The Nation that this has not been her best period.

    The actress/politician revealed that the harmattan has cracked her voice, leading to the suspension of her campaign temporarily.

    In Enugu, many of the children born about 12 years ago and below could comfortably be said to be experiencing their first harmattan. For many years, the coal city state has not experienced a biting harmattan as it is experiencing this year. The accompanying cold has also stopped some parents from sending their children to school, while those children who dare to go at all, report late to classes. Even teachers arrive late.

    Says Mrs. Ifeoma Madu, the cold is so much in the early morning that “we sleep off beyond the normal time.” Many a times, the family also skip their morning devotions to meet up with the day’s activities. Madu, who is a retail trader at the Mayor Market, Enugu, said she has consistently failed to meet up with the market schedule and this is costing her a lot.

    She however admitted “that apart from its adverse effect economically, I enjoy the weather. You do not need sleeping drugs to sleep soundly.”

    Against the backdrop that the weather is affecting business adversely, Sam, a small scale super market owner at New Layout Area of Enugu, argued that the low patronage is not completely as a result of the harmattan.

    He said the main cause is that many people who went for the Christmas celebration in their villages have not returned. Somehow, he however linked their “over-staying” to the harmattan which is more severe in the villages.

    “Many of them want to stay back in the villages to enjoy the harmattan. You know the harmattan is “sweeter in the villages.”

    At the MAON secretariat of Enugu, although offices were opened with normal duties going on, serious business was yet to commence. Also, every office window was securely locked to avoid the windy cold from finding its way into the offices.

    Winter clothings are also now a common vogue, as every worker is forced by the harmattan to purchase one. Even the low income workers now put on suits to work.

    Interestingly, private paediatric hospitals are smiling to the banks, as the children are not being spared by the biting cold. Many children are being rushed to hospitals due to one ailment or the other associated with harmattan.

    The fact that the doctors in public hospitals are on strike is also a snag. And so, those who cannot afford the bills of the private hospitals have resorted to self-medication.

    One of the paediatricians, Dr. Bede Ikem, however says there is no cause for alarm, as the fevers associated with the weather are not life-threatening.

    Plateau State, hardest hit

    Hardest hit however are residents of Plateau State who have witnessed a record-breaking harmattan, as temperature has fallen to as low as three degrees centigrade.

    Though, originally and by virtue of its geographical location, Plateau has always has an exclusive cold weather. Its rainy season is colder than any other location in Nigeria, the dry season is also cooler. But residents say the kind of weather being experienced in the new year is historic.

    75-year-old Pa Mathew Ajayi in Tudunwada, Jos, said, “The cold this year is very rare on the Plateau. I was born here on the Plateau 75 years ago; I have also lived here all my life; it has been long we witnessed this kind of weather. If I can remember, the last time we witnessed this kind of cold in Jos was 1982, some 33 years ago.”

    Ajayi added that “In 1982, the last time residents experienced such cold weather, several residents died due to the impact of the cold. Some soldiers who were posted to Jos newly died after bathing with cold water. Some persons also died in Pankshin village when the fire they made to warm their huts before they could sleep exploded and consumed the house and its occupants. The 1982 weather also caused deaths of domestic animals in Pankshin local government of the state.” Pa Ajayi said

    In such a low temperature of three degrees, the cold is severe enough to cause blood to clot in your veins. But citizens of the state rely on warm water and prayer to escape the cold scourge. It is even difficult to brush your mouth with cold water in the morning. Such is the situation residents of Plateau have passed through in the last two weeks.

    The harsh weather has also forced residents to regulate their movement. No more night crawling at the moment, as residents round up their daily activities fast enough to return home by 6pm. Residents say the situation at the moment in the plateau state is akin to a self-imposed curfew, as they avoid coming out of their homes until 8am, and retire by 6pm.

    Part of the state witnessing the worst condition is Jos, the state capital; the military barrack in Rukuba; Pankshin Local Government, as well as Riyom Local Government. Residents of Jos in particular are being warned on daily basis by the state government through the state media to take precautionary measures to avoid being victims of the harsh cold.

    Residents warm water to drink both day and night, as the water is extremely cold and could cause blood-clotting when taken in its natural cold state. During the day time, people rush to the popular Terminus Market at the city centre to buy thick socks and thick hand gloves, as well as thick winter jackets, which is the new sleeping gown for both the young and the old.

    Residents who must taste alcohol at night now go for exotic gin, whisky, rum, vodka and the like. The sale of beer is witnessing its lowest patronage. Families have resorted to the use of electric room warmer to sleep comfortably. Those who cannot afford electric room warmer go for charcoal which they light and place in the centre of the room.

    Medical experts have warned residents to always keep themselves warm both day and night. They have also been warned against playing with cold water to avoid its attendant risk. There are fears among residents that if such weather continues as schools resumes, it might take a negative toll on pupils.

    Even though the temperature has improved relatively, the impact of the cold is still high on the Plateau. Workers come out of their office to feel the sun as from 10am; traders and shop owners prefer to do business in the sun at day time whilst they head home before sun-set.

    Despite the intensity of the harsh cold weather, there has been no record of fire disaster yet on the Plateau, which residents consider amazing; but Rev Samson Della of Evangelical Church Winning All (ECWA) says it is the work of God.

    Kano experience, very severe

    In Kano, the story is the same. It was a time to celebrate for Chief Johnson Oley, whose wife gave birth to a bouncing baby boy after 10 years of searching for the fruit of the womb. Charged by the joy a new-born brings, the Kano-based business man decided to celebrate. He invited friends from within and outside Kano, but for some of his friends who came from far and near, it was a near-bitter experience as they were greeted by the hash haematin currently blowing in the ancient commercial city of Northern Nigeria.

    One of the invitees, Mrs. Adela Seguin, a Laotian, complained bitterly over the severe chilly cold in Kano, which she likened to the situation in Norway. Dressed in different layers of gowns, sweaters, cardigans, hand-cloves and cap, apparently to prevent the cold from weakening her ribs, Mrs. Adela regretted visiting Kano at this point in time, complaining that in her life time, “I have never witnessed this kind of cold before. I once lived here in Kano and I have been visiting Kano even during haematin season; but my brother, I must confess to you that this is a worse situation. I arrived here a day ago and if not because of my relationship with Chief Johnson, I would have boarded the next available flight and found my way back to Lagos.   I know there is cold in Lagos where I reside but this Kano experience is very severe.”

    Apart from the lamentations of visitors as captured in Mrs. Seguin’s account, Kano residents and, in fact, indigenes are also complaining of the harshness of this year’s haematin. They say the weather has made it a taboo for people to bath with cold water. Very early in the morning, residents, mostly youths and streets boys, are sighted by road-sides, circling around bon-fires coming out from dry fire wood just to warm their bodies. Also, road-side tea-sellers, popularly known as Mai shay in Hausa parlance, now smile to the banks as a result of the influx of customers who besiege their kiosks, both in the morning and evening for hot cups of tea, to keep body and soul warm.

    Our correspondent also observed that, apart from dressing odd and awkward, all in the name of shielding the cold, most residents in Kano now skip taking their baths, especially in the morning periods when the cold is at its highest. The situation has also affected business activities, such that major markets in the commercial town remain scanty until as late as noon, when the cold would have subsided and people would be able to leave their homes.

  • Harmattan: Sickle cell patients urged to drink more water

    Harmattan: Sickle cell patients urged to drink more water

    Dr Obiageli Nnodu, Deputy Chairperson, Sickle Cell Support Society of Nigeria, said on Monday that sickle cell patients should drink more water and remain warm to avoid complications of their ailment.

    Nnodu gave the advice when he spoke to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja.

    Nnodu, who is also a Consultant Hematologist at the University of Abuja Teaching Hospital, said that cold induces crises and complications for the afflicted.

    She said dehydration also facilitated crises and complications in the management of the disease.

    Nnodu said paying adequate attention to nutrition and hydration would reduce complications for sickle cell patients.

    “Children identified to have Sickle Cell Disease should be encouraged to drink a cup of water on waking up, and frequently during the day to ensure the yellow color of their urine becomes white,” she said

    Nnodu said that they should also be given a high-protein diet, fruits and vegetables, noting that this would reduce mortality and complications in patients with sickle cell disease.

    She said early diagnosis through newborn screening remained a major prevention against the prevalence of the disease.

    She added that the Sickle Cell Support Society advocated for massive awareness and education on the ailment.

    “Information about sickle cell disease should also be incorporated into the primary school curriculum so that stigma and other misconceptions about the disease will be avoided,” Nnodu said.

    She said the society in collaboration with other stakeholders was working to provide interventions in the prevention and management of the disease in Nigeria.

  • Strong harmattan weather hits Borno, Yobe

    Strong harmattan weather hits Borno, Yobe

    Strong harmattan wind has covered parts of Borno and Yobe States.
    Residents of Maiduguri and Damaturu, the capital cities of the states and some other towns and villages woke up on Saturday to the sudden harsh weather.
    Though the cold was not as scourging as the wind, motorists are having a hard time on the high ways with the ensuing poor visibility by the weather
    Garba Iliya, a commercial driver travelling to Damaturu from Maiduguri told our correspondent that drivers have to be more vigilant on the highway to prevent accidents due the bad weather.
    “We have to pay extra attention on the wheels so that we don’t cause unnecessary accidents,” Iliya stated.
    Our correspondent noticed that most vehicles were driving with their headlights on to avoid any head-on collision.

  • WE SAW HELL

    WE SAW HELL

    The peak of harmattan is the worst period for anyone to be displaced in Plateau State. But that is the fate that has befallen about 3,000 residents drawn from 77 families in a Plateau community. They are currently sleeping in the cold following an attack on their village by unknown gunmen. YUSUFU AMINU IDEGU writes on the humanitarian challenges created by the attack in which no fewer than 40 residents were murdered.

    THE attack on Shonong village in Bachit District, Riyom Local Government Area, Plateau State, on January 9, 2014, which led to the death of about 40 Berom people, shares some similarities with the attack on Dogo Nahawa in July 2010. In both cases, the casualties were mostly defenceless women, children and the aged who could not run fast enough to escape the assassins’ bullets. And like in the Dogo Nahawa attack, Special Task Force (STF) soldiers are being accused of aiding the people who attacked Shonong.

    No fewer than 23 people were reckoned to have been roasted to death in a single room during the attack. Even the survivors of the attack have told whoever cared to listen that they “saw hell”. What made the Shonong attack peculiar was the fact that it took place during the day, lasting from about 7 am till about noon in a village where the STF is based.

    There were claims that in spite of the presence of STF troops, no fewer than 34 people were killed, 77 residential houses razed, two vehicles burnt and about 3,000 people were rendered homeless to face the cold weather in the state.

    It was an attack whose success could not be comprehended by many, considering the presence of soldiers deployed in the state to maintain the peace and save lives. The incident left in its trail a very serious humanitarian crisis in the state, even as many mourn their loved ones who were killed in the attack. Their houses were razed and they are now left to shiver and gnash their teeth in the cold weather of Jos, which has been at its peak since the beginning of the New Year.

    There are fears that the displaced persons could suffer pneumonia and other weather-related ailments or die if nothing urgent is done to provide shelter for them in the next few days. Some children below the age of five but whose parents are rendered homeless were seen shivering due to the effect of the cold weather since they were forced to sleep in the church after the attack two weeks ago.

    Nursing mothers among the displaced persons heaved a sigh of relief when officials of the Plateau State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) and Riyom Local Government Authority appeared with blankets and mattresses to be shared to them.

    But with or without relief materials, most of the survivors have already resolved to quit the village, as they expressed lack of confidence in the soldiers. They believe that many of the soldiers deployed in the area may have teamed up with their tormentors.

    One of the victims, Mathew Dadu, said: “These STF men have lived with us for about three years now. They know the terrain and we are already friends with them. We had so much confidence that they were here to protect us until the attack.

    “Our frustration and fear in this village are that if these soldiers can fail to defend us and we are being killed like frogs, then the fear is justified. People have no confidence in them any longer, hence they (people) are moving out of the village.”

    Gunmen suspected to be Fulani heardsmen allegedly attacked Shonong on January 9, this year, barely a week into the New Year. The villagers must have danced and sung glorious songs in their various churches during the pass-over night in anticipation of the New Year as it is the tradition among the Christian population.

    Therefore, the people did not envisage that anything untoward would befall them soon after they successfully crossed into the New Year. But nine days into the New Year; they went to bed and woke up, praising the Almighty for making it possible for them to witness yet another new day. As the daily routine in the village, the men left for their farms, leaving their women and children at home. But while the women were thinking of what to prepare for their children as breakfast, all hell was let loose by gunmen.

    Shoma Toma, a survivor of the incident who sustained gunshot injuries and was receiving treatment at the Vom Christian Hospital, said the attackers stormed the village in their hundreds at about 7 am when most of the villagers had gone to farm, killing mostly children, women and the aged.

    Toma said: “I escaped narrowly from the attackers because I was at home moulding blocks when they invaded the village. They came from four different directions to invade us. They started shooting at anything they saw. While trying to run, a bullet hit me in the back and I fell down. They rushed after me and I pretended that I was dead. They left me and went after some other residents.

    “The gunmen operated for more than five hours, killing our people as I lay down there. As God would have it, they never came back to me to confirm if I was really dead. That was my saving grace. I only got up when my relations came to me and started crying, thinking that I was dead. I got up to show them that I was alive. When I got up they told me that the attackers had left. But I fainted shortly after. I don’t know how I was brought to this hospital.”

    One of the community members who went to farm before the attack, Gyang Bala, said: “Maybe we made a mistake by accepting an official of the unit to lead the soldiers here. He was driven from Barkin Ladi LGA. He was also rejected in Jol and Fan. Our mistake was that we allowed him to stay.”

    The Majority Leader of the Plateau State House of Assembly and the member representing Riyom Constituency, Hon. Daniel Dem, said in this particular attack, the STF soldiers have questions to answer because they are based in the particular village and the attack ought not to have happened under their noses.

    “If the military men were there in the village and the attack took place at about 8 am and lasted till after noon, then the military have so many questions to answer,” he said.

    Hon. Dem, who condemned the attack during his visit to survivors who were receiving treatment at Vom Christian Hospital, lamented: “We have security men there. If the attack started around 8 am and lasted till afternoon, I think something must be wrong. What are the military men there for? If we suffered an attack from morning till afternoon and people were killed and houses were burnt, I think the military should be asked why they were sent there to protect the lives and property of the people.”

    He added: “We have tried to get in touch with them and they said they were on ground. What then happened from morning till afternoon that more than 30 people were killed and many others are lying in the hospital?”

    The Plateau State Chapter of the Nigerian Union of Journalists (NUJ) expressed disappointment with the performance of the militrary in the face of the killings that are going on in the state. The union noted that in spite of the establishment of a Special Task Force to stop killings in the state since 2010, thousands of people had been killed and more were still being killed under the watchful eyes of the task force, code named ‘Operation Safe Haven’

    Rising from a congress meeting held at the state secretariat in Jos penultimate Wednesday, its communique reads: “Members of the Plateau State Council have noted with regret that for the past four years, the state has been engulfed in sectarian violence and has through the years reported the events according to the dictates of our profession.

    The communique added: “We have noted that through these years, one commander or the other has been deployed to the state as head of the Special Task Force on internal security.

    The task force is made up of the three arms of the military, including the police, Department of State Security and the National Security and Civil Defence Corps. Yet, through the years, ceaseless attacks have been going on in some parts of the state without efforts to curb the trend.

    “These attacks take the same pattern in style and sophistry, where members of the same family are wiped out in one fell swoop. These communities have more often than not accused members of the task force of culpability in some of these attacks, which they alleged were sometimes carried out by men in security uniforms.

    “Yet, not even one person has been caught and brought to book. We are left with STF’s often rehearsed and quoted sobriquet ‘our own troops repelled the attackers.’ How can these attackers be repelled without any of them being arrested?

    “And we have noted the disparity in the number of casualty figures often given by the security agencies in the state with a view to downplaying the severity of the attacks.”

    The union resolved thus: “We may be forced to withdraw from reporting the activities of the task force if urgent steps are not taken by the STF to stop the senseless killings and bloodshed in the state. We ask the commander of the task force to investigate all allegations of possible culpability and connivance against his men in some of these killings.

    “We implore the Federal Government to, as a matter of urgency, release and implement the reports on Jos crises, especially the Solomon Lar Presidential Committee set up by the present administration.”

    The state chapter of the union had in 2012 threatened to boycott the state government’s activities over the unending bloodshed, but Governor Jonah Jang defended himself by stating that the security of lives and property in the state had been taken over by the Federal Ministry of Defence with the establishment of the Special Task Force in 2010.

    Narrating how the soldiers allegedly aided the mass killing in the Shonong attack, the community leader of Shonong, Da Yohanna Ciroma Dangyang, said: “While the gunmen began to shoot sporadically to scare our people, the soldiers came and asked them to hide in one room so that they would protect us there. The people obeyed and many people ran into the room for cover, not knowing that it was a ploy to gather residents for the attackers to kill.

    “As soon as the attackers approached, the soldiers disappeared and the attackers set the house ablaze and all its occupants of about 23 women and children were burnt to ashes. Even some people who ran to take cover at the primary school hosting the STF were shot dead. The closest compound to the STF base was attacked and five people were killed there while the soldiers were just watching the action.”

    He said the soldiers were not there to defend the village but to aid the attackers to achieve their mission. “Our cry to government now is that they should withdraw these soldiers and send us policemen. These soldiers will wipe us out very soon,” he said.

    Da Dangyang leveled the allegations earlier in the week when the Plateau State Emergency Relief Agency (SEMA), led by the Sole Administrator of Riyom Local Government, Mr Samdah Ishaya Matawal, came to deliver some relief materials to survivors of the attack.

    Presenting the relief materials to the displaced people who sought shelter at COCIN Church, Shonong, Matawal appealed to the people to remain calm as the state government was taking stock of burnt houses with a view to bringing in building materials for their reconstruction.

    He said their mission to the place was to present relief materials to the people whose houses and foodstuff were burnt to ashes in the area. He encouraged the people to remain steadfast and not abandon their houses for another place, as the main purpose of the attackers was to take over their land for grazing.

    Matawal urged the STF Commander to as a matter of fact deploy more security personnel in Shonong, adding that the few ones on ground were grossly inadequate to curtail the activities of Fulani militias. He added that there should be a synergy among the various security operatives in the area to nip in the bud the incessant Fulani attacks.

    The Plateau State Emergency Management Agency presented relief materials worth N2 million to the displaced people, according to Binta Wuyep, the Director, Relief and Rehabilitation unit of the agency.

    However, the special task force (STF) preferred to remain silent over all the allegation against it’s men. The only reaction so far since the attack was on the figure of casualties. The STF has not commented on the alleged culpability of it’s men. All efforts to get the spokesman of the STF Captain Salisu Mustapha to comment on these allegation failed as he declined comment.

    But families of victims believed as the police step in to find the remote cause of the attack, the level of involvement of the STF troops will be unveil as the end of the police investigation. One thing that is clear is that, the STF will not hesitate to court marshal any of it’s members found to have aided the attackers in the killings in Shonong as they have done in the past.

    The spokesman of the STF, Captain Salisu Mustapha, however, declined comments when contacted over the alleged culpability of soldiers in the attack.

    However, a source, who pleaded not to be quoted, said the STF would not hesitate to court-marshal any of the soldiers found to have aided the attackers as had been done in the past.