Tag: Lagos Lagoon

  • Exploring ex-policeman and the lagoon

    Exploring ex-policeman and the lagoon

    Book Review

    Book: A man sent from God
    A ninety-year account of life experiences and lessons learnt
    Author: Prophet John Osagie Odigie, JP
    Reviewer: Bisi Olaniyi, Southsouth Bureau Chief

    An ex-policeman, Prophet John Osagie Odigie, turned 90 on January 4, 2025, which he marked for the first time with elaborate birthday celebration and launch of his autobiography, titled: “A Man Sent From God,” an account of his life experiences and lessons learnt, including why he concluded plans to drive into Lagos lagoon with his car, with many eminent personalities in attendance at the venue of the birthday bash, a magnificent and newly-constructed Hanson Region Campground of Christ Apostolic Church (CAC), off Benin-Lagos Expressway at Isihor, Benin, Edo State, which he built and handed over to CAC Worldwide.

    The 239-page inspiring, educative, flawless, motivating, revealing, God-glorifying, thought-provoking, Christ-edifying, timely, and informative book, which was published by SBA Publishing Company at Arizona in the United States, has fourteen chapters, with well-designed and colourful cover, neat print, and attractive content, thereby making it the readers’ delight.

    A Man Sent From God is dedicated to the Almighty God, for counting the nonagenarian worthy to preach and spread the gospel of Jesus Christ.

    The autobiography is written in very simple language by Prophet Odigie, a former Assistant General Evangelist of CAC Worldwide, who is the Planter of CAC, Deliverance Centre, off Ekenwan Road, Benin City, and the President of United Pastors’ Prayer Association (UPPA), with over one thousand dedicated members across the globe.

    Chapter one of the book is titled: “Phenomenal Birth and Childhood,” with the frontline cleric giving details of how he was born into a polygamous family, and the challenges that he faced, while growing up.

    He said: “Unfortunately, I was born into the chaotic world of polygamy, where rivalry and conflict were commonplace. Jealousy, hatred and arguments between my father’s four wives surrounded me from the moment of my conception, until birth, and I was born into a reality that included physical fights, favouritism, inequality, and constant tension.

    “My delivery was a shock to my father’s other wives, because my mother had bled heavily from the third month of her conception to the day of her delivery. She did not only face the physical challenges of pregnancy, but had to deal with my father’s other wives’ envy and bitterness as well, since they were determined to make her life as difficult as possible.

    “My mother, Imasuen Uwadiae, from the Ogbebor Usen family in Edo State, knew she was carrying a sought-after male child – a reality the other wives could not bear to accept. One day, during a fierce argument, the first wife lashed out, delivering a calculated kick to my mother’s pregnant belly. That single act of violence marked the beginning of a relentless ordeal. From the third month of her pregnancy, my mother bled heavily until the very day I was born.”

    The author disclosed that before his birth, no other male children born in his family had survived, and when the oracle revealed that he was a boy, the three other wives went ballistic and erupted in anger, vowing that his birth would not be under their watch, and boasted that it would not happen without a fight, with the pregnancy becoming the target of both physical and spiritual attacks, aimed at preventing his survival.

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    Faced with the hostility, the former policeman disclosed in his autobiography that his mother fled to her uncle, Love Ogbebor, in her determination to protect her unborn child from the jealous eyes of the other wives, but still bleeding, and later returned home, where the gang-up against her became even worse.

    He said: “Despite all the attacks on my mother, the day of my birth came, and I was born whole and healthy. I emerged crying loudly, to the utter shock of my father’s other wives, as if I were declaring my victory over their schemes. They stared at me in disbelief on the mat, with my mother in a pool of blood, their faces filled with disappointment. Then, with a snap of their fingers, they exclaimed, ‘Osagie!’ meaning ‘God sent.’

    “Indeed, I was ‘God-sent.’ Even those who had plotted against my life could not deny that my birth was a divine miracle. In their disbelief, they unwittingly testified to the hand of God in my survival. It was clear to all that I was not just any child, but one destined for a greater purpose beyond being ‘heir to my father’s house.’

    “My father, Uwheni, held the title of the Aiwansoba of Benin Kingdom. He was a diligent farmer, knowledgeable native doctor and chief attendant in customs and traditional matters to Oba Akenzua II of great memory. With my father’s busy schedule, much of the household drama unfolded in his absence. However, when he heard the news of my birth, he rushed home with joy and pride. He named me ‘Osagie-vwangbon,’ meaning ‘One sent by God to the world.’ Upon hearing the report of the shocking and unfriendly welcome that I received from his other wives, who exclaimed that I was ‘God sent,’ my father immediately sanctioned and adopted the name (Osagie). My survival was a sign that a higher power protected me.”

    The world-class author, who was born on January 4, 1935, also stated that despite growing up in a household overshadowed by traditional beliefs, idolatry, and spiritual welfare, he found himself inexplicably drawn to a different light, a yearning for a godly and peaceful life that felt out of place in his environment, revealing that while his father’s world was revolving around chants, charms, and rituals, his soul was searching for peace and truth.

    He first attended Holy Arosa Primary School, Benin, before transferring to St. Thomas Catholic School, Ogbe, while without warning, he ran from home to live at the Catholic Mission, now known as the Bishop Kelly Pastoral Centre of St. Paul Catholic Church on Airport Road, Benin, as his name was officially listed with the seminary, and attended classes at Immaculate Conception College (ICC), Benin unofficially, whihe he sat for the General Certificate in Education (GCE), and passed all his subjects in flying colours.

    The renowned cleric said: “In 1957, for reasons I could not fully understand, I suddenly became angry with the Catholic Mission, packed all my things, and returned to my father’s house. Later, he (his father) admitted that he had performed incantations and charms to bring me back home. My father did this because he feared that if he did not act quickly, I would be lost to Christianity, which he called the ‘White Man’s Religion.’

    “My father wanted to ensure that I would inherit his idols, farmlands, titles, thatched-roofed house, and legacy. Despite repeated visits from Rev. Father Anthony Murphy to plead for me to return to the seminary, my father remained unmoved. I was confused and under an influence that I could not control, torn between the call to godliness and the grip of my father’s traditional beliefs.

    “The forces pulling me back into the traditional ways of my family were strong, but God had planted the seed of His word in my heart. Amid these struggles, I would sneak into Sunday services and continue my duty as a mass server, though my spiritual path was uncertain.”

    The author also stated that it was not enough to be merely attracted to godliness, one must be filled with the power of the Holy Spirit to stand firm against spiritual challenges.

    Chapter 2 of the book is titled: “Teenage and Youthful Years,” with Prophet Odigie disclosing that his transition from adolescence to adulthood was challenging, stressing that to make ends meet, he had to take on odd jobs as pushing heavy carts through the streets of Benin, but the Catholic Mission later offered him a teaching position at its prmary schools in the villages of Uhen and Okhoro in Edo state.

    He said: “Unfortunately, my teaching career ended before it could even take off, due to a grave mistake. I got one of the female pupils pregnant, and in my fear and shame, I fled to Benin City.

    “In 1960, while searching for a new direction, a friend informed me that the Nigeria Police Force (NPF) was recruiting. I applied, passed the entrance examination with distinction, and secured admission into the Southern Police College in Ikeja, Lagos. Not long after I started my training at the Police College, my past caught up with me. The family of the girl I had impregnated, while I was a teacher, showed up at the College and made formal complaint against me.

    “They found my whereabouts through a former colleague at the school, a fellow teacher, who was also a trainee at the Police College. He said I was too popular and excelled in everything I did, while he struggled to keep up. Out of sheer envy, he helped the girl’s family to track me down. His jealousy led him to believe that bringing me down would even the score. The family demanded my immediate dismissal from the College, and insisted that I should take full responsibility for their daughter and her child.”

    The author also disclosed that the police officer on duty on that day stood by him, as he refused to dismiss him, thereby valuing his excellence, discipline and sportsmanship, and sent the family members away, while advising him sternly that he should have faced the consequence of his actions, instead of running from it.

    He stated that unfortunately, the controversial child died under mysterious circumstances, and to his surprise, the girl apologised and admitted that he was not the father of her child, while revealing that his envious colleague who exposed him, was the real father of the baby, with the police authorities dismissing him (the real father) from the force.

    The iconic cleric said: “My time at the Police College was transformative, instilling a sense of discipline that shaped my life. We were trained in leadership, time management, physical fitness, appearance, neatness, endurance, and perseverance in difficult situations. The rigorous training prepared me for life’s challenges and laid the groundwork for my journey into the disciplined world of Christian ministry.

    “When I graduated from the Police College, I received numerous awards and accolades, including: Best All-Round Recruit of My Squad, Golden Baton Award for All-Round Performance, Certificate of Distinction, Best in Parade, and Best in Law of Evidence. As first and best in every aspect of training, I excelled beyond my expectations. The first indigenous Inspector-General of NPF, Mr. Luis Edet, formally recognised these achievements, and his signature on my certificates is a testament to my dedication and hard work.

    “I still remember the proud moments when my name was announced over the microphone, and marched up to receive my awards. The cheers and applause still ring in my ears. Each time I returned to my seat, my name would be called again for another recognition. It was a day of triumph, a victory of hard work and dedication over laziness and truancy, one of the greatest moments in my life’s journey.”

    Chapter 3 is titled: “First Secular Work Experience,” which is a summary of the author’s activities in the NPF, while revealing that upon completing his education at the Police College, he was assigned to serve in Ibadan, and later transferred to Ogbomoso, both in Oyo state, but had an encounter in Ogbomoso with the wife of the then Premier of the defunct Western Region, Chief Faderera Akintola, who called him “Kobokobo,” a derogatory term to mock people from the Mid-West and Eastern Region of Nigeria, while patrolling the premises at night, and his footsteps crunched loudly on the gravel-covered ground, thereby abusing him, his family and tribe, but replied that her head was not correct, which led to his being summoned by his bosses at police headquarters in Ibadan.

  • Man mistakenly falls into Lagos lagoon – LASEMA

    Man mistakenly falls into Lagos lagoon – LASEMA

    The Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA) says it has rescued a man who mistakenly fell into the lagoon.

    The agency’s Permanent Secretary, Dr Olufemi Oke-Osanyintolu, said this in a statement made available to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Friday.

    Oke-Osanyintolu said that it received a call through the Lagos State Toll Free Emergency numbers 767 and 112 at 7.43 a.m. that a man had fallen into the Lagos lagoon at Falomo Bridge.

    “Following the distress call, LASEMA activated the state’s Emergency Response Plans with the swift arrival of LASEMA Response Team from Lekki zone at the incident scene at 8.02 a.m.

    “On the team’s arrival at the scene, investigations revealed that the man had been resuscitated, and had identified himself as Segun Amoo.

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    “He narrated how he mistakenly fell into the Lagos lagoon at the aforementioned location,” he said.

    Oke-Osanyintolu said that information gathered from officials of the Lagos State Water Authority (LASWA) at their Falomo office revealed that Amoo was seen struggling for survival inside the lagoon.

    The LASWA officials said: “Our staff had, around 11.00 p.m. yesterday night, observed Amoo struggling for survival in the lagoon waters after he fell off the bridge, thereby leading to the LASWA Rescue Team’s response.

    “Amoo was rescued by the LASWA officials and subsequently stabilised by the agency’s Pre-Hospital Care Paramedics.

    “He provided vital information about himself after resuscitation, stating that his home address is at Ilaje-Bariga, Lagos.

    “He also clarified that he was not suicidal, while narrating how the incident of his fall off the bridge occurred.”

    Oke-Osanyintolu said that the LASEMA Response Team proceeded to the above-mentioned address for further investigation, where the rescue team successfully handed over the victim to his relatives.

    He said the victim’s brother, Mr Atteji Benuwa, claimed that the family had been searching for him for a while, and thanked the emergency responders for Amoo’s rescue.

  • Man jumps into Lagos lagoon

    A yet to be identified man yesterday jumped into the Lagos lagoon in an apparent suicide move.

    The incident occurred on the Third Mainland Bridge around 6pm.

    It was gathered that the man, who was in a vehicle heading to Lagos Island, alighted, crossed to the other side of the bridge and dived into the water.

    Motorists, who took to social media to share the news, stated that before people could get to him, the man jumped into the water.

    It was gathered that the vehicle he was in zoomed off as soon as he alighted, raising suspicions that it could have been a taxi or car belonging to fraudsters, who used diabolical means to control their victims.

    As of press time, officials of the Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA) were on the bridge in search of the man.

    LASEMA’s General Manager, Adesina Tiamiyu said they got report of the incident on social media and moved to the scene for search and rescue.

    He said: “I cannot tell you anything at the moment. We do not know for sure if someone jumped into the lagoon but we have to search in case it happened.

    “So far, we have not seen anyone. We have seen contradictory accounts of the incident on social media too but the operation would continue.”

  • Lagoon sale: suspect ‘collapses’ in detention

    A real estate agent, Emeka Okoronkwo, who was arrested for the alleged sale of the Lagos lagoon last Wednesday collapsed in the cell and was rushed to Police Hospital, Falomo.

    Okoronkwo, it was learnt, has been hospitalised since November 15, with his wife and brothers appealing to the Inspector-General of Police (IGP) Ibrahim Idris to investigate the case to unravel the truth.

    They alleged that a United States (US) based businessman, Kennedy Nwabuoku of KenBuok Global Investments Limited, who accused Okoronkwo of selling the lagoon at N787.5 million instead of 150 plots of land at Sangotedo in Epe, lied to the police and was using his connections to intimidate their brother.

    According to the victim’s brother, Stanley Okoronkwo, the matter was reported at the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), and was being investigated, before Nwabuoku came into the country and had been using the police to intimidate the victim.

    Denying allegations that his brother defrauded the complainant by selling the lagoon to him, Okoronkwo told The Nation that all documents, including Certificate of Occupancy (CofO), were given to Nwabuoku, who was yet to balance his payment for 50 plots.

    Stanley said Nwabuoku was using his influence to arm twist his brother so he would collect all 150 plots assigned to him by the original documents without refunding money for the 50 plots he begged the victim to source and complete the payments.

    He said: “It is sad that in this country, the truth stands on its head. This is a clear case of abuse of power and show of strength. In the first place, it is a civil matter and my brother ordinarily is the complainant.

    “He is not only an ailing victim of vicious police brutality, but also of a vile propaganda meant to paint him with the hue of a villain in a failed property transaction in which he is actually an innocent victim.

    “Emeka Okoronkwo is a seasoned professional, a Chartered Surveyor and Valuer at Kings Court Realtors, with over 20 years practice. He presently lies ill at the Falomo Police Hospital, where he is being treated with an armed police guard in his room.

    “We have a copy of the Agreement for Accord and Satisfaction which was proposed and signed by Mr. Okonrokwo in the presence of the police IPO, agreeing that the land in question be sold and the proceeds used to refund the part payment made by Nwabuoku.

    “The refund was to be of money paid by Mr. Okoronkwo as a loan to Mr. Nwabuoku for the purchase of land which title has been passed to him (Nwabuoku). The recital captures the tenor of the transaction.

    “The land in question is a Lagos State government scheme, and is covered by a CofO. A land search was conducted by the law firms of both parties prior to its purchase to authenticate the documents and know the owners. The CofO was found to be valid and the land unencumbered.

    “The land itself is described in the survey plan attached to the CofO, which was used as the description in the Deed of Assignment conveying all 150 plots to the purchaser by the owners of the land.

    “Mr. Nwabuoku was handed the Original Certificate of Occupancy, along with the Deed of Assignment and a Power of Attorney, duly vesting the land in his company, his designated beneficiary. The receipt for all of these documents was duly acknowledged by Mr. Kennedy Nwabuoku by email on receipt…”

     

     

     

  • This is Lagos…City of aquatic splendour, dry taps

    This is Lagos…City of aquatic splendour, dry taps

    In this prelude to an investigation on contaminated sachet water in Lagos, HANNAH OJO examines the Lagos water crisis and the sketchy alternative Lagosians are forced to embrace.

    The Third Mainland Bridge, the longest bridge in West Africa, looms high above the Lagos lagoon connecting the mainland and Island. Makoko, a community of small shanties, tiny wooden houses standing on stilts, is close by. Makoko, like Lagos, is surrounded by water yet its residents have none to drink. This has earned Lagos a moniker: the city surrounded by water yet little to drink. Just like the Third Mainland Bridge, lack of potable water connects the mainland and Island. Welcome to Lagos, West Africa’s commercial nerve centre, the city that keeps attracting immigrants yet struggles to meet their water needs.

    With a booming population of 24 million people and a Gross Domestic Product (GDP) set at $91 billion, Lagos has the fifth largest and fastest growing economy in Africa. Despite its avalanche of skyscrapers, veritable human capital, and its aquatic splendour, the city suffers perennial water shortage. It is a bitter twist of irony that the fifty-year-old state, despite its resource and infrastructural development, has not been able to solve its water problems. This does not stop the government from dreaming big; it desires to transform the city from a mega city to a smart city.

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    Lagos ranked among the top ten choice destinations for rural–urban migration in the world, according to a 2014 Facebook data which compared users home town with their residence.  As if to corroborate this, Governor Akinwunmi Ambode, at a media parley in 2016, disclosed that  86 immigrants enter Lagos every minute; hence the urgent need for the state to provide facilities for its teeming population.  However, the steep rise in population has not been matched by a complementary increase in the supply of water.

    Many Lagosians rely on other sources but the government for water supply at a high cost. While some residents construct wells and boreholes, some just buy water.

    “I never grew up with government water supply so I am used to sourcing water from alternative sources right from childhood. It is a huge cost for me because I fetch a paint bucket for N10 while the water vendors charge as high as N50 for a gallon. This is ridiculous and frustrating but I don’t have a choice,” Femi Olutade, a millennial Lagos resident, told The Nation.

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    The Lagos State Water Corporation is responsible for water supply across the state. Bedeviled by continuous population increase, poor infrastructure, failed public-private partnerships, inadequate budget allocation, poor labour practices and unstable power supply, the corporation falls short. And providing enough water to meet the needs of the citizens remains a dream, just like Lagosians waiting for government water supply from their dry taps.

    “The population increase is one of our major challenges. With the research we have carried out, we need about 700 million gallons a day  (MGD)for 22 million Lagosians. The gap is about 500 MGD which we are trying to close,” Muminu Adekunle Badmus, an engineer and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the Lagos Water Corporation, told The Nation.

    The Environmental Rights Action (ERA), a non-governmental organisation (NGO) states that only 10 per cent of the population has access to water supplied by the Lagos State Water Corporation (LSWC). With four major water works and additional 48 micro and mini water works scattered in various parts of the city, the corporation produces about  215 MGD, according to the CEO. A report by ERA states that despite the number of water works, water supply remains abysmal due to some dysfunctional water works.

    The Lagos Water Corporation will need $3.5 billion to execute a Water Master Plan. This includes the construction of additional large water schemes by 2020 to cover the water needs of the which is estimated to be 733 MGD by then.  While Lagos plans to make this a reality, more immigrants keep pouring into the city, the shortage in water supply remains, along with implications for Lagosians.


    Leo Heller, the UN’s special rapporteur on human rights to water and sanitation, said the huge deficit in the provision of water by the government is “unacceptable …for millions of the megacity’s residents”. Heller added that it is worrying how the water shortage makes Lagos residents vulnerable.

    The shortage has led to the unregulated proliferation of boreholes, which is regarded as a threat to the stability of the state’s water table, which experts claim might subside if exploited beyond a certain limit. Asides its implication for nature, there are also public health risks. Many times, boreholes are sited indiscriminately close to soak-aways posing health risks.

    Kabir Ahmed, an architect and chairman of the Lagos State Water Regulatory Commission, an agency responsible for regulating water supply and wastewater management, revealed that 50 per cent of residents who visit hospitals do so as a result of water-related ailments.

    “The indiscriminate citing of boreholes, pit latrines, soak-aways has also been polluting the water source because you observe traces of coliform bacteria in various water sources across the state,” Ahmed told The Nation.

    The average cost of digging borehole in Lagos cost between N200,000 to N350, 000 depending on the water level.  In recent times, the human cost of lack of potable water supply in the state has been dire. In February 2016, 25 children from Otodo-Gbame, a slum (now demolished) in the Ikate Eti Osa Local Government Area, died after drinking the community’s pathogen-infected water. In March this year at Queens College, a government secondary school in Yaba, Lagos mainland, three students died and scores of others were hospitalised as a result of a gastroenteritis epidemic contacted through contaminated water sources.  Water-borne diseases, such as typhoid, cholera, diarrhea and hepatitis remain a major burden to public health. Experts said the spate of illness is not surprising since water and sanitation are key drivers of public health.

    A sketchy alternative

    As taps run dry as a result of the state’s inability to provide water, many Lagos residents have been affected by the high cost of sourcing water from water vendors popularly known as “mai ruwa”.  These water vendors, who buy water from tankers and houses with boreholes, resell to members of the public, increasing prices when there is the lack of power supply and fuel scarcity to power generators. The hygiene of the water supplied by these sellers remains questionable, increasing risks of contamination.


    Nature abhors a vacuum. Packaged water in small sachets retailed on the streets has also served as an alternative source of water for many Nigerians since the close of the last century. Popularly called “Pure Water”, as they are supposed to be treated, their quality and hygiene status have been questionable. There are indications that the quality of sachets of the pure water sold in Lagos do not conform to the highest standards of purity.

    The sachet water phenomenon is also considered as an environmental nuisance owing to the waste generated by consumers who litter the streets with sachets. Many times, these sachets end up blocking the sewage and causing flooding.

    In 2013, Dr Sola Oguntona and Prof Oluwole Adedeji of the Lagos State University carried out a research testing contamination of sachet water produced in the industrial area of Ikeja,  Lagos.

    Six samples sachets of pure water were randomly selected from the open market and studied by an examination on the physical parameters and inorganic constituents. The result showed that all the sachet water samples were acidic. The samples also showed high level of heavy metals and chloride.

    Despite doubt over purity standards and the likelihood of contamination, many Lagosians are forced to consume sachet water due to lack of choice.

    “People are paying for the failure of the government to provide water on the table. The so-called pure water is unsafe and not environmentally sustainable. We don’t endorse sachet water as an alternative or as a means of getting water to the people,” Akinbode Oluwafemi, Deputy Executive Director of ERA, told The Nation.

    Public-Private Partnerships (PPP) under contention

    The government plans to bridge the water gap through public-private partnership (PPP).

    “In the area of environment, we will improve water supply through PPP and increase the capacity utilisation of water treatment plants….”, Ambode announced during the presentation of  the 2017 budget proposal of N812.998 billion to the House of Assembly.

    The state government’s plan to encourage private sector participation in the water sector has been questioned by Our Water Our Right Campaign, a coalition movement of civil society organisations and labour unions.

    “We are also challenging the state government in terms of their approach which is to think that privatisation is the silver bullet to solving the problem of water in Lagos. From examples of different countries of the world privatisation has failed. Privatisation is going to cause a lot of problem for the poor people in Lagos. There is going to be access and pricing problems as well as social unrest for the 80% of residents of the state who depend on the informal sector,” Oluwafemi said.

    However, the government  has maintained that PPP is not privatisation, stating that the Lagos Water Corporation will retain ownership of the assets while the state government regulates the sector.

    Nigeria is classified as a water-short country, whose water resources is likely to reduce from 2,506 cubic metres per year in 1995 to 1,175 cubic meters in 2025, if not properly managed, according to UNICEF. The human right to water requires, among other things, that drinking water be affordable and accessible. The possibility of achieving this reality by 2020 appears distant to Lagosians.

    Reporting for this story was supported by Code for Africa’s impactAFRICA fund and the Bill & Melinda Gate Foundation.

  • Update: Found body not drowned doctor – Family

    Update: Found body not drowned doctor – Family

    Family of the medical doctor who jumped into the Lagoon last Sunday has said the body found by the Marine Police on Tuesday is not that of their son, Allwell Oji.

    According to Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA),  five family members invited to inspect the body at the Marine Police Unit  said it was that of another person.

    LASEMA said the search for the doctor continues.

    The Police had earlier  confirmed that a body suspected to be that of the drowned medical doctor, Allwell Oji has been recovered.

    “We cannot say if it is his body because we don’t have a picture of him. He was found exactly 10:30am and we have contacted his family to come and identify if he is the one. The body was found in Onikan,” said the Police source

  • Search continues for doctor’s body in Lagos lagoon

    Search continues for doctor’s body in Lagos lagoon

    •Mum: he’s alive, God still does miracles

    •Oji’s residence
    •Oji’s residence

    THE body of Dr Allwell Oji, who jumped into the Lagos lagoon on Sunday evening, has yet to be found, it was learnt yesterday.
    Divers and emergency management officials combed the lagoon yesterday for his body to no avail.
    But his family is hopeful that he would return home.
    “Please respect our grief. This is a difficult time for us and we don’t want to make comments on this issue. It is not something to be celebrated. We believe that he’s still alive. God still does miracles,” a man said to be close to Oji pleaded with reporters yesterday.
    Oji, 35, lived with his widowed mother, Mrs. Chinyere Oji, a retired banker, at their Abule Ijesha, Yaba, Lagos home.
    He was the first of three children and was not married.
    Reporters were denied access to the two-storey building believed to belong to Madam Oji. Relatives appealed that they be left alone.
    Family, church members, friends and colleagues of the doctor gathered to comfort his distraught mother.
    At the gate were two men who interrogated those entering the premises.
    One wore a kaftan; the other, a t-shirt.
    Though calm and polite, the men insisted they did not want reporters on the premises. They said neither the mother nor any close family number would comment on the matter.
    “You people don’t know what we have been through since yesterday (Sunday). Please, respect our grief. This is not a case of a grandfather that died and we want to celebrate it. This whole issue has been difficult for us. The mother is up there, not talking to anyone. Not even us who are very close relatives. People have been around her since yesterday so that she doesn’t do anything drastic. She is yet to accept that he could be dead. She doesn’t even accept people’s sympathies and condolences. As a Christian, she believes in God that a miracle could happen and that her son won’t die. She believes he’s just missing and would return alive.
    “We can’t allow you in. We won’t also comment on it. Not today, not any day. We are not interested in talking about this issue. But I can tell you he’s not the person in the picture they have been circulating online. That’s not my doctor. So many falsehoods have been circulated online in respect of this matter. We are not too pleased about it, but we won’t be pushed to comment.”
    At the Mt. Sinai Hospital in Mushin, where he worked, it was gathered that Oji was on duty Friday night.
    An official described him as “dutiful and mostly on night duty”. He said: “I am not allowed to speak to you. We run a central administrative system. I advise you go to the head office at Surulere. There, they would attend to you. He’s not the person in the picture being circulated. That’s not Dr Oji. And he was not fired either. He was at work on Friday. I saw him. He didn’t show any sign of depression. He appeared normal to me.”
    At the 30, Falolu Street, Surulere head office of the hospital, the Chief Medical Director was said to be unavailable.
    The hospital declined comments.
    Officials of Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA) and Lagos State Waterways Authority (LASWA) and divers intensified the search for Oji’s body.
    By 2pm, divers and marine boats had patrolled 10 miles radius from the suspected point of contact for possible location, said LASWA’s Managing Director, Ms. Bisola Kamson.
    LASEMA’s General Manager, Adesina Tiamiyu, who was at the scene, said it would be wrong to assume the worst for now, adding that they would rather wait till Oji was found.
    Tiamiyu, however, noted that the water reaches high tide around the place Oji jumped into the lagoon at Adeniji Adele on the Third Mainland Bridge.
    He said: “We are still searching for the body. We have expanded the search to go further than the point it happened. We have told local men around to watch out for any floating body and we have engaged local divers to look around for us. Patrol boats are in the water going round. We would continue to search for him.
    “The family is traumatised at this point and unwilling to speak on the issue. I want us to respect their wishes please. We have established contact with the family and expressed the government’s sincere wishes to them. We would also go back at a time they feel better because we would like to know what happened so that Lagosians and Nigerians can learn a lesson or two from it.
    “It’s an unfortunate situation. But what do we do? The driver is with the police. The police would be more involved in the investigation. If we are able to pick one or two things, we would pass it across. I am not aware of any suicide note. His phone and car are with the police.”
    Emergency workers hinted it would take at least 24 hours more for the body to float, adding that there was the possibility he may never be found.
    According to them, the body could be stuck in the ground, if where he landed on was muddy. They also said there was the possibility that the tide might have pushed him to another location.
    Although the police insisted that Oji’s driver, Henry Ita, was not arrested, The Nation saw his name on the suspects’ board at the Adeniji Adele Police Station.
    A policeman said no suicide note was found in the victim’s car, nor did he receive any phone call as alleged.
    The source said: “From the driver’s account, the incident occurred around 5pm while they were driving inward Marina from the man’s home. He said when they reached midway on the bridge, the doctor told him to park but he advised that it was a dangerous spot.
    “He said he asked the doctor why he wanted them to park and the doctor said he wanted to pee. As his boss, he had to obey without further questions, so he parked. He said the next thing he saw was the man jumping inside the water and so he quickly called his mother and pastor. They were not coming from church at the time because it was already 5pm. They went to church in the morning.”
    The command’s spokesman, Olarinde Famous-Cole, an Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP), said investigation was ongoing.

  • Breaking: Helicopter crashes into Lagos lagoon

    A yet to be identified helicopter crashed into the Oworonsoki lagoon in Lagos about 35 minutes ago.

    The crash site, according to sources, is directly behind the palace of the Oba of Lagos.

    The number of casualty and cause of the mishap had not been ascertained

    Confirming the incidence, the southwest spokesman of the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), Ibrahim Farinloye, said, “It is true but NEMA has not receive distress alert from the chopper on its mission control centre yet.

    “We have Maritime Distress Alert only about a ship around Warri in Delta State, rescue agencies are on their way to the scene.”

  • No bus plunged into the lagoon — LAGBUS, BRT

    No bus plunged into the lagoon — LAGBUS, BRT

     

    Operators of both the Bus Rapid Transport (BRT) and LAGBUS bus services in Lagos have denied that a vehicle in their fleets was involved in any road mishap on Monday.

    The rumour mill was thick on Monday morning to the effect that ‘a fully loaded BRT bus crashed and plunged into the Lagoon from the Third Mainland Bridge in Lagos’.

    The managing director of LAGBUS Assets Management Ltd., operators of LAGBUS buses, Mr Babatunde Disu, denied any such incident.

    Disu told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that no bus in the LAGBUS fleet, as well as its sister transport company, BRT, was involved in any accident on Monday.

    “Some people can be mischievous! Nothing of such has happened and nobody is praying for such a disaster”, Disu said.

    In the same vein, Mr Kolawole Ojelabi,  a consultant with the Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Authority (LAMATA)– regulators of the BRT– told NAN that the “malicious rumour was only the imagination of some weird people”.

    Ojelabi also prayed that no such evil would befall the transport sector in the state, either private or public. (NAN)