Tag: missing

  • I am not missing

    I am not missing

    The governor of Nasarawa State, Alh. Umar Tanko Al-Makura, yesterday said he is not missing from the state as insinuated.

    He also said there was no rift with his deputy, Silas Agara, and Sen. Abdullahi Adamu.

    Al-Makura, who made the clarification in a statement through his Special Assistant (Media & Publicity), Ahmed Tukur, said the masterminds of such mischief would fail in their plans to cause disaffection among political leaders in the state.

    The statement read: “The attention of Governor Umaru Tanko Al-Makura of Nasarawa has been drawn to a recent publication by a national daily alleging “Uncertainty in Nasarawa over whereabouts of Gov Tanko Al-Makura”.

    “The publication is not only mischievous, but the figment of the imagination of the prophets of doom who are out to create confusion using devilish assumptions to achieve selfish goals. Such publication needed clarification but for reasons best known to the writer, who neither contacted the deputy governor, Silas Agara, nor got across to any government official for clarification as  claimed.

    “For the avoidance of doubt, Governor Umaru Tanko Al-Makura is not missing but has been conducting the affairs of the state as enshrined in the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.”

    Al-Makura, who denied any rift with his deputy, Silas Agara, asked the people of the state to ignore the rumour. “There is also no iota of truth in the said publication that the governor travelled without officially handing over to his deputy, Silas Agara, because of a disagreement between the two leaders.

    The statement added: “The governor and his deputy are having a very cordial working relationship that the people of the state can attest to as well as Senator Abdullahi Adamu and other stakeholders in the state who are happy with the developmental strides of the governor.

    “The allegation by masterminds of the report of an imaginary face-off between the governor, his deputy and Senator Abdullahi Adamu only demonstrates their envy of the cordiality and good working relationship between the political leaders in the state and they are working very hard to create disaffection and divert their attention from their effort to bring the much needed dividends of democracy to the people of the state.

    “We are calling on the good people of Nasarawa State to ignore and henceforth disregard any such publication aimed at creating mistrust and disharmony in our dear state.”

  • Dead woman’s parts missing in hospital

    SOME parts of a deceased 60 year-old woman are reportedly missing at a private hospital in Osogbo, the Osun State capital.

    Though it could not be confirmed when she died, the woman took ill on Wednesday and was taken to the hospital at Owode-Oluode by her grandchild.

    On Thursday morning, a nurse on duty allegedly rushed the children to carry their mother’s body. Then they discovered that her lower lip and a part of her eye are missing.

    It was gathered that when the children confronted the nurse, she allegedly said a rat fed on the missing parts.

    One of the deceased’s children, Waliyat Raji, said: “The doctor confirmed to us that our mother had died and we were told to come for the body the following morning.

    “But we were surprised to discover that the lower lip, nasal cartilages and the side of the eyes have been cut off.”

    Those on duty at the hospital have been detained at Dugbe police station in Osogbo.

  • ‘It’s still a dream that my husband is missing’

    ‘It’s still a dream that my husband is missing’

    •He will return home, says father

    Where is Godwin Nwaeze, a worker with the Federal Palace Hotel (FPH) on Victoria Island (VI) Lagos?

    Nwaeze, 43, according to his wife, Mary, has not been seen since he left home last February 25 for the bank.

    “He said he was going to look around for a shop for me after leaving the bank. That was our last discussion”, Mrs Nwaeze, 34, told The Nation yesterday.

    “My children got to know their father is missing through my prayer points. Even when they kept asking after his whereabouts, I couldn’t say a word. I feel the world has crumbled in front of me,” she added.

    Mrs Nwaeze said she dialled her husband’s number mobile line at exactly 4pm, but he didn’t pick his call.

    She said: “I thought he had left the bank and was in search of a shop for me because where I usually sell was affected by road construction. I dialled his mobile line again around 6pm but this time, it was switched off. I began to panic. I informed his sister and afterwards we went to Oke-Odo Police Station same day and later Federal Palace Hotel, where he works but that day was his off day at work.”

    Describing her husband as easy going, Mrs Nwaeze said: “Whenever he leaves the house, he goes to my shop. He doesn’t drink or smoke. It hasn’t been easy for me. Our two children are between ages six months and nine years. I don’t know where we went wrong with God. I have not relented in my prayer. My hope is high.”

    She said police promised to get back to the family but nothing has been heard from them.

    His sister, Mrs Blessing Ehiwarior, said she saw her brother that morning polishing his children’s shoes, adding that he promised to visit them when he returned.

    “It is still like a dream. When we got the bank, we were told there was no transaction by that name on the day he got missing. That means he never reached the bank. Only God knows what happened,” she said.

    Also yesterday, a civil servant, Sunday Ojelabi, whose son, Michael Oluwatomiyin, has been missing since January 20, said he is still positive about his son’s return.

    In a phone conversation, Ojelabi said: “My family and I won’t relent in our prayers. We are yet to get any information.”

    Four-year old Michael, a Nursery 1 pupil of Mafina Primary School on Great Challenge Road, Unity Estate, Iba was abducted by an unidentified woman around 3.30pm.

    It was learnt that he was returning from school with his sister, Oyindamola, when he was snatched.

    The woman escaped with Michael on a motorcycle.

    Ojelabi told The Nation that the family was still on the matter, adding: “I still believe he will return that is why my family and I haven’t relented in prayers. I just pray he is in a good state. I just resumed work and my wife is yet to return to her business. It hasn’t been easy but we won’t stop praying.”

    The Ojelabis are pleading with the public for information on their boy’s whereabouts.

    They can be contacted on: 08024371127, 08028287574 while the Nwaeze’s can be reached on: 08177546855, 08029161084.

  • Arsenal 2-1 Leicester: Iwobi missing

    Arsenal 2-1 Leicester: Iwobi missing

    Alex Iwobi was not involved in Arsenal´s 2-1 victory in the Premier League tie against Leicester City at the Emirates yesterday.

    Manager Arsene Wenger announced his starting lineup and the seven players that made the substitutes bench, without including the Nigeria international.

    Iwobi has been officially promoted to the Gunners first-team squad and practiced with the likes of Ozil, Sanchez and Walcott on Saturday only to be left out of the encounter.

    The 19-year-old has made four appearances in the Premier League so far this season, coming off the bench in all the games.

  • Missing budget

    •Nigerians sure deserve explanation and an apology from the President 

    The bits of the puzzles over the controversial missing Budget 2016 document may have finally come together after two weeks of bickering over its whereabouts. Tuesday last week, Senate President, Bukola Saraki, read to the Senate plenary, a letter from the president formally notifying them of “corrections” to the budget document:

    “It will be recalled that on Tuesday, 22 December, 2015, I presented my 2016 budget proposals to the joint sitting of the National Assembly. I submitted a draft bill accompanied by a schedule of details. At the time of submission, we indicated that because the details had just been produced, we would have had to check to ensure that there were no errors in the detailed breakdown contained in the schedule. That has since been completed and I understand that the corrections have been submitted…It appears that this has led to some confusion… please find attached the corrected version. This is the version the National Assembly should work with as my 2016 budget estimates. The draft bill remains the same and there are no changes in any of the figures.”

    That was obviously meant to be a denouement to the drama, shame and embarrassment that had lingered for the whole of the fortnight, something that had cast the entire leadership of the nation as unserious.

    There could not have been a more cynical, if not ingenious attempt to force a closure on the issue.

    With the long drama over, it is only necessary to put the bits together. We start with the fact that the executive acknowledged that the documents it presented to the National Assembly on December 22, 2015 contained a number of errors. While that ordinarily should not be a big issue, it also turned out that some officials in the executive not only thought little about substituting the original documents with another version without the formal rites of writing to the lawmakers, but went as far as taking the liberty of removing the documents– at least temporarily. To complete the macabre drama, it also turned out that some senators received the intelligence about the plot to substitute the documents through the back door after which they promptly alerted the media on the discovery that the original hard and soft copies were nowhere in the chambers.

    The Senate-ordered investigation would later reveal two versions of the document – the original and another said to have been circulated to the members by the President’s Senior Special Assistant on National Assembly Matters, Senator Ita Enang. The Senate has since pronounced the latter as fake.

    It is clear from the foregoing that the Senate did not cry wolf where there was none. Indeed, not only was there substance to the charge that the presidency was up to some mischief, it tried valiantly to cast the National Assembly as the unserious party. To that extent, the presidency stands rightly accused of bad faith in addition to the grave charge of dereliction of duty.

    The question of course remains: why will the President choose to lay a document he acknowledged as flawed before the National Assembly? Why seek to cure the defects identified by a method so clearly at variance with the provisions of the law? And what is there in a document that can be amended at any point –even right up to its passing into law – that the nation’s foremost institution, the Presidency, would opt to jettison the niceties of process for expediency that inevitably casts it in such terrible, ignoble light? Why wait till hell broke loose before doing the right thing – as it later did?

    Nigerians obviously need more explanations – and apologies – far beyond the tepid rationalisation offered by President Muhammadu Buhari in his letter. It goes without saying that an administration that cannot be trusted to do right by the citizens in the elementary things of process cannot but forfeit its support when the crunch finally comes. Surely, Nigerians deserve better from an administration that promised change.

  • Families of missing DSS agents seek probe

    Four months after seven Department of State Service (DSS) agents went missing in Ikorodu, Lagos State, their families have called for a presidential investigation into the matter.

    They also decried the agency’s silence on the plight of its agents.

    The distraught families urged President Muhammadu Buhari to unravel the whereabouts of the agents, who were said to have been abducted by suspected vandals.

    They appealed to the President to compel the DSS to pay the salaries and other entitlements of the missing operatives to their jobless wives, hungry children and take full financial responsibility of their families.

    The sister to one of the abducted DSS agents, Ms Mercy Obiorah, said: “Let Nigerians ask why the DSS should keep silent on the sudden disappearance of their gallant officers who were on a national assignment and refuse to even ask their families how they have been faring!

    “Reason and responsibility demand that the DSS should cater for the temporary financial needs of the families until they are back.”

    Those copied in the letter, titled: “A plea for thorough investigation into the case of seven missing DSS operatives with Lagos Command,” are: the Senate, the Inspector-General of the Police (IGP) Solomon Arase and the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF).

    Ms Obiorah condemned the silence of the DSS since the incident happened, despite efforts by her family to ascertain the whereabouts of her brother.

    The woman, who wrote from Texas, the United States of America (U.S.A), described the silence of the DSS as a show of aggressive impunity and corrosive erosion of professionalism, which must be rejected by well-meaning Nigerians.

    She urged President to compel the DSS to tell Nigerians whether the missing operatives were dead or alive; investigate their disappearance and explain their mission at Arepo or Ishawo.

    Ms Obiorah said: “Rumours must be debunked for the sake of public good. A public pronouncement by the DSS on this matter is long overdue.

    “I strongly reject this aggressive and inhuman tendency from the DSS. These missing guys are human beings with wives and children; yet, they are being treated like animals. This is a show of aggressive impunity and corrosive erosion of professionalism that must be rejected by well-meaning Nigerians.

    “I need not dramatise my unimaginable mental burden, nor that of my family, that after four months, the DSS Office cannot inform us on the whereabouts of my brother who, along with his six colleagues, were sent to work from their Lagos command on September 15, 2015.

    “Incessant visits by my family back in Nigeria to the Office of the DSS in Lagos since September 15 have consistently left everyone with a most traumatic and painful experience. The Lagos Director, Mr Ajanaku, kept telling them that …my brother and his colleagues were alive and hidden somewhere in the creeks.

    “This information, quite unprofessional as it has been, is becoming tellingly unsavoury, objectionable and most devastating to the entire family members, especially with the passing days.

    “The DSS cannot permanently keep silent on a serious matter of national concern as this. In the U.S, when such incidents happen, it takes the Sheriff a few hours to go on air and inform the citizens. It is the right of citizens to get informed.

    “My missing brother’s wife confirmed that her husband told her that they were going for the rescue of a kidnapped woman in Ikorodu, contrary to ubiquitous reports that they were going to hunt down pipeline vandals or going for the funeral of their fallen colleague. This matter needs to be investigated.

    “My family back home in Nigeria went to the DSS Office in Lagos many times where my brother’s director assured them that they went to work and were kidnapped and that the DSS was negotiating for their release. At other times, the director said the military and the Navy had taken over the matter.

    “The question is: How could the military and Navy take over the investigation of a kidnap case of highly placed senior officers of DSS when they (the DSS) are adept at cracking high profile kidnap cases? We, and other Nigerians, smell a rat somewhere.”

  • Two kids missing as fire razes buildings

    Two kids missing as fire razes buildings

    Two children were declared missing yesterday following Tuesday night’s fire which razed Houses 1 and 3 on Odunsi Street in Lawanson, Surulere, Lagos Mainland.

    The kids are aged one-and-a half and three-year old. Two others aged two and three years old were injured.

    Many of the residents returned from work to meet their homes on fire.

    They ran helter-skelter as they sought their neighbours’ help to quench the fire.

    The fire, which started few minutes past 8pm, was said to have seen caused by gas explosion. A woman was said to be using a cooking gas when it exploded.

    But Delta State-born Chinedu Okolie, who lost all his properties, N276, 000 cash and certificates to the fire, said it was caused by candle light.

    Okolie, a Yaba College of Technology (YABATECH) National Diploma (ND) I student, said the woman lit a candle, which sparked the fire on contact with fuel allegedly stored in her apartment.

    The fire razed 13 rooms on 3 Odunsi Street and eight rooms of House 1.

    Damilare Adebayo, son of the late owner of House 1, said he was woken up by thick smoke around 8:30pm. By the time he opened his window to see where it was coming from, fire, he said, had engulfed everywhere.

    The businessman said: “It started around 8:30pm; thick smoke was coming from a room in front of my window while sleeping; the smoke was too much. So, I had to check. Immediately I opened my window and peeped through it, I saw that somebody was using a little gas to cook; before we could raise the alarm, the smoke had turned to fire because the gas exploded.”

    Adebayo, whose wedding is billed for next  month, said he lost everything he bought for the event.

    “I and my fiancée just returned from market on Monday where we shopped for our wedding stuff; everything is gone including some cash, we could not rescue a single pin,” he said.

    The residents’ efforts to fight the fire with detergent and water were unsuccessful, he said.

    “The fire fighters arrived 30 minutes after the fire started; they came with a complaint that they don’t have enough water, so they used what they had to fight the fire but they were not able to do much,” he said.

    Adebayo pleaded with Governor Akinwunmi Ambode to assist the victims.

    According to Okolie, his primary and secondary schools certificates, YABATECH admission letter and safety training certificate went with the fire.

    “It’s unfortunate I wasn’t at home when it happened, I’m also working with an oil and gas firm in Apapa. I came in this morning and met my room razed. I would have assisted to reduce the damage if I was around due to my training in fire fighting,” he said.

    Another resident, Donatus Nwanya, said he could only retrieve some of his clothes, and slippers.

    “I don’t live here with my family; I was outside; only came in to take my bath and I saw fire. It started from three rooms before my own and the occupant was not around when the fire started. Government should help us because we have nowhere to go this time around and no place for people to sleep. I lost a lot of property about a million naira plus. Two kids (two years and three years) were injured; they are in the hospital”.

    The Nation learnt that the fire fighters were attacked for “coming late” and complaining of “shortage of water.”

    According to the Community Development Association (CDA) chairman, Mr Christopher Fadipe, the driver of the fire fighting truck was injured on the right ear.

    When pandemonium broke out, the community leaders called the Divisional Police Officer of Itire Police Station who sent some of his men to the scene.

    “When the police came, the boys attacked them too; they wounded the driver of the fire fighting vehicle and cut his ear. They also injured some of the policemen; as at last night (Tuesday), the DPO later called me and told me that they were looking for two of his men.

     “I went to the station earlier today (yesterday), I saw the DPO because he couldn’t go home yesterday.  He said he had already taken those injured to the hospital,” Fadipe said.

    Father of four Moshood Oloto, who lives on 3 Odunsi Street, said two of his children are missing.

    He said one-and-half-year-old Taye and three-year-old Aisha got missing after the incident.

    Oloto said: “I wasn’t around when it happened, on entering my street around 8:30pm; I learnt that some houses had gone up in flames, not knowing mine was there. On getting home, I saw fire everywhere; I had to take the other building by climbing the fence. I joined them in putting out the fire and started looking for my children.  When I got to my apartment, the fire has not touched it; I struggled to enter but the smoke was thick. To my surprise I couldn’t find any of my children; suddenly the ceiling caught fire, so I had to run for cover. It was when I came out that I saw one of my children (the eldest among them).  I was a bit relieved seeing him, I asked him about the whereabouts of his siblings. He told me he and my second born carried them one each out of the building. I was happy to hear they were out of the building. So I told him to sit while I looked for the others. I could only find two of them since yesterday (Wednesday). My wife’s mother came to take her away this morning because she has been crying about her missing children.  We saw two, the two others are still missing.”

  • Russia’s might is seen, but outreach still missing

    Russia’s might is seen, but outreach still missing

    A week-long visit to the Russian Federation reveals the hidden strength and weaknesses of a nation; the thick and thin of a country’s amazing history, art and culture plus the global consequences of transition from monopoly to a market economy. Adewale Adeoye who was in St. Petersburg reports:

    We arrived to meet a mourning nation. The trees stood silent, the flowers did not respond much to the slow, chilly wind. The sky wore the colour of death; the cloud was mucky. 224 Russians had just been killed in a ghastly plane crash on the Saturday that our Emirate Airline touched town in historic St. Petersburg.  But instead of boiling with resentment against their leaders, the grief rather bonded a people raised to be tough, hard and resilient.  I was attending a United Nations, (UN) conference against corruption which drew close to 1000 participants, many visiting the Russian Federation for the first time ever.

    A visitor’s first impression is carved in gold right from the port of entry. We met an extremely courteous, efficient and dutiful retinue of immigration officials, in spite of the tragedy that has just befallen their country. As we drove through the thrilling boulevards of a city home to about five million people and one of Europe’s civilization pillars, my heart skipped intermittently in a miasma of shock and excitement.

    Is this Russia that I read so many odd stories about? After an hour drive from the Airport, a friend companion scribbled in his diary, “Oh Russia, why art thou hid thy strength and the burning firmament of thy might?”  Amazement! The Russia federation amazed many of us visiting for the first time. The worse thing is to visit a society with a shoulder-load of prejudices and stereotypes, sticking like a stubborn stain.

    Since we arrived at dawn, the city was half asleep.  But as we inched into her vast vowels, snaking through tributaries of roads, separated by heart-rending canals, the city gradually walked up warmly to visitors, like a strong, affectionate, but old grandma. The buildings bore antique images of history and majesty.

    What struck the visitors first were the huge, massive housing structures that stretch like an endless collection of sedimentary rocks. In Russia, government builds homes for her citizens. A diplomat in the Ghanaian Foreign Service told our correspondent that each building has an underground apartment reinforced with concrete and that each was built with underground compartments meant to shield the communities from possible wars that may involve atomic attacks.

    A West European official who had lived in Russia for years told our correspondent that Russian housing units were built with conception of war and peace, following the old axiom of the Chinese father of military science, Sun Tzu, whose motto was ‘when in war, prepare for peace; when in peace prepare for war”. Yes. This appears a nation built on the ashes of martyrs: in 1916, during the World War 1, Russia lost five million people; dead, taken as prisoners of war or missing. The country fought two bitter World Wars, in which over 27 million souls perished; 1, 710 towns and cities wiped off and 71, 000 villages burnt down. “We are a product of a tough history. This is why we value human rights; we are cautious about wars, we are also quick to confront enemies of our nation’, Peter Rochovish told me as we sat down for a meal of oriental shrimps, rice and desert in a Sunday evening held in awe by a zero temperature weather.

    He said the West ‘spreads wicked propaganda and lies” against Russia, portraying “our country as underdeveloped.” He said fiercely, but without any iota of arrogance: “We are a world power in economy, science and the military. The West sees Russia as a bitter rival and seeks to destroy us.”

    The Russian-West feud is legendary and for obvious reasons. The old Soviet Union pivoted the modern socialist revolution, thereby becoming the property-seeking and individualistic West’s chief Albatross. In 1917,  Vladimirovich IIya nicknamed Lenin led the momentum that altered the map of human history and civilization, a zeal that sharply redefined the form and content of world politics. The Soviet Union did not only become the model for peasants and the exploited poor in the entire Europe, leading to worker’s revolts, she gave impulsion to deadly uprising in the world’s most populous nation, China; stirred the revolutions in Cuba, Vietnam, the entire Latin America; strengthened revolutionary movements in  Africa and the Middle-East and provided an alternative economic paradigm to blood-faced capitalism. Though the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, the remnants of the ideology remains and continue to fuel succeeding liberal democratic and anti-imperialist campaigns in Asia, Africa and a sizeable portion of Europe. To a large extent, Russia inherited the alternative ideology. So, within the context of influence, economic control and manipulation of the continent, to most of the western media and governments, Russia is the devil czar, an “underdeveloped and human rights violator.”

    But millions of visitors that throng this country are making new discoveries about Russia’s potential and opportunities. About 10 million foreign visitors scramble to visit Russia yearly in the post-Soviet era. And one great nectar is St. Petersburg , the second largest city in the Russian Federation; and by far the biggest city in Europe that is not a capital. Of attraction is also the bourgeoning market economy that is rich in cheap, qualitative made-in-Russia products, ranging from essentials to supersonic cars, building materials, heavy-duty equipment, aircraft to top class furniture; offering the cheapest costs in the entire Europe. Contrary to the impression that Russians do not eat well, food here is unimaginably cheap and qualitative. “I’m surprised that Russia stands shoulder higher than many Western European countries I have visited” a South African diplomat told our correspondent in a chat over dinner days after we arrived.

    However, we did not see the grandeur of St. Petersburg, our chief host until the night of a Thursday after we were honoured with a scintillating barley dinner dance arranged by our host, the aged governor of the St. Petersburg province, Georgy Poltavchenko. As he walked into the silhouette backed with glittering neon lights beaming on his rostrum, he charmed the audience with his magical voice: “I welcome you to St. Petersburg, a city of history, a city of proud and honest people.” He added that the strength of his country is that the fight against corruption has been part of the history of the Russian people which makes the country to endure. After the show, the former EFCC boss, Ibrahim Lamorde, sitting close to him told me: “This country is good, excellent.” Russians are believed to be largely friendly, morally upright and non-discriminatory.

    Hardly will any visitor come here without being enraptured by St. Petersburg’s own intriguing account.  Founded in 1703 by Peter the Great, St. Petersburg was the imperial capital of the country for two centuries. It is a city that has seen intrigues, betrayals, torture, wars and triumphs. All these, plus the 1917 revolution combined in defining her strength. Russian historical cities are legendary. For instance, the Hermitage Museum was built 250 years ago and remains one the world’s biggest and most prestigious museum; the Winter Palace was built in 1723 and was the official residence of the Russia monarch. The St. Isaac’s Cathedral or Isaakievskiy Sobor, which is the largest Cathedral in the world is located at St. Isaac’s square. It was opened in 1818. There are the Church of our Saviour of Spilled Blood, carved on the spot where Emperor Alexander II was murdered in 1818, with its colourful onion dinner, the Catherine palace, built by the czar who hired a German architect Johann Friedrick Braunstern to construct a summer palace for her. I had no answer to a poser by a friend:  these monuments were built after the Benin Empire and the Ife Dynasty. Ife was established over 1000 years after St Petersburg. How come we could not reach this height? Our king’s palaces are badly kept and poorly managed!

    Apart from the fact that Lenin’s 1917 revolution shot Russia hundred fold into global dominance, the current leaders, since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, have ensured the dramatic growth in economy. To most Russians, Vladimir Putin is an electrifying leader, intelligence, honest and dependable. Since Putin came, the GDP, for instance, has gone to 70% of industrial growth. Investments under Putin have increased by 125%, making Russia among the 10 world economic powers. This has been backed by government’s control of substantial part of the oil and gas sector. Rosnoft, the country’s largest state controlled oil company went public in 2006. Russia employs about 600,000 in her automobile industry. In 2008, it produced 1,469,098 light vehicles, controlling about 3 percent of total world production. A top Nigerian official told our correspondent that the Nigerian Sovereign Wealth Fund was tailored after Russia’s Stabilization Fund. The fund has reached over 30 billion dollars and has now been split into Reserve Fund, to shield the country from financial stocks slide, and also the National Welfare Fund largely reserved for pension reform. One major challenge pointed out by many visitors is that little is known about Russia especially in Africa and little is done her government to tame the wrong sordid images being created about the country. Another Nigerian official told our correspondent that Nigeria needs to tap from Russia’s economic might. He said Russian goods are cheaper while the country’s leaders are honest and genuinely interested to see real development in Africa.  It appears President Muhammadu Buhari is looking towards this direction.  Only recently, Nigeria renewed the agreement between the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) and Interfax, the Russian News Agency. Russia, an official told our correspondent, is sending a team to do a documentary on Nollywood, apart from an exchange programme designed for Nigerian youths to learn more about Russia in 2013. The trade between Nigeria and Russia is a modest 350 million dollars, but observers believe this is only a drop in the ocean considering the huge, inexhaustible opportunities between the two sovereign countries. As the plane touched down at the Murtala Mohammed Airport, no one needed to tell me I was back home. The MMA was as hot as oven, angry and furious officials shout on one another, there were no scanning machines to check the luggage of visitors. Touts with red-shot eyes prowled. I saw two engaged in a brawl, one had his teeth broken as blood gushed.  Security officials watched. This was complemented by a huge rat that scurried through my legs as I hurried to meet suntanned faces waiting at the arrival hall. One of the children waiting for me exclaimed: “Daddy, what did you buy? No light. Mosquito nearly kill us.”

     

    • Adewale Adeoye

    waleadeoye90@yahoo.com

     

  • Anxiety over missing UNILORIN student

    Anxiety over missing UNILORIN student

    Members of the Kwara state Fire Service and National Emergency Management Agency are searching for a-200 level student of the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN).

    The student whose name was given as Onikenku Michael Atunde of the department of science education, was said to have gone missing since Saturday.

    Authorities of the university, it was gathered, have contacted the student’s next of kin.

    Deputy Director, Corporate Affairs (DDI) of the university, Kunle Akogun said “a member of the Man’O war club was reported to have been calling for assistance in the river flowing behind the Parks and Garden Unit early Saturday.

    “Rescue efforts coordinated by the Deputy Vice Chancellor, Academics, Prof Nike Ijaya was immediately mounted, search is still ongoing. Medical services have been on ground since yesterday.”

    It is feared that the student might have been drowned at the university’s dam site.

    The fire service and NEMA with members of the UNILORIN community security unit were said to have been combing every nook and cranny of the dam site in the last two days.

  • Kwara worker missing

    There is fear in Oluseyi, in Omu-Aran, Kwara State, following the mysterious disappearance of a 30-year- old civil servant, Olaniyi Muyideen.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) learnt that Muyideen is a computer operator at the State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB) attached to Irepodun Local Government Education Authority, Omu-Aran office.

    He was said to have left his home about 7am on September 30, leaving his door unlocked. His mobile phone and other items  were inside his room.

    A man, simply identified as Femi, who claimed to be his landlord, told NAN last Friday when Muyideen’s parents called from Ilorin to enquire about him. He found that his door was unlocked.

    He said neighbours’ fears were further heightened when a search party, organised to ascertain Muyideen’s whereabouts, found his slippers, clothes and underwear at an uncompleted building a few metres to his home.

    Femi said the matter had been reported to the Divisional Police Command in Omu-Aran.

    “I thought he had left for Ilorin from the office on Wednesday to visit his parents. It was his usual practice.

    “It was when his parents called on Friday asking about him that I noticed he left his door unlocked and I raised the alarm,” he said.

    The Secretary, Irepodun Local Government Education Authority, Mr. Bisi Dosunmu, said his office was working with the police and the town’s vigilance group to ascertain Muyideen’s