Tag: mosquitoes

  • ‘New technologies can control mosquitoes’ 

    ‘New technologies can control mosquitoes’ 

    There are new technologies and innovations that can control breeding of mosquitoes, Pest Control Association of Nigeria (PECAN), has said.

      It stressed that indiscriminate and illegal use of chemicals cause environmental pollution and damage the body.

     The association called on the Federal Government to engage the private sector in the deployment of new technologies to control breeding of mosquitoes, while focusing on environmental measures and policies to control mosquitoes.

     Speaking at a conference on World Mosquito Day, National President, Olakunle Williams, said: “Mosquito-borne diseases pose threats to public health. Private sector’s involvement in mosquito control has gained attention due to its potential to bring innovation, efficiency, and resources to combat diseases.

    Read Also: First Lady to Nigerians: better days coming

     “The private sector possesses advanced technologies and research capabilities leading to development of novel mosquito control methods. This includes innovative approaches, such as genetically modified mosquitoes or precision-targeted insecticides.

    “Private companies can allocate financial and human resources to these efforts, potentially accelerating development and deployment of interventions on a larger scale.

    “Private sector practices, such as streamlined supply chains and efficient management, can enhance control measures.

    Registrar and Chief Executive Officer of Environmental Health Council of Nigeria (EHCON), Yakubu Baba, represented by Director of Department of Registration, Ethics and Standards, Issa Adamu, added: “We need to build capacity and structure of delivery of malaria control. Malaria is attributable to many factors, but since the focus is mosquitoes, a gap in the control of malaria is the neglect of the vector.

  • Our battles with reptiles, rodents, mosquitoes, harsh weather

    Our battles with reptiles, rodents, mosquitoes, harsh weather

    In spite of successive governments’ promises and programmes aimed at providing mass and affordable houses for Nigerians, the Bureau of Public Service Reform (BPSR) early in the year said that out of the 170 million people in the country, 108 million are technically homeless. This ugly development is no doubt responsible for the self- help the poor masses seem to have adopted to provide shelter for themselves. The result is the proliferation of ramshackle buildings in many parts of the country. INNOCENT DURU, who visited some suburbs of Lagos and Ogun states, examines the health, environmental and security risks that owners and occupants of these makeshift structures are exposed to.

    SHELTER is conventionally regarded as one of the basic necessities of life. But for several landlords in the suburbs of Lagos and Ogun states, living in their own houses comes with enormous pains. Many of the houses are without doors, windows, toilets or bathrooms. Some others are tucked inside bushes where they are forced to mix with reptiles, rodents and other dangerous animals invading their homes on a daily basis.

    A landlord at Odogunyan area of Ikorodu, Lagos, who identified himself simply as Samuel, said: “Life for most of us who live in this kind of structure is an emergency. We became landlords by emergency and also turned into emergency hunters because of the unsolicited visitors we have to entertain from time to time, especially reptiles and rodents. Soldier ants are our doctors and nurses because they come from time to time to inject us. In fact, we do emergency defecation and bathing because you don’t want people to catch you doing it openly, but it is the norm here.

    “Many of us are living the kind of lifestyles we never lived as tenants because we had everything in the rented houses. We are only consoled by the fact that we own the buildings. But how long would one continue to live in the Stone Age because the money is not there to perfect the building? That is the problem,”

    Investigation conducted by our correspondent showed that a good number of the landlords were forced into building shanty one- room houses because they couldn’t cope with rent in the cities.

    Ayobami, who owns one of such houses at Mowo on the Lagos/Badagry Expressway, said: “Most of us built these houses on emergency because rent was always rising and landlords would not listen to excuses. Flood, family problems and other forms of crises also force some people to quit their rented apartments.

    “Some of us begin by living in ordinary tents because there is no money to start building immediately. Some others who could not live in tents constructed wooden houses, while some lived in containers (cubicles made with iron and pan) until they are able to get money to start building the one-room apartment you described with contempt.

    “If you look at my building and some others very well, you will find that they have different shades of blocks. This is because the blocks were set at different intervals. In my own case, the foundation blocks stayed for more than two years before I raised the building to some point. After some time, I raised and roofed it, using tarpaulin and old roofing sheets to block some open places.

    “Cold and rain dealt with my family seriously while we were living in the tent. On many occasions, wind would blow part of it away in the night and we would have to stand in the rain to mend it.”

    Afolabi, a proud owner of a shanty one-room building located in Okoafon also on the Lagos-Badagry Expressway, is not bothered about what you think about his derelict house. What is important to him is that he has joined the league of landlords and now attends meetings with other landlords who have the best of houses in the area.

    “I am happy to have this building even though it is still at this level,” he said. “I am now a landlord and eternally delivered from the harassment of shylock house owners. It was a nightmare being a tenant, especially in the last house I lived in. The landlord was a thorn in my flesh. He was always complaining about everything and would seize every opportunity to extort money from his tenants.

    “He has three wives, and the moment any of them got pregnant, he would come and tell you he needed money to pay the hospital bills. After the wife puts to bed, he would come again and ask for money to help him take care of the baby and the mother. He does this not minding whether you owe him or not. If you are not owing, he would tell you to deduct it from the next rent. In short, his tenants were his ATM cards.

    “The annoying thing was that he never bothered to repair anything that got spoilt in the house. We always used our own resources to fix it.”

    But glad as he might be to be called a landlord, Afolabi said he had not been allowing his friends and relations to visit him for fear that they would mock him if they come.

    “How do you want me to bring them to this kind of place?” he queried. “I can’t do that because they will turn me to an object of ridicule. I don’t have a toilet yet. My family members and I do what is popularly called ‘short put’. We defecate in old newspapers or nylon bags and throw it into the bush. Is that what I will ask a friend or relation who visits to do? I will rather not invite them until I have a presentable house.

    A widow, Mrs Mojeed, who owns a room and a parlour in Ogijo, a suburb of Ogun State, savours the joy of being called a landlady. But the condition of the building in which she and her children live is not too different from that of a refugee camp. The rooms, like other hastily built houses, are without doors, causing the poor woman and her children to be exposed to harsh weather conditions.

    Her words: “I was living in Pedro area of Bariga (Lagos) before I moved to this place. I left Bariga after my landlord threw my family out of the house because we could not pay the high rent of N5, 000 per room.

    “When the landlord sent us out, we felt it was unwise to go and pay another rent with agency fee and commission. That was why we hurriedly came and erected a room and parlour here.

    “As you can see, we have no door or window. When rain falls, it comes into the house and messes up the whole place. If it is the type that comes with flood, we would have to stand on the bed for the rain to subside before coming down to drain the flood. The same thing happens during harmattan season. The cold wind comes in unhindered. All we do is to cover ourselves with wrappers.

    “We don’t have any form of security. We are daily exposed to all manner of dangers, but we always rely on God for protection. We didn’t really wish to have it this way but that is what the challenges of life have dropped on our laps.”

    The story of Oyerinde Mudasiru’s movement from Surulere, a highbrow part of Lagos, to Okeoko, a sleepy community in Ogijo, is simply befuddling.

    He said: “I moved from Surulere to Ikorodu because the rent became too much for me. After some time in Ikorodu, the rent also skyrocketed and I felt it was not wise to continue to labour all the year round only to pay a landlord. It was at this point that I decided to build a room on half a plot of land I had already acquired here in Okeoko.

    “I used sack and net to cover my door and window after constructing my one-room building. Mosquitoes, soldier ants and reptiles freely invaded my room. At a point, health officers came and gave us mosquito nets to save us from the menace of mosquitoes.

    “My neighbours and I have also been clearing the bush in the surrounding to prevent reptiles from coming into the house. We have been living in darkness all along as there is no electricity supply. We have contributed N60, 000 each for us to get power supply, but it was to no avail.

    “The government does not care about us except it is time for election. The road leading to this place wasn’t passable for vehicles until the Redeemed Christian Church of God headquarters, which is not far from us, took it upon themselves to fix it.”

    It was also a rough beginning for Najeem, who said he was forced out of his rented apartment by incessant flood.

    “When the menace of flood in my rented apartment at Ketu\Ikorodu Road became too much, I tried getting another apartment. But when I checked out the cost, I changed my mind and decided to use it to start something on my land here in Odogunyan.

    “We started with a wooden house and later began to build the house. It has been pretty challenging coping in this kind of condition. We don’t have a toilet. What we do from time to time is to dig holes and dump excreta in them. When that one is full, we dig another one.

    “We wake very early to bathe because we don’t have a bathroom. It is meaningless putting a bathroom in an open place where everybody passing will see us bathing. That is why we prefer to bathe early or late at night.

    “It is unfortunate that the government does not have plans for the poor to get loan to build houses. If they were providing loans, most of us would not suffer this much to have accommodation.”

    Challenging as their conditions are, the story of Mrs. Lateefat Fatai and others who moved from a one-room apartment to completing their houses offers some hope of a better tomorrow for the embattled landlords.

    She said: “My family was living at Ketu Alapere before we moved here. It was the same landlord palaver that drove us here. When our rent was increased to N7, 000 a room, we felt it was not worth it to continue to pay such when there are other bills. We decided to build a room and covered the door and window with sack. We managed like that until we added more rooms. Many people who started like that now have great buildings that one would never believe was like a rehabilitation home at the beginning.”

    In spite of her success story, she said: “Living in a remote area like this comes with a lot of challenges because it is we the residents that use our resources to develop the whole place. As we speak, there is no water supply. We go to long distances on a daily basis to buy water. Apart from that, living in this place has affected my business adversely. I sell soft drinks and sachet water but there is no power supply to make them cold. This makes people not to buy things the way they should.”

    Security, building, environmental experts speak

    In a telephone chat with our correspondent, the First Vice President of the Nigeria Institute of Building and the President of the Building Collapse Prevention Guild, Mr. Kunle Awobodu, expressed concern about the rate at which derelict buildings are mushrooming.

    “This question has been boggling our minds for long,” he said. “When you get to the suburbs of Lagos, you would see how ramshackle buildings are developing. Eventually, they will become a burden and an eyesore in future. So why can’t we get it right from the beginning? We have seen where a family slept in a ramshackle building overnight and the thing collapsed and killed them.

    “It is a complex social problem the government has not been able to find a solution to. When Mr Babatunde Fashola (SAN) was the governor of Lagos State, we advised him that the mortgage system that is operating in advanced countries should be introduced here, but the problem is how do we recover the money?

    “Our system has deficiency in seeing such facilities through. There is this programme by LAPO and Lafarge to help low income earners with money at low interest rate to build their own houses. It is called Ile Irorun. But how those people will pay back is another issue.”

    Awobodu further remarked that it is a contradiction to say that the government cannot build houses for people “when you hear that an individual who happened to be in government owns so many houses.

    “In advanced countries, especially the socialist countries, individuals don’t own houses, it is the government that builds for them. But Nigeria does not even have a data on who is who. So it is very complex to say you want to build for the people.”

    Explaining the security challenges associated with living in such structures, an expert on security matters, Ken Oziegbe, said: “People living in such structures are often soft targets for criminals. If you look critically at the people that were killed by the Badoo cult group in Ikorodu, you will find that the majority were people living in places like the picture you have painted.

    “There was this report published by your paper sometime last year about a community in Ijora where hoodlums were always raping and robbing people living in tents and other places that were not covered. That is what happens when people live in such places.

    “Criminals also like to do their operations with ease. We should also bear it in mind that criminals could use such suburbs as their hideouts. They wouldn’t want to spend so much on such building so that they could easily abandon it when the chips are down.”

    He added: “The government needs to up its game by providing befitting houses for the people. And where they cannot, they should be able to provide an enabling environment for the people to own houses.”

    An environmentalist, MrTaiwo Adewole, said people building houses without toilet and bathroom facilities are calling for serious epidemics within the society. “Unhealthy environment can easily lead to outbreaks of diseases,” he said, adding: “The government has a great role to play because they are the ones giving approval for the construction of buildings. Secondly, the local government, through its sanitation and health department, also has vital roles to play.

    “There is a need for massive awareness among people living in such areas. The best remedy from the government is to embark on building more public toilets and bathrooms which should be completely free of charge. The government also needs to start penalising the landlords of such facilities because the epidemic will be a major one which no one can escape from. Henceforth no building approval must be given without adequate toilets and bathrooms.”

    He added: “Some weeks back, I was at a community called Ajowa in Ajeromi/Ifelodun Local Government Area, and it was a real eyesore seeing people going to defecate in an open water body. And it was not even for free. ‘Area boys’ are the ones managing the open defecation place.

    “We can imagine the environmental and health impact because some people drink from the same water (where we have well and boreholes) closer to the water body and at the same time people still fish in the same water.

    “Finally, the owners of such buildings must be penalised for not following the building rules and regulations by erecting structures that lack toilets and bathroom facilities, which are basic sanitation requirements for every building.”

    Government moves to end menace

    The Federal Government during the week initiated the Nigeria Housing Fund Programme (NHFP), which is under the Social Investment Fund of the Federal Government. A sum of N100 billion was said to have been set aside for its take off.

    President of the Mortgage Bankers Association of Nigeria, and Managing Director, Trustbank Mortgage Ltd, Mr. Niyi Akinlusi, said the scheme was a departure from other housing schemes in Nigeria, adding: “The Housing Micro Finance Scheme is meant to stimulate increased lending to low-income earners in the formal and informal sectors in Nigeria through micro finance banks for incremental housing construction or housing improvement, while the technical assistance for the scheme shall ensure the protection of all the parties involved in the scheme.”

  • ‘Mosquitoes resisting insecticidal nets’

    Nigeria seems to be sitting on a  keg of gun powder as efforts to control malaria are met with resistance.

    According to researchers, the progress Nigeria has made in combating malaria is coming under threat due to the spread of insecticide resistance (pyrethroid used in nets) by Anopheles gambiae s.s. and Anopheles arabiensis, the vectors that transmit malaria.

    The scientists that conducted the research for over 14 months said the reality and impact of resistance at the programme level was unfolding and it was believed that the loss of pyrethroid effectiveness would lead to increase in preventable deaths among most vulnerable groups.

    The malariologists that gathered at the Nigerian Institute of Medical research (NIMR) said their research has shown that there is  evidence that insecticide resistance has been confirmed in at least 20 states across Nigeria. And this could lead to a public health crisis, as the resistance could quickly overpower the current portfolio of vector control tools, especially Long Lasting Insecticide Treated nets (LLINs).

    Deputy Director/ Head, Public Health Department, (NIMR) Dr Sam Awolola said if nothing is done in Nigeria, insecticide resistance could eventually lead to widespread operational failure and much of the gains made in malaria prevention and control could be lost.

    Dr Awolola said: “Evidence of resistance has increased, and now reported in 18 states affecting the two most important malaria vector: Anopheles gambiae s.s. and Anopheles arabiensis. Three states with the highest resistance are Lagos, Ogun and Niger. Preserving and prolonging the susceptibility of malaria vectors to pyrethroids used in LLINs is critical to sustain malaria control.

    “Since 2011, malaria prevalence has not changed markedly because of anti-malarial drug resistance, substandard and counterfeit nets, non-usage of LLINs, nets not effective due to mosquito resistance to insecticide and combination of factors. The major factor is change in evolution of Anopheles gambiae s.s. and Anopheles arabiensis which is the reason why they resist LLINs.”

    The Director General of NIMR, Dr Babatunde Salako, said the way forward not to lose the battle against malaria include getting new technologies through research to combat the challenge of insecticide resistance, “There is a need to move away from a ‘one-size-fits-all’ approach, towards an approach emphasising multiple vector control  interventions yet maintaining effective coverage. There are tools with improved efficacy such as: LLINs with combine insecticide (PBO-Nets); IRS insecticides with proven efficacy and longer residuality and environmental management. The need to explore alternative non-chemical base control measures (e.g. the use of genetic modified mosquito. This more tailored approach would encourage the use of the most effective tools in accordance with specific local conditions,” he stated.

    Dr Salako said NIMR has the capacity for evidence-based research to inform policy, “In this light and in line with the World Health Organisation (WHO) recommendation on the deployment and use of tools with improved efficacy, we appeal to the Minister of Health to support a large scale operational research on deployment and use of PBO-LLINs in insecticide-resistance hot spot areas. This could provide a nation-wide evidence on the use of this tool.  Empower NIMR to explore the use of alternative (non-insecticide- based) mosquito control measures such as the ‘Sterile Insect techniques’ and ‘genetic modified mosquito’ for malaria control in Nigeria.”

  • Will Prince Momoh help us kill mosquitoes?

    I PRAY that Prince Tony Momoh, nominated for chairmanship of Nigeria’s electricity regulating authority, is still his good, old self, or, better still, has become more adroit, like aged wine. In the days I knew of him between the 1970s and 1980s on a day-to-day basis, he was a disciplined, meticulous, hardworking, work loving, intelligent, difficult to put down and stubborn person. If he is still himself, I foresee him bringing new energy, strength and focus to President Muhammadu Buhari’s mid-term presidency.

    I knew Prince Tony Momoh to be defiant and courageous on two occasions when he defied armed robbers. The first time must have been in the 1980s when, on the way to worship one Sunday morning, armed robbers stopped his car on Iju Road, Lagos. He came out of the car alright, but refused to submit the key. One of the robbers wound his agbada (robe) around his head and face to blindfold him. Prince Tony Momoh wrestled him off, freed himself from the blindfold, and went for another armed robber who was carrying a submachine gun. In the twinkle of an eye, the road was clear of human and vehicular traffic. But Prince Tony Momoh disarmed the robber, drove on to worship with the machine gun, which he later submitted to the police.

    The second encounter with armed robbers was in his house in Lagos. If you called Prince Momoh at about 3a.m. in those days, he was likely to be in his study, reading. He was there one evening when robbers came calling again. And, again, Prince Momoh would not yield. But, this time, they shot him in one leg on which he limps till this day. To his joy, the armed robbers went away empty-handed.

    After these events, I gave Prince Momoh an old coin he once gave me. That “coin” was Apple cider vinegar. He used to travel abroad frequently, especially to Austria, before these robbery attacks and he once brought me Apple Cider Vinegar as a present. At that time, I knew Apple Cider Vinegar more as a supplement, which supported bone healing after fractures by helping to mobilise calcium and other bone-health mineral salts to the injury site. I was to learn later that Apple Cider Vinegar was good also for the hair, scalp, brain, eyes, digestion, the blood, the nails, infections et.c. Now that his bone was injured, I thought of no better help for his recovery than Apple Cider Vinegar.

    How does all this fit into natural medicine?, you may wonder, as did one of my sons when I told him about the subject of this week’s column. I told him irregular supply of electricity may disorganise a person’s health in many ways. For example, my house is surrounded by many houses where electricity generators run day and night, all week long. The smoke can de-oxygenate the blood and introduce heavy metals such as lead and cadmium into the bloodstream. Lead can damage and dull the brain and other organs of the body. If it de-oxygenate the blood, that may be the result of low haemoglobin and low packed cell volume counts.

    Low counts of these blood materials may cause tiredness, fainting, lowered immunity, disease proliferation and even cancer. I worry less about the smoke as I do about the noise for I detoxify and oxygenate regularly with greens and other detoxifiers which may be organ specific, say for the kidneys or the liver, or systemic, such as Chlorella or Stinging Nettle root. Generator noise has altered my response to noise. Now, I sleep soundly when the noise riot is raging outdoor And I wake up immediately the noise stops upon the “return” of municipal electricity supply. It is probably one reason many people are becoming hard of hearing or, to strike the nail on the head, one reason many people are becoming partially deaf: The next time someone is making a phone call or receiving a call near you, watch him or her. He or she is likely to be shouting as if the person on the other end of the line is deaf, or as if the loudspeaker in the phone isn’t working well.

    Mosquitoes and malaria fever are other harvests of poor electricity supply. If the electric fans roll and the air conditioners cool the rooms, won’t we all sleep better and more restfully? In my neighbourhood, it would appear that mosquitoes are released from a barracks for a battle with humans at about 2a.m. everyday and recalled at about 5a.m. They beat all cordons. I cannot attack them with insecticides because I know they kill humans as well, although slowly. I have tried the mosquitoe catcher. It is a gelatinous material like the roll of an undeveloped camera film.

    When you unwind it and stick the head to the ceiling board, its scent attracts mosquitoes and other insects such as flies. You would be lucky if the mosquitoes in your neighbourhood are stupid enough to prefer that scent to the radiation of your blood, which the biting mosquitoes requires for its eggs to mature. In the “war” hours, I have learned not to run my electricity generator because of fumes and noise. So, I spend the time killing mosquitoes with bare hands, praying and observing a contemplative period, and writing. I am well compensated between about 5a.m and 8a.m with deep sleep which may bring me about four or five beautiful dreams. I beat malaria fever with Lemongrass tea and pawpaw leaf juice. As stated earlier, plasmodium falciparum parasite, from the female Anopheline mosquito destroys red blood cells, can lower haemoglobin and packed cell volume (PCV) count.

    At dangerously low levels, the heart may stop beating and death may come. Recently, a young man who became so weak that he was falling on the stairway and on the highway was thought to suffer from Beri beri, a condition in which the nerves were so weak that the sufferer is unable to lift the arms and the legs. Beri beri are Japanese words which mean “I can’t, I can’t”. Doctors who attended to prisoners in a Japanese prison where this condition was prevalent often asked the sick inmates to lift their arms and legs. To this request, the inmates replied: “Beri beri”. No one knew what was going on until someone sighted chickens outside the prison gates which were suffering from the same condition. It turned out that the chickens fed on remnant polished rice from the prisoner’s meals. Since then, it became known that polished rice, which was popular in Nigeria before the ban on rice importation, was stripped of its B vitamins in the rice mills and had, therefore, become a killer food. The young man improved on B vitamin therapy at 75mg for each of the major B vitamins and 100mg of B1, the nerve vitamin, perhaps because these vitamins also support the making of blood. He has improved more since his blood count challenges were revealed by laboratory tests and addressed.

    To such conditions as these, we must add the cases of hundreds of thousands of pregnant Nigerian women, who die every year from malaria fever-related causes. The same goes for babies and infants and sickle-cell challenged people. The plight of people such as these make me wonder if life would not be much, much better if electricity becomes more regular, because we are bitten less by mosquitoes in our bedrooms when air-flow does not make them come near us. So I ask: Will Prince Tony Momoh help to cure electricity-related diseases.

    I believe he can. And I would not say Babatunde Fashola has failed. Former President Ebere Jonathan sold Nigeria’s major electricity concerns to the private sector before incumbent President Muhammadu Buhari made former Lagos Governor Fashola the minister responsible for electricity matters. I believe it is the regulatory body that will do the job better. Prince Tony Momoh’s job will involve the design of regulations that will address,  adequately, Nigeria’s peculiar electricity problems, monitor adherence to them and impose sanctions for breaches.

    If Prince Momoh of today is the old Prince Momoh, he would look any rule breaker straight in the face and throw the law at him. When he was editor of the magnificent Daily Times, he refused to obey a warning by the Nigerian Senate to appear before Senators for a hearing on a publication in the Daily Times. He said editors were ethically prohibited to divulge the source(s) of their information. When the Senate would not budge, believing it had the power of summons which Prince Momoh said it did not have, Prince Momoh went to court and legally defeated the Senate.

    I was a Senior Sub Editor on the Sub Editors’ Desk when he was Editor. I had just returned from youth service and my Chief Sub Editor was Olatunde Odesanya, an amiable gentleman who loved sub editing and comeradeship. When the Deputy Production Editor went on vacation and Prince Momoh asked Mr. Odesanya to take over, Mr. Odesanya was now expected to edit the front and back pages of the newspaper, which were the most delicate pages. Everyday he would pass these pages over to me, and I would plan them and edit the copies right on the Sub Editor’s Desk. We didn’t realise Prince Momoh was watching. Then, one day, he instructed me to move to the Deputy Production Editor’s Desk. I thought this was to protect me against distractions on the Sub Editors Desk. But I was wrong. Prince Momoh actually moved me on. That meant I was flying over the heads of two or three bosses. I thought not much about it. I thought he only wanted me to be away from the noisy arguments of the Sub Desk so I would not make mistakes on those critical pages. I was wrong. For soon after, I received official letter confirming my new position as Deputy Production Editor, who may now give instructions to my former bosses. That’s Prince Tony Momoh for you. Anyone who remembers his struggles to sanitise journalism in Nigeria when he was information minister under military President Ibrahim Babangida, and how, as a one-man army, he stood against the media, would expect monumental developments in the electricity sector, if Prince Tony Momoh, journalist and lawyer, is the same or tougher Tony that we knew.

  • FROM SHANTIES TO PALATIAL ‘HOMES’:Lagos IDPs  celebrate  freedom from  mosquitoes, rats

    FROM SHANTIES TO PALATIAL ‘HOMES’:Lagos IDPs celebrate freedom from mosquitoes, rats

    IF tragedy is what is required to transform people’s lives from a state of misery to happiness, the victims of the fire incident that occurred at Iwaya, a suburb of Yaba area of Lagos State, early last month, would no doubt wish for more.

    The victims, most of who have been moved by the state government to the LASEMA Relief Camp at Agbowa, a suburb of Ikorodu area of the state, appeared to have shrugged off the misery they were plunged into by the incident and enjoying their lives.

    They have moved from wailing to wearing toothy smiles, from being emasculated to being vivacious and from being gloomy to celebrating.

    One of the inmates, Blessing Asehinde, had this to say about their new status: “We are living like kings and queens here. I use two fans with my children.  It has been so good all along and we are very grateful for all this. If given the opportunity, I would want to continue living here.”

    A visit to the camp reveals that this is the mood of all the inmates and they are celebrating it. Coming from a ghetto where basic facilities are in short supply and where little or no attention is paid to hygiene, they have come to see the camp as a paradise that must not be lost. Checks showed that they are celebrating because they are now enjoying certain facilities that were previously alien to them.

    Back in their razed shanty settlement, the victims, it was learnt, were defecating in canals and living at the mercy of mosquitoes and rats. But this has changed since they got to the camp and for them, it is worth celebrating. From defecating in canals, they said they now do so in glittering water closet and do not wait till night fall to have their bath.

    “Back there in Iwaya, we used to defecate in the canal but coming here, we are now using water closet. It is not that we were going to canal to ease ourselves. We used to do it in a place that was covered with roofing sheet and after defecating, we would fling it into canal.

    “That was the practice then but all that has stopped since we got here. We who used to do ‘shot put’ style of defecating now defecate in clean water closet,” Madam Aina Sotade, a 60 year- old refugee told The Nation.

    Bimpe Akintunde , a mother of four, said they  have been delivered from the practice of defecating in one place and going to throw it away in another place since they got to the camp. She said: “We used to defecate in nylon bag and after doing that, we would transfer it inside latrine. We now defecate in fine water closet. We have also been delivered from the pains of carrying buckets up and down looking for water. We have been bathing three times a day and under shower for that matter.

    “We wash our clothes as soon as they are dirty, unlike in Iwaya where we used to heap our dirty clothes in one corner of the house because water was not always available. When water would even be available for us to buy, the money to buy it might not be there. We have taken a breather from all that since we came here.”

    Blessing Peters, a 28-year-old refugee, however, took exceptions to defecating in canal while living in Iwaya. “Although I lived in a plank building back there, I created a place where I fitted water system to in my apartment because I could not use latrine like most people. There were so many places that you would visit there in Iwaya and you would be shocked that such places existed in such shanty community.”

     

    Freedom from mosquitoes and rats

    Before the fire incident sacked them from Iwaya, the refugees narrated that they were literarily living with mosquitoes and never saw anything unusual about it.

    After some weeks of leaving the area, Folasade Meduoye, an refugee, said she develops  nightmare anytime she thinks of going back to the community to attend to personal issues.  “I had wanted to go to Iwaya since the beginning of the week but the fear of the mosquitoes keeps discouraging me.

    “I am always crestfallen whenever I remember that I have something to do at Iwaya all because of the anger of the mosquitoes.  They may even be more aggressive this time around because they would feel that we abandoned them to be starving since we left there to come here.

    “If you see the mosquitoes at Iwaya, fear will grip you. If you sit outside to receive fresh air, you will not wait to pick your slippers if the mosquitoes should descend on you. They were in different shapes and colours.”

    Bimpe Akintunde , a mother of four, also spoke about the menace of mosquitoes in the razed community. Mosquitoes used to bite the hell out of our bodies at Iwaya because of the nature of the area  but that is not the case here. Even if you choose to sleep outside, you would not feel a single mosquito bite. You dare not try that Iwaya. If you do, you will end up in the hospital the following day,” she said.

    Blessing Peter, 28, and a single mother, spoke about the effrontery of the rats in their former settlement. She remarked:  “We have been free from the usual offensive smells that used to be the order of the day at Iwaya. We don’t have heap of refuse dump and mosquitoes in this place but we had all that at Iwaya.

    “I have also come to notice that the rats here are different from the ones we lived with at Iwaya. The Iwaya rats are completely local rodents, while the ones here are classical rats.  When you come across a rat at Iwaya, they would not run away.

    “Instead of running away, they would keep staring at you in a manner that suggests they were co-tenants. It was only when they were chased that they would run away. The rats here would not wait for you to chase them before they run. They run immediately they see you.”

     

    Sexual life of refugees in the camp

    Owing to the conditions they have found themselves, findings revealed that the sexual life of the refugees has not been the same since they arrived the camp. While the male appears to have lost appetite for sex, the females said they always find ways to satisfy their urge with their husbands.

    Chief Oluw17, 18, 19 20 AGBOWA 14-2-15.o Oladiji Sotade, a native doctor, said his state of mind does not encourage sexual matters to cross his mind, adding: “My wife and my children are here with me but we are not staying in the same apartment.  I have had no sexual urge since the incident happened and have never thought of sleeping with my wife since then. I am telling you that I have nothing to fall back on again and that the dress I am wearing now was given to me by somebody, you are talking about sex. What is sex?

    “Is it not when you are happy that your manhood will be erect? Even when I sleep these days, I always make sure I lock up very well to prevent anybody from coming to disturb me.”

    Okorie, another refugee, said he has always wished to make love with his wife but could not because they were not staying in the same hostel. “I have not been ‘kicking’ (making love) since we came here because I am not staying in the same hostel with my wife. We only come together during the day to keep each other’s company.

    “There is nothing I can do about it because the environment does not permit that. I have always suppressed the feeling any time it comes.  ‘Kicking’ is suspended till we have a conducive environment for that.”

    It is, however, a different ball game for Blessing Asehinde.  She said: “My husband is not staying here with us. He only comes to visit us. We do make love whenever he comes because I am in a family dormitory. We just have to do that because it would not be appropriate to deny him sexually.

    “I would equally not want to starve myself of sex unnecessarily just because I am in a relief camp. There is no big deal about it as long as I am doing it with my husband. If there were no room for it, we would adjust or find a way out.”

    Another refugee, Folasade Meduoye, said: “My hubby used to come here and when he does, we take time out to make love. If he doesn’t come, I do go out to meet him to satisfy his sexual needs and mine. I don’t think it is necessary to abstain when my hubby is there to fulfill his conjugal duties.”

    Bimpe said she has been on ‘sabbatical leave’ sexually because her husband is currently held in prison custody. I have had nothing to do with sex since my husband was arrested.  No guy in Iwaya had the courage to come and approach me for such because they respect my husband. I have also not cheapened myself before any man since then because of the love I have for my husband.  I have put sexual matters on hold for now,” she said.

     

    Refugees seek permanent residence in camp

    Apparently overwhelmed by the facilities in the new environment they have found themselves, the refugees wished the government could make them permanent residents in the camp because  they have no place to move into if they are asked to quit the camp.

    Bimpe said: “I have nowhere to go from here if the government asks me to leave because I have been the only one responsible for the up-keep of my four kids. My husband, Sulaimon Olomi, who should have been complementing my efforts is currently in Kirikiri prison.

    “I want to plead with the government to help me facilitate the release of my husband from the prison.  He was into land business and was arrested with some of his colleagues sometime in August, last year.

    “The arrest took place three days to our last born’s naming ceremony.  We have made spirited efforts to bail him but all that has been fruitless.  Some of his colleagues that were arrested together with him have been released but I don’t know why he is still being held.”

    Expressing her wish to continue to live in the camp, Madam Sotade, said: “I don’t want to go back to Iwaya for any reasons. I wish to continue to live here and also appreciate getting a job from the state government to make both ends meet because I have nothing I can all my own again.

    “The clothe I am putting on was given to me by somebody. Aside from it, I only have two others that were equally given to me by kind-hearted people. If the government asks us to leave this camp today, I will end up wandering about because I don’t have anywhere to put my head neither do I have a dime to get accommodation.”

     

    Refugees eulogise Lagos govt, LASEMA

    The refugees showered praises on the state government and the officials of the Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA) for the love they have shown to them since the incident occurred.

    “I really thank LASEMA for their support since the incident happened. I could not bring my first son to this place because he wanted to write his common entrance examination. It was the officials of LASEMA that gave me money to buy his books and bag.

    “There is nobody that would not prefer the life in this place.  We are being given three square meals every day and once that is taken away from the poverty in one’s life, the rest can be endured. It even appears they instructed power authorities not to deny us of power supply and whenever there is power outage, they would switch on generator to give us power supply,” Bimpe said.

    Also speaking, Chief Oluwo said: “We thank God for the help we have been receiving from the state government. Governor Fashola has proven that governance is about meeting the people at their points of needs. He and the officials of LASEMA have been very helpful and faithful to us.”

    Still locked up in his state of confusion, he added: “I have no hope or idea of what to do next with my life and family. I am even yet to recover from the shock because all the traditional things I used to do my work were consumed by the fire. The shock almost affected me mentally because most of the things that were burnt are not things you can get to buy in the market. I have been sick since then.

    “I didn’t visit the clinic in the camp for treatment. I have been trying to treat myself the native way by going into nearby bush to get leaves to make herbal drinks. I am better off now and would only plead with the government to further help us.

    “I lost all my traditional heritage as a herbalist to the incident.  It is very painful to me and that is why I have decided to come and hide myself here to recover from the shock that I suffered after the incident.  As a native doctor, there was nothing I could do when the incident occurred because it happened late in the night and caught us, I in particular, unawares.”

     

    Our babies are for  gov —Pregnant refugees

    The family of Lagos State governor, Mr. Babatunde Fasola may soon get additional five new born babies! The babies are coming from five expectant mothers at the relief camp, who have described their babies as Fasola’s children following the support he has been giving them since they were taken to the camp.

    17, 18, 19 20 AGBOWA 14-2-15.The women,  Ngozi Aloy, Fausat Hussein, Ezinne Okorie,  Kafaya Ifaniyi and Oluwaseyi Kayode, described the babies in their wombs as ‘government pikin’ and wished  that the governor would attend their naming ceremonies. They lamented that all the baby things they bought in preparation for the babies’ arrival were burnt in the incident that brought them to the camp.

    “The baby I am carrying is a child of the governor because his good gesture brought relief to the baby when all hope was lost. I was sleeping in my tiny shop with my children after the fire incident. It was my husband that asked me to come here. In fact, I would want the governor to come for the naming ceremony to see the baby that his magnanimity saved from being born by the road side,” Ngozi said.

    The woman, who is close to her delivery date, pleaded for more medical attention, adding: “I have not been sleeping well. My stomach aches me a lot and it always appears as if the baby is coming up to my chest region. I would appreciate more support from the government to be delivered safely.”

    In the same vein, Fausat remarked: “I wish to stay here and give birth. Even if I don’t, the baby is Fasola’s child because he played a role in keeping him safe in my womb when the incident occurred. All the baby things that I bought got burnt in the incident. I thank the governor for giving me succour. I would have been wandering about with this pregnancy but the governor, out of his magnanimity, put a roof over my head. This is indeed Fashola’s baby.”

    The camp commandant, Saibu Akeem, said: “The refugees have been very cooperative and  law-abiding. We have not had any problem with them since they came here. We thank them for also appreciating the efforts of LASEMA and the kind gestures of the state government.”