Tag: ordeal

  • Rape victim’s ordeal and police

    Reports of the abduction of Dr.Ime Stephen, uncle to the 15-year old school girl, Mary Udo, allegedly raped at gunpoint by a police Inspector in Akwa Ibom State, represent the apogee of the travails of the family since the rape incident took place.

    It is at once a dangerous development that calls for the immediate intervention of the Inspector-General of Police as insinuations are very high that the incident has an uncanny link with the rape saga.

    Before his abduction, Citizen Stephen had reportedly escaped assassination attempt at his village house at Nyaodiong, in the MkpatEnin Local Government Area of the state. He had also petitioned the state Commissioner of Police, Murtala Mani, alleging threat to his life, that of his family members, attempted arson on his new house and malicious damage of property.

    He also had cause to visit the CP penultimate Friday to complain of frequent attacks on him and how to get justice for Udo. Before his latest fate, the victim was pressing hard for the matter not to be swept under the carpet after refusing to accede to entreaties from some clergymen and police officers sent to him by the Divisional Police Officer DPO to let the matter go.

    Those sent to him by the DPO of the MpatEnin local government were said to have persuaded him to pipe down on the grounds that the incident was not only a big shame to the offending Inspector but the police establishment he represents. But as things stood, Citizen Stephen would not allow the matter go apparently in deference to the rape victim who had said “it was a harrowing experience. There is nothing on earth that would make me forgive the inspector”.

    The little girl’s feelings are understandable given that the inspector not only allegedly raped her at gunpoint while returning from church but detained her for three harrowing days and made the family to cough out N10, 000 before setting her free. That is the height of criminality unexpected of those paid with taxpayers’ money to protect the society. It is a big scandal that by now ought to have attracted deserved attention from the police authorities.

    It is bad a thing that a police officer of that rank could degenerate to such a bestial and criminal level of raping a school girl returning from church at gunpoint. Worse still, he also had the temerity to detain her for three days and forced the family to pay N10, 000 for her safety. These are enough to ruffle public sensibility in saner societies.

    In an issue as serious as this, the minimum expectation is for the accused to be made to face the full weight of the law without delay. But all indications have not pointed to this direction. For, it is about a month now the incident happened without the public being availed the benefit of any serious action taken against him. Rather, what we find is an attempt by the police to paper the matter as vividly indicated by the emissaries they sent to the victims’ uncle.

    Unfortunately, Udo’s family would not have such things covered up because it could encourage policemen to take laws into their hands in anticipation that the system would have a way of protecting them. This column identifies with the Udo family in condemning this singular rape incident and the lawlessness that followed. It cannot and should not be swept under the table. It is a very heinous offence with prospects of further denting the image and credibility of the police force.

    It is trite that the course of the police force will be better served when it distances itself from the criminal activities of its men and officers by taking decisive steps to discourage the resort to criminality. Even if the police had need to apologize to the victim’s family for the bestial treatment meted to their daughter, that should not in any way detract from the fact that the accused must still be made to pay for his sins.

    The accused inspector whose name up till now, is being shielded by the police should immediately be made to face the music for the unmitigated disgrace he is to the institution. That way, we will be sending the right signals that those who abuse their positions of trust for self-serving reasons will not go scot free. That is the lesson that must be underscored most poignantly in the instant case.

    Curiously, the abduction of Stephen has added another dangerous dimension to the matter. This is especially so given that before his latest ordeal, he had escaped an assassination attempt to his life. He had also alleged threats to his life, that of his family, attempted arson on his new house and malicious damage of his property. All these were documented in a petition he sent to the state Commissioner of Police CP.

    Ironically, not much is known of the response of the CP to these allegations before the man was finally abducted from his house by masked gunmen who broke through the wall from the backyard. Neither is there any evidence of the provision of police protection to the man in the face of the serial threats to his life and that of his family.

    And until the CP speaks on the latest development, the impression we get is that the command did not take seriously the copious complaints of the human rights activist. But if the police did not take seriously the issues raised in the petition, the abduction has shown very vividly that either it underestimated the weight of the matter or turned a blind eye to it for inexplicable reasons.

    For whatever reason, it is sad that the fears of Stephen have come true. If the police had taken the matter seriously, they would have responded positively by building some form of security around the Udo family. Had that been done, we would have saved the police institution the embarrassment of having to contend with the reality of this abduction despite repeated complaints and allegations of threats to life and property.

    That is the burden the police has to shoulder given the latest development. It also suffers vicarious responsibility of having to demonstrate beyond reasonable doubt that this abduction is not in any way connected with the family’s insistence that justice must be done in the case of the inspector that raped, abused and extorted money from the innocent school girl.

    There is no better way to demonstrated this than a quick apprehension of the marauding gang that abducted Stephen. With the smashing of the gang and freeing of the rights activist, we will be demonstrating to the world very unambiguously that the cries of the witch at night had nothing to do with the death of the child in the morning. That is the uncanny reality that has been elevated to the fore by the unfolding events surrounding that rape case.

    It is important that the police authorities get to the root of the matter to demonstrate very clearly that the current twist is not in any manner linked to the family’s insistence that the offending inspector must face the wrath of the law. A quick apprehension of those criminals will not only disabuse insinuations of complicity but further shore up the waning public confidence in the ability of the police to protect and treat information given to them with utmost confidentiality.

    We now run the risk of allowing the impression fester that those charged with the security of the citizens can trample on and serially abuse such privileges and get away with them. That is the point where the predicament of Stephen now leaves us. We must work to reverse this ruinous tendency by promptly apprehending the abductors and secure Stephen’s freedom. The IG must act now to extricate the police from it actions or inaction that led to the current pass. But nothing untoward should happen to Citizen Stephen.

  • ‘PDP has hand in Nwuche’s ordeal’

    The Comptroller-General of Nigeria Prisons Service (NPS), Ja’afaru Ahmed, yesterday, confirmed that 13 prisoners, comprising 10 pre-trial detainees and three convicts, escaped from Koton Karfe prison in Kogi State, last Saturday.

    Six pre-trial detainees were, however, recaptured and returned to the prison.  Others, including two robbery convicts are still on the run.

    Ahmed spoke during an on-the-spot assessment of the prison.

    Investigation showed the jailbreak was reportedly carried out by the inmates, who scaled the fence after breaking through the inner wall of the facility.

    A statement by the NPS spokesman, Frances Enobore, said a three-man panel was raised to investigate the circumstances surrounding the break.

    It said appropriate measures have been set up to address congestion, particularly among prisoners awaiting trial, in line with the Federal Government’s reform agenda.

    The comptroller-general added that security would be tightened to forestall a recurrence.

    A security source, who spoke in confidence, said: “It’s as if someone in the prisons did not do his/her job and prisoners took advantage of that to escape.

    “The negligence may be ‘intentional’ and I hope the authorities will probe the break to forestall a recurrence. The remanding of some kidnap kingpins, paraded by the DSS, last week, may not be unconnected with the break.”

    Kogi State Governor Yahaya Bello, at the prison, appealed to the Federal Government to set up a commission of enquiry to investigate the jailbreak.

    Bello, who was shocked at the frequent breaks, said the attack seems like a conspiracy.

    The governor, who was accompanied by top security officials, was not allowed into the yard to access the damage.

    He vowed to unearth the mystery behind the break.

    The 180-capacity all-male  facility, inaugurated in 2014, has 263 inmates. It was rebuilt and ‘fortified’ after the old structure, built in 1914, was broken into four.

    State Comptroller of Prison, Mr. Musa Maza, could not be reached for comments.

  • My ordeal in police hand, by lawyer

    My ordeal in police hand, by lawyer

    The lawyer also alleged that the policemen removed the N150,000 he kept in his car’s pigeonhole.

    He said he was driving by the Onipanu Police Station when he was stopped by Corporal Alonge, who accused him of using a fake tinted glass permit.

    Elemihe said: “On my way from Lekki where I went to check a property with my client, I decided to use the Onipanu Police Station Road, by Apata.

    “Immediately I drove into the street close to the station, one Corporal Alonge stopped me, demanded for my vehicle particulars. I gave them to him, then he demanded for my driver’s licence, which I also gave him.

    “When he discovered I did not commit any offence, he asked for my tinted glass permit, which I gave him. He told me I was using a forged tinted glass permit. I told him I could not have forged a police document as a lawyer.

    “He became furious and said he was going to arrest me. He jumped into my vehicle and insisted I must give him N1,000 to bail myself. I said I was not going to give him any money since I have not committed any offence.

    “He pounced on me and cocked his gun, threatening to shoot me if I make a move. A policewoman who sighted us came and dragged the gun from him.

    “The policeman, after being disarmed, descended on me and gave me the beating of my life. He pushed me into the cell and another policeman came inside, locked up the cell and beat me for 30 minutes.

    “I see this as intimidation of the highest order, not because I am a lawyer, but because I am an average Nigerian. I was humiliated like a common criminal.

    “This is oppression. One of my eyes is partially blind. I have been vomiting blood since yesterday. It was the intervention of a good policeman in the station who warned them not to kill me that save me. I would have been dead by now,” he said.

    Police spokesperson Dolapo Badmos, a Superintendent (SP), said: “We are aware of the incident and the leadership of the command is looking into the matter.”

    It was gathered that Police Commissioner Fatai Owoseni has summoned the Onipanu officers to the command’s headquarters in Ikeja for interrogation.

  • My MTN SIM registration ordeal

    SIR: Year 2016 was just three days old when that message from the MTN hit my phone: N2,000 worth of  airtime with seven days validity to every network.

    I read the message again to confirm that my eyes were not deceiving me. Truly, the bonus was there for real. But I realized it was attached with a condition: visit any MTN outlet to update your Subscriber Identity module (SIM) after which the bonus would be automatically activated for use.

    I strolled down to read other messages I had somehow refused to read some days back, thinking they were just the normal season greetings one was bombarded with. Behold, tucked inside was an earlier MTN message (without a bonus), directing me to get down to my nearest registration point to update my SIM. That was three days before the year 2015 rolled away.

    Linking the two messages together, I quickly concluded the bonus was a “ploy” to entice me to re-register my line and keep faith with the Telecom giant.

    The next day, I reported for the biometric   exercise at the Alagbaka Akure outlet of the telecom. On getting there, I saw a flurry of subscribers who swamped the office like bees to nectar. To say the least, I was thrown off balance. Why would MTN put its loyal subscribers into this mess? But I had done this registration before, why ask me to repeat it? I left the centre disappointed.

    Next day, I proceeded to another centre, this time the one at Oja-oba to try my luck. Again, the crowd of registrants was large, angling the venue like desperate job applicants. Surprising there was no rush of any kind as the already enlisted names were being attended to in turns. I wasted to time to ask for the registration list, and a Good Samaritan showed me where it was placed.

    So I added my name to the already long list. But before I could finish writing my name, an old man gave an unsolicited announcement: the 300 people per day had already been shortlisted! And my number was 426! I went back home disappointed again.

    The following day, Saturday, I left home as early as 7.30am ready to face the registration huddle squarely and fully. Arriving at the Oja-oba centre, I saw fellow registrants who said they were there as early as 6.am. Soon, a man with a baritone voice announced that the number of people to attend to had reached the 300 threshold, and that anybody whose number fell above 300 on the list should come back the next day.

    My number was 250 on the list. After many hours of waiting, I received a call from a relation and when I told him what I was doing, he explained I was just wasting my precious time. He asked me to enter a certain code on my phone and that I would see that my registration had already been completed. I did as instructed and I was surprised to see the message, telling me my registration had been completed.

    But why did MTN send the message that we should revalidate? I glanced at the watch, it was 3.pm. Somehow; it was my turn to do the registration. The young computer operator input my bio-data as kept tapping the smallish computer at intervals, took my fingerprint and finally snapped me for a good picture. I was relieved. I burst out of the arena like someone escaping from a crime scene, never to return for such nasty, time wasting exercise.

     

    • Sola Lebile,

    Akure.

  • Our ordeal at the hands  of  Boko Haram boys

    Our ordeal at the hands of Boko Haram boys

    In this encounter with Edozie Udeze, some Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) in Bauchi State, share their experiences of trauma, close shave with death, narrow escape from Boko Haram attackers and their everyday recollections of the sordid events that forced them out of their homes in their various states.  Theirs are stories of horror, pity and loss of faith in not just the system, but in life as a whole.

    If all the children in the IDPs settlement in Fadamar Mada, Bauchi State, Yohanna seemed to be the most psychologically and emotionally perturbed.  He is just 6 years old, but the trauma on his face, and constant yearning for his father, whom he lost during one of the Boko Haram attacks, has made him to somewhat stand out.  Yohanna was about to celebrate his 5th birthday two years ago, when the Boko Haram terrorists struck.  His father, Danladi was only 36, when he was cut down on his way back from his farm in Mubi, Adamawa State.

    Due to some dint of good luck and fate, Yohanna was rescued from the rubbles of his home by a good Samaritan, who later handed him over to his mother.  Since then, little Yohanna has found himself in that dire situation, where every man in white clothes is seen as baba (father). It has therefore become a habit for him to stretch out his hand to touch such a man, thinking – ‘Oh, this is my father.’

    Yohanna is thus one of the alarming statistics of over 2.3million Internally Displaced Persons in Nigeria, majority of who have lost their fathers and loved ones to the senseless war unleashed on the nation by that dreaded sect, Boko Haram. There are some still, who have lost both parents and now spend their time in the IDPs camps without that natural parental care and love needed to pull through such difficult moments. Even when Yohanna is often found in the warm comfort of his mother, who answers his constant questions about his father, his innocent mind can’t seem to settle down to that reality of life without his father.

    As it is with him, so it is with millions of other children, who will soon return to their homes. But these children did not cause the war, yet they bear the most brunt, and are most taken hostage by the pervading fear of the booming sound of gunshots and bomb explosions.

    Usually, stories of refugees anywhere in the world are the same.  Whether they are Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) or those running into strange territories for safety, the stories are riddled with agony and sorrow. In Bauchi, the Internally Displaced Persons have terrible stories of agony and close shave with death to tell – harrowing stories of how they were attacked and uprooted from their bases; stories of sadness, fear and uncertainty; told in a way that exposes the terror and realities of war. The attacks came to them by surprise, since they had little or nothing to do with the Boko Haram terrorists and were least prepared when they came calling.

    The three IDPs communities in Bauchi town namely Tudun Salmamu, Fadamar Mada and Wuntin Dada have mostly persons who fled from Gujba in Yobe State, Gwoza and Gamboru in Borno State and Mubi in Adamawa State. They have been there in the care of their host communities more than a year now.  Although to most people, there is no  place like home, most of them still entertain fears that their homes may not be as sweet and alluring as they used to be anymore.  The trauma of the last one year or so; the loss of many of their relations, encounters with death and narrow escapes, and the fear of possible reoccurrence of the attacks, have continued to haunt and hound them.

    As those amongst them, who could summon the courage, told their stories, the streaming tears on their faces and tremour in their voices betrayed their inner emotions, leaving little room for doubts about the level of misfortune and disaster that has befallen them.

    Zara Usman, 42, mother of 8 and first wife of Usman Ahmed, whose whereabouts cannot be ascertained, recounted her story this way: “When Boko Haram boys attacked us in Gwoza, Borno State, my husband left home.  Unfortunately, I have not seen him since then.  I have not been able to tell this story to anyone, for fear of what might befall us after that harrowing evening in August 2014, when deafening gunshots were heard everywhere.  But I can trust you now to tell it properly, since you came with these government people,” she began.

    Almost confirming the myth about how war plunder communities and put families asunder, Zara said: “Yes, I have not seen my husband, Usman Ahmed, whom I believe may have fled to Cameroon.  You know it is not far from us…  We were all at home around 5 pm, when they came.  We – my husband and I, were relaxing in front of our house and telling stories, while the children were in the backyard, cooking our night meal.  Suddenly, we began to hear heavy sounds of gunshots not too far away.  Then people started running towards our side of the town, shouting and screaming.  There was confusion everywhere, as we too quickly gathered whatever we could and began to run in different directions.  Already, we had heard that these people were approaching Gwoza but we did not know what to do or where to run to.  So, you see my problem now?”  She asked, her eyes filled with tears and self-pity.

    With 16 children and a co-wife to think about and console, Zara confessed that she is now the head of the family in the absence of her husband.  “The children cannot stop asking after their father.  It is even more painful to me for this 10 months old baby born in the camp.  We got to Bauchi through the help of volunteers; people who saw us as we trekked on the road and gave us a ride.  It was one at a time and as they got to their destinations, we disembarked and continued.  Gradually, we got to Bauchi after several days on the road.  With few loads on our heads and so many children to cater for, the journey at a point became really unbearable.

    “When we first left the village, we ran to the farm where we stayed for two days.  We trekked more at night for fear of being caught by the boys.  Once it was morning, we would seek for a place to hide, with hunger, tiredness, fear and worries gnawing at our hearts…  Oh, we could not wait to see if our houses were all burnt down.  It was when we got here that we learnt that the town had been occupied and no single house was left standing in the whole of Gwoza.  This is why going home, for us, is not certain anymore.  What if the boys come back to torment us and tear us to pieces?  Even my children who were in shock for days, cannot imagine going back to Gwoza,” she remonstrated.

    Asked how they have been surviving, she said, “The government people give us food items from time to time.  We also get beddings from them.  Above all, my husband is a staff of Gamboru Local Government area, so the government of Borno State sends his salaries to us here to take care of the family.  Besides, we feel safer here; at least we do not hear gunshots and explosion of bombs.  What I miss most is my sleeping foam.  The mat I sleep on here is not as comfortable.  It is too hard on my skin.”

    Abdullahi Aliyu Usman, 21, is also from Gwoza, although not from the same part of the town as Zara.  He told his story: “The attackers hit our town around 5p.m.  We first thought it was a joke and that a few people were having altercations with the police.  Before then, we felt the presence of policemen more in the town.  But it soon became clearer to us when one of my friends, Ibrahim, in company of his people approached our side of the town with loads on their heads. His little sister of about 6 years, was crying, asking ‘Where is baba (Father)?’ I asked him what was amiss and he simply pointed to his left and said: ‘The boys are in town.  Can’t you see smoke everywhere to your left?’  So we quickly ran inside and picked a few property that we could carry on our heads.

    “Baba (he points to his father in the crowd) was not feeling too well then; we had to wake him up. It was he who suggested that we moved to the farm first because darkness was approaching and there was no safer place to run to.  It was later that one of my childhood friends (I won’t tell you his name) told me that Usman was the one that brought Boko Haram to our town.  Yes, he was the one that accompanied them to the place, pointing to them houses of important people in the town to deal with decisively.”

    Abdullahi, who initially felt reluctant to grant an interview, insisting that I might be a secret agent of the boys, only inclined when the camp director, Ibrahim Mohammed, allayed his fears.  He said, “I fear every stranger now. If Usman could betray us; if he could have the heart to engineer the destruction of a whole town, including his own people, then I will fear every stranger, whether he carries a gun or not…  Oh that boy (Usman), he was not married.  He was only a small boy of 16 and still in secondary school in Gwoza.  But we noticed that after a while, he disappeared from the community and his parents looked for him everywhere to no avail.  You know, because of the fear in the air, no one had the courage to venture out.  And that was how we lost him, until he was spotted leading the Boko Haram onslaught on our town

    “Those who saw them said they did not bother to cover their faces. That was how Usman was recognised. It was indeed a terrible sight.”

    ‘What has become the fate of Usman, where is he now?’ We asked.

     “Ah, may Allah be praised.  Three months later, news came to us that he had been killed by government forces in Gwoza.  This is why we can boldly tell you the story,” he replied with visible gratitude.

    Abdullahi disclosed that even though Usman is dead, there are many young men and women like him who have been seriously hoodwinked and brainwashed by the Boko Haram ideologists, saying that Western education is bad and that Jihadist must rule the earth.  “I fear for those people whose boys and girls have been enlisted, who can now only think of nothing but wars, skirmishes and destruction” Abdullahi said, hissing and holding back tears.

    How do we go back home?

    To date, there are 2.3 million Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) in 34 camps, located in different parts of Northern Nigeria.  For Ibrahim Ishaku, 20, another victim from Gwoza, it is this increasing number of refugees that frightens him more than anything else. “We have already escaped and now feel safe and secure, but how about these fresh cases of attacks and people fleeing their homes every day?” he asked, as he clung tenaciously to his friend, Abdullahi.  Although they are both from Gwoza, it was coming to the camp that has bonded them together as friends.

    “I am more afraid for the remaining people in Gwoza.  Each time I hear news of more bombings and destructions and loss of lives, my mind quickly flashes back to the day we were attacked.  It is not something I like to recount or recall, for the fear of it all drives me mad.  Even here in Bauchi, I still feel that we are within the reach of Boko Haram.  It is not that they will come here to attack us again, it is just that the sad news I hear everyday keeps me on my toes.  I am so scared; so scared that I do not know when I will be able to return home to begin again to tend to my farm and see some of my relations with whom I have lost touch.”

    Ishaku stated that the most painful aspect of their stay in Bauchi is that they cannot move about freely.  Since most of them are not artisans, but farmers, it is near impossible for them to find alternative means of livelihood.  “We mainly live on what government and other donors give to us.  By now, I’d have harvested my corns and grains and sold them out to my customers.  Even if I go back now, where will I start from; who will I go to for assistance to begin again? he retorted, his voice quivering.

    Ishaku confessed that until the harsh realities dawned on him that it would take long to return home, his plan was to increase his crops and possibly marry before he turned 21.  “Does that look feasible now?,” he asked, as tears blurred his eyes.  His friend, Abdullahi nudged him on the shoulder to console him.  And with the impending idea of their returning home now being muted  by the federal government, Ishaku is at wits end on how to get back on his feet again.

    He inquired if government is prepared to shoulder the responsibility of resettling them on their farms and other professions.  “We lost all”, he bemoaned.   At this point, Abdullahi drew him closer and whispered into his ear.  Then he smiled all of a sudden and looked straight into the reporter’s eyes.  “I have hope.  I know that Sai Baba will look into our plight as soon as we get home.”

    That smile of hope perched perpetually on his face while the chat lasted.  Without doubt, a lot of them need renewed hope to carry on.

    Another victim, Zara Abdullahi, from Gujba in Yobe State, told The Nation that her town was attacked in the evening shortly after they returned from their farm. Mother of 8 children; 6 boys and two girls, Abdullahi’s immediate concern is how to appease the spirits of over 50 of her relations lost in the attack.  “Those people were from my father’s side of the town.  They were the first to be attacked and the boys took their time to exterminate everyone.  Ironically, this was what even gave us enough time to escape to safety.  By the time the sounds of the guns came nearer to us, the other part of Gujba had almost been leveled to the ground.  With that, I lost over 50 of my paternal relations, most of whom were not given any chance to escape.  The attack was in the night, when darkness had set in and it had become too difficult to know one’s left from right.  Our own escape was by the special grace of God,” she explained.

    Clutching her 5 year-old daughter, Fatima, to her bosom, she went on, “When we learnt that our houses were burnt and that the boys refused to vacate the vicinity, we knew we were really lucky to have escaped alive.

    “Gujba was at the thick of the crisis and we were one of the earliest settlements to be attacked. The severity of it all cannot be quantified because no one really envisaged the extent of devilishness in the hearts of the boys,” Zara Abdullahi explained, saying “but we only thank God that we now live among our people here in Bauchi.  Government people also give us food items to survive on.  We heard that we will soon go home, but how safe is our home?  Are we really sure that we will not be attacked again by these boys who have no fear for anything?”  She asked, as her daughter watched her dab the tears from her eyes.

    Aisha Abdullahi, 19, a native of Gujba was not at home when this incident happened. She was in Bauchi where she is a JSS 3 student of Government Girls College, Bauchi.  Her story is based on what her mother and other siblings told her.  “Mother came over here with my junior ones.  They met me here, more than one week after I’d heard that my town Gujba had been invaded and that many people had perished.  I lived in fear for more than one week until they arrived here on a certain evening.  I was summoned from school to welcome them.  In fact, the officials of the relief committee ensured I could identify them all.”

    She went on: “My mother said they initially heard sounds of bombs in nearby villages.  Already they had been told that Damaturu had been invaded and people were running helter skelter.  That was the first place they moved to.  They thought that being the state capital, life there would be safer.  But it soon became clear to them that Damaturu was not good enough to protect them.  This was why they first moved to Mubi in Adamawa State.  When the fall of Mubi became imminent, they again commenced their movement towards Bauchi.  By the time they got here, they had only a few belongings with them.”

    Now visibly making effort to control her emotions, she continued, “I shed tears of joy and sorrow on seeing them.  Tears of joy because they were alive, and tears of sorrow because the state I saw them was beyond me,” Aisha stated, amid suppressed laughter and euphoria as one of her pals, another Aisha, tapped her on the shoulder for telling the story so vividly. “You see,” she said, pointing, “this Aisha Mohammed is from Gwoza in Borno State, but this incident has brought us together.  Today, she is my best friend.”

    Unfortunately this second Aisha, 16, couldn’t speak a word of English.  For this, her story was stunted, as she kept to herself most of the time.  Even when she was persuaded to share her experience, she still kept to herself, hiding behind her friend to evade questions from this reporter.

    Role of government.

    Explaining the role of the Bauchi State government in taking proper care of the IDPs in the state, the man in-charge of relief camps in the state, Ibrahim Mohammed, said, “I am the one in-charge of relief assistance coming to the IDPs in the state.  I am also in-charge of those involved in natural disasters like flood, fire outbreaks, storms and so on.  We assist all of them in the state. Once news gets to us about an incident of this nature, we swing into action.  We first assess the extent of damage, then we decide on what to do to assist victims.

    “When the IDPs from Adamawa, Borno and Yobe States arrived here in 2014 in different sets and batches, we quickly rallied round to resettle them.  Those who have relations here in the state first reported to them, while those who do not, came to our office for assistance.  On the whole, we decided to use host communities to cater for them because we already had an IDPs camp in Plateau State.  We didn’t want to duplicate issues and since we would reach out to them through their people, we decided it was a good thing to do.”

    Mohammed equally told The Nation that they have provided a temporary school for them in their places of settlement.  “This arrangement is to enable them continue with their education.  We do not want them to feel totally out of place or miss out completely on their schooling.  For now, there are many volunteers, who, in collaboration with government provide food items to them.  We also ensure we give them beddings for their domestic needs. They have been here for over one year now and those who are artisans have been provided funds through cooperative arrangement to keep themselves busy.  Most of them have lost their husbands, who were their breadwinners.  Now, it behoves on us to provide for those who need help most,” Mohammed said.

    According to statistics provided by the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), of all the IDPs in Nigeria, about 55 percent of them are children who have been orphaned due to the Boko Haram skirmishes.  And of the remaining population of 45 percent, women and young boys and girls constitute majority.  The most agonising reality in the camps is the absence of fathers and breadwinners. This has made most of the children to continually ask their mothers: ‘Where is Baba? Where is my dad?’  Often enough, the grieving women do not have the courage to continue telling the same stories over and over again.

    So far, about 2.3 million Nigerians are Internally Displaced in different camps in parts of the country.  They are mostly refugees from Adamawa, Borno and Yobe States whose towns and villages have been ravaged by insurgents.  Members of Boko Haram profess and preach that Western education is bad and that people should take up arms to fight western influence and culture.  At the moment, the crisis has spread to Chad, Niger and parts of Cameroon, where refugees, both from Nigeria and elsewhere abound.  However, the federal government of Nigeria has promised that some IDPs will by the first quarter of this year, begin to go back to their homes, since their places have been liberated.

    The emerging fear however, is that with many houses totally burnt down and decayed corpses and body parts littering the towns and villages, it may be hard to control the diseases that may be laying in wait for these hapless people in these places. This is the major fear being expressed by the majority of the IDPs, and it is indeed a palpable one.

  • Senators’ road ordeal in Abia

    Senators’ road ordeal in Abia

    A fact-finding mission of members of a Senate ad hoc committee to Abia State reveals how deep and frightening the erosion and poor federal roads are, reports UGOCHUKWU UGOJI-EKE

    At some locations, they could peer into the abyss created by erosion. At other points it was practically impossible to continue their journey. The roads are unspeakably bad, the erosion sites frightening.

    The trip by members of a Senate ad hoc Committee on Works to assess federal roads and erosion sites in Abia State was revealing. The mission shaped up following a motion by Senator Mao Ohuabunwa drawing attention to the horrors of poor federal roads and dangerous erosion locations in the state. The committee members’ trip to Abia was therefore to see things for themselves and bring back a report to the chamber in Abuja. Perhaps, if things were as bad as Ohuabunwa claimed, the Senate could initiate efforts to tackle the disasters once and for all.

    So, off they went, led by Senator Barnabas Gemade. Senators Uche Ekwunife, Bassey Albert, Matthew Urohido and Clifford Odia, Mao Ohuabunwa and Theodore Orji were on the trip.

    Abia residents have been complaining about broken federal roads and the hazards of erosion for years.  The ever-worsening gully erosions have swept off farmlands and even some houses and other structures.

    The senate committee members were prevented from continuing the inspection of Ohafia-Arochukwu Road because a truck was stuck at a gully erosion point, blocking the road.

    The truck was stuck at Ania Ohafia in Arochukwu Local Government Area of the state and forced the committee members to stop further inspection of the bad situation of the roads including environmental degradation to enable them make proper assessment of the roads and erosion sites they came to see.

    They made a U-turn to inspect the serious erosion site on Elu Amuke Ohafia before proceeding to Oruruala Isiukwuato, a major erosion menace that has devastated the area over years and defied all governments from President Olusegun Obasanjo till date.

    Before the ad hoc committee set out from Umuahia, the state capital, the Senator for Abia Central and immediate past governor of the state Senator Theodore Orji took the members to the Ahia Orie Ette erosion site that has posed serious threat to Umuahia.

    Speaking after the inspection visits, Senator Gemade observed the magnitude of the problem and the reactions of the people, saying that their visit was sequel to the motion moved on the floor of the Senate by Senator Ohuabunwa for Abia North which compelled the senate to direct the inspection visits to some states beginning with Abia.

    Gemade said “Truly I have seen with my eyes the deplorable condition of the Arochukwu Road which is a federal road; the committee will do all in its power by taking the problem to the ecological office and we are sure that something will be done.

    “It will no longer be business as usual as change has come, we pray that the economy of the country will be able to carry the project, the people should not be allowed to continue to suffer, even as bad roads are not peculiar to Abia alone.”

    He remarked that the problem was not new, only that this time the federal government under President Muhammadu Buhari was resolved to effect change through physical action and not pledges and promised the people that his committee will make its recommendations to the senate and assured the people that succor is on the way.

    He urged the people to continue to have some patience pledging that his committee will make strong recommendation to the senate to cause due attention to be paid on the sites and praised Senator Ohuabunwa for drawing the senate attention to the problem very shortly after his inauguration as senator from the state.

    Senator Ohuabunwa in his remarks appreciated the senate for its quick reaction to his motion by constituting an ad hoc committee to undertake the visit and urged the senate and the federal government to immediately act on the report of the inspection and the committee

    recommendations towards addressing the problem permanently.

    In a memo addressed to the chairman of the Senate Committee on Works, the state Ministry of Works pleaded with the chairman to prevail on the relevant authority to appropriate adequately to rehabilitate federal roads in the state.

    The memo signed by the Permanent Secretary Richard Nwala said, “The level of dilapidation of the federal roads in the state has caused the Abia government to write the Federal Government severally, including requests for permission to take up the construction of some of them

    using State fund, despite the state’s lean resources.

    The requests for permission were made on rehabilitation of Port-Harcourt  Road Aba, Aba-Owerri road and Aba-Ikot Ekpene road which are  no longer passable”, and went ahead to listed 16 other Federal Road Projects  whose rehabilitation contracts , were awarded and abandoned at different points.

    It would be recalled that the collapsed state of federal roads and serious erosion sites in Abia North especially at Isuikwuato, Ohafia, Bende and other local government areas in the state had become challenges to succeeding senators and Reps Members of the area including the Presidents of the country.

    Less than two months after he became the member for Arochukwu/Ohafia Constituency in the House of Representatives, Hon Uko Nkole raised similar motion in the  house drawing the members’ attention to the Ohafia-Arochukwu Road which he said had prevented sons and daughters of the area from coming home for their 2015 New Yam cultural feasts.

    Hon Nkole had in several occasions tried to draw the attention of the federal government to the deplorable condition of the federal roads in Abia North zone where his constituency is situated, and the suffering of his constituents and their inability to evacuate their farm

    produce.

    He noted that his constituents have been suffering for years and pleaded with the federal government to come to the aid of his people and save them from further devastation from both erosion and deplorable condition of federal roads in his area, stressing that both the state and federal governments have a lot to benefit when the roads and erosion sites are worked upon.

  • Majek Fashek relives drug ordeal

    Majek Fashek relives drug ordeal

    How can the Federal Government be of help to the mentally challenged? It is by funding researches in mental health and supporting the treatment and rehabilitation of the mentally challenged, says popular musician Majek Fashek.

    Fashek said he got help to overcome drug addiction through a psychiatrist, Dr Vincent Udenze, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Synapse Services.

    At the 46th Annual General Meeting and Scientific Conference of Association of Psychiatrists in Nigeria (APN), held at the University of Lagos (UNILAG) main auditorim, Fashek said he was treated outside the country.

    While abroad, he said, there were no mentally-challenged persons roaming the streets, adding: “The difference is clear. The government of that country took the mental wellness of its citizens seriously.”

    He went on: “It has been found out that geniuses often fall ill, especially with mental illness. Government should not abandon its citizens in that situation. The good way is to also fund mental health research and treatment.”

    Some psychiatrists, spoke in the same vein, saying those mentally  challenged can be professionally managed, rehabilitated and integrated into the society.

    The theme of the AGM/Conference was: “Mental Health as a driver of positive change”.

    Sub themes were: “Mental Health challenges of internally displaced persons, Mental Health and political transitions in Africa, and the Impact of MHGAP in primary mental health: the journey so far.”

    Keynote speaker Prof Ayo Ibidapo-Obe called for reevaluation of the country’s system, “starting with the process of election.” He added: “It is mind boggling why people loot treasury or even carry out corrupt practices, which leave no one better, including the perpetrator. I will suggest there is a law in place to examine the mental health of each potential candidate vying for any political position in the country.”

    APN President Prof Joseph Adeyemi said his colleagues were ready to manage the consequences of any change as they unfold in the country.

    “Government policies, legislations, priorities and practices determine quality of life of citizens. Whether positive or negative, the nature of governance will have consequences for the emotional well being of the populace based on their vulnerabilities and predispositions. Evidence based best practice solutions will be proffered to guide citizens, relevant professionals, interest groups and governments by our panel of experts to manage the consequences of change as they unfold,” he said.

    Acting Medical Director, Federal Neuro-Psychiatric Hospital, Yaba, Dr Richard Adebayo, said though there are professional psychiatrists in the country, “unfortunately, we don’t have a workable and realistic policy direction, no mental health bill to guide us and protect the rights of our patients.”

    “It is imperative to deliberate on the vital issues that will promote the very change we desire and enlighten our policy makers that mental health is very crucial in our collective drive towards the positive change,”he said.

  • Wammako: Buhari has no hand in Saraki’s ordeal

    Wammako: Buhari has no hand in Saraki’s ordeal

    President Muhammadu Buhari has nothing to do with Senate President Bukola Saraki’s ordeal, especially his case before the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT), Senator Aliyu Wamako (APC, Sokoto), said at the weekend.

    Wamako, a former Sokoto State governor, was among the group of senators, who accompanied Saraki when he appeared before the CCT last Tuesday.

    He said: “I see Mr. President, Saraki and senators holding a meeting very soon on how to salvage democracy, which certain elements have been trying to subvert. They will find time to meet to stop our opponents from progressing with acts to sabotage our democracy.

    “Once the President and the Senate leadership sit on a round-table with a resolve to re-oil the wheels of democracy for national progress, the cynics, the political rabble-rousers and those who never mean well for the APC government will go to sleep.”

    He noted that Saraki, having submitted himself to the law by appearing before the CCT, has helped the case preferred against him by the Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB).

    He urged Nigerians to stop pre-empting the course of justice.

    He noted that those hoping to promote discord between Buhari and the Senate President, banking on excuses, would soon realise that democracy has advanced with more senators anxious to make it work.

    Wammako said Saraki’s removal as being canvassed by those he described as “faceless groups outside the National Assembly” would end up as “an ill-wind that will blow no good for the Senate, democracy and Nigeria”.

    He said: “Majority of senators weeks ago passed a vote of confidence in Saraki because they were convinced that his style of leadership has been broad and progress-inclined. Nothing has changed. Majority of our colleagues still believe that Saraki remains a stabilising factor in the Senate for now.

    “A change of leadership, at this point in time and as being canvassed, will certainly spark some endless sessions of rancour, suspicion, crises and uncertainty among members. When such begin to happen, no one will be able to predict the end.”

    According to the former governor, Saraki shares the same ideology of “change” with President Buhari.

    He added that every step so far taken by the Senate had been inclined towards promoting the change mantra, with national progress at the core of all considerations by senators.

    Wamakko noted that contrary to reports, there was no plot to replace Saraki on the strength of his case before the CCT.

    He noted that the reality on the Senate issues never tallied with the reports of a search for   Saraki’s replacement.

    He insisted that senators were rather meeting to strengthen the Senate under Saraki with a view to recovering the lost grounds on the legislative business under the All Progressives Congress (APC) government.

  • My 24-hour SSS ordeal, by Sambo Dasuki

    My 24-hour SSS ordeal, by Sambo Dasuki

    Passport, $40,000, nine cars, three rifles seized
    Former NSA alleges plot to implicate him

    The former National Security Adviser, Mr. Sambo Dasuki, yesterday raised the alarm over what he saw as plot by the State Security Service (SSS) to implicate him in alleged security breaches.

    He said Nigerians should know that the invasion of his house by the SSS was a sheer witch-hunt. He said it was sad that the operatives of the security agency broke into his ailing father’s house in Sokoto and broke his safe.

    Dasuki, who spoke exclusively with our correspondent on the phone yesterday, said he does not deserve such treatment because as the National Security Adviser he did not maltreat any Nigerian.

    He said he was subjected to a 12-hour ordeal from 6pm on Thursday till 6am on Friday.

    “The SSS operatives came in two trucks with a search warrant from a Magistrate Court. The warrant gave them the power to search for ‘illegal weapons and any incriminating item.’ You can imagine what that is supposed to mean.

    “I left office on Tuesday and they got the warrant on Wednesday and executed it by 6pm on Thursday.

    “From 6pm on Thursday, throughout the night till about 6am this morning (Friday), they were searching my house looking for incriminating items.

    “They restricted my movement. I cannot go out and no one can visit me. All those who attempted to see me were stopped from doing so.

    “In fact, my son was blocked from entering my residence. My two cooks, who used to come from their homes to prepare my meals, were also disallowed from leaving my house.

    “The only person allowed was the man who feeds my dogs. And he only related with the dogs.

    “By Friday morning, they packed away all the nine cars in my residence. I could not go out to perform the Eid-el-Fitr prayer because of the restriction.

    Even when I sought permission to go to Eid Praying Ground, they promised to provide a vehicle but they never did.”

    Responding to a question, Dasuki said: “This is just a witch-hunt; they are desperately looking for something to implicate me.

    “They went to my father’s house including breaking into the ceiling to look for incriminating documents. They broke a safe in my father’s house.

    “Also, my sister kept a 20-year old box in my father’s house, they also forced it open. What has my father got to do with this?

    “And the old man is in hospital in London. He was shocked to hear that they broke into his house. The good thing is that they did not find anything.

  • Food vendors:‘our ordeal during the ramadan fast’

    Food vendors:‘our ordeal during the ramadan fast’

    As Ramadan fast ends, the experiences of  food vendors over the last one  month has been bad. According to them, there haven’t been sales since  Ramadan fast began. Ramadan which is a blessed month for the Muslims to fast and get closer to their God, by abstaining from food, drinks and some other activities, happened to be of disadvantage to food vendors across the Lagos metropolis.

    For Mrs Merian Biodun who owns a restaurant at Makinde Bus stop in Ayobo area of Lagos, she doesn’t make sales whenever Muslims were fasting “I do not sell much when Ramadan is on. I prepare half of what I used to prepare on a normal day and when it was time to break their fast, some of them wouldn’t come around instead they prefered to go home to break their fast with their families “.

    Mrs Muniratu Olushola, another restaurant owner at Idera, in Ipaja said sales are always low during Ramadan. “It is not that we did not make sales at all, but if we used to have twenty people buying from us on a normal day, during fasting period,  we have less than twelve. And the painful thing is that, this would go on for a whole month. It was indeed a great loss to us. If I should prepare the amount of food I normally use to prepare more than half will waste”.

    For Madam Joy of God’s Glorious restaurant, her major patronage comes from Okada riders who are mainly Muslims and have their park in front of her restaurant.  “My main customers are Muslim okada riders and they eat a lot. But while they fast, I cook my food in small quantity so that it doesn’t waste. Some of them patronise me when they break their  fast in the evenings, but they bought little quantity of food”.

    The story is same with Mrs Fatimat Adebola. “Ramadan period is not always a profitable period for my business because most of my customers are Muslims just like i am. Sometimes I won’t bother  to open my restaurant at all for a day or two because after waking up very early in the morning to cook for my family, I would go back to bed.  Business was dull throughout the fast period and it is a major challenge we have always had  to cope with when the fasting period comes.” she said.