Tag: patient

  • Treat patients with respect, NHIS urges health workers

    National Health Insurance Scheme ( NHIS ) on Tuesday urged health workers to treat patients with respect and dignity for easy access to health delivery.

    The Executive Director of NHIS, Prof. Usman Yusuf, made the appeal in an interview with journalists shortly after 42nd Annual General and Scientific Meeting organised by West African College of Physicians WACP, Nigeria chapter in Kaduna.

    According to him, NHIS has done a lot of sacrifice to the country because of the funding it gives to hospitals.

    He said that the scheme had improved access to many patients across the country and increased funding to hospitals, stressing that hospitals should, therefore, treat patients with respect and dignity as stipulated by the ethics of the medical profession.

    Read Also: Four-storey building collapses in Anambra

    The National Chairman of WACP, Dr Abel Nze-Onunu, said “Nigeria is a country with a lot of resources both human and material, but yet to get it right in the health sector.”

    He added that the meeting was about examining the problems and challenges of the health sector in a scientific manner.

    Rating maternal and infant mortality rate, he said “we have done several studies in these two areas. These areas are one of the indices we used for human development in the world.

    “Nigeria performed extremely low in these areas and one of the key reason for this conference and we are going to discuss about this extensively.

  • Lesson my patient taught me about strike

    I stood near the side of my patient, speechless, my heart quite weary from much anguish, as I struggled to break the news to her.

    She was a middle-aged woman, obese with a huge chronically infected wound on her legs. She was really pale and sick. Her blood pressure was dropping.  I had spoken to her the night before. She was distressed from her illness yet subtly optimistic. She has told me the night before in her low, shaky voice “Doctor, I have gone through a lot in private hospitals without improvement, but I decided to come here to the tea..ching…. hospital, I hope I will be fine?  I had answered her in a calm reassuring tone, a telltale sign of years of treating similar illnesses with strings of successes. “ma you will be fine, we have specialists here, that will take good care of you”. I smiled as I said those words, and I could see her grin, her eyes lit up with hope and blazing optimism.

    Now I was there again the next morning, struggling to speak, I was broken and felt pangs of guilt crushing my heart. I was about to dash her flicker of hope, but I knew I had to speak. I stuttered at some few low monotonic words “ma…. ma… I am sorry ma to tell u that doctors are on strike, so we might need to discharge u to another hospital”. Immediately, I muttered those words, the little flicker of hope in her eyes vanished, I could see her eyes dim in gloom. “o…k” she deeply sighed

    Later that day, I accompanied the relatives as they wheeled the patient outside into a small car packed in front of the ward. I assisted the patient as she got into the car. I stood still as the driver started the car. I looked at the pale, weak woman struggling to survive, her head bowed, she still was able to mumble a few words of gratitude “Thank you doctor”. I watched her as the driver zoomed her off, to where?  I could not say, but I knew we had failed her, our strike has left her with no choice but towards an uncertain destination. “Nothing can justify this”, I thought in my mind, no amount of right or just privileges can pay the price for an unjust and painful death of a patient.

    Major breakthrough in modern medicine all arose out of the need to save lives. The early inventions in medicine from Mesopotamia, Ancient Egypt, India and China were all driven by quest to solve the mysterious illnesses of patients. It was Hippocrates, father of modern medicine that said “Wherever the art of Medicine is loved, there is also a love of Humanity.” Florence Nightingale, pioneered modern nursing when she saw the distasteful, unhygienic state, soldiers were treated during the Crimean war. It was out of this compassion to care for them that formal nursing programs were instituted. Medicine and Priesthood was difficult to separate in the medieval times because of the unique role of both in cure of the mind, body and spirit of its client.

    Overtime, because of the need for efficiency and the advent of evidence-based medicine, specialization in medicine and nursing care was introduced. Pharmacy, Laboratory science, and Radiography were incorporated to medical field to improve the effectiveness of patients care. Innovation then was geared towards improvement of patients care and health. The mystic nature of human disease was the single driving force towards medical innovation.

    But how come, the single driving factor of the existence of hospital and medical practice has now become puns and squabble in the hands of health workers. How come the grass that sustained the elephant have now become vulnerable to the animosities of the elephants themselves.

    The singular answer to that is that we health workers have left our first love…we have become enmeshed in the battle of superiority and hegemony. We have become fattened by pleasures and have forgotten the reason for our employment.  We have lost our vision of a perfect health care where all diseases can be treated. We have allowed our hospitals to be filled with carcasses of innocent lives.

    It is undoubted that we have the right as health workers, as free moral agents to demand for our well-deserved privileges. We have the right to protest. We have the right to seek for the improvement of our various disciplines. We have the right to reach the highest stage of Maslow’s pyramids “self-actualization”. We have that right to seek for a better welfare.

    However, the right and privileges we seek must not be viewed through our angle alone, but it must always be visualized only  through one microscope and only through one question; Will this demands improve patients care? That is the only moral scale we can use to measure the validity of our demands. So if we want a Lab scientist to become the CMD of an hospital, will that improve patients care better than before? If we have a consultant nurse, will it improve patients care ? Will residency in physiotherapy improve the patients care?  Will the frequent attack from doctors against the demands of JOHESU improve patients care? Does the incessant strike from Doctors and JOHESU improve patients care?

    If we can ponder on this question across all our demands and answer it in a most sincere way. If we can also recognize the only inescapable truths that we will all be a patient one day, then we would have started the race towards having the best health care in the world.

    As I walked back home that fateful day, I heard the echoes ringing in my mind. “There is no rightful privilege just enough to substitute for a human life, no matter how right or sacrosanct the demand is”.

    That patient of mine died some months after we discharged her, longer than I thought, thanks to the private hospital that upgraded their services when we down tooled.

    To her I dedicate this write up, and the myriads of patients who have died during the strike.

     

    • Dr Bolaji,

    UCH, Ibadan.

  • Why Nigerians must be patient with road contractors, by Fashola

    Minister of Power, Works and Housing Babatunde Fashola has called on Nigerians to be patient with contractors handling federal road projects over inconveniences caused by the on-going projects.

    Fashola spoke in Kano yesterday while he was inspecting Federal Government road projects in Kano State.

    The projects inspected by the minister were the expansion of Kano-Katsina Road and the Kano Western Bypass.

    He said the inconveniences, diversion and traffic on the roads being rehabilitated were “consequences of doing what we were supposed to do 15 years ago.

    “I want to appeal to Nigerians to be patient with us wherever that is happening, our contractors have been told to provide signage and traffic management strategies.

    “But whatever the inconveniences may be, we all know now that, it is for a better tomorrow,” he said.

    The minister  said the Kano-Katsina project was awarded in 2013 and the contractor moved to site in 2014 but had to stop work because he was not paid.

    He said work resumed on the project in 2016 when the Federal Government started implementing its budget for the year.

    He said the road was a 74km project leading to the border between Nigeria and Niger Republic, adding that it was a single carriageway  in spite of its connectivity to an international border.

    “So what we want to do here is to expand the width of the road to carry more vehicles and allow freer movement to strengthen local and international trade.

    “The contractor has said that funding has improved and has promised that, 18 months from now, the project will be completed,” he added.

    Fashola expressed satisfaction with the quality and pace of work at the two project sites visited in the state.

    The Kano-Katsina project is being handled by CCECC Nigeria Limited while Dantata and Sawoe Nigeria Limited is handling the Kano Western Bypass.

  • Quack doctor ‘sexually abuses’ patient

    Quack doctor ‘sexually abuses’ patient

    A MAN, Patrick Azubuike Uzoka, has been arraigned before an Ikeja Chief Magistrates’ Court for allegedly parading himself as a doctor and sexually assaulting a patient.

    Uzoka, 27, is standing trial before Chief Magistrate O.A Layinka on a three-count charge of unlawful sexual assault, unlawful administration of drug and impersonation.

    The prosecutor, Edet Okoi, an Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP), said Uzoka committed the offence last August 19 at about 2:00pm at 22, Ajanlekoko Street, Kirikiri Town, Lagos.

    Okoi said the defendant unlawfully assaulted a patient, Etim Okon Utibe, 22, in her residence through unlawful penetration.

    According to him, the accused unlawfully administered noxious substance on Utibe, thereby endangering her life.

    Okoi said: ‘’Uzoka presented himself as a medical practitioner and administered injections and other medications on Utibe, an undergraduate, who complained of stomach ache and was introduced to her by her parent who also thought he was a doctor.

    “On the said day, Uzoka came to administer treatment on the victim who was in the company of her friend, Sarah and he allegedly gave her an injection and she started feeling dizzy with hot sensation in her body.

    “She complained to the doctor and he gave her another injection which he claimed will calm her down. He thereafter sent her friend Sarah to get a drug for her with the claim that it is urgent.

    “Immediately Sarah left, he told Utibe that he has to urgently give her ‘seminal donation’ because the injection he gave her earlier has started affecting her womb.

    “He held Utibe’s hand and forcefully had sex with her and he didn’t stop until her friend came knocking and he quickly put her in a sitting position.

    ‘’The victim could not fight back because she was feeling dizzy and weak”, he said.

    Chief Magistrate Layinka granted the accused bail N100, 000, with two sureties.

    The magistrate directed the sureties to provide evidence of three years’ tax payment to the  government. The case continues on February 5.

  • Gunmen kill patient in hospital

    Gunmen have invaded the General Hospital in Bomadi, Bomadi L.G.A killing a patient.

    The killing, which occurred in the early hours of Monday, The Nation learnt caused pandemonium in the hospital as patients, doctors and nurses scampered for safety.

    The gunmen suspected to be cultist trailed the victim to the hospital where he was receiving treatment.

    The Nation gathered that the patient may be member of a rival cult group.

    It was learnt that there was a clash between rival cult groups earlier in the town during which some victims were rushed to the hospital, while one of the victims was murdered.  Another escaped before the arrival of hoodlums.

    Delta Police spokesman, DSP Andy Aniamaka said the police was investigating the incident

  • ‘Nigerians should be patient with Buhari’

    ‘Nigerians should be patient with Buhari’

    Former Kwara State All Progressives Congress (APC) Women Leader, Hajia Sarat Nike Adebayo, in this interview with Correspondent ADEKUNLE JIMOH, says there are no opposition parties in the Northcentral state. She also speaks about the Federal Government’s effort to revive the economy.

    What motivated you to participate in politics?

    I was close to the late Dr Olusola Saraki. Dr Saraki introduced me to politics because of my passion for women development.

    Student unionism prepared me for the politics outside the shores of the university. When I was in the university, I participate actively in the Ilorin Emirate, Kwara state students union and departmental union.

    It was through unionism that I got to know my husband. He was the president of National Association of Kwara state Students Union. He attended the University of Ilorin.

    Since I joined politics, I have never deviated from the Saraki dynasty. I love his style of politics. Senator Bukola Saraki came on board in 2002. Then, I was the President National Council of Women Societies (NCWS), which took me to so many countries in the world.

    With the recommendation of our state political leader and Senate President Bukola Saraki during the first tenure of Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed, I was appointed as senior special assistant on poverty alleviation. Before then, I was special assistant on political, project monitoring and mobilisation for the then chairman Ilorin East between 1996 and 1997.

    During 2013 cabinet reshuffle, I was dropped as SSA poverty alleviation. In April 2014, I was appointed as the state Women Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC) by our leader, Bukola Saraki.

    From being women leader, I was recently moved to become the Chairman, Local Government Commission in the state.

    As a young woman, how were you able to successfully lead the women?

    The two wives of Senate President and Governor Ahmed, Mrs. Toyin Saraki and Deaconess Omolewa Ahmed, assisted me a lot. They came, saw and conquered. When you have them as backbones, you are bound to succeed. They know my vision and mission and they have been my guides.

    In Kwara state, we have a moving structure and working tool which is the womenfolk in the state as put in place by the late Waziri of Ilorin, Dr Olusola Saraki. He believed in the women that they are the most reliable people. The youths can derail, but women are combatant soldiers. The structure on ground has given a leverage to work and I am a daughter of the house I knew how to go about my responsibilities. It was the Saraki political dynasty that brought Kwara women out of the kitchen. I cannot deviate from Baba Saraki’s passion for women’s emancipation. Because of the he had for us he said women must participate in politics.

    Baba Saraki identified strength, weakness and opportunity (SWOT) in women and that made in him excel in politics.

    How have you tried to dissuade women from going about offices and ministries soliciting for alms in the state?

    Senator Bukola Saraki was the governor of the state did a lot for the women through empowerment and job opportunities. The logo of the state is peace, enterprise and progress (PEP). The enterprise is for the women economic empowerment. Senator Saraki is the architect of modern Kwara in the area of youth and women empowerment. We have never had so good, until he came on board. In any general rule, there must be an exemption. Those women roaming about are not politicians per say. They are beggars. They are not integral part of the Saraki political structure.

    I made bold to say that, when I was special, Adviser to Governor Ahmed on poverty alleviation, the administration empowered many a women politicians in the state.

    How are you combining your home front with political offices?

    It is because I have an understanding husband. My husband understands the challenges that come with unionism and political office. When woman politician has an understanding husband she will excel politically. Above all, we have an understanding leader too. He knows we are married and he spares us the time to take care of our home front. As a humble wife, I do the needful at home. I urge women politicians outside there to imbibe the culture of being submissive to their husbands. Husbands are the heads of the families and if you submit to them in whatever edndeavours, you are into you will have your way.

    How will you react to the general belief that women pull their fellow women down in politics?

    The pull-him-down-syndrome is a reality in politics. Women seem to be their own enemies. If a woman aspires to vie for a political office, it is the women that will oppose her. It is because of our level of understanding. It is our way of life. They believe so much in money and know that women do not have enough money to throw around like men. They have forgotten that money is not all about everything. It is about passion. It is women’s love of money that our men have been using to sideline us.

    But, I must tell you that that mindset has changed drastically. Then it ratio 80 to 40, but now it has become ratio 60 to 40. The perception has changed. Women and even men have realised that women have a lot to offer. I want to urge our women holding political offices to always add value wherever they are. It is by adding value that the women outside there will appreciate them the more.  As a woman, you be a role model to your husband, children and to your community.

    As the chairperson of the Civil service commission, what efforts are you making to boost workers morale through the payment of salaries?

    Though I just came on board, but it does not mean I don’t know what is obtainable as I have been a local government staff in the last 25 years. Again, I am part and parcel of the current government. What is happening at the local councils is not peculiar to Kwara state alone.

    It is national. The recession of a thing is what is affecting. As a result we give kudos to Governor Ahmed for the wisdom he is using to pilot the affairs of the state. I don’t want to mention the names of the governors of some states that are not meeting up with the primary responsibilities as governors.

    The states and local governments have their separate allocations from the federal allocation. And because of the crash of the oil prices at the international market, Nigeria’s economy became hard hit.

    The governor has taken the bull by the horn by the integration of agriculture so that the economy of the state can be diversified. This recession has given us the leverage to think productively.

    Now, we have the Kwara State Internal Revenue Service (KW-IRS). It was not so before. The IGR is now being used to argument what comes from the federal account to pay salaries. The state government does not owe any of its staff.

    Governor has given us succor by augmenting what comes to the councils from the federal government. I am assuring that salary arrears of the 16 local government areas would soon be cleared very soon. By April, I am sure all these will be cleared. Since I came on board I have had parley with the various unions in the councils.

    What is your assement of the Buhari administration?

    The Buhari administration has been wonderful. He met nothing on ground. The economy was in shambles. The clogs in the wheel of his administration have been the crisis in the Niger Delta and the crash in the prices of oil in the international market.

    Before he came on board, there was insecurity in the north-east but today, I can say categorically that that has been nipped in the board.

    In the area of infrastructure the administration is also trying its best. The Lagos-Ibadan road, Kaduna-Abuja, Lokoja-Abuja road projects are ongoing.

    That is why Senate President Bukola Saraki is championing the cause of made-in-Nigeria goods to reduce overdependence on imported goods. So that Nigeria will not be a dumping ground. We cannot continue to hawk foreign goods and our own will be dying.

    Buhari’s anti-corruption war is going on well. When we were campaigning as APC, part of our promises it to put an end to corrupt; we can see that even the hitherto seemingly untouchables are being investigated. You can see what is happening the judiciary. Aftermath of the crusade our dying discipline will be jerked back to life.Change begins between me and you.

    What is your advice to Nigerians on the Buhari’s government?

    My advice to Nigerians is that they should be patient with the government because they need to realise that, if not for the coming of Buhari, Nigeria would have collapsed.

    Very soon, the anti-corruption crusade, the economic reform and restructuring would be appreciated. No pain, no gain.

  • ‘Let’s be patient with Buhari’

    ‘Let’s be patient with Buhari’

    Lagos State All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain Chief Taoreed Farombi has urged Nigerians to cooperate with President Muhammadu Buhari in his bid to reposition the country for excellence.
    He assured tha the president will build a better and prosperous society.
    In his new year message, the politician said better days ahead, urging Nigerians to be part of the process.
    He said the APC at the federal and state levels have put measures in place to achieve a glorious dawn.
    Farombi said smile will lit up the faces of the people as from this year.
    He lauded Governor Akinwunmi Ambode for his investment in security, which has reduced criminal activities in Lagos.
    He said the APC administration was fulfilling its campaign promises to the people.
    Farombi applauded the House of Assembly for cooperating with the governor in his bid to halt kidnapping and armed robbery in the Centre of Excellence.
    Urging parents to be alive to their responsibilities, he described community security as a joint enterprise.
    He said if the parents laid good examples of exemplary conduct, their children will emulate them and flee from crime.
    Farombi disclosed that the local vigilante groups were working round the clock in Lagos and supporting the police and other security agencies in combating crime.
    He called on the royal fathers to join hands with the government together by employing every power within their custody at turning their various communities a danger zone to the criminals.
    Chief Farombi declares that with backing he enjoys from the authority of various securities that exist in the State, he would continue to support government at fighting crime across every nooks and crannies of the state.
    He therefore implored people to always report every suspected activities and person in their neighborhoods to the police via the approve security lines of 08063299264 and 08039344870. He also assured all of the Police commitment at treating every report of crime with high level of secrecy

  • Patient needs N25m to live

    Patient needs N25m to live

    Olutayo has lofty dreams to accomplish. His signature on his works speaks of his creativity in photography. But his dreams are collapsing. He had been treating malaria and typhoid fever until a comprehensive test he underwent revealed that his two kidneys had packed up. ADEYINKA ADERIBIGBE  writes that, determined to be alive, Olutayo solicits financial assistance from Nigerians to undergo a kidney transplant which will cost him N25 million. 

    At 39; Olutayo Itayemi is a gangly young man with great and lofty dreams. Not only did he have the dream of leaving his name on the sands of time, he also looks forward to settling down and building a family, and make a statement out of photography; a profession he loved with passion.

    His signature on his works speaks of his creativity in photography. But his dreams are collapsing around him, no thanks to the result of a comprehensive test he had to run on his failing health sometime in July.

    Prior to the test, Olutayo had thought nothing of his failing health, which he considered was a bout of malarial attack.

    However, when the bout of malaria failed to ebb, he scaled up medication and began treating typhoid. With no positive response after a month, he went for a comprehensive test. That was the turning point.

    When the result was made available to him by the health personnel, it was crushing. The results stated very clearly that his two kidneys had packed up.

    Too shocked to believe the outcome, he ran further battery of tests and went for further consultations which not only confirmed the first result, but also established that he must quickly begin dialysis procedure.

    He said: “When one of the consultants saw the results, he took another look at me and simply asked me, whose result you say this was?” When I asked him why? He simply said, “this person ought to have begun a dialysis session if he wants to stay alive.”

    A medical report from Clina-Lancet Laboratories Limited, a foremost centre based in Lagos Nigeria and signed by three of its most senior doctors namely Dr. Collin de Bruyn; Dr. Yannis Pillay and Dr. Emma Wypkema, in a report reference number 760075195, dated July 14, last year, confirmed that Olutayo Itayemi’s sample collected for analysis may be consistent with end-stage chronic kidney disease (kidney failure).

    The laboratory result, a copy of which was made available to Southwest Report, showed extensive test on Sodium, Potassium, Chloride, ToT, Co2 (bicarbonate), while his S-Urea measurement is 50.3 mmo1/L the S-Creatinine is 1729 mmo1/L and his eGFR (CKD-EPI) is 3ml/mm.

    Currently, he undergoes dialysis thrice a week and has started series of medications to alleviate his pains.

    For his blood count, the same centre, in an attached laboratory report put his haematocrit at 0.24 L/L with a reference L 0.40 – 0.50.

    Haematocrit is a medical term that refers to blood separation and often called packed cell volume (PCV) or volume of packed red cells.

    What this means is that Olutayo’s pcv is currently low and as such no further action could be taken on a transplant session until his pcv is boosted to an acceptable average level.

    “A consortium of consultants who were handling the case confirmed to us that his pcv is currently low and though he has started taking medications to correct this, it is still slow in catching up with the average acceptable clinical level,” a family source said.

    Currently, he undergoes dialysis thrice a week and has begun series of medications to alleviate his pains.

    “But his pcv is currently low and as such no further action could be taken on a transplant session until his pcv is boosted to an acceptable average level.

    “His pcv is currently low and though he has started taking medications to correct that, it is still slow in catching up with the average acceptable clinical level,” a family source said.

    The dialysis and other sundry drugs to boost his pcv have, however, drained the lean resources of his family, friends and associates who have been rallying round and paying the bills since July, when the ugly development began.

    So far, they have continued to step up to do what they can, but Olutayo is at the point where more help is desperately needed to keep him alive.

    Right now, he needs financial assistance to cover his dialysis sessions while he considers his options on the process of getting a new kidney.

    “We are told that his statistics need to be improved upon before considering transplant options,” his cousin, Adedeji Adetayo said.

    According to him, Olutayo would need about N25 million for the drugs that would boost his pcv and for the transplant.

    That is why the family is calling on well-meaning Nigerians to come to the aid of this promising young man.

    “Please help keep Olutayo alive. Your help and support in prayers and financial contributions are highly appreciated and indeed essential to his overcoming the challenges at this critical phase of his life. No amount is too small. God bless you as you give for this cause,” Adetayo said.

    “Interested persons should use the following details: Name: Itayemi Olutayo Oluyinka. Bank: Guaranty Trust Bank Plc. Account number: 0029659877,” Adetayo added.

  • ‘Nigerians should be patient with Buhari’

    ‘Nigerians should be patient with Buhari’

    Lagos Central All Progressives Congress (APC) leader Prince Tajudeen Olusi, who clocked 80 yesterday, spoke with EMMANUEL OLADESU and MUSA ODOSHIMOKHE on the journey so far, his political battles, the Buhari and Ambode administration, and other partisan issues.

    How do you feel celebrating 80?

    I feel very happy; I am grateful to the Almighty Allah. Life itself is a journey, embarking on a journey means travelling and coming across both pleasant and unpleasant things. For the Almighty God, who preserved and kept me going up to this point, I thank Him abundantly. I am short of words; I feel elated, particularly when I remember those who impacted positively on my life over the years. Looking back, from the family compound, where I started my elementary school, the larger community, the political arena which had taken a large chunk of the journey, I must say I am happy. I thank my colleagues, particularly those who have been with me all my political life, starting from Asiwaju Bola Tinubu and his wife, Senator Oluremi Tinubu, who is my younger sister and a daughter. I greet my political associates across the country, in the Southwest and across the country. I greet my political children, some of them are in the National Assembly and others are heading parastatals all over the country. They have all come together, to arrange a befitting birthday ceremony for me; to all of them I am grateful. I will continue to pray for them internally and externally.

    How did the death of your father who passed on when you were eight affect your life?

    In January 1945, when my father died, I was eight years, because I was born 1936. I was very close to him, because we sleep in the same room and he took care of me like the mother of a child will do to the child. We ate together and he generally pampered me. But, he also punishes me when I make mistakes. Each time the Oba holds court, I would stand there with him and listen, even though I was still very young. Members of the family saw me as a spoilt child, but they don’t know what transpired between me and my dad, who was very fond of me. Whenever I venture outside the compound, he would not rest until I return. That was why people said I was a spoilt child. When he passed on, I did not know the enormity of what happened; I did not know what death meant. Contrary to the Yoruba practice of burying an Oba in seclusion, my father was buried in accordance with Islamic injunctions; my father was a Muslim before he became an Oba. So, he was laid in state for the prayer to be done and I joined the public, watching the remains of my father as the rite was done. I was ignorant of what had really happened. Again, I was lucky in the sense that I had brothers, who were old enough to be my father. In fact, one of them had two children before I was born. They took care of me and gave me the education I deserved. So, I did not miss the absence of my father much.

    How did you become a councillor at the Lagos Town Council?

    As someone from the royal family (my father was a former Oba of Lagos), we were involved in the royal politics of Lagos. The politics played was supported by the British; they backed Dosumu against Akintoye. They divided the political landscape and ensured that a section of the royal house, the Dosumu family monopolised the obaship of Lagos. Coincidentally, my father reigned with the assistance of the British for a period. My father came from another royal section. Before he ascended the throne, the Dosumu branch of the family monopolised the Lagos throne. My father opened the gate for agitation by other sections of the royal. So, when Oba Falolu died, Oba Adele who became the candidate of the majority of the all the royal houses was supported by them. They came together, got united and presented Oba Adele. When Oba Adele became ascended the throne, while performing his royal duty, he had to get involved with governmental duties, as well as politics. The National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons (NCNC) obviously supported the Dosumu political linage; Adele had to join the other political group to counter the move. The NCNC supported Oba Oyekan which supported the idea of monopolizing of the obaship by the Dosumu family. They dominated the politics of Lagos at that time. But, Oba Adele, being an educated person with sufficient wisdom, formed the Area Councils in Lagos. As for the Olowogbowo section, where I resided, my father’s palace was made a secretariat of sorts and used for the royal family’s political meetings. Gradually, we were inducted into the arena of the real politics. In Lagos, we had Boys Club, this started social development to ensure that the boys are properly trained; we get together and played table tennis. We were attracted by what the late Obafemi Awolowo and the late Nnamdi Azikiwe did. In the club, we referred to our leader as Premier, instead of Chairman. Eventually, I became Premier of the club. We were involved in communal work; we did this to keep the area clean. I joined the youth wing of the Action Group (AG) led by the late Remi Fani-Kayode. I and other notable people became members of the club. I later became a councillor at the age of 26 in 1952. I was pressurised by my Olowogbowo community to be a councillor.

    How did you meet Awolowo?

    Mama H.I.D. Awolowo became my mother by her disposition; by her standing for justice and truth. In politics, you face all sorts of intrigues. In 1952, I was very vocal as a young man and that positioned me for the local council leadership. In view of my outspoken disposition, I crossed the path of some of my seniors. I could challenge any suggestion or decision that was taken; I was very inquisitive as well. So, some of those I stepped on their toes resolved that I should not be elected.  We had to go through primary, which was the Electoral College; it’s not like the direct primary that we have during elections. The Electoral College was made of 15 people. They tried to obstruct my path, by getting a younger brother to oppose me. But, at the end of the day, I succeeded. Some of the supporters of my opponent kicked against my election and they protested to Alhaji Adegbenro who was the leader of the party at Ibadan. The day they went to Ibadan and they were discussing the issue, Mama Awolowo walked in when they were arguing that I must be disqualified, having won the mandate. It was like I should not be allowed to carry the banner of the party. They requested that he should write a letter to Lagos, to upturn the result, so that Olusi should not be given the symbol. After they had made their case, Mama Awolowo requested to come into the matter. She recalled that I had rendered some assistance to the party in the past. There was a time the Federal Government banned public meetings in Lagos, so that we cannot campaign. I made my father’s palace available for political meetings. They told Mama Awolowo that I like arguing cases and that I like to defend my position; in a nutshell that I will be too stubborn and will not subject myself to party discipline. Mama told them that if these were the reasons for opposing me, she told them that I was eminently qualified, because Papa Awolowo liked people who argued and that he liked people who do not take stories hook, line and sinker. She said Awolowo told her that such people will get results for the party. Mama promised them that she would send for me and that I would apologise to them. And when I got to Ibadan, Mama made a lasting impression, by giving me a warm reception. Since that day, Mama became my mother. When she visited my community, she would branch our house to greet me.

    How did you assist Rilwan Akiolu, who is now the Oba of Lagos, into the Police?

    The day he was taken to Ita Idunganran and was being interviewed, I watched it on the television. He asked about his career in the police. I heard him saying that he was taken to the police by his royal cousin, Prince Olusi. Since he mentioned it to public domain, there is nothing strange other than to confirm it. There is nothing extraordinary in the issue; he was a younger brother to me. At least I am his senior with about seven years. At that point, I was involved in the Lagos Aborigines Affairs and Egbe Omo Eko. Our members were committed to the improvement and development of Lagos, so it was our priority to help Lagosians. I was interested in the Police, when I was at the Ansar-ud-deen College. I wanted to join, because I was motivated by the anti-bribery group; I wanted to go to the force to promote the anti corruption war. But, when I discussed it with an elder, he discouraged from joining the police, because I am a prince. But, when Akiolu wanted to join the police, I supported him; he I cannot enlist, I was happy seeing my cousin in the force. We assisted about five of them, including Musiliu Smith, Shitta Bay and Kazeem, through the head of the Police College, who was incidentally a Lagosian. They were all successful police officers at the end of their career; they made their mark and I am happy and proud of them.

    What circumstances led to your election to the House of Representatives during the Second Republic?

    In 1978, we were preparing for the return to democracy by the military and we were operating under what was known as committee of friends. I was calculating that I should take a step; I looked at the arena of politics, where I had been operating at the local government level. Having served as chairman, I believed I had reached the terminal stage at the council level and that I should move to the House of Assembly. That was my calculation, when the party called for nomination to the House of Assembly, about five of us indicated our desire from my constituency. While we were waiting to take the forms officially, the late Papa Salau Onikoyi, who was the constituency chairman for Isale Eko, urged me to go to the House of Representatives. I asked him to inquire from others who were my Egbon (elders) whether they wanted to contest for the position or not. He did that and asked me to apply which I did. At the end of the day, I was the only party member who applied to contest for the House of Representatives. I had earlier applied for the House of Assembly. Alhaji Lateef Jakande ordered me to take one. He said I could not be in two places at the same time. So, I decided to take the one that the coast is clear. That was how I eventually became a member of the House of Representatives in 1979.

    How come you and Alhaji Dawodu are not together, despite the fact that you are both progressives?

    Our own environment is to look at the development of politics is Lagos. We started nationalism from the time of Herbert Macauley. You have those who did not agree with the politics of Herbert Macauley; they metamorphosed into the Nigerian Youth Movement (NYM). Those supporting Macauley metamorphosed into the NCNC. The NYM later metamorphosed into the Action Group (AG). The AG made improvement at the Area Council, which Awolowo led. The party fought the development of the ordinary people and there was full participation by the people, which was the position of the progressives. The NCNC appeared more dictatorial and sometimes they accused the AG of being of similar disposition too, but the AG worked like a united family. They held regular meetings and discussed issues, as if we are practicing democracy. What democracy means is that the minority will respect the decision of the majority. So, it was not politics of money making or acquisition of wealth. We were inducted into politics of principle and politics of serving the people.

    Why were you not able to hold your ground during the SDP and NRC struggle for Lagos governorship?

    It’s due to bad advice from some leaders. During the period of the crisis, Alhaji Jakande was the leader of the Social Democratic Party (SDP). There was a disagreement over who should become the governorship flag bearer of the party. Jakande called for a meeting to resolve the matter, but the contending groups did not want to attend the meeting and Alhaji Jakande was annoyed and he asked them if Awolowo were to be alive and summoned a meeting, can any of them counter him? Eventually, the contenders, Dapo Sarumi and Femi Agbalajobi, were disqualified by the military. So, some of their supporters opted to vote for the late Michael Otedola of the National Republican Convention (NRC). I can tell you that they regretted the decision.

    When Asiwaji Bola Tinubu joined the fray, did you imagine he will go this far?

    I was part of the group that dragged him into the arena of politics. I was the chairman of the Primose that decided over all the issues of the day. At a meeting it was decided that we should drag Bola (Tinubu) into the arena of politics. When we were struggling to fight for Sarumi, we were handicapped because we needed money and we could not provide all that was needed. So, Kola Oseni has very strong contact with Bola, through him he was contacted. Asiwaju was working at Mobil at the time; we contacted him and on two occasions he assisted us. At one of our meetings, someone said if Asiwaju could be brought to our midst, if he can become a member then we will get him committed. He will be willing to assist us to assist us the more. Someone said we should talk to him to go to the House of Representatives. While looking at these considerations, Alhaji Olatunji Hamzat and others pleaded with us to give them Asiwaju, because the issue of the Senatorial seat in the Lagos West was herculean task then. We agreed and it was decided that some people should go and speak to Bola to go to the Senate. They told him to see me, in my capacity as the head of Primose Club. He came to see me with two of his brothers. Coincidentally, he has been of assistance to me, particularly when I was to be elected chairman of the Primose Club. We had information that some people were planning to disrupt the election and were told that unless we got police it may not be peaceful. We called Bola and he took care of that for us and that was how I emerged.

    As to whether I imagined he would go this far, I had always known that he is a go-getter. After all the palava, Dapo Sarumi got appointed Minister of Communications, which we advised him not to accept. But, he went ahead to accept it. I told him that the appointment will not help him. After Sarumi had taken that path, contrary to my advice, I called a special meeting and we resolved to move our meeting from his compound to Alhaji Hamzat’s house. The day of the first meeting was the day I will call the day of revelation. Dapo came, he was begging and prostrated for forgiveness, but not quite long Asiwaju walked in and he took his seat quietly somewhere. I told Alhaji Hamzat that something within me told me this man that just walked in is a future governor of Lagos State. I pulled Alhaji Hamzat aside and told him about my feelings, he is my only witness. I told him that something is telling me that one day Bola will be governor of Lagos. There was no reaction from him, but I was convinced that what I saw would become a reality. During the period Wahab Dosumu, Shitta Bey, Rafiu Jafojo, Funso Williams came to me that they wanted to become governor. I told them that I would like to maintain neutral position in view of those involved. But, when Bola indicated interest, I told him those who had approached me for the same issues.  I assured him that I will support him, but that I won’t come out openly to do that. I went further to tell him that we must place the issue before the Almighty Allah. I told him to tell Mama Abibat Mojaji to organise regular prayer on the issue. I told him that I am also going to organise a special prayer. So, I am not surprised that he went this far in politics.

    What is your assessment of the Buhari administration?

    My personal assessment is that the administration is moving steadily. It is on the right path. If you are infested by any germ that is destructive, any germ that can take your life, unless the doctor removed the germ it will destroy the person. Our country has been infested by corruption. You could feel corruption in our national life and unless we faced reality, we may not go far. Maybe it is not possible to remove corruption totally, but it is possible to reduce corruption to the level that it will not pose danger to our existence. Let me give you one or two examples, the previous government allowed corrupt people to occupy sensitive positions in the security apparatus of the country and they stole the monies budgeted for defence; as we can glean from the various cases in court. The case of Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) is still being investigated; a panel is still investigating it. We cannot continue run our democracy in Nigeria like this. People have been condemning the Buhari administration, but anyway they are entitled to their opinion. They are free to urge the government to move fast, but the government has to look at the issues critically.

    What is your assessment of Governor Ambode so far?

    Governor Akinwunmi Ambode had a town hall meeting today in my senatorial district. That meeting was held at the Teslim Balogun Stadium, Surulere. I was present at the meeting and prayed for him that by God’s grace he will spend the constitutionally-provided period of eight years. I expressed my satisfaction of what he has been doing as governor. I thank him for one of the projects particularly; a street that was named after my father. We equally thanked him for the reconstructing roads done by two successful administrations.  Sometimes, I try to run away from commenting on Ambode. I must say the man has done well. There are some people among the citizen who easily forget, but we have to remind them that the government has done well in areas of security, transportation, health, education and others that are physical and obvious. That is why I am saying that as a leader of the party, I am not in position to appraise him. It will sound as if one is trying to blow one’s trumpet.

    In your view, what is the future of the APC, against the background of what is happing in the party now?

    A lot of people are worried about what is going on in the party; some say the party is collapsing. That, to me, is not the true picture of things. The newspapers are merely using it to sell their papers; it is the approach of those running the newspapers to make profit. They want to make money; they want people to buy their papers. In the Yoruba parlance, when the children of a woman that has three or four children begin to quarrel, she tries to prevail on them to calm down; she doesn’t aggravate the matter. She will tell them that she is looking up to them and that they must come together, so that people will not laugh at her. When people outside see you quarreling, they will say mama’s children are not united. I granted an interview to a newspaper and I said Asiwaju has made a complaint. He has been forthright, but it for us and other leaders as the collective managers of party, to sit down and manage the party that Asiwaju has created. We ought to find out the grievances of both parties, Asiwaju and the National Chairman; then sit down and find a way of reconciling them in the interest of our party. But, what we have seen is that people are just shouting and jumping from one side to the other, saying all sorts of things. Reconciliation is part of the system of disagreement all over the world. Where you have walls, you have to have disagreements. Disagreements destroy towns and institutions; they also destroy industries. But, at the end of the day, they have to be addressed. At the end of the day, either voluntarily or force, there must be reconciliation.

    That is what is happening to the PDP now; they have shot themselves in the foot and the party is not at ease. The people have not managed it well, they went to war, to destroy the party, but now they say they are doing forced reconciliation. They have now set up a committee, a 24-man committee, to sort out the mess. The committee has started the herculean task of reconciling the warring factions. We in the APC should learn; we should not give room for what happened in the PDP to befall us. They want to jubilate; that jubilation, to my mind, will be short-lived. By the grace of God, we will get over the current challenges. We are just building the thing together; we have to thrive to build the party before we get infested with one challenge or the other. It like you have disciplined yourself for a long time and have been doing things orderly and you now have to associate or work with people who have no orderly conduct. The people who want to betray the party must be educated, so that they can be brought back on course. It is like when you bring some animals together, you must tame them. Owing to the fact that we are dealing with people from diverse backgrounds, you have to talk to them, persuade them. So, my own view is that by God’s grace the APC will get over her current challenges. Those who are looking forward to the breaking up of our country will be put to shame. What do they want to get? They want to take us to zero-level, because if we now have to go to zero-level, we now have to start from the scratch in all facets of national life. I want the people to sit down and look at the matter in the interest of the country. Nigeria is made up of so many ethnic groups and for over 100 years and we were brought together as an entity. We have not been able to come together and see ourselves as one. We still see ourselves from the perspective of our ethnic backgrounds; it only the educated elite who tried to talk about Nigeria and more than 60 per cent of our country men and women do not have that education. If you go to Borno and you are talking, the man from Kanuri would hardly see the one from Lagos Island as his compatriot.  Therefore, I will continue to appeal to the people for us to see the country first and work for its interest.

  • Widow seeks help for kidney-patient son

    Widow seeks help for kidney-patient son

    A 58-year-old widow Mrs Chineyere Agatha Onyebuchi has called on public-spirited individuals and corporate organisations to help save his son’s life after he was diagnosed with a kidney condition.

    Onyebuchi, who hails from Arondizuogu in Imo State, but has been living with her family in Aba, lost her husband after 20 years of marriage and has been carrying the family burden ever since.

    After the death of her husband, the responsibility of the upkeep of their six children fell on her and she has been doing it with joy, believing that one day, one of them would come out of school to help her in training the others but sickness crept into her family to shatter her plans.

    Onyebuchi said, “I got married in 1978 and blessed with six children, but my husband died after 20 years of marriage, leaving the whole burden of caring for six children for me alone.

    “I kept trudging on, with the meager salary of a civil servant, providing for the family within my own ability. When my 28-year-old son Chimaobi gained admission to read Electrical/Electronic at Federal Polytechnics, Nekede and finished his ND, our plan was for him to work a little, raise money and go back for his HND, because the whole thing had started telling on me”.

    “But unfortunately, he woke up one morning in December last year and started complaining of fever, I took him to hospital and he was treated. Not quite long after, he complained of stomach problem and I took him to another hospital and we did a scan test and the doctor said that he has inflamed appendicitis; he was operated upon in January this year, and after the surgery, the wound had healed very well, the stomach problem started again”.

    “I complained to the doctor who did the surgery and he referred us to Abia State University Teaching Hospital (ABSUTH), Aba, we went there and stayed over one month there, then his legs, and hands started swelling, including the swelling of his stomach.

    “We kept staying there without any noticeable result, I then brought him back and took him to one other private hospital and after undergoing further treatment, we came back without any good result”.

    “I took him to Seventh Day Adventist Hospital (SDA), Aba, from there they referred us to Federal Medical Centre (FMC), Umuahia, where we have been going to take treatment”.

    “It was at FMC, Umuahia that they told us that he has Kidney problem, since then we have been on it, from that January till today, we have been relying on the good will of people to feed, having exhausted all our family savings”.

    “I am calling on the good people of Nigeria and the world as a whole to come to our assistance as I don’t want to lose my son, not now that he has grown up to wipe away my tears after all my sufferings, Satan wants to take him away from me”.

    “People should please help I know that there are still good people in this world that would hear the cry of a poor widow like me, I don’t want to lose my son, If he is alive he will be useful to the country and its people”.

    Onyebuchi said that they have been carrying out dialysis on her son and that doctors have asked her to prepare for kidney transplant , “Where would a poor widow get N8 billion to do kidney transplant.”