Tag: people

  • Old people: At home away from home?

    Old people: At home away from home?

    More Nigerians sending their elderly to old peoples’ homes

    Following an increasingly changing lifestyle and a gradual departure from a culture that systematically took care of its elderly ones, there seems to be a growing need for care homes for the elderly in the country. Gboyega Alaka explores the realities.

    The 70-something year-old Mrs. Tricia Adebanji is a mother of five and should ordinarily be having fun, having successfully trained all her children to university level. In her hey days,  she worked with the Nigerian Immigration Service, as well as engaged in other legal businesses including contract bidding and execution and food canteen. It was also the beginning of the great recession in the middle to late 1980s, when the economy plummeted and unemployment rose sharply. So like many who were well-placed at the time, she literally flung her children to developed countries of Europe and America, to forage for greener pastures.

    Having lost her husband along the line, she was left with the baby of the house, her only daughter, Toyosi,  as her companion. But it was all for the best and things went well at the time. The children prospered, got reasonably good jobs, got married and regularly sent money home to her. She also regularly went on tour, visiting them in their respective countries of residence and generally having fun.  Life was good and even as she retired from active work, money was the least of her problems.

    But the baby of the house soon came of age. Toyosi graduated and got a job with a bank, and  as a result, Mrs. Adebanji was forced to spend more time alone at home. But that’s no reason to worry, she was still the well-loved ‘mummy’ and ‘grandma’ to everybody and still went out quite well to socialise.

    More recently however, old age has set in. Her bones are becoming weaker, her movement, slower and her ability to socialise, reducing drastically. Worst of all, her sight has began to fail – a result of poorly treated cataract. The thousands of distance between her and her children who live abroad have also ensured that they only come home to see her once a year, and sometimes, once in a leap year. Even Toyosi recently got married and has had to go live with her husband. She only checks on her mother when she could squeeze time from her busy bank job.  So now, Mrs. Adebanji is really lonely. Her sight problem also means she has become more dependent and in need of help.

    Unfortunately, her impatience with the different house-helps contracted for her also means that they hardly stay with her longer than a week, at most a month; compounding the frustration of the children, who wouldn’t want the public to think they has abandoned their beloved mother when she needs them most. Pitiably, virtually all the pressure have fallen on Toyosi, who lives in Nigeria, as if she were her mum’s only child. Today, it is not unlikely to hear her nag and complain out loud what burden their mother has become on her, “as if I’m her only child. I wish I could get somewhere to put her or some reputable care-giver to come in everyday to be with her like we have in the US.”

    Mrs. Adebanji’s story above is just one of a typical situation many Nigerian families are confronted with today.

    Recently, a lady Chinasa (not real name) went on the social media to request for information regarding a specialised home for the care of the elderly. She wrote: “I really need this information right now. Apart from Catholic homes, where the poor live, I don’t know of any other thing close. I have a great-grandmother, who is over a hundred years old staying with my family. She can’t walk; pees and poos on herself, although she uses adult diapers most of the time. … Caring for her has been extremely hellish! We’ve employed people to clean her up and take care of her but they usually end up running off. Sometimes, we’ve had to lock her up at home, when everyone has a place to be. If we had the option of a home, where we can pay for her care, it’d be great relief for everyone, including herself.”

    Note the desperation in Chinasa’s voice and note the line where she said “Sometimes, we’ve had to lock her up at home, when everyone has a place to be.” But at least, she and the other members of the family have not labelled her a witch and thrown her into the streets as witches.

    In Calabar, Cross Rivers State, that is the unfortunate situation. Not long ago, 13 elderly persons were rescued from the streets after being thrown out by their families on the excuses of being witches. These people were eventually taken in by the Pope John Paul II Good Samaritan Home, which have been caring for them ever since. Rev. Sister Yvonne Nwankwo, who is in charge of the home was quoted to have implored children to stop maltreating or neglecting their aged parents.

    A growing need

    Increasingly, the need for homes for the elderly, or what is generally known as ‘old people’s home’ is growing in the country. Evidently, because of changing lifestyles, a suddenly fast-paced world, where people are becoming too busy to take care of themselves, let alone loved ones, the elderly are now suffering. Consequently, what people in this part of the world used to view as a misnomer and a ‘wicked culture’ of abandoning ones aged parents’ has crept into our society. A quick check online would reveal a good number of these homes and care-givers, especially in metropolitan cities like Lagos, Ibadan, Port Harcourt, Calabar and Abuja. Although still a handful and grossly inadequate, the fact that they have even surfaced and are in business shows a marked paradigm shift.

    Nigeria with the largest number of elderly people in Africa, boasts of just over a dozen such homes, but that they have even found a footing at all is commendable, since Nigerians have never found it culturally agreeable or commendable to ‘dump’ their old ones in homes, preferring to take care of them the best way they can, until they pass on. At the last count, some of these homes or care agencies include the Regina Mundi Holy Family Family Home for the Elderly (Lagos), the Pope John Paul II Good Samaritan Home (Calabar), Winiseph Care Home (Lagos), Regal Care Nigeria, Bluegate Healthcare, Family Ark Mission, to mention a few.

    This reporter also paid a visit to some of these homes and agencies, to have a first-hand assessment of the facilities and interact with the operators.

    Adekunle Somefun, who is supervisor and admin manager at Winiseph Care Home says the home is the brainchild of Prof & Mrs. Odusote, both of whom are medical personnel, with long-standing years of practice. He said it was borne out of the founder’s desire to create a conducive abode for the elderly, following a personal experience. “From what the MD, Mrs. Kofoworola Odusote told me,  the establishment of this home was inspired by a personal experience of how her aunt, who at that time was in the twilight of her life, constantly complained of poor care from the house-help contracted to take care of her and of how her meals were constantly delayed, while the house-help went about her personal ‘business’. She said it was after her demise that she decided she’d love to be taking care of the elderly, especially since she was about retiring at the time.”

    Somefun said the home is seven years old and that it runs a 24-hour service, with care-givers, medical team, non-medical team alike on ground to render quality service to the residents. He also says the home runs day care and full residents.

    Somefun said the oldest resident at Winiseph has been there for four years. “He used to live in his hometown in Ijebu, Ogun State but became lonely at a point because all his children are grown up and away from home. He has six children, two live and work in Lagos while four live and work abroad.”

    He debunked the opinion that people who live in old people’s home are those who have been abandoned by their children or ‘dumped’ as many prefer to call it. “It is because their people care for them that they have brought them here, and they pay for the services. So in the real sense, it is because the children don’t have time, yet they want the best for their parents that they bring them here.”

    He spoke of how this particular elder “didn’t want to move an inch from his home, thinking that they were taking him to some horrible place, but now he is actually nearing five years here, and obviously enjoying it.”

    He said “The oldest person here is 96, but she’s still very sound. what happened in her case is that the daughter on account of her business travels a lot and rather than leave her at the mercy of house-helps, she thought it best to bring her here, where she was sure of total care.

    On the price range, Somefun said he may not be able to disclose that on the go, but that depends on the age and state of health of the elder.

    About the fear that sane people may be mixed with people who are mentally sound, Somefun shook his head in disagreement, but explains that “Dementia in the real sense is a medical state that cannot be corrected or reversed but which can be managed. And it’s not all of them that are violent like many people think. So I always tell the children that life is in stages and that we are here to manage their parents for them, since they cannot spare the time. In truth, there are some things that we may not be able to do, but the human care, medical care and pampering that they need, we will give them.”

    Somefun enthused that the children also come in regularly to check in on their parents and reunite with them as much as possible.

    He said social clubs and organisations also visit the home from time to time to celebrate birthdays and other important festive occasions with them. This, he said, is to remind them that they are still part of us and are not abandoned.

    Mama Saro (not real name)

    One of the residents of the home whom we shall call ‘Mama Saro’ for the sake of confidentiality and because she once lived and worked in Sierra Leone, spoke of how she came to live in Winiseph Care Home.

    She said, “It’s not that I’m sick or anything, but my daughter travels a lot. Sometimes, she may be gone for a whole week, sometimes more; that’s why she thought it wise to bring me here, where she said she can trust that they will take good care of me.”

    She explained that she is an Urhobo, “What you Yoruba people call Isobo, but I grew up in Lagos. My parents had a house on Idi Street in Ajegunle. I also lived in Surulere and at a point travelled to Sierra Leone, where I lived for many years and even worked as Confidential Secretary to the Chairman of Sierra Leones Electricity Corporation. I was in Saro for many years before coming back to Nigeria. My mother was a big textile dealer in the old Balogun Market on Lagos Island. I also lived on Anfani Street, Ibadan with my husband.”

    Of the level of care she is receiving in the home, Mama Saro said “Oh, if it is about that one, they take care of us very well. I would even say that their service is excellent, only that anywhere you have a group of people numbering up to five or ten, you always find some people whose habit or character you may not be agreeable with.”

    Asked how old she is, Mama Saro paused for a moment, looked to the ceiling and then said “Calculate it, I was born in 1943”

    So much for someone who had earlier told this reporter that “My only problem is that I forget a lot.”

    Regina Mundi

    At the Regina Mundi Catholic Church Holy Family Home for the Elderly, it is an atmosphere of conviviality.  No complain, no nagging or bickering on the part of the elders – at least for the hour or so that this reporter spent in the home on his two visits. He also did not notice any haughtiness on the part of the staff. In fact, one of the elders, Mrs. Margaret Babalola, while commending one of the staff said “She is very pleasant woman. She must have been born of good parents.”

    On the morning of this reporter’s visit, the elders, numbering about ten – three of them male, were having breakfast of custard and akara and everyone seemed to be enjoying themselves. The staff were all over them, making sure they lacked nothing and administering their drugs as they rounded off their meals.

    The living room is spacious, highly ventilated with ceiling fans an air-conditioner, and a flat screen television for entertainment. Here, it also seems electricity supply is 24-hours non-stop. Aside the big generating plant humming quietly in the background, the home also enjoys the luxury of Inverters, which according to Rev. Mother in charge, Sister Anthonia Adebowale, was donated to the home by an international organisation called Small World.

    The home was founded in 1982 and the “cardinal principle is to help the elderly poor. That was our objective in the past and it still is our objective in the present.” To ensure that maximum care is given to the residence, she said, it is a policy of the home not to take more than 14 elders at a go. She said the home started as a bungalow and was later upgraded to a storey building, to accommodate more people.

    The sister also informed that the home is  totally charity organisation and so the residents don’t pay. “If they have to pay, maybe if they are sick and have family members who are able to foot the bill.”

    She said funds for the home come from well-meaning Nigerians who come in to donate in cash and kind. As the sister in charge, Rev. Mother Adebowale says she solicits funds for the home and even goes to the different parishes to solicit for fund. “So it’s pure charity, not as if we get any subvention from government or anywhere.”

    Unlike most other homes visited, this reporter was also given a free hand to interview the residents, while the Rev Mother wondered why he hadn’t gone ahead to take the pictures of the elders at breakfast.

    Though a catholic church initiative, the reverend mother said the home is not discriminatory and in fact has a Muslim in their midst, who has been with them for quite a while.

    Bless the Reverend Mother!

    The first resident this reporter interviewed was Iya Jos, a Yoruba woman. She said she goes by the name because she lived a long time in Jos, before coming over to Lagos. She had just finished her meals and from the look of things, she may be approaching her centenary birthday or well past it. The sight of her Muslim rosary in front of her also gave her away as the Muslim Sister Adebowale was referring to. It also testifies to the fact that she still practises her religion and that the church has no qualms about it.

    She revealed that she’s been in the home for sometime but cannot really recall how long. As for the care, she said they take care of her very well. She would not tell the number of her children but said the reason she’s in the home is because her children are too busy to take care of her and their children are attending school.

    As this reporter made to go for another resident, she called him back and said, “The reverend sister is good. She takes very good care of us.”

    Mrs. Cerena Onwuneli’s impeccable English accent already betrayed her background even before she revealed that she was a trained teacher. She cannot remember her age, but said she is in the home because her brother brought her there and because her only son died seven years before she came into the home. As for grandchildren, she said “he was married and I was told he had two children, but I’ve never seen them.”

    Once, she tried leaving the home to go and live with her brother, but she said she didn’t enjoy it much and it was even the reverend sister who noticed she wasn’t looking happy.

    Her reason, she said is that “At my brother’s place, they don’t like me going to Mass every Sunday, but here, I am free to go to Mass at anytime.”

    She hailed from Ezihinite Mbaise, Imo State, she said and was a trained teacher, with years of experience at elementary school.

    Margaret Babalola on her part says she’s been in the home for over a year, although one of the staff who overheard her corrected that she has been in the home for four years.

    Mrs. Babalola says she’s in the home because her “children are in London and don’t have time for me, but they have time for their wives. That is the way the world is now, but it is not good. We didn’t treat our parents like that. Besides, they have never been here to see me.”

    About Rev Mother Adebowale, she asked: “Pray what can we do for this woman, she was the one that saw me at a programme and brought me here? Then, I was ill and my legs were sore, but she took me to the hospital and they took care of it. Now I’m better.”

    Born in 1943, Mr. Raphael Oyelere was a mechanic and then a driver in his active days. He drove long distance passenger buses to Jos, Kaduna and Zaria until old age set in.

    He revealed that he used to live in Isale-Eko and came to the home at the instance of Reverend Father Charles.

    “I used to attend church regularly, but when my wife died, it became a bit difficult for me, so I stopped. They noticed, came to check on me and saw that I was lonely. That was how they brought me here. I don’t pay a kobo.”

    He said some of his children are dead and that the others are still young and with relatives.

    Regal Care Nigeria

    Regal Care Nigeria is a care home based in Lagos and run by a young man  and UK-trained nurse, Olufela Lapite. He says it was born out of the need to fill the gap being created by the fact that “less family members are willing to look after the older people in our society.”

    He explained that “In the past, there were younger children who were used as housemaids and left with aged parents to cook and do other house work,” but that Regalcare is averse to this pattern as it denies the young children their human rights to education and co. He also said the maids are not really trained in terms of health and safety, hygiene, manual handling and all, hence the need for an organisation like Regal Care.

    Another reason, he said is that “the children of these older people are now very busy to attend to the needs of their parents or grand-parents. Some work in private organisation where they leave home at 6am and do not return home until very late in the night.”

    He said Regal Care therefore came into existence to ensure that older people in the society are cared for through regular healthcare training.

    He said Regal care does not operate by care home at the moment but carries out services in the comfort of its clients home. “We believe it is better to leave older people to continue to live in their own homes, where they feel more comfortable with and also very used to. This is being practised in other parts of the world like UK,USA, Canada etc. Our carers are trust worthy and very diligent in the services we render.”

    He also said the organisation makes sure the carers are supervised by qualified nurses and that they work with other multi-disciplinary teams like doctors, physiotherapists and co.

  • ‘People’s well-being our priority’

    ‘People’s well-being our priority’

    The Executive Secretary of Ejigbo Local Council Development Area, Jaiye Alabi has said his administration has evolved policies and programmes to enhance people’s well-being.

    He spoke at an event organised to inform the residents of the council’s  achievements penultimate week.

    He said immediately after he was sworn in, he swung into action to improve the living condition of the people.

    He said he had increased the level of sensitising of the people to the need live healthy lifestyle.

    “Cleanliness is next to Godliness. Again, health is wealth. We will carry out our responsibility with the little income we make. We will fumigate, sanitise and give access to potable water members of the community,” he said.

    Continuing, he said: “Roads are some of the major problems within the community. The council is committed to making some inner roads motorable.

    He praised Governor Akinwunmi Ambode for his support in completing Iyana-Ejigbo/Egbe and January 27 (Peter Agha) Roads which has reduced the gridlock experienced by commuters.

    “Also, construction of Lafenwa-Coker and Fadu Streets is ongoing. There will be street light on the two roads as Governor Ambode has directed all local government areas to key in to thelight up Lagos project.  “Twenty-three culverts have been constructed while 33 streets have been graded. Fifty citizens of the community have been trained as environmental officers to make the environment less dirty.

    “The Oke-afa Plank Market which has existed for over 30 years, will be reconstructed. After completion, the market promises to be a befitting legacy that successive administrations will be proud of.”

    He cited markets which include Tejusosho, Alade and Lawanson markets has been successfully reconstructed while Daleko, Ladipo, Mushin, Sabo and Ikorodu markets will soon undergo reconstruction.

    He said the council will  create more opportunities for empowerment and wealth creation for the people.

  • Making life better for people

    For the army of the unemployed, the available white-collar jobs cannot go around. To bridge the gaps, some lawmakers have been empowering the jobless with working tools. BISI OLADELE reports that the lawmaker representing Ibadan South East/North East Federal Constituency in the House of Representatives, Dapo Lam-Adesina, has provided empowerment facilities worth N30 million for members of his constituency.

    As the country tackles the menace of unemployment which resulted from lack of white-collar jobs, wealthy individuals and those in position of authority have been encouraging individuals, especially young school leavers, graduates and some others to redirect their attention from being job-seekers to job-creators and employers of labour.

    Lawmakers are not left out in the quest to empower members of their constituency through skill acquisition programmes and empowerment items.

    In the circumstances, the countrified town of Idi Ape sparkled as residents shirked all their commercial and other activities to converge on the Army Children’s School, Idi Ape, in Ibadan North-East Local Government Area.

    They gathered to join several distinguished guests who came from far and near to witness a unique moment when many members of the lawmaker’s constituency were empowered with various items to make them self-reliant and, possibly, employers of labour. For them, it was a rare opportunity to witness such an event.

    During the event, Dapo Lam-Adesina gave out empowerment items valued at N30 million to some of his constituents.

    Great crowd of members of his constituency witnessed the event which was described as unprecedented.

    Over 300 women, youths and unemployed graduates were empowered with start-up capital and tools by Hon. Lam-Adesina in Ibadan penultimate week.

    Lam-Adesina represents Ibadan South East/North East Federal Constituency at the House of Representatives.

    Some of the items he presented to some of the constituents included sewing machines, tricycles, motorcycles, grinding machines and start-up cash.

    Most of the beneficiaries received the gifts after undergoing a two-month vocational training under the Omo Oloore Empowerment Scheme.

    In addition to start-up cash, 146 sewing machines, 110 grinding machines, 17 tricycles and 40 motorcycles were given out to the beneficiaries.

    The lawmaker, who said that beneficiaries who received sewing machines and grinding machines were graduates of a skill acquisition scheme he set up two months earlier, explained that the empowerment programme was his way of giving back to the people and fulfilling some of the promises he made to them during his electioneering campaigns.

    Addressing the beneficiaries and other well-wishers at the programme held at the Army Children’s School, Idi Ape, in Ibadan North-East Local Government Area of Oyo State, the lawmaker revealed how the 256 beneficiaries had been trained by professionals from tailoring and pepper/cassava millers’ unions. He added that the trainers were also rewarded with cash gifts.

    He said: “We told them that we would be responsible and responsive representatives. Also because of the economic challenges facing our people lately, we believe that we in positions of authority should alleviate the sufferings of our people. It is part of our agenda to reach out to the grassroots, because it is not all of us that can occupy political offices and it is not all of us that will get white-collar jobs. We are trying to make people return to the good old days where people used their hands to make money.

    “We did a lot of training and it was time-intensive and we have put the trainees under registered associations.”

    The beneficiaries expressed gratitude to Lam-Adesina for the gesture.

    Describing him as a responsible and reliable politician, a beneficiary, Olutade Adigun, said the lawmaker has consistently remained a shining example to other youths in the country, adding that his integrity makes him dependable and reliable.

    “Hon. Lam-Adesina is very close to the voters. He bonds with the people. He does not just sit in Abuja and comes back only during elections. That is why you can see this crowd of supporters attending this empowerment programme. It is not all about giving money but about being a friend of his constituents,” he said.

    Aside the beneficiaries and well-wishers, the empowerment programme was attended by several leaders and members of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the two local government areas as well as some members of the State Executive of the party.

    They included the Chairman of the party in Oyo South Senatorial District, Prince Adefisoye Adekanye; the Caretaker Chairman, Ibadan North East Local Government Area, Mr Lekan Afuye;  Chief Ayo Eniade; Alhaji Mufutau Adisa and Chief Bolade Akinyemi among others.

    Adekanye commended Lam-Adesina for the empowerment initiative.

    Akinyemi also praised him, saying the APC was poised to improve the quality of life of Nigerians.

  • We didn’t lose struggle for freedom of our people, says Umana

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) governorship candidate in the April 11, 2015, election in Akwa Ibom State, Umana Umana, yesterday said despite the Supreme Court judgment affirming Governor Udom Emmanuel’s election, the battle to liberate Akwa Ibom people was irreversible.

    Umana, who led other chieftains of APC at a rally in support of the party’s House of Assembly candidate, Gabriel Akpan, for the March 12 rerun, also said the Supreme Court verdict cannot dampen the resolve of Akwa Ibom people to realise their dream of a free, liberated and prosperous state.

    He said the consciousness of the people to fight for their rights had been awakened, adding that the party didn’t lose the struggle for freedom of the people.

    “We didn’t lose the struggle for freedom of our people. Never again will anybody take our people for granted. Never again will anybody hold our people hostage. The consciousness of our people to stand up for their rights has been awakened. We fought a good fight.”

    According to Umana, in the course of the struggle, some people paid the supreme price.

    Umana said: “We lost over 30 people during the presidential and governorship elections. Notably, we lost Okon Uwah, a former deputy speaker, murdered by alleged PDP thugs. We must ensure that these patriots did not die in vain. I extend the condolences of our party to the families of the victims of  state sponsored electoral violence.

    “We had hoped that these families will have a sense of justice when we challenged the fraudulent governorship elections of April 11, 2015. But this was not to be. We couldn’t get the reprieve which would have consoled us and the bereaved families through the framework of our legal system.

    “I know that our people are justifiably angry and disappointed. I share in your disappointment and anger. But we should never lose hope, especially because we were not defeated. After the judgment of men, comes the judgment of God.  Those who have conspired against our people will be held to account by God.

    “Let’s thank God, for all things work together for good for them that love God. Our trust in God should never waiver, no matter what we see today. We will laugh last. God bless Akwa Ibom State. We may have moved on following the judgment of the Supreme Court but that does not change the fact that we had the most fraudulent and bloody elections in the history of our state.”

    Umana thanked the elders and leaders who stood by the party saying: “A big thank you to our leaders who stood by the people. Attempts to bribe and compromise them failed. History will note that they were men of integrity and honour who did not betray their people.  By their actions and example they demonstrated that we cannot all be bought with money.”

    Also speaking, a former Minister of Petroluem and member of APC’s Board of Trustees Atuekong Don Etiebet said the era of electoral impunity was over.

    He called on security operatives to play by the rules in the rerun election by remaining professional and non partisan in the discharge of their duties.

    He said: “Umana Umana is the governor the Supreme Court didn’t allow us to vote for. Don’t be discouraged because this is what happened in the march to freedom.”

    The state Chairman of APC, Dr. Amadu Attai, said despite the outcome of the Supreme Court, Umana remains the people’s governor and APC  the people’s party.

    Attai, however, called on Ibesikpo Asutan people to support the party’s candidate at the rerun.

    Others at the campaign train of the APC were the Senior Special Assistant to the President on National Assembly Matters, Senator Ita Enang; Director General of Umana’s campaign organisation, Soni Udom; Umana’s deputy governorship candidate, Ben Ukpong.

  • Benue massacre: Stop herdsmen before they wipe out our people, Idoma beg Buhari

    Benue massacre: Stop herdsmen before they wipe out our people, Idoma beg Buhari

    Following last week’s massacre of over 300 indigenes of Agatu Local Government Area of Benue State by suspected Fulani Herdsmen, indigenes of the affected areas in Benin, Edo State, yesterday called on the Federal Government to urgently deploy a detachment of soldiers to the affected communities to end the carnage.

    Dr Enoch Malachi, an indigene of the affected Local Government and medical practitioner who addressed the press, said the Idoma community in Edo State has dispatched a letter to President Muhammadu Buhari on the urgent need to deploy soldiers to the affected areas.

    The affected communities are Okokolo, Akwu, Ocholonya, Adagbo, Ugboku and Aila where the invading herdsmen destroyed property and farmland produce worth several millions of naira.

    Dr Malachi noted that it was necessary to write the letter to the president to put an end to the unwanted killings by the herdsmen. “Government must take drastic action to end what I may describe as the senseless and wanton killings by Fulani herdsmen.”

    He rued the fact that the spate of attacks has forced thousands of families to flee the communities for other Local Government Areas for safety resulting in a serious refugee and humanitarian crisis.

    “The Federal Government must take drastic action now in order to bring peace to Agatu Local Government Area. I don’t know why Fulani herdsmen have become militants. Our people are peace loving and we have accommodated the herdsmen for years, and today, they have turned against us.

    “The information reaching us now is that three villages have been completely razed down by these herdsmen. The inhabitants have been turned refugees and displaced. Soldiers are not anywhere there to protect the people.

    “We are calling on the Federal Government to immediately deploy a battalion of soldiers to these communities; if not, our people may be completely wiped out by these well-armed herdsmen.”

  • ‘Govt should care for people living with autism’

    Patrick Speech and Languages Centre, a group in charge of people living with autism, has called on the government to ensure  care for such people.

    The group also urged government to pass into law, a bill that will protect and care for them.

    Its founder, Mrs Dotun Akande, said government should help this category of people in the area of capacity building by assisting organisations in care of them and supporting families of such persons.

    Speaking in Lagos during  a press briefing to mark the Centre’s 10th anniversary, Mrs Akande said  autism is not a death sentence, rather such children need to be cared for,  integrated into the society and be mainstreamed into the education system.

    She said the centre has being of help to lots of children living in autism in various ways.

    “Over 42 autism children have been integrated and mainstreamed into the education system. We have cared for over 250 children out of which 160 have been enrolled into our programme at the centre,” she said.

    Mrs Akande noted that her centre has partnered with the Guaranty Trust Bank (GTB) in carrying out advocacy and awareness campaigns on autism.

    “The centre has also been at the forefront of creating awareness for Autism and other related developmental disabilities in the country, we were also at the forefront of providing training and educational services for parents. We have regularly brought in foreign facilitators to train and share their experiences worldwide and how these experiences can be adopted to a Nigerian model,” she said.

    The representative of the GTB’s Cooperate Social Representative Unit, Mrs Tolulope Onipede, said the organisation is on an advocacy and awareness campaign programme for parents who have children living in autism to be able to know what actions to take.

    “We are on advocacy and awareness campaign to let everyone know that autism is not a death sentence; people living in autism can be properly integrated into the society if they are cared for and given adequate training,” she said.

     

  • We regret killing many people — Suspects

    We regret killing many people — Suspects

    In the last eight years, Idowu Tijani and his terror group have allegedly killed no fewer than nine persons in the Ijoko Community of Ado-Odo/Ota Local Government Area, Ogun State.

    While their exploits in crime lasted, they were the nemesis of residents and members of a faction involved in the tussle for the traditional stool in Ijoko.

    The terror unleashed on the community by Tijani and his blood-thirsty gang ended when the police arrested his lieutenants, Rasaq Ogundairo aka ‘Babalawo Poly’ and Raimi Ogunkunle, 25, after a trail.

    Three cut-to-size single barrel pistols, two double barrel pistols, one pump action gun with 14 cartridges, five cutlasses and charms were recovered from the gang.

    Parading the suspects on Monday at the Ogun State Police Command, Eleweran, Abeokuta, the State Commissioner for Police, Mr Abdulmajid Ali, disclosed that a team of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad stormed the gang’s hideout in Ijoko and arrested Ogundairo. He said: “The arrest of the suspect led to the arrest of two members of the gang. The leader of the gang, Idowu Tijani, confessed to have killed four people, including Soje, Babajeje and Agali in the Ijoko area.”

    Speaking with The Nation, Tijani regretted killing many people in the community in the last eight years. In tears, he said: “May God forgive me my atrocities, and I want to advise those who foment trouble to desist because it does not pay. Even if my arrest leads to death, well, that is my fate. But I regret all the killings that I have carried out so far.”

    Tijani explained that he took to crime to avenge the death of his four-year-old son, Fathiu, who was allegedly killed during the violence that engulfed the Ijoko community in the wake of the Obaship crisis. “Oba Matanmi is a younger brother to my mother. I was not involved in land-grabbing activities because I am a furniture maker and married with four children. I have a workshop in my house, which I built a few years ago,” he said.

    “On a particular day about eight years ago, some members of Tobalase group who are loyalists of one Oba Ogunseye stormed my house while I had gone out to watch a football match at a nearby field. They destroyed my house before setting it ablaze, and a portion of the building fell on my son, Fathiu and killed him. Three days after the incident, I took my gun and headed to the home of one Monsusru Osoba aka ‘Olori Odo’. I met him in front of his house and shot him but he escaped into his room where I finished him up.

    ”A lot of people were arrested in connection with the murder of Olori Odo but I was not arrested. I also killed Soje during a fight in the community. Soje and his group attacked me during the visit of Olota of Ota to Sango Secondary School. Soje tried to shoot me but the trigger refused to pull, so I quickly shot him dead and ran away.

    “I did not intend to kill people, but the obaship tussle between Oba Matanmi and Oba Ogunseye was responsible for the attack on my house at No. 17, Ago Giwa Street, Ijoko which led to the death of my son made me to embark on a killing spree.”

    Tijani said he got his gun from his late boss, adding that his arrest was due to a row he had with Rasaq Ogundairo. “I got the gun I used from my late boss called Tunji. Rasaq (Ogundairo) is just like a brother to me but he suddenly turned to armed robbery and I reported him to Oba Matanmi, who asked me to inform the police. Rasaq and one of his friends were arrested and made to sign and undertaking not to engage in robbery again. After the police released them, Rasaq condemned me for instigating their arrest and vowed to reveal how I killed Olori Odo, hence, my eventual arrest.”

    Ogundairo, 25, who confessed to being a member of Eiye Confraternity, said he had killed some people, including one Tosin and Dare.

    He narrated how friends in the Ijoko neighbourhood initiated him into cultism. “I am a member of Eiye Confraternity. We have been terrorising Ijoko community and killing people for sometime now. I joined the cult group about two years ago when some boys in the neighbourhood initiated me through beating and alcoholic drink.

    “I have killed so many people, including one Tosin and Dare, who are members of a rival cult group called Aiye Confraternity. The duo are deadly too, and we used to hunt for Aiye members because they can kill us too. Whenever we attack Aiye members, they would run away and abandon their motorcycles and sundry items and sell them.”

    Ogundairo traced his descent into crime. ”I am called ‘Babalawo Poly’ because my father is a herbalist, but, regrettably, the charms found on me could not protect me from being arrested.

    “I also partake in land-grabbing activities and I work with Oba Matanmi’s group to visit construction sites in the community. I don’t know whether my parents are aware of my arrest because they had warned me not to get involved in crime, but I did not heed their warning until I was caught in the act. The reality of my parents’ homily has since dawned on me.

    The third member of the gang, Ogunkunle, also gave a confession. He said: ”I am neither a member of Eiye Confraternity nor Aiye member, but I belong to Ogundairo’s gang. My father is one of the baales installed by Oba Matanmi. I have never killed in my life and I regret all my actions.

  • How people helped me get over my broken marriage, by Princess

    How people helped me get over my broken marriage, by Princess

    Damilola Adekoya, aka Princess is a popular Nigerian comedienne. Surprisingly, she also suffers pains, despite being in a profession that demands that she make people laugh. The thespian turned comedienne recently admitted to being traumatised by the breakup of her seven month old marriage contracted on May 8, 2013. As she admits, “Three years ago when I had a broken marriage, I was psychologically down, but it was the same thing that brought me down that became my strength; that is one of the psychological powers of comedy- it heals. People around also helped me in recovering from the most challenging period of my life.”

    Inside sources at the time revealed that the union was fraught with misunderstandings and disagreements, which often demanded the intervention of friends and relatives. Princess herself debunked the notion of a happy union at the breakup when she said, “We have been having issues since the wedding, but we still remained together hoping that we would be able to work it out. But apparently, we couldn’t work it out, hence the reason for our separation.”

    Although quite a number of reasons were rumoured to have caused the split between the celebrity and her not-so popular ex, hopefully, she is in a better place emotionally, although she has not been romantically linked to anyone in recent times.

  • ‘People use our platform as a yardstick to invest in the music industry’

    ‘People use our platform as a yardstick to invest in the music industry’

    The 2015 edition of Top Naija Music Awards has unveiled the new kings and queens of the Nigerian music industry at an event held  last Saturday.

    Speaking on the motivation behind the awards, the CEO, Paul Oghogherie, said it is to encourage talented music artistes in the music industry. “When I meet artistes and they tell me the challenges and the requirements of the industry, I feel obliged to encourage them.

    “I feel like engaging them in something so that they can shun vices. So the awards are just an avenue at which artistes will be pushed to work, if they believe they have a place in the industry they tend to belong.”

    According to Oghoghorie, the awards have been able to enhance artistes’ career in securing recording deal.”  I could recall a particular story of someone, who the label had an eye on. They talked to him when he was nominated, but were not aware if he was winning the category was nominated in. And the next I heard was that he’s going to UK to sign a recording deal.

    “This implies that people are using our platforms as a yardstick to invest in artistes, and  are taking them seriously.”

    Oritsetimeyin Arueyingho who won the Stardom category describes the award as being a feather in the cap of her brand as an artiste. “Getting this nomination is like setting a pace for me in the industry. I believe it’s going to take me far beyond imaginations.”

  • Not the people’s Generals

    Nations do not joke with the funding of their armed forces. This is why in most cases, Defence gets a huge chunk of the budget. By setting aside a large sum for Defence, a country is preparing its military for any eventuality. A nation’s military is not built in a day, it is developed over time and it takes successive administrations to work at it. A nation that waits until it has to fight a war before it builds its military is only courting disaster.

    The military plays a crucial role in the life of a nation. It is the bulwark against external aggression. So, for the military to defend the territorial integrity of a nation, it must be well equipped and its personnel well catered for. When soldiers are well kitted they too will give of their best. To whom much is given, the saying goes, much is expected. But where soldiers are not motivated, they cannot be expected to perform wonders. They will flee from the enemy as we have been seeing some of our soldiers do in the fight against Boko Haram.

    A soldier is expected to go to war with arms and ammunition and in these days of technological advancement, he must also be schooled in the use of high-tech weapons and other state-of-the-art war toys. No nation sends its soldiers to war with biscuits in their hands because the battlefield is not for wining and dining; it is for fighting. During the Civil War, our soldiers discharged themselves well, fighting to keep Nigeria one, but in the last three years, these same soldiers were until recently finding it difficult to get their bearings right in the encounter with Boko Haram.

    Why will a well trained army like ours run away from a ragtag bunch of  Boko Haram elements? Why? We now know why. The funds for the acquisition of arms and ammunition and other war equipment were spent on frivolities by those charged with securing us. The Dasukigate has opened our eyes to what happened to the $2.1 billion meant for the purchase of war planes and other weapons to fight Boko Haram. Instead of spending the money on what it was meant for, the former National Security Adviser (NSA), Col Sambo Dasuki, resorted to sharing it out among politicians and friends of the immediate past administration.

    The poor soldiers sent to fight Boko Haram were not given anything to defend themselves. When they retreated from battle, they were tagged cowards and court martialled. Some were sentenced to death; some were jailed and some were dismissed. The generals who sent them to battle without weapons derided them. Immediate past Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh, who along with 19 others, are to be probed by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) for their alleged roles in arm purchases for the Air Force between 2007 and last year, once said that the soldier’s oath to defend his country is sacrosanct. A soldier did not take oath to run away from battle, he said. Yes, that is true to a certain extent because there is a condition precedent to be fulfilled for a soldier to lay down his life for his country. Unfortunately, Badeh did not address this condition, which is  the authority must provide the soldier the instruments of war to be able to defend himself and country

    Did Badeh as CDS ensure that these soldiers were well armed before sending them to battle? If he did, he would have been justified in setting up the court martial, which sent some soldiers to death for alleged mutiny. But if he did not, he should be made to face the consequences of his action – the killing of innocent souls by sending them to battle without equipping them. A general is expected to look out for his men and not to hasten their death by ill-preparing them for battle. As President Muhammadu Buhari said on the Hausa Service of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) last December 28, the soldiers were provoked to mutiny by the actions of their bosses, who were only interested in catering for themselves.

    ‘’The government at that time sent the soldiers to the battlefield without arms and ammunition to prosecute the war. That was what led some of them to mutiny. They were arrested and detained because of this’’, the president said. Who is guilty between the soldiers and the generals? It is criminal to send a soldier to war without giving him weapons. It is heinous for a general to now turn around to punish the soldier for the  failure to do his own job. It is the generals’ job to provide their soldiers with guns. Why didn’t they do so? What is their defence to this criminal conspiracy to deliberately waste the lives of these young men?

    This is why the probe of Badeh, Air Marshal M.D. Umar, Air Marshal A.N. Amosu, Maj Gen E.R. Chioba, Air Vice Marshal (AVM) I.A. Balogun, AVM A.G. Tsakr, AVM A.G. Idowu, AVM A.M. Mamu, AVM O.T. Oguntoyinbo, AVM T. Omenyi, AVM J.B. Adigun, AVM R.A. Ojuawo, AVM J.A. Kayode-Beckley, Air Commodore S.A. Yushau, Air Commodore A.O. Ogunjobi, Air Commodore G.M.D. Gwani, Air Commodore S.O. Makinde, Air Commodore A.Y. Lassa, Col N. Ashinze and Lt Col M.S. Dasuki, is welcomed. Let them face the EFCC panel and tell the world what they did with the billions of naira that passed through their hands for the purchase of military aircraft. Did they spend the money judiciously?

    We want to know what happened because that is the only way to prevent a recurrence and ensure that in future the military lacks nothing to confront internal and external aggression. If Boko Haram had been an external aggressor, where will we be today as a country? In his valedictory speech last July 30, Badeh, among other remarks, said : ‘’Over the years, the military was neglected and under-equipped to ensure the survival of certain regimes…’’ But when he had the opportunity to change things as CDS, what did he do?  Nigerians are wiser than that. He cannot pull the wool over our eyes.