Tag: rescue

  • ‘Reps rescue Nigeria from disintegration’

    ‘Reps rescue Nigeria from disintegration’

    Supporters of the newly-registered All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ondo State at the weekend celebrated the birth of the party.

    At the ceremony hosted by a lawmaker representing Akure North/South Constituency in the House of Representatives, Ifedayo Abegunde (aka Abena), excited party stalwarts, well-dressed, danced to Juju music.

    Dignitaries included Senator Nimbe Farunkanmi, Prof. Olu Aderounmu, Princes Olu Adegboro, Solagbade Amodeni, Chief Wale Omojuwa and Mr. Adebambo Odoro.

    Others are Otunba Bunmi Alo, Tayo Abidakun, Messrs Gboyega Adedipe, Idowu Otetubi, Saka Yusuf, Olorunnimbe Ameto, Dr. K. Shaba, Mr. Ade Adetimehin and Tunji Fatukasi.

    Abegunde, who spoke to reporters after the celebration, said the nation would have been consumed by crises but for the doggedness and the fighting spirit of the House of Representatives.

    He said the current leadership of the House and its members have taken it as a duty to ensure that Nigeria remains an indivisible entity.

    Mr. Abegunde, the Chairman, House Committee on National Emergency Agency (NEMA), said the lower chamber would not fold its arms and allow desperate politicians to throw Nigeria into crises.

    He said: “But for the proactive measures taken by the National Assembly on some crises, the country would have been in a mess now.

  • Police rescue ex-army general

    THE police in Ughelli, Ughelli North Local Government Area of Delta State at the weekend rescued an ex-soldier, Maj-Gen Peter Obukohwo Unode.

    Unode was abducted on Wednesday. His kidnappers demanded N50million.

    It was learnt that the kidnappers were waiting for the ransom, when the police stormed their den and rescued the victim.

    A police source said no ransom was paid.

    Reliving his ordeal, Unuode said: “I was with a friend, S.O Oyibo, who deals in bamboo sticks, on the Ughelli/Port-Harcourt Expressway.

    “Along the way, we saw a Toyota Sienna parked close to the caravan, where the bamboos were kept.

    “And we saw the owner of the vehicle defecating close to the caravan.

    “We cautioned the man and went our way.

    “After a while, we saw Oyibo discussing with the man and as I moved closer, they stopped the conversation and the man left.

    “After a few minutes, the vehicle returned and two boys emerged with pump action guns and they were saying; na you say make our oga pack shit.

    “There were three of them in the car and that was how I was bundled away through Amekpa.

    “I was blindfolded. As we were going, they said I should give them N50 million, otherwise they would waste me. I told them I didn’t have that kind of money.

    “They took me to their hideout; which was in a community.

    “People in the area were speaking Isoko language; the boys guiding me were also conversing in Isoko.

    “I heard the sound of vehicles and motorcycles; the place was close to a busy road.

    “From the day they took me until I was rescued by the police, I refused food. I lived on water all through.

    “Later, they reduced the ransom to N20 million. They later reduced it to N5 million.

    “They tortured me. I was bitten by mosquitoes because I was chained to a chair.”

  • Police rescue kidnapped Spaniard

    A Spaniard, Jose Anthonio Murili Tureillo, who was abducted at a hotel in Benin City, has been rescued by the police in Edo State.

    Tureillo was abducted last month after he was lured into the country by his Nigerian girlfriend.

    Commissioner of Police Foluso Adebanjo, who announced this at a briefing gave the name of the girlfriend as Okafor Ada Joy, aged 28.

    The police commissioner said Ada arranged Jose’s kidnap and made him withdraw all the money he had in his account.

    Adebanjo said the suspects forced their victim to call his sister in Spain to send €2000 to them before he would be allowed to return to Spain.

    He said the sister contacted INTERPOL which, in turn, got in touch with the Nigeria INTERPOL and the state police command.

    The state police boss said the victim has been handed over to INTERPOL while the two suspects would be prosecuted in Lagos State.

    A 22-year-old man, who allegedly killed his father-in- law three years ago at Afuze in Owan East Local Government , was paraded.

    Also paraded was a 20-year- old Fulani herdsman, who allegedly conspired with his colleague to kill Idirisa Jubril, a co-herdsman, to enable them steal his cows.

    Two suspects, who allegedly raped their 16-year-old Facebook girlfriend after drugging her, were also paraded.

    Others paraded were said four kidnapped suspects, seven armed robbery suspects and four cultists.

    In Anambra State, a businessman, Michael Mogbu, has been rescued by the police.

    Mogbu was kidnapped on Sunday at his home in Oraifite Street, Awada, in Idemili North Local Government.

  • How we’ll rescue abducted French family, by IG

    The Federal Government will collaborate with Cameronian and other international security allies to track down the kidnappers of a French family of seven in Northern Cameroun, Inspector General of Police Mohammed Abubakar said yesterday.

    He spoke while receiving members of the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) at the Force Headquarters, Abuja.

    Abubakar said he was in touch with the Camerounian diplomats in Nigeria and that both countries would partner to rescue the abducted French nationals.

    The police chief said: “The French President did not accuse Nigeria. What I do know is that some persons were kidnapped in Cameroon. I am in touch with the Cameroonian Ambassador here in Nigeria.

    So, we are working jointly to arrest the people. However, you will not expect us to discuss details of such issues on the pages of newspapers.”

    State Security Service (SSS) spokesman Marilyn Ogar also yesterday said it would be premature to comment on the incident, stressing that the SSS would rather hold on to its traditional mode of secret policing.

    Nigeria’s borders have been put on the red alert to arrest kidnappers of the six French children, who were abducted from Cameroun and taken into the country.

    The Acting Comptroller-General of the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS), Mr. Rilwan Bala Musa, said this in Maiduguri, the Borno State capital yesterday.

    Cameroun has also confirmed that the victims of the abduction in Dabanga – a Cameroun village 10 kilometre, off Nigeria border in Borno – were taken across the border into Nigeria.

    They were kidnapped on Tuesday by armed men on motorbike on their way from a trip to Cameroun’s Waza National Park.

    “The kidnappers have crossed the Nigerian border with their hostages,” Junior Cameroun Minister Joseph Dion Ngute said in a statement late on Tuesday. He added that security in the Dabanga area had been reinforced and “urgent measures” put in place to find the hostages.

    It is the first case of foreigners being snatched in the mostly Muslim north of Cameroon, a former French colony. Speaking on French television yesterday, French Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said all the evidence pointed to Boko Haram being behind the kidnapping, but there did not appear to be a direct link with France’s intervention in Mali.

    Immigration boss Musa said: ‘We have already sent alert messages across the borders in the Northeast and all other borders of the nation. We have told our men to be on the alert. We have given the border posts all the support they need to tackle them whether in the day or at night.”

    The Immigration boss spoke in Maiduguri after a visit to Governor Kashim Shettima. He was in the state as part of his tour of border facilities around the country.

    Gunmen, who abducted six foreigners off the Bayelsa coastline, yesterday demanded a ransom of N200 million for their freedom.

    A Russian, three Ukrainians and two Indian sailors were abducted on Sunday when their vessel was attacked off the coastline.

    Bayelsa police spokesman Fidelis Odunna confirmed the development in a telephone interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Yenagoa.

    Odunna said that the Police Anti-kidnapping squad was already trailing the suspects to secure the victims’ freedom.

    “We have already dispatched our men to track down the kidnappers.

    “Contact has been established with them and they are asking for N200 million,” he said.

    Bayelsa Governor Seriake Dickson recently signed into law a bill prescribing death penalty for kidnapping.

    “French special forces came in yesterday from N’Djamena to help with the investigation. They left yesterday and came back today,” Augustine Fonka Awa, Governor of Cameroon’s Far North Region, told Reuters by telephone.

    He declined to say how many French military officials arrived from their regional base in Chadian capital, which is about 60 km from where the French tourists were taken.

    Asked to confirm or deny whether France had sent special forces, a spokesman at the Defence Ministry in Paris said that their presence was unfounded rumour.

    “French gendarmes visited the site of the kidnapping yesterday in coordination with Cameroonian police to assess the situation and were protected by French military,” he said.

    Two Yaounde-based agents from the French DGSE foreign intelligence agency were dispatched to the kidnap zone to work with Cameroon’s secret service and a French army helicopter was sent to help look for the hostages, French BFM TV reported.

  • Police rescue landlord’s son, 14, kidnapped by tenant

    If not for Providence, little Daniel Oke would have been sold by now.

    Last Saturday, his father’s tenant, Raymond Quadri, allegedly abducted the 14-year-old boy and kept him with his girlfriend in Ikorodu.

    He was said to have taken Daniel to Ikorodu pending when he would sell the boy for N2 million.

    Daniel has been been reunited with his parents at their 51, Lasisi Ige Street home in Ikotun, a Lagos suburb.

    Quadri, who is in police custody, was said to have cashed in on his relationship with the Okes to carry out his plan.

    Sources told The Nation that Quadri took the boy to his girlfriend in Ikorodu, throwing the Okes into despair.

    Oke said: “My son left home with no trace of where he went until we were hinted that Quadri took him away. I never in my life would think that Quadri could do this kind of thing to my family because I took him like my son and relaxed with him. He would come in and play with my children. He would eat and drink with us in my house.”

    When Oke raised the alarm over his son’s disappearance, two women told him that they saw Daniel with Quadri at the BRT Bus Stop, Ikotun.

    Oke immediately reported the matter to the police, which swung into action by inviting Quadri for interrogation. But he was said to have insisted that he knew nothing about the boy’s disappearance.

    “I almost thought I was accusing him falsely until a senior police officer started asking him questions on his relationship with my son and the two women that saw them last at the bus stop,” Oke said, adding:

    “He would always send my son to buy him petrol for the generating set he uses at his football-viewing centre, but I was not comfortable with his lifestyle when it comes to money. He lives big. In fact, at a point, I asked my son not to go to his centre anymore because I was uncomfortable with how he got all that money he lavishes all the time.”

    Daniel’s friend told The Nation: “He once asked my friend and me to think of four things we wanted most in our life that he would do them for us.”

    A source told The Nation that Quadri later confessed, saying: “The police formation at Ikotun which, on a tip-off, invited him for investigations. It was when he refused to cooperate that his case was handed over to men of the SARS, Ikeja for proper investigation and prosecution”.

    Quadri reportedly took the SARS to the Ikorodu residence of his girlfriend where Daniel was rescued. Quadri, it was learnt, planned to sell the boy for N2 million.

    Reliving his experience, Daniel told The Nation: “I was inside the room throughout with one sister (the girlfriend), not sure of what next to expect. I’m happy to be back home.”

    A neighbour spoke about Quadri’s relationship with children in the neighbourhood: “Raymond is an easy-going man who used to play with little children. He would buy biscuits and ‘Bobo’, a popular fruit juice, for them. But he has been living big. Though he operates a TV viewing centre here, his real source of income is suspicious.”

    The Lagos State Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), Ngozi Braid, a Deputy Superintendent (DSP), said the matter was being investigated.

  • Dry Lips: Balm & gloss to the rescue

    Dry Lips: Balm & gloss to the rescue

    CHAPPED and dry lips are common during the harmattan. These occur when your lips do not have enough moisture to keep them supple all day long. For your lips to remain soft throughout this harmattan season, always protect your lips with a lip balm or gloss.

     

    Some rules to adhere to

    First, the golden rule: do not lick your lips consistently. This can lead to dry and cracked lips, which will definitely result in chapped lips, because the moisture on the lips would have been licked off and the lips would then be exposed

    Use a lip balm or gloss to help seal-in moisture.

    Exfoliate weekly. This will peel off the weathered outer covering or layer.

    Go for lip balms or gloss that are thick and that contain moisturising.

    And for chapped lips, medicated balm or gloss that has menthol is suitable. This will relieve pains.

    For homemade lip balm- gently melt African shear butter (ori) in hot water, add the coconut oil to the shear butter and stir until melted, and remove from the boiling water pot. Now add your vitamin E oil and mix in while still hot. Pour into your container of choice and let cool. You will be surprised and amazed at the result and the soothing effect. Give it a try!

  • Beyond Mrs Okonjo’s rescue

    Beyond Mrs Okonjo’s rescue

    With denials heaped upon denials, some even amounting to classic refutation, we may never know whether ransom was truly paid to secure the release of Professor Kamene Okonjo, the abducted mother of the Finance minister, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala. And if anything was paid, we may still never know for sure just how much, perhaps after protracted haggling, was eventually paid. Was it N10 million, as some sources say, or was it a little over that figure? Indeed, how many of us would be so stouthearted as not to yield to the blackmail of parting with money to secure the release of a loved one? If a man could resist blackmail when the ‘merchandise’ is an octogenarian, could he resist without panicking if the commodity were his young bride?

    So, whether anything was paid or not, the Finance minister’s family must be relieved that their mother is now free and safe. The trauma will undoubtedly live with them for a long time, and the Goodluck Jonathan government, if it is capable of any delicate feeling, will feel the humiliation of a distasteful strike hitting close to home. At least the victim is now free and safe; therefore to blazes with morality and principles. Few are, however, going to believe nothing was paid, especially judging from the manner Queen Okonjo strolled into freedom. As the police acknowledged, the elderly woman was released, not rescued. In spite of the avalanche of security agents that descended on the small town of Ogwashi-Uku in Delta State, Professor Okonjo was held by the kidnappers for about five days. The kidnappers evidently got in contact with the family, and some sort of discussions took place between the kidnappers and the Finance minister’s family. Those discussions, or as the police elegantly put it, pressures, led to the release of the 82-year-old queen.

    The police may not be equipped to fight the sophisticated crimes they frequently confront, but in the case of this high-profile kidnap, they at least honestly admitted some of the details surrounding the ugly incident. They were not too keen to entertain the fanciful theories some commentators were bandying about in which they suggest that what was essentially a simple kidnapping was in fact a classic political weapon to force the government to embrace wrong policies. It would be far-fetched indeed for any group to hope it could compel the Finance minister alone, no matter how influential she is, to redirect government policy on fuel subsidy payments, or modify any other policy for that matter, simply because a close family member had been abducted. The police believed Queen Okonjo was kidnapped for ransom, and they said so simply and plainly. They were also honest enough to admit she was released rather than rescued, though some dramatic shootouts a little removed from the actual kidnapping were reported to have taken place, leading to the death of an alleged kidnap kingpin.

    What humiliates every Nigerian is not just the helplessness he feels in the face of bold and innovative criminal gangs, for which the poorly equipped, distracted and disoriented police are sometimes unfairly blamed. Nor is the problem just one of a lacklustre presidency that appears increasingly incapable of responding structurally to the complex challenges of the times. I think that more than anything, the problem is that this government, like all the ones before it, is negligent in appreciating the gravity of the problems confronting it and in summoning the willpower and wisdom to respond to them.

    The federal government, which unadvisedly retains total control over law enforcement agencies (See Box), should naturally and agilely respond to security breaches like kidnapping with all the means at its disposal. Instead, it has right from the beginning treated kidnapping leisurely and with indiscernible air of resignation. It displays indignation only when children and top government officials and their families are victims, as if one Nigerian is less human than the other. The Okonjo-Iweala’s mum’s kidnapping deeply embarrassed the presidency; but surely even the government could not claim to be inured to the anomalousness of deploying, as it were, an armada to tackle a rather simple case. The security agencies not only overwhelmed the town in search of the kidnappers, by arresting 63 people in one fell swoop, they became almost irrational. Once again, for an admittedly good cause, and as they are wont, government agents exhibited the idiosyncratic excesses that tend to undermine the citizenship of Nigerians. It was lazy, reckless and counterproductive to herd so many Nigerians into detention in order to prise one doubtful tip from them. The net was disrespectfully cast too wide. But I fear that government officials will miss this nuanced point.

    More salient, however, is the Jonathan government’s disconcerting lack of appreciation of the foundations upon which a government must anchor its policies and responses. No one will believe ransom was not paid for the release of Mrs Okonjo because the Jonathan government has not shown the will and wisdom to make it a cardinal policy not to negotiate with terrorists and kidnappers, and to make it unlawful for anyone to do so privately or otherwise. By announcing its readiness to negotiate with Boko Haram Islamic fundamentalist group, the government showed it lacked the spine to stand its ground for the things that ennoble humanity. It has, therefore, become convenient for the police to feign ignorance of negotiations with kidnappers, as they did in the Okonjo kidnap saga. According to them, they have a policy of not negotiating with kidnappers, and were thus not part of whatever negotiations took place between the Finance minister’s family and the kidnappers.

    Kidnapping will continue to flourish in one form or another for as long as there is no government courageous enough to draw a red line against that crime. The lowly will be abducted, as the high and mighty will fall victim. Kidnapped women will be violated, with families keeping mum over the cruel fate that would befall their loved ones, and children will be brutalised and traumatised. Some will lose their lives, and some parts of the country will remain tense, insecure and volatile, despoiled by kidnappers, its populace dehumanised by government agents who can’t tell the difference between citizen and alien, freedom and servitude, and between democracy and autocracy. Above all, knowing how alone they are, victims’ families will strenuously ignore the impotent government and enter into amicable and productive negotiations with kidnappers.

    The only option left for victims of kidnapping, such as Brig Oluwole Rotimi’s family, is to appeal to the government to deploy as much resources as it cheerfully did in the Professor Okonjo case. Government officials said pressure on the kidnappers, not ransom, led to the release of the abducted queen. The people would like to see more of that pressure applied in subsequent kidnap cases, for kidnapping will not cease overnight, especially given the report that ransom was paid to secure the release of the powerful Finance minister’s mum. If the powerful could pay ransom, so reasoned the populace, who could withstand the kidnappers?

    If only the Jonathan presidency could see the futility of its attitude towards kidnapping (plausible deniability) and terrorism (constructive engagement), it would appreciate why it needs a backbone to fight those twin crimes with the enlightened and principled doggedness great governments are known for. If he finally decides to stand and fight, it will be bloody, it will even expose the weaknesses of his security machine and publicise the incompetence of some of his men, and it will test his nerves. But in the end, as history ineluctably underscores, sometimes in surreal imagery too powerful to put into words, he would succeed, and his government, which has failed so disastrously to regenerate the country economically and re-engineer it politically, would be defined by the courage with which he met the most important security challenges of his day.

  • Jonathan orders rescue of Okonjo-Iweala’s mum

    Jonathan orders rescue of Okonjo-Iweala’s mum

    Police special team, soldiers deployed in Delta

    President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday directed security agencies to rescue Prof. Kamene Okonjo, the kidnapped octogenarian mother of Finance Minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.

    Dr. Jonathan has returned to Abuja after the funeral of his younger brother, Meni, in Bayelsa State.

    A massive manhunt for the kidnappers, who were yet to contact the family as at 7.30pm last night, has begun. In the battle to rescue Mrs Okonjo are the police, the State Security Service (SSS) and the Intelligence units of the Armed Forces.

    The family is said to be worried over the fragile health of the retired Professor of Sociology.

    The Ministry of Finance was virtually shut down as a result of the incident.

    The Minister relocated to Delta, it was gathered.

    “We might not have been able to establish motive, but it is a clear case of kidnap,” police spokesman Frank Mba told AFP, adding that “the police have already launched a massive manhunt for the perpetrators of the crime.

    A source said: “The SSS, the police and Intelligence units of the Army, Air Force and Navy are all involved in the efforts to locate Mrs. Okonjo.

    “We are still trying to identify where the old woman was taken to by the fleeing suspects. We will try our best to rise to this challenge.

    “The President has directed all the security agencies to rescue the victim in a tactical manner to avoid being hurt.”

    A police source in Delta said a crack team of detectives from Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital, has been deployed in Delta to track the kidnappers.

    The source, who pleaded not to be named because of what he called the sensitivity of the matter, said: “The kidnappers are yet to get in touch with the family. We are awaiting their call. I am quite sure that they will soon reach out to the family.

    “The security agencies are liaising with the family to get some clues and also give an update on their efforts. But the family prefers a low-profile approach to the rescue operation.”

    The Okonjo family is said to be worried about the health of its matriarch.

    Another source said: “For quite some time, the health of the aged mother of the minister has been fragile. And this gives a serious worry to the Minister because she was not allowed access to her drugs before she was kidnapped.

    “The situation is tense in the family because of fears that her health might deteriorate.”

    Responding to a question, the source added: “We are anxious about her health. That is why the family has been unusually quiet. We want to leave this issue out of the media as much as possible, until the situation is sorted out.

    “It is quite harrowing and emotionally challenging. If you can keep this off the media, we will appreciate it. That is why all the aides of the minister and associates are not picking calls. The emotional trauma is too much.”

    Early yesterday, activities at the Ministry of Finance were virtually paralysed.

    An official of the ministry said: “We were all devastated; we could not work effectively because the woman has been hardworking and highly reform-oriented. It is sad that the mother of such a patriotic Nigerian could suffer this kind of fate.”

    Sources in Delta said Prof. Chukuka Okonjo, the Obi of Ogwushi-Ukwu, the husband of the kidnapped mother of the minister, has been “a difficult Very Important Person (VIP) to manage for the police.”

    He is believed to have rejected all entreaties for security detail to be provided for him and his wife.

    He is also opposed to the activities of the vigilance group in his palace, it was gathered.

    When he travelled to Nasarawa, where he was at the time of his wife’s kidnap on Sunday, he is believed to have timed down the police’s attempt to provide him an orderly.

    The Minister set her worries aside and reported for work in her office yesterday – although briefly. She received some guests and made telephone calls.

    An official of the ministry said: “Since she came to work today it is likely she was in Abuja at the weekend when the news of the kidnapping broke.”

     

  • Job  hunting: Tie & dye to the  rescue

    Job hunting: Tie & dye to the rescue

    Dyeing  has become a big business, providing jobs for many. Experts say it has the capacity to reduce pressure on the labour market, writes AKINOLA AJIBADE

     

    For job seekers, opportunities abound in the tie and dye industry. The industry is very large and accommodative of new entrants. It doesn’t require certification just the skill which can be acquired on the job. Aside the production of the materials — kampala, batik, and adire — there is a need for marketers and, may be exporters, of the finished products which enjoy patronage in Nigeria and beyond.

    Adire, batik and kampala can be used for many things. However, they are mainly used in making clothes. They are also used as bedsheets, curtains and finishings for homes and offices for aesthetics. Given their variety of uses these days, both within and outside the country, the demand for the materials has increased with supply taking the back seat because that end of the chain is occupied mainly by ageing workforce begging for new hands.

    Against this backdrop, the industry will welcome anyone who desire to come in as their are many windows of opportunity. Aside job creation, experts believe the industry can boost foreign exchange earnings if properly harnessed.

    Although many have ventured into the trade in recent times, to earn a living and reduce the pressure on the labour market, the industry still needs more hands. Graduates, school leavers and even those without formal education can find their niches in the industry.

    Experts said despite the limitless opportunities it offers for job seekers, the jobs cut across social strata. There’s something for every one, no matter his/her qualification. Anyone venturing into the trade can become an employer of labour in no time. They advised the unemployed laying siege to offices for white collar jobs to take a chance with the trade. they assured that any new entrant would not regret it.

    According to them, it is a good means livelihood which provides substantial income daily. Moreover, both skilled and unskilled workers can create jobs. The jobs are not only in the tie and dye sector; textile manufacturers, dealers in clothing materials, producers of dyes and marketers benefit, from the industry.

    What does it take to become a tie and dye expert? According to industry experts, the art of making Adire or Kampala is simple and flexible once people adhere to certain rules guiding it which they can’t espouse on the pages newspaper.

    One of them, the Managing Director, Tye and Dye Limited, Mr Tayo Adebayo, said the market is expanding by the day. He said his National Certificate of Education (NCE) certificate could not fetch him a good job, hence, his decision to go into the production of adire and batik.

    He said he has overcome the initial challenge of getting customers, adding that people from diverse backgrounds come to his Ibadan office to give him jobs.

    He said: “The proceeds from the job are modest, but I have helped in training more than 100 people in the past five years. Some of my students are university and polytechnic graduates, who embraced the art to create jobs for themselves. While some of them have opened their own shops, others are working from their homes to meet customers’orders. By and large, they have got a means of livelihood which I think will prevent them from depending on relations or parents for survival.”

    He said the art of making adire is simple, arguing that people who want to venture into the business must have a knack for colours, be observant with a higher level of concentration. He said if the colours are not properly mixed, it would affect the production.

    Adebayo said adire first emerged in Abeokuta, a town noted for cotton production, weaving and indigo-dyeing in the 19th century.

    He said adire oniko is believed to be the oldest adire method, stating that Yoruba and other West Africans taken to the US as slaves were said to have been familiar with the design.

    On how to make designs, he said: “Areas of the fabric are tightly tied with thread (originally raffia, later cotton) to produce simple decorative designs. Several methods have traditionally been use. One of them is called Bullseye. The centre of the fabric is found and then the whole piece is twisted and tied, or the fabric is pleated with or without folding into segments and tied; then the fabric is dyed. The technique is quick, easy, and inexpensive to produce. It is so ubiquitous dyers call the design ‘Tom, Dick and Harry.’”

    A more complicated version involving diagonal pleating is called sahada (possibly from al sahada, Arabic for “testimony.” This certainly would be an attractive choice to make into a muslim-style tunic,“ he added.

    Also, the Managing Director, SJ Tours Limited, Mrs Abiola Ogunbiyi, said adire, batik, among other materials, are well sold at tourist centres. She said such tourists buy such materials at higher price because of their unique nature. She said clothes of various sizes and designs are objects of attractions in tourist centres.

    She said: “The tourism industry is growing well. New hotels are springing up daily. Many centres have been upgraded to meet the international standards. Tourists from different climes are visiting the country for one thing or the other to explore the beauty of Africa. Through this, they discover unique things about the cluture, and dressing of Africans. Hardly can you get hotels in Nigeria without seeing well designed adire, or batik sold at a higher price. All these have multiplier effects on the economy.”

    She said the demand for adire, kampala is growing in certain parts of the country where people use them for parties. Mrs Ogunbiyi said people who have an eye for arts love the textures and designs on adire among other materials in Nigeria, stressing that some buy and export the materials.

    She urged job seekers toexplore the window of opportunities opened in the industry to create jobs for themselves, arguing that they can start with small capital.

    “There is a lot of value chain in the industry. One is production of adire and other materials which I believe tourists like so much. This means an expanded market which translates to more job opportunities,” she added.

    A dealer in Adire in Osogbo, Osun State, Mr Jacob Adeniyi, said the annual Osun Osogbo Festival is usually attended by tourists from different parts of the world. Adeniyi said the demand for the materials is high during and after the festival, advising people to use the opportunity for growth.

    “We are talking of huge unemployment rates in Nigeria. The universities are producing over 100,000 graduates every year. They have tickets (certificates) in their hands, but there are no jobs. Where would the jobs come from. It is high time graduates faced the reality and think of what they can do for themselves. To the best of knowledge, there are enormous opportunities in the production of adire among other materials that come with unique designs,” he said.

  • Police rescue five-year-old girl in Zamfara

    •Kill two suspected kidnappers

     

    The Zamfara State Police Command has killed two suspected members of a kidnapping and human parts’ selling syndicate during a raid on their hideout.

    Police Commissioner Usman Gwary told reporters in Gusau, the state capital, that the girl was rescued during the raid.

    He said the two suspects were killed in a crossfire with the police on the Sokoto-Gusau Road.

    The police chief said the suspects were first intercepted when they were negotiating to sell the girl.

    Gwary explained that his men acted on a tip-off and ambushed the suspects at strategic points on the Zamfara-Sokoto states’ boundary.

    He said the suspects allegedly abducted the girl from a private school in Imo State last week.

    The police chief said the girl was to be delivered for sale to another syndicate in Niger Republic through the Sokoto-Zamfara boundary.

    According to him, the police sourced N600,000 for a phony purchase deal, having been briefed that the syndicate usually collected between N500,000 and N1,000,000 for their victims.

    Gwary said the police were connected to the syndicate through a mobile phone number they got from an informant.

    He said his men offered to buy the girl for N600,000, a price the suspects accepted.

    Gwary said when the suspects attempted to drive off, a gun battle ensued, which led to their death.

    The police chief said the girl’s parents had been contacted through the Imo State Police Command.