Tag: River

  • Ogun-Oshun River Basin Authority MD Ashiru cautions against pollution of rivers

    Ogun-Oshun River Basin Authority MD Ashiru cautions against pollution of rivers

    Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Ogun-Oshun River Basin Development Authority (O-ORBDA), Dr. Adedeji Ashiru, has cautioned against the pollution of rivers across the country.

    He gave the warning at this year’s Annual World Rivers Day celebration at the Authority’s headquarters, Abeokuta.

    In his address delivered by the Executive Director (Planning & Design), (O-ORBDA), Azeez Adeoye, an engineer, Ashiru said the celebration was to showcase the incredible natural, cultural and recreational values of rivers and streams in our communities with this year’s theme: “Protect our Rivers from pollution”.

    Ashiru noted the word of Mark Angelo, the brain behind the World Rivers Day Celebration that ‘rivers are the arteries of our planet, they are lifelines in truest sense” , adding that rivers must be accorded their due respect.

    He bemoaned the indiscriminate discharges of contaminants into the water bodies through human activities such as sewage discharges, industrial activities, agricultural activities, urban runoff, oil spill, discharge of metals, plastics, industrial waste products and others.

    He warned of the consequences of river pollution, which he said had contributed significantly to millions of death every year through the pollution of surface and underground water.

    This according to him leads to the degradation of aquatic ecosystems with the spread of water-borne diseases when people use such water for drinking and some other useful purposes.

    Ashiru hailed the Minister of Water Resources and Sanitation, Prof. Joseph Terlumun Utsev and Minister of State, Bello Muhammed Goronyo, Esq for upholding the celebration every year.

    In his lecture, the guest speaker, Prof. Adewale Gbadebo from the Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta said that there is a need to strengthen environmental laws in existence, empower regulated agencies with resources needed to monitor and penalize offenders who pollute our rivers either by dumping of refuse in drains, river path or industrial affluent discharges.

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    Gbadebo also advocated for community- based solution at all local government levels while there must be a synergy between the federal, states and local arms of government in planting trees around river banks and maintaining them in order to reduce soil erosion, to maintain the quality of our rivers and to filter pollutants before they get to the rivers.

    Earlier in the welcome address of the Executive Director (Planning and Design) (O-ORBDA), Engr. Azeez Adeoye (FNSE), read by the Deputy Director, Administration, O-ORBDA, Ms. Nike Fadipe, he said that the celebration started in 2005 as an avenue to remind people about how important all “our waterways around the globe are to us and the need to take care of them”.

    Goodwill messages were delivered at the event by the Commissioner for Agriculture in Ogun State represented by the Permanent Secretary in the ministry, Mrs. Kehinde Jokotoye and the Baale of Camp, Odeda, Chief Akanji Fatola in commemorating the day which was attended by Executive Directors, Directors and other staff of the Authority. A symbolic tree planting was also held at the bank of Lekan Are Dam at the Authority’s headquarters.

  • FG issues alert over rising level of River Niger

    FG issues alert over rising level of River Niger

    The Nigeria Hydrological Services Agency (NIHSA)  on Friday issued an urgent warning to the public regarding the rising water levels of the River Niger system.

    Mr Umar Mohammed,  the Director-General of NIHSA, in a statement, noted that floodwaters from these countries are gradually moving towards Nigeria, starting with Kebbi.

    According to agency, the development is attributed to upstream activities in Niger and Mali, with reports from the Niger Basin Authority (NBA) in Niamey, Niger Republic.

    Read Also: NIHSA issues flood warning along River Niger

    “NIHSA has assured that dam operators at Kainji and Jebba, situated on the River Niger, have been informed and are on standby.

    “As of Aug. 22, the agency confirmed that these dams are not currently spilling water from their reservoirs”.

    The D-G said the risk of flooding is expected to peak by the end of August and into September, urging states and communities along the River Niger system to remain vigilant.

    He said the agency will continue to monitor the situation closely and provide regular updates to the public. 

    (NAN)

  • From the river to the sea!

    From the river to the sea!

    “There is no peace for the wicked”- Isaiah 48:22.

    There is no greater truism than that which Prophet Isaiah, one of the greatest and most reverred Prophets in the Holy Bible, has enunciated in the scripture above.

    What he is saying is that callous, merciless and bloodthirsty men and oppressors, subjugators, persecutors, slavers and the occupiers of the land of others, whether they be the biblical Egyptians, the Ancient Romans or anyone else, coupled with those that trample on the rights and liberties of others with impunity and that repay good with evil can NEVER escape the wrath of God and neither will they ever know or experience lasting peace.

    This is a lesson that evidently the Jews themselves and particularly the Zionists amongst them have failed to appreciate or learn.

    That you were oppressed, subjugated, murdered, robbed, humiliated, enslaved, subjected to genocide and mass murder, ethnically cleansed and treated with scorn and contempt yesterday does not give you the right to do the same to others today.

    That you were once occupied, enslaved, thrown into captivity, scattered all over the earth, butchered, gassed to death, subjected to the holocaust and deprived of your beloved homeland yesterday does not permit you to do the same to others today.

    That you have experienced God’s love, mercy, blessings, grace and restoration does not mean that you are the chosen race or master race, it simply means that God has shown you His tender kindness and opted to restore you despite the fact that you also killed and oppressed others in the past and that you crucified His only Begotten Son, our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ and sought to destroy Christianity even at the advent of its coming.

    Those that have suffered so much in the past surely have a greater duty to ensure that that they desist from inflicting such suffering on others today lest they lose everything.

    It is in this context that I view the State of Israel and the Zionists.

    No matter what they have suffered in the last two thousand years in the hands of their numerous haters, oppressors and persecutors they have no right to inflict the wickedness that they are inflicting on the Palestinian people today and as long as they continue to do so they shall know no peace.

    They shall also continue to stir up hatred and opprobium for themselves and their cause from all right thinking people, including millions that once had sympathy for them, from all over the world.

    This is what we see unfolding today.

    Now to the title and essence of this piece.

    First coined by Yasser Arafat’s Palestinan Liberation Organisation and other Arab nationalist movements in the 1960’s, the phrase “from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free” is the popular refrain and battle cry for the Palestinians and those that support their cause and struggle for self-determination and emancipation from Israeli occupation and oppression.

    And given what is happening in Gaza and the West Bank today who can deny them the right to achieve this noble quest for freedom and the right and aspiration to exist as an independent sovereign state?

    I have always loved the State of Israel and believed in the two-state solution but I hate what her leaders are doing to the Palestinians today.

    I equate the actions of the Israeli Defence Force in Gaza today with the heinous and horrendous atrocities that Hamas inflicted on their civilian population on October 7th.

    I have always made the point that the Jewish State must be accorded the right to exist and reserves the right of self-defence.

    I concede that she is also entitled to a measure of vengeance against those that visited the deplorable violence on her civilian population that we witnessed on October 7th but the targetting of innocent civilians in their thousands, the infanticide, the ethnic cleansing, the mass murder, the genocide, the crimes against humanity, the war crimes, the unprecedented and massive amount of bloodshed, the displacement of hundreds of thousands of civilians, the destruction and utter annihilation of Palestinian homes and infra-structures and all the other beastly and inexplicable horrors that are being unleashed and foisted on the women, children and elderly of Gaza today, including journalists, aid workers, hospital workers, doctors, nurses and other defenceless non-combatants and innocent civilians is unacceptable and indefensible.

    20,000 civilians (mainly women & children) slaughtered in Gaza & 85% of her 2.5 million people displaced in two months!

    Such butchery & slaughter beggars belief & as painful, traumatising & tear-jerking as it is, the world can witness it in real time thanks to Al Jazeera.

    And frankly what we are seeing is unspeakable.

    Israel may consider this to be her finest hour & a glorious manifestation of her military strength & prowess but in actual fact it is nothing but evidence of her irretrievable & inescapable descent into notoriety, savagery & barbarity & her relentless, degenerate, bestial & reprobate disposition.

    This is not her finest hour or her best moment but rather her greatest mistake.

    I say this because the Israel that millions of people from all over the world, including yours truly, once  loved, cherished, defended & empathised with no longer exists.

    What we have in its place is an unforgiving, unthinking, cruel, brash, barbaric, brutal, racist, evil, power- drunk and thoroughly repugnant fascist/apartheid state that is being led by a political class that comprises of deluded monsters, narcisstic savages, obsessive psychopaths and bloodlusting child-killers who have lost their minds, who are devoid of any pretence to even a semblance of humanity, who are hell bent on wiping out the Palestinian people and who do not believe that they are bound by the rules, regulations, canons & strictures of civilisation & international humanitarian law.

    Given this, Israel should no longer be welcomed into the comity of civilised nations & neither is she worthy of the western world’s consistent & unconditional support.

    She has not only lost her right to be regarded as a responsible & law- abiding member of the international community but, as long as she denies the Palestinians the right to exist in peace & freedom and refuses to lift the occupation, she stands the risk of forfeiting her own right to exist.

    What was once the inspiration, promise, pride & joy of millions from all over the world & the darling of civilised nations is now nothing but a vacuous, vicious, vengeful, lawless, petty, pitiful, tyrannical & bloodthirsty pariah state which celebrates & prides itself on its own barbarity, hatred, madness, war-mongering & rage, which openly espouses a racist & repugnant ‘Zionist’ philosophy, which considers itself racially & religiously superior to all others, which thrives on the suffering & pain of its Arab vassals & which is hell-bent on provoking the entire world into WWIII in an attempt to satisfy its senseless & dangerous delusions about re-establishing a biblical Zionist state & wiping out the Palestinian people.

    Zionism is the greatest evil that has been foisted on earth since the advent of the Nazis.

    It is an irony of fate & history that the Jews that are now calling themselves Zionists are the very same race whose forefathers suffered more persecution & cruelty at the hands of the Nazis than any other.

    I have no doubt that if Israeli PM Netanyahu had the power, wherewithal & horrendous gas chambers that Hitler once did he would, without any hesitation, gas to death every Arab on earth & kill every Muslim & Christian in the Middle East.

    That is how evil he & those that share his insane delusions are.

    They are the greatest threat to world peace & stability & the only way to free us from their insidious & sinister power & pervasive influence is by establishing a free & sovereign Palestinian state “from the river to the sea”.

    Just as Nazi Germany was brought to her knees by the civilised world after WW11 because of her heinous atrocities, Zionist Israel needs to be brought to her knees today.

    Does a murderous, racist rogue state that considers itself above the law & delights in slaughtering children have the right to exist?

    I doubt it.

    To those that say “but Israel is a democracy and indeed the ONLY democracy in the Middle East”, I say the following:

    Nazi Germany was a democracy too & Hitler was a democratically-elected leader yet look where they took the world!

    In the light of all this it is indeed a great shame that Israel’s greatest friend and ally, the United States of America, not only firstly vetoed a motion for a second ceasefire in Gaza at the United Nations Security Council last friday but that secondly the American Congress passed a resolution that any criticism of or opposition to Zionism would be regarded as a manifestation of anti-semitism.

    The first is nothing but yet another inglorious and graphic display of American immorality, hypocrisy, double standards, insensitivity and depravity and the second of the wilfull blindness and glaring ignorance of the majority of members of the American Congress.

    To equate political Zionism, a concept which only came into existence as an organized nationalist movement after it was enunciated and founded by Theodor Herzl in 1897, with Judaism which has existed for thousands of years is not only antedelluvian idiocy and intellectual bankruptcy in its most raw, primitive, vulgar, crude and glaring form but also ignores the fact that millions of both right-wing, conservative religious Jews such as the Torah Jews and secular ones residing in Israel, America and Europe vehemently oppose the concept of Zionism themselves and deplore its malevolent and sinister delusions and political aspirations.

    I love the Jews and the State of Israel but I despise and deplore the Zionists and what they have turned the latter into.

    I despise them not because of their religious faith or semitic racial identity but because of the evil political philosophy of subjugation, occupation, enslavement and destruction of others that they choose to espouse.

    It is for this very reason that for millions all over the world and not just the Arabs  of the Middle East, the battle cry and war song of ‘from the river to the sea’ resonates so loudly.

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    Permit me to conclude this contribution with the following observation which is particularly relevant to those of us that are from Africa.

    At the end of WW11 In 1945 when the great debate began amongst the leaders of the victorious Allied powers, including America, France, Russia and the UK, about where to send the Jews after the holocaust, there was a very strong lobby to send them to Uganda where they would have established their long-awaited new Jewish homeland.

    Uganda, like Palestine, was a British colony and the colonial power believed that, unlike the Palestinians, the local African population would not present much of a threat or even raise an objection to the appropriation and occupation of their land by millions of western-backed European Jews who had suffered the most horrendous form of persecution in Europe for thousands of years.

    Yet this interesting proposal was initially made forty two years earlier in 1903.

    Known as the ‘Uganda Scheme’, it was a proposal by British Colonial Secretary Joseph Chamberlain to create a Jewish homeland in a portion of British East Africa.

    It was presented at the Sixth World Zionist Congress in Basel in 1903 by Theodor Herzl, the founder of the modern Zionist movement.

    In a short piece titled ‘Expolring The Middle East Uganda Scheme For A Jewish Homeland’, the Middle East Monitor wrote the following.

    “Did you know about the intriguing chapter in history where Israel was almost established in Africa? This “almost” moment was known as the Uganda Scheme and was proposed by Theodor Herzl the father of political Zionism, in 1903. Herzl presented the plan to the World Zionist Congress envisioning a Jewish homeland in East Africa, then under British colonial rule. The proposal came at a time when Jews in Eastern Europe were facing severe persecution and massacres, making the idea of a safe haven, even in distant Africa, appealing. Despite initial approval by the Congress the plan faced opposition from the White settlers in East Africa who did not want to be displaced by other settlers. They formed an anti-Zionist commitee and their disapproval led to Britain withdrawing the offer, altering the course of history”.

    Isnt that amazing?

    Now to the point.

    Given the disposition of the Zionists I am of the view that had the Uganda Scheme been successfully resurrected, accepted and implemented by the Allied powers in 1945 and the State of lsrael established in Uganda as opposed to Palestine in 1948, the history of the Middle East and indeed the world over the last 82 years would not only have been very different but the local African indigenous population in Uganda may well have either been totally enslaved or, worse still, extinct or exterminated by today.

    I say this because Zionism is a deeply racist and supremacist philosophy that takes no prisoners, that seeks to disposses, subjugate, humiliate, emasculate and enslave others and that does not believe in sharing.

    If the local indegenous African population had sought to resist  Zionist hegemony and occupation in the same way that the Palestinians have been doing for the last 82 years they would have been subjected to something even worse than the genocide we are witnessing in Gaza and by now there may well have been no black Africans left alive in Uganda or indeed the whole of East Africa!

    Such is the danger that political Zionism presents to humanity wherever it is entrenched and wherever it goes.

    And if anyone considers the elimination or extermination of entire races to be a far-fetched proposition in this day and age they should find out what happened to the black population in Argentina, the Native Indians of North America and the local indigenous tribes like the Incas and Aztecs of South America in the hands of foreign and non indegenous settlers and occupiers.

    The world really is a very cruel place and the Ugandans  and East Africans should count themselves lucky that Lord Balfour, the British Foreign Secretary, did a deal with the immensely wealthy Jewish Rothchild family and  presented what was then known as British Palestine as a gift and offering on a silver platter to them in the form of a Jewish homeland in 1948 rather than Uganda.

    Meanwhile we shall continue to speak out against the evil in Gaza, agitate for a ceasefire and call for a peaceful resolution to the conflict.

    •Chief Femi Fani-Kayode, the Sadaukin Shinkafi and the Wakilin Doka Potiskum, is a lawyer, a former Minister of Aviation and a former Minister of Culture and Tourism

  • Floods: Adamawa communities seek Dasin-Hausa dam actualisation, River Benue dredging

    Floods: Adamawa communities seek Dasin-Hausa dam actualisation, River Benue dredging

    People of Adamawa State who live in communities near the River Benue who are prone to flooding have called for the dredging of the river to mitigate flooding.

    The people have also called for actualisation of the abandoned Dasin Hausa Dam, a project, which was initiated in 1982, to avoid flooding that usually results from release of water from the Lagdo Dam in Cameroon Republic.

    Communities around the River Benue or its tributaries in Fufore, Yola South, Girei and Numan local government areas made their plea during a sensitisation and training on climate change conducted in the places by the African Activists for Climate Change Justice (AACJ) and Human and Environmental Development Agenda (HEDA), better known simply as HEDA Resource Centre.

    The Executive Secretary, Centre, Sulaiman Arigbabu, explained to each community they visited that the purpose was to sensitise them on flood preparedness and resilience as well as to gather their views and needs for transmission to relevant authorities.

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    At the outreach programme tagged ‘Amplifying the Voices of Climate Frontier Communities’, the host communities who consisted mostly of farmers, said a well-built Dasin Hausa dam and dredged River Niger would curtail flooding.

    The Ward Head, Wuro-chekke of Rugange Community in Yola South Local Government Area (LGA), Alhaji Sa’ad Muhammad, said the failure to build the dam had thrown Nigeria into a panic each time the Cameroon authorities announced that it would release water from their Lagdo dam, and flood resulting from such release had often caused havoc for his people.

    One of his people, Kabiru Abba, told reporters during   that he had no farm and had to live in abject poverty after the last flood in the area devastated his farmland.

    At Dasin Hausa, the community at which the much-talked about abandoned dam project is located, the community leader, Shitu Ahmodu, said the project and dredging of surrounding rivers are important if perennial flooding is to be effectively addressed.

    The Assistant Village Head, Imburu Community in Numan LGA, Chief Imyaleyo Bulus, said a vital thing that the Federal Government could do is to drain the River Benue of sand.

    “The river has become shallow because it is full of sand, such that the moment there is some water, either from rainfall or some other source, water rushes out to adjourning communities, causing harm to people and their belongings,” Bulus said.

  • Eight persons feared dead as vehicles plunge into river in Warri

    No fewer than eight persons were feared killed Saturday afternoon when two vehicles rammed each other into a river along the ever-busy NPA Expressway in Warri metropolis.
    Eyewitnesses informed that the two vehicles were on the same lane of the dual carriageway, around the Ekpan community axis of the expressway when the accident happened.
    The Nation gathered that one of the two vehicles, a sports utility vehicle (SUV), rammed into a commercial bus, which was reportedly parking on the side of the road to pick a passenger, plunging the two  and all the eight persons aboard into the river.
    “The bus was picking a passenger around that spot when the Jeep (SUV) on high speed ran into it and pushed the bus and itself into the river. Eight bodies were recovered from the wreck inside the water”, an eyewitness said.
    It took the intervention of sympathisers as well as officers and men of the Nigeria Police Force, Ekpan Divisional Headquarters, to recover the corpses and evacuate the vehicles from the scene of incident.
    When reached for confirmation and comments, the spokesman of the Delta state police command, DSP Andrew Aniamaka, said he was yet to get a situation report on the development, although he been informed of it.
    “Yes, I have heard about it, but I am yet to get a situation report from the new Ekpan DPO. We will have to talk later,”, Aniamaka said.
  • Army to launch Python Dance II in South East Friday

    Army to launch Python Dance II in South East Friday

    The Nigerian Army said last night that Operation Python Dance II in the Sotheast of the country would continue today as planned.
    A statement from the Director of Army Public Relations, Brig General Sani Usman, urged Nigerians to disregard the rumours that the army would withdraw from the operations from the Southeast.
    The statement Reads: ” The attention of the Nigerian Army has been drawn to some stories in the media that it is withdrawing its troops from Exercise EGWU EKE II, crediting such information to Abia State Governor and the General Officer Commanding 82 Division Nigerian Army. This is not true.
    “The Nigerian Army wishes to enjoin members of the public to disregards such rumours. For the avoidance of doubt, the Abia State Governor in his speech stated that “there will be gradual withdrawal of soldiers on the streets of Aba and Umuahia from tomorrow”.
    “This should not be misconstrued as withdrawing of troops earmarked for Exercise EGWU EKE II. The General Officer Commanding 82 Division has not said such thing. Consequently, we wish to state that Exercise EGWU EKE II is commencing tomorrow as scheduled.
    “Commanders have been instructed to ensure that all hands are on deck to commence the Exercise to its logical completion. We wish to state further that the successful completion of the exercise will dovetail into the various states security outfits till the end of this year.
    ” Members of the public especially in the areas where the exercise will take place are please enjoined to go about their lawful businesses. We wish to also state that we would not allow any individual or group to jeopardize the conduct of the field training exercise through unlawful or criminal activities.
    ” Hoodlums and criminal elements are once again warned to be law abiding and not cause any breach of peace. We hereby reiterate that our troops would conduct themselves in the best professional manner, abide by the Rules of Engagement and Code of Conduct in line with requirements of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
    ” Any act of indiscipline by any of our personnel would be decisively dealt with. While we enjoin all Nigerians to go about their normal businesses, the Nigerian Army urge all to support the troops as they carry out their constitutional duties and make Exercise EGWU EKE II a success”.
  • A river in crisis

    A river in crisis

    Title: The River Gone Dry
    Author: Toun Olaoye
    Page: 346
    Publisher: Clean Slate Books, Ibadan
    Reviewer: Daniel Adeleye

    When biblical King Solomon said God has pointed times and seasons, the events of our lives, the happy and the sad, the easy and the difficult; the wealthy king must have gone through insurmountable hurdles in the face of the earth. Maybe this is what Toun Olaoye, a promising young writer, was trying to replicate in her debut novel, The River Gone Dry.

    Written in a first person narrative technique, Kunle, the last child in the family of six children, three boys and three girls, of poor but diligent parents in a small village, Ruwa, on the southern bank of the Long River in the middlebelt of Nigeria.

    The author surveys the novel with the theme of love, politics, disappointment, heartbreak, hope, service of humanity to one’s community and invisible line separating the rich class and the poor class, in the case of City-State and Ruwa. The novel also depicts the suffering and hurdles parents can encounter when giving the legacy of education to their children, which may be circumspect with both positive and negative experiences.

    The narrator, Kunle, revealed the vivid account of his parents’ background and their professions. His father, Kawu, who was born in Lagos, captivated by Ruwa, a small but thriving town worked with Nigerian Railway Corporation. His mother, Keke, who had her origin from Ikirun, got married to Kawu, when she was 23 years old and delved into a petty trading to lend a helping hand to her husband when they started raising children. Although both Kawu and keke did not have formal education they did much in spacing their children with four years.

    Ibidapo’s absence created a large gap in the family, a space that was left wide opened to the end of the novel.

    Kunle narrates his academic life since elementary school at Ruwa up to the time he went to the university of Ibadan where he was admitted to study Medicine.

    The novel noted the culture of not furthering education in many parts of Nigeria, and many promising young children who end up being school dropouts.

    Despite Kawu’s sermon during Ruwa’s annual festival, that parents should strive to give their children legacy of good education, only 10 of Kunle’s classmates indicated interest in secondary school education, one of them was Bayo, Kunle’s friend.

    In the novel, Olaoye exposed how children in Ruwa village, like every other African community engaged in child hawking before and after school hours to raise money for their school financial bills. Besides, the author cast the mind of the readers on how young girls who are supposed to acquire quality education and become important personalities in the society, married off without finishing even elementary school. An example of this can be seen when, Aduke, who wrestled first position from Kunle in elementary school, suddenly married Baba Gudu-Gudu. Aduke was brilliant and had determined to pursue education to a landmark, but her dream became shattered due to poverty and other factors mentioned in the narrative.

    Although the book was set during Nigeria’s second republic, the time when the country was picking its pieces from the military rule that terminated democratic government in 1966, the issue of school dropouts was then very critical. Many young people found it extremely difficult to continue in their education for the issue that might be unconnected with poverty that stared everybody in the face.

    The writer blamed the hardship on the politicians who came to people with sugar coated mouth to get votes from people and abandon them to their fate after election.

    “Good people of Ruwa, you’re all aware that elections are drawing near, we have come to seek your support. Our opponents have nothing to offer you but misery. If you give us your votes, we’ll turn this place around. Your children will attend the best of schools, dusty roads will be expanded and wear tar and we’ll establish more industries,” (page 106).

    The above excerpts are part of promises from the politicians and many of them remain mere promises from one political dispensation to another.

    The author rightly observed this in the novel, when those made to the people of Ruwa became only ‘beer parlor’ promises, none of them was fulfilled until military toppled democratic election in December. And this has dampened the spirits of the people of the community. They were disappointed, especially Kawu, who was used by the politicians as their campaign mobilize and was dumped after the election.

    Kunle, who enjoyed absolute freedom for the first time, when he gained admission into the university, gave account of his life in the university. ‘He makes friends and plays hard.’

    During his fifth year in the university, Kunle met a beautiful young lady, Shade, who was studying Public Administration. The duo have very interesting relationship until, after the two lovers visited Kunle’s parents at Ruwa and things began to go awry between them. Shade started acting strange and avoiding Kunle like he had contagious disease. Less than a week after a visit to Ruwa, the relationship ended with Shade giving an excuse that, ‘she wanted to concentrate more on her studies’. This decision of Shade forms part of the bitter experience and heartbreak encountered by Kunle.

    After the breakup, Kunle met Yemi, who was also his course mate. Through her, Kunle met Efe, Yemi’s prospective sister-in-law who was in the Law school. Kunle and Efe started a new chapter of courtship that lasted for six years before they tied the knot. The journey of courtship between the two young people was characterized with distraction, misunderstanding and jealousy. The climax of this was when Kunle rebuffed everyone’s advice not to work at Ruwa. Kunle had prepared to set up a Clinic in Ruwa, a local community where Efe found it difficult to settle down. She wanted two of them to settle in Lagos, where she was living with her retired civil servant parents.

    The novel also depicts the theme of community development, when Kunle shifted his service to Ruwa to serve his people, to fulfill his childhood promise. He was unperturbed by the fierce pressure from Efe and Kawu, and was able to stay for a period of about one year to lend his own quota of contribution before moving to Ibadan for a job of residency in the teaching hospital.

    It’s also highly commendable the writer’s efforts to showcase the true purpose of the mandatory one year primary assignment of National Youth Service Corps (NYSC). The purpose of which was to entrench love and mutual interaction with people and community of the primary assignment. Kunle demonstrated this when he was posted to Kaduna State, where he met a boy, Yaro, a vulnerable and orphan. Kunle brought him closer and that imparted the boy to start thinking positively and dreaming of becoming a medical doctor someday. This equally resonated community development that Olaoye explored in the book.

    The language is simple but adorned in cultural diction.

     

  • Alleged N360m bribe: INEC officials challenge court’s jurisdiction

    The Federal High Court, Abuja, on Tuesday adjourned till April 7, hearing of an application filed by 23 INEC officials challenging the jurisdiction of the court to hear the bribery case filed against them.

    The 23 officials of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), were docked for allegedly receiving N360million from Gov. Nyesom Wike of River during the Dec. 10, 2016 re-rerun election in River.

    They were dragged to court on a seven- count charge bordering on money laundering and economic crimes.
    The defendants are: Shittu Lamido, Henry Owokure, Peter Ewatade, Mrs Mary Pennap, Gwatana Jibril, Ivase Stephen, Abdullahi Ogabo, Gayus Hassan, Hussaina Yahaya and James Oqwuche.
    Others are: Karimu Aminu, Adedokun Ayotunde, Najeem Ayotunde, Balogun Funmilayo,Adams Kadiri, Akinwande Adesoji, Lukeman Olabimpe and Tiamiyu Arowolo.
    The rest are: Akinwoye Amodu, Nwoha Yusuf, Patrick Anuke, Iro Abali, Nwosu Olucchi and Arukwe Chinelo.

    When the matter was called up for mention, Mr A.A Halilu, Assistant Chief State Counsel for the prosecution, told the court that all the defendants were present and they were ready for the matter.

    Mr Ahmed Raji, counsel to the 1st to 20th defendants, however, informed the court of his application which he filed, questioning the territorial jurisdiction of the court in the matter.
    Mr Raji said the offence took place in Port Harcourt, while their arraignment took place in Abuja.

    He also said that the defendants were not resident in Abuja and urged the court to hear the application.
    The other defence counsel, Mr Ukpan Ukaiso and Mr E. A. Nwagwa aligned themselves with the argument of Raji.

    The prosecution said they were aware of the issue of jurisdiction raised and ready to respond.
    Justice John Tsoho adjourned the matter till April 7 to hear the application.

  • Four children drown in Abuja River

    Four children, Jinkai Hakila, 10, Bridget Ibrahim, 11, Precious Ezra, 14 and Azumi Daniel, 16, were on Saturday found drowned in Danko River, Galadimawa Community, FCT suburb.

    A correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), who visited the community, reports that residents were thrown into mourning following the ugly incident.

    NAN reports that the four deceased together with other children were at the river for washing before the incident occurred.

    Some eye witnesses told NAN that the incident happened at about 11a.m. when the children were still washing in the river.

    Miss Blessing Elisha, 14, an eye witness, told NAN that they were together at the river washing while others were playing.

    She said several efforts made to stop the children from playing in the water yielded no result before the incident.

    “I actually did not see them entering the water because I was busy washing, suddenly I was called that three of them had entered the river.

    “It was then I looked up and saw the fourth one going in and an attempt made to rescue her looked like I was getting drowned.

    “Then I left her and ran to call for help,” she said.

    Mr Alhassan Abdulwahab, one the first people that responded to the distress call, said it took about three hours to get their corpses out of the river.

    He said the information gathered from other children at the scene showed that the youngest of the deceased, Hakila was the first to enter the river.

    He said other children were drowned while attempting to rescue their colleagues.

    “We came to the scene of the incident immediately we got the information, and it took some time before we discovered their corpses because our nets were already in the river for fishing.

    “It was after I pulled out my net with a very big fish in it that I saw the four corpses in the same area with their stomach not swollen,” Abdulwahab said.

    NAN reports that the four corpses were buried by the river side in line with the tradition of the community. (NAN)

  • Clearing of hyacinth-infested Ogun River begins today

    Clearing of hyacinth-infested Ogun River begins today

    •Keep off, govt tells public
    •People besiege ‘scene of miracle’

    The long bridge on Lagos-Ibadan Expressway yesterday remained a sightseeing of sorts as people trooped there to behold the drying up of Ogun River near the Kara Cattle Market.

    Some motorists parked to the picturesque scene, others watched from their cars, causing a huge traffic.

    Many came with their cameras and phones to take the picture of the river which has been covered with sea weed, popularly referred to as water hyacinth.

    Some jumped into the hyacinth injected river singing, playing, praying and dancing. Yet, some fell on their knees, marvelling at what they described as “a miracle.”

    Others laid on the grass, rolling on it as they wondered how the river suddenly dried up.”

    Last night, the Ogun State Government warned the public from commuting on the river “because of the inherent danger.”

    Its commissioner for the Environment, Mr Bolaji Oyeleye, said on The Channels Television primetime news that excavation would begin on the site today.

    Dredgers, excavators and workers, he said, would be mobilised to site to begin work, though he noted that such mobilisation “takes time”.

    Water hyacinth, he said, was not new to the country, pointing out that many were referring to what happened at the river as a “miracle or mystery”.

    Oyeleye said the police would be drafted to the site to stop people from going there for their own safety.

    He said: “Water hyacinth is not new; it simply means the water body is low at this point in time. People are not supposed to walk on the place. It allows dangerous animals to inhabit the place. River Ogun is important to us. It drains into the Lagoon. We can’t have this for a long time because it is going to affect a lot of things.”