Tag: SEADOGS

  • Seadogs disowns association with ‘impostor’ in viral video

    Seadogs disowns association with ‘impostor’ in viral video

    National Association of Seadogs (NAS), also Pyrates Confraternity has dissociated itsef from a group self-styled as Association of Humble and Obedient Youths (AHOY).

    This followed a viral video created by AHOY, which sought to establish a link between the two organisations.

    Speaking yesterday at a briefing in Lagos, Capoon, Abiola Owoaje, noted inaccuracies and malicious falsehoods in the video, which they believe were crafted with intent to damage their reputation.

    Owoaje decried attempts to tarnish Pyrates’ image and reputation, vowing to use legal means to address the matter.

    He warned of potential threats to members and urged heightened vigilance from security agencies and the public.

    Read Also: EFCC secures 3,175 convictions, recovers N156b in one year

    He demanded cessation of  actions seeking to perpetuate the false association with them.

    “We, the Board of Trustees and Tortuga-in-Council of National Association of Seadogs, having watched a video purportedly made by a group self-styled Association of Humble and Obedient Youths (AHOY) in which the individuals who made the video seek, forlornly and incompetently, to associate their origins and existence with our organisation, especially with our Seven Founding Fathers, place on record the following statement in denunciation of those claims.

    “The video constitutes the most impudent, brazen episode of piracy on the high seas – the real thing – yet to be acknowledged in seafaring lore. It is more comical than Baba Sala in crossdressing, more improbable than a Mr Bean cartoon, more puerile than the petulant antics of an infant denied a lick from an ice cream cone…’’

  • Seadogs advocate restructuring, true federalism

    The National Association of Seadogs, otherwise known as Pyrates Confraternity, has lent its voice to the ongoing political restructuring agitation in the country.

    The confraternity said restructuring of the country has not only become expedient but a time frame must be attached to it.

    Speaking at a roundtable organised by the Abuja Chapter of the confraternity last week, Dr Olu Agunloye, the National President of the group said it is regrettable that the nation’s leaders have decided to pretend and refused to address the socio-political and economic challenges confronting the country.

    He said Nigerians and their leaders should not feign ignorance of the need to restructure the country, insisting that it must be anchored on true federalism.

    He also said a time frame must be fixed and agreed to by all stakeholders, arguing that “the earlier we started doing it bit by bit, the better for us.”

    Panelists at the roundtable opined that restructuring should not be dismissed.

    Ayokunke Fagbemi, Executive Director, Centre for Peace Building and Social Economic Development said poor Nigerians are no longer concerned about who is in government but how to get three square meals to eat daily, pay children’s school fees and survive the day.

    Ankio Briggs, a Niger Delta activist, regretted that federal character principle has been abused by those in authority, with a particular region being favoured above the rest.

    She said: “It is unjust; it is becoming unreasonable and totally unacceptable for the nation to depend on the resources of one region.”

    She also said, “It is an injustice when you tell me that I cannot talk and discuss restructuring.” Abulemen Idiagbon Samuel, President, Abuja Chapter of Seadogs, said the theme of the annual event was intended to capture the prevailing situation in the Nigerian society.

    Employing the imagery of the “Barracuda, a fierce big fish that preys on small ones,” Samuel said “what we are discussing today is a realism, something that is almost tearing us apart.”

    He concluded that “what we want to do is to bring people together to discuss about how to change the situation that will throw up a possible better solution.”

  • Seadogs launch ‘Save Aba Street Children’project

    The National Association of Seadogs (Pyrates Confraternity) launches the “Save the Street Child Aba Initiative” in Aba, the Abia State commercial capital. Sunny Nwankwo reports

    THEY are everywhere, on the major roads and the side streets. You find them at different parts of the city: Bata Junction, Azikiwe by Asa Road, Market Road by Asa, Brass Junction and beyond.

    They are the street children of Aba.

    They have no roof over their heads. Children huddle around their mothers, begging. Sometimes, the females receive male visitors who take them away for the night. The relationship sometimes produces more children on the streets.

    A social welfare worker in one of the local governments in Aba, who spoke anonymously to our reporter, warned that if such sexual behaviour was not curbed, Aba might be overwhelmed by children without shelter.

    The social worker disclosed that most of the children found on the streets of Aba are from broken homes where parents were divorced and parted ways without any of the parties agreeing to take ownership of the children born in such relationships.

    Even the security community is worried, a source saying most of the crimes committed in the state are carried out by people who were once street children.

    There is hope, as the Aba chapter of the National Association of Seadogs (Sancta Sacramento Deck) launched  the “Save the Street Child, Aba Initiative” under the NAS Street Child Project.

    The event attracted the crème de la crème in the society including federal and state lawmakers in the state, Abia State Commissioner of Education, Professor Ikechi Mgbeoji and Prince Ifeanyi Onochie, the CAPOON of NAS.

    The event provided guests the opportunity to meet some of the children that have been taken off from the streets.

    Members of the confraternity and public-spirited individuals also  donated generously for the upkeep and the academic welfare of some of the children in some motherless babies homes in Aba.

    Anyanwu Sandra Nwokoroku, Programme Officer at Children at Risk Development (CARD) Initiative, a non-profit child rights protection organisation, said that street children are alwways in tattered clothes, scavenge, beg for alms, peddle drugs, join armed robbery syndicates, move in colonies and do menial jobs, among other things just to survive.

    Nwokoroku also said living on the streets exposes children to sexual abuse and rape and sexually transmitted infections.

    In a paper, Abia State Commissioner of Education, Prof. Ikechi Mgbeoji described the street children syndrome in Aba as the aftermath of the Nigerian Civil war  as well as increasing urbanisation and dislocation of extended family system.

    Mgbeoji added that factors such as poverty, breakdown of homes, political unrest, acculturation, peer group influence, drug addiction amongst others and listed “Correctional model, Rehabilitative model, Outreach strategies and Preventive approach” as some of the measures to use in dealing with issues of street children.

    The Education Commissioner who said that the state is planning to bring stakeholders in education to a roundtable for deliberation; Education Summit, added that the state on its part is planning to propose an Education Bill which is expected to be passed into law by the State House of Assembly before the end of this year, stressing that the bill when passed into law would make street hawking by children a crime in the state.

    He said, “Under the proposed bill, the guardian or parent of any child caught hawking on the streets of the state will be tried and if found guilty, will be fined by a Mobile Education Court which is specially designed for education-related offences.”

    And for the enactment of the Child Rights Act and Persons with Disability Bill into law by the state legislative arm, reintroduction of Free Education regime and the abolishment of street begging syndicates and gangs who specialize in using and displaying children on the streets for the primary purpose of begging, a practice he described as dehumanising.

    Christopher Chijioke Joseph, CAPOON, Aba chapter (Sancta Sacramento Deck) and Ifeanyi Onochie, CAPOON, NAS in separate interviews expressed their happiness over the level of attendance and described the “Save the Street Child, Aba Initiative” event was geared towards eradicating and if impossible to reduce to the barest minimum the act of street begging and taking children of school age off the streets of Aba and the state at large, stressing that they have equally carried out several projects to better the lives of the citizenry.

    They further disclosed that though they are partnering with some motherless babies homes at the moment, they intended to have a home of their own where children taken off from the streets will be kept, nurtured/rehabilitated and reintegrated back into the society.

    They expressed hope that the initiative if embraced by all will reduce crime rate in the society and give the children the sense of belonging.

    “It is a project in which the pilot scheme will run for four years. Within the first four years while this pilot phase of the project is running, we will make plans for the exit; it is just like a continuation of other years ahead. The campaign is continuous as the project is continuous too. So, we will keep doing it from time to time on social media, print media and other areas in order to reach out to as many people as possible that may be interested to join hands to see that the act of child street begging is sorted out.

    “Apart from this, we equally have other projects that we have carried out in Aba community such as in the Aba Prisons, where we have equally built and handed over to the authorities of the prisons,   psychiatric bed for the inmates. We have equally been consistence in the supply of drugs to the prisons till date. We equally engage in de-worming children in primary schools for over two years in the state during MNCHW (Maternal Newborn Child Health Week) and we intend to continue doing that. We engage in cleaning of streets and residential quarters in Aba and also join in the advocacy on HIV/AIDS and since 2006, we have been observing World AIDS Day till date; we do HIV screening, free HIV counseling and also support HIV/AIDS patients in the little way that we can,” the Aba Deck said.

     

  • Seadogs seek unity on budget

    The National Association of Seadogs has urged the executive and legislative arms to work together on the 2016 budget to “save the  the populace from starvation.”

    The association, in a statement in Calabar by its National President, Prince Ifeanyi Onochie, decried the arguments over the 2016 budget.

     It said while the national economy is collapsing, the two arms were busy fiddling.

    “One must be afflicted by a numbing of the sensory organs not to appreciate the frightfully bleak future staring Nigerians in the face.

    “Starvation is a daily reality as basic foods have vanished from many households, as the Naira continues to bow meekly against international currencies and price of goods and services soar beyond the reach of the common man.

    “The response of government to the current situation  smacks of insensitivity to the plight of Nigerians, who have endured the hibernation of the economy since preparations for the general election commenced last June.

    “The socioeconomic and security situation calls for sober reflection and strategic thinking and it’s no time to play politics. Nigerians deserve and demand good governance,” the statement read.

    The organisation warned that the longer the 2016 budget stayed without being passed into law and its implementation commenced, the more the economic miseries would deepen.

    It urged the executive and legislative arms to close ranks, discuss and resolve issues and discrepancies in the budget.

  • Seadogs lifts kids with disabilities in Calabar

    Seadogs lifts kids with disabilities in Calabar

    Raising awareness and support for children with disabilities was the objective as members of the National Association of Seadogs (NAS) convened at the fifth National Association of Seadogs (NAS) Charity Ball in Calabar, the Cross River State capital.

    The NAS Charity Ball is an annual event organised by the association to raise funds for humanitarian causes, taking into consideration the prevalent issues of society at the time.

    NAS Capone Prince Ifeanyi Onochie said the gesture was a quest to keep the dilemma and challenges confronting children with various learning disabilities on the front burner of people’s preoccupations and consciences.

    According to him, the association are forsworn not to let off steam on this path, not just because of the huge legal and legislative challenges of protecting the rights of the child or the daunting logistical requirements or knowledge gaps but because of the high propensity there is for the faint voice of the weak and vulnerable, to be drowned out in the hustle and bustle that have characterized human existence.

    Onochie said the NAS Charity Red Ball was conceived in 2005, for the purposes of interfacing with and further enlighten the general public on the aspect of NAS Charity/ Advocacy Work, to conduct peer review exercises with the aim of arriving at improved ways and means of collaborating with like-minded individuals and corporate organizations in articulating and implementing humanitarian and social advocacy programmes; and to raise funds for NAS Charity projects and to create a forum for social interaction between members and non-members.

    He said this year’s edition of the NAS Charity Red Ball was the first reloaded version in the series, and its theme, Championing the Cause, Supporting Children with Disabilities aims to broaden the theme of their focus in the United States to include issues of mental health, special education and vocation/rehabilitation of children with learning difficulties.

    “Against this background it becomes even more imperative to keep abreast of current developments, especially for the purpose of closing knowledge gaps for families of these special children and the society in general. The power and benefits of knowledge in making informed choices cannot be overemphasized. This is the core objective of the NAS Charity Red Ball. We in NAS believe that both humanitarianism and rights to self-determination are given wings to take flight upon the moral significance of the dignity of the individual being.

    NAS members also known as Seadogs or Pyrates are passionate about community services, development and voluntary work that there is no deck/chapter of the organisation that is not involved in more than one humanitarian project to uplift and improve the quality of lives in communities we live and work.

    “NAS usually will work closely with the selected beneficiaries to identify areas of priorities and the intervention needed. Upon an agreed line of action, informed by the budget, engage in direct execution of projects from start to finish, ensure judicious and purposed application of every kobo raised by your kind benevolence and generosity.

    “NAS will focus on these selected beneficiaries for one year, commencing from the date of the Charity Red Ball and lead collaborative efforts at making the public aware of the outstanding work these orgzations are doing to help the children and provide them with the necessary assistance and support.

    “The three selected beneficiaries for 2015 NAS Charity Red Ball are Project Comfort (School for Children with Learning Disability), Amaudo Itumbauzor, Abia State; Special Education Centre, Nursery/Primary Schools, Calabar, Cross River State; and Vocational rehabilitation Centre, Ememe, Enugu State.

    “As a people we must improve our knowledge about the inherent abilities in all humans. No more should we allow any child be thrown away because he or she is born with a disability. No more should we look away while children born with disability are treated as scums, demons or worse. The milk of kindness every human deserves must not be denied any child because of disability. The ability of the human mind to raise itself above any situation cannot be underestimated,” he said.

     

  • Seadogs donates drugs to orphanage in Akwa Ibom

    The National Association of Seadogs (NAS), Eket chapter has donated drugs to the Nation Children’s Centre at Ikot Ibiok in Eket Local Government area of Akwa Ibom.

    Donating the drugs on behalf of the association, Dr. Kalu Anyan, said the gesture was part of measures to improve the healthcare and wellbeing of the less-privileged children in the state.

    The drugs donated include malaria drugs, de-worming expeller, single worm expeller, fully equipped First Aid Box.

    Other items donated included three cartons of Honeywell noodles, cartoons of fruit juice, rolls of toilet papers, among others.

    “The programme is reaching out to the less privilege, in this case since the drive for this year had been maternal and child health, we felt we could use one opportunity to achieve two things, by reaching out to the less privilege children and helping to control this common disease among them in order to improve their health and wellbeing,’’ he said.

    He said the outreach programme under the medical charity of the Association was targeting disease that is common and responsible for mortality and morbidity among the populace.

    “We are out to help some of those we consider as less privileged people in the society.

    “Today we single out malaria treatment for children because that is a big challenge, and infestation by worm is the outreach programme focus today,’’ Anyan said.

    According to him, 80 per cent of outpatient consultations are due to malaria in Nigeria. “From the statistics that we have, malaria is the leading cause of death especially in young children and pregnant mothers”.

    He noted that the average Nigerian adult treat malaria not less than three to four times in a year, saying that malaria had contributed to economic lost of the country.

    Also speaking, Mr Benjamin Robbert, President of the Association, Eket branch, promised to check the less privileged children quarterly.

    He said NAS would be a partner to the orphanage centre.

    Receiving the items, Miss Dianabasi Akanimoh, Chief Executive Officer of the centre, expressed gratitude to the Association while urging other members of the society to emulate NAS.

    She said the orphanage home was four years and the centre had 37 children, adding that the centre was funded by some groups of people in the state.

    She said 80 per cent of the children in the centre had been stigmatised by either the parents or society.

    She added that the centre provides shelter, feeding, health care and vocational skills to stigmatised children in the state.

    Akanimoh said the orphanage centre is faith-based organisation committed to save life and bring safety to learning environment of children in the state.

  • Seadogs donates mobility canes

    The President of the National Association of Seadogs (Pirates Confraternity), Abia State chapter Okechi Utah, has advised visually-impaired persons not to be deterred by their situation but strive to attain the highest position in the society.

    He said they could only achieve this when they take their studies serious, noting that education is the best avenue the less privileged can explored to greater heights.

    Okechi gave the advice in Umuahia while handing over 60 mobility canes and T-shirts donated by the group to the inmates of School of the Blind in Afara, a suburb of Umuahia.

    He noted that it was by acquiring formal education through self-determination that they could realise their life regardless of their visual disability.

    He said: “In any little way we can, we want to say we are with you. We are your brothers and your sisters. It is in line with our tradition of identifying with the people in the society we feel are in need of assistance and encouragement that we have come today.

    “The T-shirt we have given you has an inscription: ‘blind with vision.’ Though you are blind, that does not stop your vision of becoming what you want to be in life. So, we want to encourage you to utilise very well whatever opportunity you have been given to acquire formal education.

    “What you are may be a temporary setback; that should not deter you from realising you goal in life. God who created you knew what you, will be from your mother’s womb and whatever God has ordained for you, you would accomplish.”

    Utah also presented some quantities of Braille books.