Tag: sight

  • For the love of their sight

    For the love of their sight

    Age was no barrier, nor was distance. From remote villages they came, one of them guided by his devoted grandson. All visually impaired, they are hoping to see again, and their source of hope is Senator Alkali Abdulkadir Jajare, the lawmaker representing Yobe South Senatorial District.

    The turnout was unprecedented as both old and young gathered at four  centres in Damagum, Fika, Nangare and Potiskum to take advantage of the free eye surgery scheme of the senator.

    The scheme, operated by the Alkali Foundation, is aimed at offering eye treatment to over 1200 constituents, irrespective of party affiliation or ethnic background.

    Sixty-year-old Abubakar Shuaibu had never had any reason to travel outside his village in the last 10 years. But one compelling reason took him out of his hometown Ngelshagale to Damagum, headquarters of Fune Local Government Area.

    This reporter sighted him with his 10-year-old grandson named after him as the duo did their best to cross the busy Kano-Maiduguri Highway without being hit, on their way to the venue of screening.

    Little Shuaibu has never seen the four walls of a classroom, opting to   dedicate his life to guiding his grandfather who can hardly see. His sight is virtually donated to his grandfather, as it were.

    The old man is happy his grandson is willing to be of help, but the Pa Shuaibu is also traumatised by the fact that the boy’s devotion and services rob him of the opportunity to go to school.

    He said: “One of my greatest worries is not the fact that I am going blind but the fact that my little boy can’t go to school because of my condition”.

    His fear for a dark future for his grandson spurred him to make the trip to Damagum when he heard the announcement on the local radio for free eye surgery by Senator Jajare.

    “My coming here is with the hope that if I get this sight, my son will go to school. I only pray that Allah works things out for me and my son. I love him so much and I would like to see him grow into a responsible person in life.

    “Look at the senator who is doing this for us. I am sure it is education that took him to this position to turn his eyes on us. I pray Allah to reward him many more times in whatever he is looking for in life”, Shuaibu said.

    Another man, Mustapha said he has not been active at his farm due to his threatened sight. He hopes to leverage on the free surgery to restore his sight so as to resume his farm work.

    “I am hoping that my problem will be over after meeting with the doctors. I have been screened and I am due for the operation in Potiskum,” Mustapha said.

    Over 1200 patients suffering from Cataract, Glaucoma and Trachoma from different village across the four Local Government Areas were at the four centres.

    According to investigations, the beneficiaries were chosen on only one condition i.e. those with eye problems.

    “Senator Jajare corroborated the story as he said: “the only qualification for this operation is the condition itself. Those who qualified for this treatment and operation were not selected on party lines or tribal affiliations. If you have the disease, you are qualified for the operation or the treatment and you come get it free of charge.

    “I decided to embark on this programme as part of my gesture of giving back to the society and the less privileged in my position for the mandate the people have given me, the Senator said.

    The leader of the doctors team, Dr Salmanu Rabiu said the exercise will go on for three days as the screening will be done at various centres and the final operation at Potiskum General Hospital.

    Dr. Rabiu explained that a glaucoma surgery on one eye costs N50, 000, while the rest would cost between N40,000 and N30,000.

    He said that the senator also made available operational drugs and lenses for the patients, while attributing most of the eye problems to unclean water use in washing faces, as well as lack of routine medical checks.

  • Boko Haram:the end in sight?

    President George W Bush’s tenure as America’s leader would probably have passed without much to remember it for were it not for Osama bin Laden and his Al Qaeda terrorists.

    The 43rd president of the United States had his work cut out when Al Qaeda struck mainland America on September 11, 2001 bringing sorrow, tears and blood to an hitherto, fortress America. And Bush, after a slow start took on the challenge and responded in such a strong fashion that finally defined his presidency.

    His war on terror, initially wrongly christened a crusade, later identified the so called axis of evil and rallied the rest of the world against Al Qaeda and its backers. It drove him into the second Gulf War that led to the overthrow of the then Iraqi president, Saddam Hussein, the war in Afghanistan and the countless military actions in Pakistan and some Gulf Arab countries against the terrorists.

    Though he couldn’t kill or capture bin Laden, his presidency set the tone for the Obama administration in the continuing war against terror. And if anything good would be said about the Bush presidency it probably would be that he confronted and fought terror and weakened Al Qaeda. History would probably judge him right on that, even though he could have done it better.

    As the Nigerian government continues its own war against the home grown terror called Boko Haram, the success or otherwise of the ongoing military action in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe states could well define the Goodluck Jonathan presidency.

    Like play, like play, as we like to say in Nigeria, the Boko Haram insurgency which began like a child’s play has assumed a notorious and murderous dimension that could consume our country if proper actions were not taken. Just as Gowon treated Biafra at the outset of the civil war as a police action, federal government’s initial reaction to the emergence of this group of home grown terrorists was less than serious. The political elite especially those of northern extraction didn’t pay much attention either. At best they saw it as a problem of the north east, the Kanuri people, alone. But when the group, which was firmly on ground in the north east decided to export terror to the north west, north central and even Abuja the whole country took serious note of their activities. But even at that, a section of the northern elite, especially some elders and leaders of thought in the north east zone was against the limited military activities deployed to that region by the federal government, complaining of high handedness and brutality against the civilian population by the soldiers.

    Though the military Joint Task Force (JTF) sent to the region to battle the insurgents recorded some qualified successes, Boko Haram was all the same getting stronger and even popular among the people, and the government was beginning to lose control of that section of the country bordering Cameroun and Chad. So, something had to be done and urgently too to arrest the situation and save Nigeria from disintegration. And so entered the state of emergency declared on the three states by the federal government.

    Even though President Goodluck Jonathan’s action could be said to have come rather late, some have argued that it is better late than never and recent reports seem to suggest that the military could be winning the war. Though as I warned on this page recently, it is too early to role out the drums and celebrate or declare victory as the terrorists are not relenting.

    One area that gladdens the heart in this war against Boko Haram is the resolve of the locals, especially the youth to collaborate with the JTF to fish out the Boko Haram members in their community. A group of youths known by the locals as “Civilian JTF” and whose ages range between 17and 25 years has for some time now been moving from one street to another, house to house in Maiduguri, the Borno state capital identifying and arresting suspected members of Boko Haram and handing them over to the JTF.

    Armed with iron bars, cutlasses and wooden batons, the group apparently fed up with the trouble and hardship that Boko Haram has brought on the community decided to launch it’s own war against the terrorists and rescue the people from Boko Haram.

    One had argued repeatedly on this age that until the people themselves turn against Boko Haram there is nothing much the security agencies can do to end the insurgency and defeat terror. These terrorists are not spirits, they live among the people, they attend the same mosque for prayers, so, there is no way they would not be known in their local community. So, if they operate with seeming impunity that’s because the people condone them and in fact support them.

    It would be necessary to recall here that there was a time (during the Babangida years) that Benin City, the Edo state capital and to a large extent, the entire state was under the terror of a gang of armed robbers led by a Bini man called Lawrence Anini. Together with his right hand man Monday Osunbor and the rest of the gang, they robbed at will and even dashed out their loot to members of the public, the Robbinhood way to escape arrest especially in a difficult situation. Because the robbers evaded arrest successfully for so long, the people began to believe that they were spirits who could not be arrested. But it took a presidential charge by Babangida to the then Inspector General of Police, Etim Inyang to get the police to arrest the gang. The rest is history, but suffice to say that the Bini people actively cooperated with the security agencies to fish out Anini and co and rid their city and state of the menace of these robbers.

    That Maiduguri youths have taken the initiative to fight and fish out Boko Haram members in their midst without minding the likely repercussion on their personal safety is a clear indication that the days of the terrorists are numbered. It is a pointer to what can be achieved when a people are determined. Their decision, not without it’s dangers though, was in sharp contrast to the position of the so called Borno Leaders and Elders Forum that had criticized the deployment of the JTF to the state in the past on the grounds of high handedness and indiscriminate killing of innocent civilians by the soldiers.

    The Borno youths have shown that to defeat terror and overcome evil, all men and women of goodwill must come together to collaborate with both the government and the security agencies. Boko Haram is beatable and the war is winnable, but all of us must get involved.

    The war on Boko Haram could define the Jonathan presidency and decide whether he returns in 2015 or not. Even with victory in sight, the way and manner it is conducted could determine whether the president would be praised for a job well done or get blamed for the collateral damages. Stories abound about the “atrocities” of the JTF, but nowhere has the kind of war we are waging against terror been won without the innocent suffering, but what must be done is to have a clear cut rule of engagement for the military and follow such strictly and anything to the contrary must be punished severely.

     

    Madam at the top

     

    Strange things are happening at the presidency that all men and women of goodwill need to come together and stop. It does appear that there is more than one commander in chief of the Nigerian armed forces going by the way and manner the wife of our president, Dame Patience Jonathan has been conducting herself both in private and in public.

    Those who know one or two things about the political crisis in Rivers state where the first lady hails from, claim Madam at the top, as part of her war against the sitting governor, Rotimi Chibuike Amaechi, has been meeting with heads of security agencies, including the military in the state dishing out instructions and woe betide who amongst them dared flout her orders.

    Emboldened by her show of federal might over the state government, crooks, hoodlums, kidnappers, cultists et al are returning to the streets of Port Harcourt to terrorize the people without any fear of arrest. Kidnapping is returning now and the state police command appears not bothered: part of a conspiracy to return terror and fear to the state preparatory to the declaration of a state of emergency in Rivers? Quite a lot is happening with Madam exercising powers she doesn’t have. Nigeria shine your eyes.

     

     

     

  • How I lost my sight

    NATURE and inclement economic conditions, especially in this part of the world, often box the physically challenged, the blind in particular, to depending on others for their survival. It is, therefore, not uncommon to find some of them resorting to begging for alms on major roads to make both ends meet when they lack assistance for their basic needs, especially food.

    This is not, however, the case with Evangelist Upright Wonders, a visually challenged minister and proprietress of Eastern Star Care Foundation. She lost her sight in mysterious circumstance, that have defied medical explanation but uses her creative insight to add value to the society.

    She had the option of depending on others for her living, but she chose not to do that. Her choice has paid off today as many people, both able-boadied and physically challenged, now look up to her to make meaning out of life.

    She is consumed by the passion of liberating other physically challenged in the society from the world of abandonment, despair and poverty; a feat which even the privileged able-bodied people shy away from. She carries on with her activities without any sign of having any problem with her sight.

    As the proprietress of the foundation, she trains the physically challenged apprentices in her care on how to make handcrafts and home use products, thus empowering them to be self-employed instead of resorting to begging to earn a living.

    In an encounter with our correspondent at the 11th anniversary celebration of the foundation held at the Province two office of the Living

    Faith Church Worldwide, Oke Odo

    Bus Stop on Isheri-Igando Road, Lagos penultimate weekend, the soft spoken evangelist gave an account of how she lost her sight and how she got the call to quit her job and embark on the business of empowering the physically challenged.

    She began by explaining why she took the name Upright Wonders.

    She said: “Upright Wonders is not the name that my parents gave me but when I got the vision, I changed my name and it is pointing to where I am going and what I am supposed to be as a Christian. I am a ‘wonder’ and I want to live an ‘upright’ life. My real name is Ememebong Umondak. Ememebong means ‘the peace of God’. I am still using the name and have not discarded it.”

    She went on to narrate how she lost her sight at a time she was preparing to proceed to the university to further her studies.

    “I wasn’t born blind. I went to primary, secondary and high schools, with my sight intact. I was about entering the university when the challenge came up. I was then working with the then Cross Rivers State Television now known as Channel 45 Uyo. I had worked with them for two years and was about going into the university when the problem started.

    “After all the diagnosis, the doctors have not really been able to point at anything as the cause of the challenge. When the challenge came, I had to leave the media industry and enrolled in a school for the blind because I didn’t just want to live my life as a beggar. After my education, I worked with Aluminium Cement Company of Nigeria as a receptionist. Exactly two years after, the Holy Spirit put it in my heart that I am to assist fellow physically challenged and I answered the call by resigning from my job.

    “The name of my foundation came as a revelation I got from Mathew chapter 2 verse 2 that talks about that star that appeared from the east and led those wise men to where Jesus was born. The vision is aimed at leading the physically challenged and the vulnerable ones to their colourful destinies in Christ by forming their lives and empowering them and helping them to make heaven. We started the foundation 11 years ago and have affected the lives of thousands of people. We visit centres, organise crusades and also have fellowship where we address the challenges of the physically challenged. We have graduated many sets of people under us.

    “We train the physically challenged ones in adire making, beads making, and also have the products section where we train them on how to make home care products like liquid wash , izal and perfume. What we want to do is to discourage each and every one of them from begging and get them to be gainfully employed because they are not challenged mentally. The gifts of God are still in their mind; as long as their minds are still functional, they can still do something with their lives,” she said.

    Looking back at the number of lives she has touched, she said: “There are so many of the people that we have trained that are doing quite well today. I have one that is producing Izal and Detol. She has customers in the hospitals and has been supplying them these products. I have so many of them that are doing well and we thank God for that.

    “Some of them have not been doing as much as they are supposed to because of funds and this is where the need for support from individuals and corporate bodies comes in. These trainings are quite expensive because the cost of the materials we use in doing them are going up everyday and we don’t collect money to train them. We do train them free of charge.

    “After the training, we try as much as we can to empower them, rent shops for them and help them in marketing their products because so many people take the products from them to sell without giving them the money. We are trying to make sure that they are not exploited by dubious people. We have set up a team that would be monitoring such sales and we would devout a good part of our time to this and do it professionally.

    “Apart from the challenge of funds, our people also have the problem of marketing their goods as it should be because the products are not registered with NAFDAC. I can’t do it alone. I need the support of kind- hearted Nigerians, especially now that we want to establish a skill acquisition and talent centre with a bible school and music school attached to it. ”

    Speaking on how she acquired the skill she has been imparting into others, she said: “I acquired the skill on how to make these products by going for training. It was after I completed my training that I started making the products to sell. The money I get from the ones that I market for the foundation is what I use for training those under the foundation.

    “The market is not wide yet because we don’t have NAFDAC registration number and as a result cannot push it into the larger market. This is where we need NAFDAC to assist us by reducing the registration fee for us. I have not really got the official registration fee but someone told me that it is between N120, 000 and N150, 000. The day I went to NAFDAC office at Oshodi, the gateman did not allow me to enter. He said I should go to their office at Yaba. When I went to Yaba, they asked me to go back to Oshodi. After a fruitless effort to get the official registration fee, I gave up and went back to my house. They frustrated my efforts.”

    Apart from empowering the physical challenged to earn a living, she added that the foundation is also concerned about going into rural ministration to seek out and attend to the needs of the physically challenged.

    “ We also want to go into rural ministration and we trust God for it because the vision is from Him. This evangelical arm of the foundation is to organise crusades in rural areas. We are focusing on the widows, the physically challenged ones and the vulnerable ones because in our local assembly, when they are going for outreaches and witnessing, they don’t remember the physically challenged ones. They neglect them but God has raised us to go into the rural areas to minister to them because their souls have to be saved and their needs met by empowering them.

    “My message to the physically challenged ones out there is that they should locate a foundation like this where they can learn the truth about God. Many parents and guardians are keeping physically challenged people at home and not allowing them to do anything. They should know that they can still make it in life in spite of their condition. They should find a foundation like ours to make them acquire skills that would keep them away from begging to survive. We have been transparent in all we have been doing. Any money we get for the