Tag: STUDENT

  • High tension cable eletrocutes Unilag student

    High tension cable eletrocutes Unilag student

    A 300 level student of the Department of Accounting in the University of Lagos was electrocuted to death Tuesday night by a high tension cable that fell on her.

    The student identified as Oluchi Anekwe met her untimely death in front of the popular New Hall in campus.

    According to an eye witness, Oluchi was coming from the library and on reaching New Hall, a high tension cable fell on her and she was electrocuted to death before help came.

    A parliamentary member of the Nigeria University Education Student Association (NUESA), Hon.Ojo Temitope Olufemi, in a message on whatsapp confirmed this incident and also the demise of the victim this morning.

    He added in the broadcast message that residents of various Halls (Sodeinde, Eni Njoku, Makama, Fagunwa and Madam Tinubu) in New Hall to be very watchful and careful so as not to fall victim of this incident.

    Similarly, the University of Lagos Students’ Union (ULSU) in a statement signed by Comrade Abiodun Martin- the Union President and RT. Jawosimi Oluseegun- the Speaker of ULSU parliament on the incident said; “the ULSU regrets to announce the passing away of one of us our very own Oluchi Anekwe, a 300 level student of Department of Accounting. Oluchi, till her death was a 1st class Student and a very active student in class. Our condolence goes to her families, relatives and friends. We pray that God grant them the fortitude to bear the loss.”

    The statement added that the Union called the concerned authorities to swing into action so as to prevent future occurrences. This is because they believe the event that led to her death is entirely avoidable if measures have been put in place.

    The statement further reads, “All academic and social activities of the school and of the students are hereby declare suspended for today (9th September 2015) and no unnecessary sound around the school campus must be made in honour of Oluchi.”

    As the time of filing in this report, the school management has not released any statement on the incident. Also, the Security Unit only disseminated information that her body has been deposited in a mortuary.

  • Student shines at essay competition

    Student shines at essay competition

    Miss Oluwabukumi Obembe has won a 10.1 inch android tablet at the Youth Square National Essay competition that focused on the electoral process in this year’s general elections.

    The contest was organised by Youth Square, an offshoot of Hacey Health Initiative, a non-governmental organisation committed to supporting women to live a healthy and productive life.

    It engaged women of between18-25 to express their views on election matters in the essay sponsored by the United States Consulate in Nigeria.

    Oluwabukumi, a National Open University of Nigeria Accounting undergraduate, wrote on: “My expectation on the 2015 election and beyond”.

    In her essay, she repeatedly advocated good governance, total ridding of corruption in the society, and complete awareness of human rights, among others. She expressed optimism on the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari, describing it as a step in the right direction.

    Oluwabukumi, who recounted how she stumbled on the contest online, added that she participated because she had always wanted a platform with which to express her views on governance.

    Opeyemi Adeniji came second while Nneka Isiekwe took the third place.

    Though the competition, which received about 180 entries nationwide, was held in March, only 15 were shortlisted for the final. The lucky winners were rewarded at the Consulate on Victoria Island, Lagos two weeks ago.

    Speaking at the event, the Coordinator, Youth Square, Ms Rhoda Robinson, said the project aimed to engage young women on governance.

    “We realised that it is not everybody who is qualified to vote, be voted for, or show interest in the voting procedure. So, we want them to know the essence and play their role in the political affairs of the country.”

    The Director of the Consulate, Mrs Dehab Ghebreab, advised the finalists to take advantage of the opportunities that come their way.

    “We need more women to be involved in politics not just in Nigeria but all over the world.

    “If you continue to be involved in governance, when you are done with school, you might want to participate in politics. Read about your country and beyond that think of about what you do. Make a difference in people’s life. It starts from home; make your presence felt by people around you,” Ghebreab said.

  • Court sentences student for ‘theft’

    An Ikeja Chief Magistrate’s Court in Lagos, yesterday sentenced a student to one week community service without an option of fine over theft of cable wires worth N200,000.

    Magistrate O.A. Komolafe gave the ruling after Abayomi Adebayo pleaded guilty to charges preferred against him.

    The accused, 23, was charged with a four-count charge bordering on stealing, wilful damage and breach of peace. Earlier, the Prosecuting Sergeant Joseph Ajebe, said that the accused committed the offence on August 16, at Mosco Road, IJaiye, Lagos.

    Ajebe said that the accused broke and entered the warehouse, where Etisalat Nigeria Limited mast was mounted and stole the wires.

    “The accused used an iron spanner to destroy the padlocks in order to gain entrance into the premises.

    “The security men guarding the mast caught him while he was trying to escape with the wires and handed him over to the police,’’ he said.

    Ajebe said that the offences contravened sections 21,166,307 and 337 of the Criminal Laws of Lagos State, 2011.

  • Police arrest student for alleged theft

    A student of the National College of Education in Nsukka, Enugu State has been arrested by the police for theft.

    Sunday Nwaeze, who specialises in stealing motorcycles and using forged invoice, met his waterloo when he attempted to sell a stolen motorcycle, using a forged invoice.

    The invoice was said to belong to one Stantly Ogwo, a motorcycle dealer at Obollo-Afor in Udenu Local Government Area.

    Sunday, 27, and a 300-Level student of the college, admitted that he forged the invoice during police interrogation. He said he always used fake documents to get number plates and sell stolen motorcycles.

    The suspect said he has been in the business for a long time.

    The police have charged the suspect to court on a two-count charge of stealing and forgery. Sunday pleaded not guilty to the charges. The presiding magistrate, F.E Chukwu, granted him bail with a surety and the sum of N80,000.

     

  • Student and teacher reunite in U.S. decades after meeting in Nigeria

    Student and teacher reunite in U.S. decades after meeting in Nigeria

    Because of his name and accent, it’s not unusual for Dr. Yele Aluko’s patients to ask where he’s from.

    But in the early 1990s, when he got the question from this new patient – a retired Charlotte principal and Johnson C. Smith University professor – Aluko asked one of his own: Where do you think?

    Spencer Durante guessed correctly that his new heart specialist was from Nigeria, in West Africa.

    This rarely happened. In fact, when Aluko first came to Charlotte in 1989, one area hospital administrator suggested he change his name from Yele – pronounced yeh-lay – to Yale, so it would be easier to say.

    As Aluko chatted with Durante and his wife, Rosalia, he learned they had lived in Nigeria from 1962 to 1966, when Spencer Durante was working on a U.S. project to build a college that would train Nigerians to be secondary school teachers.

    Rosalia Durante (pronounced rose-ale-ya due-rawnt) said she had taught primary school in Nigeria. And she remembered having a student named Yele.

    Really? Aluko thought. And he asked the name of the school.

    When she said Corona International School in Lagos, his jaw dropped. Aluko, who was born in Lagos in 1954, had gone to that school in the mid-1960s. What a coincidence.

    The Durantes had seen Aluko’s name in The Charlotte Observer and made an appointment, both to confirm he was the boy at the Corona School and because Spencer Durante needed a heart specialist. They continued seeing Aluko for more than a decade, but the conversations focused on medical issues.

     

    Class picture

    Spencer Durante died in 2003, at 86. Rosalia Durante remained one of Aluko’s patients, coming to his office once a year for an evaluation. At one of her visits, she brought Aluko a surprise. She had been digging through papers after her husband’s death.

    She’d found an 8-by-10 copy of a black-and-white picture of her first class at Corona, for the school year 1963-64. That’s her, at 47, standing in the middle of 23 children – girls and boys, black and white, Nigerian, Asian and British, mostly dressed in white.

    She asked Aluko if he saw anyone familiar.

    Indeed, Aluko saw his sixth-grade self, legs crossed, sitting on the grass in the front row. He’s smiling at the camera, resting his elbow on his knee and his cheek on his fist.

    “Oh my God, that is me,” Aluko thought. “How could this be?”

    By what twist of fate did this Nigerian boy in Mrs. Durante’s class end up, half a world away and more than three decades later, becoming the heart specialist who cares for his former teacher and her husband in Charlotte, North Carolina?

     

    Settling in Charlotte

    The picture had been taken outside Corona, a private British-owned school that attracted children who could qualify academically and afford the tuition. Some were children of foreign diplomats. Aluko’s father was a civil engineer; his mother had been an English teacher.

    Aluko remembered having American, Nigerian and British teachers at Corona. He got a good education, good enough to get him into Kings College boarding school and then medical school at the University of Ibadan in Nigeria. He came to the United States for medical residency at Columbia University in New York, where he met his future wife, Shirley Houston, also a doctor.

    In 1989, they chose to settle in Charlotte. Aluko said he started a solo cardiology practice after he couldn’t find an existing group that would hire someone with his foreign education. His practice grew into the city’s second-largest group of heart specialists, Mid Carolina Cardiology, now Novant Health Heart and Vascular Institute. He often was quoted in the Observer, about new heart procedures, efforts to reduce health disparities or the community of Nigerian doctors in the Charlotte area.

    As she got to know Aluko, Rosalia Durante continued searching through her scrapbooks. They bulged with keepsakes from Africa – maps of Nigeria, newspaper and magazine articles, pictures of her students and copies of their handwritten notes.

    “I keep stuff,” said Durante, whose home is decorated with African art, including a carved ivory elephant tusk and a painting by a Nigerian artist.

    She remembers her first day at Corona School: “When I first saw all the boys in that class, I thought, ‘Oh, I’m gonna have a terrible time.’” She had three “rambunctious” sons of her own. But these boys, from several countries, sat at attention at their desks, called her “Madame,” and raised their hands and stood before speaking.

    “They didn’t have many books, but their books were well-used,” Rosalia Durante recalled. “…I enjoyed hearing how the languages criss-crossed. … And they had to listen to a Southern dialect from North Carolina.”

     

    ‘My name is Yele’

    Nigerian names were distinctive and stuck in her mind, Rosalia Durante said. It helped that she had asked her students to print their names in large letters on construction paper. For the first week, they held up their posters and announced themselves so she could learn to spell and pronounce their names correctly.

    “My name is Yele Aluko,” she recalled him saying. He had bright, eager eyes and a “zest for knowledge. … He was inquisitive. You didn’t have to pull things out of him,” she said.

    In 2011, Rosalia Durante read in the newspaper that Aluko was getting a lifetime achievement award from the Charlotte Post Foundation. She mentioned it to her granddaughter, who arranged for them to attend. During the ceremony, Aluko was surprised when organizers announced that his primary school teacher was in the audience.

    By then in her 90s, Rosalia Durante stood at her table and waved. Aluko walked over and gave her a hug. She couldn’t hear well, but she had a keen memory of that year when he was beginning to find his path in the world. He vowed they would become more than just doctor and patient. They would be friends.

     

    ‘With all my love’

    He called her occasionally, and this year, he arranged a visit to her home off Beatties Ford Road. Aluko arrived with a bouquet of flowers. Rosalia Durante pulled a note on white paper from her scrapbook.

    It read: “To the teacher I will not forget. And to the teacher who has helped me with my lessons.”

    Aluko recognised the tiny but clear and legible script – and thought how much better it was than his handwriting today.

    He did not remember writing this note at the end of sixth grade to thank his American teacher. But she had saved it all these years. It had meant that much to her.

    It was signed: “With all my love. From Yele.”

     

    • Culled from Charlotte Observer
  • Student, others win houses in  MTN Trutalk promo

    Student, others win houses in MTN Trutalk promo

    More lucky winners have emerged in the MTN Trutalk Best 11 promo. At the final prize presentation ceremony at the weekend in Victoria Island, Lagos, some lucky winners were presented with gift of houses valued at N15million each.

    Among the lucky winners are  Mr Seun Olola, a 25-year old student of the College of Health Tech, Akure, Ondo State, Mr Christian Okereafor, a fresh graduate from the Abia State University, Uturu and Mrs Adekoya Bolatito Khadija from Lagos.

    One of the winners, Seun Olola was full of praises for MTN and thanked the company for the noble gesture. Seun stated that he was in total disbelief when he received a call from MTN, informing him about his winning.

    Another winner, Christian Okereafor also showered praises on Nigeria’s leading telecommunications and ICT Company, MTN for what he described as a surprise of a life time. “Many of my friends told me it is a lie, but now, they will be surprised to discover that I have become a landlord, courtesy of MTN” Christian said.

    Speaking on the rationale behind the MTN Trutalk Best 11 promo, the General Manager, Consumer Marketing, MTN, Mr. Richard Iweanoge, while addressing the press after the presentation, stated that the Company, in its bid to ensure that its subscribers connect with the people that matter to them regularly, without any hindrances, introduced the MTN Trutalk, a value proposition that enables subscribers to register 11 numbers and make calls to those numbers at 50 per cent discount. Explaining further, Richard said, subscribers on the MTN Trutalk proposition therefore qualified for the MTN Trutalk Best 11 Promo, where MTN have so far given out eleven houses, cars and huge cash gifts among other fantastic prizes.

    Also on hand to witness the occasion are the Director, Regulation and Monitoring, Prince E.O Jeminiwa and the Assistant Director/Coordinator, Lagos Zonal Office, National Lottery Regulatory Commission (NLRC), Mr Fidelis Aigbogun the who both expressed their satisfaction with the conduct and execution of the MTN Trutalk Best 11 promo, right from its inception.

     

  • Army urges calm over UNIBEN student’s death

    The 4 Mechanised Brigade in Benin, the Edo State capital, yesterday enjoined students of the University of Benin (UNIBEN) to remain calm, following the death of one of their colleagues on Tuesday.

    The brigade made the appeal in a statement in Benin by its Public Relations Officer (PRO), Capt. Jonah Unuakhalu.

    Two female students of the university were knocked down on Sunday morning in front of the university’s gate by a patrol vehicle of a security outfit, Operation Pulo Shield, driven by a soldier.

    The death of one of the students sparked a protest, which grounded activities at Ogbowo in Benin.

    The Army said the brigade had started investigation into the matter to determine the cause of the accident.

    It said efforts were being made to reach the families of the deceased.

    The statement said: “On Sunday morning, at 8.30a.m, there was a road accident involving Operation Pulo Shield vehicle, driven by a soldier. It knocked down two ladies, who were confirmed to be UNIBEN students.

    “They were, however, evacuated to a nearby hospital where one was confirmed dead; the other student is responding to treatment.

    “Efforts are being made by the command to reach the university authority and families of the two students involved in the accident and to further dialogue with the Students’ Union Government (GUG) to avert the protest. But the students insisted on speaking with government officials.

    “It is advisable that the students should keep calm as the command is looking into the issue.”

  • How Ogun varsity student died on his  last day in school

    How Ogun varsity student died on his last day in school

    THEY came from different families, entered this world by birth at different times and also at different locations but in the course of time, and subtly too, a cruel fate began to bring them together bit by bit with its malevolent hand appearing largely undetected.

    They were all promising future leaders – in education, law, politics, governance, arts, sciences and you name it, yet fate schemed it that they became undergraduate students of the state – owned Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago-Iwoye, Ogun State and in life shared the common identity of being university mates.

    Thirteen of them had taken off at the Ago-Iwoye park in a passenger bus around noon and had hoped to spend the weekend as usuall with their parents and siblings in Lagos.

    That was not the first time they would travel home for the weekend but as the journey progressed along the Lagos – Ore Expressway, little did any of them know that at the Sagamu – Ilssan stretch, the cruel fate that had laid ambush for them at a treacherous slope, showed in a moving truck – a weighty container tipped and fell on their bus.

    Welcome to the story of the Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU) 12 – promising young boys and girls. They never made it to the Lagos destination – their lives were terminated abruptly last June 26, when the container from a moving truck fell on the roof of their bus and crushed them to death.

    Among the dead were the quartet of Damilola Eunice (200 level Political Science); Aribiola Yetunde( 100 level Bio – Chemistry); Adams Suliyat Oluwatobi (100 Accounting); Ibukunola Ashade and then Tunji Dairo(NYSC hopeful, Physics graduate).

    The case of Damilola Eunice was quite touching. Her friend, Miss Shodunke Deborah, who described her as jovial, lively and embodiment of black beauty, said she was full of energy and enthusiasm while embarking on the journey that ended midway on a sad.

    According to Deborah, Damilola was one student who was serious with class work and rarely missed lectures if she was around in Ago – Iwoye.

    Adebiyi Adeola she was full of tears about Tunji Dairo whose case appeared more touching.

    Adeola said Tunji had finished during the 2013/2014 academic seession and had only come to OOU for clearance, while waiting for mobilisation for the one year National Youth Service Scheme.

    According to her, Tunji spent two days in Ago – Iwoye and had ‘signed off’ completely having cleared and left for Lagos along with others in that ill-fated passenger bus not knowing that would be his last day on earth.

    Already, their colleagues who were touched by the reckless manner their lives and future were cut short are asking for N120million compensation from a plastic factory they suspect to own the truck and container that killed the students.

    Last week, the students forced their way into the factory, located few meters away from the scene of the accident and carried placards with the inscriptions: “We Demand Justice for the Lost Souls; ” OOU Mourns, OOU Weeps, OOU Cries,” “A Future Lawyer is Gone!,” “Fresh Graduates Gone!,” “We’ve Lost Our Scientists,” “OOUITES Are Not Chickens.” “ Stop Giving us Phobia,” “Police, FRSC, TRACE Must Be Probed.”

    The Student Union Government’s President, Com. Adegbesan Adenola, told The Nation that  they are demanding immediate payment of N120million naira compensation – N10millon for each of the dead students.

    Adenola warned that should the company fail to pay the said amount to each family of the victims within seven days, they would return to the factory.

    Also last Monday, OOU students, clad in black T – shirts and pairs of black jeans, stormed the scene of the accident in luxury buses to pray for the repose of their colleagues’ souls. For over an hour, they sang dirges for the 12 victims as Muslims and Christians also took turns to pray for the dead.

    While a youth pastor, Tobi Adesanya, from the Redeemed Christian Church of God(RCCG) prayed for the Christians,  Oresanya Adewale 300 level Business Administration (Education) student of OOU, prayed for the Muslims.

    However, the head of the university’s teaching hospital’s Morbid Anatomy and Histopathology Department, Dr Deji Agboola, told The Nation that the families of the affected students had begun collecting the remains of their wards and children as at a week ago, while the last batch of corpses were taken last Tuesday.

    Agboola disclosed that one of the victims of the accident is still lying in the morgue of the teaching hospital because nobody had come to claim it.

    According to Agboola, an associate professor who also doubles as the Chairman of the OOU branch of the Academic Staff Union of Universities(ASUU), the identity of remaining corpse could not be established.

  • Anambra student gets US degree in Medicine

    Anambra student gets US degree in Medicine

    Anambra State-born Ikenna Erinne has received a Doctorate Degree in Medicine (MD) from Morehouse School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia in the United States.

    Ikenna, who attended Navy Secondary School, Port Harcourt, is an alumnus of Portland State University, Oregon, USA.

    His list of awards also include: M.D. Graduate Award Magna Cum Laude; Alpha Omega Alpha honour; Pathophysiology, Pharmacology and Medical Microbiology.

    He has since started his six-year Residency and Fellowship programme in International Medicine and Cardiology at the University of Maryland, Baltimore, USA.

  • Unemployment, bane of youth criminality, says student

    An undergraduate of the Ajayi Cowther University, Miss Ayisat Nifem Adeosun, has called on the government to formulate policies and legislations that will enhance job creation through small enterprises and poverty alleviation schenes.

    She made the appeal in a paper she presented at a Youth Enlightenment Forum in Oyo town.

    Titled: ‘Why youth lose hope,’ Ayisat noted that no nation could achieve growth or any form of stability that would enhance socio-economic development with youth unemployment.

    “Youth unemployment leads to anti-social behaviours such as ethnic militancy, vandalism, illegal bunkering, arm-robbery, insurgency and kidnapping.  This is due to infliction of psychological trauma as a result of the breakdown of the social contract, isolation from the world of work, loss of responsibility identity and respect which the position at work guarantees. People who have no jobs feel insignificant and inferior, as they always have the impression of being alienated from the rest of the society and treated as parasites.”

    Ayisat identified the causes of graduate unemployment as including faulty manpower planning and expansion of educational facilities that have unduly raised the expectations of youth, economic recession, unwarranted preference for expatriates in employment, and graduates’ attitude to some types of jobs and locations.

    She noted that most youths that take part in criminal activities are uninformed; do not know why they are doing so, or the consequence of their actions.

    “A great percentage of criminal activities and violence perpetrated by the youths in the country is the result of some communication gap, a disconnect between the youths and leaders at various levels which continues to widen overtime, and are often manipulated by opportunists who lure these youths with promises of a better life, and end up turning them into willing instruments for perpetuating violence in the pursuit of their group or individual interests,” she said.

    She pointed out that it is necessary for youths to be liberated from the shackles of ignorance and misconception, adding that these cannot be achieved except through timely, accurate and relevant information and enlightenment.

    “Without doubt, disciplined, focused and law-abiding youths can create a bright future for the nation, since they are the most active segment of the society, and major determinant  of the degree of disorderliness and instability in a society.”