Tag: Teenage

  • How Boko Haram ‘charms teenage suicide bombers’

    How Boko Haram ‘charms teenage suicide bombers’

    A 14-year-old would-be suicide bomber has revealed how Boko Haram terrorists draft young girls to detonate explosives to kill.

    She survived after choosing not to detonate an Improvised Explosive Device (IED) in Maiduguri, the Borno State capital, after being strapped with it and sent on a mission to kill.

    According to her, she was sent on the mission after she refused marriage proposals from top Boko Haram members in Sambisa Forest.

    She is among three suspects arrested by the military when they allegedly came for a suicide mission at a military facility in Jakana, Maiduguri.

    She told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Maiduguri yesterday that she was abducted alongside her father, Usman, by Boko Haram insurgents in Gwoza, Borno State, in 2013.

    She said she and her father were running to Mandara mountains for safety when they were abducted.

    The suspect said she and her father wanted to travel to Madagali in Adamawa State where he sold cows before Boko Haram insurgents attacked Gwoza.

    “I have spent three years in the hands of Boko Haram. Three different Boko Haram chief (terrorists) had proposed to marry me and I refused. Two among them were commanders (amir).

    When I refused for the third time, one of the commanders became furious and threatened to kill me and my father. I told him I would rather die than marry a Boko Haram (terrorist). So, after one week, they said since I have refused to get married, I should be taken to Maiduguri for a suicide mission. So, three of them held my hands and they injected me. Then, I never knew what was happening again.

    “I was taken to a herbalist, who, after I regained consciousness, told me that I had been with him for 30 days.

    “He told me he was preparing me for a mission. So he gave me some water to drink. I don’t know what it tasted like but I drank it. So, he said they would come and pick me today.

    “At about 7p.m. three Boko Haram (members) came with a male and a female. They were also recruited for the mission like me.

    “We spent one and a half days on the road to Maiduguri. It was when we got to Maiduguri that they strapped the bombs on our bodies. At that moment I knew that I was going to die, so I started crying.

    “I was watching when the first bomber, a female, detonated her explosive close to a military checkpoint which killed no one but herself. The second, a male, was killed by the military before he could detonate his.

    “At that time something told me to remove my own IED and surrender which I did.  I was surrounded by soldiers and policemen and I fainted.

    “When I woke, I discovered that one of the policemen at the checkpoint was a brother of my mother’s. I think that was the reason I survived,’’ the suspect said.

    The outgoing Theatre Commander of  Operation Lafiya Dole, Maj. Gen. Lucky Irabor, said the suspects were being de-radicalised at the military detention facility.

    “We have quite a number of them here in our facility. We have been profiling them and making them feel comfortable.

    So far, from their testimonies, they usually tell us that they were brainwashed by some sort of charms to commit suicide – Gen. Irabor said.

    Also yesterday, the Army arrested a suspected terrorist who had been on the run at Fika Local Government Area of Yobe State.

    Army spokesman Brig.-Gen. Sani Usman said in a statement that four suspected kidnappers were also arrested at Mundu village in the state, following a tip-off.

    “They were found to be in possession of one locally made six-loader single barrel gun, one empty cartridge, two machetes, a knife, two handsets, two packets of tramol tablets and N360,” he said.

    He further said that investigation into the arrests would continue.

  • Suspected teenage cult member held

    Suspected teenage cult member held

    Rapid Response Squad (RRS) operatives on Friday nabbed a 13-year-old suspected member of the Awawa cult group for alleged robbery in Fagba, Agege, Lagos.

    The teenager, a Junior Secondary School (JSS) pupil, was arrested after he and 20 others allegedly dispossessed road users of their belongings.

    It was learnt that the suspect and his colleagues were returning from a street carnival when they started terrorising passersby, snatching their bags, phones and other valuables.

    While the others fled, the patrolling RRS men caught the suspect, who led the police to arrest another suspect, Mohammed Korede, 19.

    A statement by the RRS quoted the teenager as saying that their leader, Ijaomode ordered them to rob anyone they saw on the road.

    He said: “I followed my cult members to a carnival at Power Line, Agbado Crossing. On our way home, our Capol, nicknamed ‘Ijaomode’ instructed us to start robbing anybody we meet on our way.

    “We robbed no fewer than 10 people before we got to Fagba Junction. At this point, we saw a young girl, (Naisha Akiomon) and immediately surrounded and collected all her belongings including phones and jewellery. She later went to bring RRS men who chased us and arrested me while my colleagues managed to escape.”

    The suspect, who claimed he was raised by his mother and never knew his father, said he was told that his dad was a Congolese, adding that he once travelled to Congo alone to see his father but was told he had travelled.

    Asked how he joined the cult, the suspect said he was forced into the group by “Brother Ola” last year.

    “I was initiated into the group about a year ago. It was one brother whom I only know as Ola that introduced and forced me to join the group.

    “Since that time, I have been going out with them for operations. I stopped going back home. I used to sleep in a shanty plank room at Abattoir.

    “Initially, I did not know it would turn out to be like this. Immediately I saw their way of life, I wanted to quit but they threatened to kill me if I dared,” he said.

    But, his mother was quoted as saying she always tried to give him and his siblings the best.

    She explained that she enrolled him in a private school at Sango Ota in Ogun State to ensure he did not go astray, but wondered how he ended up at Abbatoir.

    “He is my third child. Though I have remarried but that doesn’t stop me from playing my motherly roles on him. His two older siblings are in higher institutions.

    “I have tried enough to ensure that he doesn’t go astray. I enrolled him in a private school at Sango. I wonder how he got to Abbatoir, Agege. I gave him and his siblings all my best,” she said.

    Police spokesperson, Dolapo Badmos, a Superintendent (SP), said the suspects have been transferred to the Gender Department of the police.

  • Teenage girl sells baby for N500,000 to Onitsha couple

    •Five arrested

    The police in Ondo State at the weekend revealed how a 17-year-old girl, Miss Tessy Obianua, allegedly sold her baby girl for N500,000 to a couple in Onitsha, Anambra State.

    According to the police, Tessy fell victim of a “specialised child trafficker”, Mrs. Chibuzor Okoye, who convinced her to sell the baby to Mr & Mrs. Sunday Kalu, who were looking for a child.

    Parading the suspects, the Commissioner, Mrs. Hilda Ibifuro-Harrison, said five persons were involved in the case.

    She said the police got a tip when Tessy’s father, Henry Obianu, who lives at Ogbese in Akure North Local Government Area, reported that his expectant daughter was missing.

    Obianu claimed Tessy ran away from home in January last year ; she later re-appeared again without the baby or pregnancy in May.

    After much pressure on the whereabouts of the baby, Tessy reportedly confessed to one of her uncles that she sold the baby to a couple in Onitsha.

    Police investigation showed that Tessy was lured to Onitsha by her father’s neighbour, Jude Azuka.

    It was gathered that when Tessy left home, Azuka reportedly took her to Okoye’s house in Onitsha. Okoye nursed her through her pregnancy.

    The police boss said: “The police arrested Okoye at 3, Tonny Olisa Street, Awada Onitsha.

    “It was Okoye, who sold the baby to the couple at 8, Uzogwu Street, Onitsha for N500,000.

    “She claimed she gave Azuka N200,000 of which he claimed he bought clothes and shoes for Tessy and also gave her N30,000.

    “Mrs. Okoye, thereafter, forced Tessy to sign an undertaking that she would never come back for the baby.”

    Ibifuro-Harrison urged parents to be wary of the antics of criminal elements, who disguise as neigbours around their wards.

  • Violence of teenage love

    Violence of teenage love

    Increasingly, times are changing, and the world is witnessing unusual development, including teenagers or children- if you like –  falling in love and willing to kill to preserve their love. Medinat Kanabe takes a look at the rising spate of violence and killing by young people over love

    Ibrahim Ogunkoya is a 19-year-old, Oyingbo, Lagos boy with a big dream of becoming an international footballer. He had even begun pursuing his dream, as he had started playing for a local league football team.

    Things however came to a halt for him in September, when he was charged to court for allegedly murdering Toyin Eniola, who he claimed snatched his girlfriend. Ibrahim had in a moment of rage, stabbed Eniola in the armpit, inflicting on him a fatal body injury that eventually led to his death.

    The teenager, who has been remanded by the Ebute-Metta Chief Magistrates Court sitting at Oyingbo, Lagos state, was arraigned on a two-count charge of conspiracy and murder. He now faces a bleak, bleak future.

    Another teenager named Funmilola was also recently arrested for attempting to kill 15 year-old Haliya Odunaya, a senior secondary school student for dating her boyfriend.

    Funmi, slashed Haliya’s neck during a heated argument and Haliya, severely injured and bleeding had to be rushed to Stars Clinic along Apapa Road, Ebute-Metta.

    It was gathered that Funmi, who is 16 had warned Haliya to stop dating her lover or face trouble.

    Just last week in Bauchi State, a 20 year old girl, Fatima Baba Isa, killed a 28 year old lady, Iklima Alhassan for dating her boyfriend, Nasiru Banki, 30.

    The above are just a few cases of boys and girls, who have killed or attempted to kill because they felt they were in love.

    Temilolu Okeowo, a pastor and founder of the Girls Apostolic Ministry of All Nations, New York and Girls Club of Nigeria spoke to The Nation on the matter, using her teachings as examples. She said the teen-age is that period when one can lay a solid foundation for one’s destiny, adding that once a teenager doesn’t get it right, there’s every likelihood that they’d have great difficulty fulfilling their destiny in the future.

    “The teen years are a critical period for learning and development foundation for a young person’s future. Opportunities missed at this period can never be regained. If young people don’t take advantage of these opportunities, they may never develop their full potentials,” she said.

    Okeowo, who teaches life skills based on the word of God, which she says doesn’t even permit teenagers to fall in love with anyone else but the man they are legally espoused to, says, “people should fall in love with only their husbands or wives.”

    “Pre-marital sex as far as I am concerned is a taboo for teenagers or anyone who is not married. I don’t encourage girls to have romantic relationships or boyfriends in their teens because to start with, there’s no mention or approval of boyfriend in the bible; secondly, it distracts them spiritually and more often than not, derails them from the path of their destiny. When your heart is clouded by romance, fantasies, love songs etc, how can the spirit of God which will ignite your inner mind and show you your divine path, function?”

    Asked if love can make teenagers kill, she said yes. “Love can make teenagers kill because when they fall in love, they do so passionately and lose all sense of proportion. Teenagers live in a world of their own, they allow their emotions to rule their intellect and they do everything with so much gusto.”

    In order that they do not get reckless, she said parents must first have God. Without the fear of God, she said no parent can effectively bring up a child the right way. As it is, she said too many parents have a faulty upbringing.

    “Aside this, the world out there is hostile and everyone wants to be loved and made to feel special. Parents have to love their gifts from God passionately and express it at every given opportunity before any wolf in sheep’s clothing takes advantage. So many parents are too busy to give their children the required attention, especially in their impressionable years when they are confused by divergent views about life.

    “Without wasting time, they must prayerfully, lovingly and appealingly discourage them by drumming the risks into their ears and letting them know the beneficial advantages in waiting till the right time.”

    She said the dangers of getting involved in romance and emotional relationships at a very early age include low academic performance, gangster-ism, unprotected and more frequent sexual intercourse, addiction to pornography, unwanted pregnancy, emotional distress, suicidal behaviour, abortion, early parenthood and dropping out of school.

    Parents speak

    Mrs Bose Ironsi of Women’s Rights and Health Project and mother of three said, children need the guidance of their parents to have direction in life. “For a child to have that kind of freedom to be able to fight over a boy or girl, it means there is something wrong in the home. Lack of communication between the children and parents is a big problem in some homes. Parents should be able to communicate with their children and give them all the necessary information they need to have at certain age, so that they will not go and get the information outside and get misled.

    “I am free with my children; I play with them, dance with them, listen to them and sing with them. Because of this, they can tell me anything and they listen to me. Parents should engage their children, understand who their friends are, have more close time with them, even if it means missing work for a day. Find out their talent and help them to pursue it, so they will be busy with it.”

    Mrs Ironsi also said children are very energetic, so parents should multi-task them and not forget to teach them sex education.

    Pastor Agu, another parent, said there are different types of parents; some encourage their children when they do wrong while some don’t.

    He said “It takes God’s intervention for people to lead good lives and it is the duty of parents to speak to their children. It is advisable that from the day a child is born, the parents speak into their ears, telling them what to do and not to do.”

    He said many parents are so busy that they leave their children in the hands of maids who don’t have the time to take proper care of them nor have the capacity to talk to them about life and what is expected of them.

    Another thing, he said “is the ‘I-don’t-care’ attitude of Nigerians, where they don’t make attempt to correct other people’s children. Children are for everyone, so let us correct them whether they are ours or not; otherwise tomorrow, someone will just walk into your kitchen and steal away your pot of soup.

    For Mr Patrick Onaighise, parents have a great role to play in correcting this wrong. He says, they should not pretend as if they don’t know what their children are doing, when in actual fact, they do. They should call them and speak to them about the possible consequences of their actions, should they make mistakes. “If you want your child to make you proud, teach them how to differentiate between, good, bad and ugly.

    He should know that if he gives the key to his room to his friends to rape someone, even if he doesn’t participate in the rape, he has committed a crime.” Onaighise said.

    A psychologist speaks

    When asked if it is possible for children to fall in love psychologically, Dr. Leonard Okonkwo, a clinical psychologist at the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, LASUTH, said: “I like the fact that you said psychologically. There are different ways of looking at it: morally, religiously, psychologically. Psychologically, it is possible. Love or romantic feeling is an idealised feeling of attachment and it starts way back from the very beginning.

    “From the psychoanalytical point of view, when the child is between the age of 0-1, he possesses an instinctual libido, also known as sexual energy that develops in five stages. The first stage is the oral stage, when the child expresses sexual impulses through the mouth. This can be through feeding from his mother’s breast and from the oral exploration of his or her environment, i.e. the tendency to place objects in the mouth. He begins to form ego at this stage.

    “Then it moves to the anal stage, which is from eighteen months to three years, wherein the infant’s erogenous zone changes from the mouth to the anus (the lower digestive tract), while the ego formation continues. Toilet training is the child’s key anal stage experience.

    “The next stage is the phallic stage, which is between the ages of three and six years, where the child is involved in infantile masturbation and he is attached to the parent of the opposite sex. He is seen always touching his private parts and you hear parent threatening to cut off his penis if he doesn’t keep his hands away.

    “They gratify physical curiosity by exploring each other and their genitals and so learn physical differences between male and female and the gender difference between boys and girls.

    “”Then later on in life, he moves to the latent stage which is from six years to puberty, where the child consolidates the character habit he or she developed in the three earlier stages of psychological and sexual development.

    “The last stage is the adult sexual stage or genital stage, where they begin to have attachment and love relationships with the opposite sex. Also this stage is centred upon the genitalia but the sexuality is consensual and adult rather than solitary or infantile.

    So children can fall in love because it has to do with emotional attachment. For example, how old was Romeo and Juliet when they fell in love? The thing here is that, if there is a problem at any of the stages, there will be a problem of adjusting later on in life. But because of the parents’ threatening of the child and the society, the child may not go to the extreme.”

    Dr. Okonkwo also said that “Different levels of the influence of the parents or the society or what we call the super-ego, has different influences on the individual; so different people have different level of acceptability of the expression of these feelings. So such people are likely to get out of hand.

    “What I am saying is that the parents are the ones who say “don’t go there, don’t do this in the early stage, to keep the child away from these ills until they get to adulthood, when they are old enough to control their feelings.”

  • Camp exposes teenage girls to technology

    With skills such as video production, 3D design, and mobile app development, 27 teenage girls are ready to carve a niche in the world of business using technology.

    They impressed their parents with their new skills at a ceremony to close the 2015 Girls Technology Camp organised by Women in Technology (W.TEC).

    The programme also featured an exhibition of projects executed by the girls during the camp.

    Camped at the Laureates College in Mafoluku, Oshodi for two weeks, the girls, aged 11-17, also learnt about photography, self-defence, financial literacy and careers, and went on field visits to General Electric and MainOne Data Centre.

    The girls presented summaries of their skills, entertaining their parents and other guests present as they did.

    Highpoint of the event was the presentation of certificates to the girls and prizes to those who excelled in individual and group projects, as well as character-wise.

    Temitope Bolanle was crowned Ms W.TEC for being an all-rounder in academics, character, and camp life. She also won awards for the holiday resort she designed using 3-Dimension design technology.

    Parents were left in no doubt of the value of the training the girls received from the camp.

    Ms Kate Duru, whose niece, Stephney, won an award for creating the best mobile App, using MIT App Inventor, said the programme gave parents value for money as the teenagers gained skills they could use to earn a living.

    “I am glad to be here to watch my niece win this award. I learnt about this programme about two years ago when my colleague’s daughter attended the camp. She is now our web designer today. There is nothing like waste of money here. I know my niece will also come and join us,” she said.

    Mrs Monisola Balogun, an interior designer, said she was impressed about what she saw on the exhibition stand. She particularly praised  Temitope’s work.

    “I saw the exhibition stand. I am a professional interior designer. I was so overwhelmed. What she (Temitope) has done is great. She designed a resort. She is just in secondary school. Please keep up the good work,” she said.

    Mr Omotoso Bolanle, Temitope’s father, encouraged parents to expose their wards to various skills training to enable them find their feet early. He said early exposure to technology has helped Temitope to decide her course of study in the university which is Computer Science.

    Representatives of some of the corporate supporters of the programme also lauded the initiative.

    Mrs Adebisi Olukayode, Cloud and Data Centre Specialist, MainOne, which provided free internet service for the duration of the camp, said of its benefit to the girls: “They may not really realise the import of what is happening now. This can be a defining moment for some of them based on what they have done. It is a foundation. But they can actually build on it.”

    Babatunde Akinola, Corporate Affairs Manager, Intel Corporation for West Africa, added: “We accept it  because it is giving opportunity to the girls to learn new skills in technology. I feel it is going to be transformational because they are learning skills they can grow with.”

    Programme Manager for W.TEC, Ms Modupe Darabido, said beyond technology, a good take away from the camp was how to make money from each skill they learnt.

    “For all the ICT programmes they learnt, we tied it to them making money out of it – even starting small. We are helping them to open their minds to possibilities around them using ICT,” she said.

    A participant and recipient of the Mobile App Development Award for creating a game using Game Salad software, Tolulope Taiwo, said she would further develop her game beyond Level 4 after the camp.

    “I loved the camp. I learnt a lot. I hope to develop my game further, said the 13-year old pupil of White Dove Schools, Lekki.”

  • Teenage prodigy Animasahun finishes in top 16

    Teenage prodigy Animasahun finishes in top 16

    After his scintillating  performance at the ITTF Junior Circuit in Egypt recently, Nigeria’s teenage prodigy, Abayomi Animasahun, made the country and Africa proud at the just-concluded China Open after finishing among the top 16 players in the U-12 event.

    From the preliminary stage, the Ekiti State-born player was patched against Tunisia’s Raed Elloumi and China’s Shentong Gao with two top players advancing to the last 16 (main draw).

    In his first match against Tunisia’s Elloumi, Animasahun was in superb form, beating the North African, 11-9, 11-0, 11-3. In his final group match against the home-boy, Animasahun gave a good account of himself against the Chinese star with the match attracting fans to table six in the hall.

    The two players matched themselves strength for strength with the Asian winning the first game at 13-11, but his victory was rubbished when the Nigerian restored parity with 11-9 to put the match at 1-1.

    Again the Chinese took the lead with a 14-12 win but Animasahun responded with an 11-7 win to put the match at 2-2.

    The deciding game brought out the best in the players with both of them playing with a lot of caution. At the end it was the Chinese that carried the day with an 11-7 win to top the group.

    But Animasahun still progressed to the last 16 where he was pitched against India’s Payas Jain on table three.

    As usual, Animasahun put up a good performance against the Indian but his efforts could not prevent him from losing 7-11, 3-11, 11-6, 11-9, 13-15 to his opponent to be listed among the top 16 U-12 players in the championship.

    Meanwhile, Animasahun’s compatriot, Muibat Bello was no match for most of her opponents as she failed to win any of her matches in the group stage. It was Animasahun’s conqueror in the group stage, China’s Shentong Gao, who emerged winner in the boys’ U-12 singles event of the championship.

    Since yesterday, Animasahun and Bello have been part of the 2015 ITTF World Hopes Week and Challenge jointly organised by the ITTF Education and Training Programme, the Chinese Table Tennis Association and the China Table Tennis College, the whole itinerary will be hosted in the wonderful premises of the Shanghai University of Sport

  • How teenage sensation, Hassan ignited Lagos ITTF World Tour

    Nurudeen Hassan might not be a regular member of the Nigerian junior team but the 17-year-old has wormed his way into the hearts of Nigerian coaches with his exceptional performance at the 2015 International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF) World Tour, Lagos Open.

    From the start of the tournament on Tuesday, March 10, it was 12-year-old Abayomi Animashaun that dazzled the fans with his superb style of play. But what Hassan did in the third and fourth day of the competition has endeared him to the fans as well as Nigeria’s technical crew.

    Against some of the competition’s top players, Hassan played like a fighter and his imposing figure on table most times intimidated some of his opponents.

    His excellent displays came to fore in the men’s U-21 singles when he nearly bundled out number two seed, Egypt’s Magdy Shady,  but his inexperience may have contributed to him surrendering to the Egyptian, who also won the U-21 title.

    As if that was a tip of the iceberg, beyond all expectations, Hassan defeated one of Nigeria’s local players, David Fayele in the first round of the men’s singles. To play in the main draw, Hassan had finished the second best in his group and the win over Fayele indeed boosted the confidence of the teenager when he battled Egypt’s Mohammed El-Bieali in the round of 16.

    As a junior player, who never had the experience of playing at top level, he gave a good account of himself against El-Bieali. Despite falling to the North African, the fans at the Molade Okoya-Thomas Hall of Teslim Balogun Stadium gave the young lad a standing ovation for his extra-ordinary performance in the tournament.

    “I never expected that I could performance like this but I know that my performance was due to the training I had before the competition. I have been training for the past three months. I knew that for me to do well I must work hard in the closet and this really manifested in my game. I am indeed satisfied with my performance and I will continue to work hard to become like my hero, Aruna Quadri,” he said.

    “I want to emulate Aruna because he is very good player respected all over the world while his conduct outside the table is indeed a good example for all us in Nigeria. He works hard and he is a very humble player, who never looks down on others. For me, this is a virtue I want to copy and also improve my game. I had represented Nigeria at a regional tournament but I am yet to play an international competition for my country. I hope one day I will make it and my dream will come true. I remain grateful for this opportunity given to me to showcase my talent and I will continue to train in order to become a better player,” Hassan said.

  • The teenage marijuana smoking epidemic

    The teenage marijuana smoking epidemic

    With the rate at which teenagers in Lagos are smoking Indian Hemp as if it is a candy, and going out of fashion, stakeholders are at a crossroad on how best to handle the helpless situation reports Sina Fadare & Medinat Kanabe

    They are helpless, homeless, hopeless and perhaps do not know the implications of their actions.  They are smoking marijuana, popularly called Indian hemp, igbo, eja or kukuye on a 24-hours basis as if their lives depend on it. They are products of broken homes and carefree parents who care less about where, when and how they are surviving.  They live their lives on the streets and under the bridges. During the day, they are noticeable at major bus stops and parks across Lagos and other states. And these are aside those permanently operating under the bridge at Oshodi towards the Ilupeju end. Often, you can identify them by their tell-tale unkempt looks, wrapped weed in between their fingers, thick smokes unfurling and melting into the atmosphere, and of course the nauseating odour. Welcome to the little world of teenage hemp smokers,

    As early as 5 am, their day starts. They are on the streets, snatching bags, phones and money. Investigation by The Nation revealed that they rarely sleep, preferring to occupy themselves with smoking Indian hemp almost throughout the night. And they’re freshly out of the cradle, their ages ranging between 12 -16 years.

    “How can they sleep, when throughout the day they are smoking Indian hemp? Definitely sleep will elude them and that is why they are ready-made recruits for buglers and armed robbers,” a newspaper vendor under the bridge, who knew virtually all of them, due to years of interacting with them lamented.

    We also discovered that some of them have turned under the bridge to their homes. Their clothes could be seen littering the base of the bridge, while those recently washed hung on the barbed wire, supposedly used as demarcation by the authorities to discourage people from making the place a bypass.

    A repeat visit to the place on weekends confirmed that the kids actually live under the bridge. Some of them could be seen washing few of pieces of cloths, while others naturally busied themselves with their pastimes, hemp smoking. It did not matter that it was just 6:30 in the morning. We also discovered that they are threats to commuters who trooped to the popular bus terminus to take early bus rides to Lagos Island and other cities and towns outside the state. At one time or the other, a good number of them have fallen prey to these urchins, losing bags, phones and other belongings in the process.

    After the morning rush of passengers, some of them move to the garage adjacent their abode to begin a long session of dice and card games, using money, wrist watches and sometimes shoes, most of which were stolen,  to bet. During this time, the big white stick never leaves their fingers. They just can’t seem to have enough of the illicit weed.

    How teenagers between the ages of 11 to 15 years of age could become hemp addicts in the glare of the ever busy Oshodi, with so many people troop in droves on a per minute basis beats the imagination and raises cause for concern.  More worrisome is the fact that a police station sits just about 10 meters from this spot.

    This team of The Nation was however dazed to discover that this trend cuts across the major bus parks and bus stops across the Lagos metropolis. From Fadeyi to Mushin to Bariga; right across to Somolu, Ketu, Pen Cinema, Abbatoir, Mile 12, Olodana Oto Apapa,  Agege, Ajelogo, Agric Ikorodu, Agbole area of Ikotun, Itire, Ojuelegba, Obalende; the story is the same. And so it is official, hordes of teenagers, who should be in school or at vocational training, preparing themselves for a meaningful future, are smoking away their future with impunity.

    At Agege area of the state, a middle age man, who identified himself as Baba Kabiru, said he almost fainted the day he learnt that his son who was in primary six was smoking Indian hemp.

    He said the poor boy learnt to smoke the weed during his regular trips to the Quranic lesson, which he used to attend after school hours. “Some of the bad boys were living in the same building that is housing the evening class and were using these innocent children as errand boys whenever their master was not around. Gradually my son and some others were inducted into smoking. I got to know one day when my wallet was missing. In the confusion of searching everywhere, l checked his school bag where l saw two raps of Indian hemp.”

    Baba Kabiru who disclosed that he was unable to sleep that night said upon investigation he learnt that they have a group and they have been involved for a while. “l had to change his school and move away from the environment because l was too shocked to see my son, a primary school pupil smoking Indian hemp. The experience is still strange to me.” He lamented.

    The entrance of Our Lady Lourdes Girls Primary School on Clegg Street in Surulere area of Lagos is another notorious joint that harbours hemp-smoking kids. On a daily bases, immediately the school closes for the day, these kids take charge and smoke marijuana till the wee hours of the day.

    Again, the Area  ‘C’ Police Division  is very close to the school compound, but somehow, they seem to be content with looking elsewhere, whilst this atrocity go on.

    Speaking to The Nation on condition of anonymity, a police officer from the command said most of the parents of these kids are within the vicinity, but unfortunately they cannot put them under control, adding that “there is little the police can do because some of these kids are under-age and cannot be put behind bars.”

    As a panacea, he challenged the government to wake up to its responsibility and send these kids to rehabilitation homes, where they can learn different vocations to make useful to themselves and society later in life.

    At Obalende, another kid hemp smoking rendezvous assailed our reporter. Here we gathered that weed smoking, particularly among the teenagers, is like a carnival. A middle-aged woman, Labake Ilori who sells assorted wines in the area questioned this reporter’s naivety, asking if he was new in Lagos not to know that smoking of Indian hemp in the vicinity by the teenagers is a daily occurrence.

    “Are you new in Lagos? All these kids are chain hemp smokers, virtually from morning till late into the night. Some of them don’t have anywhere to go; therefore they live on the streets and sleep in most of the kiosks. Occasionally the police come here to raid them, but after few days you see them again,” she explained.

    She lamented that at the dawn or night, they become uncontrollable and there is nothing they cannot steal. “You can see all of us are very careful and keep our money inside our inner purse otherwise they can do anything.”

    Candidates for nuthouse

    If the kid hemp smokers are potential recruits into the world of crime, they are also potential patients at psychiatric homes. The question thus arises; why are they left to waste away their future under the bridges and at bus terminals, when their parents, government officials and even the police could have kept them in check?

    Lagos State Police Public Relation Officer, Mr.  Nwosu Kenneth said that the police in the State are doing everything within its power to arrest the situation.

    He pointed out that Oshodi area of the state is a peculiar terrain that remains a concern to the police authority, adding that “when we arrest people we know are underage and cannot really be arrested under the criminal justice system, we take them to juvenile homes for care because some of them get involved in it because of lack of care.”

    He said the police in partnership with the National Union of Road Transport Workers, NURTW and the government of Lagos State are trying to mop up the area in order to save the future of the kids. “Most of the kids you see there are not from a home; they are on their own, fending for themselves; so they are vulnerable and easily lured into these things. We do clean up there about twice a week. We rescue these kids because they cannot be arrested. If you have information about how we can get the kids, so they can be rescued, it will be much appreciated.”

    Kenneth however regrets that the kids keep returning to the dark areas, despite being rescued on a daily basis. He ascribed this to the fact that these are places where they earn their living, albeit illegitimately.

    Speaking in the same vein, Head of Public Affairs of National Drug Law Enforcement Agency, NDLEA, Mr.  Ofoyeju Mitchell said kids get involved in marijuana due to their ignorance of the consequences of the drug.

    Mitchell while speaking to The Nation in his office noted that “some are so carried away by the type of peer groups they keep that they don’t even know when get involved.  If they are unfortunate to have friends who are involved, they are likely to succumb to pressure by their peers to try it out.”

    According to Mitchell most of the kids do not have what you can call a home; therefore they are ready-made tools for such a gamble. “Lack of good upbringing also leads to it because when children are not properly cared for, it affects. You don’t know their friends or what they do; when they keep late nights, nobody asks where they are coming from. And children being what they are, like to experiment, even when they know that government have said the drug abuse is bad. They want to experiment and have a taste of that much-talked-about euphoric pleasurable feeling, forgetting that the feeling is addictive.”

    He lamented that these kids are products of broken homes, who possibly have nobody to lean on for survival and therefore take solace in bad peer groups. “There are children that don’t even know where they are from or where their parents are. We have counseled some that we expect them to go back home, but they can’t because of one reason or the other. Some live under the bridge in Lagos but their parents are in Osogbo.  And when they are on the streets, they are exposed to all forms of abuses because they don’t have guidance.”

    Mitchell pointed out that the NDLEA has put up a lot of enlightenment programmes to assist them. “We have introduced drug free clubs in schools. The club builds capacity among the children. They have their NGO. We  talk to them and give them  fliers, and whenever they are having programmes like debate or seminar within their school, they invite us as patrons to come and present talks and we believe that by involving them in anti-drug abuse programme, it will help to inculcate a drug free lifestyle in them, and it is working.”

    Mitchell said that in as much as the agency wants these kids off the street, it has its limitations. “We have challenges of accommodation for them. After we counsel them, we can give them money to go back to their various homes around the country, but there is no proper follow-up or monitoring to know if they actually went home.

    “There are some others that after the counseling process, they go back home but because of lack of follow-up we re-admit them again. We expect that their parents would take over after they complete the process. Some say that nobody cared for them after getting home, but their friends came and they followed them and started taking the substance again.”

    He argued that the daunting challenge at hand is that all hands must be on deck to monitor these kids, particularly by their parents who have greater responsibility towards them before they turn to social menace.

    “We have raided Oshodi, Obalende and some other notorious spots in Lagos and we do that on regular bases, but we cannot do it alone. Parents must be involved; NGOs, civil society groups, opinion leaders, traditional rulers, individuals. We have a dedicated phone line on our website that people use but we also advise other people to use it. I cannot know what is happening in your area even though we have people who go out to raid notorious places.” He said.

    Reacting to the allegation that the government of Lagos State is not doing enough to take these kids off the streets, a deputy director at the ministry of Environment, Lagos State, who spoke to The Nation on condition of anonymity said the government is trying to do its best but challenged parents not to give birth to children they cannot take care of, lest they become social deviants.

    According to him the government in conjunction with relevant security agencies raids these notorious dark spots, but the kids are always back there after “escaping from our custody at juvenile homes.”

    He lamented that the government is busy about electioneering at the moment and most of these kids have been conscripted into pasting posters, especially at night; therefore he said “To have a meaningful programme for them will be after this election palaver.”

  • Teenage Fantasy hits shelves

    TEENAGE Fantasy, the first complete teenage movie by Charles Brain Nnoshiri, was released across the country on Monday, October 27 on DVD.

    According to the producer, the movie was produced with the primary aim of seeing teenagers blossoming in the Nigerian entertainment industry.

    Nnoshiri, who made his Nollywood debut in 2004 as editor/special effects in the movie, 40 Days in the Wilderness, said: “The film is a must-see  for every teenager and is now out on DVDs nationwide. This is after a very successful premiere in December 2013 at the Filmhouse Cinemas, Lagos.”

    He revealed that he partnered with Mrs. Cynthia .N. Eze, the proprietress of Noble Vine Schools, to produce the movie by grooming and training teenagers in acting for over seven years.

    The filmmaker launched his own media outfit, Synergy Studios, in 2007, majoring in television and film production. “We have worked on various projects, including The Teenievision Show, which is currently running on TVC, Lagos and RSTV Port Harcourt.”

    The movie features Yvonne Jegede and Paul Sambo, among others.

  • Stopping teenage pregnancy

    Vesicovaginal Fistula (VVF) is an abnormal tract extending between the bladder and the vagina that allows the continuous and involuntary discharge of the urine into the vaginal vault. This occurs when there is a prolonged labour.

    In the process, the unborn child is tightly pressed against the pelvis, cutting off blood flow to the vesico vaginal wall and therefore affecting the tissues. This leads to a hole between the bladder and the vagina, resulting into an uncontrollable leakage of urine through the vagina.

    Teenage pregnancy has been so rampant in our society today. According to statistics, about 16 million girls of ages 15-19 years give birth yearly. That is about 11 per cent of all births worldwide. Half of these teenage births occur in just seven countries, which are India, Ethiopia, Brazil, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia and Nigeria. Teenage pregnancy poses serious health risks that can even lead to death, as most teenagers indulge in unprotected intercourse. This is because of lack of proper orientation.

    VVF occurs in teens because their pelvic bones are yet to be fully developed. According to a radiology study of early 1990s on teenagers in the United States, it was found out that the actual size of the birth canal was smaller in the first three years after menarche than at age 18, and that the dimension of the inlet, midplane and outlet of the birth canal of these young adolescent were contracted.

    In Nigeria, of 241 fistula and 148 that were controlled, it was found that 27 per cent occurred  in girls of age 15 years and below, 59 per cent occurred in girls of age 18 and below. This shows that early age at marriage was significantly associated with fistula. Malnutrition of these young mothers also contributed to the risk of fistula.

    Teenagers involved may face some social challenges, such as isolation from the society due to the putrid smell brought about by the urine leakage and lack of supports by family members. Teen mothers are less likely to complete their education. They also suffer depression.

    Fistula can be treated either transvaginally or laparoscopically. Some possible complications may occur afterwards and these include recurrent formation of the fistula, injury to ureter, bowels or intestine and vaginal shortening. But laparoscopical has become more prevalent due to its greater visualisation, higher success rate and low rate of complications.

    Everyone has a role to play in curbing this disease. Parents need to educate their kids, both male and female about intercourse and dignity. Girls may be the only one at the physical risk, but both are responsible for another person’s life. Parents should also avoid the habit of early child marriage to protect the lives and future of their children.

    The government must provide adequate facilities to hospitals to treat fistula cases. It must enact a legislation to stop child marriage and punishment should be meted out to those engaging in the act. The vulnerable, which are the teenagers, also have the important role to play. They must resist peer pressure and focus on educative write-ups and videos produced against VVF.

    The media will help by educating teenagers on why they must not engage in premarital intercourse. I believe this health risk can be reduced and stop if these measures are put in place.

     

    Oyebimpe, ND II Food technology, ADO POLY