Tag: teenager

  • Teenager: see what police did to me

    Teenager: see what police did to me

    A boy, Rasaq Adams, 14, has alleged that he was brutalised by some policemen in Lagos.

    In a petition to the Director, Office of the Public Defender (OPD), Lagos State, Adams accused men of the Akinpelu Police Station in Oshodi, Lagos, of treating him “shabbily.”

    He said: “At night on March 30, I was with my friends and some others in our street discussing when some policemen came in their vehicle; they started picking up people indiscriminately and throwing chairs, bottles and some other harmful objects. We all ran into our various houses. Some of them followed me. I quickly locked my door. The policemen, surprisingly, broke into my room and beat me up ruthlessly. They also beat my younger brother and a girl that stays with us.”

    Adams said despite sustaining injury in his right eye, the policemen dragged him and four others to their station, where they spent the night for an undisclosed offence.

    The following day, he said, the executives of the Community Development Area (CDA) came to bail him, adding that others were asked to pay N4, 000. The policemen, he claimed also damaged his television set and other household items. “I have spent over N5, 000 to treat the eye and N2, 000 to repair my broken door,” he said.

    He said he had never had any problem with the police nor had he been arrested for any crime, adding: “We were only having a rest in front of our house when they came.”

    “Please, I want justice to prevail; the policemen should pay for damages. That is all,” he told The Nation. Now, he waits on the OPD in his bid for justice.

  • … And this teenager

    … And this teenager

    The killing last Thursday of a teenager by men of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) in Ado-Ekiti has added to allegations of extra-judicial killings by the police in Ekiti State, writes SULAIMAN SALAWUDEEN

    When four armed policemen besieged a building Ilaja, Ojumose in Ado-Ekiti, the Ekiti State capital, at about 12noon last Thursday, the residents knew there was trouble and before long, they got it in full.

    Wielding guns and looking menacing, the policemen from the Special Anti Robbery Squad (SARS) of the State Police Command barged into the house shouting: “Where is he? Where is he?” They moved from one room to another, forcing doors open to see if anyone occupied any of the rooms, a task they were said to have found easy as the doors were made of weak wooden planks.

    The armed men were close-ly followed by a man popularly known in the area as Baba White. Fortunately for them, they found a boy, Oluwaseun Awoyemi, reclining on a mat in one of the rooms. Without asking further questions and caring little if he was the one they were seeking, they went for him, held him by his trousers, dragged him out of the room and dealt him blows perhaps, as he had never received in his entire 18-year of existence.

    The band of four armed men and one unarmed man were not alone. Now, with them were two elderly women, one in her late seventies; the other in her early sixties, and one heavily pregnant young woman who were all pleading with them. But their pleas counted for nothing.

    Eye witness accounts maintained that they insisted Seun must follow them to the ‘station’ for a reason they refused to disclose.

    According to the accounts, the boy was able to wrest himself free from their grips after a while and ran into another room but was followed by one of the two elderly women who, following the refusal of the policemen to listen to their pleas, now turned to him appealing that he should follow them (police) with assurance that they would meet him at the police station.

    But, before Seun consented to the appeal, guns rang from two sources: one from the entrance to the room and another from the window. The boy, now riddled with bullets, fell, soaked in his own blood; the other woman who was with him was shot in her two hands. She came out shouting ‘they have shot us.’ Where she was coming from now laid the corpse of the boy that would not need to go to the station again: Seun was dead.

     

    How it all started

     

    At about 9am earlier that day, according to Seun’s grandmother, Mrs. Abigael Awoyemi, the man called Baba White had come to their house, seeking to know who had beaten his son and after some threats, a boy called Taiye confessed to have done it. “Although, we appealed to him, he still gave that boy some slaps to satisfy himself,” Mrs. Awoyemi said.

    She spoke further: “We all thought it had ended there. Surprisingly, about two hours later, he appeared with the police who looked fearful, pointing guns everywhere and forcing doors open. My son just finished eating and lying down in his room there. They went in, held him by his trousers and dragged him out.

    “We even asked Baba White whether Seun was the one that beat his son, he did not reply me till now. He was watching the whole scene. And I appealed to the boy to follow them (the police). My son refused. Suddenly, he freed himself and ran into another room. I followed him inside the room, begging that he should follow them. Surprisingly, they followed him. My sister was the one who had gone inside with my son into the room earlier, saying he should follow them.

    “Not long after they were inside, and while my sister was still beg-ging Seun, we heard the gunshots. My sister ran out, showing her hands where they shot her. I rushed inside and met my son, lying in the pool of his blood. I started crying: ‘they have killed my son, they have killed my son.’

    “Immediately they shot him, they left. Four of them and just a few minutes later, they came back, this time around, they numbered about six. I was still with him, crying. This was a boy I have been nursing since he was one and a half years. He never hurt anyone. His father is my first son.  When they came back, they carried him away and we later learned he was taken to the State Police Command.”

    A statement by the police later confirmed that Seun’s corpse had been deposited at the mortuary of the Ekiti State University Teaching Hospital. The Police Public Relations Officer, Victor Babayemi said investigation was ongoing and no arrest has been made.

     

    Why was

    Seun killed?

     

    Residents of the area, especially neighbours could not adduce any reason why anyone let alone the police would kill Seun. According to some of them, the boy was apparently killed by the police for “no just cause.”

    One neighbour told The Nation that: “Seun was a model child in this area. He was humble, obedient and hardworking. When he did not want to school again, he stopped and started learning bricklaying.

    “Apart from that, there is no job he was not doing. See all the Igbo people selling on the road, Seun would go there and help them offload their goods. Call him any time he was there, easy going.  Tell him to borrow you some money, he would always give you. He would go for bricklaying in the morning and in the evening when you expect him to rest, he would join other boys to offload trucks out there. That was his life.

     

    Other victims of

    the development

     

    There were other victims of the attack according to one Mr. Peter Olaseinde. He said a 15-year-old boy popularly called Small, who also lived in the area was equally beaten and brutalised, after which they arrested him.

    “Small was also arrested too. They hit him on the head with the butt of their gun. Blood was coming out of his head. Yet, they arrested him. He is now in police station. They took him to the police headquarters.

    Another victim was the heavily pregnant Fatima, who was among those who pleaded for mercies from the invading band. The incident left her traumatised leading to her having a miscarriage and lying critically ill at the hospital.

    She managed to speak with The Nation: “Soon after the ordeal, around 2pm that day, the children started struggling inside and I was rushed to the hospital. When the doctor and the nurses saw that I was dying they forced me to have the children. But one was already dead.

    Supporting Fatima, a nurse at the hospital confirmed, “If the delivery was not induced, the second child and Fatima would have died as well.  Fatima said one of the attackers pushed her.”

     

    Seun’s wife just got pregnant

     

    The Nation learnt that Seun, whose wife Oyewole Opeyemi is pregnant had been preparing for the arrival of the baby who he had boasted would be a male. Unfortunately, he would never see the baby. Opeyemi said her husband had suggested that the two of them relocate to Lagos, promising to take care of her. “I saw him last in the night of Wednesday. He said we should be going to Ekon in Kwara State or Lagos. He was from Ekon. I said I won’t go with him as I don’t have any one there. He gave me N170 being the only money on him. I am pregnant for him now. Where is the father, in the mortuary,” Opeye-mi said.

     

    Tales of similar brutalities by the police

     

    Azeez Alese, who claimed to have been brutalised alongside his wife and a friend said “even those alive don’t get justice let alone the dead. Alese, who lives in the same area recalled that eight mobile police officers came to arrest him with his wife and a friend on October 15, 2013, while he was eating in his room on Sallah Day last year.

    “I was not around when some boys fought. I came round to eat in the afternoon. They (the police) came numbering eight. They were all mobile police officers. They fired tear gas into our house and arrested me and my friend, Gbenga Alese. They never took me to court. They also arrested my wife, Busayo. We spent 36 days in the cell. When they liked, they released me.

     

    The interventions in the case

     

    The Nation learnt that the state government has ordered investigation into the incident, insisting that the culprits must be brought to justice. Also, the Legal Aid Council had also reportedly intervened to ensure adequate legal support was given to the family should the case be taken to court.

    But the father of the slain teenager, Dele Adebayo Awoyemi, had lost all hope of getting justice for his son, saying, “What did they say my son did. Was he caught robbing on the highway? Just last month, I wanted to take him to my farm. But, I thought my mother would need him. He was not even up to two years when she (the mother) took charge of his upkeep. Mama’s efforts have gone to waste.

    Any possibility that the culprits, in the latest extra-judicial killing, will be caught and made to face justice? Azeez Alese said, “such things do not happen in Nigeria. You will hear that the police have done this, they have done that, but that will be all.  Remember, they shot and killed a girl in Orin, in 2011 and in 2012, they killed another boy in Ilupeju. Have you heard of developments in respect of those cases again, impossible?”

     

  • Man ‘rapes teenager to death’ in Bayelsa

    Otuoke, the university community, in Ogbia Local Government Area, was thrown into mourning yesterday when residents woke up to hear reports that a 36-year-old man allegedly raped an 18-year-old girl to death.

    The man was identified as a close associate of a former Community Development Chairman.

    It was learnt that the man, whose name could not be ascertained, hailed from Isoko Local Government Area in Delta State.

    He was arrested by an operative of the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), who saw him attempting to throwthe girl’s remains into a bush.

    But some residents of the community claimed that the suspect was trying to assist the girl in his home before she died.

    It was gathered that the suspect lived in an uncompleted building across the Otuoke Bridge.

    Eyewitnesses said the man was apprehended with the naked remains of his victim.

    A source, who identified herself as Eunice, said the suspect claimed that he met his victim writhing in pains and decided to assist her.

    She said: “We saw the civil defence officer dragging the man and lamenting that the man had raped a teenager to death. We rushed to the scene. The man was begging for understanding.

    “He said he was innocent. He said he met the girl in pains. According to him, the girl was frustrated and drank poison and was rolling violently on the ground when he met her.

    “He said he attempted to rescue the girl and borrow N5,000 to take her to a clinic. On getting to the clinic, he said there was no body on duty and that he took the girl to his house. The girl, according to him, died in his house.”

    But another source, who pleaded for anonymity, said the community wondered why a girl the suspect claimed to be helping was found naked.

    The police confirmed the report and said they would conduct an autopsy to determine the cause of death.

    Police spokesman Alex Akhigbe said the police had begun investigations into the matter.

    He added that the remains of the deceased had been deposited in the Kolo General Hospital.

  • Mum: stowaway teenager always dreamt of air travel

    Mum: stowaway teenager always dreamt of air travel

    For Daniel Ohikhena, a Junior Secondary School (JSS) One pupil in Benin, the Edo State capital, his dream was to travel by air. He did it in a sensational way on Sunday. Daniel hid in the tyre compartment of an Arik Air flight from Benin to Lagos.

    He never told anyone about his passion to be on a plane, not even his mother. His only confidant was his younger brother who he always told that he would one day travel abroad on an aircraft.

    Last Saturday, Daniel attempted to realise his dream: he sneaked away from home to the Benin Airport. Undetected, the teenager got to the Arik plane. He grabbed one of the aircraft’s tyres, held on to it for the duration of the flight, apparently less than an hour.

    Like the Biblical Daniel, who escaped the lions’ fangs when he was thrown into their den, Daniel Ohikhuna survived the flight to the Murtala Muhammed Airport in Ikeja, Lagos.

    It was not until he was caught in Lagos under the Arik aircraft that the stowaway realised the risk he had taken.

    Following his arrest and his story in the news, security agencies went to Benin for his parents. They got his mother, Mrs Evelyn Ohikhena. She was quizzed yesterday at the Benin office of the Directorate of Security Services (DSS).

    Mrs Ohikhena addressed reporters yesterday after her interrogation.

    She said her sister, who lives in Germany, informed her about Daniel’s adventure.

    The mother of four, who lives at 6, Ehigiegba Street, off Goodwin Street in Benin, said she was still confused and in shock over the incident.

    She said: “When we started looking for him, his nine-year-old younger brother told me that anytime they were watching movies, Daniel always said he would take an aircraft to travel abroad. The boy asked me to check for Daniel at the airport. I did not believe him.

    “I left home on Friday to pass the night at my elder sister’s home. When I came back the following morning, my daughter told me that he and Daniel had an argument on Friday night. She said she did not find him around the following morning.”

    Mrs Ohikhena debunked the insinuation that the boy might have made his dangerous journey following an ill-treatment meted out to him at home.

    She said: “I did not maltreat him. I don’t even joke with my children’s education; I give them the best education. Everybody knows me. Ask of me at Oba Market (in Benin). The only thing that bothers me now is how my daughter will go to school, a Federal Government college.”

    Giving an insight into the teenager’s life, Mrs Ohikhena said: “Daniel does not have friends. He hardly leaves home. I don’t know where he was going in Lagos; we don’t have any relative in Lagos. I have never been to the airport. But I cannot deny the fact that he might have been to the airport when he was attending a private school, but I’m not aware of when this happened.

    “When I heard the news, I did not know what to do or say. I was very weak. Several people asked me to calm down. My only joy now is that he is alive; that is my happiness. I want the government to help me. I did not send him. I’m innocent.”

    DSS Director Bakori Tukur said the security agency invited the mother for questioning and not to arrest her since her son was already in custody.

  • Teenager flies to Lagos  in Arik Air tyre

    Teenager flies to Lagos in Arik Air tyre

    Arik, FAAN trade blames over breach of security

    How did a young boy outsmart security operatives at the Benin Airport yesterday to stow away on a commercial flight to Lagos undetected?

    This is one of the questions experts in the aviation industry and security agencies will have to find an answer to after the boy was found on the arrival of the plane at the local wing of the Murtala Muhammed Airport, Ikeja yesterday.

    The development has already sparked accusations and counter accusations between Arik Air whose security was breached and the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN), the agency responsible for security in all the nation’s airports.

    The boy, whose name was given as Daniel Ihekina, hid in the tyre compartment of Arik Aircraft 5N-MJG, Flight 44 while preparing for take- off to Lagos at 9am.

    The management of the airline attributed the development to security lapses at the Benin Airport.

    But FAAN countered, saying the airline acted with impunity on the matter.

    On board the plane were several top officials of the Edo State government.

    Passengers aboard the airline were shocked when security agents found the teenager at the MMA soon after the aircraft landed.

    Though none of the officials at the Benin Airport agreed to comment on the issue, there were fears that the boy may have accessed the tarmac through Akenzua Road axis owing to lack of perimeter fencing at the airport. A passenger aboard the plane said: “we were suspicious in Benin when the plane was about taking off when we heard a noise as if the tyre crushed somebody on the ground. Some people even started shouting ‘Jesus, Jesus, which suggested that the boy was already inside the tyre compartment before we left.

    “So, we left for Lagos but when we landed at the Ikeja Airport, the boy came out from the tyre compartment and everybody started shouting.

    “Seriously speaking, this shows that we have serious problems with regard to securing our airports. This is a serious security breach. If that boy was carrying bomb it means he would have succeeded in blowing up the plane. How can somebody be in an aircraft without being detected? We are in trouble in this country.”

    However, Arik Air, in a swift reaction to the development, blamed it all on security lapses at the Benin Airport.

    It expressed shock at how anyone could beat aviation security checks at the Benin Airport to stowaway into the main wheel of its aircraft.

    Spokesman for the company, Mr Banji Ola, said :”The pilot of Arik Air flight W3 544, departing Benin Airport for Lagos at 9.00am today (yesterday) 24thAugust, 2013 reported to the control tower the presence of a strange boy in the bush about 200 – 300 metres at the end of runway 23.

    “The control tower told the captain that they were sending security men to the place to arrest the boy. As the captain was making his final turn, preparatory for take-off, a cabin crew called his attention to the information by some of the passengers that they saw a boy running towards the airplane. The First Officer confirmed that they had observed it earlier and alerted the control tower which responded that they have sent the patrol team to arrest the boy. The captain again reported to the control tower and was informed that the situation was under control and that he had been cleared for take-off.

    “On arrival at the domestic wing of MMA, Lagos, a teenage boy, who apparently had sneaked into the aircraft main wheel well jumped out and was arrested by Arik personnel and handed over to FAAN security.”

    Managing Director of the airline, Mr. Chris Ndulue, asked the authorities of FAAN to “immediately address the problem.”

    But speaking for FAAN, Mr Yakubu Dati said Arik Air was responsible for the breach by not conducting a check on the plane after the attention of the crew and ground personnel was drawn to an abnormally on the tarmac.

    The procedure for such infraction, he said, is for the crew to abort the flight and return to the apron for check-up.

    “It is revealing that Arik Air accepted that their attention was drawn to the presence of foreign bodies on the tarmac. Why they ignored this vital safety precaution reveals their disdain for following safety procedures,” he said and warned that FAAN will not tolerate such infraction from any operator.

     

    He said: “This is arrant display of impunity. The aircraft should not have taxied further, but return to the apron until a proper check is carried out on all parts of the aircraft.

    “FAAN will not tolerate such impunity henceforth from Arik or any airline. Any violation would be met with applicable sanctions.”

    The suspect is already giving useful information to security agents on his motive.

     

  • SSS arrests teenager over internet scam

    The State Security Service (SSS), Delta State Command, yesterday paraded a 19-year-old alleged member of an employment syndicate.

    Its director, Ms Florence Ikakone, told reporters in Asaba that the suspect, Daniel Ehihebolo, was arrested on July 9 in Uromi, Edo State.

    According to her, the suspect and other members of his gang specialised in defrauding those seeking employment into the SSS, Nigeria Army, West Africa Examinations Council (WAEC) and the Nigeria Police Force (NPF).

    Ikakone said the suspect acted as the zonal coordinator for South/South SSS/Police recruitment in the country.

    The suspect, admitted to operating a website www.tropix/forum.com, where he uploaded application forms for applicants into the above-named agencies. But he said he was arrested at the premises of a commercial bank while trying to cash money from his account.

    The suspect said he just completed his Secondary School Leaving Certificate Examination from Ogwa Grammar School, Esan North East Area. He said he had only defrauded one applicant.

    Ikakone identified Osayemewre, an undergraduate at Ambrose Alli University, Edo State, as an accomplice, adding that he was on the run.

    The suspect said applicants were made to pay N6,500 for application forms.

    The command said the suspect would be arraigned in court on completion of investigations.

  • And the teenager died

    The girl has just died. And she died at the prime age of 13. The first time I saw her picture, it was the innocence in her big eyes that caught my attention. Even before I noticed that atop her beautiful but carefully make-up filled face was a bald head.

    She was young, fashionable and was pregnant with so much idea to offer the world. But cancer, a malignant tumour, was all she could receive from this cruel world. One could tell from her look, how big and productive she wanted her world to be. How eager she wanted to live but her hopes shrivelled into nothingness and death could not have been crueler.

    She was no ordinary girl. Talia Joy Castellano, the teenage girl that bewildered the world with her amazingly beauty make-up video tutorials, which swept Youtube social media on the internet and caught the attention of several talk shows, fashion magazines and such like. But Talia’s was no ordinary make up. It was her attempt to correct her many inadequacies, her imperfections.

    It was her attempt to erase from her mind, and the mirrors, the unattractiveness she felt as a result of her bald head, which resulted from long periods of chemotherapy. It was her way of filling up her wells of happiness and making up for her physical and mental detachment from the moving world. But she gradually lost her strength with her fight and she faded gradually, though unwillingly, losing on all fronts in her battle against the malignant cancer.

    She lost gradually each decibel of sound, air of breath, pixel of sight but then, she also lost too, the moments of pain, of uncertainty, of agonising hope. She lost, at 13, her life.

    At 13, however, Talia had lived a life many adults can only dream of. It is sad that life could only offer this young girl a dozen and a year. At such age, life poisoned her years with cell-feasting worms bearing the name, cancer. But unlike many, Talia productively used her years and made a meagre 13 to look like a whopping 30. Through her productivity, she wrote her name indelibly in the heart of the world.

    Like Talia, we all have our own apportioned years to spend here. Talia had 13 years out of which six were years of poisoned happiness. Many spent tens of decades but their passage through the world can be likened to the path created on the rock by snakes – it is non-existent. Many of us live that kind of life – a life with no life; and when we pass away, there is little or nothing to be remembered for. Throughout those years that we grazed the grasses of the different terrains of the world, we make no impact and thus disappear like we never really existed.

    This got me thinking. The world I see is a place where we are all involved in a rat race of some sort against time, trying to catch up with time and making the best use of it before our bodies start failing us; before we lose our youthful vigour and the energy bubbling inside us; before we lose the sparkle in our eyes and our once strong muscles start yielding under the weight of age.

    We will all cease to exist someday. Death is an inevitable price we cannot but pay for. For without it, life would lose its value. The skin we spend so much to maintain will become delectable meal for worms and snakes. The body we were once proud of would undergo decay one day. That good body shape that hypnotises men would be useless and emptied by insects.

    All the wealth we have sacrificed our youth and adult age to accumulate, the estate of houses, the fleet of posh cars, the array of ornamental jewelries, the fat bank accounts, all would become property of people, who were probably not around when one was suffered for those materials. All our dreams, our fears, our hopes and our insecurities would be buried with us. But before we initiate our contract with death, we must first complete our destinies in life.

    We could choose to go with the tide or stand the risk of being washed away. We can only adapt to the situation or we stand the risk of going into extinction. New technologies keep emerging to make living worthwhile but yet life is only what it is: a phase we all need to pass through before crossing over to oblivion.

    We can only make best of life by loving ourselves and be good to all men. We should learn to live each day like it is our last. We have to be grateful for what we have and shouldn’t habour regrets. We must learn to forgive, let go and be willing to start afresh. Learning from our mistakes would make us be the best we have dreamed of.

    We should not hold on to the past but to live in the present and look forward the future with optimism. Before I drop my pen, let me say a prayer for Talia: rest in the bosom of God and may He, in his infinite mercies, comfort those you left behind. Goodnight beautiful. God be you.

    Adebisi, 300-Level Communication and Language Arts, UI

  • Hit-and-run driver kills teenager in Ado-Ekiti

    A teenage boy was yesterday killed by a hit-and-run driver in Ado-Ekiti, the Ekiti State capital.

    Eyewitnesses said the victim was trying to cross the road at Similoluwa when the car, which was going towards Adebayo, hit him. The driver did not stop.

    Sources said the victim, who bled profusely from his mouth, ears and nose, died a few minutes later.

    The incident, which occurred around 8:30am, caused a gridlock around the State Teaching Hospital, as the victim’s body remained on the road.

    It was learnt that the body was taken to the Teaching Hospital by the convoy of Deputy Governor Modupe Adelabu, which was coming from Iworoko.

  • You and your teenager

    You and your teenager

    Stories abound of parents shocked by the double lives their children live, especially when trouble strikes. They find it difficult to believe that their children can commit hideous crimes like robbery, murder or rape, or in case of suicide, cannot understand why their very happy children would take their own lives.

    Almost always, the children at the centre of such stories are adolescents. Adolescence is that mysterious stage during which things are not necessarily as they seem. This means that parents have to be extra vigilant or their lovely children would metamorphose into beasts under their roofs.

    At the age of 10, when the average child should be in the final year of primary school, he or she is already aware about feelings that develop between the opposite sexes and may be discussing it with classmates and friends.

    This sexuality awareness grows in secondary school. This is so for girls, especially when their breasts and figures begin to develop. They become conscious about their bodies – what they have that others don’t, and vice versa. They share stories with friends, who may have heard the stories from others or adults living around them, and are susceptible to temptations to jump on the bandwagon if they feel insecure. They usually want to belong, be fashionable, use the latest slangs, know what is happening on television or the internet, and generally be in tune with what is trendy in the world around them.

    During this period of their lives, they prefer the company of their peers to boring parents. When they hang out with friends, they learn so much about life and try to make a meaning out of the myriads of information they get by experimenting. The internet is increasingly becoming popular among youths locally because cost of owning personal laptops and internet access is reducing so they get to satisfy their hunger for information and entertainment.

    Unfortunately, they do not always get the right information from the right sources and if parents or trusted adults are not there to guide them, and they do not keep good friends, then things are almost certain to go awry for them. They either clash with their parents over values, or live almost unnoticed if adults are too busy to attend to them.

    Somebody shared a story about a woman’s discovery of porn websites on her husband’s laptop lately. The man could not convince his wife he knew nothing about it, no matter what he said. When told, the person who shared this story with me and some colleagues said he immediately discerned that his friend’s teenage son was responsible. With his friend’s permission, he took the son for a ride during which the lad confessed he visited the sites.

    The best way to know what is happening in your child’s life is to leave lines of communication open between you such that they can raise any issue bothering them with you. Encouraging them to share stories about how they spent their time in school and with friends will provide opportunities for you to point them towards the right direction as you review their decision making process.

    It is also important that parents help develop their ward’s self esteem and teach them the right values so that they do not bow to pressure because of inferiority complex. This does not mean that parents should bar their children from making friends. On the contrary, friends should be allowed to visit so that parents can monitor who their children relate with. Doing so would provide them with insight on what their wards could do behind theim.

    Considering that a large percentage of the total population of people living in sub-Saharan Africa is adolescents, it is important that they are not neglected. Unfortunately, the 2011 UNICEF report on the State of the World’s Children which focuses on adolescents, says that this segment of the population do not receive as much care and attention as the children.

    If well catered for, I am sure we will benefit from the energies of these young ones. Their optimistic outlook to life and penchant for adventure means we can look forward to a developed world that is as interesting as it is varied.