Tag: Turai Yar’Adua

  • TURAI YAR’ADUA smiles again

    THESE are definitely the best of times for former first lady, Turai Yar’Adua.  Eight years after the demise of the late former president, Umar Musa Yar’Adua, one of her sons, Ibrahim, has come of age and he will be getting married later this month.

    Ibrahim, a graduate of Law from Brunei University, London, is set to wed his heartthrob, Saratu Sodangi, also a lawyer and daughter of Captain Bashir Sodangi.

    In the wedding invitation which has been given out to a selected few, it was revealed that the wedding will hold in Kaduna State. The first event in the invitation passed out is the wedding reception set for Thursday, 26th July, 2018 at Umaru Musa Yar’Adua Hall, Murtala Square, Kaduna. The traditional aspect of the wedding known in the Hausa parlance as Kamu/Sa Lalle is slated for Friday, July 27, at Bashir Sondangi’s residence, in Kaduna.

  • Turai Yar’Adua’s N10b Abuja cancer centre abandoned

    Pesidents of Abuja have called for a revamp of the cancer centre project that was championed by former President Umaru Yar’Adua’s wife Turai for health delivery to the vulnerable in the country.

    On July 18, 2009, she assembled the Nigerian rich and government contractors to a fundraising in Abuja, which was also attended by her usually taciturn husband, who was battling some complicated diseases at the time.

    Financial pledges made by the galaxy of guests to actualise her dream amounted to N6.8 billion.

    The International Cancer Centre, (ICC) Abuja was born.

    But since then, apart from the imposing structure on the Umaru Yar’Adua Express Road, the project is now virtually abandoned, according to a report by the News Agency of Nigeria  (NAN).

    One of the security guards at the ICC, who simply identified himself as Garba confirmed the abandonment.

    He said there had been no activities to actualise the centre, as envisioned by Turai Yar’Adua.

    According to him, Turai came two times in 2016 to the site. She had not been seen around the area since then.

    “We have not seen her this year, but some people often come around to see the progress of the place,” he said.

    Garba said some bandits invaded the ICC last year to disposess them of their valuables, adding that few items belonging to the centre were also stolen..

    He added that some policemen from the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) had since been deployed to secure the ICC against further attacks.

    “Six of us were employed to secure this place and we do alternate, but because the bandits were fully armed, they overpowered us and beat the security guards.

    The desolate centre was more palpable at a park for scores of tricycles meant to be conveying patients. Weeds have swamped the tricycles.

    Worried by the delay in completing the ICC, one the residents of Abuja, Mr. Gabriel Oluwabunmi, berated those responsible for the abandoned project, adding that such noble idea that could bring relief to the masses, should have been completed without the usual hiccup.

    He called on the authorities to ensure that the project was resuscitated, adding that such cancer centre would help bring succour to those ravaged by the disease and especially those who could not afford to be flown abroad.

    Miss Ngozi Chukwuma, whose relative is suffering from the cancer, called on the Federal Government to ensure the completion of the centre to enable Nigerians who could not afford overseas treatment to patronise it.

    She said such project would go a long way in assuaging the feeling of Nigerians who could not afford the treatment as a result of heavy monetary demand.

    Mrs. Yar’adua had in her speech during the launch of the centre said the whole idea of establishing the cancer centre was conceived out of her desire to contribute her quota to achieving standard healthcare delivery for the vulnerable.

    According to her, the centre would specifically render services to women and children, especially the rural and urban poor.

    When NAN visited the National Hospital Abuja, which is offering an alternative treatment to cancer patients, the staff appeared so overwhelmed with the huge number of cancer patients.

    A cancer patient who craved anonymity called on the Federal Government to assist in revamping the centre, adding that this would go a long way in decongesting the national hospital from cancer patients with special attention.

    Mr. Mohammed Lawal, an Abuja based businessman, called on the government not to abandon the centre, adding that though it was a private initiative; the government could also intervene to revamp it.

    The ICC, according to its promoter, was meant to focus on four types of cancer that account for most deaths in Nigeria: cervical cancer, breast cancer, prostate cancer and throat cancer.

  • Lonely world of Turai Yar’Adua

    Lonely world of Turai Yar’Adua

    A single picture, they say, can tell a story better than a thousand words. Those who saw former first lady Turai Yar’Adua or her pictures at the big wedding of Gen. Ibrahim Babangida’s wedding in Minna, Niger State, would agree that there is a lot on her mind these days. While former first ladies Patience Jonathan and Fati Abubakar were full of smiles at the event, Turai’s mien was moody.

    Since her husband and former Nigerian president, Musa Yar’Adua, died in 2010, Turai, who turns 60 in July, has maintained a relatively low profile while some of the projects she founded as first lady, including the International Cancer Centre, Abuja, lie desolate and abandoned.

  • Court fixes May 2 for judgment in Yar’Adua wife’s suit over land

    Justice Peter Affen of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) High Court, Jabi, has fixed May 2 for judgment in a case instituted by former First Lady, Turai Yar’Adua against her successor, Patience Jonathan, following their inability to settle.

    Mrs Yar’Adua had sued, claiming that Mrs Jonathan has trespassed on the 1.84 hectares land in Abuja earlier allocated to her pet project, Women and Youth Empowerment Foundation (WAYEF).

    Joined as co-defendants in the suit are the Minister of FCT, Federal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA), the Abuja Geographic Information System (AGIS) and the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF).

    Yesterday, WAYEF opposed an application by the other parties for further adjournment, following which the judge informed the parties that the judgment was ready and would be delivered if parties failed to settle before May 2.

    The disputed land, plot no. 1347 Cadastral Zone AOO, Central Business District, Abuja, FCT, was initially allocated to WAYEF while Mrs Yar’adua was the First Lady.

    The FCT Minister, Bala Mohammed had revoked the allocation for what he described as “overriding public interest” and reallocated the same land to Mrs. Jonathan on the 2nd of November, 2011 for the building of the African First Lady Peace Mission headquarters.

    Mrs. Yar’Adua complained that the land allocated to WAYEF on 19 February 2010 was being trespassed upon by Mrs. Jonathan and got a court order dated 5 March 2012 restraining the defendants from affecting WAYEF’s title and interest over the land.

    WAYEF, through its lawyer, Adamu Ahmed Ibrahim and Company is asking for N1.5 billion as general damages, N100 million as exemplary damages, N100 million as aggravated damages in addition to N261 million already paid for Certificate of Occupancy as well as N454 million paid for building designs.

    WAYEF stated that while it appears that the Ministry of Justice may be interested and committed to a settlement, their terms and what they offer says otherwise.

    It said the land being offered by the FCTA was a much smaller parcel of land than the one purportedly acquired from WAYEF for the first lady