Tag: Woman

  • Man docked for ‘beating woman to a pulp’

    A 32-year-old man, Emeka Obiora, who allegedly beat his neighbour, Peace Gaius, to a pulp, yesterday appeared before an Apapa Magistrates’ Court, Lagos.

    Obiora, a resident of Ijora-Badia area of Lagos, is standing trial on a two-count charge assault and breach of peace.

    According to the prosecutor, Corporal John Iberedem, the accused committed the offences on May 14 at his apartment in Ijora-Badia.

    Iberedem said the accused unlawfully assaulted Peace by beating her with a plank.

    “Gaius was badly injured by the accused and was taken to the hospital for treatment. The accused claimed that the complainant was very rude to him,’’ he said.

    Iberedem said the offences contravened Sections 54 and 171 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2011.

    The accused pleaded not guilty to the charges.

    According to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), Section 171 stipulates three years imprisonment for assault occasioning harm.

    The Senior Magistrate, Mr G.L. Hotepo, granted the accused bail in the sum of N20, 000 with one surety in like sum.

    The case was adjourned till July 10 for mention.

     

  • Woman bathes neighbour with hot water

    Miss Oluchukwu Nwali, 25, of Amaeka Community in Ezza South Local Government Area of Ebonyi State was at the weekend bathed with hot water by her neighbor, Mrs. Chigozie Ugama.

    Nwali was injured and was rushed to a private hospital at Onuoji Echara.

    Narrating her ordeal, Nwali said the trouble began after she had a misunderstanding with Ugama. She reported the matter to the latter’s husband who promised to look into the complaint later.

    “As I finished complaining to the husband, I did not know she had prepared hot water. And when I stepped outside, she bathed me with the water.

    “You can see the injuries she inflicted on me. I am here for now and hoping to raise money for treatment in a better hospital,” Nwali said.

    She called on the government and good-spirited individuals to assist her in getting medical attention in a better hospital.

    The police have arrested Mrs. Chigozie Ugama.

    Police spokesman DSP Chris Anyanwu confirmed the incident.

  • Woman led Ikorodu banks robbery, says eyewitness

    A woman led Monday’s robbery of two banks in Ikorodu, Lagos, it was learnt yesterday.

    Two persons died in the incident.

    The woman was seen giving orders to her colleagues after leaving one of the banks.

    The Nation learnt that the robbers snatched two vehicles, including a Lexus Sports Utility Vehicle (SUV) and drove towards Ijede.

    An eyewitness said the lorry driver had just parked by the road side.

    He alighted and was heading towards a canteen near the bank when he sighted the robbers coming and shooting into the air.

    The driver turned and made for his vehicle but was shot before he could start it.

    The other victim was trying to leave the troubled area when he was caught in a crossfire between the robbers and police.

    The police were said to have been delayed by traffic snarl caused by speed breakers.

    They were coming from Itamaga to where one of the robberies took place at Omitoro.

    Police spokesperson Kenneth Nwosu, a Deputy Superintendent (DSP),  said the police were able to foil one of the robberies.

     

  • ‘Woman, love thyself’

    ‘Woman, love thyself’

    Women have been accused of being the major source of their own challenges, especially in the affairs of family, marriage and as individuals.

    This, according to Executive Director of Echoes of Women in Africa (ECOWA),  a non-governmental organisation, Louisa Ono Eikhomum, hinder them from achieving certain goals in their careers.

     She told journalists in Lagos recently at a press conference that women are usually the first to condemn each other and point accusing fingers at each other both at home and in their work environments. She pointed out that many mother-in-laws make life unpleasant for their daughters-in-law and which has led to broken homes.

    Discussing domestic violence which is on the increase, Eikhomum, who said she was once a victim, urged women to be their sisters’ keeper and stop betraying one another. She further urged the society at large to stop using the word ‘House wife’ to address women who work so hard at home to care for their families, instead they should be called “Home Managers.”

    While responding to questions from the audience she spoke about the strength of a woman, bondage and weaknesses of womanhood. The Social Director of the Guild of Professional Fine Artists (GFA) of Nigeria and initiator of the discussion, Mr. Gabriel Awusa, said: “Unlike many Nigerian men, I don’t believe and perceive that women’s strength lies in their physical endowment even though I have unconsciously portrayed this in my artworks.

    “I don’t hold the view that the male is more superior to the female intellectually, as I depicted in my last solo exhibition titled: Memories of Elizabeth,” Awusa said and jokingly stressed that he knows many men will see him and call him “woman-wrapper” for stating this.  He continued: “My experience of the exhibition has awakened in me a curiosity about women,” which is why he is collaborating with Mrs Juliet Ezenwa Maja-Pearce and ECOWAS in order to get a deeper understanding about women sensibilities.

    He revealed that the Strength of a Woman; an art exhibition by him and Maja-Pearce which will hold in March, next year will be dedicated to women and their findings from this discussion will be the basis of the exhibition.

    “When Gabriel Awusa first approach me about doing a two-man exhibition using the theme: the Strength of a Woman; I immediately knew we had to be enlightened about the subject. Having worked with gender-based NGOs in the past, it was easy to call on ECOWA. We believe that they will be better positioned to update us on current issues concerning gender sensitivity,” said Mrs Maja-Pearce.

    She added that gender sensitivity is not rampant in the visual art sector like in other professions but said female artists still suffer some setbacks, such as sexual harassment from some of their male clients, family life and patronage which the male artists enjoy.

  • Woman, daughter regain freedom

    A businesswoman, Mrs Opeyemi Adeniran and her daughter, Oyinkansola, who were kidnapped last Friday at her Academy, Odo-Ona Elewe, home in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital, have been released by their abductors.

    It was gathered that Mrs Adeniran and her daughter were released yesterday unhurt.

    Mrs Adeniran was quoted to have appreciated her friends who showed concern .

    She said: “We using this medium to thank everyone who supported us during this trying period.

    “Mother and daughter were released early yesterday. God bless you all.”

    A source said the woman was immediately taken away by her family.

    All efforts to know her whereabouts proved abortive as  family members declined to speak to reporters.

    Police spokesman Kunle Ajisebutu said mother and daughter were rescued by the anti-kidnapping squad of the command.

    “They are currently undergoing post-trauma medical treatment and counselling at the post-trauma counselling unit of our hospital, Eleyele, before being reunited with their family.They were rescued around 0430hours yesterday,” he said.

  • Honourary hit woman

    Honourary hit woman

    •Yale University’s odd recognition of Okonjo-Iweala

    The award of a honourary doctorate degree in Humane Letters to the outgoing Minister of Finance and Co-ordinating Minister for the Economy, Dr. (Mrs.) Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, is a stark demonstration of the willful blindness that can affect even the most enlightened of Western institutions.

    Okonjo-Iweala becomes the second Nigerian to receive such an honour in the university’s 314-year history, after Nobel Laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka, who was awarded a honourary Doctor of Letters degree in 1980.

    In his remarks, the President of Yale, Prof. Peter Salovey, described Okonjo-Iweala as “a brilliant reformer and dedicated civil servant” who “has spearheaded efforts to stabilise and grow Nigeria’s economy, battling widespread government corruption and creating greater fiscal transparency and discipline.”

    There is no doubt that the minister is blessed with a larger-than-life reputation, not least because of her global prominence as a senior executive at the World Bank and her first tenure as Minister of Finance which was distinguished by major fiscal and economic reforms, most notably the debt write-off negotiated with the Paris Club of creditors in 2005.

    However, if Okonjo-Iweala is to be assessed on the basis of her current performance as opposed to her past achievements, it is hard to see how Yale can rationally justify its award. If she has received worldwide renown for the things that she did well, she cannot avoid censure for what she did badly. As coordinating minister for the economy, she bears a great deal of responsibility for turning a nation that was once flush with cash to one that is now struggling to pay salaries.

    There is no shortage of evidence that the minister has fallen far short of expectations. A particularly obvious example lies in the fact that, while she was being feted in New Haven, her fellow Nigerian citizens were caught in the throes of the most devastating fuel crisis ever to occur under the Jonathan administration.

    The scarcity, which is entering its fourth week, is the culmination of the minister’s signal failure to deal with the nagging fuel-subsidy issue competently and honestly. In the wake of the protests which convulsed Nigeria after the Jonathan administration attempted to remove subsidies on fuel in 2012, government made a three-pronged promise: to comprehensively investigate the glaring discrepancies in the payment of subsidies; to create a programme aimed at ameliorating the effects of increased petroleum prices; to strengthen local refining capacity in order to reduce the nation’s ludicrous dependence on imported fuel products.

    None of these promises was fully met. The investigation of the fuel subsidy scam has been bogged down in the courts; not one person has been sentenced. Refineries are still operating below optimum capacity, and private investors have largely declined to take up the slack.

    Nigeria’s overall economic performance has not been that good, either. Although the country became Africa’s largest economy under Okonjo-Iweala’s watch, its new pre-eminence only appears to have underlined the structural deficits which still bedevil the nation.

    Worse still, the Jonathan administration has been plagued by misappropriation scandals mainly revolving around the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), ironically aggravated by government’s clumsy attempts to dismiss them. The incoming Buhari administration is widely perceived as inheriting the worst economy in the nation’s history.

    In essence, there is a surfeit of hard facts and concrete figures to show that Okonjo-Iweala has superintended a national economic system riddled with incompetence, shambolic policy implementation and bare-faced corruption. All the honourary doctorates in the world cannot change that. Yale University is too serious an institution to lend its accolades to mediocrity as it has done to Okonjo-Iweala.

     ‘There is a surfeit of hard facts and concrete figures to show that Okonjo-Iweala has superintended a national economic system riddled with incompetence, shambolic policy implementation and bare-faced corruption. All the honourary doctorates in the world cannot change that. Yale University is too serious an institution to lend its accolades to mediocrity as it has done to Okonjo-Iweala’

  • Why I don’t socialise as much as the average Nigerian woman

    Why I don’t socialise as much as the average Nigerian woman

    Mrs. Boma Ozobia (OON) is a scion of the Nembe Kingdom and one of the leading corporate lawyers in the country. She is a partner in the law firm, Sterling Partnership, and the first black and female president of the Commonwealth Lawyers Association (CLA). Ozobia is also a former president of the Association of Women Solicitors in England and Wales. She has authored books and is engaged in mentoring young ladies aspiring to climb the corporate ladder. She spoke to JOHN AUSTIN UNACHUKWU and OKORIE UGURU on her life, career and growing up. 

    With your background as a former President of the Commonwealth Lawyers Association (CLA), I had a preconceived opinion that I was coming to meet a no-nonsense woman. But you seem to be different from that.

    It is different because I don’t see why you cannot enjoy what you are doing. You can be serious minded and productive in what you are doing without being unfriendly and without doing what I commonly do here because people think they have to fit into a box in order to be in a position. I believe that my works speak for me and my achievements speak for themselves.

    Beyond that, I am not different from the next person. We are all human beings. We breathe the same air and drink the same water. We want the same things, which are security for the family, individual happiness and the right to pursue our dreams.

    I am me, but I have been told that I am easy to get on with. It certainly has its advantages because I make friends easily across the board. It is not just about opening doors. I like people and respect them for who they are, regardless of whether it opens the door or not. It is not based on whether I want something from anybody. It is purely because I am interested in people, I want to know them, I want to help if I can. I think that is what comes first.

    How did your journey start in the legal profession?

    Interestingly, it has turned full circle because I left Nigeria primarily to go and study in England for Masters in Law but did not return because at that time, we were under a military dictatorship. I could not conceive myself living under such an autocratic rule. As citizens, we had little or no rights. The men in uniform were superior beings and I had had cause to run into them in the university and so on. I know this was not the place I, as a young person, could survive in because I would either have to take the gun from somebody and shoot him or he would have to shoot me. But I refuse to be a lesser Nigerian because you are in uniform. So, that was why my focus was not on coming home to live under that type of condition. Incidentally, we have a former military ruler coming in now as a reformed democrat. So, it has come full circle.

    You stayed back in the UK not only practising law but engaging in activism under the aegis of female lawyers for England and the Wales…

    Indeed, it was that background that made me develop an interest in human rights and rule of law, which is what the Commonwealth Lawyers Association is about. It is a group of lawyers across the 54 countries and territories coming together over 50 years ago. The rule of law is what underpins the civilization that we know as human beings. The absence of rule of law in my own country was the driver in taking decisions about what I got involved in. The absence of human rights, the arbitrariness of living under military dictatorship drove my interest and participation in those activities which didn’t and still does not earn me money. But it gives me an opportunity to make a difference and to give back, because when you impact positively on your society, it is satisfying in itself. So that was what took me along that pathway.

    At a time you became the chairperson of female lawyers in Britain and the Wales…

    As a woman, I face the same challenges that every woman who happens to have a career or a job faces. She leaves her home in order to make ends meet. So it is with the market woman that goes into Balogun Market to sell pepper and tomatoes. So, being in England did not make these challenges any different. I saw that there was an association of women solicitors, looking after the interests of women in the profession and trying to resolve the challenges female solicitors were facing. You will be surprised to hear that people are not all that different from Nigeria in that sense. In fact, in some ways, Nigeria is ahead. So, women were admitted to practice as solicitors in England less than 100 years ago. It took an act of parliament to make that happen. Having got the right to do so, it took a lot of time to get the men in the profession to accept us. Even when they accepted us, we were not given the opportunity to work at the same level, neither were we given the same pay.

    Even in England?

    Yes, up till date. So, at the time I became the chairwoman of the association, remember this is an association that looks after the interest of almost half of the people in the profession, because at that time, women in the profession were over 40,000, nearly 50 per cent. At that point in time, from the statistics that we were able to gather from several very credible sources, because data is kept, it was clear there was a huge disparity in pay between female and male solicitors for doing the same work. Just because you were a woman, you got 27 per cent less. That has improved now. Statistics were released early this year, I think it is about 19 per cent. So, the work we have been doing is progressive. It is making the difference but there is still a lot to be done.

    I remember colleagues in England asked me them: why was there an association of female solicitors when there was none for men? Why do you people think you have to have your own association?’ And I said the association of women solicitors exists in order not to make itself extinct. Once we have achieved equality of the genders, we don’t want to be more than men. We just want to have a level playing field, then there will be no need for an association of women solicitors.

    So, how did you get into the legal profession?

    Law has always been in my family. My grandfather was a magistrate and also the Amayanabo of Nembe Brass, Bayelsa State, which is where the former Minister of Petroleum, Edmund Daukoro, is now. My uncle, the next Amayanabo after him, was a lawyer. The late Chief Justice Ambrose Alagoa was the Chief Justice of the old Rivers State; the first indigenous Chief Justice and a respected lawyer. There are others uncles of mine, including the one that recently retired from the Supreme Court, Justice Stanley Alagoa. He reached the apex. In fact, he in particular, was the one who sparked my interest in Law because one, we had that familiarity in the family. Two, Uncle Stanley was one of my favourite uncles as a child because he was one of those uncles that took time to play with children. Every time he came to the house and invariably he would be coming from the court, he would have his collar and his black suit. He would talk to you, and sometimes he would come along with all those old black and white reel movies. He would set them up for us and we would watch Charlie Chaplin and so on. Not many older people made out that time with little children. Certainly, he was one of my favourite uncles. I wanted to do what he did when I grew up. He was a lawyer.

    So it was really about the family, to begin with. I did have an understanding of what the work involved. My late father always said to me: ‘You will make a good lawyer,’ because I was one who would always speak up. In fact when the others didn’t want to tell him something, I would be the one that would say it. And he couldn’t just tell me to do something; he had to explain it to me because I would ask why. He encouraged that. He didn’t think it was an insult; he didn’t think I was rude as some parents do, because a child deserves to understand the logic behind what he is sent to do. He saw it as an opportunity to teach you. And so your why was not seen as confrontational, insulting question; it was seen as a perfectly logical approach and he took his time to then explain to you why.

    As I got older, I saw that lawyers made the difference in access to justice, in ensuring that people were treated fairly. And that for me was then my passion, which now takes me here. I am a commercial lawyer in practice.

    One would expect you to do more of civil than corporate law.

    I agree. I love what I do daily, which is dealing with transactions, looking at legal frameworks and looking at how to deal with the risks. So, when the executive arm of government was overreaching for instance, and not respecting the other arms of government or respecting the constitutional provisions we would intervene, even though it is not a Commonwealth country. For instance, in the United States under former President George Bush, when they started the Guantanamo Bay detention centre, we intervened and we took the case as amicus curia. The United States is not, technically speaking, a Commonwealth country, but the United States Supreme Court said yes the Commonwealth lawyers, your intervention has been very useful in guiding us on how to look at this whole issue. So, in that jurisdiction, that was interesting and useful.

    In this jurisdiction, we have challenges with so many things: infrastructure, education and so on. We Nigerians like to think that we are rich, but we are not. This country, in comparison with the number of people we have, is a poor country. If your people’s per capita income is 3,000 dollars a year, please…Singapore is about 40,000 per annum. Malaysia, Indonesia, they are all ahead in per capita income. So think about it. And therefore, government does have very finite resources. Yes, I know about corruption. This means that these finite resources are not being properly applied. If it was being properly applied, your access to justice issues will trickle down the line. Young people and fellow citizens are rotting away in our criminal justice system only because of poverty.

    Maybe that is the more reason you ought to be more involved than staying in the corporate world.

    I am doing both. I am a corporate lawyer, but what we do, in the tradition of our profession, is to have a budget. The state doesn’t have the budget. There is a cost attached to doing this. You’ve got to file processes and there is a cost attached to it. If you are going to appeal, you’ve got to get records; there is a cost attached to it, and so on. Those costs are met from our pro bono budget which we fund from our corporate work. It enables us to make our own little difference within our society by intervening in those cases where you can see that there is a clear miscarriage of justice or where people have been hauled into detention for lengthy period of time without being charged or allowed to go on bail simply because they didn’t have the funding or the legal aid does its best with the little funding available to it but is unable to do it all.

    In 2011, you were the first female lawyer and black to lead the CLA. How did it feel achieving such height?

    2011 in Hyderbad, India was a very special conference. For me, it was an opportunity to continue to serve. You were simply the first amongst equals. It is a council, but you had the opportunity to direct and work with colleagues in the direction you feel you should go.

    It was special in the reaction. I had colleagues from other African countries come and say how wonderful it was to look up there and see someone like them. It had never happened. What had never happened also was that suddenly there was a queue because everyone wanted to come up and shake my hand. It wasn’t just Africans, contemporaries and colleagues, it was across board. I had members of the British House of Lords who were present as keynote speakers lining up and coming up to shake my hands. That was a humbling experience because it really wasn’t something I was expecting.

    With your tight schedule as a partner in a legal firm and head of the organisation, you still go out of your way to author books. However, your books seem to be female inclined?

    The books, yes, I wrote from the perspective of what I know which is all I can do. I cannot write a mentoring book for men (laughs). I don’t know your world; I don’t wear your shoes, so I don’t know where they pinch. I can’t write for young women coming after me because I have walked this part and there are certain experiences that I have had, which I have only had because of my gender. So if I can share this information and say with this information, you can create a level playing field for yourself and ensure that you are not unduly disadvantaged in the profession.

    Despite your background from a privileged home, you still had the drive to succeed in life. What was the push?

    You are right in saying that I was privileged. That is true, and that is what makes me sad when I see the current crop of privileged Nigerians. If you looked closely when the world was commemorating the end of the First World War, then if the people of Great Britain were rationing food, the palace was doing the same. That is the mentality of the generation of Nigerians that brought me up. I was brought up to know that. The first thing my father or mother would tell me was that you are privileged, and privilege comes with responsibility. The privilege is by the grace of God, so you owe it to those who are less privileged to ensure that you do whatever you can to assist. Because it is a privilege you haven’t earned, you started off ahead of somebody else, by accident of birth. Why on earth would you take credit for that?. My drive as a result is to effectively earn the privilege by giving back. That is the way I was brought up and I think that is the right thing to do.

    From the way you talk, it seems your father had greater influence on you as a child?

    You are absolutely right. You see, you must read the book even though it is written for female lawyers. It will serve as a lesson to every parent. One common thread that runs through the interviews with female lawyers, successful in their own right, is that there was a father who I would say was a feminist. Feminist in the definition of Chimamanada Adichie, is a person who believes in the equality of the sexes and that earned reinforcement from the man in your life who you adore, because a father, for a little child, is next to God. He makes you understand that this is what you are capable of, and nobody can tell you anything different.

    So, for parents, fathers are so important in the nurturing of their male and female children that stands them in good stead. By the time they go out and the society begins to knock them, that you are less capable because you are not a man, you don’t believe a word of it because the person who you know and value his opinion has already said a different thing to you. So, you are out there and find out that they are not correct, he is. You are not disabled by your gender, you are equally capable.

    It seems being a product of two societies, Nigeria and Britain, has made you to be reticent social wise. You are not loud like the average Nigerian.

    I don’t know about being loud or not. I agree with you that in terms of socialising, I may not socialise the way the average Nigerian does. So, you won’t see me at a lot of society functions. There are two reasons for that. One, I actually work very long hours. That means I have limited time for social engagements, and it is by choice because I really like what I do. It is a more useful way of spending my time. If I really go to a social function, it is because that person is really near and dear to me. Time, for me, is extremely valuable and I really have to manage it properly.

    How do you unwind then?

    Now, that is a different thing entirely. I like activity-based leisure. I sail.

  • Woman, 91, threatens to occupy Fashola’s office

    Woman, 91, threatens to occupy Fashola’s office

    A 91-year-old woman has threatened to occupy the Lagos State Governor’s office if the Metropolitan College and Isolo Secondary School are not returned to her within seven days.

    The nonagenarian, Mrs Roseline Ololo, made the threat yesterday in a statement by her lawyer, Malcolm Omirhobo.

    She vowed to permanently occupy the governor’s office until her requests were met.

    The woman with her late husband, Chief Michael Ololo founded the college in 1955 through their firm, Akaix West Africa Limited.

    But the school was taken over in 1976, following the military regime’s Education (Private Secondary Institutions Special Provisions) Law then under which 48 private secondary schools were acquired.

    Subsequently, the Isolo Secondary School was established on the same premises as the Metropolitan College.

    But in 2001, the Bola Tinubu administration repealed the law and returned the schools, including Metropolitan College, to their owners after an agreement with the founders at Arbitration Court.

    However, trouble started following the Ministry of Education’s insistence to retain Isolo Secondary School.

    Akaix West Africa said the retention of part of the school was against government’s restructuring of the education system of divesting and allowing private sector investment.

    Following the disagreement, Mrs Ololo was said to have written to Fashola, urging him to present the matter at the state executive council meeting for deliberation.

    In pursuit of her case, the nonagenarian said she has decided to occupy the governor’s office in protest against the undue delay in returning her school.

    “My client desperately wants her school to be given to her in her lifetime because the school is the family legacy. Mama and her late husband worked hard to build the school and they cannot sit back and watch when the other schools have since been returned to their owners.

    “We don’t have any problem in terms of running the school effectively and efficiently. We are capable and we have agreed that we should be sanctioned if we don’t run the school properly. So, there is really no reason for the delay in returning everything to us,” the lawyer stressed.

     

  • Protecting dignity of woman

    Protecting dignity of woman

    Members of the Nnamdi Azikiwe University (UNIZIK) community in Awka, the Anambra State capital, have held a special session to celebrate female academic and non-academic staff. FRANKLIN ONWUBIKO (Mass Communication) reports.

    It was a remarkable moment at the Nnamdi Azikiwe University (UNIZIK) in Awka, the Anambra State capital, as wife of the Vice-Chancellor, Dr Gladys Ahaneku, led academic and non-academic staff to celebrate the university’s Women Day.

    The university auditorium was draped in colourful ribbon for the event. It was filled to the brim. The women, who came for the event, spilled over the hall. The event began with the arrival of the principal officers led by the Vice-Chancellor (VC), Prof Joseph Ahaneku. Other dignitaries included the Deputy Vice-Chancellor for Academics, Prof Charles Esimone and Registrar, Mr C.C. Okeke, among others.

    The VC described the ceremony as a good step for UNIZIK women, urging them to lead an exemplary life to shape the characters of students. While advising women to always demonstrate their capacity and competence in their disciplines, Prof Ahaneku urged them not to be intimidated by their male counterparts.

    The guest lecturer and a senior lecturer at the Faculty of Law of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN), Dr Edith Nwosu, urged the women to strive for society’s growth by exploring their innate potential. She enjoined them to follow the footprints of accomplished women so as to make positive impact on humanity.

    Earlier, Dr Ahaneku said the event was borne out of the vision to awaken the spirit of women in the university to realise their potential.

    According to her, the institution is getting accolades for its growth and developing new frontiers to ensure even development. The success of the last two years, she said, could be attributed to the astute leadership and proper management of the university.

    On the need for the university women to maintain unity for the purpose of contributing their quota to the daily success of the school, Dr Ahaneku said: “We went to other institutions and made inquiries. We found out that strong and vibrant women associations exist to complement the managements’ efforts towards development.”

    She added that the aim of the association was geared towards the transformation of the university as well as creating a platform for the women working in the institution to interact and socialise.

    In her poetic rendition, a former Head of Department of Igbo, African and Asian Studies at UNIZIK, Prof Nkechinyere Nwokoye, charged the women to always stand up and protect their rights. She said there is dignity in being a woman.

    Speaking to our reporter, some of the participants described the event as one which rekindled their spirits towards service to the school and the nation. They praised the VC’s wife for taking a bold step to revive an event after many years it had been stopped.

    Mrs Ify Obi, Station Manager of UNIZIK 94.1FM, hailed Dr Ahaneku, describing her as a woman of humility, who she said has passion to project and protect the interest of women working in the university.

     

  • I’m not a thief, says woman, 80

    I’m not a thief, says woman, 80

    An octogenarian, Alhaja Basiratu Balogun, accused of stealing N7,000 and harrasing her neighbours, is alleging frame up by the police.

    She claimed that an Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP) at X-Squad is aiding land grabbers and cultists to take over her family land.

    Alhaja Balogun, who was arraigned before an Igbosere Magistrate’s Court in Lagos, with 21 others last Wednesday for allegedly stealing N7, 000 and frightening her neighbours with a single barrel gun, described the allegations as false.

    She said she and her family have suffered injustice.

    The police, she said, are biased against her and members of her family.

    Alhaja Balogun alleged that during the raid, the police bulldozed some buildings and acted as a shield for some people to take over her village.

    She said: “It is ridiculous, at my age, what am I doing with money that I will conspire with 21 people to steal N7, 000? The fact of the matter is I was born here and grew up in the village. Some 15years ago, certain strangers showed up in the villages, laying claim to our land.

    “This same ACP was then attached to area ‘A’ Police Command, Lion Building. He was then a Deputy Superintendent of police 13 years ago. He did exactly the same thing. He led a police team that completely sacked us from the village. Against a directive from the Inspector-General of Police that policemen should not be involved in land matters, the ACP at X-Squad is doing otherwise.

    “Nothing exposed him better than that count charge No S/16/2015 that reads that the 22 of us, “and others at large on the same date, time and place, did forcefully enter a piece of land in Igando-Orudu, property of Agbaje and Elesho Family of Ibeju Lekki.”

    One of those whose houses were demolished, Alhaji Mutairu Owoeye said he would fight the “injustice”.

    “The police at the X-Squad department of Zone 2, Onikan have abandoned their statutory duty and have become land agent. The whole thing is ridiculous. The police at General investigation (GI) of the same Zone 2 are currently investigating the same matter. The matter is still under investigation and the police at X-Squad of same zone 2 came with some cult boys to demolish our houses,” Owoeye said.