Tag: Deaths

  • Buhari: A tale of two deaths, By Lasisi Olagunju

    Buhari: A tale of two deaths, By Lasisi Olagunju

    June 2015, freshly minted President Muhammadu Buhari hosted General Olusegun Obasanjo at the Villa.

    “Whatever anyone might have done to you in the past, please forgive and forget,” Obasanjo advised the new president. Buhari looked up, surprised. His countenance changed.

    “Including Ibro?”

    “Yes, especially Ibro,” Obasanjo answered very quickly and curtly. The two leaders exchanged glances.

    Silence.

    The ‘Ibro’ in that discussion is General Ibrahim Babangida. The question on whether Ibro should be forgiven was a surprise to Obasanjo because twice, Buhari was in IBB’s home seeking his endorsement ahead of the 2015 election. And his host supported him all through, publicly.

    But there was no overt commitment to ‘peace’ from the new president. Old soldiers they were, host and guest quickly drifted to other issues. The meeting ended.

    The event I reported above happened. It was one of the earliest signs in Nigeria’s power circle that the new man had come to power to do more than governance. I got the gist a few days after the Villa meeting. And, I asked the source what Babangida’s reaction would be if he heard that conversation. Or was he aware of it already? My source smiled and said “Of course. But, you know he is a veteran in such intrigues.”

    For the eight years of Buhari, the journalist in me patiently looked forward to how he would take his pound of flesh from IBB for toppling him in 1985. I was aware that IBB also was on the alert. I was told that Buhari really wanted to take on Ibro. “He was told that he would need more than two terms to fight that war. He got the hint and backed off.” My source told me.

    Babangida is very lucky to have outlived Buhari and his regime. President Shehu Shagari, the man Buhari toppled in December 1983, was not that lucky. He was president for four years and three months. He died in December 2018, right into the mouth of Buhari’s awesome powers as president. A State House press statement mourned the dead but that was where it ended. President Buhari stayed away from Shagari’s burial and made sure the dead president enjoyed no state burial. It was Buhari’s second December coup against Shagari.

    Last week, Shagari’s grandson, Nura Muhammad Mahe, reacted to Buhari’s death with a caustic press release. He said the very expressive state burial honour which President Bola Tinubu gave Buhari was “in sharp contrast to how my grandfather, President Shehu Shagari, was treated during the administration of Muhammadu Buhari.” Muhammed Mahe recalled that upon Shagari’s death on 28 December, 2018, “Buhari neither attended the funeral nor approved a state burial, despite being in the country at the time.” The man said “it was a painful experience for the Shagari family and many Nigerians who expected more honour for a man who served as Nigeria’s first Executive President…Even in death, Buhari failed to show due respect to his predecessor.”

    Probably under pressure, Buhari visited the Shagari family a day after the burial and signed the condolence register. When he left, journalists who wanted to feast on what he wrote in the register met nothing in there. It was a blank page. Was that an error or a fulfillment of a pledge to dishonour the dead?

    Whether you overthrew the man as IBB did, or he overthrew you as he did Shagari, he believed he was your victim and considered you an enemy till he breathed his last breath in London on Sunday. I read IBB’s beautiful tribute in honour of Buhari. The Minna-uphill General is lucky that he lived through the Buhari years. If he had gone when Buhari was president, it is almost certain that there would not have been such positive review from Daura. The Shagari treatment would be certain. It would be worse. Friends would be afraid to ‘show face’ in Minna because Mr President would have kept a register of mourners for the appropriate punishment.

    Niccollo Machiavelli warns that a leader can “make mistakes of ambition and not mistakes of sloth.” Buhari made both and got away with them. Muhammadu Buhari’s engagement with Nigeria is a study in entitlement. The textbook meaning of entitlement mentality is to believe that you deserve the best from your people while giving back far less than was required of you. Buhari represented that forever in our history. And it wasn’t his fault. Very literate, knowledgeable people openly said our country owed the old soldier power; they said we owed him reverence and accolades; they put unquestioning loyalty as the icing on his cake. For 30 years, Nigerians Earnestly Yearned for Buhari. He came, and he failed. When he was exiting power, he warned us never to attempt asking him questions: “Nobody should ask me to come and give any evidence in any court, otherwise, whoever it is would be in trouble because all important things are on record.” He threatened us in January 2022, and we complied and bought padlocks for the laws he broke. Who born Nigeria and Nigerians!

    The gentleman officer was a beautiful snake who carefully positioned himself as the gift the nation had been waiting for. Physician Buhari donated himself to Nigeria and the nation bled from all the orifices: from the nose, from the ear, the mouth, etc. Under his watch, life got tragically devalued. For eight years he added nothing of value to the lives of ordinary Nigerians. He instead took from many their food; and from many more their lives through unremitting insecurity. As peace progressively turned ashen, the man who swore to protect us sat back, belched, picked his busy teeth and demanded appreciation from all of us for graciously failing us. We paid him that debt of gratitude last week with the fairy tale celebration in Daura and a national holiday declared by Abuja. He was the luckiest leader the nation has ever served.

    Instead of checking the dictionary meaning of inertia, just open the book of blank pages called Buhari. He was absent for eight years even for his 12 million children in the North. The North-West was healthy before he came; he left it gasping for life. Where the president’s voice was needed, Buhari planted silence and watered it with absence. He never cared; he was a leader for whom mere presence in office was enough achievement.

    Everything Buhari denied others, he got from others, even when he didn’t deserve such. Tinubu gave him every support possible for him to be president and he became president. When it was Tinubu’s turn to contest for the presidency, the General he exhumed from political retirement in Daura denied him every support at his disposal. Buhari escaped every bad treatment he gave others, even when he deserved it. Apart from Sani Abacha, whom he served diligently, no other leader since 1979 got Buhari’s respect. Yet, the living among them – all of them – last week used words which you and I know were hyperbolic untruths to bury him. He was Nigeria’s most successful charmer.

  • Desperate Crowds and Foods of Death, By Lasisi Olagunju

    Desperate Crowds and Foods of Death, By Lasisi Olagunju

    I died one bright day in 1969 – yes, died; crushed by a motorcyclist. It happened on Ileya Day (Eid el Kabir) in my hometown. I did not know, and still do not know, how it happened. All I know is that I was following my father to the eid praying ground in the morning, then I followed a crowd of other children to cross the road to the other side,…then I woke up in the afternoon, medics all over me, stitching and cleaning. Where I was turned out to be the Baptist Welfare Centre in neighbouring Iree town. A day that was supposed to be a day of feast almost turned grim in our home. For parents of the children who died last Wednesday in Ibadan, and families who lost loved ones on Saturday in Abuja and Okija, Anambra State, this Christmas and the New Year are certain days of mourning. May God comfort them.

    The dead got eaten while looking for what to eat. I pray that the bereaved be healed of their mortal wounds. They do not have my parents’ luck: I came back from the dead, head heavily sutured. The children who went to Basorun in Ibadan on Wednesday last week didn’t come back; they won’t be back, forever. Every eid el Kabir reminds me of my own aborted (abortive) death. For the Ibadan, Abuja and Okija families, every year end henceforth will come with spectral, ghostly memories. What happened is an evergreen tragedy, monumental in all ways.

    When a similar crowd crush killed 183 children in a hall in Sunderland, United Kingdom, on 16 June, 1883, one of the survivors contrasted the mood in his family with the atmosphere in unfortunate homes in that city: “In our house there was joy and thanksgiving, and one old neighbour laid his hand on my head and told me that my death had not yet been decreed. But in many homes, there was misery and desolation, many a heart was stricken with woe, and many a mother as she bent in sorrow over a loved one so strangely still (said that) indeed, the ways of God are not as our ways.” William Codling, who managed to escape the horrid incident with his sister, wrote the above in December 1894 (eleven years after the tragedy).

    Death existed to kill the aged, but today, it is murdering the young, north, east and west. Why? Fuji music philosopher, Saheed Osupa, asks the same question in a song: “Ikú np’àgbà/ èwo ni t’omodé?/ Ilé ayé mà wá di rúdurùdu.” The world is spoilt. In his ‘Yoruba Responses to The Fear of Death’ (1960), Peter Morton-Williams describes death of the young among the Yoruba as “horrifying, an unnatural calamity.” It is true that what we call àìgboràn- headstrong foolhardiness – sometimes kills, but it is also true that the will of the enemy kills more. The enemy in the context of this death discourse is the Nigerian state. Mass misery was the enemy that processed the disasters of last week.

    Hunger is a very jealous tenant; it habours no neighbour – not the fear of death, not of death itself. If the hungry feared death, they would know that an uncontrolled crowd is a barrel bomb that kills without borders. Hunger was the devil in the fatal gatherings of Ibadan, Abuja and Okija. I blame the lords of the land. On their watch, everyone begs, or rummages the trash can or joins deadly food rallies for IDP rations. Those are the options. The other available option is suicide – and many pursue life today in ways that suggest they do not mind dying as an escape route.

    In 1883, what was promised the kids of Sunderland were toys and “the greatest treat for children ever given.” In Ibadan last Wednesday, what the children were promised was N5,000 for the first 5,000 of them that showed up. Some mothers heard that and put one plus one together: Two kids meant N10,000; three kids, N15,000. They did the maths and thought it was right to gather and rush their entire kids into that ground of death in search of hope. Many got there as early as 5am – five hours before the event was due to start; some mothers reportedly even slept overnight there with their kids to beat the queue. Some more desperate ones threw their kids across the fence into the already choked and charged school compound, the event venue. It was like feeding their future to the demon of misery. Mr. Oriyomi Hamzat, whose Agidigbo FM radio station partnered with the organizers, says in a trending audio clip: “I saw how people were falling on one another. As I was rescuing those that fell, more people were rushing and stepping on those that were on the ground because of small gifts. I pity that woman, and I pity myself. I will never do this again.”

    In Okija, Anambra State, the promise was rice; in Abuja, it was imprecise ‘palliative.’ The Ibadan, Abuja and Okija gesture of magnanimity unfortunately turned to foods of death; a pledged gift of chickens took whole bulls from many families. In ‘The Gift, and Death, of Blackness,’ Joseph Winters of Duke University, North Carolina, United States, writes about what he calls “the gift of death.” Some gifts become poisonous when wrongly given; they kill. We have become so depraved that we volubly advertise philanthropy. Gordon B. Hancock, in a June 1926 Social Forces article, writes on “the evils which inhere in excessive advertising.” He asks one troubling question: “Is the unlimited sway of advertising compatible with society’s highest good?” Whoever is probing last week’s serial disasters should seek an answer to that question. An effusive promise of gifts on a popular radio station roused several thousands of hungry children and adults to the Ibadan funfair of death. Similarly hyped promises of gifts poured over two thousand school children into Victoria Hall in Sunderland in 1883 – 141 years ago. William Codling, who was quoted above, narrated how the Sunderland disaster happened: “It began something in this wise: A man delivered a handful of bills outside the school doors on the Friday night setting forth the entertainment in glowing terms and we were all wild to go.” And they went. As it turned out, no one left that venue, and all the Nigerian venues of last week, with what was promised. Instead, death, which was not promised, was the harvest. In the UK experience, a whole class of 30 Sunday School children were among those picked up dead from the stampede. In Ibadan, some mothers reportedly lost all they had to the tragedy.

    Hunger, or even fear of hunger, push people to plunge into deadly irrationality. On Thursday, 24 October, 1918, eleven women, four children and a police officer died in a stampede at a market in Cairo, Egypt, simply because they feared they wouldn’t get enough cereals to buy. They were not looking for freebies; they died because they scrambled to buy what was scarce.

    “In the aftermath of tragedies,” writes Ellen Walker in a November, 2022 article, “it’s easy to focus on the assignation of blame. But how well do we understand the causes of crushing crowds?” The piece is on ‘Death by Crowding.’ All probes and available literature on crowd accidents abroad blame the same issues: poor and “inadequate planning, excited crowd, lack of crowd management and a flaw or hazard in a facility” (J. F. Dickie, 1995: 318). We have those factors here compounded viciously by unremitting hunger courtesy of bumbling governance, and a colada of existential concerns.

    Grim and tragic as last week was, will it be the last? We pray it is so, but it may not be unless we check the causes and yank off the throttle, drivers of such tragedies. In ‘The Life of Reason’, Spanish American philosopher, George Santayana, warns that: “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”

    A passage in J. F. Dickie’s ‘Major Crowd Catastrophes’ published in 1995 suggests exactly that. Dickie writes about the Sunderland disaster of 1883 with 183 fatalities, the London crowd crush of 1943 with 173 fatalities; Bolton of 1946 with 33 fatalities; Glasgow of 1971 with 66 fatalities and Sheffield of 1989 with 96 fatalities. He then sculptures those crowd-crushing disasters into a dizzying revolving door of calamities. Because man does not learn from his bad experiences, they come in repeated times like Wole Soyinka’s Abiku. Dickie notes that “the Ibrox stand incident of 1902 in Glasgow reoccurred at Bastia in 1992 where the potential for an enormous tragedy existed. The crushing accident at Bolton in 1946 has a striking similarity with the Hillsborough disaster. The Sunderland catastrophe of 1883 is similar to the Bethnal Green incident of 1943 which repeated itself on a smaller scale in New York in 1992.”

    We have them in Nigeria here too. I quote a BBC report of the Ibadan stampede and its predecessors: “Nigeria is grappling with its worst economic crisis in a generation, which explains why more than 10,000 people reportedly turned up for the event. There have been several similar incidents this year. In March, two female students were crushed to death at the Nasarawa State University, Keffi, near the capital Abuja, when a rice distribution programme by the state governor caused a crowd surge. At least 23 people were injured. Three days later in the northern state of Bauchi, at least seven people died in another crush when a philanthropist and businessman was giving handouts of 5,000 naira. Earlier in February, five people were reported killed in Lagos when the Nigerian Customs Service auctioned seized bags of rice. A crowd surge for bags of rice being auctioned for about $7:00 led to the trampling to death of five people with dozens more injured.” The BBC did that recap on Wednesday, four days before the twin tragedies in Abuja in the north and Okija in the east – a perfect completion of the usual pan-Nigerian triangle of evil.

    I spend some of my valuable time watching power and its drama. This past week, I bit my lips watching the indiscretion of the president’s men organizing a voluptuous boat regatta for him in Lagos in spite of the Ibadan disaster. I shook my head at the politics of a last-minute cancellation of that boat regatta not because of Ibadan but because of similar disasters in the north and in the east. The president and his Lagos men were almost echoing Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar: “What touches us ourselves shall be last served.”

    The president has been busy with statements after statements mourning the dead. He needs to do more than issuing condolence messages. PR stunts of cancellation of a boat regatta won’t turn back hungry crowds from journeys of death. The president should convince himself that his policies are not life-friendly; they kill the poor and impoverish the rich. I hope he knows this and believes this and makes amends. He is his number one problem; the second are those who sing Emperor Nero’s anthem while his Rome burns. Fawning fans of power will insist that the president and his policies have clean hands in this mass death matter. They will talk of palliatives of the past as proof of the president’s humanity. Unfortunately, as Zimbabweans say, “you cannot tell a hungry child that you gave him food yesterday.”

    Defenders of power would point at pre-May 2023 crowd-crush disasters in this country. They would say they happened before this regime; they would cite the several deadly stampedes outside Nigeria across decades and centuries. The Muslim among them would cite Quran 63:11: “Never will Allah delay a soul when its time has come.” The Christian among them would quote the Bible, Ecclesiastes 1:9: “There is no new thing under the sun.” Yes, a stampede in a Chicago theatre in 1903 killed 602; another in a Moscow stadium in 1982 killed 340. A stampede in Mecca in 1990 killed 1,425; many more follow-up crowd crush disasters in Saudi Arabia claimed hundreds of lives. Further down history in 1863, a Church stampede in Santiago, Chile, killed 2,000 persons. Regime backers here will use these figures to scent the arse of their palace. They won’t think of one distinguishing fact: in all those places, the disasters were not because the people were starving and dying. Even the Egypt food scarcity that birthed the disaster of 1918 was not because government was unfeeling; it was because a world war was ongoing. Here, there is no war, yet people are dying in droves as if there is a war here.

    Kings and presidents should pause their greed, rethink their policies and create some space for the people. They can remain big without being “superfluous and lust-dieted.” They can let “distribution undo excess” so that “each man (will) have enough.” The words in quote here are from Shakespeare’s King Lear. And, ‘enough’ in every culture here means life’s basics: food, shelter, clothing and hope of advancement. It is only when the “houseless heads and unfed sides”, when the “poor naked wretches” are weaned of their want that the country can have peace and stop crying over spilt milk of fatal stampedes. In whatever remedial steps we may take, I see a need for urgency. We need to act fast, otherwise – and this is my conclusion here – the next stampede may not spare the elite.

  • IGP Orders Probe of Abuja, Okija Food Distribution Stampedes

    IGP Orders Probe of Abuja, Okija Food Distribution Stampedes

    Scene of devastation at Abuja stampede (Photo credit: Channels TV)The Inspector General of Police (IGP) Kayode Egbetokun has ordered a probe into the stampede at food distribution events in Abuja and Anambra State that resulted in several fatalities, with many injured.

    At the Holy Trinity Catholic Church, Maitama, Abuja, at least 10 persons died and several got injured during the distribution of foodstuffs to vulnerable and elderly people in the spirit of yuletide.

    In Okija, Anambra State, three persons died and several other were injured during a philanthropic activity by a renowned philanthropist in the town where palliatives were distributed to help citizens cushion the hardship induced by the gruelling economic situation in the country, as well as to celebrate Christmas.

    As Nigeria’s continue to mourn the dead, praying for the speedy recovery of the injured, the Inspector General of Police, Kayode Egbetokun fingered negligence on the part of the organisers of the charitable events.

    The IGP described the alleged negligence as criminal.

    This was the core of a press conference addressed in Abuja, on Saturday, by the Police Public Relations Officer at Force Headquarters, Olumuyiwa Adejobi, an Assistant Commissioner of Police, ACP.

    Adejobi quoted the IGP as having mandated police commissioners in the affected states to scrupulously investigate the incidents.

    “The IGP has ordered the Commissioners of the affected states to carry out thorough investigations into these ugly incidences for further legal actions,” Adejobi said.

    The police spokesman implored government officials, groups, individuals, community leaders, and non-governmental bodies to work “collaboratively towards establishing a comprehensive and organized framework for distributing palliative”.

    “The IGP has hereby warned groups and organizers of similar events to ensure the involvement of security agencies as negligence on their part is criminal and would not be overlooked, as provided for in Sec. 196 of the Penal Code and Sec. 344 of the Criminal Code, Laws of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.”

  • AFCON Tragedy: Super Eagles/Bafana Bafana Semi-Final Cracker Claimed 6 Nigerian Lives

    AFCON Tragedy: Super Eagles/Bafana Bafana Semi-Final Cracker Claimed 6 Nigerian Lives

    By Damola Emmanuel

    Reports have revealed that at least five Nigerians, including Hon. Cairo Ojougboh, an All Progressives Congress stalwart, died while watching the Super Eagles of Nigeria play South Africa’s Bafana Bafana in the semi-final of the ongoing Africa Cup of Nations in Cote D’Ivoire on Wednesday.

    Ojougboh, according to the family, screamed and died as the South Africans earned a penalty after Video Assistant Refere, VAR, disallowed Victor Osimhen’s goal and the North African referee awarded a penalty against Nigeria.

    Osimhen’s goal would have sent the South Africans into a deep slumber and out of the competition but for an earlier infringement committed by a Nigerian player.

    Although Nigeria went ahead to win the tension-soaked match 4-2 on penalties after more than 120 minutes of play, the victory came with a heavy price as no less than five Nigerians died due to shock and high-wire tension during or after the penalty shootout.

    Apart from Dr Cairo Ojougboh, other Nigerians who died as a result of the tension they soaked during the match include: the Deputy Bursar of  Kwara State University,  Alhaji Ayuba Abdullahi;  an Anambra-born businessman based in Cote d’Ivoire, Chief Osondu Nwoye;  a sales reprsentatives, one Mikhail Osundiji; and a National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) member, identified simply as Samuel.

    The match ended 1-1 after extra time, with both goals coming from penalties during regulation time. The goals came after resilient Super Eagles Captain, William Troost-Ekong, converted his 67-minute kick and Teboho Mokoena equalised from a 90th-minute spot-kick for the South Africans.

    The back-breaking equalizer by Mokoena came just after the Super Eagles thought they had scored another goal through a tap-in from the Napoli top striker, Victor Osimhen. But the goal was upturned after the referee checked the VAR for an infringement in the Nigerian penalty box in the build-up to the goal.

    The dramatic twist in the tension-soaked match was said to have led to the death of the former member of the House of Representatives representing the Ika Federal Constituency of Delta State,

    Ojougboh, according to the Family, reportedly screamed and subsequently slumped as soon as the South Africans scored the equalising penalty kick.

    Mr. Sheriff Oborevwori, Governor of Delta State, confirmed Ojougboh’s death in a condolence statement signed by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Festus Ahon, on Thursday.

    According to Ahon, the governor commiserated with Ojougboh’s family, the Ika nation, Agbor Kingdom, and the APC family over the demise of the renowned politician.

    The governor, according to Ahon’s statement, said: “On behalf of the government and people of Delta State, I mourn the passing of an astute and grassroots-oriented politician, Dr. Cairo Ojougboh, who passed on Wednesday.

    “The news of his death was shocking, given his invaluable contributions to the politics of the state and the country at large. Until his death, he was a renowned chieftain of the All Progressives Congress, in the state.”

    Similarly mourning Ojougboh’s sudden death, the President General of the Agbor Community Union, Chief Laurence Onyeche, said the politicican’s demise had created a big vacuum in the Agbor kingdom.

    In a statement issued by the union’s Publicity Secretary, Mr. Augustine Ekamagule, the President General described Ojougboh as a fearless politician.

    “On behalf of the PG and members of Agbor Community Union, where the Ojougboh belong, we sympathize with the family.

    “According to our President General of the Agbor Community Union, Chief Laurence Onyeche, Ojougboh died in Abuja while watching the Nigeria vs. South Africa match.

    “He said an Ojougboh family member called him around 3 a.m. on Thursday, informing him that Cairo Ojougboh had passed away.

    “The family said Ojougboh was watching the match, and immediately South Africa scored the goal, he shouted and slumped.

    “All efforts to revive him were not fruitful. It was around 3 a.m. when the family announced his death. Rest in peace, great and fearless politicians of our time,” he said.

    Meanwhile, the NYSC Coordinator in Adamawa State, Jingi Dennis, said on Thursday that the corps member was confirmed dead at the General Hospital in Numan.

    And in faraway Bouaké, the Anambra-born billionaire, Chief Nwoye, himself an avid football lover, reportedly slumped while watching the same match.

    The news of his death was made known in a post by a Facebook user, Chukwudi Iwuchukwu, on Thursday.

    The Facebook user wrote: “High Chief Osondu Nwoye was the richest Igbo businessman based in Ivory Coast before yesterday (Wednesday), but what the late Anambra-born billionaire did not see coming is that watching his darling Super Eagles play yesterday in Ivory Coast, where he lives and runs his flourishing business, was going to ultimately cost him his life.

    “He travelled to Bouaké, the city that hosted the Super Eagles match yesterday, to watch his darling Super Eagles play.

    “According to eyewitnesses, the High Chief was on top of the moon, shouting in his voice, when Victor Osimen scored that second goal, which was later cancelled by VAR.

    “Maybe the shock of seeing the goal canceled and penalty awarded to South Africa was too much to bear for his fragile heart, which failed immediately, which resulted in the High Chief collapsing inside the stadium.”

    The Punch newspaper reported that the deputy bursar of Kwara State University, KWASU, Alhaji bdullahi, reportedly died on Wednesday night while watching the same match. He was buried on Thursday morning according to Islamic rites.

    The university’s Director of Information, Dr. Saedat Aliyu, confirmed Abdullahi’s death, describing the late deputy bursar as a “jovial and radiant person” who was always ready to assist other people.

    According to her, “There is no dull moment when you’re with Alhaji Ayuba. He’s very jovial and ready to render assistance to anyone who goes to him for such assistance. He came to work on Wednesday and was full of life. He was jovial and radiant at the office.”

    In Adamawa State, an NYSC member, identified only as Samuel, who hailed from Kaduna State, was said to have also passed away just before Nigeria’s final penalty kick, which secured the Eagles’ win in the match.

  • Mayhem in Plateau as 27 Killed in 25 Hours

    Mayhem in Plateau as 27 Killed in 25 Hours

    Hell could not have been hotter than in Plateau State where over 25 persons were reported murdered by blood-baying terrorists and dare-devil cattle herders last weekend.

    According to reports, the fatalities were recorded during vicious attacks by suspected Fulani militia as well as clash between local vigilantes and armed bandits.

    Eighteen people were reported killed during a clash between a vigilante group and bandits in Bangalala town, Wase Local Government area of the state. The mayhem continued on Sunday when suspected Fulani militia attacked  the Danda Chugwi community in Jos South, leaving  seven people dead, and many injured.

    Confirming the incident to journalists, yesterday, the

    National Publicity Secretary of Berom Youth Moulders Association, Mr. Rwang Tengwong, confirmed the incidents to journalists on Monday, disclosing that the Danda Chugwi killings came barely 24 hours after 18 persons Wase mayhem.

    However, reports said the local vigilantes successfully neutralised the 16 bandits but lost two of their members tin the ferocious battle.

    The reports further revealed that the bandits had earlier taken over the town after threatening its people to leave. The bandits, however, met their waterloo when the vigilantes mobilised and engaged them in fierce gun battle.

    But the vigilante’s action didn’t seem to go well with the police command in the state, who were reportedly angry that they did not consult any security agency before confronting the bandits.

    The Guardian quoted the Plateau State Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), DSP Alfred Alabo, as asserting that the vigilantes might have unintentionally committed murder during the armed confrontation with the bandits.

     

  • Gunmen kill 32 people in volatile northwest Nigeria

    Gunmen kill 32 people in volatile northwest Nigeria

    Gunmen killed 32 people and razed dozens of houses in the latest attacks in Nigeria’s volatile northwestern state of Kaduna, local authorities said Thursday.

    Heavily-armed criminal gangs known as bandits in northwest and central Nigeria have raided villages to kidnap or kill residents for years but have become increasingly brazen.

    In recent months, they have attacked a passenger train between the capital Abuja and Kaduna city and kidnapped dozens, massacred more than 100 villagers and killed a dozen members of vigilante groups.

    On Sunday, “bandits attacked the villages of Dogon Noma, Ungwan Sarki and Ungwan Maikori in Kajuru local government area,” the state security commissioner Samuel Aruwan said in a statement.

    He said they “stormed the area in large numbers on motorcycles, and proceeded to raze several houses, as they attacked and killed locals”.

    The gunmen attacked the first two locations and killed 31 citizens. “They then headed into Ungwan Maikori, where they killed one person and burnt some houses,” said Aruwan.

    Security forces dispatched a helicopter which engaged the bandits before the arrival of ground troops, he added.

    According to the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project (ACLED), such armed bandits killed 2,600 civilians in 2021, an increase of 250 percent from 2020.

    Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari, a former army general, has been under pressure to end the deadly violence before he leaves office next year at the end of his two terms in power.

    • AFP
  • Buhari Furious at Imo Illegal Oil Refinery Tragedy, Calls it National Disaster

    Buhari Furious at Imo Illegal Oil Refinery Tragedy, Calls it National Disaster

    President Muhammadu Buhari has reacted to last Friday’s explosion at an illegal oil refinery in Abaezi forest in the Ohaji-Egbema Local Government Area of Imo State that claimed over 50 lives, describing it as “catastrophe and a national disaster”.

    According to Declan Emelumba, Imo State Commissioner for Information, fire broke out, Friday night, and quickly spread to two fuel storage areas at the illegal crude oil refinery, causing huge explosions in the complex. There were morbid prospects of death toll rising as high as 100.

    In his reaction to the tragedy, President Buhari, according to his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Mallam Garba Shehu, directed the armed forces, security and intelligence agencies to intensify the clampdown on illegal refineries.

    According to Shehu, Buhari said responsibility for the loss of lives and property must squarely lie with the sponsors of the illegal refinery, “who must all be caught and made to face justice.”

    In conveying “the condolences and the full depth and range of the nation’s shock and trauma” to the families of the victims, the Ohaji Egbema community and the government and people of Imo State, the President urged community leaders, the police, and the secret service to never allow the occurrence of the heart-breaking incident in any part of the country again.

     

     

  • Mysterious Deaths: Kogi Advises Residents to Shun Cow Meat

    Mysterious Deaths: Kogi Advises Residents to Shun Cow Meat

    Residents of Kogi State have been  advised to shun cow meat for at least one week as 20 cows died mysteriously in Lokoja.

    The state government says there is the possibility that the cows ingested poisonous substances while grazing.

    The Director of Veterinary Services, Kogi Ministry of Agriculture, Salau Tarawa, gave the advice at a news conference.

    He said beef from some of the cows were already in Lokoja markets, but had been recalled.

    He said some of the cows had already been taken to markets in Osara in Adavi Local Government Area; to Ajaokuta, to Obajana, to Kotonkarfe and to Kakanda for sale to members of the public.

    He said the ministry was collaborating with security agencies to bring the herders to question.

    Speaking on the development, the Head, Agro Rangers Unit, Kogi State Command of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), Bayode Emmanuel, said the cows were discovered in Lokoja.

    “The cows emerged from the back of the state’s secretariat complex where they had gone to graze. All of a sudden, they started behaving funny, slumped and died within minutes.

    “Upon interrogation, the herder said he was coming out with the cows after grazing when the incident happened,’’ he said.

    Mr Emmanuel assured that the NSCDC would investigate the development thoroughly to ascertain where the dead cows had grazed and also to prevent possible sale and consumption of the infected beef.

    (NAN)

     

  • Ekiti Obas Mourn Olubadan, Soun

    Ekiti Obas Mourn Olubadan, Soun

    Ekiti State Council of Traditional Rulers, has described the demise of the Olubadan of Ibadan, Oba Saliu Adetunji, and the Soun of Ogbomoso, Oba Jimoh Oyewumi, as saddening and painful.
    The traditional rulers said that with Oba Adetunji and Oyewumi’s deaths, the Yoruba race and, indeed, Nigeria, had lost  charismatic and strong custodians of our tradition and culture, whose contributions remained unparalleled in stabilising the country.
    Oba Gabriel Ayodele Adejuwon
    Oba Gabriel Ayodele Adejuwon
    The  council, in a statement by its Chairman and the Onisan of Isan Ekiti, Oba Ayodele Gabriel Adejuwon, applauded the late Olubadan and Soun for showing strong commitments to the country’s stability and the unity of Yoruba nation through their conducts and utterances.
    Oba Adejuwon added that the Yoruba people, particularly Ibadan and Ogbomoso people of Oyo State, would never forget the contributions of these highly charismatic and industrious monarchs to the development of the Southwest and Nigeria at large.
    “We are saddened by the demise of Olubadan of Ibadan, Oba Saliu Adetunji and Soun of Ogbomoso, Oba Jimoh Oyewumi, Ajagungbade lll,” the Onisan of Isan said. “But we are particularly happy that the departed monarchs were iconic in the preservation of Yoruba customs and tradition. They were  stabilisers and unifiers with uncommon passion for development of the Yoruba nation.
    “Oba Adetunji served humanity in most outstanding fashion. He used his youthful life promoting youth and their  talents by his contributions to the development of the music industry, where many musical aces rose to stardom through his Midas’ touches and tutelage.
    Soun of Ogbomoso, Oba Jimoh Oyewumi, Ajagungbade lll
    Soun of Ogbomoso, Oba Jimoh Oyewumi, Ajagungbade lll
    “While Oba Oyewumi was one monarch that rose above pedestrian sentiments in all spheres of life. He was never caught in the web of politics. He saw unity as a focus and worked towards it. That is why his legacy would be difficult to surpass and forget in Ogbomoso, and Oyo State in general.
    “We sympathise with the people of Oyo State, and Yorubaland over the deaths of these outstanding monarchs. We also condole with the Government of Oyo State under the leadership of Governor Seyi Makinde for losing in quick succession such  highly placed, priceless and supportive traditional rulers, whose vacancies will be difficult to fill.
    “We pray for the repose of their  souls in the bosom of Allah and wish Ibadan and Ogbomoso people well even as we pray for  Allah’s guidance in their quests to fill the vacant stools left by the departed royal fathers”.
  • COVID-19: Deaths Surge As NCDC Logs 30 Fatalities, 459 Infections

    COVID-19: Deaths Surge As NCDC Logs 30 Fatalities, 459 Infections

    Nigeria on Sunday recorded 459 cases of COVID-19. Here are five updates about the pandemic this Monday.

    The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) says 459 people tested positive for coronavirus on Sunday.

    The latest positive samples of COVID-19 were recorded in 18 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), according to the agency’s update for September 5, 2021.

    Lagos, the hardest-hit state by the pandemic, topped the COVID-19 infection chart with 185 new cases, followed by Abia and Oyo with 38 positive samples each.

    Other states that recorded new infections include Akwa Ibom (33), Cross River (33), Osun (24), Ekiti (23), Benue (15), Kwara (14), Kano (12), Delta (10), FCT (10), Edo (9), Kaduna (5), Ogun (3), Katsina (2), Nasarawa (2), Rivers (2), and Bayelsa (1)

    The NCDC, on Sunday, confirmed that 30 persons died of COVID-19 complications, raising the country’s fatality toll to 2,552.

    The agency, however, said the deaths reported include a backlog of 23 deaths from Lagos state for September 3.

    According to the NCDC, 2,066 new recoveries were recorded across the country in the past 24 hours.

    A total of 195,511 COVID-19 cases have now been confirmed — out of which 184,529 persons have been discharged.

    Meanwhile, the  Lagos state government says it is considering getting COVID-19 vaccines from other sources in a bid to speed up vaccination.

    Akin Abayomi, the commissioner of health, said the state is considering vaccinating its entire population in order to achieve herd immunity and prevent the emergence of new strains of the virus.

    “While the first national target of vaccination is 60 per cent, we in Lagos are looking for vaccines to create full coverage that will be safe,” he said.

    “We’re looking for avenues and activities to speed this up; donor partners, private sector, through advocacy because it appears that this virus is not going away anytime soon.”

WP2Social Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com