Tag: Dead

  • BREAKING: Nigerian Senator, Rose Oko is dead

    BREAKING: Nigerian Senator, Rose Oko is dead

    The Senator representing Northern Senatorial District of Cross River State, Dr (Mrs) Rose Okoji Oko, is dead.

    The late Senator Oko died last night at a UK medical facility .

    She passed on at the age of 63.

     

    She was the current serving chairman, Senate Committee on Trade and Investment and was born in September 27, 1956.

    Oko was also a member of the House of Representatives when she represented the Yala/Ogoja Federal Constituency in the 7th National Assembly.

    The late senator was elected into office as the first female representative from her constituency in June 2011 and was Deputy Chairman House Committee on Education.

    She was elected as the first female representative from her Senatorial District in June 2015, and re-elected in 2019.

     

    Details later.

  • Another nollywood actor is dead

    Another nollywood actor is dead

    Veteran Yoruba filmmaker and actor, Gbenga Ajumoko is dead. The actor reportedly died after battling with a chronic ailment.

    This is coming weeks after Veteran Nollywood actor, Kayode Odumosu, popularly known as Pa Kasumu died.

    Gbenga Ajumoko was reported to be critically down with a chronic ailment since last year.

    For over 6 months, the Ijebu, Ogun State-born actor was admitted at a hospital in Sagamu Remo where he was diagnosed with Diabetes and Hypertension which affected his two kidneys.

    He solely treated the ailments quietly until things got worsen for him and he was transferred to a private hospital located at Ibadan Garage, Ijebu Ode, Ogun State.

    Last year, he begged Nigerians, the government and his colleagues to rescue him as he needed millions of Naira to recover.

  • All you should know about Kenny Rogers

    All you should know about Kenny Rogers

    Celebrated country music icon, Kenny Rogers has passed on at the age of 81

    Rogers “passed away peacefully at home from natural causes under the care of hospice and surrounded by his family,” according to a statement by representative Keith Hagan.

    Rogers was raised in public housing in Houston Heights with seven siblings. As a 20-year-old, he had a gold single called That Crazy Feeling, under the name Kenneth Rogers, but when that early success stalled, he joined a jazz group, the Bobby Doyle Trio, as a standup bass player.

    But his breakthrough came when he was asked to join the New Christy Minstrels, a folk group, in 1966. The band reformed as First Edition and scored a pop hit with the psychedelic song, Just Dropped In (To See What Condition My Condition Was In).

    NASHVILLE, TN – DECEMBER 02: Wanda Miller (L) and honoree Kenny Rogers (second from right) attend the 2015 “CMT Artists of the Year” at Schermerhorn Symphony Center on December 2, 2015 in Nashville, Tennessee. (Photo by Rick Diamond/Getty Images for CMT)

    Rogers and First Edition mixed country-rock and folk on songs like Ruby, Don’t Take Your Love To Town, a story of a Vietnam veteran begging his girlfriend to stay.

    After the group broke up in 1974, Rogers started his solo career and found a big hit with the country ballad Lucille, in 1977, which crossed over to the pop charts and earned Rogers his first Grammy.

    Rogers invested his time and money in a variety of endeavours over the course of his career, including a passion for photography that led to several books, as well as an autobiography, Making It With Music. He had a chain of restaurants called Kenny Rogers Roasters, and was a partner behind a riverboat in Branson, Missouri.

    In 2007 The Gambler became the unofficial anthem of the England World Cup rugby team, catapulting Rogers back into the spotlight.

     

    He was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2013 – the same year he played at Glastonbury and received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Country Music Association.

    He acted in a variety of movies and television shows, most notably the title roles in Kenny Rogers as The Gambler and the MacShayne series for The NBC Mystery Movie, and the 1982 feature film Six Pack.

     

    Kenny Rogers was married five times (with each marriage lasting longer than the previous one) and had five children. He married Janice Gordon on May 15, 1958; they divorced in April 1960 with one child. Rogers married Jean Rogers in October 1960 and divorced her in 1963. He married Margo Anderson in October 1964 and divorced her in 1976 with one child.

    Rogers married Marianne Gordon on October 1, 1977, and divorced her in 1993 with one child. Rogers married for the fifth and final time when he married Wanda Miller on June 1, 1997. The couple had twin sons together.

  • [Update] Coronavirus: 10 feared dead as quarantine facility collapses in China

    [Update] Coronavirus: 10 feared dead as quarantine facility collapses in China

    At least ten people were killed in the collapse of a hotel used as a coronavirus quarantine facility in eastern China, authorities said Sunday.

    Rescuers retrieved 48 people from the rubble, of whom 38 are still alive, the Ministry of Emergency Management said on social media.

    The building in the coastal city of Quanzhou had been repurposed to house people who recently had contact with patients confirmed with COVID-19, the state-run People’s Daily newspaper reported.

    The city has recorded 47 cases of the virus.

    Video posted online by the ministry’s firefighting department showed rescuers helping children don surgical masks before pulling them from the wreckage of the six-storey Xinjia hotel, including a 12-year-old boy.

    Rescuers were also seen spraying disinfectant on each other as part of “strict decontamination” measures between shifts.

    Footage published by local media appears to show the hotel collapsing in seconds.

    Other videos circulating on China’s Twitter-like Weibo platform show workers combing through the rubble in the dark as they reassure a woman trapped under heavy debris and carry injured people to ambulances.

    – Renovation –
    The building’s facade appeared to have crumbled to the ground, exposing the structure’s steel frame.

    Nine people escaped on their own at the time of the collapse, the ministry said.

    The first floor had been undergoing renovation since before the Lunar New Year holiday, and construction workers called the hotel’s owner minutes before the collapse to report a deformed pillar, authorities said.

    The owner has been summoned by police while investigators work to determine whether the renovation or an original structural issue was at fault, according to the ministry.

    Fifty-eight people who had recently been in regions hard hit by COVID-19 were being quarantined in the hotel but all had tested negative for the virus, local newspaper Quanzhou Evening News reported Sunday.

    More than 800 rescuers and 750 medical staff were deployed for the rescue effort along with 20 ambulances, the ministry said.

    China’s National Health Commission said it was sending to Quanzhou 18 medical experts from the nearby cities of Fuzhou and Xiamen.

    Building collapses and other deadly construction accidents have typically been blamed on the country’s rapid economic growth, which has led to corner-cutting by builders and the flouting of safety rules.

    At least 20 people died in 2016 when a series of crudely-constructed multi-storey buildings packed with migrant workers collapsed in the eastern city of Wenzhou.

    Another 10 were killed last year in Shanghai after the collapse of a commercial building during renovations.

  • Ejiro Emokiniovo of Veentage band is dead

    Ejiro Emokiniovo of the popular premium Lagos music group, Veentage band is dead.

     

    Ejiro passed away in Dubai after an unsuccessful surgery on Thursday March 5th.

     

    Ejiro who runs the band with her hubby, Desmond, was in Dubai to perform at the 90th birthday party of the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Femi Gbajabiamilia.
    After the festivity, she went in for a surgery where she sadly passed away.
    Her distressed husband, Desmond, took to Instagram to announce her death. Sharing photo of a burning candle and a video of one of her performances, he wrote:“Of a truth, there’s no justice in this world…. The worst day of my entire existence.Dear Lord ,you always answer any time we call.Why you chose not to answer yesterday remains a mystery”

    https://www.instagram.com/p/B9Ya1q2nqmP/

     

     

  • Female NYSC member found dead in Abuja hotel

    A corps member identified as Amaka Asikaogu has reportedly been found dead in an Abuja hotel, few days to the end of her service year.

    The deceased checked into New England Hotel in Abuja on Saturday evening with a male friend who left shortly after they were served food and drinks they ordered.

    According to reports, when asked about the lady he checked in with, Amaka’s male friend insisted that she is fine and alone in the room. Amaka also affirmed that she was fine when called by the hotel workers.

    Amaka’s corpse was however found in the room when the hotel staff who were worried that she is yet to check out the following day, forced their way in.

    A family friend who confirmed the incident told newsmen that the parents of the deceased sent her money after she complained that the person she was staying with asked her to leave the house.

    The family friend said; “It was like she was waiting for the end of the weekend before she get the accommodation before the unfortunate incident happened.”

  • Five feared killed as Sagamu protest killing of Remo’s footballer

    Five feared killed as Sagamu protest killing of Remo’s footballer

    Five persons, including two policemen, were feared killed after hundreds of protesters including women and children flooded streets in Sagamu, Ogun State to register their anger over the death of footballer Kazeem Tiamiyu.

    Tiamiyu, a player with Remo Star Football Club, was killed on Saturday after policemen attached to the Zonal Intervention Squad (ZIS) arrested him on allegations of being a Yahoo Boy.

    The protesters stormed the palace of Babatunde Ajayi, the paramount ruler of Remoland, demanding justice for the deceased.

    Gbenga Daniel, a former governor of Ogun; Funmi Efuwape, member representing Remo federal constituency at the house of representatives, and Adewunmi Onanuga, commissioner of women affairs and social development, were among those who appealed to the protesters.

    Kazeem was said to have been killed after he was mistaken for a suspected internet fraudster (Yahoo boy).

    The police have denied the incident, saying the deceased tried escaping after arrest and was knocked down by an oncoming vehicle.

    Sanni Abubakar, his team mate who was with him when the incident occurred, confirmed that Tiyamiyu was pushed out of the vehicle and knocked down by an oncoming vehicle.

  • [Video] Pandemonium in Ogun as angry mob clash with police over killing of Remo Stars’ Assistant Captain

    An angry mob on Saturday stormed a police station in Sagamu, Ogun State, after a police officer reportedly caused the death of Tiyamu Kazeem, a footballer.

    Kazeem played for Ogun State-based Remo Stars Football club.

    Videos and pictures of how the mob vented their anger on the officers and destroyed some properties of the police have been trending online.

    In a statement by Oladimeji Oshode, the media officer of Remo Stars Football club, where Mr Kazeem played in the right-back position until his death, the club mourned the death of Mr Kazeem.

    View this post on Instagram

    Happening Now: Chaos as #SARS officials kill footballer in #Sagamu . . #Sagamu is presently on fire in #OgunState, as a young footballer, identified as Tiamiyu Kazeem alias #Kaka, was allegedly chased to his death by some SARS operatives. . . It was gathered that Kaka was on his way to Sagamu from #Abeokuta after his training, when he ran into SARS operatives who labeled him a yahoo boy and started chasing him. . . Eyewitnesses claimed that the officers shot at his car tyre which made it somersault. On seeing what had happened, the officials ran away, leaving Kaka to his fate. . . The footballer was later rushed to Fakoya Hospital, Sagamu, where he was pronounced dead. Residents have now taken to the streets to protest the murder of the youngster who once played for the #Remo Football club.

    A post shared by Instablog9ja (@instablog9ja) on

    “The incident occurred this afternoon (Saturday) in Sagamu while he was driving along Sagamu area of Ogun State with one of his teammates, Sanni Abubakar,” the club management narrated.

    It cited a witness account as saying that a SARS officer stopped the footballer and accused him of being a Yahoo Boy(internet fraudster) and they insisted on taking him to the nearby police station.

    “The SARS officer stopped Tiyamiyu Kazeem, insisting that he was a Yahoo Boy. He brought out his identity (ID) card to identify himself as a player of Remo Stars FC, but, the officer insisted on taking him to the nearest police station in Sagamu.

    “Tiyamiyu and Sanni obliged, followed the SARS officers, only for them to notice that they were driving towards Sagamu-Abeokuta Expressway. Then the guys questioned to know where the SARS officers were taking them to, but this prompted them to stop the car and push him (Tiyamiyu) out of the car, and a vehicle knocked him down,” the unnamed witness was quoted as saying.

    It was gathered that Mr Kazeem was immediately rushed to Fakoya Hospital in Sagamu, where it was confirmed that he was dead.

    Meanwhile, the police have denied the involvement of any SARS or police officer in the death of Mr Kazeem.

    The Ogun state police spokesperson, Abimbola Oyeyemi, told newsmen that the deceased was arrested by officers of the Zonal Intervention Squad of the police force.

    According to Mr Oyeyemi, the youngster was arrested for wearing a military outfit when he was not a soldier.

    “The police officer challenged him and he was arrested. While they were on their way, the vehicle developed a fault and while he was crossing the road, he was knocked down by another vehicle,” he told this paper on Saturday evening.

  • Sad! Nollywood actor, Frank Dallas is dead

    Sad! Nollywood actor, Frank Dallas is dead

    Frank Dallas, a veteran Nollywood actor and production manager, is dead.

    He was said to have passed away in his hotel room in Umuahia, capital of Abia state, on Wednesday, where he was attending a summit.

    Monalisa Chinda Coker who is the national PRO of the Actors’ Guild of Nigeria (AGN), broke the sad news in a press statement on Thursday.

    With a heart full of sorrow, we announce the sudden death of the immediate past national PRO of GNU, Frank Dallas Ebulukwu,” AGN wrote on its official Instagram page.

    “The National President of AGN, Ejezie Emeka Rollas has declared 3 days of national mourning and prayers across all State Chapters including FCT Abuja.

    “In view of this, all official activities of the Guild at all levels are hereby cancelled for three days. State chapter chairmen are instructed to open condolence register in his honour from Monday.

    “Monthly meeting for February is dedicated to mourning and prayers. We shall be guided accordingly while we await further directives and burial arrangements from the family.”

     

    Dallas has featured in series of Nollywood flicks including ‘Black Maria’, ‘Agony Of A Mother’, ‘A Night To Remember,’ among others.

     

    https://www.instagram.com/p/B8ziHV5nuXH/

  • Sad! ‘Good Times’ Actress Ja’Net DuBois is dead

    Sad! ‘Good Times’ Actress Ja’Net DuBois is dead

    Ja’Net DuBois, the actress who played the sassy Willona Woods in the 1970s TV show “Good Times” and sang the theme song to “The Jeffersons,” died on Monday.

    Ms. DuBois died in her sleep at her home in Glendale, Calif., surrounded by family, her youngest daughter, Kesha Gupta-Fields, said on Tuesday.

    “Good Times” was one of the first black sitcoms that featured a two-parent home. Ms. DuBois played Willona, the single, upstairs neighbor to Florida Evans, the matriarch of the show’s family. Willona was stylish and had a big heart. She did not hesitate to take in Penny, an abused child played by a young Janet Jackson.

    While she was taping “Good Times,” Ms. DuBois told Norman Lear, an executive producer on the show, that she wanted to branch out. Mr. Lear suggested she work on the theme song to “The Jeffersons,” Ms. Gupta-Fields said.

     

    After speaking to her mother about her own family’s aspirations to move up in life, she wrote “Movin’ On Up.”

    “She wrote that song as a promise to her mother, that when she obtained a certain level of stardom, that her dream was to essentially have her mom live in a deluxe apartment,” Ms. Gupta-Fields said. “That was written and sung as a gift to her mother, Lilian DuBois.”

    Ms. DuBois felt that she had lived the song herself, she told Jet Magazine in 1992. “I moved my whole family,” she said.

    “I bought her a house, bought her a mink coat,” Ms. DuBois said of her mother. “I did everything, retired her. I did everything I ever promised her.”

    “Movin’ On Up” became widely known as a jubilant, aspirational theme song for black Americans.

    “It provided a lot of black people with an anthem,” Ms. Gupta-Fields said. “For them it provided a lot of encouragement.”

     

    On Tuesday, Mr. Lear, who also produced “The Jeffersons,” called “Movin’ On Up” the “song of her passing” on Twitter.

    “Ja’Net DuBois was all light and will be missed,” he wrote.

    Her family said Ms. DuBois was 74 when she died, but public records indicate she was older.

    Jeanette DuBois was born in Philadelphia and was raised by her mother, Lilian. The family did not have much but they had a home and food to eat, Ms. Gupta-Fields said.

    “That was just the state of the world for African-American families,” she said.

    When she got older, Ms. DuBois moved to Brooklyn to act on Broadway.

    She was in “A Raisin in the Sun,” “Diary of a Mad Housewife” and other Broadway plays, her daughter said. In the 1960s, after spending time running a youth acting workshop in Amityville, N.Y., Ms. DuBois moved to Los Angeles to film “Good Times.”

    Earlier this month, Ms. DuBois spent a “joyous, wonderful family time” with some of the cast of “Good Times,” Ms. Gupta-Fields said.

    “She remembered her time on the show very fondly,” she said.

    After “Good Times,” Ms. DuBois had roles in “I’m Gonna Git You Sucka,” “Charlie’s Angels: Full Throttle” and many sitcoms from the 1990s. Ms. DuBois was a two-time Emmy winner for her role as Mrs. Avery, a combative neighbor in a housing project, on “The PJ’s,” an animated show created by Eddie Murphy and Larry Wilmore.

    Two months ago, on “Good Times: Live in Front of a Studio Audience,” during which Hollywood actors redid an episode of “Good Times,” Ms. DuBois told Jimmy Kimmel that she was “happy that Norman saw her in another film she was doing and said, ‘I want you for a TV role.’”

    “She gave him a lot of respect for putting her in a position to birth Willona,” Ms. Gupta-Fields said.

    Off camera, Ms. DuBois raised a family and worked to break stereotypes in Hollywood.

    She is survived by her son, Provat Gupta, her daughters Rani Gupta and Kesha Gupta-Fields, and a sister, Lilian DuBois.