Tag: Dead

  • Celebrated poet, Gabriel Okara dies weeks before 98th birthday

    Celebrated poet, Gabriel Okara dies weeks before 98th birthday

    Popular Nigerian poet and novelist, Gabriel Imomotimi Okara is dead. Okara reportedly died on Monday at his residence in Yenagoa, the Bayelsa State Capital.

    The renowned poet was born 24 April, 1921. He died four weeks to his 98th year birthday.

     

    Okara became famous following the publication of his art work, The Voice in 1964.

    The deceased, born at Bumoundi in Yenagoa, was the first Modernist poet of Anglophone Africa.

    No official statement has been released either by his immediate family or the Bayelsa State Government on the development at the time of filing this report.

    According to Brenda Marie Osbey, editor of his Collected Poems, “It is with publication of Gabriel Okara’s first poem that Nigerian literature in English and modern African poetry in this language can be said truly to have begun”.

     

    In April 2017, the Gabriel Okara Literary Festival was held at the University of Port Harcourt in his honour.

    The publication in May 2017 of the book Gabriel Okra, edited by Professor Chidi T. Maduka, addressed Okara’s “place in African literature and the fact that he has not been given his full due in African literature”, which was partly attributable, said Lindsay Barrett, to Okara (like himself) not having been “university-based”, while Odia Ofeimun acknowledged Okara as “not just the oldest writer but a foundational producer of the literary arts in our part of the world.

  • PDP agent shot dead in Imo

    PDP agent shot dead in Imo

    A Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) agent has been shot dead in Eziama Obire in Nkwere LGA Imo State by hoodlums.

    The Police Public Relations Officer in the state, Godson Orlando Ikeokwu, confirmed the incident.

    The identity of the victim is yet to be known.

     

    Details shortly….

  • BREAKING: Soldiers shoot PDP agent dead in Rivers, allegedly cart away election materials

    An agent of the Peoples Democratic Party in Rivers State has been shot dead.
    The agent was shot dead as the Presidential and National Assembly elections got underway on Saturday.

    The major opposition party in the state, All Progressives Congress, is not on the ballot for the National Assembly elections as it has been barred by the Independent National Electoral Commission based on court orders.

    According to available information, there are crises in different parts of Rivers State.

    The PDP agent was shot reportedly dead at Ward 10 in Akuku-Toru Local Government Area.

    Also, sources who spoke with TheNewsGuru under the condition of anonymity said operatives of the Nigerian Army have snatched election materials in Okrika area of Rivers State.

  • Former Secretary General of NFF, Taiwo Ogunjobi is dead

    Chief Taiwo Ogunjobi, former Secretary General of Nigeria Football Federation ( NFF ), is dead.

    Ogunjobi, who before his demise was the Chairman of Osun Football Association, was confirmed dead by his Media aide, Mr Tunde Shamsudeen.

    Shamsudeen told the News Agency of Nigeria on Monday in Osogbo, that Ogunjobi passed on in the early hours of Monday at the University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan.

    He said the former NFF Secretary-General was admitted at the hospital three days ago.

    Shamudeen did not disclose the nature of the ailment that took Ogunjobi to the hospital but said he would provide further details later.

  • Strange: Lovers found dead inside car

    By Efe Osunbor
    Two Lovers were on Saturday found dead in a car at Mende in Maryland, a neighboring town to Ikeja, the capital of Lagos State.
    TNG reliably gathered from eye witnesses that the Lovers bodies were discovered in the early hours of Saturday.
    The car was found along Okuneye Okugade Street of Mende neatly parked though with one of the back tyres deflated.
    According to a witness account, the owner of the car one Mr Emma, the victim lives on the same street and the incident occurred just opposite his residence.
    He said:” We all know Emma but the girl inside the car is not known to us but both were found dead inside the car.
    “Emma lives on this street and we all know him as a successful photographer but what is baffling is that nothing was removed from the car.
    ” If you look inside the car all you can find are bottles of liquor both victims must have gulped over the night.
    “No trace of any wound so ritual is ruled out except they were drugged or possibly food poisoning but that is left for law enforcement agents to investigate.
    ” They (police) came this morning to remove their bodies and sealed off the scene of the incident.
    ” I can’t confirm the morgue they were moved to but we saw them moving the corpses away after they asked residents a few questions.
  • Emir of Lafia, Mustapha Agwai passes away at 84

    Emir of Lafia, Mustapha Agwai passes away at 84

    The Emir of Lafia, and the Chairman of the Nasarawa State Traditional Council of Chiefs, Isa Mustapha Agwai I has passed away at the age of 84.

    TheNewsGuru gathered that the Emir died on Thursday with the Ajiyan-Lafia, Sule Abubakar, confirming the death in Lafia.

    According to Abubakar, the Emir died on Thursday at a Turkish Teaching hospital in Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) after a protracted illness.

    The traditional ruler was coronated on May 28, 1974, and only recently celebrated his 44th anniversary on the throne.

    He is survived by three wives and two children.

  • Astronomer celebrated as Mother of Hubble dies at 93

    Astronomer celebrated as Mother of Hubble dies at 93

    Nancy Grace Roman, celebrated as a trailblazer for female scientists and a driving force behind advances including the launch of the Hubble Space Telescope, is dead.

    TheNewsGuru (TNG) gathers Roman died on Christmas day at a hospital in Germantown, Maryland.

    She was born in Nashville, Tennessee, on May 16, 1925. Her father was a geophysicist with the US Geological Survey. Her mother was a former music teacher and a nature enthusiast who took her daughter outside at night to view the stars.

    Roman, who recalled founding an astronomy club at age 11, moved frequently for her father’s work before landing in Baltimore, where she graduated from high school.

    She received a bachelor’s degree from Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania in 1946 and a PhD from the University of Chicago in 1949, both in astronomy.

    When Roman requested permission to take a second algebra course in high school, a teacher demanded to know “what lady would take mathematics instead of Latin”.

    In college, a professor remarked that he often tried to dissuade women from majoring in physics.

    After receiving a doctorate in astronomy, Roman concluded that a female professor in the field had little hope of obtaining tenure.

    Undeterred by the barriers to women in the sciences, she found a professional home at NASA. Even there, she recalled in an interview years later, she felt compelled to use the honorific “Dr.”

    “Otherwise,” she said, “I could not get past the secretaries.”

    After early work at the University of Chicago and the Yerkes Observatory in Wisconsin, she was hired by the Naval Research Laboratory in 1955, working in radio astronomy.

    NASA was formed three years later, with Roman among its earliest employees.

    After joining the fledgeling space agency in 1959, Roman became the first chief of astronomy at NASA headquarters, a role that made her one of the agency’s first female executives.

    She remained in that position for nearly two decades before her retirement in 1979.

    She spent the final part of her career at the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, where she oversaw the Astronomical Data Center.

    Roman spent much of her career helping to develop, fund and promote technology that would help scientists see more clearly beyond Earth’s atmosphere.

    NASA credited her with leading what it described as the agency’s “first successful astronomical mission,” the launch of Orbiting Solar Observatory-1 in 1962 to measure the electromagnetic radiation of the sun, among other things.

    She also coordinated among scientists and engineers for the successful launch of geodetic satellites, used for measuring and mapping Earth, and several orbiting astronomical observatories that offered an early glimpse of the discoveries that might be reaped by sending observational technology beyond the veil of the atmosphere.

    But she was perhaps most associated with the early legwork for the Hubble Space Telescope, the first major telescope to be sent into space for the purpose of gathering photographs of and data from the universe.

    Hubble is widely considered to have yielded the most significant astronomical observations since Galileo began using a telescope in the early 1600s.

    The design and launch of Hubble was fraught by scientific, financial and bureaucratic difficulties that Roman worked to resolve.

    Lobbying for early funding for Hubble, whose price tag reached $1.5 billion, she recalled arguing that every American, for the cost of one ticket to the movies, could be assured years of scientific discoveries.

    However, the telescope did not launch until 1990, more than a decade after Dr. Roman retired, but when it did, its photographs of the cosmos electrified the world.

    In 1994, when NASA announced the repair of a faulty mirror and other problems that had caused its early photographs to be blurry, Roman was in the audience, knitting.

    Her honours included the Women in Aerospace Lifetime Achievement Award and the NASA Exceptional Scientific Achievement Award.

    She helped promote professional opportunities for women through the American Association of University Women and spoke frequently in schools to encourage children to take on the challenges of science.

    Roman resided in Chevy Chase, Maryland, at the time of her death and had no immediate survivors.

     

  • Dozens of migrants found dead on Mediterranean Sea

    NO fewer than 25 people are believed to have died or are missing, including a pregnant woman, when a group of migrant boats got stranded at sea and was rescued off the Spanish coast on Thursday.

    Briefing reporters in Geneva on Friday, spokesperson for the UN High Commission Refugees (UNHCR), Elizabeth Throssell, said that colleagues in the field had reported that bodies had been found on two of the boats.

    “You can imagine how traumatising that was for the people who were rescued,” Ms Throssell said.

    According to reports, the migrants had sailed from North Africa.

    On one of the six vessels found adrift in the Straits of Gibraltar, in the western Mediterranean Sea, 33 people had been rescued, but 12 had died and a further 12 were missing, UNHCR said.

    On another of the boats, the UN refugee agency said 57 people had been on board, including one that had already died by the time of the rescue.

    “There was a massive sea-swell that threw them into the water,” Ms Throssell said, adding that among the survivors was a mother and her two-year-old child who was evacuated by helicopter, after she was found to be suffering from hypothermia.

    She added that many of the survivors were being held at detention centres at the Port of Almeria in Spain.

    “Our implementing partner is there to provide the people with information and support and to help any potential protection and other needs and of course to promote access to the asylum process for those who may need it,” she said.

    Delivering the latest overall statistics on the deadly Mediterranean migration route, UN migration agency (IOM) spokesperson, Joel Millman, said that as of December 19, 113,000 migrants had entered Europe by sea so far in 2018.

    According to him, the figure is the lowest recorded in five years.

    Recently, however, he said the death rate for migrants attempting to reach Spain, had tragically begun to tick upwards, with 769 fatalities registered on the western Mediterranean migration route.

    “That’s only slightly more than half of all on the Central Mediterranean route from North Africa to Italy, but what’s remarkable is how rapidly that number has increased over the last three months,” he said.

    Mr Millman said it was likely that there would be “more incidents like this” in the next 10 days.

  • UPDATED: Former Chief of Defence Staff, Alex Badeh shot dead [PHOTOS]

    UPDATED: Former Chief of Defence Staff, Alex Badeh shot dead [PHOTOS]

    Former Chief of Defence Staff Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh has been killed by unknown gunmen in Abuja.

    He was going to Abuja this evening when he was attacked by gunmen and killed.

    Nigerian Airforce spokesman Air Commodore Ibikunle Daramola confirmed the death in a tweet this evening.

    ”It is with a heavy heart that I regretfully announce the unfortunate demise of former Chief of Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh, who died today, 18 Dec 18, from gunshot wounds sustained when his vehicle was attacked while returning from his farm along Abuja-Keffi Road.

    ”On behalf officers, airmen and airwomen of the Nigerian Air Force, the Chief of the Air Staff, Air Marshal Abubakar, commiserates with the family of the late former Chief of Defence Staff over this irreparable loss. We pray that the Almighty God grants his soul eternal rest” he tweeted.

    The retired military officer, it was learnt, was travelling back to Abuja with his driver who was also shot with an unidentified man.

  • [Video] In Poland: Buhari reacts to speculations on being cloned

    [Video] In Poland: Buhari reacts to speculations on being cloned

    President Muhammadu Buhari has responded to speculations on being cloned.

    He spoke on the subject on Sunday in Kraków, Poland, according to Bashir Ahmad, his Personal Assistant on New Media.

    Speaking on the speculations, Buhari said a lot of people had hoped for his death when he was sick, but he remains strong.

    He was also optimistic on celebrating his birthday; he will be 76 years old on December 17, 2018.

    The post on his response to being cloned was published in a tweet that read: JUST IN: “A lot of people hoped that I died during my ill health. It is real me… I will soon celebrate my 76th birthday and I will still go strong.” — President @MBuhari this evening in Kraków, Poland. His response to a question of him being cloned”.

    Recall that the Minister for Information, Lai Mohammed has earlier rubbished the reports that Buhari was cloned with one Jubril from Sudan.

    He said, “It is idiotic to say the President is cloned. I don’t see any serious government responding to that. So, the same Jubril that was cloned from Sudan or Chad is in Chad now? Isn’t that stupid?

    “They even said he is from Chad. Yet, the same President is in Chad as we speak. The same Jubril is remembering what the President did while in Petroleum Trust Fund and he is also remembering what he did when he was head of state between 1983 and 1985.

    “All the ministers do not know who is before them when they attend the Federal Executive Council meeting? The President remembers memos he had seen or heard about in 1985 and we say he is cloned.

    “So, Jubril from Chad or Sudan will now remember all of these? It is too silly for the government to respond to this. It must be ignored.”