Tag: Death

  • COVID-19: No death from Omicron variant yet in Nigeria, says NCDC

    COVID-19: No death from Omicron variant yet in Nigeria, says NCDC

    The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control, (NCDC), says no person in Nigeria has died of COVID-19 with the B.1.1.529 SARS-CoV-2 lineage, the Omicron variant, in the country, as the variant surges across the country.

    The NCDC Director-General, Dr Ifedayo Adetifa, disclosed this to newsmen on Friday in Abuja.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Data from the African Union (AU) shows that the Omicron variant of the coronavirus is spreading rapidly across the African continent.

    AU’s Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said as of Thursday, that 22 countries have reported the presence of the Omicron variant.

    “We can see clearly that Omicron is spreading very quickly,” said John Nkengasong of the CDC.

    Around a month after South Africa first discovered the more infectious variant, it has now been detected as far as Egypt, Togo, Morocco, Kenya, Mauritius and Burkina Faso.

    Nkengasong said there are grounds for optimism, pointing to initial findings from South Africa that Omicron posed up to 80 per cent less risk of severe disease compared to the Delta variant.

    However, he cautioned against applying these early findings to other countries.

    Across Africa, 253,000 new coronavirus infections were recorded last week, a 21 per cent increase on the previous week.

    Adetifa noted that Omicron has raised the number of confirmed cases in the country to 500 per cent, and now has become the dominant variants in the country.

    The NCDC boss said that the country has now identified a further 45 cases of the omicron variant, bringing the total number of confirmed infections to 51.

    He added that the 45 additional omicron variants were not cases from travel history, rather they are in country, which suggests that the country is already experiencing a community transmission.

    He said that the six earlier detected Omicron cases were detected in persons with recent travel history to South Africa.

    Adetifa stressed that it was important for Nigerians to maintain physical distance and avoid contact with anyone showing symptoms of respiratory illness.

    “We are counting on you to #CelebrateResponsibly and #TakeResponsibility to keep yourself and your loved ones safe from COVID-19,” he urged.

    He advised Nigerians that the further measures to curb the spread of Omicron was by reducing group sizes, increasing physical distancing, reducing duration of contacts and closing high-risk premises.

    He noted that indoor mixing was the “biggest risk factor” for the spread of Omicron, and that large gatherings risked creating “multiple spreading events”.

    Adetifa stressed that Nigerians should take the advisory issued by the Presidential Steering Committee on COVID-19, adding that it would greatly reduce the effectiveness of such interventions and make it is less likely that these would prevent considerable pressure on health and care settings.

    Meanwhile, the National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA), is insisting that the national booster campaign remains the main tool in the country’s arsenal for curbing the spread of Omicron.

    The agency suggested that all the COVID-19 vaccines in the country offer “significant protection” against the Omicron variant, and that two doses should still ward off severe disease.

    It comes as the EU medicines watchdog said that there were early indications the Omicron variant may cause milder disease than previous strains.

    The suggestion from the European Medicines Agency (EMA) echoed similar findings from the World Health Organization (WHO), which said earlier this week there was some evidence that Omicron causes less severe disease than the dominant Delta strain.

    “Cases appear to be mostly mild, however, we need to gather more evidence to determine whether the spectrum of disease severity caused by Omicron is different from that of all the variants that have been circulating so far,” said Marco Cavaleri, EMA’s head of biological health threats and vaccines strategy.

  • TRAGIC! Truck crushes Anambra motorcyclist to death

    TRAGIC! Truck crushes Anambra motorcyclist to death

    A motorcyclist was on Friday in a road accident at the Customary Court Junction along Igboukwu-Uga Road, Anambra State.

    The crash involved a red trailer with registration number JJ496QF and a Lifan motorcycle with no registration number.

    The unknown rider of the motorcycle was said to have died on the spot while two others sustained injuries.

    The likely cause of the crash was attributed to excessive speed and loss of control.

    It was learnt that the driver of the trailer, who was at high speed, lost control and rammed into the oncoming motorcycle in a single carriageway.

    Three male adults were involved in the crash.

    The wounded victims were taken to Apex Hospital, Ngo, while the motorcyclist was confirmed dead by the doctor on duty and his corpse deposited at the hospital’s morgue.

    The Anambra State Sector Commander of the Federal Road Safety Corps, Mr Adeoye Irelewuyi, lamented the frequent crashes on the road and advised motorists to be more safety-conscious on the road.

     

  • How soldiers allegedly tortured police woman’s son to death in Edo

    How soldiers allegedly tortured police woman’s son to death in Edo

    Disappointed by the action of soldiers at a check-point, the Nigerian Army has summoned one of its guard commanders in Edo State in connection with the alleged death of Christian Ehima, a 24-year-old University of Benin undergraduate studying computer science.

    Mercy Ehima, the victim’s distraught mother and an Assistant Superintendent of Police with the Delta State Police Command, told newsmen that her son was tortured to death by soldiers at the Railway Checkpoint in Igbanke, Edo State.

    Mercy stated her son had unwittingly boarded a kidnappers’ vehicle while travelling to a hamlet named Ewesa in Edo before Benin on Friday, December 10, 2021.

    The kidnappers stumbled onto the soldiers’ roadblock, according to the 53-year-old widow, and promptly reversed.

    “During the process, my kid claims he leapt out of the van and ran into the bush.” He claimed he texted me in the jungle, but I didn’t respond. He claimed that as he was walking through the bush, he came face to face with a large snake and leapt out of the way.

    Christian claimed that he dashed to the Army checkpoint, which was about four poles distant. He stated he expected the troops to rush to his help, but as he was going to tell them about his ordeal, they booted him and he fell to the ground, where they began to hit him,” the grieving widow added through sobbing.

    When contacted, Brigadier General Onyema Nwachukwu, Director of Army Public Relations, informed Newsmen that an investigation into the case had begun and that the military had no space for such behaviour.

    “I’ve just phoned my PRO (Public Relations Officer) in Benin and brought it to his attention,” Nwachukwu stated. He also stated that he had contacted the Police Prosecutor in the area.

    “The woman is a Delta State employee, and a probe has already begun on their end.” The Guard Commander (the commander of the checkpoint’s soldiers) has been asked to make a statement.

    “We’ve started looking into it, and we’ll get to the bottom of it.” We can’t cover up such people, and we don’t have a place for such people in the system if it happened, just like the female soldier who abused the youth corper; it was properly investigated, and the officer was dealt with; we can’t cover up such people, and we don’t have a place for such people in the system if it happened.”

  • JUST IN: [COVID-19] UK confirms first Omicron variant death

    JUST IN: [COVID-19] UK confirms first Omicron variant death

    UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Monday said at least one person infected with Omicron had died, as the country began an ambitious booster programme against the variant.

    “Sadly, at least one patient has been confirmed to have died with Omicron,” Johnson, who on Sunday warned of a “tidal wave” of infection from the mutation, told reporters

    More details soon…

  • Governors and ‘death’ of direct primaries, By Ehichioya Ezomon

    Governors and ‘death’ of direct primaries, By Ehichioya Ezomon

    By Ehichioya Ezomon
    Politicians’ think always about the next election, and how to stay in power. It’s never about the people they pretend to represent their interests. Rather, it’s all about their self interests.
    Nothing demonstrates this notion of “self” better than politicians’ scramble for the crucial and critical 2023 general election that’s barely 14 months away, going by the timetable drawn by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).
    In their bid to hijack the processes of the election, governors of the rival All Progressives Congress (APC) and Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) have surprisingly come together to kick against direct primaries in the Electoral Act Amendment Bill 2021.
    The National Assembly (NASS) has voted for direct primaries that will avail the participation of all members of political parties in the selection of candidates for a general or a stand-alone election.
    But the governors were opposed to, and mobilized against direct primaries for indirect primaries that enable them to wield enormous power over selection of candidates for any elective positions.
    Actually, a team of governors of the ruling APC had met with President Muhammadu Buhari at the Villa in Abuja, to intimate him of the position of majority of their colleagues on direct primaries.
    Similarly, the opposition PDP, conveying the objection of the governors on its platform, had stopped short of telling the NASS members, including its representatives, that they went beyond their briefs in inserting direct primaries in the amended Electoral Bill.
    As President Muhammadu Buhari suddenly turned the beautiful bride, the NASS leadership also visited the president, according to Senate President Ahmad Lawan, to implore Buhari to shun those (governors) lobbying him not the assent the Electoral Bill.
    If Senator Lawan’s courtesy to Buhari wasn’t lobbying in disguise, Speaker Femi Gbajabiamila was explicit in telling the president that direct primaries would deepen democracy in Nigeria, and ensure full integration of the youth in the political process.
    Gbajabiamila’s plea ought to strike a cord in Buhari, who claims credit for the passage of the “Not Too Young To Run” Bill that’s supposed to open the political space for Nigerian youths.
    It’s uncertain how Buhari’s mind was made up, after weighing the preferences of the governors, the legislators and inputs of various stakeholders, including the INEC, to reportedly decline to sign the Electoral Bill, and return it to the NASS.
    Yet, the princely N500 billion, allegedly needed by INEC to conduct direct primaries in the states towards the 2023 polls, would’ve been too much for a cash-strapped president to contemplate.
    The Buhari administration, hard-hit by financial crunch, and has resorted to a borrowing spree to execute most of its programmes, can’t afford to add the conduct of primaries to its responsibilities.
    The obligation to conduct primaries – direct or indirect – is the sole purview of the political parties, and that appears what the governors are transmitting cloaked in preservation of their self interests.
    The questions are: Will NASS members re-amend the returned Electoral Bill, due to the cost implication of conducting primaries for the political parties, and leave funding to the parties?
    Or will the legislators summon the courage to “override” the president’s presumed “veto” even if Buhari didn’t entirely withhold his assent to the Bill, but merely referred it to the NASS for further action on the aspect of funding of party primaries?
    The fresh review of the Electoral Bill is ongoing, starting with the Appropriation Committee of the House of Representatives’ invitation to the Chairman of INEC, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu, to brief members on the commission’s involvement in the conduct of primaries.
    As Rep. Mukhtar Batera (APC-Borno) related to newsmen in Abuja on December 9, Prof. Yakubu told the committee that INEC has a minimal role to play in party primaries, certainly not in the funding, as erroneously or mischievously conveyed to the presidency.
    Quoting Yakubu, Rep. Batera, who chairs the House Appropriation Committee, said that INEC isn’t interested in evaluating the cost of primary election(s) because it’s not part of its functions.
    “In our discussions with the INEC Chairman, we wanted to know the requirements for the 2023 elections, as well as cost of direct or indirect party primaries,” Batera said.
    “On party primaries, he specifically told us the role of INEC in direct or indirect primaries, which he said is just minimal. He said the responsibility… is the role of political parties and not INEC.
    “For direct primaries, what the INEC Chairman told us is that only the political parties have the responsibility on primaries and the funding of the primaries.”
    The die is cast, and the ball, once again, is in the legislature’s court, to either go ahead and “impose” direct primaries on the unwilling governors, or allow the status quo, which’s a choice among three options: consensus, indirect or direct primaries written into the constitutions of at least the ruling APC and opposition PDP.
    But whatever method is adopted, the governors have the wherewithal to prosecute it, sparing no thought in deploying the vast recourses of state to steamroll the process, and include or exclude whoever they fancy, to advance their self interests.
    The fear of exclusion – total or partial – from the mainstream politics in the states reportedly galvanised the bitterly-divided NASS along party lines, to close rank and adopt direct primaries for parties.
    Going by their reasoning, the adoption of direct primaries would whittle down the influence and power of the governors in the choice of candidates for any elective positions.
    The legislators had banked on Buhari’s backing, to seal the dominant political fate of the governors, by helping them to get the Electoral Bill across the finish line. But that seems unlikely with the president’s return of the Bill, with the implications as follows:
    * President Buhari has created a record for declining assent to the Electoral Bill for the fifth time, at some occasions on the minute excuse of clerical errors in the piece of legislation.
    * Given a choice between the NASS that stands by him almost 100 per cent of the time, and the governors that give him and his government headaches, Buhari has cast his lot with the latter.
    * Thus, the president, on the altar of politics, has sacrificed for the governors very dependable allies in the NASS, who, on account of their amenability to Buhari and his administration, are derisively nicknamed by critics as “rubber-stamp” legislators.
    * The governors have been emboldened to deploy any means possible, to unilaterally determine the course of politics in their states, even to the exclusion of real or imaginary opponents, many of them members of the NASS and State Houses of Assembly.
    * With the power to choose whom they like in their hands, the 2023 polls are a fait accompli for the governors, some of them aspiring to be president/vice president of Nigeria.
    * Buhari, who earned his second-term ticket in 2019 via direct primaries, has failed to extend his mantra of free, fair and credible elections to the very foundation for popular choice of candidates.
    Going forward, it’s the self-interests of politicians, President Buhari not exempted, that’ve ensured the “death” of direct primaries for the selection of candidates for elections in Nigeria.
    Mr. Ezomon, Journalist and Media Consultant, writes from Lagos, Nigeria.
  • Why you should not to fear death – Cleric

    Why you should not to fear death – Cleric

    A cleric, Rev. Unah Umoh of the United Evangelical Church, says human beings have no reason to fear death if they lived uprightly, knowing that appointment with death is inevitable.

    Umoh said this at the funeral service for the late veteran journalist, Prince Effiong Asian held in in Mbiokporo Nsit 1, Nsit Ibom Local Government Area of Akwa Ibom.

    In a sermon entitled: “Inescapable appointment’’, the priest said that the appointment called death was designed by God for every human being and all living things.

    Unah, who quoted from the Book of Hebrew 9:27 said “it is appointed unto men once to die and after that, judgement’’, added that the deceased, aged 72, would have wished to live longer but could not live beyond 72 years.

    He said: “prepare your mind for a time like this; everyman will die, old or young. Abraham lived for 175 years, after that he died. So make a choice because you have an opportunity to be among the living’

    “ We should be prepared knowing that one day we will leave this world. Generations have all and next generations will take over; that is the beauty of life, something must kill a man.

    “Moses said in the Bible: `Oh Lord teach me to number my days’; you don’t know your day, your time. You will be judged by the kind of life you lived not by the life you did not live.

    “Your creator may call you any day while young, in old age, everyone is returning to his Maker. You came from God to live on earth and you will return to God, so work for the Lord.

    ` Get ready to leave better than you came; offer your services wholeheartedly. God gives to any man according to his good works.’’

    The deceased first son, Godwin Asian, said his father was a mass communicator, journalist of high repute who served in the State Ministry of Information until his retirement in 2010 as a Director.

    According to the son, the father’s interests were ”further galvanized in music when he established `Hotline Ensemble International Band’ in 1989 which is still running”.

    Also, Mr Onofiok Luke, Member representing Etinan/Nsit Ibom/Nsit Ubium Federal Constituency, said that the deceased was a mentor and his late father’s friend, adding that it was necessary for him to condole with the family.

    The Deputy Governor of Akwa Ibom, Mr Moses Ekpo, in his tribute, said the deceased was a “multi-dimensional personality, who held his own as a civil servant and offered meritorious service as Information Officer in the former Cross River and Akwa Ibom States’’.

  • Trouble in School, Death in the Dorm – Chidi Amuta

    Trouble in School, Death in the Dorm – Chidi Amuta

    By Chidi Amuta

     

    A couple of years ago, I was the guest of a good friend who had been elected a civilian governor of one of our states in the southern parts of the country. It was a weekend dovetailing into 27th of May which is normally Children’s Day. The gentleman invited me to accompany him and his entourage to a brief tour of some schools. He was fanatical about education, having risen from the depths of slum poverty to the height of his political career only by force of education. He loved to fraternize with children, to read passages from books with them and in the process get them to embrace a future shaped by ideas.

     

    He frequently ended these school visits with a very informal question and answer session with the children at which they were free to ask him questions and also answer his. At this particular school, the Governor decided to probe the career aspirations of the children who were obviously elated to see a governor in life and blood instead of just on television.

     

    “What would you want to become when you grow up?” That was the simple question from the Governor. A stream of screaming responses followed. “Governor!”, screamed one starry –eyed boy. “Militant!!” came yet another. “General !!!”, was another big boy’s ambition. “Governor’s wife!”, a shy looking girl volunteered in a meek voice. A few others tried to voice their preferences: “Doctor!!, Lawyer!!, Engineer!!!…” But these other mundane answers and aspirations were shouted down, their preferences drowned by the howling in praise of the earlier ones who wanted to become more sensible things.

     

    Back in the car as we made to leave this school premises to return to Government House, we were all silent for a while. My host was crest fallen. He was shocked that all his investment of state resources in education through building of model world class schools would go into raising children whose best ambitions was to become “Governors” and “Militants”, ambitions fuelled by the desire to get rich quickly and live a life of material opulence and luxury, above work and lasting purpose. These were the kind of aspirations that he was spending all his energy to save the future of the state from. He wanted to builde the state’s human capital through quality education and healthcare so that the future generations could compete with their peers in Japan, United States and Europe.

     

    This tragic irony of a society gripped by the vicious curiosity of its own contradictions is one way of looking at the current epidemic of violence and bullying in Nigeria’s educational institutions. This for me is the effective prelude to the unfolding anarchy in the nation’s education system. It does not matter at what you level you look or in which direction of the national compass, the story is the same.

     

    The university of Ilorin recently expelled a final year student for physically assaulting a female leccturer. The student, SaludeenWaliuAanuoluwa of the department of Microbiology was expelled for beating up his female lecturer , Mrs. RahmatZakariyau. In addition to being expelled by the university authorities, the errant student was subsequently arrested by the police and is facing criminal prosecution for assault and related offences.

     

    The Governor of Edo State, Mr. Godwin Obaseki does not suffer fools gladly. He has reportedly shut down Idogbo Secondary School in IkpobaOkha Local government area of the state. The students recently went on rampage against the authorities of the school and extensively destroyed school property worth over N30 million. They beat up the principal of the school, manhandled and stripped a policeman deployed for security at the school. The governor has insisted that the school would remain closed until the students make restitution for all that destruction and damage. Noone knows how the beating suffered by the principal can be restituted or how the hapless policeman who found himself stripped to his bare buttocks would have his privacy and other details fixed.

     

    Similarly, police in Delta state is still searching for Master Michael Ogbeise , a Senior Secondary School 3 student of a private secondary school in Abraka. He beat beat his teacher, oneEzeugo Joseph, to death in a fit of anger over the teacher’s flogging of his junior sister as a disciplinary measure. His junior sister is still alive but the unfortunate teacher is dead. Master Ogbeise is at large, wanted by the police for murder.

     

    In Ogun state last October, a mathematics teacher at the Itori Comprehensive Secondary School in Yewa Local government area simply identified as Mr. Owolabi was beaten to stupor by a male student when he tried to stop him from physically assaulting a female fellow student.

     

    In all this gamut of school incidents and violent exertions, the one mishap that has gripped the attention of the nation is the sad story of young Sylvester Oromoni. A 12 year old junior secondary school student of Dowen College, a high profile private school in Lagos, Sylvester recently died of injuries ostensibly sustained in the hands of senior fellow students who, from all accounts, are mere dormitory bullies.

     

    Sylvester’s death has been surrounded by understandable public interest and incensed social media campaigns from all over the country and beyond. There has also been a flurry of controversy depending on whose version you are prepared to listen to. In a hurriedly scripted PR defense version put out by the school almost immediately after Sylvester passed on, the story is that Sylvester died of injuries he sustained playing football in school. But according to the circumstantial recollections of his parents and the series of eye witness accounts of fellow students, Sylvester died as a result of sustained physical assault in the hands of a group of school bullies. He had been subjected to bouts of extortion, beatings and other forms of abuse and bullying by a squad of insensitive seniors over time. The physical assaults led to grave injuries which eventually led to his death. By the time his parents could intervene in his medical treatment, the school authorities had sufficiently mismanaged the situation. The matter is actively under investigation by the police while the Lagos State government has shut down the school. Even President Buhari has weighed in on the criminal and moral dimensions of the tragedy.

     

    Whether or not young Sylvester died of injuries inflicted by bullies or in the field of play, what this incident has revealed is a multiple crisis in our educational system. First is the reality of bullying as a constant feature of our schools especially the boarding schools. Second is the serial failure of school authorities to pay close attention to the welfare and wellbeing of the children entrusted to their care. There is of course the incidental matter of the less than close interest of wealthy parents to the welfare of their children once they have left them in the hands of authorities in some of these expensive schools.

     

    In the case of private schools, it does seem that the profit motive which lies at the heart of the establishment of these schools has swarmed the moral responsibility of school authorities for the protection of the children placed in their care. Not only that, the responsibility of school authorities to ensure that schools have structures and personnel responsible for the non academic aspects of life on these school premises seems to be in decline. Responsible house masters and house matrons, professional healthcare personnel and responsible adult staffers as moral beacons on school compounds have increasingly vanished in the new educational infrastructures.

     

    The emphasis these days has shifted to the architecture of school edifices and state of art equipment over and above the overall human capital content of the educational system. Ever busy and successful parents are often content to off load their children in these expensive schools in the hope that once the exorbitant fees have been paid, the rest will follow. But tragically it does not work that way. This is partly why we are witnessing increasing instances of bullying, substance abuse, homosexuality and social media trolling among school age kids mostly in these privileged schools.

     

    Taken together, the various instances of violence and assault in our schools point to an overwhelming failure in our educational system. It is bad enough that standards of instruction and general attainment especially in the public schools are at an abysmal low. It is also lamentable that the increase in the number of private institutions has not raised the moral tone of the educational system in any substantial way. It would seem that the general moral decline in the Nigerian society is finding almost direct reflection in what is happening in our school settings.

     

    A society in which leaders literally bully those who elected them into office to accept unpopular policies is the breeding ground for the madness in our schools and universities. The cultism on the campuses, the bully networks in school dormitories and the thugs that pass as undergraduates on our campuses all find role models in our thuggish politicians, garish priests and miracle merchants in the outer society. These outlandish role models are the very parents, uncles and aunties of the children unleashing mayhem on lur campuses.

     

    Students that beat up their teachers, undergraduates that physically manhandle their professors, students engaged in regular free for all fights on campusare a refection of the anarchy in the outer wider society. The phenomenon of the strong bullying the weak and the use of powers of impunity to assert authority are all infiltrations of values from the wider society into campuses and school premises. The insensitivity to the feelings of others and the casual infliction of pain and injury on the weak and subordinate are mirror images of daily lived experience in real life Nigeria.

     

    Further unexpected tales and images are tumbling out of our schools and places of learning. Older generations of Nigerians with memories of school and campus as hallowed places of learning and quiet contemplation must be finding it hard to bear the repeated drama of violence that has recently become the reality of our educational institutions. Our new national culture of impunity and violence seems to have found a comfortable lodging in school dormitories, university hostels and lecture rooms. The social media is replete with recent images and stories of violence in countless educational institutions.

     

    The action that is called for is in the region of a national emergency. It is not enough to shut down schools where these outrages occur as the Lagos state government has done in the case of Dowen college or the Edo state government in the Ikpoba school. More is needed. The regime of regulation of schools both private and public must become national policy. Schools need to engage qualified guidance counselors to help mould character and direct energies in schools. The old system of having accountable house masters and matrons must be reinstated. The criteria for the registration of private schools especially must be strengthened and made more rigorous. Annual renewal of school licenses should be instituted to avoid the deterioration of standards.

     

    Moreover, the National Assembly must wade into the crisis of disorder and lawlessness in our educational institutions. Laws that prescribe specific jail terms for acts of thuggery, bullying and cultism in educational institutions must be legislated into place without delay. School authorities that fail in their duties must bear responsibility for what happens on their campuses and premises. For some reason, it remains curious that the federal ministry of education has maintained a studied silence on a matter that demands the declaration of a national emergency while politicians and social media influencers have a field day in no particular direction. In the end, national policy on so critical an area cannot be left in the hands of vote seeking politicians or attention hungry social media hounds. The educational system is perhaps the last remaining frontier of national salvation when everything else fails. We cannot abandon that frontier to the forces that have besieged our larger society.

  • SAD! New converts stab RCCG pastor to death

    SAD! New converts stab RCCG pastor to death

    Suspected hoodlums have attacked and killed a pastor of the Redeemed Christian Church of God in FESTAC Town, in the Amuwo Odofin Local Government Area of Lagos State.

    It was gathered that the deceased, Pastor Babatunde Dada, was killed inside the RCCG Chapel of Resurrection on 13 Road, 6th Avenue, FESTAC Town.

    The killing, which happened on Thursday, December 2, was said to have been executed by two new converts who came to the church for the first time a Sunday before the incident.

    The two youths were said to have come out during an altar call and surrendered their lives to Jesus.

    The church accommodated them on its premises after they claimed to be stranded.

    They had hardly spent a week in the church when they reportedly stabbed the Pastor to death.

    However, the wife of the pastor, Bose said she called her husband on the day of the sad incident and he promised to come home to rest.

    “My husband was killed on December 2 at the church. He was the admin/accounts officer, as well as the parish pastor. I was not with him when he was killed, but I was told that they collected money from him. I heard that those who killed him were new converts”, she told Punch.

    A family member, Mr Abolarinwa Olatunbosun, said the pastor was killed after withdrawing money from a bank.

    He said, “The pastor went to a bank to withdraw some money and went to rest on the first floor of the church. Two persons said to be new converts went to meet him upstairs, broke his head and killed him.

    “The matter was reported to the police and one of the suspects, who ran to Ilorin, has been arrested.”

     

  • Man arrested for allegedly beating cigarette seller to death over N50

    Man arrested for allegedly beating cigarette seller to death over N50

    The Police Command in Ogun on Monday said it has arrested a 35-year-old man, Biodun Adeniyi, for allegedly beating a cigarette seller to death following an argument over N50 balance.

    The Spokesman of Police in Ogun, ASP Abimbola Oyeyemi, made this known in a statement issued to newsmen in Ota, Ogun.

    Oyeyemi explained that the suspect, who resides at No 35, Oladun Street, Ikotun, Lagos, was arrested on Dec. 5 following a report lodged at Idiroko Divisional Headquarters by the father of the victim, Adamu Abubakar.

    The PPRO added that the father reported that the suspect came to his shop at Ajegunle area, Idiroko, at about 2.00p.m. to buy cigarettes and his son, Mukaila Adamu, attended to him.

    He stated further that at about 10 pm of the same day, the suspect came back and demanded for N50 balance, which led to an argument between the suspect and his son.

    The suspect descended heavily on his son, raining blows on him. He said his son collapsed and was rushed to hospital where he was confirmed dead.

    “Upon the report, the Divisional Police Officer (DPO), Idiroko Division, CSP Shadrach Oriloye, quickly led his men to the scene, where the suspect was promptly arrested.

    “The corpse of the deceased has been deposited at mortuary for autopsy,” he said.

    Meanwhile, the Commissioner of Police in Lagos, Lanre Bankole, has ordered the immediate transfer of the suspect to homicide section of the state criminal investigation and intelligence department for further investigation and diligent prosecution.

  • North Korean who smuggled in ‘Squid Game’ sentenced to death

    North Korean who smuggled in ‘Squid Game’ sentenced to death

    A North Korean man has reportedly been sentenced to death for smuggling in the movie ‘Squid Game’.

    According to Radio Free Asia, the unidentified man was caught unlawfully distributing the South Korean survival drama series.

    It was gathered that he smuggled copies of the series on USB drives from China into North Korea.

    Seven high school students were also caught watching the series, one of whom is said to have received a life sentence.

    The six other students who watched the series were said to have been sentenced to five years of hard labor while some teachers and school administrators have been fired and faced banishment to work in remote mines.

    Sources in the know of the case were quoted as saying that the man’s execution will be carried out by firing squad.

    The case, RFA said, is the first time North Korea enforced on minors its “elimination of reactionary thought and culture” law that sets execution as the penalty for “watching, keeping, or distributing media” from capitalist states.

    “They were caught by the censors in 109 Sangmu, who had received a tipoff,” the source in law enforcement added, referring to a government strike force that hunts illegal video watchers, known as Surveillance Bureau Group 109.

    “This all started last week when a high school student secretly bought a USB flash drive containing the South Korean drama Squid Game and watched it with one of his best friends in class,” the law enforcement said.

    “The friend told several other students, who became interested, and they shared the flash drive with them.”

    ‘Squid Game’ tells the story of a contest where 456 players are drawn from different walks of life.

    Deeply in debt, they play children’s games with deadly penalties for those who lose — with the sole aim to win ₩45.6 billion.

    Following its release, ‘Squid Game’ quickly became a global phenomenon, becoming Netflix’s biggest series ever.