Tag: Death

  • TAMPAN expresses shock over Baba Suwe’s death

    TAMPAN expresses shock over Baba Suwe’s death

    The Theatre Arts and Movie Practitioners Association of Nigeria (TAMPAN) on Monday expressed shock over the death of Babatunde Omidina, popularly known as “Baba Suwe”.

    Damola Olatunji, the National Chairman, TAMPAN Guild of Directors, in a telephone interview in Ibadan, said that the vacuum created by Baba Suwe’s death would be difficult to fill.

    Olatunji said: “Who are we to question God? He was one of the greatest actors ever liveth.

    “He started his comedy in Nigeria with his “Awada Kerikeri in those days.

    “He was the king of comedy. He was able to put smiles on our faces through his craft.

    “My sincere condolence to the Omidina family.

    “We, at the TAMPAN Guild of Directors, sympathise with his entire family and pray to God to be with them in this trying time,” he said.

    “Baba Suwe” died at the age of 63.

    TAMPAN National President, Bolaji Amusan, had earlier confirmed the death of the actor, saying: “Yes, we lost Baba Suwe to the cold hands of death, it is unfortunate”.

  • Migrants about to freeze to death, salute Europe, By Owei Lakemfa

    By Owei Lakemfa

    THE world this week is witnessing about 4,000 human beings, mainly Iraqis, Syrians and Afghans, caught in the freezing forests between Belarus and Poland. They have no warm clothing, food or water and are under siege by opposing European armies.

    Flowing from Belarus which closed the borders behind them, and facing Poland which has shut its borders on their faces, many of these refugees can only await death under a climate which on Thursday, November 11, 2021 was three degrees Celsius and is getting colder. These victims include lots of children.

    The situation escalated when using social media, some of the refugees, rather than simply lay down and freeze to death or be despatched by hunger, decided to march this Monday on the Polish border which promises to be their Heaven Gate pass to bigger Europe. Poland immediately massed 15,000 troops to stop the migrants while also mobilising its citizens to rise up against the hapless migrants.

    In response, some far-right groups decided to move to the borders looking for migrants to take out. Poland, under the ruling anti-migrants, Law and Justice Party had in September, declared a state of emergency on its borders with Belarus. This was in anticipation of desperate moves by the starving refugees to breach its borders.

    Belarus, a landlocked country of 9.399 million people and ranked as a state with high development, appeared to have been sympathetic to refugees, especially those escaping conflicts. Following disputed elections, the European Union, EU, imposed punishing sanctions on it in June 2021.

    This appeared to have biting effects on the country, and it pushed for the migrants to start leaving. This, in August, led to the march by many refugees towards Poland’s 418- kilometre border with Belarus. The following month, Polish President, Andrzej Duda, declared a state of emergency over 183 towns and villages in a long term plan to ensure the refugees do not set foot on Polish soil.

    This resulted in the refugees being caught in a sort of no-man’s-land between the two countries. Since then, a number of the refugees have succumbed to cold and hunger. Virtually abandoned by all, with Poland refusing to allow humanitarian groups to provide food or warm clothing, the refugees using social media decided to mass at the Polish border demanding passage to the rest of Europe, particularly Germany which in the past had displayed kindness towards victims of conflicts from Asia and the Middle East.

    Rather than properly examine the issues, European leaders put the blame on the doorstep of Belarusian President, Aleksander Lukashenko. They accused him of being behind the refugees’ decision as his way of getting back at the EU for imposing sanctions.

    Adalbert Jahnz, the European Commission’s spokesman for migration, argued that: “This is a continuation of the desperate attempt by the Lukashenko regime to use people as pawns to destabilise the European Union and of course the values that we stand for.”

    Poland threatened to use maximum force against the refugees. Polish Prime Minister, Mateusz Morawiecki, bellowed on Monday: “This border is sacred …The border of the Polish state is not just a line on the map. Generations of Poles shed their blood for this border.”

    But the refugees who face possible death in the cold forests were past caring. That Monday, they made 309 attempts to breach the Polish border fences. Seventeen of them, almost all, Iraqis were detained. The next day, they made nearly 600 attempts to enter Poland.

    Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki that day went before parliament and alleged that “the security of our eastern border is brutally violated today by a ruthless dictator who wants revenge on Poland and Europe for opposing human rights violations in Belarus. But we know that his revenge is controlled from Moscow…This attack which Lukashenko is conducting has its mastermind in Moscow, the mastermind is President Putin.”

    EU President Ursula von der Leyen after meeting American President Joe Biden said both agreed that: “This is a hybrid attack. Not a migration crisis”. She claimed that there is the need to protect “democracies”. On their part, Belarus and its Russian ally accused the EU of orchestrating a crisis. Russia sent two fighter jets to protect the Belarusian airspace.

    In all these, the warring Europeans do not put the lives of the hapless refugees into consideration. It is incredible that Europeans who can deploy helicopters and troops to rescue a freezing dog, would consciously force some four thousand human beings to remain in starving, freezing conditions.

    The European nations having deployed special forces on their borders and helmed in the refugees, are employing arms and brute force to keep the refugees in the forests and using them as puns in this chess game.

    In Poland and Belarus, the armies are mobilised, the guns are cocked, but not at themselves; in-between them are the helpless and hapless refugees, this is the buffer zone. So, if bullets fly, they would either be skywards or hit the refugees.

    For those who may blame the refugees for not staying in their countries, it is necessary to remind them that the fires burning in those countries were essentially set by the EU and its allies.

    The crisis in Syria was orchestrated by external forces which trained Islamic fundamentalists, including the Islamic State, and unleashed them on that country. Today, the Syrian refugees number over 5.6 million and are constantly knocking on the gates of Europe especially at the Greek and Polish borders.

    Most of the refugees camping at the Polish borders are Iraqis. Iraq was a prosperous and safe country until March 2003 when countries like the United Kingdom, America, Australia and Poland invaded it under the false premise that it had weapons of mass destruction.

    There are today, 9.2 million Iraqi refugees or internally displaced. The Afghan refugees roaming around the world were minted by Europe and America which invaded Afghanistan for two decades. That is why today, some of them are at the borders of Poland, Lithuania and Latvia.

    Despite European countries being the largest group in contemporary times which through invasions have created armies of refugees, only one European country, Germany, with a million refugees, is amongst the top ten countries hosting refugees.

    Turkey, which is being paid by the EU to take in refugees expelled by Europe, has 3.7 million, Jordan is next with 2.9 million, while Lebanon and Pakistan have 1.4 million refugees each. In Africa, Uganda has 1.1 million and Ethiopia, 921.000. Iran with 979,400 refugees, is also in this league.

    As the refugees caught in the European chess board game in Poland are left to their fate, I recall the gladiators in Rome who shouted: “Hail Emperor, those who are about to die salute you!”

     

  • Ikoyi collapsed building: Death toll now 45, two high-rise buildings not for demolition – LASG

    Ikoyi collapsed building: Death toll now 45, two high-rise buildings not for demolition – LASG

    Death toll in the 21-storey collapsed building in Ikoyi, Lagos has reached 45, the Lagos State Government said late Wednesday night.

    The government also said contrary to speculations, no directive has been given for the demolition of the two high-rise buildings standing at the site of the 21-storey collapsed building in Ikoyi, Lagos.

    A statement issued by the Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Gbenga Omotoso said the Panel of Inquiry instituted to establish issues surrounding the collapse of the building has continued to sit and that an integrity test was yet to be conducted on the buildings.

    “It is, therefore, wrong to assert or speculate that the buildings will be demolished.

    “The operation at the site of the collapsed building continues. Vehicular movement around the site has been smooth, following the reopening of the road.

    Ikoyi collapsed building: Death toll hits 43
    “Two more bodies were recovered from the site today. The recovery of the two bodies has brought to 45 the number of bodies retrieved from the site,” he said.

    Omotoso added that the identification of bodies of the victims of the incident had continued at IDH, Yaba, Lagos Mainland.

    He disclosed that 32 families had come forward to submit samples for DNA to identify bodies that they wished to claim.

    “In cases where identification is clear and there are no arguments, the bodies will be released to the families.

    “A committee to supervise the identification and release of the bodies has begun work. It comprises senior officials of the Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Justice,” he said.

  • Our Fingers and Death by COVID-19 – Hope Eghagha

    A finger or our fingers could be the death of us. So we are advised, cautioned, and warned by COVID-19 experts, locally and globally. In a sense, it is a new way of dying. This finger thing. I know about death at the touch of a button. Nuclear switch or button. The hangman’s button. But his finger and COVID-19 type of death? I really I’m not sure. However, it is not really a new way of catching disease. Ignaz Semmelweis, a Hungarian doctor who worked at the Vienna General Hospital between 1844 and 1848 was the first to establish a link between washing hands and disease. Most of his colleagues did not agree with him at the time because of the politics of discovery of scientific truth and what I may term accepting responsibility for deaths in hospitals. The poor man died in ignominy, confined to a sanatorium. Details of that story? That is story for another day. These days it is routine to wash the hands whether at home or the office or hospital. But somebody died for it.

    In our days in public primary schools we were taught the benefits of washing hands in hygiene as a subject. Suffice it to say that ‘the importance of hand washing for medical professionals didn’t really become understood until scientists hit upon germ theory—the idea that certain diseases and infections are caused by microorganisms we can’t even see. In particular, the British surgeon Joseph Lister drastically improved patient mortality by advocating that surgeons wash their hands and sterilize their instruments in between patients’.

    Those fingers therefore in your hands could bring a deadly virus to your face, your mouth, your nostrils, and into your life. A handshake could be the death of us, of anybody. Fingers naturally find their way to the face. To scratch. To eat. To wipe sweat or dust. The fingers rush to protect and safeguard the face. But we are told that in that process fingers could take a virus to the face. You could catch a cold. A cold degenerates. Coughing follows. Malaria symptoms. Body weakness. Pains in the joints. Fever. Pneumonia. Inability to breathe. Then death. Death horrendous for most. No family members go near them while they are ill. Sometimes, husband and wife catch the virus. One dies. The other stays back. Filled with pain. Sorrow and tears. For some both husband and wife are struck by death. The children become orphans. A finger could have brought in the virus. Or where they breathed in the virus- the virus of death. Or it could have been brought in the by innocent kids or grandchildren.

    Breathing in the virus could also have the same consequences. Cold and fever. We treat for malaria and typhoid and breathing becomes a problem in some people. Death follows. Often, for the rural poor in Nigeria, it is too late by the time they realize that they should see a doctor. They prepare all kinds of herbal concoctions to fight fever. For some, Agbo saves the day. How this happens, we are yet to fathom. Yet we know that for some reason, we have not died in our thousands in the streets of Lagos or Port Harcourt or Kano or Warri as health experts had predicted. Are we immune to the deep and overwhelming tragedies of a pandemic that we do not easily succumb to death? Hundreds of years of living with viruses and fighting them may have a role to play. It has not been proven. It has not been tested. It has not been confirmed. Yet there is death. There are deaths. Many deaths. Too many Nigerians have displayed the symptoms without getting to the hospital. Some get to the hospital with all the symptoms and die. When the test reports come in, they are negative. No presence of COVID-19. Some are saved after millions have been spent in highbrow hospitals for first class treatment. Others, especially the poor ones, are not so lucky. It is their time to go. They die. They are buried immediately. No report. They are not part of the statistics of the dead. Were they a part of the statistics of the living before?

    In all of this, there are doubts. Skepticism. Skepticism in Warri, in Asaba, in Enugu, in Kano, in Port Harcourt. Skepticism over the existence of the virus. Skepticism over the efficacy of the vaccine. Some say those who take the vaccine will die in two years. The confusion is heightened by the death of some people who are fully vaccinated. A fully vaccinated General Collin Powell has just died. We are told he had underlying health challenges. There are conspiracy theories. Some pastors promote the theories. Some doctors too. And some scientists have been brought into the circle to dispute the vaccine. In America, home to great scientists and science, there are over seventy million people who have refused to take the vaccine. Or to wear a nose mask. Former President Donald Trump and his gullible supporters dispute everything pro-vaccine. Trump mocked COVID-19. He caught the virus and came out of it. But he quietly took the vaccine. Wily and deceptive leadership. These all add to the confusion. COVID-19, the conspiracy theorists say, is part of the attempt to chop money, or to steal money.

    When poor victims, not famous or popular or media-known people die, the cause of death is hidden, not published. Some families believe there is stigmatization if one died from COVID-19. Such ignorance. Such superstition. Such fear of the unknown. As a result, they are silent on the cause of death even to the extended family members. One fellow who ought to know better asked me whether families usually announced cause of death in the church or newspapers or social media. I had no answer to that foolish question. I only reminded him what Professor Olikoye Ransome-Kuti did after Fela Anikulapo-Kuti elder brother to the music icon did when Fela died of AIDS. He made a public announcement about the cause of death to create awareness among Fela’s many fans. That reduced nothing about the person or music of Fela!

    There is confusion. Big confusion. Confusion in America. Confusion in Europe. Confusion in Africa. Confusion in Asia. China disputes the narrative that the virus became a monster in their homeland. There are doubts about how our fingers that usually feed us with good food could be the cause of our death. But let it be said that the fingers that give us food could also give us poisoned food. Poisoned food. The fingers do not know what is bad or good. They act as directed. The nose which breathes in fresh air could also breathe in foul or fatal air. The word therefore is caution. Those preachers who rail against the mask should be cautioned. If they wish to die of the virus, let them go. Let them not deceive their poor gullible adherents. Late Brother Ebenezer Otomewo, President of the God’s Kingdom Society used to tell us that one false prophet was more dangerous than ten armed robbers. I didn’t understand it then. Now I understand how false teachers can lead one million people to destruction. ‘And the leaders of these people cause them to err, says Prophet Isaiah, ‘and they that are led of them are destroyed’. It is true. The good book says it.

    The finger, our fingers could be the death of us. Our nostrils could be the death of us too. Let no one deceive us with puerile words from the altar in the name of God. Simple obedience to COVID-19 protocols and the grace of God could make the difference. Let us tap into the spirit of obedience and the grace of God!

  • Woman shoots man to death for rejecting her kiss while drinking at home

    Woman shoots man to death for rejecting her kiss while drinking at home

    A woman allegedly shot a man to death after he refused to kiss her while they were drinking at a home in Rolling Meadows, Cook County, Illinois on Thursday.

    On Oct. 14, Claudia Resendiz-Flores, 28, reportedly shot 29-year-old James Jones in the chest and killed him after he refused to kiss her and instead asked his girlfriend for a kiss while the three of them were drinking at their home in the Woodfield apartment complex in Rolling Meadows, New York Post reported.

    Resendiz-Flores reportedly recently moved in with Jones and his girlfriend at the Preserve at Woodfield apartment complex at 4700 Arbor Drive in the northwest suburb.

    On Oct. 14, the three of them were reportedly hanging out and drinking at their apartment when Resendiz-Flores allegedly asked Jones for a kiss. However, Jones refused because he was sitting next to his girlfriend, and instead, turned to his girlfriend, asked for a smooch, and kissed her in front of Resendiz-Florez.

    Resendiz-Florez, who became jealous after seeing this, reportedly asked Jones’ girlfriend for a kiss. However, she declined to kiss her as well.

    Following this, Resendiz-Flores’ demeanor changed and she demanded Jones to kiss her again. However, Jones refused once again and in a fit of rage, an enraged Resendiz-Florez reportedly grabbed Jones’ gun that he had tucked between two couch cushions and aimed it at him. She pulled the safety off and put her finger on the gun’s trigger. Seeing this, Jones tried to push Resendiz-Florez’s arm down but the gun went off, striking Jones once in the chest and killing him, according to Chicago Sun-Times.

    Following the incident, Jone’s girlfriend called 911 and alerted them regarding the incident. When the officers responded to the scene, Resendiz-Flores allegedly admitted to shooting and killing Jones. She was charged with first-degree murder and is being held in the Cook County jail without bail. She is expected back in court on Tuesday.

    Assistant Public Defender Courtney Smallwood, Resendiz-Florez’s attorney, said during the bond hearing that her client is married but separated from her husband and is the sole caretaker for three young children. Smallwood also reportedly argued that her client was living with her family in Des Plaines and not with Jones and his girlfriend at the time of the murder.

  • Educating Nigerians before birth and after death – By Owei Lakemfa

    By Owei Lakemfa

    A STORY trended in the social media on Tuesday, October 5, 2021, the International Teachers Day. On that day, the Senate confirmed the nomination of Alhaji Yahaya Mohammad as a Board Member of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC.

    Many Nigerians appeared scandalised that the Senate would clear a man who was born on September 29, 1969 but had started school in 1968; that is the year before he was born.

    It was also unsettling for them that the nominee had claimed he attended the Borno Teachers College for thirteen years from 1975.

    That means he started his post-primary education at the age of seven and finished the five-year course when he was 20. Simultaneously, he attended the professional College of Administration Studies in 1980 when he was a 12-year old boy. This man clearly, was a child prodigy.

    Personally, I see nothing strange in a man beginning primary school before he was born because children are educated before they are born. Otherwise, where would a new born baby have learnt how to cry? Where would it have learnt that when hungry, it should yell for nutrients or breast milk?

    It is a well-known fact that for us Nigerians, education is not just life-long, but eternal; it is before birth and after death. That is why it is not uncommon for people to speak to a corpse at the grave side.

    They admonish it on various issues, remind it of past or pending matters and generally tell it not to forget the loved ones it has left behind. Sometimes the corpse during burial, is sent on errands; it is told to convey the greetings of the living to deceased loved ones in the land of the dead.

    The Yorubas know this better than any other Nigerian nationality. They tell the corpse to continue its education eternally. There is a standard instruction they give the corpse: “When you get to heaven, neither eat millipedes nor worms, rather, eat what is eaten there.” In other words, the deceased is to study the dietary pattern in heaven. It is like saying when in Rome, behave like a Roman.

    Although teachers are told their reward is in heaven, they neither teach the unborn nor the dead; they teach only the living on surface earth, and they do a good job doing so. This is why I agree that: “Teachers are the keys that unlock the student’s mind.”

    It is also a truism that while: “the architect makes houses, the writer makes poetry, the scientist makes discoveries, the teacher makes them all.” In other words: “Teachers make all other professions possible.” So: “If there were no teachers, all other professions will not exist.” The point is, if you can read this, thank your teacher.

    Teachers Day in Nigeria has become a ritual during which the Presidency plays the role of chief priest casting divination which shows a better future for teachers. This year, two major promises the Buhari administration made to teachers are: an enhanced salary system and extending their retirement age from 60 to 65 years. These are familiar promises; they were the same made during the 2020 Teachers Day.

    In fact, the issue of an enhanced teachers’ salary system dates back to 2006 during the Obasanjo administration. It was called the Teachers Salary Scale, TSS. It is similar to the University Salary Scale, USS.

    The Yar’Adua administration, 2007-2009, formalised the TSS. Since then, its implementation has been trying to burrow through the bureaucracy underground. So for over a dozen years now, the Jonathan, and now the Buhari administrations on every Teachers Day, make the same promises.

    The extension of the teachers retirement age by five years is even an older promise since the retirement age of lecturers in the universities has been sixty five. In fact in 2010 the then Minister of Education, Dr. Sam Egwu announced the implementation of a new retirement age in the universities; that for professors was extended from 65 to 70, and for the non-academic staff from 60 to 65 years.

    But why are teachers pleased whenever they are teased that their retirement age will be extended? It is poverty. Nigeria has evolved so well that to be a pensioner is to be sentenced to a life of penury. First, it takes eternity for the once-off bulk retirement payment, called gratuity to be paid.

    Secondly, pension payment has never been a priority of governments at state and federal levels. Thirdly, subsequent adjustments to pension in line with continuous currency devaluation, hyper-inflation and salary increases, are usually not reflected, or reflected very late for pensioners. So the average Nigerian worker lives in fear of retirement.

    This is in sharp contrast to their European counterparts who look forward to retirement. I recall during my March 2012 visit to factories like BMW in Germany, there were protests and strikes over the decision of some governments in Europe to increase retirement age by an average two years.

    The workers felt they needed more time for holidays and with their families. I reflected that in contrast, Nigerian workers and professionals were clamouring to postpone their retirement as long as possible even if it means tampering with their official records.

    In any case, with mass unemployment among young graduates including those with degrees in education, does it not make more sense for teachers to be encouraged to take due retirement and be handsomely rewarded so more employment opportunities can be available for the young?

    Whatever the case, we all need teachers, whether old or young. For instance, teachers are needed to organise refresher courses for the Nigeria Army.

    Soldiers in Onitsha had arrested popular actor Chiwetalu Agu for wearing a cloth emblazoned with the defunct Biafra coat of arms. First the army statement announced that it was the “very well-known attire” of the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra, IPOB.

    This is incorrect because that was the symbol of Biafra from 1967, the same year IPOB founder, Nnamdi Kanu was born. Secondly, various organisations in Eastern Nigeria wear it. So the army’s conclusion that by the actor wearing such a cloth in his film company bus, amounts to “soliciting” support for IPOB, is illogical.

    More to my point. Viral videos showed soldiers pushing the famous actor at gun point, forcing him to the ground, dragging him on the tarred road before finally carrying him like a piece of rag. Yet the army told Nigerians and the world that: “he (Agu) was not assaulted or subjected to brutalisation.”

    You see why teachers are needed to explain that brutalisation or assault is to visit physical violence on somebody, which was what soldiers in the video did to the veteran actor. May we never lack teachers in our lives.

     

  • BREAKING: Taraba’s top traditional ruler dies

    BREAKING: Taraba’s top traditional ruler dies

    The Paramount and Supreme Ruler of the Jukun Race and Chairman Taraba State Council of Traditional Rulers, His Majesty, Dr Shekarau Angyu Masa Ibi, Kuvyo II CON has joined his ancestors.

    This was contained in a statement issued by Jolly Agbu Masa-IBI, SA Media to Aku-Uka on Sunday.

    The Aku Uka joined his ancestors at the age of 84 after leading the Kwararafa Race for 45 Years.

    All traditional rites in accordance to the Jukun tradition has since commences.

    The final traditional rites for Aku Uka’s transition from the Palace to Puje would be announced in due course.

  • Mourners returning from burial meet death as Rivers jetty collapses

    Mourners returning from burial meet death as Rivers jetty collapses

    Several persons were feared dead after a jetty collapsed in Isaka community in the Okrika Local Government Area of Rivers State on Saturday.

    It was gathered that the incident occurred on Saturday evening while sympathisers who attended a burial in the neighbourhood were trying to board a boat back to Port Harcourt, the state capital.

    The rickety jetty reportedly crumbled due to the weight of the travellers.

    A survivor, who narrated the incident on a radio programme at 93.7 Rhythm, Port Harcourt, said about 70 persons were on the jetty when it caved in.

    The survivor, who identified himself only as Walter, said the burial attracted many people to the island community, lamenting that many guests had yet to be accounted for as of 6pm.

    Walter said, “Today (Saturday), we had a burial at Isaka and a lot of people were in attendance. On our way back, people queued to board a speedboat. In the process, the jetty caved in and so many people fell into the river. A few of them were rescued.

    “I was a little away from the point that caved in, so I survived it. That jetty was old. The pressure was on the jetty, and then it caved in. There were so many people on the jetty. They were more than 70. The local divers are still combing the area to find survivors.”

    Walter said though the exact number of casualties could not be ascertained, he said, “To be candid, I will not be able to give you an exact number, but I know that they are up to 20.”

  • Dad flees after beating 2-year-old son to death

    Dad flees after beating 2-year-old son to death

    A Delta State indigene resident in Bayelsa State, simply identified as Vwede, has reportedly flogged his two-year-old son to death.

    The incident which occurred on Sunday, September 26, 2021, at Immiringi Road, in Yenagoa, the State capital, caused pandemonium in the area.

    It was also gathered that the mother of the deceased may have abandoned the child with his father and run away.

    The father, who had since fled the State immediately his son was confirmed dead, was accused of constantly torturing his son.

    He was said to have inflicted serious injuries on the boy on the fateful day.

    After beating his son into stupor, he rushed the boy to Answer Clinic, along the Ruthmore Hotel Road, Immiringi.

    Residents in the area have expressed anger over the development.

    Women Lawyers under the aegis of Do Foundation, have vowed to pursue justice for the victim.

    Do Foundation, which is in forefront of the campaign against gender violence and protection of children, condemned the incident and called on security agents to ensure that the fleeing father of the deceased is arrested.

    The State Coordinator, Do Foundation, Comfort Itoru, said the incident had been reported at the Akenfa Police Station.

    Itoru said her foundation has reached out to other advocacy groups in the State, including the State Gender Response Initiative Team (GRIT), to prevail on Police authorities to investigate and prosecute the suspect who killed an innocent child.

    “We have reached out to other advocacy groups over the incident. We however call on residents of the state not to keep quiet in the face of noticeable violence against the girl child, under aged and women,” Itoru appealed.

  • Losing my mother my greatest fear- Nkechi Blessing

    Losing my mother my greatest fear- Nkechi Blessing

    Popular actress, Nkechi Blessing is currently mourning the death of her mum, Mrs. Gloria Obasi Sunday.

    The actress took to her Instagram account hours after Honourable Opeyemi Falegan announced the passing away of her mum.

    In an emotional eulogy, Nkechi said her greatest fear was losing her mum and it has eventually happened.

    “My greatest fear, Mummy you shouldn’t have, Hmmmmmm…You know if the doctors asked for money to keep you alive, I would have begged the world to help me save you, but you left in a flash,” she began.

    Continuing, she lamented how her mother had passed away just five days to her birthday.

    “Your only complaint was stomach ache…And that is the last I heard of you..I went to bed thinking I would wake up from this dream but it’s indeed a reality that you left me five days to your birthday.”

    Nkechi also recounted her mother’s support and how she was working on shocking her with a house for her birthday.

    “Afianma You were a warrior. You had me at your back and said Nkechi you are unstoppable…Now that you have left me how do I face the world? Everyone around me knew I lived all my life for you. I received insults, abuse, embarrassment on this app just to make sure you do not beg for food. I am fulfilled knowing you are in a better place but it hurts that you didn’t even wait to see your birthday Gift mama the one I was working endlessly day and night to build for you.

    “Mama, you are a landlady in Lagos and you couldn’t even wait to see it Haaaa. They said I should be strong, okay I will but you didn’t do well at all mama you didn’t. Return if possible mummy because I refuse to accept the fact that you are no more.”