Tag: Death

  • Nigerians want to ride Buhari to death – Ngige

    Nigerians want to ride Buhari to death – Ngige

    Minister of Labour and Employment Dr Chris Ngige on Monday said Nigerians (especially the critics) have stretched President Muhammadu Buhari beyond reasonable limits.

    Ngige said many leaders specifically former President Olusegun Obasanjo will not tolerate half of what Nigerians are doing to President Buhari if he (Obasanjo) was the one in power.

    Ngige spoke on Monday on a monitored Channnels Television programme.

    “Can President Obasanjo give you people the latitude?… He will not grant you people that! So, this president (Buhari) is a willing horse and you people (Nigerians) want to ride him to death,” Ngige said.

    The former Anambra State governor while stressing that the present government has delivered its promises in many areas, called on critics and members of the public to give kudos to the Buhari government.

    “There must be a limit to politicking. If a government has done well, if a person has done well, give him accolades. In the areas he has not done well, point them out and discuss,” he added.

    Calls for the presidential seat to be zoned to the southeast region have gathered momentum and sharply divided opinion in Africa’s most populous nation.

    But Ngige has concurred with those who see the 2023 election as a time for the Igbos to get the seat.

    Ngige believes that tensions in the southeast and the feeling of marginalization by people in the region will be addressed if the nation’s number one position is occupied by an Igbo man.

    “The people in the area have perceived that they are marginalized, that they are unappreciated, whether it was done by propaganda and brainwashing or not, that is now immaterial.

    “So I agree with that proposal, unfortunately, the Nigerian constitution does not have that. This is where I quarrel with those who authored the 1999 Constitution.

    “I still believe today, tomorrow, that the Abacha Constitution of 1995 that espouses rotational presidency into the six zones in Nigeria, a single five-year tenure in order to heal all the wounds; the wounds of civil war, and the wound of June 12.

    “Now, that constitution would have been the best constitution for Nigerians to use for the next 30 years by which the six zones would have tested the presidency,” the minister stated.

  • Death toll from Pakistan train collision rises to 62 Accident

    Death toll from Pakistan train collision rises to 62 Accident

    The death toll from a train collision in southern Pakistan rose to 62 on Tuesday after some of the casualties died of injuries sustained in the crash, local officials said.

    A train derailed in the town of Ghotki before dawn on Monday and another one coming from the opposite direction rammed into it, the reason for the initial derailment is not yet clear.

    “We fear more people may die. Some of the injured people are in a critical condition,’’ said Usman Abdullah, local administration chief in Ghotki.

    The operation to find survivors and bodies in the wreckage had been completed and the track would be reopened today, said Syed Ijazul Hassan, a spokesperson for the state-owned railway operator.

    The two trains were carrying more than 1,000 passengers.

    Deadly train accidents are common in Pakistan, where the tracks laid by former colonial power Britain around a century ago have hardly been upgraded.

    Bombings by Islamist militants and separatists targeting the lines, and weak safety and security systems also contribute to the high number of deaths on the trains every year.

    Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan on Monday ordered investigations into the railways safety fault lines.

  • ‘He served us till death’, T.B. Joshua’s employees, church members, community leaders recount prophet’s generosity, love for humanity [Photos/Video]

    ‘He served us till death’, T.B. Joshua’s employees, church members, community leaders recount prophet’s generosity, love for humanity [Photos/Video]

    It was a tensed atmosphere at the Synagogue Church of Nations Church (SCOAN) in Lagos on Sunday after its founder, Prophet T.B. Joshua was confirmed dead.

    The usual bubbling SCOAN that is always full of congregational activities all through the days of the week wore a mourning look on Sunday, the church’s peak service day due its founder’s death.

    TheNewsGuru.com, TNG gathered that Joshua died on Saturday (yesterday) moments after he reportedly ministered via the church’s cable television channel, Emmanuel TV.

    TNG reports that the soft spoken cleric married with two girls would have clocked 58 on June 12.

    ‘You know June 12 is around the corner. However, as a man of the people, I won’t be celebrating my birthday this year due to the challenges worldwide. I can’t be celebrating my birthday while others are in pain. There are many birthdays to celebrate,’ the popular prophet said in a viral message circulating on social media.

     

    It is hard to believe papa is gone – SCOAN members lament

    Members of SCOAN in their thousands trooped to the church premises on Sunday to confirm if the unfortunate news of the prophet was true. Many felt it was a test of the prophet and their faith saying ‘Papa can’t just die. He’ll come back to life’.

    ‘I came to the church for service this morning only to be hit with the rude shock that my Prophet T.B. Joshua is dead. Prophet was never sick nor tired. How can he die? What kind of death is this? I want to believe this a dream or test of his faith. The T.B. Joshua that I know will come back to life,’ a bewildered SCOAN member who identified as Brother Jude said.

     

    Another church member who couldn’t control her tears said: ‘I can’t even imagine that Papa will die in 50 years. This man lived his entire life for the people. He was never appreciated for all his good deeds. I can’t begin to list what he has donefor my family and I. This is not true and I won’t accept it to be true’.

     

    Prophet Joshua changed our lives for good – Employees

    Employees of SCOAN are still finding it hard to swallow the bitter pill of Prophet T.B. Joshua’s death. They explained in details the phophet’s selflessness and commitment to staff welfare. They hope that soonest the news of the prophet’s passing will be congratulations confirmed as false.

    ‘If just five percent of pastors in Nigeria act like Prophet Joshua does this country would have moved forward. The man is down to earth and never forces people to attend his church. He changed our lives for good. I’ve been working in this church’s security unit for years and our welfare is of utmost importance to the prophet. My life and indeed that of my colleagues has change for good. The man foots our bills without asking. His type is rare. His not too much into religion. What he preaches all the time is love. Let love lead. That is his moto,’ a security detail who does not want to named said.

     

    Our benefactor is gone – Community leaders

    The mourning was not limited to SCOAN members. Residents of Ikotun-Egbe and its environs hosting the sprawling SCOAN edifice could not be consoled when reality of the prophet’s passing downed on them. They highlighted how the prophet brought unrivaled developments to the community since erecting the church there.

    ‘Prophet T.B. Joshua is our benefactor in this community and by extension adjourning areas. This man is God sent to us. He saved and empowered lives since founding this church here.

    The vibrant security and regular power supply we enjoy here is his making. I don’t know how we will survive his sudden death. As a matter of fact, Synagogue Church is not a Nigerian church, it is a global church. Eighty percent of his members are foreigners. You can imagine the opportunities that we have having him around us,’ a community leader in Ikotun who identified in as Mr. Saheed said.

    Amongst other things, the community leaders said Phophet Joshua facilitated scholarships for indigent students, paid rents, provided transformers, food items, financial support for both members and non-members of the church.

     

  • Death of late army chief, a national disaster-Lawan

    Death of late army chief, a national disaster-Lawan

    The President of the Senate, Ahmad Lawan, has described the tragic death of the late Chief of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Ibrahim Attahiru, and 10 other military officers in an aircraft crash on Friday as a national disaster of immense proportion.

    Lawan, in a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Ola Awoniyi, late Friday night, noted that the ill-fated occurrence has thrown the entire nation into mourning.

    He expressed deep grief over the tragic death of the late military officers who were on an official trip to Kaduna.

    The statement read in part, “I extend my heartfelt condolences to the Chief of Defence Staff and the entire members of the Armed Forces of Nigeria over this tragedy.

    “This incident is saddening, coming at a time there is a fresh momentum in the nation’s war against insurgency, banditry, and other violent crimes.

    “The Chief of Army Staff and the other officers gave their lives for the security and unity of Nigeria and will be remembered as heroes in the history of the country.

    “I commiserate with the President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, Muhammadu Buhari, and the families of the deceased over the tragic incident and wish the departed souls eternal peace,” Lawan said.

     

  • TNG Health Tips: Six likely causes of death while asleep

    TNG Health Tips: Six likely causes of death while asleep

     

    By Emman Ovuakporie

    Why do people die in their sleep? Explore some of the most common causes and how sleep disorders like sleep apnea, snoring, and insomnia may contribute to a higher risk of never waking up.

    Cardiac Arrest

    A death that is associated with the heart could be attributed to several medical conditions, including sudden cardiac arrest (SCA), myocardial infarction, arrhythmias (abnormal heart rhythms), and congestive heart failure (CHF). One common effect from all of these heart conditions is the failure of the heart to pump enough blood to the rest of the body, which can be fatal.

    Respiratory Arrest

    The lungs and the heart complement each other. As such, when one system fails, the other will most likely follow. One type of breathing that is indicative of impending death is called the Cheyne – Stokes respiration or periodic respiration. It is characterized by deep and fast breathing, followed with a gradual decrease before going for a temporary stop in breathing or apnea. The pattern repeats with each cycle lasting up to 2 minutes.
    Respiratory failure can happen due to a chronic, degenerative disease, such as:
    Chronic Bronchitis
    Emphysema
    Bronchiectasis
    Pulmonary fibrosis
    Cystic fibrosis
    Lung cancer
    Status asthmaticus

    Pulmonary embolism

    It is also possible for the lungs to fail because of some changes in the muscles or the nervous system, just like in the case of myasthenia gravis or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).
    Moreover, there are cases of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) in babies less than one-year-old. The exact cause is unknown, but it is believed to be associated with defects in the portion of the infant’s brain that is responsible for breathing and arousal from sleep.

    Sudden Unexplained Nocturnal Death Syndrome

    SUNDS or sudden unexplained nocturnal death syndrome was first recognized in 1915 in the Philippines. It was originally called bangungut (“to arise and moan;” the word for “nightmare”) in the Tagalog language. In Hawaii, they call it Dream Disease.

    The exact cause of SUNDS is unclear, but it is associated with acute hemorrhagic pancreatitis, Brugada syndrome (a condition that causes disruption in the normal rhythm of the heart), and structural heart disease. Moreover, SUNDS is prevalent in young adult Southeast Asian men who are otherwise healthy.

    Carbon Monoxide Poisoning

    Have you heard of people dying while sleeping inside their car with their AC on? That’s more likely due to carbon monoxide poisoning.
    Carbon monoxide (CO) is a colorless and odorless gas that can be fatal if too much of it is breathed into the lungs. And unless you are using a CO detector, you can hardly notice its presence. It can be found in the fumes from running cars, gas ranges, furnaces, grills, stoves, water heater, fireplace, dryer and so on.
    How does it kill? An increase in the levels of carbon monoxide can compromise the amount of oxygen that is flowing in your blood. When this happens, the blood that circulates in the body is carrying more of the toxic carbon monoxide, instead of oxygen. This ultimately leads to shock, or in the worst-case scenario, death.
    What happens if you are awake? If there is an increased level of carbon monoxide inside your car or in your environment while you are awake, you may experience symptoms like dizziness, headache, or an upset stomach.

    Obstructive Sleep Apnea

    Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is the most common of all the types of sleep apnea, and it is more likely the culprit why a person may die in their sleep. Apparently, OSA is a serious sleep disorder. It causes one’s breathing to stop and start repeatedly while sleeping.
    This type of sleep apnea causes your throat muscles to intermittently relax and cause blockage in your airway during sleep. Hence, there’s the term “obstructive” in its name. Snoring is one noticeable sign of sleep apnea. It is estimated that about 22 million Americans struggle from sleep apnea, and 80% of these cases are undiagnosed.

    How does OSA kill? When the airway is obstructed, it can suddenly compromise the level of oxygen that is running in the blood. If a person is already at risk for heart attack and stroke, then OSA can trigger a sudden cardiac event or brain attack that can cause one’s untimely demise while asleep.

    In Conclusion

    It pays to know all of these things before it’s too late. People may say that once it is your time, you can’t do something about it. This statement is quite preposterous because doing preventive measures and knowing what to look out for can definitely help in staying away from impending and untimely death.
    For instance, you can do something to address your snoring problem and there are treatments for sleep apnea that you can try. There are also medications, treatments, and surgeries that can address a respiratory or heart problem. And of course, one can stay at an affordable motel to sleep at instead of sleeping inside the car with the AC on.

  • Dare’s death:Leke Adeboye condemns those asking questions

    Dare’s death:Leke Adeboye condemns those asking questions

    Leke Adeboye, son of Pastor Enoch Adeboye, the General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG) has condemned those asking insensitive questions about the cause of his brother’s death, Pastor Dare.

    TheNewsGuru had reported exclusively the tragic demise of Pastor Dare Adeboye, who retired to his bedroom, and died in his sleep on Wednesday in Eket, Akwa Ibom State, where he was based with his family.

    Dare was born on June 9th 1978 and would have clocked 43 next month.

    Leke took to his Instastories to criticize those asking questions about how Pastor Dare died.He advised them instead to ask about how he lived.

    “So my brother died and some people are asking me how he die. You should ask me how did he live and how should you live”? he said.

    Meanwhile, well-meaning Nigerians including the President, Muhammadu Buhari; former Vice President Atiku Abubakar; ex-Senate President, Bukola Saraki; amongst others have condoled with the 79-year-old general overseer and his wife over the irreparable loss of their son.

  • Dare’s death: Leke Adeboye reacts over brother’s demise

    Dare’s death: Leke Adeboye reacts over brother’s demise

    Leke Adeboye, son of Pastor Enoch Adeboye, the General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG) has reacted over the death of his brother, Dare Adeboye.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports exclusively the sudden demise of Pastor Dare Adeboye, who retired to his bedroom, and died in his sleep.

    Dare pastors one of the Akwa Ibom branches of the RCCG and officiated a church programme on Tuesday, before he retired to his bedroom to have a rest.

    Meanwhile, he had asked not to be disturbed after getting home from church, but slept and did not wake up on Wednesday.

    His wife, Temiloluwa Adeboye was the one who noticed her husband’s unusual sleeping hours.

    When she could not reach him on the phone, she raised the alarm and Dare was discovered dead.

    Following the death of Dare, Leke, brother to the deceased, took to social media to express heartfelt shock over the passage of his brother.

    “The righteous man perishes [at the hand of evil], and no one takes it to heart; Faithful and devout men are taken away, while no one understands That the righteous person is taken away [to be spared] from disaster and evil,” a Bible passage shared by Leke reads.

  • I had to choose between greatness and death –Burna Boy

    I had to choose between greatness and death –Burna Boy

    Grammy Award-winning star, Damini Ogulu, aka Burna Boy, recently stated in an interview with GQ Magazine that at a point in his life, he had to choose between greatness and death, and that was what led to his recent achievements on the global stage.

    He said, “Following several collaborations with foreign artistes of African heritage, I just made up my mind that I wanted it all. I wanted to be the greatest. That’s when it hit me really hard that I had to do it. It was that or death.”

    Burna also noted that winning a Grammy award broke the mental cycle of people who felt that certain things were unachievable. He added, “I was not celebrating because of myself. It was almost as if I had broken a mental cycle of our people. Our people had been very mentally oppressed to feel like they could not do certain things, and that certain things were unreachable.”

     

  • Fans react to death of comedienne, Ada Jesus

    Fans react to death of comedienne, Ada Jesus

    Nigerians have continued to react to the death of comedienne, Mercy Cynthia Ginikachukwu, fondly referred to as Ada Jesus. The comedienne died a day after celebrating her birthday. TheNewsGuru recalls that the young entertainer had been battling kidney disease that left her debilitated before her demise.

    After the news of her death was announced by one Harrison Gwamnishu, who had been taking care of the ailing comedienne, fans have been expressing shock at her passing.

    @Doctoremto wrote on Twitter: Haaaa, how her family denied her proper medical attention and instead carried her from one place to another in search of miracles baffles me. Someone suffered from stroke and needed proper medical attention but they had to worsen it”.

     

    @Bigjohnydatalk1: Either Ada Jesus died of a Spiritual attack or illness the question is what does it take to forgive people, what?! Odumeje & Rita Edochie and others who cannot forgive easily, how do you ask God for forgiveness? We’re our problem, & Desmond Elliot of course.

    “I never met you but I’ve heard so much about you & the impact: the smiles, the laughters & happiness you brought into people’s lives. The comatose health system in Nigeria failed you. Ada Jesus, Rest In Peace, until we meet again. Adieu sister”, a certain user @firstladyship said on Twitter.

     

     

     

     

  • In death, Sankara marches from victory to victory, By Owei Lakemfa

    By Owei Lakemfa

     

    THE first time I saw Blaise Compaoré was at the African Union, AU, Heads of State Summit that held in Addis Ababa in 2013. At that time, at 62, he had been Burkina Faso President for 26 years, but was little respected. He slunk around like a defeated man. He had not only betrayed his predecessor Captain Thomas Sankara who had implicit trust in him, he had also tried to abort the African dream. He seemed isolated and already condemned by history.

     

    He was one of those infernal characters in history who hid a Brutus dagger in his cloak to stab the trusting Julius Caeser. Compaoré was like a walking corpse, and people seemed to avoid him. Who will not avoid a Judas who was willing to pump over a dozen bullets into his master for a few shekels of silver? History had already condemned him; he merely awaited the weighty sentence which was sure not just to sink him and his family, but also his fellow collaborators. Surely, Compaoré is a cold and infernal man with no compunction.

     

     

    Some years earlier, I had visited Burkina Faso as part of a delegation of African Labour leaders. We did not contact any government official or institution, rather we went to the press centre to learn more about the circumstances leading to the murder of investigative journalist, Norbert Zongo. He was a thorn in the flesh of the Compaoré regime and was investigating the December 1997 suspicious disappearance and possible murder of Mr. David Ouedrago, driver of Compaoré’s brother, Francois, who was accused of stealing from his boss.

     

    After being warned to get off the case and receiving death threats when he refused, the charred remains of Zongo, his brother, Yembi Ernest Zongo, fellow journalist, Blaise Liboudo and his driver, Abdouleye Ablasse Nikiema, were found on December 13, 1998 in his burnt out jeep. They had been shot before being burnt. After intense public pressure and protests, five members of Compaoré’s Presidential Guard were tried and later convicted for these murders.

     

     

    Back in 1983, there were two other officers, Jean-Baptiste Lingani and Henri Zongo who along with Sankara and Compaoré led the new government. The three-some conspired on October 15, 1987 to assassinate the 37-year-old Sankara, but two years later, Compaoré executed his fellow traitors for alleged coup plotting. But history was not too long in catching up with Compaoré whose hands were dripping with the blood of innocent Burkinabe.

     

    He had become the Judas Iscariot of our time and after 27 years as President, the Burkinabe rose up as one body and army, to chase him out of power and the country. He fled, just a step ahead of a peoples’ righteous anger.

     

    Compaoré had all the power he could ever have wanted and the wealth he could accumulate, but like a man who swallowed a pestle, he could neither sit nor stand. He was like a man who head-butted a bee colony without wearing any protective clothing, not out of insanity, but because his colonial masters, intent on once again aborting the African dream, directed him to do so without thinking through the implications.

     

    This week Tuesday, April 13, 2021, thirty four years after he assassinated Sankara, the Military Tribunal in Ouagadougou indicted Compaoré for the assassination of Sankara, the attack on state security, complicity in murder and concealment of corpses. He may be tried in absentia having fled to Cote d’Ivoire in 2014 and tried to avoid trial by naturalising as an Ivorien. Although an arrest warrant has been issued, it is unlikely the conniving Ouattara government will extradite him. But Compaoré has no hiding place, he is an internally troubled mind who will have no respite, at least on earth.

     

     

    Sankara emerged from some of the unlikeliest circumstances in history; from one of the poorest countries on earth, and a neo-colonial army trained to be anti-people and pro-imperialist. He was like a flower sprouting in a field of thorns. He was Prime Minister in the regime of Colonel Saye Zerbo but resigned over principles. The latter quickly put Sankara under house arrest from which he emerged to be President.

     

    The Sankara government which was in power for four years, vaccinated 2.5 million children against meningitis, yellow fever and measles within weeks and increased the literacy rate from 13 percent in 1983 to 73 per-cent in 1987. It built scores of schools and hospitals, including pharmacies in 5,384 villages. Within two years, the infant mortality rate dropped from 208 per 1,000 births to 145. Sankara argued that: “He who feeds you, controls you.” To make the country food self-sufficient, he took arable land from the elite and gave them to subsistence farmers, thereby significantly improving food production and making the country mainly self-sufficient.

     

     

    Also, his government planted over 10 million trees to combat desertification, and suspended rural poll taxes. He distanced the country from the International Monetary Fund, IMF and World Bank, preferring to mainly utilise local funds. This he did in building an urgent 62-kilometre rail between 1985 and 1987 to link Cote d’Ivoire. Sankara also outlawed female circumcision, forced marriages and polygamy and appointed women into top political positions reinforcing his belief that there can be no real social revolution without the liberation of women. His government established Popular Revolutionary Tribunals which tried the corrupt. As President, he earned the equivalent of $450, drove an old Renault car and obeyed traffic rules, including stopping at traffic lights.

     

     

    His government changed the country’s name from Upper Volta to Burkina Faso, meaning: “The land of the upright man”. He was a talented guitarist and musician who composed his country’s national anthem. Compaoré and the French intelligence who eliminated Sankara merely killed his physical being, but like the legendary John Brown, his soul marches on from victory to victory. Like Kwame Nkrumah, local lackeys and their pay masters overthrew him, but his ideas cannot not be overthrown; they live on, guiding all who want to rebuild a brutalised continent and give its people hope and confidence. Letting them realise that like other peoples, the Black people, who are as endowed as other races and whose lives matter, can reshape their world and the world in which we live.

     

    Sankara was like young Patrice Lumumba, cut down by the bullets of criminals in uniform he had tried to transform their lives. Today, he has transformed into an ancestor watching over the African people. On the other hand, Compaoré like Mobutu Seseseko who murdered Lumumba, would slip into oblivion; remembered only when used as an example of what betrayal means. The young Captain Thomas Sankara in death, has joined the pantheon of the gods of liberation, marching from victory unto victory.