Tag: Father

  • Father defiled his 4-year-old daughter – Investigator

    Father defiled his 4-year-old daughter – Investigator

    Mrs Modupe Maduba, an Assistant Chief Intelligence Officer, told an FCT High Court in Kubwa that a 35-year-old man, Onyebuchi Ezema defiled his four-year-old daughter.

    The National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons ( NAPTIP), charged Ezema, who resides in Zone 9, Lugbe Airport Road, Abuja with assault, to which he pleaded not guilty.

    Maduba of the NAPTIP said this while being cross-examined by the defence counsel, Opeyemi Adeyemi at the resumed trial of Onyebuchi Ezema.

    During cross-examination, Adeyemi asked Maduba the time, date and place the defendant committed the said offence.

    He further asked if Maduba knew where the defendant’s wife kept the victim the day it happened and if it was possible an unknown person penetrated her vagina.

    The defence counsel also asked the investigator to describe where the defendant lived and if there was electricity on the day of the incident.

    In response, Maduba said the incident happened on April, 15, 2020 at Lugbe Zone 6, at night.

    ” The defendant lives in a one bedroom self contained apartment with his son whom he sleeps with in same room alongside his wife and daughter(the victim).

    “The defendant’s wife left her child with her cousin whom lives in the same village, while she went to work on the said date,” she said.

    The investigator added that she did not know if there was electricity on the day of the incident.

    Adeyemi asked if the investigator discovered any blood stain on the minor in the course of her investigation and if
    a fingerprint examination was carried out on the child to confirm if it was the defendant’s finger.

    The defence counsel asked the investigator to read out the medical report in court, if it stated that the defendant broke the victim’s hymen.

    Maduba responded that she did not see any blood stain on the victim , no fingerprint examination was carried out and the medical report did not state whom broke the victim’s hymen.

    Adeyemi however applied for a no-case submission to the court.

    Following the defence counsel’s submission, Justice Asmau Akanbi-Yusuf adjourned the matter until Dec.13 for adoption of the no-case submission.

  • Mohbad: Why I rushed to bury my son – Father reveals

    Mohbad: Why I rushed to bury my son – Father reveals

    Joseph Aloba, the father of the late singer, Ilerioluwa Aloba famously known as Mohbad, has stated reasons why he rushed to bury his son.

    Recall that Mohbad’s death was reported last week Tuesday and he was buried under 24 hours in Ikorodu.

    However, Aloba, Mohbad’s father via an interview shared by Temilola Sobola (@TemilolaSobola) on Instagram explained in details why he rushed to bury his son.

    According to him, it is customary not to delay burial if both parents are still alive.

    “In Yoruba land, his corpse is not the kind to be kept when both of his parents are still alive.

    “That land where Mohbad was buried is his only land, that is the only land I know him to have owned.

    “Truly he gave me the land to build my church because we had both agreed to build the church there and since that’s the only land I knew him to have,” Aloba said.

    The cause of Mohbad’s death is still unknown as it’s shrouded in a lot of controversies.

    Mohbad passed on at 27 years old, with varying accounts of how he died circulating on the Internet.

    There are reports that  the police is trying to exhume his body in order to take it for autopsy to unravel what killed the artiste.

     

  • My last experience with my late son – Mohbad’s father

    My last experience with my late son – Mohbad’s father

    Joseph Ayoba the father of late artiste, Ilerioluwa Oladimeji Ayoba, professionally  known as Mohbad, has revealed the bad dreams he had two days before the demise of his son.

    The internet was awashed with the news of Mohbad’s demise on Tuesday evening and the artiste was  laid to rest in Ikorodu the following day amidst tears from family, friends and sympathizers.

    Mohbad’s father while granting interview to an online platform on Wednesday explained that he shared a good relationship with the late artiste,

    According to him,  their relationship  was more of friendship than father-to-son.

    He also revealed his final moment with him, saying he had paid him a visit last Saturday where they had lunch together.

    ” Mohbad is my friend. I called him Oladimeji (meaning my second) because I’m the only son of my parents. We were close.

    “The last day we met which was last Saturday,  I went there (Mohbad’s house) and we dined together. When I was leaving he also gave me some money like he always did,” Mr Ayoba narrated.

  • Father, 2 sons confirmed dead in Anambra building collapse

    Father, 2 sons confirmed dead in Anambra building collapse

    At least three persons were confirmed dead in Sunday’s collapse of a-three-storey building under construction in Anambra community.

    The incident occurred at Egbu Umuenem, Otolo Nnewi community, Nnewi North Local Government Area (LGA) of the state.

    The building collapsed at about 1pm, when the workers were said to be preparing to start plastering work.

    Eyewitness account said that the deceased, including a man and his two children, said to have reported for the day’s job, allegedly died on the spot.

    They were said to have been rushed to St. Felix Hospital, Nnewi, where they were confirmed dead.

    It was learnt that other workers, who were rescued from the rubbles, sustained varying degrees of injuries.

    They were also said to have been taken to the hospital for medical treatment.

    The Chairman, Council for Regulation of Engineering in Nigeria (COREN), Anambra Chapter, Mr Victor Meju, led some state officials of the council to the scene.

    Addressing newsmen at the scene of the incident, Meju blamed the incident on poor foundation, concrete mixture and quality of materials as well as the non approval by relevant regulatory authorities.

    He said that the building would be sealed off and the owner, Mr Chukwunafu Anamanjo, invited for questioning and investigation.

    Also, the Transition Committee Chairman, Nnewi North LGA, Mr Chris Obiora, called on the people to always make use of certified engineers and other relevant personnel in the building sector for their construction works.

    Obiora further said that monitoring teams were also important in ensuring that builders stick to stipulated standards.

    When contacted for comments on the disaster, the state Police Command Spokesman, DSP Tochukwu Ikenga, said the command had yet to receive information about the incident.

    “I don’t have any information on it yet, but I will escalate the information to the Divisional Police Officer in the area for necessary action,” Ikenga said.

    NAN

  • We have no plans of suing JAMB – Mmesoma Ejikeme’s father

    We have no plans of suing JAMB – Mmesoma Ejikeme’s father

    Mr Romanus Ejikeme, father to Mmesoma who was accused of forging her 2023 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination result, says the family has no plan to sue the Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB).

    Ejikeme told journalists who visited his house at Nnewi on Tuesday, that the family had left everything to God to judge.

    He insisted that her daughter did not forge her results saying that she was a hardworking and studious student who did not joke with her studies.

    He said: “My daughter studies so hard that even when you ask her to go to bed late in the night, she will insist on reading more because she wants to study Medicine and Surgery.

    “After all the stress, someone will say her result was forged. I have no doubt about this matter. I’m sure my daughter did not forge the result and we are ready to go to any length to prove it.

    “I only feel bad that after what my daughter has gone through reading for the exams, that she is being denied her legitimate score.

    “Since this allegation of my daughter forging her JAMB result broke out, both my wife and my daughter have been feeling very sad. My daughter is traumatized.

    “We want a diligent investigation into this matter.”

    Recall that Mmesoma Ejikeme, who has been parading a JAMB result with the score of 362, and said to be the highest scorer has been dismissed by JAMB as being fake.

    The board said the student forged her result, withdrew her original result as well as banned her from taking the exams for three years.

  • My father’s disciplinary approach contributed tremendously to my success – Tunde Afe-Babalola

    My father’s disciplinary approach contributed tremendously to my success – Tunde Afe-Babalola

    A legal practitioner, Mr Tunde Afe-Babalola, SAN, says his father’s disciplinary approach contributed tremendously to his success in his endeavour.

    Tunde, son of the legal luminary, Aare Afe Babalola, SAN, made this known on Sunday in an interview with NAN in Abuja

    The lawyer, who recalled that his father would be celebrating his 60th anniversary of his call to Bar on July 9, said the legal giant’s attributes had helped him to grow in the profession.

    “My father’s attributes include hard work, dedication, generosity, sacrifice, resilience, trust, fear of God, love for mankind, etc.

    “These same attributes which he has, are the same things that have helped me over the years.

    “Really, the way he disciplined us contributed tremendously to my success today.

    “Victor Devlin said, ‘Listen, there is no way any true man is going to let children live around him in his home and not discipline and teach, fight and mould them until they know all he knows. His goal is to make them better than he is. Being their friend is a distant second to this.”

    “Barack Obama said, ‘Someone once said that every man is trying to live up to his father’s expectations or make up for their father’s mistakes….’

    “In his case, I emulate his great attributes and wonderful achievements,” he said.

    He described his father as a simple man despite all the international awards and achievements.

    “He is a loving, generous and supportive father,” he added.

    Afe-Babalola said his father’s genuine love for the people and the desire to positively impact the society kept him going in the legal profession.

    “Absolutely, he is my mentor and I am what I am today because of the Grace of God and my father. I cannot pray for a better father,” he said.

    He congratulated his father on his 60 years of law practice.

    “Dad, you are a winner, a goal getter and a worthy example to all of us. Indeed, we are so proud of having you among us over these 60 years in the legal profession.

    “Your dedication to work is beyond admiration. Having produced innumerable SANs, several judges up to the appellate levels, several Attorney Generals at the federal and state levels, leaders of industry, etc.

    “We pray that God will give you many more years of sound health and further impactful contribution to the legal profession worldwide,” he said.

  • What does it mean to be a father today? – By Azu Ishiekwene

    What does it mean to be a father today? – By Azu Ishiekwene

    I’m getting ahead of myself. Father’s Day is still next Sunday. But after the Executive Editor of LeVogue, LEADERSHIP’s Fashion and Lifestyle magazine, Nikki Odu-Khiran, asked me if I could write a piece to mark the day, it got me thinking.

    If my father, who passed on May 28, 2000, ever had to write on Father’s Day, what would he have written? Of course, he wouldn’t have written anything. A pensioner who worked as a storekeeper at the Apapa (Lagos) Quays of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) before he retired in 1996, Robert could barely write. 

    But my, oh, my, he could hold a crowd with his speech. And if you wanted to get him going, then talk politics, especially about Nigeria’s Civil War.

    I can imagine what he would have said about Father’s Day back then. Being a father in his time is different from being a father today. And if my children have to write about Father’s Day two and a half decades from now, they’ll probably be using the same lens of wistful contemplation. Every generation thinks its burden is the heaviest. 

    My father would not be surprised, for example, that I didn’t know his real age and never once asked him until he passed. Of course, I wrote 84 in his obit because I had to write something. I got that from asking several sources I thought would know. Not from him. For the over four decades that he lived and as far back as I can remember, I never could ask him his age.

    What it meant to be a father was for the son to stay in his place. Father’s authority was final, unquestionable. Mucking about asking him about his age would have been crossing a line. 

    Fast forward 2023. My children not only ask me to “surrender” my PIN number and God-knows-what-else, my four-year-old granddaughter asks me my name, my mother’s name, and once teased her own mother to call my wife by name. And that, of course, is woke.

    I’m not sure my father would have thought so. Perhaps if he had lived to see his great-granddaughter, he would have half-jokingly, half-embarrassingly dismissed such precociousness as a regrettable consequence of the new-age bug.

    If my father wanted me to become anything other than a journalist, I’m not sure there was much I could have done about it. You studied what you were told, which was often either law, medicine or engineering. Being a father at the time meant laying down the rules about virtually everything from your child’s hairstyle to their course of study. And being a son meant one thing: obedience. 

    Fortunately, my father wasn’t really interested in my career choice. All he wanted was for me to be the best in any career I wanted, a concession which I still find hard to explain, given his dominance in my life. 

    My father believed that staying away from booze, parties and girls was the beginning of wisdom and kept a long cane to enforce it. You really couldn’t blame him.  Ajegunle, where I grew up, was one of the most congested slums of Lagos at the time. Booze was cheap, parties rampant, and girls plenty. 

    Of course, boys being boys (and occasionally with the connivance of my mother), I sneaked off to parties a few times, stayed out late and swigged a few bottles of beer.  I even wrote frothy love letters with lines from James Hadley Chase. 

    However, when I crossed the line like when I went off on my own to see a football match at the National Stadium where dozens died in the post-game stampede, my mother gave me the full measure of a fan belt hung on the door lintel until I was covered in welts and near passing out, while my father turned a blind eye.

    Of my many transgressions growing up, bringing a girl home, even when I was over 21, would have been considered a cardinal sin. It didn’t matter that I was out of secondary school and in higher school for my HSC, my father often warned, sternly, that hanging out with a girl when he was still responsible for me meant that I was in a hurry to relieve him of any further fatherly responsibility. His favourite phrase was, “If you get any girl pregnant, you’re done for!”

    I’m sort of stuck in that groove. Tried as I have to be a modern-day dad, my children — all in their adult years — still know I felt a bit awkward, especially in the very early stages of their relationships. I think psychologists call it conditioning. 

    It’s futile, isn’t it? I mean for a father, these days, to worry too much about the social life of their grown-up children? You worry as they grow up, hoping they will pass every stage of growth when they should. Then you worry when they start making friends, hoping they will survive peer pressure. 

    Then you worry when they start going out, hoping they will keep the right company; you worry when they start going to school hoping that for all the huge bills you pay (and for their own sake) they will make good grades and turn out well. 

    Then when they finish, you also worry about how they will get a good job; how they would marry and who they would marry; and perhaps when they would have children. And when the grandchildren come, the worry cycle starts again. 

    I guess my father had all these worries, too, maybe less so in many ways than my mother had them. Yet, in a way, he had far more control of things than I could ever hope to have over my own children. If he didn’t want me to go out to a party, to see Ian Fleming’s The Spy Who Loved Me or any of Amitabh Bachchan’s hit movies, for example, which I rarely did, he only needed to say the word and, very often, that was that.

    As a father today, however, if I don’t want my child to go to a party, he could bring the party home by phone. And if I don’t want him to go to the movie, he could watch Netflix on a speed dial.

    If I told him that too many bananas and sweets could unleash the village masquerades on him, which was what my mother told me obviously for my own good, he could simply ask Google. And I’ve just been told that if I give my son a timeout, thanks to the next big thing, Apple’s Vision Pro, he could simply recreate his own new world indoors.

    I wasn’t a sheltered kid. Back in the day, my father was happy to put my school “chop money” into my hand every school day and off I went, either alone or with other students, covering a distance of at least 25 kilometres to and from school through shortcuts and winding street corners on foot. We didn’t have to worry about kidnappers.

    It’s a different world today. Being a father when my children were much younger also meant being their driver for school runs, popping up on Open Day and fretting about what age they should get a phone, things my father would have considered helicopter parenting. 

    Sometimes, being a modern-day father can feel like the Chartterjees in the legal drama Mrs. Chartterjee Vs Norway, only in the domestic sense, where your own grown-up children take the place of the Norwegian authorities. 

    Today’s children have a completely different code of how they want their own children raised, nurtured and treated, different from what your mother or father taught you!

    And increasingly, a number of them relate to you differently. On this Father’s Day, for example, if you’re nice, your son might even offer you a bottle of beer! The mere thought of it would make my father turn in his grave. I can almost hear him say, “this generation is done for!” Is it?

     

    Ishiekwene is Editor-In-Chief of LEADERSHIP

  • 18-year-old confesses killing father unknowingly while sleeping

    18-year-old confesses killing father unknowingly while sleeping

    An 18-year-old suspect has confessed to killing his biological father while sleeping.

    The suspect, who was paraded alongside his 47-year-old mother, made the confession while being paraded by the Police Command in Oyo State at its Headquarters, Eleyele, Ibadan on Friday.

    According to him, I didn’t know what came over me that made me to kill my 52-year-old father, Adeagbo Jimoh, because he has not done anything wrong to me.

    He said his father did not offend him, adding that he just wake up around 11.00 p.m on the day of incident and hit his head with an iron rod while he was sleeping, leading to his death.

    “On that day, all of us were sleeping in the house with my father.

    “I woke up around 11.00 p.m and I went straight to where my father was sleeping and I picked an iron rod and hit it on his head and I went back to sleep.

    “When it was around 6.00 a.m the next day, my mother woke me and my sister up to go and pray.

    “She also went outside the compound to perform ablution to pray when she saw my father dead on the floor.

    “My mother called all of us out to come and see that my father was dead.

    “I immediately took a motorcycle and went out to inform our relatives about the death of my father and the police were informed about the incident.

    “When the police arrived in our compound, I ran inside the house and hide under the bed and everybody started looking for me.

    “My mother later came inside and saw me under the bed and ask whether I was the one that killed my father and I said yes.

    “My father did not offend me and nobody sent me to kill him. My father do take care of us and as well pay our school fees, but he use to beat my mother and I don’t use to talk,” the suspect said.

    Briefing newsmen about the incident, the Command’s Public Relations Officer, SP Adewale Osifeso, told newsmen that the incident was reported by one Adeagbo Taofeek on April 21 at about 8.00 a.m at Tede Division Police Headquarters.

    Osifeso said that the deceased was found lying dead where he was sleeping inside the compound with a serious mark of violence on his forehead.

    The PPRO said that preliminary investigation showed that the suspect on April 21 at about 11.30 p.m struck his late father on the head with an iron rod where he was sleeping leading to his death.

    According to Osifeso, the suspect has voluntarily confessed to the crime and further confessed that his mother was aware that he killed his father and concealed the information.

  • Nigerian singer, Skales reveals mystery about his dad

    Nigerian singer, Skales reveals mystery about his dad

    Popular Nigerian singer, John Njenga-Njeng, popularly known as Skales, has revealed the mystery about his biological father.

    The rapper stated that he doesn’t know what his father looks like.

    He disclosed this in a recent chat with media personality Chude Jideonwo.

    He said: “That’s one mystery that I’ve not been able to solve like I don’t even know what my dad looks like. The only thing I can remember about my dad was the day he was leaving us. He came to kiss me on the forehead and I remembered he had a beard. But I can’t remember the other things because I was so young. I was like four or five years old.

    “I have tried to ask my mum. But then, again, because I really love my mom and I hate when my mum is sad, I feel like, okay, it’s going to make her sad. I never asked.”

  • Father allegedly chains, starves 2 children to death in Ogun

    Father allegedly chains, starves 2 children to death in Ogun

    Operatives of the Ogun security network, also known as the Amotekun Corps, have arrested a 45-year-old man, Gbenga Ogunfadeke, for allegedly chaining and locking his two children in solitary confinement which led to their death.

    Mr David Akinremi, the State Commander of the Amotekun Corps, disclosed this in a statement issued in Abeokuta.

    Akinremi explained that the suspect was arrested on Tuesday, April 18  in Ibiade, Ogun Waterside Local Government Area of the state by men of the corps.

    He said that the suspect was arrested following a complaint by his ex-wife.

    According to the statement, the suspect, a father of three, accused his children of stealing.

    Akinremi said the suspect was alleged to have chained and locked the children in solitary confinement without food and water for over three months which led to the death of two of the children.

    He stated that the corps gathered that the suspect had been maltreating the children aged 16, 17 and 18 since he took custody of them following his crashed marriage with their mother, Busola Otusegun.

    “One of the three children came across his aunt in Ibiade where he currently lives with his father (suspect), and narrated their experience with their father which led to the death of his two elder siblings , Yusuf Ogunfadeke ,18 and Dasola Ogunfadeke ,17 .

    “It happened between April and June 2022 in Ijebu-Ode where they were all living with the suspect until he relocated back to Ibiade.

    “According to the child, their father chained and locked them in solitary confinement without food and water for over three months which led to the death of the two siblings but he miraculously survived the ordeal,” he said.

    Ogunremi explained that the suspect when interrogated, admitted the alleged confinement of the children for months, but denied not feeding them and being responsible for their death.

    The Amotekun commander stated that the suspect said his action was based on the children’s involvement in stealing, hence the need to ensure they were stopped from continuing with such.

    He added that the suspect claimed that his two deceased children were taken to the hospital for treatment at different times when they fell ill, but unfortunately died in the process.

    “What is however curious about his defence is that the hospital where he claimed the two children died in Ijebu-Ode could neither be located.

    “Where he allegedly buried them behind a rented apartment he lived in Ijebu-Ode before relocating to his present abode in Ibiade with the third child could also not be traced for possible exhumation.

    “The fact that he refused to make the incidents known to any member of the family also gives course for concern, more so when the suspect is a herbalist, thus further fuelling the suspicion of having killed the deceased for possible rituals,” Akinremi  said.

    The Amotekun commander said that the case had been transferred to the State Criminal Investigation Department for further investigation to establish further facts that would facilitate his prosecution.