Tag: TESTIMONY

  • TRAGEDY! Woman slumps, dies while giving testimony in Lagos Church

    TRAGEDY! Woman slumps, dies while giving testimony in Lagos Church

    A tragedy struck at the Zonal Accountant Ministry Church in Ejigbo, Lagos as a 55-year-old woman, simply identified as Ifeoma, collapsed and died while giving a testimony during a church service.

    The incident occurred at approximately 8:48 a.m. on September 8th during the testimony hour.

    According to witnesses, Ifeoma came forward singing to share her testimony when she suddenly collapsed.

    Immediate efforts were made to rush her to a nearby hospital, but she was later referred to the General Hospital in Isolo, where doctors confirmed her death.

    Lagos State Police spokesman, SP Benjamin Hundeyin, confirmed the incident, stating that police detectives were dispatched to the hospital but were informed that Ifeoma’s husband and family had already taken her body to Anambra State for burial.

    The exact cause of her sudden death remains unclear, and authorities have not yet announced whether an investigation will be launched into the circumstances surrounding the incident.

  • Tony Elumelu: Buhari’s testimony – By Femi Adesina

    Tony Elumelu: Buhari’s testimony – By Femi Adesina

    By Femi Adesina

    What a delightful week it has been for Mr Tony Elumelu, Chairman of United Bank for Africa (UBA), Heirs Holdings, and the Tony Elumelu Foundation.

    On Monday, he stood tall in Sokoto at the Chief of Army Staff Annual Conference to receive a Recognition Award, handed out by no less a person than President Muhammadu Buhari himself.

    Elumelu was recognized alongside Chairman of Dangote Group, Alhaji Aliko Dangote, Chairman of BUA Group, Alhaji Abdulsamad Rabiu, Founder and Chairman of Zenith Bank, Jim Ovia, Col Hameed Ali, Comptroller General of Nigeria Customs Service, and Lt Gen Tukur Buratai, a former Chief of Army Staff. All these people had made salutary impact on the Nigerian Army in different ways.

    What qualified Elumelu, particularly, through his Foundation? Entrepreneurial and philanthropic activities for our soldiers, both living and dead. He organizes and funds skill acquisition trainings for the army, extending his bowels of mercy to both the living and the dead. The Foundation cares for widows and children of deceased soldiers, and no less than 220 widows have been given succor, without a prompting.

    After being trained, each widow is given a start up capital of two thousand dollars, while job opportunities are also given to retired and ex-service personnel in the conglomerate headed by Elumelu. This goes a long way to boost the morale of serving troops.

    The next day after Sokoto, what news did we hear again about Elumelu, this worthy son of Nigeria, and of Africa? He had been named one of the winners of TIME 100 Impact Awards for 2022, for his selfless humanitarian activities and support for business upscaling for Africans in Africa. He had in 2020 also been named on TIME’s list of 100 most influential people in the world.

    Of course, we know what Elumelu does for youths in Africa, spending millions of dollars annually to empower them for entrepreneurship. At a time people are bringing out smelly currencies from damp and dank places, to avoid the trap of naira redesign deadline, this Chairman of Elumelu Foundation is receiving National and global recognition for making money a servant, rather than a master.

    What are the secrets of his success? This master investor with the touch of Midas gave a glimpse in a recent thread on Twitter. He said he is where he is today because of luck, noting: “luck is important but that doesn’t make it a substitute for hard work or labor.”

    He added: “hard work and passion are the two most important ingredients for luck.

    “I am where I am today because of luck. Let me be clear, luck is important, but it is not a substitute for hard work or labor. Luck is part of the cocktail that you need for success.

    “There are two ingredients for luck – hard work and passion. The more work you put into something and the more passion you apply, the ‘luckier’ you find yourself.

    You have to work hard and be more passionate and committed about what you do, to be successful and make your own luck.

    “Hard work and passion are within your power and control, and you should apply them to earn your own luck and to help us foster a better and more prosperous world.”

    Elumelu has successful investments in banking, power, oil and gas, hospitality industry, and many others. Self-effacing and hardly one to throw his weight around, he is a model, an icon for Nigerian and African youths.

    In June this year, we were in Kigali, Rwanda, for the 26th edition of Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, and among the many world leaders that President Buhari met privately was Jamaican Prime Minister, Andrew Holness.

    Before the bilateral meeting started, Holness disclosed that he had just finished meeting with Tony Elumelu from Nigeria.

    And with a chuckle, the Nigerian leader said: “Tony? He’s a restless young man. Quite irrepressible. I see him all over the place.”

    That’s our President for you. He does his things quietly, unobtrusively, but he notices everything. He sees people all over the place. He cares for the big, and the small. The billionaire investors, and the start-up farmer. He keeps tabs on everyone under his care, including the Dangotes, the Rabiu Abdulsamads, the Jim Ovias, and the Tony Onyemaechi Elumelus.

     

    *Adesina is Special Adviser to President Buhari on Media and Publicity

  • Court bars newsmen from covering late Osinachi children’s testimony

    Court bars newsmen from covering late Osinachi children’s testimony

    A Federal Capital Territory High Court, Wuse Zone 2, Abuja, on Friday barred journalists from covering and witnessing the late gospel singer, Osinachi children’s testimony.

    The move was as a result of the court granting the three oral applications made by Aderonke Imana, the prosecution counsel, on June 22.

    The counsel filed the applications during the court hearing in the alleged culpable homicide case against Peter Nwachukwu, the late singer’s husband.

    According to reports, the three oral applications made by Imana include:

    The first one was brought pursuant to the provision of sections 156 and 158 of the Child Rights Act.

    The application sought that persons other than the parties in the matter, the court officials, correctional staff, and the witness’ guardians should not be allowed in the court when the witnesses would give their testimonies.

    The second application Imana brought was premised on section 160 of the Child Rights Act and section 209 of the Evidence Act.

    The application prayed the court to allow the other two witnesses, who are the deceased children, being minors to give unsworn evidence as Pw3 and Pw4.

    The final application brought was pursuant to section 1, 2 (1) and 157 of the Child Rights Act urged the court to allow the witnesses to be brought to the court blind folded and for their faces to be shielded.

    The Judge, Justice Njideka Nwosu-Iheme had then, granted the three prayers after which the defendant’s counsel I.A Aliyu did not object to the applications.

    Nwosu-Iheme therefore held that the applications were in the best interest of the children which is paramount and must be considered during proceeding, for the children to be shielded while giving their testimonies.

    The court had on June 3 ordered that the defendant be remanded in Kuje Correctional Centre after he pleaded not guilty to the alleged homicide charge filed against him by the Attorney -General of the Federation.

    He is standing trial on 23 counts bordering on domestic violence and homicide.

    The defendant is accused of been responsible for the death of the late gospel singer who was popularly known for her song “Ekwueme”.

    Nwachukwu was arrested by the police after his wife Osinachi died on April 8 following widespread allegations by their children, family and colleagues that he battered her.

    The deceased mother and two sisters had on June 21 and 22 given their testimonies in chief, Pw1 and Pw2 respectively.

  • Violence in Secondary Schools: A Personal Testimony (1) – Hope Eghagha

    Hope O’Rukevbe Eghagha

    The immediate trigger of this essay is a response to one of my posts on my Facebook page ‘February 1978. BHS Port Harcourt when two scoundrels in Form 3 tried to do the unthinkable to me as Senior Prefect. God intervened. I forgave them long ago’, to which Toyin Adewale-Gabriel interrogated ‘Sir, please share the full story, what exactly happened? I think your story is important in this season of national soul searching on the issue of bullying’. I am writing about that painful experience today because it is time for soul searching. When I first posted a cryptic message ‘Bullying and violence in secondary schools didn’t start today. I remember February 1978 even while I was Senior Prefect’, the first comment came from Kote Onungwe Obe-Eleme ‘the huge stone hauled through the window that landed on a bed where you were supposed to be sleeping? It was a miraculous escape, the story went’. This was not bullying. It was an assassination attempt!

    Baptist High School Port Harcourt was a good school. Sound and committed teachers. Well organized activities in sports, chapel activities, music, and any other aspect of secondary school life. I remember such teachers as Mr Jack, the English teacher who taught pronunciation very well, Mr KKMD Braide, Mr Ogulu, Chief Horsfall, Mr & Mrs Sangoju, Mr Fred Alasia, Mr Vincent Egbuson, Mr & Mrs Jackson (American volunteers). The principal of the school, the always elegantly dressed Mr I.O. Izeogu was a no-nonsense and tireless disciplinarian. He effectively stamped his personality on the school once he took over, I think late in 1976. Some of the teachers whose names I mentioned never taught me directly because I was in the HSC class. Yet, I felt their impact and the impact of Baptist High School once I stepped into the school premises. The ambience and the regime of activities assured everyone that we were there for both character building and learning!

    The school had six halls – Agbebi, Amakiri, Batubo, Brantley, Davies, and Florida – which accommodated over one thousand students. All the halls had House Prefects and Hall Masters, the latter being teachers. There were rules about the type, colour of uniform to wear, including the quality of the material. Khaki was the prescribed quality. Not ‘terylene’. Afro hair style was outlawed. I remember one morning when the principal conducted morning assembly and right from there, he sent those who were in breach of uniform quality and hair style out through the gate: don’t come back until you have bought the proper uniform or till you have cut your hair. To be sure, he had warned us well in advance. But nobody knew he would go that far to enforce the rules.

    I have taken pains to give this background to BHS just to establish that it was a good school. But there were bad eggs. There was bullying as I found out when I became Senior Prefect. There were also would-be murderers in the school! It is my encounter with the latter group that I want to narrate in this essay.

    On Friday afternoon of the week, once I entered my room, I suspected something was not right. (Well, as Senior Prefect, I had a room to myself). I saw water on the louvre blades of the only window in the room, though it didn’t rain that day. My sense of self-preservation wondered how water found its way into my room. Did someone pour it in during the day? I then took an action that saved my life. I moved my bed from directly under the window to the other side of the room. I moved the official cabinet in front of the window and placed my ‘portmanteau’ on the filing cabinet.

    I had gone to bed a little after 11pm that Sunday night after we the prefects had gone round the school to enforce the lights out order. I recall saying my prayer after reading from the New Testament of the bible provided by Gideons International. I switched off the light and slept off. I hadn’t slept for more than thirty minutes when I heard a loud unearthly noise that shook me out of from my slumber. When I opened my eyes, I could see the moon. The louvers were gone. The curtains torn asunder. I stood up, switched on the light. Time was a few minutes to 1am. What I saw shook me. A huge boulder was lying on the floor beside my bed. Shattered glasses were scattered all over the room. My portmanteau was on the floor. I opened the door tentatively then went outside. A few metres away were some of fellow-prefects whom I had left a few minutes before. They were assembled and almost together asked me what happened. I led them back into my room. The screaming of disbelief was unanimous. Outside, near the window was a smaller boulder. As I found out later, after the loud impact of the first throw, the second fellow dropped his arsenal on the ground and fled. ‘We must get whoever did this’. ‘This is terrible’. I was calm. My faith had taught me to be calm in such situations. As young as I was, (seventeen going on eighteen) I had learnt how to measure my reactions.

    I remember it was Adokiye D. who pointedly told me he knew (not suspected) one of the fellows who committed the heinous act. He said I should come with him. Along with the other prefects, we went to a classroom block next to the school farm, the area students named Zion. Inside the classroom were two students. Adokiye went on the offensive: ‘Sam, what have you done? Why did you run away from the scene of the attack? The Sam in question was one of my boys, a junior, someone who fed from me, visited me freely, and was one of my ‘intelligence officers’. Within me, I thought ‘Adokiye, you have the wrong guy’, but Adokiye was insistent. According to him, he was in the carpenters’ shed reading when he heard the bang. Immediately, he looked out the window and saw two figures dash off from the site in different directions. When Sam got to the block, he paused, and calmly walked into the classroom. Suspicious, isn’t it?

    Though I didn’t believe Adokiye at the time, I took a step. I felt Sam’s hands. They were sandy. I asked him for an explanation. He gave me a stupid one. Yet, I found it difficult to believe he could try to kill me. For some reason, the principal did not visit the site until after school hours that day, after I threatened that I would rather go home and finish the term as a day student. When he saw the extent of damage, he sprang into action. About ten students were questioned by the police. Sam was not among those questioned. A few days later when I became convinced that Sam had been one my attackers, I added his name to the list. It was now time for my final examinations, so I didn’t really follow up on what steps the principal took to punish the scoundrels. Decades later, I heard that Sam had been angry with me because I once asked him to level an anthill as punishment for a case ‘two fighting’.

    Shortly after, I said goodbye to BHS, not with painful memories, but sweet memories and forgiveness in my heart. My days at BHS were defined by the good, not the bad. The experience proved to me that I have a God who protects me. That God has been my God by His grace, the same God who shielded me in the kidnappers’ den in 2012!

    Next week, I will write on some of the terrible experiences of teachers in modern private schools. I have also spoken words of condolences to Mr Sylvester Oromoni (Snr).

  • LASG, LCC ask judicial panel to strike out #EndSARS protest coordinator’s testimony

    LASG, LCC ask judicial panel to strike out #EndSARS protest coordinator’s testimony

    One of the Coordinators of the #EndSARS protests, Serah Ibrahim again failed to show up for her cross-examination on Saturday at the Lagos State judicial panel on restitution for victims of SARS-related abuses and other matters.

    This prompted the lawyers representing the Lagos State Government, the Lekki Concession Company, LCC and the Police to ask the panel to strike out her previous testimony.

    They premised their application on her continued absence at the proceedings of the panel.

    During her previous testimony, Serah, who described herself as a professional auditor said she was at the protest ground every day and in fact helped in coordinating activities.

    Led by her lawyer, Yinka Olumide-Fusika (SAN), Serah had narrated how the Nigerian Army and subsequently the police shot at protesters at the Lekki toll gate on the night of October 20, 2020.

    She testified that at least 10 persons were killed.

    During her appearance at the panel on May 8, Serah came along with several videos, some of which she said she shot personally with her iPhone.

    One after the other, she played the videos which according to her demonstrates that soldiers shot at peaceful protesters on the night of October 20.

    As she played the videos, she explained to the panel that soldiers shot at the harmless protesters and even took away some of the dead bodies.

    Counsel to the Lagos State Government, Olukayode Enitan (SAN), in his application to strike out her testimony told the panel that the witness has been evading cross-examination after making “scandalous and outrageous claims.”

    He asked the panel to note that this is about the 4th court sitting that the witness had failed to turn up for and having failed to present herself for cross-examination, she should be deemed to have abandoned the cause.

    The Senior Advocate’s application was supported by Counsel to the LLC, Rotimi Seriki and Counsel to the Police, Joseph Eboseremen.

    On her part, the Chairman of the Panel, Justice Doris Okuwobi said members would consider the application and take a decision which would be communicated later.

    She adjourned the proceedings till September 11.

  • I prayed to win BBNaija- Mercy Eke declares as she gives testimony in church [VIDEO]

    I prayed to win BBNaija- Mercy Eke declares as she gives testimony in church [VIDEO]

    BBNaija 2019 winner, Mercy Eke stunned many of her fans when a video of her testifying in church surfaced online. In the video, she was captured thanking God for making her win the reality TV show last year.

     

    According to her:”I prayed to win, I went in and I won”.

     

    https://www.instagram.com/p/B72y76lDxF5/

    Months back, Eke took to her Instagram page to appreciate those who constantly support her.

    I’m still a work in progress, learning and unlearning.It still feels surreal because the love I have been receiving up until now is overwhelming.
    I really can’t thank you all enough and don’t know how best to thank you all, but I promise never to disappoint you.

    Keep praying for me as I’ve always asked, keep supporting me and the brands I work for.
    Thank you all for always being here for your girl LAMBO I love you all”.

    TheNewsGuru recalls that in November 2019, Mercy lamented, saying she wants her old life back.

    “This thing it looks rosy on social media and it’s not rosy I think I want my old life back. I want to sleep wake up when I want, don’t have anything to do, don’t have a calendar,” she said in the clip which appears to be from a live Instagram session.

    “Right now I have a calendar. it sucks like I hate yea I prayed for it but its too much. People keep telling me it will reduce and it doesn’t. It keeps getting worse I don’t have a life of my own anymore…like I feel like I want my old life back.”