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Untold stories of victims kidnapped by Nigeria’s gunmen

AS fear grows in Nigeria over rising insecurity, aggravated by banditry, kidnapping, insurgency, militancy, and other social ills, The ICIR’s Marcus Fatunmole and Bamas Victoria report tales of citizens who were kidnapped and held hostage, including those who were released after paying huge sums as ransoms.

“My daughter gets frightened whenever she sees a policeman or hears loud banging.”

“She was three when I was kidnapped,” Uzoma tells the ICIR.

“She says ‘police came to pick my daddy,’ but I keep on correcting her that they were not police but bad people.”

Uzoma, like several victims of abduction, lives with constant reminder of the sordid ordeal long after it has happened.

He says he constantly has to tell his now five-year-old daughter that not all armed men are ‘bad people.’ He explains that whenever she sees an armed policeman, she still insists that they want to ‘take my daddy.’

A black Christmas

Two days to the Christmas of 2019, Uzoma was abducted in his house in the presence of his family – a wife and three children, the youngest, a month-old infant.

He recalls that he was in his room with his daughter when he started hearing loud noises.

“At first I thought it was knockouts,” he says. But as the sound continued, he decided to check.

He went to the kitchen door, but several things happened simultaneously in few seconds.

First, he made an eye contact with an armed person. Secondly, there was a realisation that the sounds were gunshots, that he was being robbed and needed to secure the door and get his family to safety.

Doors from Uzoma's house
Doors from Uzoma’s house.

“I could hear gunshots fired at the door and later what appeared to be a dagger being used to hack the kitchen door,” he says.

A few minutes later, there was loud banging on the bedroom door where Uzoma and his family were hiding. Meanwhile, he had contacted the neighbourhood vigilante who also said they could hear the gunshots.

“I don’t blame them, what do you expect them to do against such firepower?”

“The vigilante were proactive, but these people overpowered them. They had Dane guns, but the abductors had AK-47, so you cannot compare them.”

The abductors had two two extra magazines each, Uzoma explains.

Uzoma says he opted to call the vigilantes first instead of the police because they were closer.

The banging was now on his bedroom door. He took his family into the bathroom. They gained access and their next port of call was the bathroom door. The sound was getting louder and his son was crying, which made his wife open the door.

He saw several armed men in the room. One of them was going round taking all the valuables he could find, including money, clothes, bedsheets, and towels. The armed men also had his wife’s phones.

“I told them to take everything, and they could have our cars too,” Uzoma says. But the only response he got was “Muje, let’s go” from one of the armed men who handed him a dashiki shirt.

That was when he realised that this could be an abduction.

He was taken outside where he was made to sit down on the ground alongside three other men. One of the men was bleeding from a machete cut which he sustained while trying to escape.

Uzoma says he counted 15 abductors with nine of them armed with guns.

“It is incredible. They even had bags containing bullets,” Uzoma says, still in disbelief.

The long trek and the many Abuja mountains

Abuja is filled with hiking clubs.  At weekend members hike numerous hills, rocks, and mountains. But for Uzoma, his hiking that day was not for pleasure.

The abductors had a tracker called ‘Smallie’ who knew the route. “I am not sure that boy is up to 20, he wasn’t carrying a gun,” Uzoma recalls.

“I think he is a younger brother to the leader,” he explains.

“They had cooking utensils; they even had a solar panel used to charge their phones and a translator,” he says.

The translator, a Tiv man, went by the alias ‘Abiola.’

Abiola was the only non-Fulani among the kidnappers.

Uzoma says when the trek began, the abductors were 15 with nine guns, but when they got to their first stop, their number decreased to 13. Two persons had left; one with a gun and another without.

He says that they came across a herd of cows at one point and an elderly man appeared. The leader of the abductors walked quickly towards the man and knelt. He spoke in a language Uzoma suspected to be Fulfulde and the elderly man responded as if he was giving them direction.

The trek continued. They avoided villages, came across some palm wine tappers and the abductors forcefully collected their palm wine. They walked until it was 6am. Uzoma says he knew the time because his wife’s phone alarm had gone off. And still, they did not stop.

During his abduction, Uzoma, who could not understand the Hausa language, came to know words like ‘Kwanta,’ ‘Muje,’ ‘Tashi’ – Lie down, Let’s go, Get Up . These were words used to bark commands at him.

Uzoma says he noticed that the abductors gave him a special treatment in the sense that they did not give him tasks or ask him to carry luggage like they did others.

He later found out that the three other abductees were not targeted, they were just in the wrong place at the wrong time. At the end of the first day, the three of them were released after paying a total of 1 million naira ransom and 15,000 naira call card vouchers.

They had to relocate, which meant another round of trekking. He says he knew they were in Kuje Area Council because he could see the Nnamdi Azikiwe international airport lights.

The journey had begun from Ketti, a community around Lugbe axis in Abuja Municipal Area council.

Uzoma says the kidnappers would never use their lines to contact the victims’ families – they instead used the victims’. They also demanded that the victim’s families send airtime to the phone line. And after every conversation with a victim’s family, they would call and relay the message to someone whom they referred to as ‘Yellow.’

Uzoma believes Yellow calls the shot, because he (or she) determines whether they should collect a negotiated sum or not.

They asked his family to bring 30 million naira for his release.

He laughed when he was notified.  “I told them, ‘If I have 30 million naira, would I be living in that community?”

They frequently changed location; this meant more trekking.

The double life of Kidnapers

Folarin Philip Banigbe was abducted in the early hours of May 1, 2016, in Port Harcourt. His was targeted.

Folarin would later document his experience in a book titled, ‘The Abduction Chronicles.’

Folarin Philip Banigbe
Folarin Philip Banigbe captured his kidnap experience in his book “The Abduction Chronicles”.

“I assumed they were area boys trying to steal a few things, but afterwards, I realised they were more serious criminals. When I engaged them, they shot into the house. They knew who they wanted and robbed us blind before taking me,” Folarin says.

He explains how sophisticated he realised the criminality was.

READ ALSO: Accidents, deaths and kidnappings escalate as FG drags feet on Abuja-Kaduna-Kano road construction

“Those who picked me up were different from the transportation party who then handed me over to the keeper, before allowing me to talk to the negotiator,” Folarin says.

There were three people per shift and three shifts in a day.  One of the guards was nick-named ‘WAEC Boy.’

He was guarded by nine persons, but he picked interest in the WAEC Boy  because “he engaged me the most from the moment I was captured.”

“From him, I realised that criminals rationalise their criminality. Nigerians have multiple personalities. The way you see somebody in a church, or a mosque is pretty much not who he is at home or in the presence of his friends,” Folarin explains.

Some of guards talked about how they were going to take some girls out later and have some drinks.

These men had taken criminality as an occupation, but would often go back to their normal lives.

He stated that “I looked around and kept asking myself how many people like this could be regular people by day but criminals in the night and you will not even know.”

This is a similar observation shared by Uzoma who says his kidnappers said Muslim prayers in batches, usually in the morning and evenings.

Towards the end of his captivity, Abiola had become chatty, always making calls to his wife and his mistress and talking about how women could be problematic.

Kidnap attacks and deaths between 2011 and January 24, 2021
Kidnap attacks and deaths between 2011 and January 24, 2021

Uzoma feels that his abductors were either from Sokoto State axis or their next job was slated in Sokoto. This was because they mentioned ‘Sokoto’ a lot in their conversations.

At their next location, which would turn out to be the last, Uzoma could pick out the infrequent sound of motorcycles. This meant they were close to a village.

Abiola told him they had reached an agreement with his family. His brother, who was to deliver the ransom, was asked to come with a Hausa interpreter and call card vouchers.  This was December 27, 2019.

His brother brought the money-over 4 million naira.

“Do you know that these people took their time to count the money to make sure it was complete before they released me?” Uzoma asks rhetorically.

Uzoma speaks about other kidnappers:  Biggie who was big and not very bright but shows incredible dexterity at dismantling and coupling guns; Tallest who was the tallest and had a gun with a spearhead; and there was an effeminate one who he says ‘walks like a woman.’

Ransom paid – free at last but the hurdles are not yet over

Aside the paperwork at the police station, Uzoma’s extended family and friends had to foot his medical bills. He also had to relocate his family 24 hours after his release. This meant paying rent and shouldering the all expenses that came with moving.

A series of kidnappings in Ketti had left people leaving the community.  He would later find out from the police that the informant, who told the abductors about him, was paid 75,000 naira.

It is over one year now but Uzoma is still paying off “the debt that was incurred from paying the ransom.”

He had built a house in the community because it was cheaper and gave him time to save and buy in one of the Abuja estates. But he is back to square one.

His family are still traumatised Aside his daughter, his wife lives in constant trepidation. And him? He often cannot sleep without sleeping pills. “It is an experience I do not wish on my enemies,” Uzoma says, while shaking his head.

Between 2011 and January 2021, a total of 849 kidnap incidents in the country, leading to 529 deaths, were recorded, data from Nigeria Security Tracker shows.  A total of 1,990 persons were kidnapped and 288 kidnappers were neutralised by security agencies in the country.

The crime peaked in the country in 2020, as 219 cases and 110 deaths of victims were recorded, respectively. Number of victims were 601, and 58 of the kidnappers were neutralised.

These numbers are not all-encompassing as they are limited to those that made the news.

A considerable number of these victims ended up paying negotiated ransoms.

A robbery? No, a kidnap and one location too many

On July 19, 2020, Bem, a developmental worker, was in his house in Logo Local Government Area of Benue State. When he heard a noise, he opened his door to check and he came face to face with a hooded man holding a gun.

“The first thought that crossed my mind was that it was a robbery,” Bem recalls.

The man was not alone. They were four armed hooded men.

They came into his house, took all the valuables they could find, including his phone and laptop, and asked for his car keys. They covered his face with a beanie and sandwiched him at the back of his car.

They drove for hours. At a point, they ditched the car and continued the journey on motocycles.

His abductors spoke in Tiv – they were most likely locals or people from Tiv land or those who had lived in the area for a long time.

He was taken to a thatched hut where he would spend the next five days before his release on the July 24, 2019.

They took out all the money in his account using his ATM cards and demanded for 7 million naira ransom.

When the family finally paid a negotiated sum, they took him on a motocycle after a few hours and left him stranded.

“I didn’t know where I was. I had no money, and it was dark already,” Bem told The ICIR

He walked until he got to a police checkpoint. “I told them, ‘Officers, I don’t know where I am.”  This got their attention. Because it was late, he had to sleep at the checkpoint. This was at Ukum LGA of Benue State, 61km from where he was abducted.

Bem would later learn that the ransom was collected at yet another LGA, Gboko. This was 118km from Ukum and 120km from Logo.

He also believed the negotiator was also in another Local government. He was probably held in a local government different from where he was released.

Kidnapping Nigeria gunmen
The many locations used in Bem’s kidnapping

Unlike in the case of Uzoma, but like in the case of Folarin, the abductors holding him hostage were not directly involved in the negotiation, neither were they involved in the ransom pick-up.

“These people are highly organised,” Bem says.

His family had picked up his vehicle where it was ditched. After his release he wemt to the police station, made his report, picked up his vehicle, got to his apartment, packed his things and left for good.

Bem, who now stays in Markurdi ,has no plans of returning to Logo in the nearest future. It is not a memory he wants to relive.

He also says there is no form of mental, physical, psychological, financial assistance or referrals or system put in place for people like him. At least, none from the police station, which is usually one of the first points of contact for kidnapped victims. Uzoma also holds the same belief.

Bem was not the actual target. He says it was a case of the abductors coming to the wrong house.

From shortcut to 9 days captivity

Adekola, a retired senior official of the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), was driving home from Kuje on Monday October 7, 2019.

He stays in Pegi, a community in Kuje Area Council of the FCT.

He opted to take a shorter but bushy route against his wife’s advice because he wanted to get home faster as “It was getting late,” he says.

A few poles after driving past the community vigilantee, he was flagged down by armed men.

His car was not the only one. The men selected captives from different vehicles while discharging the lucky ones.

Getting home faster was no longer a priority for Adekola but making it out alive.

This was the beginning of a long tortuous and haunting nine-day experience for him, his teenage cousin and the other abductees.

He counted 15 men all armed with AK-47 and other rifles.

The kidnappers and their characters

The kidnappers, who were mainly of Fulani descent from their looks, spoke Fulfulde and the Nigerian pidgin English, Adekola says.

After trekking for many hours, their valuables were taken, they were beaten and asked to state their names, state of origin, among other bios.

“We were made to run like cows in the bush and it was a big offence for anyone not to run as the kidnappers did. They always wanted everything to be done fast,” Adekola narrates.

“They threatened and hit us with daggers, guns, sticks, machetes and other weapons as if they just wanted us to die by any means other than gunshot or butchering,” he says.

They were asked how much they could pay as ransom – an unfavorable answer meant severe beatings. This was also repeated in the hearing of an abductee’s family whenever they negotiated for a lower fee.

Adekola says the kidnappers worked in shifts. Every morning, a new set would be brought in.

Different states, different victims same modus operandi

The kidnappers would only communicate with the victims’ families through abductees’ phones. And they spoke to a person’s family only once in a day, Adekola explains.

A man was brought in. His job was to appeal to them to cooperate with their captors – a tactic of the kidnappers to use carrot-and-stick approach.

Victim lost all contract money paid into his account because of credit alert

Adekola narrates the account of one of the victims who got a credit alert while in captivity. The money was meant for a contract. The kidnappers would hear nothing of such. They made the elderly man transfer the money to them. He was left with 189 naira. And it did not stop them from whipping him or demanding ransom from his family.

Our kidnappers would threaten us: ‘We are asking you to pay 10 million naira, you said you could not afford it – money that is not enough for us to buy bullets. We will waste you, the money that your family cannot find to bail you here, they will look for it to do your obituary.

“Our kidnappers would threaten us: ‘We are asking you to pay 10 million naira, you said you could not afford it – money that is not enough for us to buy bullets. We will waste you, the money that your family cannot find to bail you here, they will look for it to do your obituary,” Adekola recounts.

They were fed once a day by meals prepared by their captors. They slept on the ground, in the open, under the rain which fell almost every day.

Their legs and hands were bound and then they were chained together. This made a bad situation even worse as they could not turn while lying down.

“Donkeys were better than me in those days,” he says.

It is over a year now, but Adekola, who is a retired security officer, is still haunted by his experience. He visibly shakes while recounting his travail.

The series of kidnappings put fear on the residents of Pegi community. Those who could afford to relocate did.

Kidnappers confused on whether to sell or release victims

As days went by, so also were abductees whose ransoms were paid released. This brought their number to four.

The kidnappers were at an impasse about what to do with them. Some wanted them to be sold to a herbalist in Enugu while others insisted it should be in Benue. This meant walking in one direction and then turning to another depending on who was winning the argument.

His teenage cousin and another child were released. This brought momentary relief for Adekola. But the fear that his cousin, who was new in town, would not be able to make it out of the bush took over.

Fortunately, they made it out a few days later.

Adekola narrates the story of another elderly abductee who was diabetic, and his leg got swollen and could barely move. He was beaten mercilessly.

“So, at a point, he could no longer bear the pain. He asked his son to look for a stick with sharp edge to burst the swollen leg for him. Immediately the boy did it, huge fluid spurted out of the leg” he states.

Adekola gathered the man was the main target. Unlike Uzoma, who got preferential treatment for being the main target, this man was the recipient of the kidnappers’ ire.

At one time, a helicopter flew past, which meant more beating for the man.

The kidnappers told the man that it was his family that were mounting pressure on security agencies to hunt for them.

The man’s family eventually paid 2 million naira and Adekola’s family brought 1 million naira. They were then taken on motorcycles and released around Abaji, another area council in the FCT.

 

At Abaji, a combined security team were already patrolling the area because the news had gone wide. They were taken to the hospital and the bill settled by the Federal Capital Territory Administration, Adekola says.

A tale of two brothers and their neigbhours

In Kaduna, two young brothers were part of the people kidnapped, at Rido in Chikum LGA of the state in February 2020.

They regained their freedom after 13 days and 1 million-naira ransom paid.

Two of their neighbours, a father and daughter, were also abducted the same night, the young brothers’ guardian, Stephen says.

The kidnappers also collected call cards worth 200,000 naira from the two families.

One of the brothers has returned to their village vowing never to live or work in Kaduna township again because of the fear of being re-kidnapped. The traumatised graduate of Kaduna State University now farms with his parents.

 

They were kidnapped while at home, made to trek for days and an initial 30 million naira asked as ransom.

“Initially, they asked for N30 million for the four of them. We kept negotiating till they settled for 500,000 naira each. We later paid the money, making it 2 million naira for all of them. We were also made to pay for recharge cards which they used to communicate with us. That was 100,000 naira. They told us they did not want money, but the recharge card. So, we were able to buy the card from the people printing recharge card.”

“When we paid the money, the abductors did not release them immediately. They told our brother-in-law that took the money to them to go home. They promised they would release them. So, our brother-in-law went home and by evening of that day, they were released,” Stephen told the ICIR.

We did not involve the police as they told us they would “waste the lives of our people” if we reported.

From work to kidnappers’ den

In the second week of December of 2020, Abiodun, a father of four ,was kidnapped alongside two men and a woman.

Abiodun had gone to a community in Kaduna to work on roofing a house belonging to an engineer.

At midnight, gunmen stormed their lodge and took them to the forest.

“We walked in the forest for three days,” he says, as he shows a scar from an injury he sustained from the period.

He is resident in Abuja.

Abiodun did not want to speak to the press because he believed the kidnapers had informants and knew the city.

After his  release, he went to report at a police station at Rijana community in Kaduna state.

Abiodun was the first to be released after his family had paid the 500,000 naira ransom. He confirmed others were eventually released for the same amount.

He said his kidnappers had a radio from which they monitored news, adding that they made jest of threats by security agents to fish them out.

The visibly trembling man said the kidnappers used charms, guns, and other weapons to conduct their ‘business.’

Anti-kidnapping laws

Not all victims of kidnapping make it out alive to tell their stories.

It is 2021 and reports of kidnapping still abound in the media space. This is despite the anti-kidnapping laws put in place by states.

Some state governors have signed anti-kidnapping bills into law to curb the crime within their jurisdictions.

In the anti-kidnapping bill signed by Governor Abdullahi Ganduje, kidnappers who kill their victims are to face death penalty, while those who kidnap but do not kill their victims will be sentenced to life imprisonment.

Bauchi, Bayelsa, Osun, Katsina, Nasarawa, Plateau, Lagos, Benue, Enugu, Kogi, Delta, Imo, Akwa-Ibom, Rivers, Edo, Abia, and Kaduna are some states that have similar laws and/or have approved maximum punishments for kidnappers.

The Nigerian Senate had in 2017 approved death sentence for kidnappers in the country.

The bill also prescribes 30-year jail term for persons who collude with kidnappers in the country.

The names in this report, except one, were changed to protect the identities of the victims. Data was sourced by Oluwadamilola Ojetunde.

My kidnappers spoke good English, claimed they were jobless graduates – Akinbami, Ekiti oil mogul

SULEMAN Akinbami, an Ekiti oil mogul, has narrated his ordeal during a week-long stay in the hands of kidnappers.

He was kidnapped at his filling station along Ado-Ijan Road, Ado Ekiti, at about 9 pm on Sunday, January 10, 2020, while conducting a routine check at the facility.

Narrating his experience in an interview with Punch Newspaper, Akinbami said his kidnappers were gun-wielding four young men with a good mastery of the English and Yoruba languages. He said they told him they were jobless graduates.


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“They spoke good Yoruba and good English. I want to believe that if they are not Yoruba, they had been in Yorubaland for long. They spoke good Yoruba. They spoke good English as well. They claimed to be jobless graduates,” he said.

“My kidnappers were angry people. They were very angry; I think they listened to radio and watched television. While I was there, they drove my car to town. In the town, they listened to radio and watched television, they listened to news, they said they saw me on national and international television news, and heard my name on radio. They asked – ‘Who are you? Why is your news everywhere? Are you the first person to be kidnapped? Why all this noise? Who are you by the way? What are you? What is your worth? Why are people shouting Akinbami, Akinbami?’ However, it is surprising that they drove my car around town for a week without removing the number plates and nobody challenged them. They went to town with my car, they came back, they did not remove the number plates and nobody challenged them. It is surprising.”

According to him, his abductors also told him they were sent to kidnap him because he collected 60 million naira from someone, to which he denied.

“Yes, they did. They established contact with my family on the third day. They said it was the 60 million naira, which they alleged that I collected from a certain person. I told them I did not collect any money from anybody. I told them that fortunately, I had just received my statement of account which they could check in the car to see if there was any 60million naira, even N20m or N10m inflow from anybody into my account. I told them to check and that I could not be keeping money at home.”

“When I returned, people told me how they were praying for me, even in Saudi Arabia, following contacts. Prayers from several universities, NASFAT in Ekiti here, the Grand Imam, traditional rulers, Muslims, Catholics on the order of the Catholic Bishop of Ekiti prayed for me. Also. Christians fasted, prayed and had vigil because of me. I am surprised. It was when I returned that I heard about all these. I am surprised.

“I thank all of them for the love they showed me. I shed tears when I came back and heard all these. That they did all these for me – What am I? Who am I? I am nothing and they were sympathetic to my cause. They prayed that God should protect me, I thank all of them. I appreciate them. God will continue to protect them and every member of their families. I pray to God to please repay their kindness.

“One should always be with his God. Don’t do evil. Don’t cheat anybody, be sincere. Be truthful; be honest in everything you do. Be godly.”

While stating that he was only released after paying an undisclosed amount as ransom, he appealed to governments at all levels to create an enabling environment that would productively engage the youth, lamenting that kidnapping had become a huge trend in Nigeria.

“I was released after the ransom was paid. Somebody from my family brought the ransom to them in the bush between Kuje in the Federal Capital Territory and Kogi State. They collected it and released me and as well handed over my car to me. It was after I was released and left the bush that I knew where I was. All the time they were taking me here and there, I did not know where I was. It was on leaving there that I started looking at signposts to see names of towns. I have forgotten the names of the villages in Kogi State close to Abuja. I do not want to remember the experience. I want it to go off my memory.

“Kidnapping has now become a trend. It is my prayer that we quickly find a solution to it. In the bush over there, one day, the kidnappers were elated that one of their victims had paid the balance of his ransom. They told me that they kidnapped somebody who they collected 30 million naira from. They said the victim initially paid 27 million naira and paid the 3 million naira balance that day.

“I am appealing to government; the economy is not helping matters; those in authority should try and see how they can help the unemployed graduates through employment creation. Let the youth have something doing. The truth is that without jobs, it will be easy to recruit them into kidnapping, and nobody will be safe. I appeal to the state government and the federal government to please find a solution because my case will not be the last. They have kidnapped others. Government should do something to, at least, create employment so that those who have no job now will have means of livelihood. Somebody who has no job can be easily convinced to join these groups of people.”

Kidnappers on the prowl in Nigeria

Kidnapping for ransom, which has assumed a worrisome state, is one of the biggest organised or gang crimes in Nigeria.

But in recent years, the narrative has changed,: Kidnapping has assumed a frightening dimension, and is often violent. Not a few victims have lost their lives to either resistance or failure of their family members or security operatives to ‘cooperate’ with the kidnappers.

The current wave of abductions across the country makes every person a potential target, regardless of social class or economic status–unlike political kidnappings of the past. Terror groups waging wars against the country have also added a new dimension to it, especially in Nigeria’s North-East and North-West, whereby they kidnap school children in their numbers, both to generate fund for their criminal activities and to negotiate the release of their captured partners in crime.

According to figures by Nigeria Security Tracker, a total number of 1,990 persons have been victims of kidnappers between 2011 and January, 2021. The figures also showed that no fewer than 849 well-coordinated kidnap attacks were launched by these criminal elements across the country.

The breakdown also revealed that about 529 persons have died from these attacks.

 

HIV prevention, rape: Vaginal ring to the rescue!

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By Tobore OVUORIE


BETTER days are ahead for women globally as the World Health Organisation (WHO) has recommended a vaginal ring, which can prevent the contracting of HIV, to be added as a prevention choice for women who are substantially at risk of the virus.

This was disclosed Thursday, at the HIVR4P virtual conference by Michelle Rodolph of the WHO, while addressing the 2021 HIVR4P media Fellows. The ring, Ms. Rodolph said would be offered as a choice preventive like other contraceptives.

The WHO guideline is a critical step for having HIV prevention choices for women and this is considered a win by Ms. Chilufya Kasanda, Programmes Officer, Treatment Advocacy and Literacy Campaign (TALC) Lusaka, Zambia. “Many women in Africa for a long time have lacked options which they can control. Thus, the ring empowers women to make better choices as they continue to be affected by HIV,” she said.

Global statistics indicate that the global burden of HIV falls on women in sub-Sahara Africa as no fewer than 60 percent of all new adult infections are among women. “This is why they urgently need and deserve more choices for HIV prevention,” says International Partnership for Microbicides (IPM); inventors of the ring, in one of the firm’s videos about the product.

Dapivirine vaginal ring

Made of silicon, the ring, when set near the cervix in the vagina, releases an antiretroviral called dapivirine at the sight of potential infections and blocks the virus. A ring is to be set in the vagina; near the cervix every month and wouldn’t need to be removed during menstruation or sexual intercourse, as it cannot be felt. The IPM says the long-acting vaginal ring for HIV prevention reduces HIV risk by 50 percent and should be used with either male or female condoms.

The ring would last for 28 days in the vagina before a replacement is needed. Reproductive and Sexual Health experts say it would save on time, cost and give a sense of security. “Because if raped, a woman wearing the ring is protected from contracting HIV. It is better having a ring inside of me than nothing else for protection,” the HIV prevention advocate; Ms. Chilufya said.

Ms. Chilufya explained that the ring is a long-acting choice many women in Africa have longed for and is very discreet, so, can be used without a partner’s permission.

Vaginal Ring To The Rescue
Vaginal Ring

Many times, women don’t have a choice when it comes to HIV prevention because most options require reaching a compromise with their partners except for PrEp (pre-exposure prophylaxis) – an oral option.  With the ring, this is different as there is a privacy that goes with the ring because no one will be able to tell when inserted in the vagina unlike the oral PrEp which doesn’t provide such privacy.

Ms. Chilufya emphasized that the ring is a great solution for women who are presently experiencing Gender Based Violence (GBV) due to the COVID-19. Studies so far reveal that though quarantine is a necessary and major way to reduce the COVID-19 spread, it has birthed serious psychological and socially disruptive consequences including a surge in the cases of gender violence within many families and homes.

Nigerians welcome product with mixed reactions

The ring which is yet to arrive sub-Sahara Africa already has several challenges awaiting its arrival in Nigeria. In an online survey which this reporter started conducting via various social media outlets immediately after the media brief ended, cultural and religious beliefs and practices topped the list of major barriers awaiting the ring’s arrival in Nigeria.

Apostle Chibuzor Ofoegbu, a clergy with the Eternal Sacred Order of Cherubim and Seraphim in Lagos, South-West Nigeria said he will discourage his wife from using the vaginal ring and would be mad at her if he discovers she is using it without first telling him. He said he doesn’t like a vaginal ring.

Dr. Ezinne Ezepue, a lecturer at the Theatre and Film Studies Department of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, said she would not use the vaginal ring because she doesn’t feel threatened and so has no need to protect herself. She however added: “I know someone who would very much love to use the product but she doesn’t use a smartphone and so cannot respond (to the reporter’s survey). I would like to gift her one just for her to protect herself.”

Mr. Joseph Okoghenun a Public Relations professional in Lagos, said “It is her body. Whatever she does with it that doesn’t affect my and her health and socio-economic wellbeing negatively, is welcome by me. But I hope feminists won’t raise eyebrows when masculinity advocates start criticizing this secrecy.”

Ms. Rita Akpojaroh an educationist and entrepreneur said she will not use the vaginal ring because it is unnecessary for her to. “I am 100 percent sure I am my husband’s only sexual partner and he is mine, as well.”

But Ms. Justina Auta, a journalist in Nigeria’s Federal Capital Territory, said she will use the vaginal ring not because she doesn’t trust her partner but to further protect herself from contracting HIV in view of the increasing cases of sexual violence in the Nigerian society. “Women and girls are being raped by known and unknown persons,” she emphasized.

Ms. Temple Ajilola, an Abuja-based journalist said she would not use the vaginal ring except she gets more information about it with full details about the side effects.

Samuel Okolo, a spoken-word poet says he wouldn’t encourage his partner to use the ring and will frown at her using it without informing him before commencing. “I wouldn’t encourage her on religious and spiritual ground of upholding celibacy,” he explained.

Mr. Ireho Aito, a Lagos-based radio journalist says he will encourage his partner to use the vaginal ring and would have no hard feelings towards her should she commence usage without informing him.

A relationship coach who chooses to be anonymous pleaded that the vaginal ring should be made available in Nigeria immediately. “Anything that will save lives is welcome by me. If this will prevent infection, then there is hope,” he said.

Mr. Ben Pemii, a Port-Harcourt based independent journalist and author in South-South Nigeria said “Given the superabundance of conspiracy theories, the use of this ring needs to be further subjected to detailed examination to ensure there are no side effects. I would use it if I were a female.

“But if I’m sure that I’m negative, then there is no need to encourage my partner to use it. I’ll encourage a partner to use it in a situation where the male partner is sexually reckless. My finding out that my partner uses the ring without my knowledge won’t carry any serious reaction though I would be surprised,”

Cultural beliefs and practices have been identified as major challenges ahead of the acceptance of the ring in Africa because women in many African communities like in some parts of Nigeria, are not allowed to put anything in their vagina especially in communities with high stakes for feminine virginity.

Solutions

Ms. Chilufya recommends breaking down the science of and around the ring to local languages. She enjoins all HIV prevention advocates and the media to work together to ensure a seamless and better awareness creation about the vaginal ring so that more women particularly in Africa will make better choices and live healthier lives.

Addressing the fears of possible side effects, Ms. Rodolph explained that the product stops working three hours after removing the ring from the vagina. “So, if a woman feels she is having side effects, she can remove it.”

Ms. Rodolph said the ring will cost about seven or eight dollars but as production increases, the price too will reduce. She hinted that donors are looking at getting onboard so it will get to women for free.

Investigation: How illegal gold miners milk FCT of billions in revenues

WHILE Zamfara State government rakes in billions of naira from its large gold deposits, the Federal Capital Territory Administration(FCTA) loses a large chunk of the mineral resource to illegal miners. Marcus FATUNMOLE reports.


ABUJA, Nigeria’s capital, is currently forfeiting revenue from its gold deposits to illegal miners, findings by The ICIR have shown.

The loss results from the failure of relevant government agencies to prevent unlicensed artisanal miners from plundering the valuable mineral resources.

The revenue haemorrhage has led  to the rising calls on government to harness the nation’s resources, especially now that economic condition is worsening amidst  COVID-19 pandemic.  The call also comes amidst shrinking revenue from crude oil,  the mainstay of the country’s economy.

Background to this story

The ICIR investigated activities of the illegal miners in Kundu, Kwali Local Area Council, Abuja, and found that many youths of the community are involved in the artisanal mining.

Kundu, a ward in Kwali area council, has over 5,000 residents, according to Bello Magaji, leader (Aguma) of the community. The ICIR, however, has no means of verifying this claim because the last national census was conducted more than 15 years ago. Kundu is a remote and agrarian village, and it takes about 40 minutes to reach the community from Kwali via motorbike. The only road leading to the settlement is untarred, and motorbike operators charge each passenger between N500 and N700 from Kwali. Only a few vehicles, mostly used for agricultural purposes, ply the rough road.


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The locality lacks major basic amenities such as electricity , pipe-borne water,  and modern means of communication. Homes in Kundu are mostly made of mud.

Kundu has a public primary school and a primary health centre, but the primary school’s roofs have been blown off by the wind, and the school has been shut down after efforts to get the attention of the government for its repair, failed.

Closure of the school makes it possible for children to spend more time to join the miners at work. Some of the children support their mothers who sell foods to the miners. A few other women in the community also participate in mining.

As rain retreats for the year, farming – the community’s main source of income, winds up. Children, therefore, help their mothers with the chores at home while men ventures out to win bread for their families.  Scores of Kundu youths also have found a new trade in mining; they spend most part of each day excavating the earth under the village river for gold.

Miners are from Zamfara, other places, Kundu monarch says

The impact of gold mining on Kundu River

 

But according to Magaji, (the Aguma),  only youths from Zamfara and other parts of the country are involved in the mining. He said the number of miners could grow beyond 5,000 (more than Kundu’s population) at the peak of the dry season.

Given their experience in the business, Zamfara youth are skilled in gold mining and were trooping into his community and environs to help themselves with the gold deposit, he added.

Some of the youth who spoke with our reporter boasted they could become millionaires within weeks. “It is all by luck, we can make up to N500, 000 in one week,” Musa Aliyu said.

“What I can tell you is that no one comes here and chooses to do anything else again until he ‘hammers’ (a local parlance for making huge financial breakthrough).

The ICIR gathered that the miners could go as far as killing one another whenever they find gold that is a finger size, or more. Such discovery could make them swallow the mineral and excrete it much later, in ravenous bid to keep sizeable part of their harvests from others. Up to a million naira could be made from excreted gold, The ICIR gathered.

The mining process

Heaps of gravels surround the mining site. The stones are first excavated before reaching the muddy earth from which the mineral is extracted. The miners have no use for the gravel stones, which though is another source of huge revenue; they only are after the precious stones.

They work in groups. Some persons excavate the earth under the river, separating gravel and other unwanted substances from the soil; about two or three scoops the miry water, and sieve gold from muddy dirt. The person who sieves carefully ensures the tiny yellowish substance finds its way into a small bowl where the mineral is further extracted from dirt. The gold appears, in most cases, as tiny glistening yellowish substance amidst some dirt. It is usually difficult to see it, as it mixes with soil participles, but it glints. Sand around the river also shines under the scorching sun, as it appears to contain a negligible amount of the mineral.

Buyers come from outside the community, but only on appointment, the miners said. They are however always open to highest bidders. So, there is no permanent client.

The Kundu River

The Kundu river flows through Gwagwa community (before Jiwa) to Bassa, Zamani, Nuwalege through Sauka, linking Gwagwalada and Pai in Kwali before rushing through Kundu. The river heads towards Kogi and Niger states where River Niger, one of Nigeria’s most famous rivers, has its bed before forming a confluence with River Benue in Lokoja, Kogi state.

While most communities where the river flows through has a specific name for it, the river is called “Suma” by Kundu people.

A lot of fishing  and little of gold mining activities take place in these communities during the dry season, but none of the villages has the size of people with mining acumen as Kundu. The river is very wide in Pai and Kundu because of large excavations that have opened up banks of the river; exposing a mass of small rocks beneath and around the water. Canoes are used in Pai to ferry people across the river.

How mining affects community

Speaking on environmental hazards caused by mining in the village, Aguma of Kundu said the business is making the river to become wider and that the activity affects farming in the area because of increased erosion.

Aguma of Lindy (3rd left), flanked by his Elders in Council
Aguma of Kundu (3rd left) flanked by his Council of Chiefs

 

Magaji said there had been no sickness associated with mining in his village, but the fishes in the river were dying. According to him, the river is the community’s only source of water and it is facing increasing pollution.

The chief appealed to the government to intervene and stop illegal mining in the area. He also sought help for potable water in Kundu from the government.

The 40-year-old leader noted that mining activities are usually low during the raining season but increase during the dry season because the water level would have reduced to allow for increased excavation.

He said  some of the miners sleep in the river because they don’t have accommodation in Abuja. “They come from Kano, Zamfara and other states. Any time a car comes to the village, it is the buyers that bring food to them or come to buy the gold,” he noted.

Meanwhile, Magaji later admitted that some of his subjects had been trained by the “foreigners” to engage in the trade.

He said the mining had been on for over 10 years, stressing that only a few people were coming to mine when the business was introduced to the village. The mining, which appears to be done in the crudest form, is done both day and night, he said.

He added: “The mining is done at different locations and all the locations are around Kundu village. We could have engaged the police if they are close to us. The nearest police station is the Kwali Divisional Police Headquarters.”

“The community is not benefitting anything from the mining. They just come to the village and do their work without any commission or benefit for us; neither are the villages around this place getting anything in return from the activities,” the Aguma told our reporter.

Similarly, Idris Mohammed, head of public health centre in Kundu, confirmed to The ICIR that the river is the main source of water for the settlement. He said diseases such as cholera and dysentery are very common in the community.

He also told The ICIR that schistosomiasis – a major neglected tropical disease (NTD) contractable from water – is very common in the village. Mohammed, who has been working in Kundu since 2013, however, said though they are water-borne, none of the diseases is directly linked to mining in the community.

The world of miners

The ICIR met scores of youth who grouped at different ends of the river, after walking through the river with a village guide. Unlike Pai community, there is no canoe to ferry people through the river at Kundu. The miners smartly carry out their business at the other end of the river, so they could not be located easily by outsiders. They either have to swim or walk through the breadth of the river, which is about 700 meters. They help themselves with dozens of wraps of Indian hemp, cigarettes and other “energy-boosting” substances.

“We don’t allow anyone to come here without prior notice because what we are doing here is illegal. We did not get anybody’s permission to be here. We know those we transact with. But if you are here to offer higher bid, we’ll sell the gold for you,” one of the miners said as his group took our reporter through the process of the mining.

Another miner said: “Don’t look at us as illiterates. Even though we didn’t go to school much, we are big boys on our own. We can make in short time all the money that those of you who went to school very well would make in your offices, depending on the luck we have here.”

From their look, the miners are largely between age 18 and 40.  Despite claims they could make fortunes within days if luck smiles on them, the miners looked haggard. But, they were ambitious and agile.

Police react

Meanwhile, Mr Vitalis Obiano, the Divisional Police Officer, Kwali, who was alleged to be conspiring with the miners by a source, vehemently denied having knowledge of gold mining in the area.

He told The ICIR during a visit to his office that the government should be able to explore the resource as a good source of income to boost its gross domestic product.

He said if the mining is found to be an illegal activity, the community should inform the police.

“Is there a complaint? Let them bring up the complaint. Once the community brings the issue up, we’ll put an end to it; we’ll raid the place because such an economic resource should be for the state.

Please, whenever the community wants us to come in, we’ll be available; provided it (the mining) is illegal,” he vowed.

Kwali Council Chairman fails to comment

Danladi Chiya, chairman, Kwali local council area, turned down the request to speak on the development with The ICIR. After waiting in his office for hours, our reporter approached him to speak on the illegal mining,  he headed straight in a waiting car and was driven off in the company of his gun-wielding security aides.

Nigerian government controversially defends miners

Backing the miners, Eng. Frank Odoom, Acting Director, Mines, Federal Ministry of Mines and Steel Development,  said he had 98 percent assurance that there is no illegal mining activity in the FCT. “I am telling you the truth because of the coverage. We have a very strong collaboration with the DSS. We have informal mining. Some of them have small scale mining. You might look at them as illegal because of the way they are working. Their operation is quite informal.

“They are not organized, they are crude in nature, but they might be under the artisanal mining. You don’t say they are illegal, but they are not formal. Government is trying to bring them into the formal sector because most of them were pushed into it because of poverty. We’ll try to accommodate them and try to bring them in and try to train them on safe mining and the likes.”

Similarly, Mohammed Bature, Federal Mines Officer for the nation’s capital in the ministry, said the government was aware of the existence of the mineral resource in the FCT, but noted that quantifying the reserve was very difficult for him.

Mohammed Bature
Mohammed Bature

He said nobody could go into mining without acquiring a licence in the city.

“These people have a licence. They are the operators; they have the licence. They have the mineral title,” he said.

When confronted that the miners claimed they didn’t have the title, he insisted they had it.

“Most of these people have mineral titles. If you have a mineral title over land, anybody can come and do the work. Maybe those people are working under a licence because you cannot issue two licence in one place. A man has the title over that place, maybe the people are working under him,” he said.

Asked if it means that all the locations in the communities have been given out legally for mining, he answered emphatically in the affirmative. “They are not working illegally. There is the mineral title over there,” he said with an air of finality.

He said the mineral title holders pay a royalty to the Federal Government, but failed to state how much had been paid and the modality for payment.

He also explained that there is a task force comprising operatives of most of the nation’s security agencies working to ensure the laws guiding mining in the country are obeyed.

Gold mining hazards, not health ministry’s priority – spokesperson

Olujimi Oyetomi, Director of Information and Head, Media and Public Relations Unit in the ministry, rebuffed The ICIR’s efforts to get a reaction of the Federal Ministry of Health on this report.

He said coming to the ministry for such an “insignificant” issue as illegal gold mining was a misplaced priority for The ICIR.

Oyetomi said with the issue of COVID-19, communicable and non-communicable diseases in the country, the ministry had no time to respond to issue of illegal gold mining.

He mentioned two directors in the ministry who had turned down media requests for the position of the ministry on issues they thought were of no importance to the government.

Dangers of illegal mining, by WHO, CDC

Illegal and artisanal mining can be very detrimental to human and livestock health.  In May 2019, the World Health Organization said no less than 850,690 people in Nigeria were at risk of mercury poisoning. Mercury is a chemical used by artisanal and small-scale gold miners.

The WHO noted that artisanal and small-scale gold mining is the main source of the largest release of mercury emissions around the world.

WHO had listed 12 states in Nigeria as high-risk places where gold mining could trigger health crisis.

The states (which have gold deposit in Nigeria) are FCT, Niger, Osun, Zamfara, Kebbi, Katsina, Kaduna, Kwara, Borno, Kaduna, Jigawa, and Yobe.

Similarly, responding to a national tragedy and historic poisoning and deaths from lead in Zamfara in 2010, the US Centre for Disease Control joined the Federal Ministry of Health and other leading global health institutions to warn against illegal and unsafe mining.

It said gold ore could produce lead and the lead could pose a serious risk to the health of people and animals in neighbourhoods where mining takes place.

In Zamfara, over 400 children were reported dead, alongside animals and birds between March and June 2010. But for late response from government and lack of needed enlightenment, the tragedy would have been averted.

Nigerian experts speak on illegal gold mining 

Dele Ayanleke, an engineer and secretary, Miners Association of Nigeria told The ICIR that the miners are only looking for their daily bread and are not licensed.

He said artisanal miners are not professionals and would not be directly engaged by licensees as professionals.

Similarly, Sani Shehu, another engineer and immediate past president of the association,  said illegal mining is criminal and that government should view it in that prism. He decried the dimension which illegal mining is taking in the country as worrisome.

He said government officials in charge of mining and extraction of mineral resources in the nation hardly know what happens in remote communities because they would not be willing to go far into those communities to monitor mining and extractive works, as according to him, most of the illegal mining activities take place in distant communities from where government offices are located.

He said the reason illegal mining is booming in the country is that people do what they like in areas where no one could challenge them.

He also decried huge loss of revenues to illegal miners by the nation, amidst dwindling revenues to government.

He said rather than making arrests, government should engage traditional leaders in communities where the activity takes place to engage the miners on how to stop the practice.

Gold mining licensees in Abuja

Meanwhile, the Nigeria Mining Cadastral Office, an agency of the Federal Ministry of Mines and Steel Development in charge of licensing mining and extraction of mineral resources in the country, made available to The ICIR a list of mining licensees in the FCT.

As at 30th November 2020, there were 66 mining licensees in the nation’s capital whose operations cover gold, copper, columbite, lead, zinc, tin, niobium, tantalum manganese, lithium, marble aggregates, among others.

Only seven of them were permitted to mine gold within the Kwali Area Council. They are Gamla Nigeria Limited; Cypress Logistics and Construction Limited; Jordan Plains & Minerals International Limited; Sky Digital Mineral Nig. Ltd; Zicorp Limited; Morris Forte Limited, and Resident Investment Limited.

Gamla Nigeria Limited told The ICIR through its Business Development Manager, Obinna Ihebon, that it hadn’t started operation in the area and had not requested anyone to work on its behalf.

Similarly, Henry Oti, who spoke with our reporter on behalf of Cypress Logistics And Construction Limited said nobody mines for the firm in the area. “Anybody you see there went there on his own,” he stated.

Efforts by The ICIR to get the reaction of Jordan Plains & Minerals International Limited; Sky Digital Mineral Nig. Ltd; Zicorp Limited; Morris Forte Limited, and Resident Investment Limited proved abortive, as the phone numbers they provided to the Cadastral Office could not be reached.

For over two weeks, the companies also failed to respond to emails sent by The ICIR to get their reactions to this report.

President Muhammadu Buhari had on July 16, 2020, decried loss over three billion dollars to illegal gold mining in the country between 2012 and 2018. Buhari said this when he received locally-mined gold bars from the Presidential Artisanal Gold Mining Development Initiative (PAGMDI) in Abuja.

268 million naira cheque signed by the Central Bank of Nigeria. Source: Sun newspaper

 

His administration launched the initiative in 2019 as a way of diversifying the country’s economy, creating jobs and blocking the conduit through which revenues from gold is plundered.

The Central Bank of Nigeria presented a cheque of N268 million for a 12.5kg gold bar at the event, the first time the nation would officially refine its own gold through artisanal mining.

The Federal Government had in 2018 established a Federal Gold Reserve Scheme to support its economic diversification programme and as part of the implementation of the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) of the Buhari’s government.

With the scheme, the government would purchase gold from local refineries, subject to international standards such as the London Bullion Market Association.

Nigeria only could export 63,250 dollars worth of gold (unwrought or in semi-manufactured forms, or in powder form) in 2018, according to UN ComtradeThe ICIR could not find any official data on gold deposit and market in Nigeria.

Meanwhile, according to the report of the Auditor General of the Federation, total mining rents that accrued to the FG in 2014 was 1.5 billion naira. It came down to 889 million naira in 2017. That is a far cry from  revenue generated from gold mining by other countries such as South Africa.

The total revenue generated by the South African mining industry for the year ended 30 June 2019 was R529 billion. That is over 13 trillion naira.

 

Amid health and environmental hazards, Nigeria spends $2.4bn on generators in 2 decades

THOUGH emissions from electric generators contribute major health and environmental hazards in Nigeria, the country spends huge foreign exchange importing the alternative power sources.
According to data from the United Nations International Trade Statistics Database, UN Comtrade,  Nigeria has spent not less than 2.4 billion dollars on importation of generating sets in the last 24 years. 
UN Comtrade, the largest depository of international trade statistics, captures Nigeria’s generator imports between 1996 and 2019.
In 2013, the country imported 262.5 million dollars worth of generators, the highest in two decades.
The importation of generators has been on the rise since 1996 and reached the zenith in 2013.
Worth of electric generators imported by Nigeria between 1996 and 2019
Worth of electric generators imported by Nigeria between 1996 and 2019
This is not surprising as the average cumulative power supply received per day by Nigerian households between 2013 and 2015 was below 6 hours per day, according to a survey by NOI Polls.
In fact, the average operational capacity of power infrastructure in the country is estimated at 3,879 (MW).
The poor power supply in the country  has, therefore, forced Nigerians to seek alternative power sources. Between 2015 and 2019, Nigerians have spent nearly 500 million dollars on importation of generators.

READ ALSO: In Abuja, failing power supply disrupts operations at primary health centres

It is worth noting, however, that only 37 percent of the amount expended on generators in 2018 was spent in the subsequent year.
This necessarily does not mean that there was an improvement in the power supply.
In fact, the average daily supply of 3,800 megawatts (MW) in 2018 dropped to 3,775MW in 2019.
President of the Nigerian Association of Energy Economics, Prof. Yinka Omorogbe, once described the energy sector in Nigeria as ‘a dismal failure.’
A direct effect of the poor power supply is attributed to the 77.5 percent  Nigerians who have resorted to purchasing and using alternative sources of power such as generators and others, according to NOI Polls.
Nigeria is among the top six countries generating energy by back-up generators.
Others are India, Iraq, Pakistan, Venezuela, and Bangladesh.
These six countries account for over 50 percent of the electricity generated (and fuel burned) by back-up generators in the 167 countries modeled by International Finance Corporation, IFC.
The World Bank group estimates that Nigeria spends three times as much on back-up generator power as compared to the grid.
Generators contribute significantly to health, environmental hazard
Despite the huge amount spent on alternative energy, exhaust from generator contributes significantly to the emissions of fine particulate matter (PM2.5), sulfur dioxide (SO2), nitrous oxides (NOx ), carbon dioxide (CO2) and other pollutants that compromise human health and contribute to climate change.
A research conducted by IFC shows that the CO2 emitted from generators in Sub-Saharan Africa is equal to about 20 percent of the total emissions from vehicles—the environmental equivalent to adding about 22 million passenger vehicles onto the road.
“Nitrogen Oxides (NOx)emissions are associated with combustion, usually from burning of fossil fuel in vehicles or for energy generation.
“Exposure to NOx has been associated with increased risk of numerous respiratory illnesses.
“NOx can also form other pollutants that impact health (i.e. ozone, particles) and the environment (i.e. particles, acid rain).
“Our results suggest that generators account for 5 percent of NOx emissions across all modelled countries and 15 percent in Sub-Saharan Africa.”
There is also evidence associating excess noise with health challenges such as high blood pressure and hearing loss.
 Assessment in Nigeria from 2013-2015 showed noise levels of most common generators are beyond WHO limits (greater than 90db).

Missing Chibok schoolgirls reportedly escape Boko Haram’s custody

SOME of the remaining 112 Chibok Schoolgirls have reportedly escaped from the custody of Boko Haram, a terrorist group that has been responsible for several deaths in Nigeria.

According to a report by the CNN on Friday, January 29, one of the escaped schoolgirls, Halima Ali Maiyanga, called her father to say she and other captives have escaped the Boko Haram custody.

“She asked me. Is this my daddy? Is this my daddy, and she started crying. The crying was [so] much and I couldn’t hear her very well. I was crying too. I never expected to hear from her again,” Ali Maiyanga, Halima’s father reportedly said.

CNN added that Ali Maiyanga said he didn’t get a chance to speak to his daughter properly, as she was emotional and the call was short. But he said she and others are safe and being looked after by the Nigerian army.

The ICIR reached out to Sagir Musa, spokesperson to the Nigerian Army in a bid to confirm the development but he directed the reporter to the Nigerian Defence.

READ ALSO: Viral image of Nigerian soldiers lowering Boko Haram flag is old photo – not 2021 operation

Several efforts to reach the Nigerian Defence has proved abortive as at the time of filing this report.

On 14, April 2014, 276 female students were kidnapped from the Government Secondary School in the town of Chibok in Borno State by armed insurgent group, Boko Haram.

Since their abduction in 2014, the government has only been able to secure the release of 107 while 57 others reportedly escaped from their abductors, Boko Haram.

The whereabouts of the remaining 112 Chibok schoolgirls has remained a mystery the Nigerian government has failed to solve.

Rights groups, civil society organisations as well as personalities have accused the federal government of neglecting the remaining girls.

In 2020, a frontier group for the release of the abducted schoolgirls, Bring Back Our Girls Movement accused the Nigerian government of copying and pasting the press release from the previous year to commemorate six years disappearance of the Chibok schoolgirls.

“It is most sad and disheartening that the administration copied the statement from last year verbatim and pasted with minor updates like the date to deceive the public,” the group said in 2020.

Meanwhile in 2019, Muhammadu Buhari, the Nigerian President had promised that he would secure the release of the remaining 112 Chibok girls and others in Boko Haram captivity.

Buhari said this in a statement issued by Garba Shehu, his senior special assistant on media and publicity.

Buhari noted that his administration would ‘not rest’ until it secured the release of the remaining Chibok schoolgirls.

Other missing schoolgirls

While the abduction of the Chibok schoolchildren gained international attention, there are other schoolchildren missing whose parents’ hope of meeting them again seems bleak.

On February 19, 2018, more than 100 schoolgirls were kidnapped in Dapchi Town, Yobe State by suspected Boko haram insurgents.

A few days after, a substantial number of the schoolchildren reportedly re-appeared, however, the whereabouts of others are unknown and there has been no report about them.

Among the Dapchi Schoolgirls is Leah Sharibu, a 16-year-old Christian. There have been reports that Sharibu is still alive but securing her release has been an impossible task for the government.

Most recently is the abduction of seven orphans from Rachael’s Orphanage Home opposite UBE Junior Secondary School in Naharati, Abaji Area Council, Abuja.

The orphans were abducted on 24th, January 2020 at around 1 am by gunmen who have demanded 10 million naira ransom from the victim’s family.

About 44,000 persons most of which are children are currently missing in Africa according to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

ICRC stated that out of the 44,000 missing persons, the Red Cross estimates that about 23,000 of these cases are from Nigeria.

According to the ICRC, due to several cases of conflicts, violence and insurgency, mostly in the Northern part of the country, Nigeria remains the epicentre of missing persons in Africa.

FG considers lockdown in Abuja, Lagos, others as COVID-19 cases surpass 127,000

THE federal government says any other COVID-19 lockdown would be in Abuja, Lagos and other urban cities across the country.

Mukhtar Muhammad, national incident manager of the Presidential Task Force on COVID-19, disclosed this when he appeared on Channels Tv programme, Sunrise Daily on Friday.

According to Muhammad, an analysis of the COVID-19 cases has shown that a bulk of the infections are arising from major cities in the FCT, Lagos, Plateau and Kaduna states.

“Certainly, even if we are going to have a lockdown, it is not going to be a total lockdown. A couple of weeks back, we analysed the data and we identified the hotspot local government areas.

“Mostly, the areas affected are the urban local governments in Lagos, Abuja, Kaduna, Plateau. Even in most other states, it is the urban areas that are involved. So, if we are going to have any restrictions, it will be in these areas,” Muhammad said.

As at the time of filing this report, the aforementioned states hold the highest number of cases in Nigeria.

Lagos state has recorded a total of 46,935 cases, FCT; 16,341, Plateau state; 7,740 while Kaduna state has recorded 7,458 cases.

The ICIR had reported how COVID-19 cases have been increasing in Nigeria since the second wave of the pandemic hit the most populated African country.

Visit the ICIR COVID-19 portal

Nigeria has recorded a total of 127,560 positive cases out of 1,270,523 tested samples with 1,550 deaths related to COVID-19.

Out of the total 127,560 positive cases, 101,511 have recovered, only 24,499 are active cases.

The Chase for COVID-19 Vaccines

Despite the success in the recovery rate of COVID-19 cases, the Nigerian government is in what some have described as ‘hot chase’ to purchase the vaccine to the pandemic.

On Thursday, 28th January, Osagie Ehanire, the Nigeria Minister of Health said the government has secured additional 41 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines.

Nigeria COVID-19 lockdown
COVID-19 vaccine

Ehanire stated that the additional 41 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines would be obtained through the African Vaccine Acquisition Task Team (AVATT), a vaccine strategy organised by the African Union.

“A mechanism for the African Vaccine Acquisition Task Team (AVATT), of which the minister of health of Nigeria is a member, and the chair is the president of South Africa, was inaugurated in November 2020.

“At the meeting, we had on the 6th of January, it was announced that they had a mix of 270 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines going to be ready because they are on order.

“Now, we immediately applied for 10 million doses, but at the meeting, we had two days ago, the AVATT team announced that they actually had now done allocation according to population.

Due to Nigeria’s large population estimated to be over 200 million, Ehanire said ‘Nigeria is allocated 41 million doses of vaccines of three types’.

Meanwhile, Bill Gates, American philanthropist had advised the Nigerian government to prioritise fixing its public health care system rather than expending its health budget for the purchase of COVID-19 vaccines.

Gates said this during a virtual press conference on Tuesday ahead of the launch of the 2021 Bill and Melinda Gates Annual Letters.

“I’m an advocate for the government to have more resources and prioritise health. Obviously, I’m not a voter in Nigeria, so Nigeria can decide that independently.

“So, my advice is that the primary health care system is what’s super important and that with those finite resources, you have to prioritise expenditure,” Gates said.

NCC investigating data depletion, wrongful deductions by mobile networks

THE Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) says it is investigating unreasonable depletion of mobile data and wrong deductions of customer credit by mobile network providers.

The investigation will seek “to get to the bottom of why consumers are experiencing data depletion and the possibility of compensating them for wrong deductions, which may arise from short message service (SMS).

“We have instituted and we have insisted that despite the fall in data price, that forensic audit must go on and must be concluded and the outcome communicated to the CEOs of telecom companies.”

Umar Danbatta,  executive vice-chairman of the NCC, who stated this on Thursday in a statement signed by Ikechukwu Adinde, NCC director of public affairs, said the commission was committed to ensuring maximum protection for consumers as that was its key focus area.

Danbatta said the NCC had accomplished significant improvements through various initiatives aimed at putting mobile operators on their toes.

Danbatta said operators would be made to comply with whatever directions were given after the investigation, with a view to ensuring maximum protection for telecom consumers.

The statement said, “He, however, noted that the Commission has developed Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) on data depletion, which are designed to inform consumers on activities that may result in faster depletion of their data as well as enlighten them on measures to mitigate such. The FAQs are accessible from the Commission’s website.

“Over the years, the NCC has given a boost to consumer protection empowerment through sustained awareness creation and education on consumer rights and privileges. It was for this reason that the Commission declared the year 2016 as the ‘Year of the Consumer’ with elaborate programmes to further underscore the NCC’s commitment to consumer protection, information and education.

READ ALSO: GLO, Airtel refuse to replace lost SIM cards for subscribers despite NCC directive

“The Commission has intensified its compliance monitoring exercises with the acquisition of efficient tools and capacities to bring sanity in the industry all in a bid to improve the quality of consumer experience.

“Among several initiatives, Danbatta said the introduction of the Do-Not-Disturb (DND) has helped over 30 million consumers to block unsolicited text messages on their phones while stern regulatory actions are constantly taken by the regulator against any operator that prevents a consumer from subscribing to the DND service.”

The statement said the Commission launched the 622 Toll-free number, which consumers could use to lodge and escalate service-related complaints to the Commission for resolution, stating that thousands of complaints had been successfully resolved since its introduction.

It restated the commitment of NCC to the protection and empowerment of telecom consumers using the over 208 million active telephone lines in the country,. It noted that consumers remained critical stakeholders in the Nigerian telecommunications sector and so must be adequately protected to ensure sustainability.

Nigerian farmers to receive compensation from Shell Nigeria over oil spills

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A Dutch Court of Appeal sitting in the Hague has ordered the Nigerian subsidiary of Shell to pay compensation in a case brought by four Nigerian farmers who alleged widespread pollution in Niger Delta.
The legal tussle, which has lingered since 2008, was brought by four Nigerian farmers alleging widespread pollution on their land by oil spills. The court said the amount of compensation would be “determined at a later stage”

The court also directed Shell Nigeria and its Anglo-Dutch parent company to install a leak detection system on the Oruma pipeline to prevent future oil spills that could cause damage of land and water in the Niger Delta region.

However, the ruling could be challenged in a Dutch Supreme Court by Shell, as the multinational oil giant argued that saboteurs were responsible for the leaks. In its ruling, the court said the oil company could not convince the jury ‘beyond a reasonable doubt’ that saboteurs were responsible rather than poor maintenance.

The spills were said to have occurred between 2004 and 2007, but pollution from leaking oil pipelines is a perennial problem in the Niger Delta.

“This makes Shell Nigeria responsible for the damage caused by the leaks in the villages of Goi and Oruma,” the court said.

READ ALSO: Fishermen report oil spill at Chevron’s Funiwa oilfield off Bayelsa coastline

Friend of the Earth Netherlands, an international environmental rights group that supported the farmer’s case in the Netherlands case,celebrated the court’s verdict in a tweet.

“Tears of joy here. After 13 years, we’ve won,” the group’s Dutch branch tweeted following the ruling.

Data obtained from the Nigerian Oil Spill Monitor, which records the location of oil spill areas in the country revealed that an estimated 240,000 barrels of crude oil are spilt in the Niger Delta every year, polluting waterways, contaminating crops, and releasing toxic chemicals into the air.

2011 report by the UN Environment Programme estimates that after years of repeated oil spills in the Niger Delta, it would take 30 years to reverse damage to public health and the regional ecosystem.

Royal Dutch Shell stated it was ‘disappointed’ with the verdict of the court, alleging that the oil spills were as a result of sabotage.

“We continue to believe that the spills in Oruma and Goi were the result of sabotage,” it said in a statement.

Shell Nigeria is also currently involved in an ongoing legal dispute in the Hague brought by widows of former Nigerian environmental activists who were killed in 1994, blaming the multinational company for its alleged complicity in the unlawful arrest, detention and execution of their husbands by the Nigerian government.

 

However, Shell denies the allegations, challenging the decision of the District Court of The Hague to hear the case, stating it lacked jurisdiction to hear the suit.

Corruption ranking: Characters behind report are Buhari’s opposition, says Garba Shehu

GARBA Shehu, spokesperson to Muhammadu Buhari, Nigeria’s president, has said that the persons behind the recently published global corruption ranking are the opposition of the current administration.

Shehu said this in a statement issued on his official Twitter handle in reaction to the Transparency International’s 2020 Corruption Perception Index (CPI) that ranked Nigeria as West Africa’s most corrupt country after Guinea-Bissau.

“We are also not unaware of the characters behind the TI in Nigeria whose opposition to the Buhari administration is not hidden,” Shehu said.

He stated that the Buhari administration had repeatedly challenged the ranking while labelling it as ‘sensational and baseless.’


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According to the presidential spokesperson, its anti-graft agency, Economic Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), had recovered 1.2 trillion naira in the last decade, 939bn naira of it was between 2015-2019.

He added that the current administration had also deployed preventive measures to curb corruption and fish out ghost workers from the federal civil service.

“Additionally, preventative instruments deployed by this administration such as Treasury Single Account (TSA), Integrated Personnel and Payroll Information System (IPPIS) coverage expansion and the removal of 54,000 ghost workers from federal civil service saving us 200bn naira annually serve as evidence that perception is not reality,” Shehu further stated.

In the 2020 ranking, Nigeria, again, slipped down the ladder to 149 (out of 180) on Transparency International’s 2020 Corruption Perception Index (CPI), scoring 25 points out of 100.

In 2019, Nigeria was ranked 146th, with a total score of 26 (out of 100).  In 2018 and 2017, the country maintained a CPI score of 27, ranking 144 and 148 respectively.

Nigeria ranked 136 out of 176 with a score of 27 in 2014, one year before Buhari was elected.

The 180-member nations are usually ranked from 0 to 100. While zero indicates the participating country is ‘highly corrupt,’ 100 signifies the highest level of transparency – ‘very clean.’

However, The ICIR had reported how contract inflation, breach of procurement process, among others, reigned supreme during the peak of COVID-19 in 2020.

Several government agencies, including the National Biosafety Management Agency (NBMA), the Nigerian Centre for Disease Control (NCDC), among others, were found culpable of illegal conducts.

While the 2020 CPI report shows that corruption is more pervasive in countries least equipped to handle COVID-19 pandemic and other global crises due to the relaxed procurement process, Shehu did not address the several breaches of procurement process during the COVID-19.

Shehu said the federal government was currently analysing the source of the data used for the 2020 ranking.

“We are currently analysing the sources of data used in arriving at the latest Transparency International (TI) report on Corruption Perceptions Index in Nigeria since by their own admission, they don’t gather their own data,” Shehu further stated.