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When Death Brings Urban Renewal In Nigeria

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Ibadan 2

For the Yoruba in Nigeria, funerals provide an opportunity to renovate run-down family homes and their surroundings.


By Kolawole Talabi

Mama Debo is a house-proud widow who takes special care of the one-storey residence her husband bequeathed his entire family. She complains that her dirty tenants have become a nuisance since his death. Ideally, she says, she would have evicted them from the property, but as the residence belongs to the extended family she doesn’t feel able to.

The family house is a quintessential symbol of genealogy for the Yoruba people and a source of pride. It’s a centre for ceremonies – christenings, weddings, retirement parties and, of course, funerals. From the smallest villages to the biggest cities of Yorubaland, family houses are architectural heirlooms passed from one generation to the next.

Tradition forbids people from selling the houses. They are often shared between the wives of a deceased patriarch – the size of a woman’s share is related mostly to her seniority and sometimes to the number of children she has.

“The family is an undying concept in Yoruba culture,” explains Kunle Ogundoro, a PhD candidate and social commentator. “Hence renovating one’s family house is an image-making endeavour.”

And that renovation often happens when somebody dies.

“Deaths [especially those of the elderly] bring members of the family together. The idea of beautifying the family home is another way of bestowing honour on the deceased.”

When Mama Debo’s husband died three years ago, relatives came from far and wide to attend the funeral in Ibadan. Today, she is the sole occupant of the landlord’s section of the family house – a relatively modern apartment in the New Adeoyo district of the city. Her grown-up children have left to fend for themselves. Despite her displeasure with the tenants’ poor hygiene and unsanitary habits, the property is well-maintained.

Mama Debo lounges in her parlour, a “family room” that is modestly furnished with four armchairs and a sofa that serves as an ideal spot from which to watch Nollywood blockbusters. There’s also a dining table and chairs.

“We didn’t renovate our [family] house prior to the burial ceremony of our husband,” she recalls. “The owner himself had painted his property before his demise.”

Mama Debo sits in the parlour of her family home [Hamed Adedeji/Al Jazeera]
Mama Debo sits in the parlour of her family home [Hamed Adedeji/Al Jazeera]
Almost every family in Yorubaland adheres to the custom of refurbishing the family house in preparation for funerals.

In many cases, years of neglect have turned these residences into run-down eyesores. So Nigerians and, in particular, members of the Yoruba ethnic group use family occasions and ceremonies as a justification to upgrade their family house to meet modern aesthetic styles. Since no single person can claim absolute ownership of a family house, its maintenance is often a collaborative effort.

The wives and children of the deceased pool their funds to replace old furniture, repair peeling paintwork and renovate other worn-out fixtures. Some wealthy families will even repair damaged neighbourhood roads, particularly those that lead to the residence of the deceased, in order to bolster the family’s image.

But the rivalry that is common within polygamous families in Nigeria can make such efforts challenging.

“I personally don’t believe in the custom of refurbishing a deceased [person’s] property. Why can’t it be done when the person is still alive to enjoy and appreciate it?” says Mama Debo. “I think people do it for show. They want their guests to think they are more than they really are.”

Just across the street from her residence is a newly renovated family house. The patriarch of the Oyebode family has recently died and in preparation for his funeral, his residence had been painted in bright hues. It stands out amid the other weather-battered properties in the neighbourhood. A colourful banner hangs proudly on the façade – an obituary of the deceased.

Unbeknown to the passers-by who stop to admire the house, the Oyebodes have also contributed to the aesthetics of their neighbourhood and by extension, the city.

The Oba’s palace was the seat of government before the city became a British protectorate in 1893. The edifice was upgraded to reflect the influence of the colonial overlords. But the surrounding buildings retain the ambience of the distant past. Mud houses with rusted corrugated roofs spread out in all directions.

The Oja’ba, the King’s Market, is directly opposite the palace and remains one of the busiest commercial centres in the old town. 

Across the city, statues of heroes adorn major road intersections and roundabouts – a testament to the value afforded to history and heritage here.

“Yoruba culture is very dynamic and [our] society is very articulate in keeping this dynamism,” says Niyi Akangbe, a lecturer in the African languages department of the University of Ibadan. “It is part of the unwritten tradition of the Yoruba people to give a new touch to their buildings when the elderly ones die.”

Suspected Killer Of British MP, Jo Cox Remanded In Custody.

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The Late Jo Cox
The Late Jo Cox

Thomas Mair, the suspected killer of British Parliamentarian, Jo Cox, has appeared in court and has been remanded in custody.

Forty one year old Cox was shot and stabbed in Birstall, West Yorkshire, on Thursday.

The suspect, a 52-year old man, is also charged with possession of a firearm with intent to commit an indictable offence and possession of an offensive weapon.

He refused to give his correct name and did not reply when asked to confirm his address and date of birth.

“My name is death to traitors, freedom for Britain,” he said.

He is due to appear at the Old Bailey on Monday.

Cox, who was married with two children, was about to attend a constituency surgery when she was killed.

A 77-year-old man who came to her aid was also injured and remains in a stable condition in hospital.

Vigils were held across the country on Friday evening in honour of Cox.

Earlier in the day, British Prime Minister David Cameron and Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn, visited her constituency. Also, US president Barrack Obama had called the late lawmaker’s husband to condole with him.

 

South Africa Virginity Bursaries Unlawful

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SA virgins....

The Commission for Gender Equality in South Africa has ruled that university bursaries offered to proven female virgins were unlawful and should be scrapped.

The bursary scheme was introduced by the Uthukela municipality in KwaZulu-Natal province as part of efforts to reduce the prevalence of HIV/Aids and child pregnancies.

When the scheme was unveiled earlier this year, the mayor of Uthukela, Dudu Mazibuko said the virginity tests would not be carried out by the municipality or universities.

Instead, schoolgirls who had already undergone the tests as part of an annual ceremony hosted by the Zulu king would qualify for the bursaries.

But the gender commission ruled that a bursary “contingent on a female student’s virginity is fundamentally discriminatory”.

In a ruling made after some rights groups had protested the initiative, the commission said “It goes against the ethos of the constitutional provisions in relation to dignity, equality and discrimination,” adding that “Virginity is not intrinsic to the task of studying,”

The Uthukela municipality, which is in a socially conservative part of South Africa, has not yet commented.

The commission has given it 60 days to respond to its recommendation that the scheme should be closed.

An estimated 6.3 million people in South Africa are HIV-positive, with more than one in 10 people living with the virus. Teenage pregnancy is also on the rise in South Africa.

 

FG Charges Saraki, Ekweremadu With Forgery

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Senate President Bukola Saraki and his deputy, Ike Ekweremadu
Senate President Bukola Saraki and his deputy, Ike Ekweremadu

The federal government has slammed Senate President Bukola Saraki and his deputy, Ike Ekweremadu with a two-count charge of criminal conspiracy and forgery.

This followed a petition written to the police in 2015 by a member of the Senate, Suleiman Hunkuyi, on behalf of the senate Unity Forum, alleging that the Senate Standing Rule 2015 which was used in the election of Saraki and Ekweremadu as Senate President and deputy respectively, was forged.

The suit is coming more than a year after the police commenced investigations into the matter.

Also charged alongside the two principal officers are the immediate past Clerk of the National Assembly, Salisu Maikasuwa, and his deputy, Benedict Efeturi.

The case has been assigned to Justice Yusuf Haliru of the Federal High Court, Abuja.

This is being perceived in some quarters as another dimension in the seeming crisis between the presidency and the legislature, which could be traced to the manner with which the election of principal officers in the National Assembly was conducted.

It would be recalled that the Senate President is still undergoing trial at the Code of Conduct Tribunal, CCT, for alleged false declaration of assets and receiving salary even after his tenure as the governor of Kwara State had elapsed.

 

 

Military JTF In Niger Delta Foils Attack On Agip, Arrests 19 Vandals

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Operation Pulio Shield

The Military Joint Task Force operation to protect oil installations in the Niger Delta, Operation Pulo Shield, on Friday said it foiled an attack on Agip’s oilfield and has arrested 19 suspected vandals in several operations since May 2016.

This was contained in a statement made by Isa Ado,a colonel and spokesman of the JTF, which was made available to the News Agency of Nigeria, NAN.

Ado said  while the troops were on patrol on June 9 along Brass water ways of Bayelsa foiled an attempt by suspected pipeline vandals to destroy Agip’s oil pipeline at Okpoma Community.

He explained that the suspected vandals had dug and planted dynamites beneath the pipeline location in a swamp for detonation before the troops foiled the sabotage operation and recovered two dynamite detonators, cable wire and battery.

Ado added that on May 28, troops of the JTF arrested six suspected pipeline vandals and oil thieves in Ogbia Local Government Area of Bayelsa along Ebelebiri and Agba communities.

Eight boats loaded with illegally acquired crude oil were destroyed while the suspects were handed over to the prosecuting agency.

During a cordon and search operation in Oporoma Community of Delta, ten suspected pipeline vandals were arrested and weapons recovered, including one pistol, 195 rounds of 7.62mm special ammunition, 14 handheld radio set, 30 detonating cords and several phones without SIM cards.

In a similar development, the Maritime Component of the Joint Force, the Nigerian Navy Ship, NNS, Delta on May 26 and June 14, respectively, arrested three suspected coordinators of several pipeline bombings across the region.

The spokesman added that one of the arrested suspects reportedly confessed to being part of the group that bombed the Nigerian Petroleum Developing Company, NPDC, crude oil pipeline at Escravos, Warri South West Local Government Area of Delta.

Ado said that several bomb related items were recovered from the vandals who bombed the Escravos facility.

He assured that the joint military force will not be deterred by the activities of criminals and remains highly committed in carrying out its mandate professionally within the Niger Delta region.

According to him, efforts are underway to round up fleeing criminals including pipeline vandals and to dismantle all militant camps in the region.

He urged people of the region to support the force by providing credible and timely information to aid their operations.

162 Nigerian Migrants Held in Libyan Prisons Repatriated Home

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Nigerian Migrants from Libya

The International Organisation for Migration, IOM, Libya on Thursday assisted 162 stranded Nigerians migrants, including 28 women and 3 children, to return home to Nigeria from Libya.

Of the group, 146 had spent months in immigration detention centres, namely Abu Saleem, Qarapoly and al Zawia detentions centres.

The repatriation was in close cooperation with the Libyan authorities, the Nigerian Embassy in Tripoli and the IOM mission in Nigeria.

The returnees came on board a chartered flight that departed Tripoli’s Mitiga Airport and arrived in Lagos the same afternoon.

The repatriated migrants were received by IOM Nigeria at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport and were provided with cash grants upon arrival. 20 of them will be provided with some reintegration supports.

Before departing Libya all of the migrants were provided with hygiene kits, clothes and shoes. A mobile patrol from the Libyan Directorate of Combating Illegal Migration, DCIM, escorted the buses to Mitiga airport.

The circumstances of this group were similar to the other migrants who were previously repatriated by IOM from Libya. Almost all the migrants traveling on this charter were detained after they were intercepted at sea, trying to get to Europe.

Some of the migrants who spoke explained why they felt compelled to embark on these perilous journeys.

Omar, a 19 year-old, who was in tears, narrated his ordeal. “I made it to Libya six months ago, and I settled in Garaboli city, 60 km east of Tripoli, with the intention of travelling to Italy, where I was arrested by a militia member together with other migrants. He threatened to send us to prison if we refused to work for him.

“We worked at his farm, for no money at all. When we tried to escape he asked us to pay 500 dinars ($360) for our release. Then he put us in a room and shot at us with his gun. I was shot in the leg. He then threw gasoline on us and set us on fire. I was severely burned. I managed to escape from the farm and I was eventually taken to the hospital by police who found me lying on the side of the road.”

Adama, a 38-year-old father of three, living with his mother borrowed $5,000 to travel. He arrived in Libya five months ago and spent three months in the detention center. “It does not matter which country, any country in Europe is a paradise for me and worthy of any risk to reach, even if the price is my life,” he said.

Abdul, a 25-year-old paraplegic, said his physical condition did not prevent him from working as an auto mechanic in Nigeria after dropping out of school, to help his parents and his brothers. However, he lost his job and struggled to survive.

His frustration meant that he was easily convinced when his friends in Italy persuaded him that there would be plenty of opportunities for him under Italian disability laws. His journey was much harder than other migrants anyone else because of his condition.

When he arrived in Libya, he was forced to work for two months in an electronic repair shop owned by a brother of one of the smugglers in Sabha, South Libya, to pay for his passage to Tripoli. Upon his arrival in Tripoli last February, he tried to find work to raise money for his passage on the boat.

He was however, arrested just two weeks after he arrived. “I chose the humanitarian repatriation although I’m sure that the situation at home is much worse. I have to face my family with empty hands after all that they spent to get me here in the first place. I hope the IOM will help in securing income just as it helped me to secure my return to my country,” said Abdul.

Aicha, a 39 year-old mother of two, arrived in Libya five months ago via the desert. She had left her two children with her husband in search of a better life. She said, “It was a long and hard trip where my life was threatened twice when I fell down from the truck between Agadez (Niger) and Al Qatrun (Libya) because of huge amount of migrants that were on the back of the truck. After my arrival in Tripoli, I found work as a maid in one of the connection houses – which is more like houses of prostitution. Eventually, I had to escape and began to think seriously about the return. Luckily I heard from a friend that IOM organizes voluntary repatriation so I registered with the embassy.”

Despite their journeys of hope ending in detention centres, these migrants consider themselves lucky to have escaped death trying to cross the Mediterranean, which this year has claimed the lives of over 2,438 migrants and refugees on the central Mediterranean route.

The fund for this charter was provided by the Swiss Secretariat of Migration, under the project Provision of Humanitarian Repatriation and Reintegration for Stranded Migrants in Libya.

US Cancels Nigerian Lawmakers’ Visas As House investigate Sex Scandal

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House-of-Rep 2013

The United States Embassy has cancelled the visa given to three members of the House of Representatives, just as the House is set to investigate the lawmakers over sexual misconduct allegedly committed while they were in the United States of America.

This was made known by one of the accused lawmakers, Mark Gbillah, who revealed in a letter he wrote to the American ambassador, that they were not given fear hearing before their visas were revoked.

Meanwhile the Chairman, House Committee on Media, Abdulrazak Namdas, also revealed that the House had constituted a committee to investigate the three lawmakers.

This came on the heel of a letter from the US Ambassador to Nigeria, James Entwistle to Speaker Yakubu Dogara.

The letter, dated June 9 stated that three of some ten members of the House who recently travelled to Cleveland, Ohio, as participants in the International Visitor Leadership Programme on good governance, engaged in sexual misconduct.

Part of the letter reads: “We received troubling allegations regarding the behaviour of three members of the delegation to the US Government’s flagship professional exchange programme.

“The US Department of State and the Cleveland Council on World Affairs received reports from employees of the Cleveland hotel, where the representatives stayed, alleging that the representatives engaged in the following behaviour:

“Mohammed Garba Gololo allegedly grabbed a housekeeper in his hotel room and solicited her for sex. While the housekeeper reported this to her management, this incident could have involved local law enforcement and resulted in legal consequences for the Representative

“Mark Terseer Gbillah and Samuel Ikon allegedly requested that hotel parking attendants assist them to solicit prostitutes.”

The decision of the House to investigate the lawmakers came as the US formally cancelled its visas from the three lawmakers, an indication that they had been barred from future trips to the United States.

The affected members are Mohammed Garba-Gololo (Bauchi State); Terseer Gbillah (Benue State), and Samuel Ikon (Cross River State).

The three legislators were members of a team of 10 lawmakers nominated to attend the leadership programme, which took place in Cleveland, Ohio, between April 7 and 13 this year.

Some of the members who participated in the programme were Chairman, House Committee on the Diaspora Affairs, Rita Orji; Deputy Chairman, House Committee on Media and Public Affairs, Gaza Jonathan; Ayo Omidiran; Danburam Abubakar and Nkole Ndukwe.

 

Former Customs’ Boss Abdullahi Dikko Arrested

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Former CG, Nigeria Customs Service, Abdullahi Dikko
Former CG, Nigeria Customs Service, Abdullahi Dikko

The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, has detained a former Comptroller General of Customs, Abdullahi Dikko.

He was yesterday quizzed in connection with an alleged N42billion fraud.

Dikko was said to have acquired a N2 billion mansion at 1, Audu Ogbe Street, Jabi, Abuja.

Besides, the EFCC said it has traced how about N2.6billion was withdrawn from Nigeria Customs Service, NCS, and remitted into the accounts of some companies floated by a former Assistant Comptroller General who served under Dikko.

The anti-graft agency had been on Dikko’s trail since January 8 when its operatives stormed his home, but Dikko was said to have travelled out of the country. The EFCC launched a discreet manhunt for him, seeking help from some agencies, including the INTERPOL.

The former Customs’ boss eventually turned himself in to the EFCC yesterday.

He arrived at the EFCC’s Abuja headquarters at about 10am. His interrogation lasted about eight hours.

As at press time today, he was still being detained by the commission for the continuation of his interrogation today.

“The former Customs boss is at the moment being quizzed over two key allegations bordering on criminal conspiracy, diversion of public funds, theft, abuse of office and living above legitimate means,” said a source at the EFCC.

 

EgyptAir Crash: Voice Recorder Recovered

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EgyptAir_Boeing_777

The cockpit voice recorder from the EgyptAir flight MS804, that crashed last month has been found in the Mediterranean.

Investigators say the device, commonly known as the “black box” was damaged and had to be pulled out in several stages but its memory unit was intact.

“The vessel’s equipment was able to salvage the part of the recorder that contains the memory unit, which is considered the most important part of the recording device,” a statement by Egyptian Authorities read.

A search vessel with an underwater robot has been scouring the crash site and has sent back images of wreckage.

The recorder will now be taken to the Egyptian city of Alexandria to be studied.

Flight MS804 was on its way from Paris to Cairo on May when it crashed into the Mediterranean, killing all 66 people on board.

It is not clear yet what caused the aircraft to go down.

FG Issues Alert On New ISIS Mobile App 

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Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed
Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed

The Federal Government has alerted Nigerians about a newly-launched mobile application developed by the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, ISIS, for propagating Jihad to children.

In a statement issued in Abuja late Thursday, the Minister of Information and Culture,

Lai Mohammed, said the mobile application, tagged ‘Huroof’ (Arabic alphabets or letters), is designed by ISIS to teach children the Arabic alphabets with the aid of guns, military tanks and cannons.

”The application utilizes colourful illustrations that attract and engage the attention of young children,” the Minister said.

He urged members of the public in general and parents in particular to be vigilant and to prevent their children and wards from being indoctrinated.