Wednesday, 25 December 2024
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How do you respond to the electrocution of a promising university undergraduate, a first-class material at that? You can say “it is God’s will” — as it is our custom in Nigeria — or you can say that once again, another light has been dimmed in clearly avoidable circumstances. Oluchi Anekwe, a 300-level accounting student of the University of Lagos, was killed on Tuesday when a naked wire fell on her from an electric pole. Since there was no natural disaster such as a storm, you get the sense that the deadly cable had been hanging dangerously for a while. It was somebody’s responsibility, I guess, to maintain those cables. The “somebody” failed in his duty and there are no consequences. Life goes on. We await the next electrocution, the next “God’s will”.

So, how many people have died needlessly in Nigeria? If someone illegally goes on an electric pole to tamper with the installation and gets electrocuted, we can say there was a trespass and a self-affliction. It is still not acceptable for any Nigerian to die carelessly — whether or not it is self-afflicted — but official negligence makes it all the more painful and we should, ordinarily, be full of regrets. Only God knows how many people have died from electrocution in Nigeria for reasons that are considered to be God’s will. The rain falls and a weak electric pole comes down on innocent road users or passers-by and send them to their early graves. It is “God’s will”. It is the will of God that people should be careless about their jobs and go away scot-free, right?

Could it be God’s will that people should do the right and sensible thing? To start with, cables are hardly laid over the ground these days. They are laid below the surface — like sewage and water pipes. It not only solves an aesthetic problem, it addresses a health and safety issue. I am shocked anytime I see newly developed areas in Nigeria still laying surface cables on rickety poles. Let us admit that the electric cables have been over the ground for decades and we can do nothing about that for now — but could it be God’s will that electricity officials who get paid to oversee the electric infrastructure should be diligent in enforcing and maintaining safety so that naked cables stop killing innocent Nigerians? How many people have to die before enough is enough?

Did you hear about the container that fell off a trailer and killed a family of three in Lagos recently? It was the will of God, I was told, because if God had not willed it, there was no way the accident could have happened. You know the line: were it not for God’s will, the container would have missed them by a few inches or they wouldn’t have been on the road at that time. It was their destiny. Do you know how many containers regularly fall off trailers and crush people to death in Nigeria? Do you know that the last one is not going to be the last one? Do you know that there are rare cases of such accidents in some other countries — countries where the name of God is used as a curse word or as a joke? Why should God decide to be killing his children in Nigeria with containers all the time?

I am wondering if it is God’s will that safety standards should be enforced on our roads by those who rule over us. I am wondering if it is God’s will that officials who certified a vehicle roadworthy should be called to account for their negligence after accidents. I am wondering if broken down vehicles should be left in the middle of the road at night. I am wondering if it is God’s will that our streetlights should work so that people will stop dying in avoidable accidents at night. I am wondering if it God’s will that our roads should be littered with potholes that serve as death traps, sending sorrows to homes on a daily basis. I am wondering if it God’s will that hospitals are ill-equipped and people die daily from treatable ailments.

Some years ago, a friend’s younger brother fell ill at midnight. He managed to get a neighbour’s car to take the brother to the hospital. He got to the gate of the estate and found it firmly locked. The security guard said they were under instruction not to open the gate until 6am. All pleadings fell on deaf ears. By the time somebody came to his senses and ordered the gate opened, it was too late. My friend’s sibling had died right in the vehicle — according to “God’s will”. If God did not want the brother to die, the conventional wisdom declares, the brother would not have fallen ill at night when the gates were locked. In fact, the brother would not have fallen ill at all. My friend was traumatised for years and eventually relocated from Nigeria, unable to overcome the devastation.

In godless countries, it is God’s will that there should be emergency services. It is God’s will that you dial a number at anytime of the day and the ambulance and paramedics show up. It is God’s will that life-threatening cases are treated without any pre-condition of making cash deposits. But in our godly country, it is God’s will, we are tutored, for bullet-wound victims to bleed to death. It is God’s will that accident victims are abandoned to die because there is nobody to guarantee payment of hospital bills. It is God’s will that our hospitals should be in a deplorable state, and the people who embezzled the funds and mismanaged the commonwealth are able to fly abroad for the best medical treatment, while the people are dying from typhoid and malaria.

An older friend of mine is diabetic. He had managed his condition very well for years, for at least 10 years, until one fateful day in 2011. His wife was having her birthday. He decided to surprise her by taking a gift to her at her shop somewhere in Mushin, Lagos. As he parked his car and made to walk up to the shopping complex with the surprise package in his hand, his leg got stuck between the failing concrete slabs on the gutter. A few weeks later, he had to have his right leg amputated from below the knee. He subsequently lost his job — as there is no protection for disabled people in Nigeria — and spent a fortune rehabilitating himself, setting himself up in business and buying a prosthetic leg. I am even not calculating the emotional cost to his life.

I was made to understand that it was “God’s will” for my friend to experience what he did. Some will even go to the extent that maybe he had committed a sin and God wanted to punish him. Maybe he had done some evil to some people and it was Karma time. And I was thinking: but could it also be God’s will that the local government should have maintained the gutters? Could it be God’s will that the same council that sends thugs to harass traders and motorists to extort all kinds of taxes and levies from them should also care a bit about the safety of citizens? Could it be God’s will that part of the millions of naira going into the coffers of councils should be spent on building a decent concrete slab on a gutter? Could it be God’s will for the government to take responsibility for its failings?

I understand God’s will in a simpler way: that is, I have done all that is humanly possible but still could not help the situation. I then surrender to the higher authority. If the electricity officials had properly maintained the cables and there was a storm that caused Anekwe to be electrocuted, I will say: what more could human beings have done? If the officials responsible for maintenance are investigated and charged to court for negligence and manslaughter, I will say we are making every effort to enforce health and safety rules in Nigeria. But from all I can see, the tears in the eyes of the grief-stricken parents will still be fresh when another “God’s will” brings another loosely hanging cable down to kill another innocent Nigerian. You call that God’s will? Really?

And Four
Other Things…

ASSETS’ LIABILITY

PUNCH reported on Saturday that governors elected on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC) have made it clear that they will not publish their assets — unlike President Muhammadu Buhari. I’m not surprised. I have always maintained that APC is a coalition based on winning an election, not based on shared values or overriding principles. Many politicians simply rode on Buhari’s popularity to power in a mutually beneficial arrangement — otherwise known as “friends with benefits”. Yet some of these governors fiercely criticised ex-President Goodluck Jonathan for saying “I don’t give a damn” after criticisms of his no-disclosure stand. Hypocrisy.

SANI VS FAYOSE
Have you noticed an emerging subtext in the ongoing criticism of President Muhammadu Buhari by Governor Ayo Fayose of Ekiti State? Senator Shehu Sani from Kaduna State has emerged as the counterweight. For every word against Buhari, he offers his own. I notice that the president does not spend time reacting to Fayose’s statements, and maybe Sani is the “talking head” arrangement or he is just trying to fill the gap as a volunteer. Whatever the case is, Nigerians are entitled to a decent debate full of facts and less of insults. As a journalist, I am having fun. Thrilling.

BOMBING IDPs
Wickedness, as it goes, does not have a code of conduct. It is impossible to understand why heartless terrorists will chase people from their homes and still pursue them to a camp to kill them. The killing of seven school children at the Malkohi camp of the internally displaced persons (IDPs) in Yola, Adamawa State, on Friday is yet another proof that we are not dealing with human beings. Attacking a church means nothing to them; bombing a mosque is pure routine; and now they pursue disoriented and displaced people to their camps and murder them in cold blood. Cruel.

FIRST WOMAN
Isn’t it heart-warming that Nigeria’s oldest bank, First Bank, is about to have its first female chairperson in its 121 years of history? Mrs Ibukun Awosika, the chairperson-designate, is one Nigerian who does business with integrity and has proved herself to be an inspiration to Nigerian women. I’m very happy for her. My dream for Nigerian women is for them to break new grounds, to be given the opportunity to lead, to be respected for their brains, not just the beauty. When we look at the last 20 years, it has been a positive trajectory. Things can only get better. Encouraging.

 

A boy was hospitalized after his mother forced him to eat frogs that were still alive.

The 3-year-old boy was hospitalized with a parasitic infection after his mother forced him to eat live frogs to cure his epilepsy.

The woman, known only as Mrs. Li, became concerned when her son began to show signs of what she thought was epilepsy.


Li said that her friends and neighbors advised her to try an ancient way to cure the epilepsy by swallowing live frogs.

Neighbors said that another boy in their neighborhood tried this method and it was successful.

“So we went to catch live frogs to feed my son,” Li said.

After catching 3 live frogs, the entire family, who lives in Maoming, Guangdong, China, held the boy down and forced him to swallow them alive.

This did not cure the boy. Instead, the mother found several abnormal masses growing on his body.

The boy was taken to a hospital, where he was diagnosed with sparganosis, a parasitic infection caused by the larvae of tapeworms, which was caused by eating the frogs.

Doctors removed the growth from his stomach and scrotum. Doctors at the Shenzhen Children's Hospital, will continue to monitor the boy as they believe that there may still be tapeworms in the body.

The mother did not disclose whether the boy actually suffered from epilepsy in the first place.

 

 

 


Read more: 3-year-old boy has worms in scrotum after mother forces him to eat live frogs http://www.worldwideweirdnews.com/2015/08/30-Boy-worms-scrotum-mother-forces-eat-live-frogs.html#ixzz3kjGn2U00
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A 30-year-old resident of Railway Road in the Bauchi has allegedly poisoned and killed Hajara Ahmed, an 11-year-old daughter of the Chief Imam of Bauchi Central Mosque, Bala Inna.

The suspect, whose identity was given as Jarelu Ahmed, and was arrested on Monday by Police detectives, was said to have buried the deceased in his room after killing her.

The Police Public Relations Officer, Bauchi State Command, Haruna Mohammed, in a statement issued on Monday said forensic experts visited the scene of the crime, exhumed the body and had taken the corpse to the hospital for postmortem.

He said, “On Monday, August 31 at about 18 hours (6pm), Police detectives, attached to Township Division, arrested one Jarelu Ahmed, Male, (30) of Railway Road, Bauchi.

“The suspect allegedly poisoned one Hajara Ahmed, an 11-year-old daughter of one Bala Ahmed Baban Inna (Chief Imam of Bauchi Central Mosque), killed and buried her in his room in order to conceal his atrocity.

“The scene of crime was visited by forensic experts, attached to State Criminal Investigation Department and the victim’s body was exhumed, photographed and taken to ATBU Teaching Hospital for postmortem examination.”

He added that investigation into the matter was still on.


Centuries-old tales have described severed heads that seemed to live on for a few seconds — blinking, changing expressions, even attempting to speak.

During the French Revolution, an executioner reportedly held the severed head of Charlotte Corday (who assassinated politician Jean-Paul Marat) aloft and smacked its cheek. Witnesses claimed Corday's eyes looked at the executioner, and an unmistakable expression of disgust came over her face.

More recently, in 1989, an Army veteran told of seeing a friend decapitated in a car crash. According to the story, the severed head showed emotions of shock, followed by terror and grief, its eyes glancing back at its separated body.

 

Compelling (and gruesome) as these stories may be, many physicians would call this possibility highly unlikely. At the moment of decapitation, the brain would suffer a massive drop in blood pressure. Rapidly losing blood and oxygen, the brain would likely go into coma, even if death took a few seconds.

Recent animal studies, however, lend some credence to those chilling stories.

In 2011, Dutch scientists hooked an EEG (electroencephalography) machine to the brains of mice fated to decapitation. The results showed continued electrical activity in the severed brains, remaining at frequencies indicating conscious activity for nearly four seconds. Studies in other small mammals suggest even longer periods.

If true in humans, those few seconds would provide enough time for a strange and terrifying experience: count off four seconds ("one Mississippi…"), and notice how much of your surroundings you can register.

But anecdotes of severed heads trying to speak are likely just descriptions of bodily reflex actions. Indeed, severed limbs can twitch from muscle reflexes, and a subconscious, reflexive portion of the brain called the extrapyramidal system produces some expressions. This brain region causes, for example, the unconscious expressions of fear, disgust and contempt shown by infants.


 

Authorities in Nigeria's financial capital Lagos have shut down churches across the city after a glut of complaints over noisy worship sessions.
 
 
The Lagos state government has shut down no fewer than 22 churches for causing noise pollution in different areas. This was brought about by several complaints from residents.
 
This was revealed by the Environmental Protection Department in the state through a statement by the head of the Lagos State Environmental Protection Agency, Adebola Sabi on Wednesday, 26th of August following dozens of calls.

Neighbours of one church named Jesus Our Lord Divine Catholic Prayer Ministry said they were constantly disturbed by a congregation of mainly pregnant women, young mothers and their children.
 
Sabi said, "On my phone alone, I get 20 SMS on a daily basis,"

"In the next five years, if there is no stringent policy on the siting of religious houses, there will be problem."


Constant noise from the the thumping beats of loud music, the beep of car horns and the noise of generator engines is the soundtrack to Lagos life and is seen by many as part of its charm.

But residents are complaining in unprecedented numbers that they can barely hear themselves think among the churches and mosques where giant loudspeakers pump out religious messages and music.

Officials receive around 50 telephone calls and 20 text messages a day complaining about noise, mostly from churches, the New Telegraph said.

"With the enforcement today, we would have sealed about 55 premises because the last enforcement we carried out, we shut 33 premises," Shabi told reporters.

"I gave approval for closure of 22 premises today, making 55."

Here is a list of some of the churches closed down in Lagos:
 
1. The Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG)
2. God Royal Sanctuary, Lagos Province 3, Zone 15, Area 48 and another on its opposite located on Ayilara Streets, Surulere.
3. Tower of Praise Ministries International Praise Centre.
4. Jesus Our Lord Divine Catholic Prayer Ministry located at 11 Anuoluwapo Street, Ilasamaja.
5. Shakara Bar - a Strip Club/Hotel in Ogba, Thomas Salako Street.
6. Dura Products Industries Nigeria Limited on Sanni Olabode Street, Abule Egba.
7. Mopson Pharmaceuticals Industry, located on Osolo Way.

 

The woman, Mrs Blessing Okpoko, who is a regional manager of a new generation bank, reported the latest development to the Lagos State Commissioner of Police, Mr Fatai Owoseni, who summoned to a meeting over the matter.

Blessing informed the CP that her estranged husband, Ifeanyi Okpoko, has taken further step by going to the dreaded Okija shrine to report her and she has been summoned to appear at the shrine.

Ifeanyi confirmed that he took her not only to Okija shrine but to seven other shrines in Igbo land since she claimed that he did not contribute anything to the acquisition of their property that is now the subject of litigation.

He said he went to consult the oracles to decide and punish quickly any of them and their supporters making false claims over the property.

Ifeanyi said Blessing was using her position as a senior bank staff to make some people believe that she owned their joint property, adding that was why he decided to go the oracles so that the truth would be established.

CP Owoseni, during the meeting with them to resolve the issue, lambasted Ifeanyi and Blessing for their conduct and wondered whether the couple had relatives and elders in their communities that could not resolve the issue amicably.

On Saturday, 12 August, suspected thugs were arrested and charged before Isolo Magistrates’ Court for their alleged involvement in the pulling down of a furniture factory in Ajao Estate.

The police at Ajao Estate division also arrested Blessing in connection with the demolition of the factory owned by Okpoko.

anambrariansnews gathered that the couple had been at loggerheads and had gone to a Lagos High Court seeking for the dissolution of their 13-year old marriage that produced three daughters.

The suit was still pending at the court when the thugs invaded the factory kown as Multicraft Interior located a 14, Alhaji Lukeman Atobajeun Street, Ajao Estate, and pulled down the structure.
Properties worth millions of naira were also destroyed.

At the station, Blessing told our correspondent that she contracted those who went to demolish the place because the land was not in dispute and as such it belonged to her.

She said she went to Alausa and obtained the necessary documents for the demolition and that she has documents which show that she owns the land.


 

Nigeria’s women sprints champion Blessing Okagbare on Monday finished 8th in the 100 metres final at the 15th IAAF World Championships in Beijing,China.

It was however a different story for team mate Patience George as she qualified for Tuesday’s semi-finals in the women’s 400m, even though two other compatriots failed to advance.

Okagbare, who had earlier in the day in the semi-finals ran 10.89 seconds to place second on from lane four, was on lane 9 and could only clock 11.02.

She had on Sunday placed first in heat two with 11.07, and her semi-final showing had raised hopes of a medal prospect, especially as her season best is 10.80.

In the quarter-mile, George whose season best is 50.76 will compete in heat two on Tuesday from lane 8 after she finished third in heat 5 in 50.87 seconds.

Compatriot Regina George, whose season best was 51.30 and personal best 50.84, ran in at 51.74 to place fourth in heat 4 and miss out on qualification for the semis.

Tosin Adeloye also failed to qualify from heat 2, after placing fifth with 52.42, in spite of a season and personal best 51.92.

The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the Athletics World Championships which is holding at Beijing’s National Stadium began on Saturday and will end on Sunday. (NAN)


 

“Rather than everybody calling for change, religious leaders should own up to their ethical failure. Nigeria is littered up with mosques and crowd-pulling, money-spinning churches, but reeling in a cesspool of corruption and moral decadence.

“Ours is a secular state where top public officials, traditional monarchs and clerics go on pilgrimages annually at public expense, while their followers and subjects suffer in neglect, unemployment and backlog of unpaid salaries, for the few employed ones, in both public and private sectors.

“And what hope is there in a country where parents fund exam malpractices which are encouraged by teachers and tutorial centres/ school proprietors – right from primary to tertiary institutions.

“If Nigerians are honest with themselves, the change we need should begin from the home, the churches and mosques, to schools and universities where the future leaders are groomed.

“So, while the President does his part by cleaning the federal Augean stables, state governors, parents, and heads of social institutions have a greater role to play in driving the desired change. Are we not ashamed of the endemic corruption and frequent news reports of ritual murders, where believers and religious chieftains are often implicated?”

The General Supervisor (GS) of ThankGod Awaited Liberation Ministry, Mr Francis Onwudiwe Otukwu, expressed the above at the 9th Anniversary and Founders birthday celebration on Sunday August 9, 2015.

The event was held at the Mission House, 37A Adekoya Street, Ogba, because of the demolition of their 91 Awolowo Way, Ikeja, Lagos premises, which, he said, was a blessing in disguise.

Speaking on the theme of the anniversary, The Light has come, Mr Otukwu (fondly called Ozuomee), stated that the ministry has been regarded as controversial because, being founded by the Son of Man, it stands out distinctively in its outright condemnation of evil – both in Christendom and the political system.

This, he noted, led to various forms of attacks and hate petitions, culminating in the demolition of the worship centre by the Lagos State Government on June 18, 2015, against an injunction of a competent Ikeja High Court.

He added that despite the antagonism, the ministry is joyfully celebrating the power of light in their congregation.

“Because I’m empowered by the Master himself, the raw power of God is released in my prayers and it delivers healing, liberation from all forms of demonisation, including pernicious invasion of spirit husbands and spirit wives (the incubus and succubus), as well as opening of people’s spiritual eyes to enable them identify sources of their problems directly, rather than depend on occult-empowered pastors and seers who cannot provide any solution,”  He said.

 Mr Otukwu averred that it is only in ThankGod Awaited that you are not subjected to fasting, night vigils, tortuous deliverance exercises, and other forms of warfare prayers - all of which produce no results to supplicants because there is no power of God in churches.

This, he said, is another distinguishing feature of light, “which separates us as disciples directly empowered by Christ.” He recalled the words of our Lord Jesus Christ in John chapter 8 where he said that he is the light of the world and so his followers cannot walk in darkness.

This was explained by Apostle Paul in 2 Cor. 6: 14, 15: “Be not unequally yoked with unbelievers: for what fellowship has righteousness with unrighteousness? And what communion has light with darkness? And what concord with Christ and Belial (How can Christ and the devil agree?).”

Stressing that condemning evil practices, contrary to so-called Christians say ‘thou shall not judge,’ the minister recalled arguments between Jesus Christ and the Pharisees and religious leaders of the time who rightly claimed to be children of Abraham.

Citing the scenario in John Chapter 8, where they vehemently rejected him as the messiah, how Jesus Christ was compelled to tell them the bitter truth: “Ye are of your father, the devil, and the lusts (desires) of your father you will do. He was a murderer from the beginning, and abode not in the truth, because there is no truth in him…He is a liar and the father of lies.” (Vs 44).  

Mr. Otukwu asked: “Despite their pontifications and impeccable Queen’s English, false claims to miracles, annual ‘life-changing’ programmes with deceptive themes, shouts of Holy Ghost fire, blood of Jesus, and what have you – are they not agents of darkness, corruption, lies and ritual murders – all of which Jesus attributed to Satan the Devil?” The crowds in their churches, the GS added, are in bondage as they are manipulated and controlled in the night, which explains why many behave like zombies: ‘my pastor, right or wrong - which is neither biblical nor sensible.

The cleric said that there are manifestations of syncretism in Christendom. That is, combining God with other powers, which according to him, “is not tolerated in our ministry, because the Almighty made it clear that He is a jealous God.”

Mr Otukwu noted: “As a result of our Insistence that God does not combine, many so-called believers come to our worship centre or buy the blessed table water: after they’ve received healing and solutions to their various problems, go back to their various churches to give testimonies. The reason is simple: they cannot afford to stand on God alone, as demanded in the kingdom, which simultaneously destroys such diabolical powers.

“Although this costs the ministry membership, but that we cannot compromise such standards, because our goal is not crowd-pulling or prosperity appeal, but serving God of justice, who alone can liberate you before you can attain success. It is Spirit-enabled” On visions and dreams, as the Bible states, will happen in the last days, he said that in the ministry, everyone sees.

He mentioned the example of the current anniversary where the inscription on the cake and mode of hall decoration was revealed to a Basic 9 pupil, who relayed it to him and it was fully complied with. Given what he described as misconception about the Kingdom of God and second coming of the Messiah, he cited Luke 17:20 where Jesus specifically told the Pharisees that the Kingdom does not come with your careful observation;…because, the Kingdom of God is within you.

The minister also said that experiences of God’s power in his ministry was in accordance with John 1:12 which said power was given to those who saw the Messiah and believed: and Mathew 13:16, 17 where Jesus said to his disciples:  “How fortunate are you. For blessed are your eyes because they see; and your ears because they hear. For verily I say unto you, that many prophets and righteous men have desired to see those things which you see and to hear these things which you hear…”

Mr. Otukwu, who rejects being called a pastor, expressed satisfaction that his ministry commands the light because the founder rightly stated via the mass media and Internet, that he is the Christ. “And although he has gone back to the Father, he still directs the affairs of the ministry through revelations, which is why the light in us delivers the power of God that manifests in our prayers.”   

•Photo shows Mr. Otukwu


The Nigerian Army has recalled over 2,500 soldiers who were asked to withdraw from service for alleged offences committed under the counter- insurgency operations code named Operation Zaman Lafiya.

The review panel set up by the Army, which began sitting in Kaduna on August 17, has also screened and reinstated 102 officers, who were sentenced or facing prosecution in relation to the operations in the North-East.

The reinstated soldiers and officers, it was learnt, had commenced retraining at the Nigerian Army Training Centre, Kontangora, Niger State.

The 2,500 soldiers were among the over 4,000 who responded to a memo from the Army authorities inviting soldiers for a review of recent disciplinary cases, which emanated from the counter terrorism operations.

The NA had said on August 1, 2015 that the service would constitute a panel to review all recent disciplinary cases in the service.

But the Acting Director, Army Public Relations, Col. Sani Usman, cautioned that the directive to review disciplinary cases should not be mistaken for a “total reinstatement of dismissed and deserter soldiers.”

A source in the Nigerian Army, who confided in our correspondent, said, “The panel has cleared 2,500 soldiers who were dismissed from their units for minor offences alleged to have been committed under Operation Zaman Lafiya.

“The review panel also cleared 102 officers who were either asked to withdraw, dismissed or facing prosecution for various offences under the operation.”

The soldiers, who were said to have been conveyed out of the NDA, Kaduna, venue of the review panel, in luxury buses on Saturday are expected to undergo a short retraining exercise as part of the reintegration requirements into the service at the NATRAC, Kotangora.

After the retraining, the Army authorities would screen the affected personnel and re-activate their suspended bank accounts.

It was further learnt that the panel would also review the cases of 66 soldiers who were sentenced to death by firing squad.


 17-year-old houseboy, is battling for his life following burns sustained after his boss' wife poured hot water on him for coming back late from an errand.



 
Tragedy has befallen a 17-year-old houseboy, identified as Chidera who is now in a Lagos hospital battling with burns he sustained after his boss’ wife, Mrs. Angela Achilefu, poured hot water on him.

It was learnt that Mrs. Achilefu, poured hot water on the teenager who lives with the couple on Akinola Street, Gemade Estate, in the Ipaja area of the state, for coming back late from an errand she sent him on Thursday.

It was gathered that the woman had sent Chidera to open her cosmetics shops in the Egbeda and Gowon Estate areas for her sales girls around 8:am on the fateful day, giving him N100 as transport fare.

It was said that the boy trekked to the shop in Gowon Estate, a few miles from Egbeda, and did same while returning home because the fare was not enough. He was said to have arrived home at about 9am, which reportedly did not go down well with the woman.

Angered by the lateness, she reportedly took the boiling water she wanted to use to prepare tea and splashed it on Chidera.

Neigbours who saw the victim with the injury, reported the matter at the Gowon Estate Police Station, leading to Achilefu’s arrest, while the boy was rushed to a hospital in the area.

A resident, who identified himself only as Stephen, said the woman was released three hours after she was arrested. “The boy was in pain when somebody saw him and called other residents of the estate. They held the woman and alerted policemen, who arrested her. But surprisingly, the woman came back after three hours.”

Another neighbour, said, “Chidera was brought to Lagos about three years ago from Abia State, where the woman also hails from. But she is harsh on him. She said it was just small hot water in a tea cup she poured on him and that she did it out of anger.

She sent him to open her shops and gave him N100, instead of N200. From this street to the (Gemade) estate gate is N50 bike. From the gate to her first shop in Egbeda is another N50. What did she want him to do? So, he had to trek to the other shop in Gowon Estate and trek back home.”

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