The
city of Rome has been with a bizzare moments which has shown hundred of
dead birds scattered outside a busy train station, believed to have
been killed during the city’s New Year’s Eve fireworks.
The
city of Rome has been with a bizzare moments which has shown hundred of
dead birds scattered outside a busy train station, believed to have
been killed during the city’s New Year’s Eve fireworks.
They urged Nigerians across the country to ask their representatives at the National Assembly to commence impeachment process against the President.
Expressing support for Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) caucus in House of Representatives earlier calls to impeach President Buhari, the youths insisted that the move had become unavoidable to salvage the country from total collapse.
In a statement issued in Enugu under the aegis of Coalition of South East Youth Leaders (COSEYL), the youths said they agreed with one of the leaders of the PDP House caucus, Kingsley Chanda, stressing that the President had shown inability to deliver on security of life and property, which it said was the first responsibility of any responsive government.
The statement, signed by their President, Goodluck Ibem, noted that security was the most important thing in any society and any leader that could not provide security for its citizens had no cause to continue in office.
“Even in a society of fools and nonentities, they will not keep quiet if they are being slaughtered like rams and goats on daily basis. The office of the President is a position for service and when the President cannot deliver on government’s responsibility to its citizens, the most honourable thing to do is to resign.
“In this case the President has refused to resign despite failing to protect Nigerians. Only recently, Boko Haram massacred 73 farmers on their farms. These persons have loved ones and people who depend on them for survival. They were butchered in broad daylight and you don’t some expect Nigerians to clap for Mr. President for a job well done,” the statement reads.
Continuing, they said: “The National Assembly and Nigerians have told the President to sack the service chiefs and he has remained adamant to the call. You can’t be doing one thing the same way and expect to get different results.
“The President and his service chiefs have failed Nigerians and we are totally in support of his resignation or impeachment.”
The youth leaders said in Britain, America and South Africa among others, government functionaries found wanting in their duties would resign but in Nigeria, “ our leaders sit tight in office even when it is obvious that they have failed woefully. The see the office as a means of corrupt enrichment and so they must stay tight even if everyone is against them”
However, they cautioned against politicising the call for Buhari’s resignation or impeachment, saying it was in the country’s best interest.
SOURCE: GUARDIAN
President Muhammed Buhari has reiterated that different fake media accounts of Professor Ibrahim Gambari, the new Chief of Staff to the president has been created after his appointment.
However, the Presidency had informed Nigerians that the new Chief of Staff has no social media account.
The alarm was raised by the Special Assistant to the President on New Media, Bashir Ahmad via his Twitter handle.
He wrote:
“DISCLAIMER: All the twitter accounts bearing Professor Ibrahim Gambari, the Chief of Staff to President @MBuhari are fake, the new CoS doesn’t have an account on twitter or on any social media platform. If he wishes to have one, it will be communicated properly,” he tweeted on Wednesday night.
Outrage over Arbery's death came through last week after a viral video of the alleged murder, which took place on February 23, surfaced.
The video shows Arbery running at a jogging pace on the left side of a road with a truck parked on the road ahead of him. One white man is inside the pick-up truck's bed, while the other is standing beside the driver's open door.
The runner crosses the road to pass the pick-up truck on the passenger side, then crosses back in front of the truck. A gunshot sounds, and the video shows the runner grappling with a man in the street over what appears to be a shotgun or rifle.
A second shot is heard, and the runner can be seen punching the man. A third shot is fired at point-blank range. The runner staggers a few feet and falls face down.
Authorities asked the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) to look into the case last week after the video emerged.
The GBI arrested and charged father and son, Gregory and Travis McMichael, with murder and aggravated assault.
The father and son told police they thought Arbery matched the appearance of a burglary suspect who they said had been recorded on a surveillance camera some time before, according to the Glynn County police report filed after the shooting.
Arbery's mother, Wanda Cooper Jones, has said she thinks her 25-year-old son, a former high school football player, was just jogging in the neighbourhood before he was killed.
Meanwhile, a man identifying himself as the person who recorded the mobile phone video of the shooting said he had received death threats.
William "Roddie" Bryan is identified as a witness in the police report taken after Arbery's shooting. He appears to be mentioned in a single sentence of the report, which says Gregory McMichael told an officer that "'Roddy' attempted to block [Arbery] which was unsuccessful."
"I had nothing to do with it. I'm trying to get my life back to normal, and it's been smeared for the last week," Bryan told WJAX-TV in an interview that aired Monday. "I was told I was a witness, and I'm not sure what I am, other than receiving a bunch of threats."
Bryan has not been charged in the case. The TV station reported Bryan would not discuss his involvement in the events that led to Arbery's death.
Not more than 73 children in New York have been diagnosed with symptoms similar to Kawasaki disease.
A five-year-old boy is reported to have died of a rare inflammatory condition which is possibly linked to COVID-19, the first such death in New York, Governor Andrew Cuomo said Friday.
The death of a five-year-old boy Thursday at a New York City hospital is sad news for New Yorkers who believed children were largely unaffected by the coronavirus, Cuomo said.
"So this is every parent's nightmare, right? That your child may actually be affected by this virus," the Democratic governor said. "But it's something we have to consider seriously now."
Children elsewhere in the US have also been hospitalised with same condition, which was also seen in Europe.
A spokesperson for the Mount Sinai Kravis Children's Hospital, which treated the child, expressed condolences to the family and stressed that the condition has been, thankfully, rare.
While it is concerning that children are affected, we must emphasize that based on what we know thus far, it appears to be a very rare condition," Mount Sinai spokesperson Jason Kaplan wrote in a statement. "Mount Sinai and the healthcare community will continue to investigate and study this new variant in hopes of finding a solution to this rare condition."
There is no proof yet that the coronavirus causes the syndrome. At least 3,000 US children are diagnosed with Kawasaki disease each year. It is most common in children younger than six and in boys.
Symptoms include prolonged fever, severe abdominal pain and trouble breathing.
Douglas Wigdor donated thousands to Trump's 2016 presidential campaign as well as Democratic politicians in New York.
The lawyer, Douglas Wigdor, donated tens of thousands of dollars to President Donald Trump's 2016 presidential campaign, according to Federal Election Commission records. He has also given tens of thousands of dollars to state and local Democratic politicians in New York, including New York Congressman Hakeem Jeffries, one of the leaders of the Democrats' impeachment efforts in January, and New York Attorney General Letitia James. He has not donated to either Trump's or Biden's 2020 campaign.
"We have decided to take this matter on because every survivor has the right to competent counsel," the firm said in a statement.
Reade has said for weeks that she was struggling to find a lawyer willing to represent her. She has accused Biden of sexually assaulting her in 1993, when she worked on his Senate staff.
On Thursday, Reade said she wanted Biden to be "held accountable" and called on him to drop out of the presidential race. Her comments came in her first on-camera interview, conducted by former Fox News and NBC News journalist Megyn Kelly.
"The truth is what matters," he told Bay News 9. "In this case, the truth is these claims are flat-out false."
Wigdor is well known for his work on prominent cases related to sexual harassment and assault. He represented six women who accused Weinstein, the disgraced Hollywood producer, of sexual misconduct. He has also represented a number of Fox News employees in cases alleging gender and racial discrimination at the network, including Juliet Huddy, one of the women who accused host Bill O'Reilly of pursuing a sexual relationship CONTINUE READING
CREDIT: AL JAZEERA
FISAYO SOYOMBO on his Twitter handle wrote how a Covid19 patient in Kogi State loses the battle and some more hidden stories.
Below is Twitter write ups:
"On Saturday, a patient died at FMC, Lokoja, Kogi, after exhibiting COVID-19 symptoms. His samples weren’t taken.
That was the 4th such death at the FMC last week alone. Not once was the patient’s samples taken, dead or alive.
A familiar cover-up
March 22 was the first time this scenario occurred.
A patient who came into Kogi from Lagos required a CS. The patient exhibited COVID-19 symptoms, prompting the hospital to request for her to be tested. It was turned down.
The patient was isolated for some time surgery was done and she was discharged without testing.
Last week, there were some patients in the O&G ward who manifested respiratory issues, inability to breathe and other COVID-19 symptoms.
Three of them died.
They’d come from private hospitals — one in Lokoja, another in Okene and the third in Ogudu.
The first of the trio, Mrs G.I. (her initials), a 43-year-old woman who arrived at the hospital on Thursday, had a temp of 38.8°C.
The other 2 had temperatures of more than 40°C.
In each case, no sample was taken before or after death.
Now, on the final day of the week, a patient admitted to the Accident and Emergency (A&E) Ward with a temp of 40.3°C was transferred to the male medical ward.
The patient spent 3 hours in the ward and then died.
One more patient exhibited potential COVID-19 symptoms on Sunday but moves for sample collection were futile; by yesterday, the patient was dead.
I’ve been told there are more suspected cases, but these were the ones I personally tracked.
Ideally, the FMC ought to notify the Ministry of Health of the need for sample collection if it suspects a case, but the ministry needs to secure the authorisation of the Incident Manager, that is the Commissioner for Health, who directly relates with the NCDC.
If the Commissioner says no, end of request! Meanwhile, state hospitals are not even in a position to call the health ministry.
I understand the instruction from Gov Yahaya Bello is that there should be no testing. I know the question you want to ask and I’ll answer it:
Why would the state govt want to hide COVID-19 cases? There may be many reasons but I’m sure of three, so far:
1. None of the 3 isolation centres — at SDG/FAREC Clinic, the Kogi State Diagnostics Centre & the Maimuna and Usman Yahaya Foundation Hospital — is ready for use.
A patient can’t be taken into any of them. The only ready space is at Kogi State Specialist Hospital, Lokoja, where Lassa Fever cases were once managed.
And it has only four beds. Not four wards — four beds!
All are just building structures, no equipment for the doctors to work with.
The diagnostics centre is a private facility donated to the state years ago, but the 100-bed structure is an ongoing project that has spanned three governors & doesn’t yet have power supply!
I understand the state has no money to give the people as lockdown palliatives, should there be the need to restrict their movement. But many in Kogi aren’t asking for palliatives; they just want their salaries, which the government is making moves to halve.
It is unclear why there is no money, as the Bello administration hasn’t executed a single project since its reelection in May 2019 apart from payment of salaries.
Despite receiving increased federal allocation of late due to a temporary halt of bailout deductions, the state govt was going to pay workers only 50% of their March salaries but the union fought back.
April salaries haven’t been paid due to this ongoing disagreement.
For whatever reason, the state government believes the NCDC has politicised COVID-19 cases such that if samples are sent, they will automatically return +ve.
It is a reason that defies logic, actually, but it exists all the same.
Kogi has blatantly REFUSED to test. Medical experts agree that “it is a lie to say the state does not have any COVID case”, but scientifically, no one can put a figure to it.
The FMC has been warned that if it breaches protocol by sending anyone’s samples to the NCDC...
it would be shut down on the pretext of exposure to the virus.
For that the reason, the state and hospital officialdom will counter this story with all they have, rather than make amends, but the hope will be that Kogi won’t go the way of Kano before making a U-turn."
An adage will always say "Education is the key to success".
But why is it that our leaders are lacking in giving the young generation quality education?
The name Oba Adedokun Abolarin is not a well known familiar name, the Orangun of Oke-ila in Ifedayo local government area of Osun State.
Oba Adedokun Abolarin became a traditional ruler on the 8th of December 2006. He adopted the title "The aroyinkeye 1".
Prior to his appointment as the Orangun of Oke-Ila, Oba Adedokun Abolarin was working in National Assembly Abuja, he was a Special Adviser to former senate president, senator Anyim Pius Anyim.
Oba Abolarin is a graduate of Political Science from the Prestigious University of Ife now Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU). He hold Masters degree in law also from OAU.
The Orangun of Oke-Ila was the Principal partner of Dokun Abolarin & co Law firm and Legal consultants who had served many high reputable companies & corporations as Company Secretary.
Oba Abolarin Adedokun is the founder of ABOLARIN COLLEGE where he is also classroom teacher as he teaches History and Government at the school like other teachers.
The school, ABOLARIN COLLEGE which is not meant for people of his kingdom alone and extended to other communities, is giving an international standard education with a laptop to each student, free meal, free hostel, free internet access, free school fees, free uniform, 24/7 power supply, free books etc. Everything in the school is totally free for the pupils.
This is Orangun of Oke-Ila, Oba Abolarin Adedokun teaching Government in the class.
Oba Abolarin said to know each students, who are about 100 by their names because, he relates with the students like their biological father, motivates them every time, building their confidence, and encouraging them to always strive to be successful in life.
Oba Abolarin said the reason and motivation for this gesture of his is because, Nigeria was kind to him and his generation as they got many things on a platter of gold. The traditional ruler also said, he get supports from some of his friends who he do call upon, to assist him and they always respond whenever he call.
OOba Abolarin though not wealthy (according to him), is doing a great job by giving back to the society, what is considered the BEST GIFT any man can ever give.
Oba Abolarin have only one wife as according to him, "he can't afford to cater for many wives".
Oba Adedokun Abolarin took over reign from Oba Samuel Adeyemi, Arojojoye III whose reign span from 1969 to November 2005.
Oba Abolarin is a silent achiever, but people like this won't go viral, we prefer giving attention to noisemakers.
God bless Oba Abolarin Adedokun the Oragun of Oke-Ila, The Aroyinkeye I for the good works he is doing.
Please, let's share and make him go viral to encourage him as Nigeria need more people like him to be celebrated.
Taylor Swift cancels all live appearances and performances for the remainder of the year 2020 in what she said was an effort to prevent the spread of Covid-19.
"I'm so sad I won't be able to see you guys in concert this year, but I know this is the right decision,"
Swift wrote on Twitter. "Please, please stay healthy and safe. I'll see you on stage as soon as I can but right now what's important is committing to this quarantine, for the sake of all of us."
Previously scheduled shows will take place in 2021 and ticket holders will be given new tickets then, according to a statement attached to her tweet. Refunds for the US shows will be available May 1st subject to Ticketmaster's terms, it said.
Swift isn't the only one who has changed up touring schedules in light of the pandemic, which has infected more than 2 million people worldwide.
Justin Bieber postponed his "Changes" tour, and other stars like Niall Horan and Bad Bunny have also postponed tours and events.
The Minister for Social development, Humanitarian Affairs and Disaster Management Hajiya Sadiya Umar Farouq has disclosed that Nigerians who recharge their mobile devices with more than N100 and bank customers with over N5,000 in their accounts do not qualify for the palliatives.
This was effected after the President has extended the lockdown by another 14 days in order to curb the spread of COVID19 which is yet to get a cure.
The Minister said the federal government is working with Banks and telecommunications companies to ensure the less-privileged and physically-challenged persons receive the palliatives.
“We should be aware that the president in his broadcast on Monday, April 13, directed that we expand the beneficiaries of the conditional cash transfer by one million and in this regard, we are going to focus more on the urban poor.
These are people who depend on the informal sector to earn their livelihood; they are daily wage earners and these are the people we are going to focus on as well as people living with disabilities.
“But, we have three options.
One, we are going to use the national social register that we already have.
Two, we are going to focus on the urban poor as mentioned earlier by using their verified BVN accounts to get them, that is, people that have an account balance of N5, 000 and below.
Thirdly“We are using the mobile networks, to know people that top up the credit units for their phones with maybe N100 or less. These are people that we consider to be poor and vulnerable.
So, these are the three options that we are exploring and I am sure that by the time we get this data, we will be able to give this intervention.
“Let me also say that we have a standard. Twenty five percent of the total population is what we will take out. It cannot go round everywhere, but we are starting from somewhere. Twenty five percent of let’s say the location of Lagos State, for example, is what is going to benefit from this intervention that we are doing. Going forward, we might expand it but this is what is obtainable for now.”
With hundreds of Nigerians stranded abroad wishing to return home, the federal government initiated an evacuation scheme which they can be flown back after registering with the local mission in the country where they reside.
In the UK, the Nigerian high commission asked those interested in participating in the scheme to forward their details and so far, about 40 people have taken up the offer.
However, to qualify for evacuation, applicants must be certified as coronavirus Negative and of the 40 people who registered in the UK, about 10 of them have tested positive.
These test results created panic among the staff of the Nigerian high commission in London, creating fears that the applicants could infect others with the virus.
As at Saturday 11th April, 2,000 Nigerians in the US, UK, China and the United Arab Emirates, had registered and indicated their interest to return home. Many of the stranded Nigerians were students and businessmen, who travelled abroad and got stranded by the global lockdown.
One source at the London high commission said:
“We have just received the results of the first batch of 40 Nigerians who registered for evacuation to Nigeria. The results show that about 10 persons tested positive for Covid-19 and they have commenced treatment in isolation centres.
“What is generating consternation is the fear that they might have infected many other people since they were not showing symptoms of the deadly disease.”
Nigeria’s foreign minister Geoffrey Onyeama, said that the federal government was exploring all options for the evacuation of the stranded citizens. In China in particular, the situation is dire as a recent video showed about 100s of Nigerians are being evicted from their homes and hotels in Guangzhou by the authorities last week, while their passports were reportedly seized.
Governor's forum of Nigeria’s 19 Northern States have warned President Muhammadu Buhari against introducing a lockdown across the region in response to the coronavirus pandemic saying that it cannot be sustained economically and will come at too high a cost.
Although Nigeria only has 343cases of coronavirus and has suffered just 10 deaths, the federal government has taken firm action to contain the spread of the pandemic.
Yesterday 14th April, President Buhari extended the lockdown in Lagos and Ogun States and the Federal Capital Territory Abuja for a further 14 days in a nationwide broadcast.
Despite the fact that the federal government’s measures have been praised as preventative, there is widespread concern about the economic impact of the lockdown.
In Lagos and Ogun states, there is now widespread unrest as hardship bites because the government has not backed up the lockdown with the distribution of essential needs to the citizens.
Yesterday, the Northern States Governors’ Forum met via teleconference and decided that it cannot lock down its region because doing so will come at a high cost.
Governor Simon Lalong, of Plateau State, the chairman of the forum, added that the governors agreed to approach the federal government for funds because the preventive measures they have put in place have eaten deep into their pockets.
According to Governor Lalong, they also resolved to strengthen preventive measures through enhanced boundary controls and surveillance.
They also pledged greater collaboration to ensure that there is synergy among them in the fight against Covid-19.
Dr Makut Macham, Governor Lalong’s spokesman, said: “They agreed that at the moment, each state would adopt the measure suitable to its setting because a total lockdown of the region will come at a very high cost since most of its citizens are farmers who need to go to farms since the rains have started. Another issue discussed by the northern governors was the issue of palliatives from the federal government where they regretted that so far, no state in the region had received a dime as special allocation despite the fact that some of them have recorded cases while others are making frantic efforts to prevent any outbreak, as well as prepare against any eventuality.
“This they observed has eaten deep into the pockets of the states as they have spent a lot of money already and may not be able to sustain this for a long time. Since prevention is better than cure, they canvassed that the federal government grant them some special funds just as it has done to other states.
“Also, the northern governors lamented that the region has no testing centre, which is very disturbing. They resolved to again liaise with the federal government to ensure that each state at least gets one testing centre while highly populated ones get two.
“The governors also discussed the economic impact of Covid-19 on the region and decided that they needed to take a holistic look at the economic prospects of the region with a view to repositioning it for less reliance on federal allocation and to prepare for the future by diversifying to areas of comparative advantage such as agriculture, manufacturing, tourism and human capital development. They set up a seven-man committee to be chaired by Atiku Bagudu, the Kebbi governor, to fashion out the way forward.”
The UAE has taken strict measures to combat the spread of COVID-19 respiratory disease, which has claimed the lives of over a 100 ,000 people globally.
The justice ministry said on Sunday that citizens and residents can set a date for an online wedding ceremony conducted via video link with a cleric after their paperwork is submitted and approved also online, according to the UAE’s official news agency WAM.
The couple will receive confirmation of their marriage certificate via text message.
The service was launched “to maintain the health of the public and that of people working in courts and to limit the presence of employees”, WAM reported.
This comes after Dubai, one of the seven emirates that make up the UAE, said on Wednesday it suspended “until further notice” marriages and divorces in the emirate. No announcement has been made about divorce proceedings.
Dubai has temporarily restricted the movement of people and vehicles, except for those working in “vital sectors” and with “essential needs” — such as food or medicine.
The UAE has recorded more than 3,700 coronavirus cases, including 20 deaths.
The Lockdown which was imposed because of the current coronavirus pandemic is disrupting economy at different scales globally with several income-yielding activities being at their lowest ebb.
While big firms have devised some models like allowing their workers to work from home to cushion the effect of the shutdown, hundreds of small businesses have been brought to a freeze, leaving the operators idle.
The President, Maj.-Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), ordered a mandatory 14-day movement restriction in Lagos, Ogun and the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja, to curb the spread of coronavirus.
A food vendor at Ogba, Lagos, Mrs Kudirat Adebisi, reflects the dark side of this trying time. The 42-year-old woman has been enduring strenuous means to feed her family since March 31 as the Federal Government’s lockdown order took effect in the state.
The little profit she realises from her daily sales is what she, her three children and visually-impaired husband, have been living on in the past four years. She is the pillar the family rely on and never shy away from the burden that comes with it. But the challenge has become weighty since she suspended her business about two weeks ago due to the distance from her home in the Abule Egba area of the state to the shop.
“I sell rice and have to go to market every day to buy ingredients. Since commercial buses are not allowed to operate, it is difficult for me to go to shop even though government allows food vendors and those on essential services to operate,” she stated in Yoruba.
Having to stay at home with a husband and three children to cater for portrays a serious financial distress for Adebisi. The family has been feeding on her small capital and she couldn’t wait for the lockdown to end so she could reinvest the remainder of the money to keep the family running.
“The money I use for my food business is not up to N20,000. The little gain I make daily is what my family and I survive on,” she disclosed.
“My husband cannot work because of his condition so I shoulder all the responsibilities. We have been spending from the capital with little support from generous neighbours. I didn’t get any relief food item from government as promised,” the woman added.
Adebisi’s plight typifies what many Nigerians whose survival hinges on daily income have been going through amid the lockdown caused by COVID-19 which has killed 10 persons and sickened 318 people in the country as of Saturday.
Like Adebisi, Mrs Bimpe Isaac, a food seller on Sule Abore Street, Ojodu, has been confined to her residence in Alagbole in Ogun State. She has been a strong support base for her electrician husband to ensure they put food on the table for themselves and their four kids.
But the lockdown has practically mounted more pressure on the couple while trying to fend for the family these days, Isaac told Sunday PUNCH during the week.
She said, “I came to sell food on the second day of the lockdown, but the turnover was not encouraging. I sold to more customers on credit. When I considered the stress I went through to get a vehicle to the shop and back home, I decided to stop.
“My husband is an electrician and many customers need his service, but their places are far. It is what he realises from the work he does within the community and my little contribution that we manage to prepare food. It has not been easy. I pray this disease is brought under control so we can continue with our normal life.”
Starting out as an outbreak late December 2019 in Wuhan, a suburb of China, coronavirus has steadily snowballed into a pandemic sweeping through the world without a specific vaccine in sight.
With over 103,000 deaths and more than 1.7 million cases as of Saturday, the virus continues to impact negatively on almost all spheres of life – sports, stock exchange, banking sector, aviation, among other national and international trades.
Already, global economy is seriously bleeding and heading towards recession. Nigeria’s ailing economy may also face harsh realities of recession in six months, according to the Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Mrs Zainab Ahmed.
Meanwhile, Nigeria and other countries of the world have come up with different strategies, including lockdown and social distancing rules to arrest the spread of the disease and tackle it to fully restore the economy.
But while the lockdown measure lasts, Uzor Tochukwu, who hawks accessories in traffic around Ojota – a fairly bustling area at the heart of Lagos – is stuck without any means of making ends meet.
Every day, Tochukwu’s sustenance is hinged on traffic snaking in the bubbling Lagos centre. He sells car chargers, earphones and phone hangers to eke out a living.
A secondary school leaver, the indigene of Anambra State collects the items from a relative who has a shop at Computer Village, Ikeja, and remits payment every three days, using the gains from daily sales to keep body and soul together.
Within three days into the lockdown, the 23-year-old began to depend on the benevolence of relations and neighbours after exhausting his savings without any means of replenishing it.
He stated, “I have never found myself in this kind of situation for some years now. There is nothing I can sell when there are fewer vehicles on the road and there is no traffic where I normally stay. How do I even get to Ojota from Alapere where I live when there is no bus?
“I can’t imagine what life would be without support from relatives and neighbours because my parents are not in Lagos.”
A roving newspaper seller on Ogunnusi Road, Ojodu-Berger, Toyin Kolawole, is also temporarily out of business due to the lockdown. The 41-year-old man depends on the busy morning traffic along the corridor to sell papers every day. But unlike other stationary newspaper vendors who still make sales from buyers who trek from their homes to the stands, he hardly sees people to sell to while roving.
“Once I don’t sell papers in a day, I have no other means of income. The majority of my customers are the motorists who ply this road. So there is no point carrying papers around when the road is deserted,” he revealed. “My little saving is what I have been managing to survive all this while,” Kolawole added.
Bayo, as he simply identified himself, shuttles between Ketu and Ikorodu with his 10-passenger yellow bus (popularly known as Danfo) on a daily basis to provide food for his family of four.
Painfully, the past few days have proved really hard for the family whose means of livelihood has been held in the lockdown. He told our correspondent that he borrows money from friends to ensure the family does not go hungry.
As part of the tactics to get through the trying moment, Bayo said he and his wife now take only brunch and dinner.
“I had spent the N10,000 I had before the lockdown started and had to borrow another N10, 000 to survive this period. My friends who are commercial drivers are going through the same challenge. I have three children and a wife, who has a hairdressing shop along Ikorodu Road. Both of us can’t go to work.
“We have been rationing our food items pending when the lockdown will end. We make sure our children eat three times daily while we take breakfast and dinner. We take our breakfast around 11am so it can cover for lunch,” he lamented.
However, some food items sellers have defied the odds caused by the lockdown to earn a living. A pepper seller at a market on Obafalabi Street, Ojodu, Mrs Zainab Ibrahim, told Sunday PUNCH that she has been trekking to Mile 12 every continue reading
CREDIT: PUNCH