Friday, November 16, 2012

Nollywood actor, Pete Eneh, passes on

Pete Eneh
Veteran actor, Pete Eneh, famous for his ‘fatherly’ roles in Nollywood films, died on Thursday in Enugu State.
The actor who recently had one of his legs amputated by doctors at the Enugu State University Teaching Hospital , otherwise called Park lane Hospital, on October 24, died in the same hospital.
Eneh’s death was confirmed by the Special Assistant to the state governor on Media, Afam Okereke, who is also an actor.
His travails began last year, after he sustained an injury that later led to a serious infection, thereby making treatment near impossible.
Feelers from his doctors showed then that the injury degenerated into a sore, which was further compounded by the fact that the actor was diabetic. He spent three months at the hospital before he was advised to get the leg amputated to reduce the risk of the infection spreading to other parts of his body.
The amputation took place after efforts to save the leg was unsuccessful. Until his death, the actor, who was often cast as Patience Ozokwor aka Mama Gee’s husband in movies, was then said to be taking the situation in his stride.
Eneh’s plight brings to the fore, the worsening health condition of some Nollywood practitioners, whose circumstances are generally compounded by financial constraints.
The deceased actor featured in several films including Heavy Rain, Arrows, By His Grace, Ngozi:Abeg Marry Us, Naomi, The Suitors and Not Your Wealth.

As ZAFAA nominates Nollywood stars

Monalisa Chinda

The 2012 nomination of the African Film and Television Arts Festival, ZAFAA is a deluge of stars. For an event that started in 2006 and holds annually in the United Kingdom, it is good news to many Nollywood actors/actresses as their names topped the list of the October 19 ceremony.
Veteran actor Olu Jacobs and star actress, Funke Akindele Oloyede have been nominated. Nominated for the Best Actor award, Olu Jacob’s role in the film, Adesuwa definitely worked in his favour. Also nominated in the same category were Joseph Benjamin, and John Dumelo. Funke Akindele was nominated for the Best Actress award, along with Monalisa Chinda, and Nadia Buari. Also nominated for awards were Nse Ikpe-Etim, and Martha Ankomah, who were both nominated for the Best Supporting Actress award. Lancelot Imasuen, Desmond Elliot, and Ruke Amata were nominated for the Best Director award.
According to Prince Samuel Anwuzia, Chief Executive Officer, ZAFAA Global Awards Limited, organisers of the awards, the 2012 edition remains unique, what with the crop of artistes nominated.
There were more nominees from Zimbabwe, Cameroon, Ghana, Sierra Leone, the United Kingdom and the United States respectively.
“The plan is to partner with Ojez Entertainment to gain the confidence of the stars that built ZAFAA from inception to date and make it more reputable now that we have gained the support of foreign film-makers and recognition by the British Broadcasting Corporation. ZAFAA is an African pride just as the OSCAR and BAFTA are America and British pride.
“ZAFAA has made Nollywood, Ghollywood and other African filmmakers a huge industry to reckon with. Our culture remains our pride and there is no better place to celebrate this than the International and Economic City of London. This year, ZAFAA goes to the heart of London. Many more African countries are also participating, therefore, this year will be glamorous and sophisticated,” he said.

Healed by music when doctors said it was over

Aimee
The journey of Aimee to and fro the music studio is a classical example of the healing power of music
For six years, Aimee – Rita Alakija – experienced a debilitating illness that even the cruellest mortal can hardly wish for his enemy. The lady had hitherto bubbled with life, working in the aviation, financial and broadcasting sectors. She and the people around her had thought it was a short trial when she fell ill and was rushed to the hospital.
But as tough seasons rolled on seasons for her, she found herself being transferred from one hospital to the other. That was within and outside the country, until she became what she describes as a vegetable and someone on whom doctors had given up hope.
While she would not easily open the pages of her medical experience, she concedes that the challenges culminated in issues of blood, and as she started bleeding non-stop. At the climax of it, her body became a temple of some 15 complications, while she had to take an average of 15 injections daily.
“Doctors gave up on me. There was one crucial surgery that doctors were reluctant to take me through,” Aimee says in her Queen’s English that once made her viewers’ delight on a Lagos-based national television station where she was a broadcaster.
“My doctors did their best. But they felt I wasn’t going to pull through. They were asking me: ‘Do you still want to face it?’ You know, when you have had one or more surgeries before, and you are now faced with another crucial one in the same part of the body, it looks more like a matter of death than that of life and death.”
But what makes the case of the lady that studied English and later earned a degree in Business Administration ‘funny’ is that in the heat of her ordeals, God, according to her, placed it in her heart to go and sing His praise.
Were she in the frame of mind to laugh, she probably would have done so and mockingly roll on the ground for some minutes. Which kind of spirit would contemplate that the next thing for someone who had lost all strength, who had to be helped to do virtually everything, and who was practically on doctors’ death list, was to subject herself to studio rigour?
Alakija notes, “It was like a joke. When I had all the money and connections, this didn’t come. How come that it is in the midst of illness and pain when I should sit down and feel pity for myself because of my challenges?’’
‘Unfortunately’ for her, the voice insisted that that was what she should do. That led her to another palaver on how to tell her people and the physicians that her next agenda was to produce an album and a video. Like any other person would feel, they were likely to think that the illness had probably meandered into her brain zone.
Aimee adds, “It wasn’t that I couldn’t sing. I started singing in the church as a little girl. And I grew up with love for it. I had performed alongside others in churches and concerts. But I never wanted to take it farther than that. I never wanted to become an artiste.”
She had to eventually obey ‘Him’. While it was a tug of war getting everyone convinced that studio work was the next thing, people around her also eventually conceded. Her family, she says, was there for her.
“They would take me to the studio. And we moved from one studio to the other. I couldn’t stand up in the studio. I would just lay my voice and go back.”
This is how Aimee got out her maiden baby of creativity, Lost Without You, a seven-track album recently presented in Lagos. Besides, she, in the pool of the pain, shot five of the tracks into videos that have been on air for some time. Several gospel acts that include Femi Mikal, Victor Olayeni and Rose Yusuf also performed at the album presentation.
“When I watch the videos now, it is difficult for me to explain how I came by them. When on location, they would even dress me up. Now, music gives me reason why I want to live. It has taught me how to worship God. I am also bold to say that no matter how tough the challenges one might be facing, God is faithful.”
Aimee says she is healed now. She went through the surgery and survived it. A brother of hers, Jin, wrote the songs in Lost Without You. Currently, she is working on new songs while also writing a book as she is looking forward to having another concert soon.
Apart from her arrestingly poetic voice, Aimee has an intellectual base that can help her music. Despite the peculiar nasty situation she went through while producing the album, the songs generally come out interesting. One of the tracks, Oluwa mo mi, comes in a sober and expectant mood while Good Good inspirationally asks, “Is He good to you?” In Friend, in which she features Mix Master J, the artiste goes philosophical, reasoning that a good friend is like the oil put in an engine and the sweater worn during cold season.
The title track, Lost without You, is the theme song of re-dedication which seeks to situate Jesus as the compass of the singer’s life.

Police harass, brutalise us on unrestricted roads – Okada riders

The police van that knocked down the rider; Okada riders at Magodo Phase II entrance.
Some men of the Lagos State Police Command and task force enforcing the state traffic law on okada riders in Ojodu and Berger area now employ brutal tactics to arrest riders who violate the law, findings has shown.
Our correspondents, who went around spots that served as okada parks in Isheri, a police van marked ‘Magodo GRA Phase II Residents Association Security Patrol Van’ swung by a motorcyclist riding along the road and hit him.
The rider fell into a ditch beside the road and the motorcycle fell on him.
The policemen jumped down from the van, pointed their guns at the rider as one of them immediately took the motorcycle and mounted it.
The rider, who sustained injuries on his head and leg, climbed onto the police van while one of the policemen rode the motorcycle behind.
Residents of the area said the incident was a common occurrence in the area.
Some of the riders, who spoke with our correspondent on Thursday, also accused the state task force of arresting and impounding motorcycles on roads that were not classified as out of bound to okada.
A group of okada riders on Kosoko Street, off Ogunnusi Road, Ojodu, said even though the street was not “off limit,” the Lagos task force had on many occasions impounded motorcycles on the street.
One of the riders, Ibrahim Adejobi, said, “After the vandalisation of a BRT bus on November 7 by some okada riders, the task force came here with a Black Maria and confiscated every motorcycle in sight irrespective of whether it was commercial or private.
“Since that day, it was like they renewed their wickedness. Any motorcycle close to the Kosoko Junction, even if the motorcycle is not plying the Ogunnusi Road, would be impounded.
“There was a time a motorcyclist at the junction saw them and sped into the street. They chased and impounded the motorcycle. They then proceeded to impound every motorcycle they saw on Kosoko Street that day.
A store owner at Ojodu, Caroline Ugwu, said that in the last two weeks, she had witnessed the brutality of task force members about four times in the front of her store.
An okada rider, who identified himself simply as Abubakar, said one of his friends sustained a serious injury when a van used by task force officials knocked him down while trying to impound his motorcycle.
“He sustained a burn from the motorcycle’s exhaust pipe when he was knocked down and the okada fell on his leg. They did not even care. They took the motorcycle and put it in their Black Maria and left,” he said.
Okada riders in Magodo GRA Phase II and its environs also lamented police harassment on routes that okada were not prohibited.
An okada rider, Ola Ishola, at the Magodo Phase II gate park said the police attached to the Ogudu Area Command had made it a daily routine to impound motorcycles in the outlying streets in the area.
He said, “Despite the fact that we ply Cele, Love All, Aladelola, Oluwalogbon, Dairo and Makinde streets, which are not part of the restricted routes, policemen still come into these places to harass us.
“These policemen usually come into these streets with rented commercial buses and as soon as they come, they will impound our motorcycles and whisk away the riders to their station.
“At the station, they will demand for sums between N10,000 and N20,000 while threatening to take the okada to Alausa unless their demand is met.”
Another rider in the area, Mohammed Isa, said the constant harassment had made many of them sustained various injuries in an attempt to evade arrest.
He said, “I wonder why people brazenly derive pleasure in meting out degrading and inhuman treatment to fellow human beings. For crying out loud, we are not contravening any section of the traffic law, yet they still harass us.
“The last time they stormed our park, about three of us got injured when they started hitting us with their gun butts.
“Even while riding on the road, they don’t bother if we are carrying passengers or not. They simply double park their vehicle sometimes, hit us and wound our passengers. We now live in perpetual fear despite operating lawfully on the road.”
In Isheri, residents said since the incident of November 7, when policemen attached to the state task force embarked on indiscriminate clamp down of okada, commercial motorcycle riders no longer operate in the area.
A resident, Segun Joshua, said, “On November 7, those policemen even went to the extent of impounding motorcycles parked inside residential apartments.
“Now you can hardly see an Okada plying inner streets of Isheri, Olowora, UNILAG Estate, Gateway Estate area and its environs. Government should really intervene and restore normalcy.”
When contacted, the police officer in charge of the task force, Mr. Bayo Sulaiman, said on the phone that the day the BRT was vandalised, some okada riders who fled into different streets were the ones arrested.
Sulaiman said, “We are talking about motorcycles that have two wheels.
How do you arrest riders without them falling down especially when they are trying to evade arrest?
“This country cannot develop when people keep opposing good things. All these reports that the task force is being brutal are just ploys to oppose the law which we all know is a good thing. The chairman of the riders’ association in the areas you mentioned knows the truth.
“About the policemen from Magodo Phase II who you say knocked down the okada rider, I cannot comment on that since that was not done by our task force.”
But the Police Public Relations Officer, Ngozi Braide, was not available for comment when contacted.
After calls and text messages were sent to her phone, an assistant, who answered her phone, said she was “on air.”
However, subsequent calls were not answered.

Doctors leave bullet in banker’s body, extract four

Badejo
An employee of Access Bank, Femi Badejo, who was allegedly shot alongside a security guard, Joshua Musa, by policemen on Saturday at Ikota, Lagos, still has a bullet lodged in his wrist.
We learnt that the bullet could not be removed at the moment.
“I’m still in pain from the bullet wounds. I was shot five times. Four of the bullets have been removed but the fifth one is still lodged in my wrist and because of fear of complications, doctors can’t touch it for now,” he said.
However, Badejo has been moved from St. Nicholas Hospital, Lagos Island, to an undisclosed location.
Meanwhile, Covenant University Alumni Association has written a petition to the Inspector-General of Police, Muhammed Abubakar, over the alleged shooting.
Badejo is an alumnus of the university and member of the association.
The Vice-President of the Abuja chapter of the association, Mr. Reginald Bassey, berated the police for lack of professionalism and failing to issue a public apology.
Bassey said the matter was more pathetic because Badejo is a promising young man, a husband and a father-to-be, who had been left incapacitated for days.
He added, “We have written a petition to demand for three things. First, we want a thorough investigation into the matter and we want the policemen who shot the victims to be brought to book.
“We see it as callous that those who are paid to secure lives could storm a compound and start shooting sporadically.
“Also, we want compensation for Badejo and the compensation must be commensurate with the extent of the injury.”
Bassey expressed dismay that rather than address the situation, the police resorted to harassing a journalist that reported the incident.
“We want a formal apology from the Inspector-General of police addressed to Badejo,” he said.
The Coordinator of the Lagos chapter of the association, Mr. Olufemi Fajemisin, who signed the petition, questioned the level of training of policemen in the state due to the incessant allegations of extra-judicial killings.
Badejo and Musa were allegedly shot by the policemen who responded to a distress call about a robbery in the banker’s home on Saturday at Ikota area of Lagos.
The residents of the house said when the policemen arrived the scene about an hour after the robbers had left, they started shooting indiscriminately resulting in injuring the banker and security guard.
Badejo was shot five times while Musa was hit twice.
The police claimed that Badejo was shot only once while the security guard had been shot by the armed robbers before they arrived
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