Showing posts with label stowaway boy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stowaway boy. Show all posts

Thursday 5 September 2013

Mother expresses concern over whereabout of stowaway boy

By SIMON EBEGBULEM

BENIN CITY— MOTHER of the 13-year stowaway boy, Mrs Evelyn Oikhena, yesterday, expressed confusion over the whereabout of her son, Daniel after officials of the Department of State Services, DSS, handed him over to Edo State Ministry of Women Affairs, Tuesday.

The family of the boy, including the father, Mr Osaigbovo Oikhena, who surfaced prior to the meeting between the family and Governor Adams Oshiomhole at Government House Benin City, Tuesday, appealed to the state government to release the boy to enable him return home to his family.

The meeting between the family and Governor Oshiomhole held at close door lasted till about 8:30pm, but Mrs Oikhena, who spoke to Vanguard, yesterday, said that the governor had instructed the security agents and officials of the Ministry of Women Affairs to release the boy to the family but that she was yet to see him back home.

[caption id="attachment_411117" align="alignnone" width="412"]Evelyn Oikhena and son, Daniel Oikhena Evelyn Oikhena and son, Daniel Oikhena[/caption]

“I just don’t know what is happening now. The governor said he should be released to us but I think the ministry officials have their own plans. I don’t even know where my son is kept now, I am still trying to find out what the problem is. We are missing him and we believe that he is a small boy and should not be subjected to further trauma. We thank the governor for his concern and God will bless him.”

Vanguard learnt that ministry officials believe that the stowaway boy should be in their custody to educate him on how to avoid any form of criminality in future with a view to ensuring he uses his talents positively.

It was further learnt that Governor Oshiomhole had admonished the boy to be serious with his education and avoid any form of criminality, just as he assured of the state government’s commitment towards ensuring that the children of the poor enjoy quality education.

Sunday 1 September 2013

Arik stowaway, Boy Oi!

By Ochereome Nnanna

FOR passengers on an Arik Air flight from Benin to Lagos, Saturday, August 24,2013 will be a day to remember like no other. On that day, they climbed down the gangway of their flight at the General Aviation Terminal in Lagos and met with a spectacle that gave them the psychedelic shock of their lives.

A young teenager of about fourteen years old sporting a pink polo shirt with a cream Catholic rosary hanging loosely around his neck, climbed down from the tyre hole of the aircraft! He was also carrying what looked like a school bag. Then, in typical Nigeria fashion of shutting the gate after the horse has bolted away, security men swooped and led him away.

His name was later given as Daniel Oikhena, a boy said to be a loner and an aficionado of action movies which he watches till late in the night. I call him Boy Oi. When I examined the countenance of this kid as he was being dragged away, I did not see the fear or trepidation that hits when one has just escaped death. All I saw was a touch of bewilderment on a face that exuded intelligence and confidence.

What happened that day was extraordinary, and I must admit that the media slept on duty over this mind-bending news. In other, more media-alert parts of the world, all the television networks would focus on it for days, if not weeks, while all the major newspapers would descend on it like a pack of hungry hyenas, tearing every angle of it to shreds for a news-hungry public to devour.

Fancy what could have happened. The boy could have been crushed to death by the tyres when they were retracting. The dead body could have caused the tyres to hook and fail to eject on arrival in Lagos, thus leading to a plane crash. That black bag could have contained an explosive, which could have gone off mid-air, blowing the plane and its human cargo to bits. All these because workers of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) and Arik Air tasked with the job of ensuring the safety and comfort of air travellers woefully failed in their duties.

All we saw was FAAN and Arik exchanging blames. No one was made to lose his job; none was made to report to the law enforcement agencies to answer questions for endangering public safety. That is Nigeria.

This, certainly, is not the first time Nigerians are stowing away in planes. Stowaways have been happening since transportation was invented by man. But no serious country records aircraft stowaways with the frequency that we see here in Nigeria where it has almost become commonplace.

On Thursday, October 26th 2012, I was on an Arik (again!) flight to New York to cover the US presidential election. The flight departed the Murtala Muhammed International Airport at exactly 4.20pm and landed safely at about 1.35am New York time. We all disembarked and went our respective separate ways, only for me to read a couple of days later that a dead man was found in the hold of the plane!

Apparently, he hid among the luggage, quite obviously with the assistance of some people charged with the plane’s security and logistical services. Similar such reports have come from Arik flights from Nigeria to South Africa and a few other routes. Arik needs to look inwards to know if they are truly well grounded to do airline business. So does FAAN. Whatever lapses the airlines may have, the industry regulators should be able to spot them and bring down the hammer as and when due.

Back to Boy Oi. I suggest that after interrogating him, the punishment should be very minimal. Being a minor who got mixed up with such a complex and perilous adventure, I will not put the full weight of culpability on his shoulders. The family he comes from is obviously not in the best of shapes to cater for his financial and psychological needs, thus his decision to take his destiny into his hands in that suicidal manner. Secondly, the system he was born into is not working. Otherwise, he would have been caught before the flight took off.

Boy Oi should be helped. He is an extraordinary young man. Such people can be turned to an asset to society. But if they are allowed to grow wild like weeds, they can equally turn to haunt society. His case requires expert and matured handling.

My last line is that parents should resume being parents. Let us spend more time with our children and study them closely. Let us encourage them to speak their minds to us and be eager to discuss with them. Money is only a small part of a child’s needs. We must help children to grow, not allow them to grow up anyhow. Let us revive the African concept of the community as a collective nursery for raising young people.

Abandoning these children as we now do is not in our interests. The Federal government and their state counterparts have ministries for the youth. What do they do, except using the youth for political self-aggrandisement? One misguided youth could have led to the death of scores of innocent air travellers. Some of whom might even be foreigners visiting the country.

We will surely pay through the nose for neglecting our youth, one day soon.

 

 

Suntai: Easier said than done

THE Governor Danbaba Suntai impasse in Taraba State is not an easy nut to crack. Commentators asking him to resign or be impeached due to permanent incapacity have to look closely at Section 189 dealing with Permanent Incapacity. Only two-thirds of the members of the executive council (people appointed by the governor; people who owe their employment to him) can initiate this process. They are unlikely to do this for obvious reasons.

For as long as Governor Suntai remains alive, he is free to cling to power. His loyalists will see to that. There are too many interests that will be affected by Suntai’s loss of power. We are not just talking about religious and ethnic interests, we are also talking about 2015 prospects. Only a dead president or governor will leave political cabals with no choice but to let go. The best the state can hope for is that development is not impeded in the heat and vapour of this controversy.

Clearly, Section 189 is a failed constitutional clause and must be amended to ensure the state does not fall sick along with an ailing governor.

 

STOWAWAY SAGA: Teenage boy wanted to fulfill ambition to go to America - Mum

By Simon Ebegbulem, Benin-City

*The quarrel with sister moments before risky action

*Why he survived inside aircraft’s wheel — Expert

Madam Evelyn Ohikhena, like many other Nigerians, was shocked when she was informed by her sister in-law in Germany, that her son, Daniel, stowed from Benin-City to Lagos via an Arik flight  penultimate Saturday. Before the call from the sister who read the story online on Sunday morning, Madam Oikhena had gone to the police station to report a case of missing person.

The mother, a saloonist with four children, was invited, on Tuesday, by officials of the Department of State Security (DSS). She narrated her ordeal to Sunday Vanguard thereafter. “My son’s name is Ricky Daniel. He answers one name in school and another one at home. He is in JSS 1. Before now, he was in a private school Young Scholars, but, because I could not afford his school fees when my saloon got burnt, I now took him to Ogbe Secondary School to continue his third term”, she said. She continued, “My sister- in-law in Germany, who was unaware that we were looking for him, called to alert me of the development.

She got the news via internet. I think she said she read it in Vanguard. She was the one who told me Ricky was in Lagos, that he broke  airport security and entered the wheel of the plane heading to Lagos. Soon after she called, my attention was drawn to newspapers by sympathizers and family friends. I rushed to Ring Road where I bought a  newspaper and thereafter I went to the police station to report the matter. He was not used to leaving home”. According to her, the police initially did not believe her story as they said “I did not know who I was looking for.”

[caption id="attachment_410831" align="alignnone" width="412"]*The apprehended teenager who stowed from Benin. *The apprehended teenager who stowed from Benin.[/caption]

Narrating how the boy left home without being stopped, Mrs Ohikhena said, “I left home around 9pm on Friday for the house of my elder sister who gave birth to pass the night. When I came back the following morning, my daughter told me that she and her brother-the stowed boy- had an argument , that she found him watching film when she woke up to ease herself and that he broke the television set.

The sister explained that my mum-their grandmother-  settled the quarrel but when she woke up in the morning, she could not find him”. Debunking the claim by the teenage boy that he left the house because he was being maltreated, Madam Ohikhena said, “ I did not maltreat him, but I don’t play with him . And I don’t joke with my children’s education. I give them the best  of education.

Everybody knows me, go and ask about me in Oba Market. When we commenced the search for him, his nine year-old younger brother told me that each time they were watching film, he always said he will go abroad, that he will go to the airport to enter plane. He told me to go and check the airport. I did not believe him. He does not have friends, he hardly leaves home. My son thought he was going to America. My only joy now is that he is alive”.

The stowaway saga began penultimate Saturday when the pilot of the Arik plane, about to take from Benin-City enroute Lagos, claimed to have seen Daniel and informed the control tower which promised that security agents will apprehend the boy. The stowaway teenager, however, successfully entered the nose wheel of the aircraft. He was found when the plane arrived Lagos by officials of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN). His survival in the aircraft wheel well was surprising too because most stowaways face numerous health risks.

From statistics, from 1947 to September 2012, there were 96 stowaway attempts worldwide in wheel wells of 85 separate flights, which resulted in 73 deaths. An aviation expert, David Learmont, suggested that no one would be willing to risk such journey, adding that stowaways who survive usually traveled relatively short distances or at low altitude. He also attributed why stowaways are prevalent in Africa to the poor perimeter security in several airports.