Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Three came back


In 1995, one of the brutal killings reportedly linked to the government of then military Nigerian head of state, Sani Abacha, was carried out. The victim was Alfred Rewane, a businessman and Warri chief who was also known as a major financial supporter of the pro-democracy group, National Democratic Coalition (NADECO). He was assassinated at his home in 1995. Shortly after Mr. Rewane’s death, the police paraded seven young men — Sylvester Iyasele, Saturday Egbeide, Ola Obanuso, Sunday Obanobi, Effiong Elemi Edu, Elvis Iremuma, the former personal assistant and driver to the late activist, and Lucky Igbinovia, who was the security detail to Mr. Rewane — whom it said were behind the murder.

Osagyefo's Park in Accra


The place of His last rest...

His official car as the President of Ghana

Tree planted by Nelson Mandela at the park
The Kwame Nkrumah Memorial Park is a national park in Accra, Ghana named after the country's first president. The remains of the late nationalist called ‘Osagyefo' (The Victorious One) in Akan language, lies in a mausoleum in the park.

Echoes of history at Cape Coast Castle


Its strategic location on the Atlantic coastline led to its invasion by European slave traders in the early 14th century. Since then, the Ghanaian town of Cape Coast is visited annually by tourists in numbers that far outstrip the town's population of about 100,000 people.

Ilorin’s queens of the night


Thirty-five-year old Patience (not her real name) was a trader at Uselu Market, Benin City, Edo State, before it caught fire last December. With a huge debt of almost N1 million, she ran away to Ilorin, the Kwara State capital, in an attempt to escape from her creditor ‑ only to end up in Honeymoon Hotel, where she makes between N2,000 and N5000 daily from commercial sex.