BEWARE
(Life experience.com)
(Citadeloflife.blogspot.com)
Don't be perplex when you hear the boom boom sound of boko's alarm
Like a trumpet, it will fall the wall of your heart
Giving you heart attack
Shattering bodies in the space of air
Beware
Don't be dumbfounded when you hear
That the viral diseases are widespread
Eliminating 30% of souls monthly
Increasing our death rate
Making us to purchase melancholy without epiphany of symphony
Beware
Won't you be happy to
Hear that the chibok girls are back , safe and sound
Or you think it isn't possible
Why give up on God
While He is still on the throne
Why give up on your leaders
While they are on duty
Just believe chibok girls will be back soon
Beware
I deduce you haven't heard this
Just know that my prowess is from inspirations, imaginations and experiences
Why can't you be radical and passionate for
What you love doing
For when you are passionate
You will touch life with your muse
Beware
Beware, I tell you most solemnly to beware
For the fact that you sing
Doesn't make you a song
For the fact that you act
Doesn't make you a movie
For the fact that you motivate
Doesn't make you an inspiration
For the fact that you write Doesn't make you a book
For the fact that you are a comedian
Doesn't make you a joke
For the fact that you are a poet
Doesn't make you a poem
For the fact that you dance
Doesn't make you a rhythm
For the fact that you rap
Doesn't make you a rhyme
Beware
©Copyright
#Sunsampaul d Philosopher
#Beware
22/11/2015
11:40pm

CITADEL OF LIFE........................(OWNED BY SUNSAMPAUL EGWU A.K.A PHILOSOPHER) Here we bring to your desk poems, prose, articles, news headlines, and all the pleasure of life in written and pictorial form. feel free to make submission of your muse for the world to view your prowess, appreciate it, share it and promote it if need be. NOTE, CITADEL OF LIFE is for everyone. it is the stronghold of life that appreciate all literary works and promote art and literature.Feel free to comment
nice poems
Monday, November 23, 2015
MY LIT-RAY-CHURL IN LITERATURE(poem by Sunsampaul)
MY LIT-RAY-CHURL IN LITERATURE
(Life experience.com)
(Citadeloflife.blogspot.com)
#Sunsampaul d Philosopher
My Lit-ray-churl in Literature
Filled with artistic creatures
Of benevolence nature
I write to fuss my pals with my muse
Making them know I lit ray of churl
Burning my foes in woe
Leaving them unclad behaving like a clown
My Lit-ray-churl is the father of Literature
My muse the first son of art
My prowess the grand patron of philosophy, logic, ethics, metaphysics,
epistemology and aesthetics.
My Methodology I found lodging between the thighs of
ecology,eulogy,sociology psychology and physiology.
My Lit-ray-churl in Literature is all texts
Written about a specific field of Philosophy
Searching for the past ,the present and the future of the figurative
pictures I saw in nature
Developing human mind,
To accommodate the sweetness and bitterness of life
Speaking reality in formality without partiality
I write from experiences not from expectations
The prowess in my Lit-ray-churl reveals the unseen of man's heart
To show the truth hidden in darkness
Sharing wisdom from the root of Solomon
Basking in ecstasies of my prophecies
I Lit rays in Prose
Evaluate Poetry
And bisect Drama
I uses words not languages
I spread muse that amuse and fuss
My Lit-ray-churl in literature
Is an artistic work of prowess
©Copyright
#Sunsampaul d Philosopher
#My Lit-ray-churl in Literarure
21/11/2015
11:17am
(Life experience.com)
(Citadeloflife.blogspot.com)
#Sunsampaul d Philosopher
My Lit-ray-churl in Literature
Filled with artistic creatures
Of benevolence nature
I write to fuss my pals with my muse
Making them know I lit ray of churl
Burning my foes in woe
Leaving them unclad behaving like a clown
My Lit-ray-churl is the father of Literature
My muse the first son of art
My prowess the grand patron of philosophy, logic, ethics, metaphysics,
epistemology and aesthetics.
My Methodology I found lodging between the thighs of
ecology,eulogy,sociology psychology and physiology.
My Lit-ray-churl in Literature is all texts
Written about a specific field of Philosophy
Searching for the past ,the present and the future of the figurative
pictures I saw in nature
Developing human mind,
To accommodate the sweetness and bitterness of life
Speaking reality in formality without partiality
I write from experiences not from expectations
The prowess in my Lit-ray-churl reveals the unseen of man's heart
To show the truth hidden in darkness
Sharing wisdom from the root of Solomon
Basking in ecstasies of my prophecies
I Lit rays in Prose
Evaluate Poetry
And bisect Drama
I uses words not languages
I spread muse that amuse and fuss
My Lit-ray-churl in literature
Is an artistic work of prowess
©Copyright
#Sunsampaul d Philosopher
#My Lit-ray-churl in Literarure
21/11/2015
11:17am
Friday, November 20, 2015
26 ATTRIBUTES TO GREATNESS
IMAGE: Getty Images
In the words of John Quincy Adams, "If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader."
Great leadership has the potential to excite people to achieve extraordinary things, which makes leadership among the highest of callings.
Measure yourself against these 26 attributes and ask yourself how you can lead from your very best qualities:
When you embrace these attributes from A to Z, you walk the path of great leadership. Begin now and see where you end up.
Great leadership has the potential to excite people to achieve extraordinary things, which makes leadership among the highest of callings.
Measure yourself against these 26 attributes and ask yourself how you can lead from your very best qualities:
1. Authentic
Be genuine and reliable, trustworthy, and always the same person.2. Brave
Develop courage in the face of risks--and bad outcomes.3. Character-driven
Character resonates with people and impels them to follow and trust.4. Decisive
Determination and daring make great leaders unshakeable.5. Engaging
Connect with enthusiasm, empowerment and encouragement; remember that everyone can make a positive contribution.6. Fearless
If you are brave in your thinking and daring in your actions, you can accomplish anything.7. Goal-oriented
Goals provide governance to vision and mission, guiding people and organizations to a meaningful purpose.8. Humble
Leadership with humility means service to others, ownership of your own mistakes and failures, and openness to learning.9. Inspiring
Leading with intuition and intelligence gives everyone around you room to grow.10. Just
Always seek to be guided by truth and reason; be a champion of equality and fairness.11. Knowledgeable
Be so well informed, learned, and cultivated that people are drawn to you for their own enlightenment.12. Listener
Good leaders speak; great leaders listen. When you're listening to others, you're learning from them.13. Motivating
Mentor and encourage those around you. Inspire them to take chances.14. Noble
To be a great leader, live in a way that draws others to emulate you.15. Optimistic
To lead with optimism is to be confident, cheerful and positive, leading to openness and opportunity for all.16. Progressive
Keep moving, increasing and growing, and pioneering new frontiers. Those around you will gain energy from being part of a dynamic enterprise.17. Qualitative
Always choose quality over quantity; hold yourself and those around you to the highest standard.18. Reliable
Show people they can count on you in good times and bad by living up to your word. Be dependable and consistent.19. Supportive
When you're encouraging, caring and sympathetic and helpful, offering feedback both positive and negative, you give those around you the confidence they need to persist.20. Trustworthy
People are reassured by dependability, reliability, credibility and competence. Have faith in those you're leading, and they will have faith in you.21. Unbiased
Be impartial and open-minded; hold to the value of listening, learning, giving chances and being open to opinions.22. Visionary
Be innovative, imaginative, and perceptive. What differentiates great leaders from the rest is they not only have plenty of ideas but also commit to carrying them out.23. Wise
Wisdom in leadership is more than just being wise--it's using that wisdom to give insight and inspiration to others.
MORE:
24. Xcellent (with apologies for the liberty in spelling)
Aim for distinction and virtuosity, motivate yourself to always give your highest quality effort.25. Yearning
One test of a true leader is a constant longing and hunger. Always be looking to be more, do more and make a difference in a big way.26. Zealous
A devout drive to be dedicated to something bigger than yourself fuels a fierce passion to be help others be successful. Embrace that intensity and put it to work to better the world.When you embrace these attributes from A to Z, you walk the path of great leadership. Begin now and see where you end up.
20 STEPS IN WRITING A GOOD ARTICLE
. In order to write a good article, first choose
your topic and decide its boundaries. (The topic must be narrowed as
much as possible, and the scope of it must be outlined clearly.)
2. Make a serious and detailed research on the topic. (Be sure that you have not missed any important issue written about the topic.)
3. Read treatises, articles and books about the topic until you are sure that you have comprehended the topic with every aspect. (Your comprehension of your readings determines the quality of your article as much as the quantity and quality of your readings do.)
4. If your topic is still too broad, revise your topic according to your readings and narrow it as much as possible. (Not limiting the topic means that you will write a heavy speech and a common composition.)
5. Make your plan! (Writing what pops into mind without any plan is useless. Plan is your road map.)
6. Classify the knowledge that you read and collect according to the plan.
7. Leave out all irrelevant information!
8. Start to write your article according to your plan. (Do not wait to be inspired. You will be inspired as soon as you begin to write.)
9. Write your article in a clear, understandable and plain language. (Using a pompous language, using obscure words and making long sentences are not the features of a good article.)
10. People of all ages must be able to understand your claims, aim and sentences easily.
11. It should be clear what you mean with the term, concepts and words you use in the article. (While writing an article, keep an ordinary and a terminology dictionary with you at all times. The utmost danger an article faces is to use terms and concepts wrongly. Make sure that you don’t overuse terminology that could distract readers either. Terms are the fruits, frames, keys and summary of knowledge. Use them sparingly.)
12. In the introduction part, write clearly the basic aim of the article and the conclusion you want to reach.
13. Make the first sentences of each paragraph the main ideas of them.
14. Be careful that your article does not have spelling mistakes. Print out after you finish, and have a quick but careful check to find any errors.
15. A good article is sufficiently long enough. Cross out any irrelevant words or even sentences. It is a good article if it is saved from unnecessary words, sentences, paragraphs or information.
16. Quote the sentences and information that do not belong to you referring to them either by footnotes or parenthesis. (The more an article includes references the more qualified it is. Value and eminence of an article lies in the knowledge and scholars it refers to.)
17. Make a special study of conclusion part of the article. (The conclusion is not the summary of article. It is a part that opens a door, makes an evaluation, and shows your contribution to the world of ideas, or academia.)
18. As a good introduction of an article shows your knowledge, the conclusion of a good article shows your penetration to the future, in other words your horizon.
19. A good article does not make repetitions of previous ones, instead it is a scientific text that provides openings, stimulates and contributes.
20. After completing your article, send it to at least three, if possible five, people on whose knowledge and perspective you rely. Request them to criticize your article. Then edit your article according to their critics, and after reading again and again till you are sure, send it to relevant places to be published.
(While sending your article to be published, do not forget to pray to God
in order that He gives effectiveness to the article; because there should be sincerity in an article as much as the seriousness.)
2. Make a serious and detailed research on the topic. (Be sure that you have not missed any important issue written about the topic.)
3. Read treatises, articles and books about the topic until you are sure that you have comprehended the topic with every aspect. (Your comprehension of your readings determines the quality of your article as much as the quantity and quality of your readings do.)
4. If your topic is still too broad, revise your topic according to your readings and narrow it as much as possible. (Not limiting the topic means that you will write a heavy speech and a common composition.)
5. Make your plan! (Writing what pops into mind without any plan is useless. Plan is your road map.)
6. Classify the knowledge that you read and collect according to the plan.
7. Leave out all irrelevant information!
8. Start to write your article according to your plan. (Do not wait to be inspired. You will be inspired as soon as you begin to write.)
9. Write your article in a clear, understandable and plain language. (Using a pompous language, using obscure words and making long sentences are not the features of a good article.)
10. People of all ages must be able to understand your claims, aim and sentences easily.
11. It should be clear what you mean with the term, concepts and words you use in the article. (While writing an article, keep an ordinary and a terminology dictionary with you at all times. The utmost danger an article faces is to use terms and concepts wrongly. Make sure that you don’t overuse terminology that could distract readers either. Terms are the fruits, frames, keys and summary of knowledge. Use them sparingly.)
12. In the introduction part, write clearly the basic aim of the article and the conclusion you want to reach.
13. Make the first sentences of each paragraph the main ideas of them.
14. Be careful that your article does not have spelling mistakes. Print out after you finish, and have a quick but careful check to find any errors.
15. A good article is sufficiently long enough. Cross out any irrelevant words or even sentences. It is a good article if it is saved from unnecessary words, sentences, paragraphs or information.
16. Quote the sentences and information that do not belong to you referring to them either by footnotes or parenthesis. (The more an article includes references the more qualified it is. Value and eminence of an article lies in the knowledge and scholars it refers to.)
17. Make a special study of conclusion part of the article. (The conclusion is not the summary of article. It is a part that opens a door, makes an evaluation, and shows your contribution to the world of ideas, or academia.)
18. As a good introduction of an article shows your knowledge, the conclusion of a good article shows your penetration to the future, in other words your horizon.
19. A good article does not make repetitions of previous ones, instead it is a scientific text that provides openings, stimulates and contributes.
20. After completing your article, send it to at least three, if possible five, people on whose knowledge and perspective you rely. Request them to criticize your article. Then edit your article according to their critics, and after reading again and again till you are sure, send it to relevant places to be published.
(While sending your article to be published, do not forget to pray to God
in order that He gives effectiveness to the article; because there should be sincerity in an article as much as the seriousness.)
10 STEPS IN WRITING A GREAT POEM
Tip #1 Know Your Goal.
If you don’t know where you’re going, how can you get there?You need to know what you are trying to accomplish before you begin any project. Writing a poem is no exception.
Tip #2 Avoid Clichés
Stephen Minot definesa cliché as: “A metaphor or simile that has become so familiar from overuse that the vehicle … no longer contributes any meaning whatever to the tenor. It provides neither the vividness of a fresh metaphor nor the strength of a single unmodified word….The word is also used to describe overused but nonmetaphorical expressions such as ‘tried and true’ and ‘each and every'” (Three Genres: The Writing of Poetry, Fiction and Drama, 405).Cliché also describes other overused literary elements. “Familiar plot patterns and stock characters are clichés on a big scale” (Minot 148). Clichés can be overused themes, character types, or plots. For example, the “Lone Ranger” cowboy is a cliché because it has been used so many times that people no longer find it original.
A work full of clichés is like a plate of old food: unappetizing.
Clichés work against original communication. People value creative talent. They want to see work that rises above the norm. When they see a work without clichés, they know the writer has worked his or her tail off, doing whatever it takes to be original. When they see a work full to the brim with clichés, they feel that the writer is not showing them anything above the ordinary. (In case you hadn’t noticed, this paragraph is chock full of clichés… I’ll bet you were bored to tears.)
Clichés dull meaning. Because clichéd writing sounds so familiar, people can complete finish whole lines without even reading them. If they don’t bother to read your poem, they certainly won’t stop to think about it. If they do not stop to think about your poem, they will never encounter the deeper meanings that mark the work of an accomplished poet.
Examples of Clichés:
|
|
How to Improve a Cliché
I will take the cliché “as busy as a bee” and show how you can express the same idea without cliché.- Determine what the clichéd phrase is trying to say.
In this case, I can see that “busy as a bee” is a way to describe the state of being busy. - Think of an original way to describe what the cliché is trying to describe.
For this cliché, I started by thinking about busyness. I asked myself the question, “What things are associated with being busy?” I came up with: college, my friend Jessica, corporation bosses, old ladies making quilts and canning goods, and a computer, fiddlers fiddling. From this list, I selected a thing that is not as often used in association with busyness: violins. - Create a phrase using the non-clichéd way of description.
I took my object associated with busyness and turned it into a phrase: “I feel like a bow fiddling an Irish reel.” This phrase communicates the idea of “busyness” much better than the worn-out, familiar cliché. The reader’s mind can picture the insane fury of the bow on the violin, and know that the poet is talking about a very frenzied sort of busyness. In fact, those readers who know what an Irish reel sounds like may even get a laugh out of this fresh way to describe “busyness.”
Tip #3 Avoid Sentimentality.
Sentimentality is “dominated by a blunt appeal to the emotions of pity and love …. Popular subjects are puppies, grandparents, and young lovers” (Minot 416). “When readers have the feeling that emotions like rage or indignation have been pushed artificially for their own sake, they will not take the poem seriously” (132).Minot says that the problem with sentimentality is that it detracts from the literary quality of your work (416). If your poetry is mushy or teary-eyed, your readers may openly rebel against your effort to invoke emotional response in them. If that happens, they will stop thinking about the issues you want to raise, and will instead spend their energy trying to control their own gag reflex.
Tip #4 Use Images.
“BE A PAINTER IN WORDS,” says UWEC English professor emerita, poet, and songwriter Peg Lauber. She says poetry should stimulate six senses:- sight
- hearing
- smell
- touch
- taste
- kinesiology (motion)
- “Sunlight varnishes magnolia branches crimson” (sight)
- “Vacuum cleaner’s whir and hum startles my ferret” (hearing)
- “Penguins lumber to their nests” (kinesiology)
Tip #5 Use Metaphor and Simile.
Use metaphor and simile to bring imagery and concrete words into your writing.Metaphor
A metaphor is a statement that pretends one thing is really something else:Simile
Example: “The lead singer is an elusive salamander.”
This phrase does not mean that the lead singer is literally a salamander. Rather, it takes an abstract characteristic of a salamander (elusiveness) and projects it onto the person. By using metaphor to describe the lead singer, the poet creates a much more vivid picture of him/her than if the poet had simply said “The lead singer’s voice is hard to pick out.”
A simile is a statement where you say one object is similar to another object. Similes use the words “like” or “as.”Note: A simile is not automatically any more or less “poetic” than a metaphor. You don’t suddenly produce better poems if you replace all your similes with metaphors, or vice versa. The point to remember is that comparison, inference, and suggestion are all important tools of poetry; similes and metaphors are tools that will help in those areas.
Example: “He was curious as a caterpillar” or “He was curious, like a caterpillar”
This phrase takes one quality of a caterpillar and projects it onto a person. It is an easy way to attach concrete images to feelings and character traits that might usually be described with abstract words.
Tip #6 Use Concrete Words Instead of Abstract Words.
Concrete words describe things that people experience with their senses.- orange
- warm
- cat
Poets use concrete words help the reader get a “picture” of what the poem is talking about. When the reader has a “picture” of what the poem is talking about, he/she can better understand what the poet is talking about.
Abstract words refer to concepts or feelings.
- liberty
- happy
- love
A person can’t see, touch, or taste any of these things. As a result, when used in poetry, these words might simply fly over the reader’s head, without triggering any sensory response. Further, “liberty,” “happy,” and “love” can mean different things to different people. Therefore, if the poet uses such a word, the reader may take a different meaning from it than the poet intended.
Change Abstract Words Into Concrete Words
To avoid problems caused by using abstract words, use concrete words.Example: “She felt happy.”
This line uses the abstract word “happy.” To improve this line, change the abstract word to a concrete image. One way to achieve this is to think of an object or a scene that evokes feelings of happiness to represent the happy feeling.
Improvement: “Her smile spread like red tint on ripening tomatoes.”
This line uses two concrete images: a smile and a ripening tomato. Describing the smile shows the reader something about happiness, rather than simply coming right out and naming the emotion. Also, the symbolism of the tomato further reinforces the happy feelings. Red is frequently associated with love; ripening is a positive natrual process; food is further associated with being satisfied.
Prof. Jerz belabors Kara’s point:Extension: Now, let’s do something with this image.
OK, the image has gotten embarrassingly obvious now, but you can see how the introduction of the tomato permits us to make many additional connections. While Kara’s original example simply reported a static emotional state — “She felt happy,” the image of the ripening tomato, which Kara introduced as a simple simile to describe a smile, has grown into something much more complex. Regardless of what the word “tomato” invoked in your mind, an abstraction like “happy” can never stretch itself out to become a whole poem, without relying on concrete images. –DGJShe sulked in the garden, reticent...hard; Unwilling to face his kisses -- or unable. One autumn morn she felt her sour face Ripen to a helpless smile, tomato-red. Her parted lips whispered, "Hello, sunshine!" |
Tip #7 Communicate Theme.
Poetry always has a theme. Theme is not just a topic, but an idea with an opinion.Theme = Idea + OpinionTopic: “The Vietnam War”
This is not a theme. It is only a subject. It is just an event. There are no ideas, opinions, or statements about life or of wisdom contained in this sentence
Theme: “History shows that despite our claims to be peace-loving, unfortunately each person secretly dreams of gaining glory through conflict.”
This is a theme. It is not just an event, but a statement about an event. It shows what the poet thinks about the event. The poet strives to show the reader his/her theme during the entire poem, making use of literary techniques.
Tip #8 Subvert the Ordinary.
Poets’ strength is the ability to see what other people see everyday in a new way. You don’t have to be special or a literary genius to write good poems–all you have to do is take an ordinary object, place, person, or idea, and come up with a new perception of it.Example: People ride the bus everyday.
Poets’ Interpretation: A poet looks at the people on the bus and imagines scenes from their lives. A poet sees a sixty-year old woman and imagines a grandmother who runs marathons. A poet sees a two-year old boy and imagines him painting with ruby nail polish on the toilet seat, and his mother struggling to not respond in anger.
Take the ordinary and turn it on its head. (The word “subvert” literally means “turn upside down”.)
Tip #9 Rhyme with Extreme Caution.
Rhyme and meter (the pattern of stressed and unstressed words) can be dangerous if used the wrong way. Remember sing-song nursery rhymes? If you choose a rhyme scheme that makes your poem sound sing-song, it will detract from the quality of your poem.I recommend that beginning poets stick to free verse. It is hard enough to compose a poem without dealing with the intricacies of rhyme and meter. (Note: see Jerz’s response to this point, in “Poetry Is For the Ear.”)
If you feel ready to create a rhymed poem, refer to chapters 6-10 of Stephen Minot’s bookThree Genres: The Writing of Poetry, Fiction, and Drama. 6th ed., for more help.
Tip #10 Revise, Revise, Revise.
The first completed draft of your poem is only the beginning. Poets often go through several drafts of a poem before considering the work “done.”To revise:
- Put your poem away for a few days, and then come back to it. When you re-read it, does anything seem confusing? Hard to follow? Do you see anything that needs improvement that you overlooked the first time? Often, when you are in the act of writing, you may leave out important details because you are so familiar with the topic. Re-reading a poem helps you to see it from the “outsider’s perspective” of a reader.
- Show your poem to others and ask for criticism. Don’t be content with a response like, “That’s a nice poem.” You won’t learn anything from that kind of response. Instead, find people who will tell you specific things you need to improve in your poem.
Saturday, November 7, 2015
GASKIYA STUDENT STABBED HIS PREFECT TO DEATH..ARTICLE RESEARCH BY SUNSAMPAUL
Academic activities in Gaskiya College
in the Ijora area of Lagos State were paralysed on Wednesday after a
pupil in Senior Secondary School 2, Saka Ahmed, aka Ejo (snake),
allegedly stabbed his senior, Saheed Jimoh, to death.
PUNCH Metro gathered that 19-year-old Jimoh, who was a school prefect, had punished Ejo on Tuesday for an offence which had yet to be ascertained. They were said to have fought each other outside the school premises after the closing time.
It was gathered that Jimoh was about entering the school when Ejo, who was said to have been lurking around a food canteen near the school, ambushed him and stabbed him with a knife in the chest.
He reportedly fled the scene, leaving Jimoh for dead in a pool of blood. It was said that he gave up the ghost shortly after he arrived at a private hospital where he was rushed to.
It was learnt that the incident was reported at the Amukoko Police Division.
The deceased’s uncle, Mr. Shakiru Oluayo, who lives on Adejiyan Street, Amukoko area, said Jimoh was brought to Lagos in 2005 by his mother to continue his studies.
Oluayo said his nephew had initially decided not to go to school on the fateful day but rescinded his decision because he did not want to miss classes. The uncle added that Jimoh’s mother had yet to be informed of the incident.
He said “Saheed (Jimoh) was a school prefect. I do not know what happened between him and the boy (Ejo) that made Saheed to punish him. He was supposed to be in SS3 like Saheed but he had to repeat a class.
“I learnt that as my nephew was coming to school that morning, the boy was waiting for him at a food canteen near the school gate. He attacked him all of a sudden and stabbed him in the chest.
“For the past 10 years he had been living with me, he was easy-going and decent and all our neighbours can attest to that. In fact, he did not want to go to school on that fateful day but he later said he would go so as not to miss a practical class he was to have because he was a science student.”
An eyewitness, Kayode Aderibigbe, told our correspondent that it was too late for Jimoh to run to safety by the time he knew the assailant came after him.
He said, “He (Ejo) had been waiting for Jimoh. He brought out a knife from his bag. Saheed ran when he saw him with the knife but ejo chased him and stabbed him. I followed the pupils who rushed him to the hospital but he was confirmed dead on arrival. The police can trace Ejo.”
The school security guard, who declined to give his name, turned down our correspondent’s request to speak with the principal when our correspondent visited the school.
He said, “You cannot see the principal now. Come tomorrow (today). The principal and teachers have been to the hospital where the pupil was taken to. Besides, the incident did not happen inside the school.”
Some parents who also learnt of the incident besieged the school but were not allowed to enter.
A mechanic in the area, who identified himself only as Joshua, said he saw Jimoh and ejo fighting on Tuesday.
“I was there when they were fighting yesterday (on Tuesday) after they closed from school but I did not really know what led to it. In my observation, Jimoh subdued him during the fight. I guess he (Ejo) later went to attack him with a weapon since he could not win in a fair fight,” he said.
The Lagos State Police Public Relations Officer, DSP Joe Offor, confirmed the attack. He said a manhunt had been launched for the suspect.
He said, “According to the information we have, the pupil was stabbed by the school gate with a knife by a fellow student of the same school, who is at large.
“The victim was confirmed dead at the hospital. Investigation is ongoing.”
http://punchng.com/2015/11/4044
PUNCH Metro gathered that 19-year-old Jimoh, who was a school prefect, had punished Ejo on Tuesday for an offence which had yet to be ascertained. They were said to have fought each other outside the school premises after the closing time.
It was gathered that Jimoh was about entering the school when Ejo, who was said to have been lurking around a food canteen near the school, ambushed him and stabbed him with a knife in the chest.
He reportedly fled the scene, leaving Jimoh for dead in a pool of blood. It was said that he gave up the ghost shortly after he arrived at a private hospital where he was rushed to.
It was learnt that the incident was reported at the Amukoko Police Division.
The deceased’s uncle, Mr. Shakiru Oluayo, who lives on Adejiyan Street, Amukoko area, said Jimoh was brought to Lagos in 2005 by his mother to continue his studies.
Oluayo said his nephew had initially decided not to go to school on the fateful day but rescinded his decision because he did not want to miss classes. The uncle added that Jimoh’s mother had yet to be informed of the incident.
He said “Saheed (Jimoh) was a school prefect. I do not know what happened between him and the boy (Ejo) that made Saheed to punish him. He was supposed to be in SS3 like Saheed but he had to repeat a class.
“I learnt that as my nephew was coming to school that morning, the boy was waiting for him at a food canteen near the school gate. He attacked him all of a sudden and stabbed him in the chest.
“For the past 10 years he had been living with me, he was easy-going and decent and all our neighbours can attest to that. In fact, he did not want to go to school on that fateful day but he later said he would go so as not to miss a practical class he was to have because he was a science student.”
An eyewitness, Kayode Aderibigbe, told our correspondent that it was too late for Jimoh to run to safety by the time he knew the assailant came after him.
He said, “He (Ejo) had been waiting for Jimoh. He brought out a knife from his bag. Saheed ran when he saw him with the knife but ejo chased him and stabbed him. I followed the pupils who rushed him to the hospital but he was confirmed dead on arrival. The police can trace Ejo.”
The school security guard, who declined to give his name, turned down our correspondent’s request to speak with the principal when our correspondent visited the school.
He said, “You cannot see the principal now. Come tomorrow (today). The principal and teachers have been to the hospital where the pupil was taken to. Besides, the incident did not happen inside the school.”
Some parents who also learnt of the incident besieged the school but were not allowed to enter.
A mechanic in the area, who identified himself only as Joshua, said he saw Jimoh and ejo fighting on Tuesday.
“I was there when they were fighting yesterday (on Tuesday) after they closed from school but I did not really know what led to it. In my observation, Jimoh subdued him during the fight. I guess he (Ejo) later went to attack him with a weapon since he could not win in a fair fight,” he said.
The Lagos State Police Public Relations Officer, DSP Joe Offor, confirmed the attack. He said a manhunt had been launched for the suspect.
He said, “According to the information we have, the pupil was stabbed by the school gate with a knife by a fellow student of the same school, who is at large.
“The victim was confirmed dead at the hospital. Investigation is ongoing.”
http://punchng.com/2015/11/4044
1 Like
Friday, October 30, 2015
HISTORY OF BOKO HARAM(ARTICLE RESEARCH BY SUNSAMPAUL EGWU)
Boko Haram was founded as a Sunni Islamic fundamentalist sect, influenced by the Wahhabi movement, advocating a strict form of Sharia law. It developed into a Salafist-jihadi group in 2009. The movement is diffuse, and fighters associated with it do not necessarily follow Salafi doctrine.[35][36][37][38][39] The group has denounced the members of the Sufi, the Shiite, and the Izala sects as infidels.[40]
Boko Haram seeks the establishment of an Islamic state in Nigeria. It
opposes the Westernization of Nigerian society and the concentration of
the wealth of the country among members of a small political elite,
mainly in the Christian south of the country.[41][42] Nigeria is Africa's biggest economy, but 60% of its population of 173 million (2013) live on less than $1 a day.[43][44][45] The sharia law imposed by local authorities, beginning with Zamfara
in January 2000 and covering 12 northern states by late 2002, may have
promoted links between Boko Haram and political leaders, but was
considered by the group to have been corrupted.[46]:101[47][48][49]
According to Borno Sufi Imam Sheik Fatahi, Yusuf was trained by Kano Salafi Izala Sheik Ja'afar Mahmud Adamu, who called him the "leader of young people"; the two split some time in 2002–4. They both preached in Maiduguri's Indimi Mosque, which was attended by the deputy governor of Borno.[32][50] Many of the group were reportedly inspired by Mohammed Marwa, known as Maitatsine ("He who curses others"), a self-proclaimed prophet (annabi, a Hausa word usually used only to describe the founder of Islam) born in Northern Cameroon who condemned the reading of books other than the Quran.[29][51][52][53] In a 2009 BBC interview, Yusuf, described by analysts as being well-educated, reaffirmed his opposition to Western education. He rejected the theory of evolution, said that rain is not "an evaporation caused by the sun", and that the Earth is not a sphere.[54]
Except for a brief period of civilian rule between 1979 and 1983, Nigeria was governed by a series of military dictatorships from 1966 until the advent of democracy in 1999. Ethnic militancy is thought to have been one of the causes of the 1967–70 civil war; religious violence reached a new height in 1980 in Kano, the largest city in the north of the country, where the Muslim fundamentalist sect Yan Tatsine ("followers of Maitatsine") instigated riots that resulted in four or five thousand deaths. In the ensuing military crackdown, Maitatsine was killed, fuelling a backlash of increased violence that spread across other northern cities over the next twenty years.[59] Social inequality, poverty and the increasingly radical nature of Islam, locally and internationally, contributed both to the Maitatsine and Boko Haram uprisings.[46]:97–98
In the decades since the end of British occupation, politicians and academics from the mainly Islamic North have expressed their fundamental opposition to Western education. Political ethno-religious interest groups, whose membership includes influential political, military and religious leaders, have thrived in Nigeria, though they were largely suppressed under military rule. Their paramilitary wings, formed since the country's return to civilian rule, have been implicated in much of the sectarian violence in the years following. The Arewa People's Congress, the militia wing of the Arewa Consultative Forum, the main political group representing the interests of northern Nigeria, is a well-funded group with military and intelligence expertise, and is considered capable of engaging in military action, including covert bombing.[60]
According to Borno Sufi Imam Sheik Fatahi, Yusuf was trained by Kano Salafi Izala Sheik Ja'afar Mahmud Adamu, who called him the "leader of young people"; the two split some time in 2002–4. They both preached in Maiduguri's Indimi Mosque, which was attended by the deputy governor of Borno.[32][50] Many of the group were reportedly inspired by Mohammed Marwa, known as Maitatsine ("He who curses others"), a self-proclaimed prophet (annabi, a Hausa word usually used only to describe the founder of Islam) born in Northern Cameroon who condemned the reading of books other than the Quran.[29][51][52][53] In a 2009 BBC interview, Yusuf, described by analysts as being well-educated, reaffirmed his opposition to Western education. He rejected the theory of evolution, said that rain is not "an evaporation caused by the sun", and that the Earth is not a sphere.[54]
History
Background
Further information: Fourth Nigerian Republic
Before colonization and subsequent annexation into the British Empire in 1900 as Colonial Nigeria, the Bornu Empire ruled the territory where Boko Haram is currently active. It was a sovereign sultanate run according to the principles of the Constitution of Medina, with a majority Kanuri Muslim population. In 1903, both the Borno Emirate and Sokoto Caliphate came under the control of the British, who used educational institutions to help spread Christianity in the region.[55] British occupation ended with Nigerian independence in 1960.[56][57][58]Except for a brief period of civilian rule between 1979 and 1983, Nigeria was governed by a series of military dictatorships from 1966 until the advent of democracy in 1999. Ethnic militancy is thought to have been one of the causes of the 1967–70 civil war; religious violence reached a new height in 1980 in Kano, the largest city in the north of the country, where the Muslim fundamentalist sect Yan Tatsine ("followers of Maitatsine") instigated riots that resulted in four or five thousand deaths. In the ensuing military crackdown, Maitatsine was killed, fuelling a backlash of increased violence that spread across other northern cities over the next twenty years.[59] Social inequality, poverty and the increasingly radical nature of Islam, locally and internationally, contributed both to the Maitatsine and Boko Haram uprisings.[46]:97–98
In the decades since the end of British occupation, politicians and academics from the mainly Islamic North have expressed their fundamental opposition to Western education. Political ethno-religious interest groups, whose membership includes influential political, military and religious leaders, have thrived in Nigeria, though they were largely suppressed under military rule. Their paramilitary wings, formed since the country's return to civilian rule, have been implicated in much of the sectarian violence in the years following. The Arewa People's Congress, the militia wing of the Arewa Consultative Forum, the main political group representing the interests of northern Nigeria, is a well-funded group with military and intelligence expertise, and is considered capable of engaging in military action, including covert bombing.[60]
Founding
Mohammed Yusuf founded the sect that became known as Boko Haram in 2002 in Maiduguri, the capital of the north-eastern state of Borno. He established a religious complex and school that attracted poor Muslim families from across Nigeria and neighbouring countries. The center had the political goal of creating an Islamic state, and became a recruiting ground for jihadis. By denouncing the police and state corruption, Yusuf attracted followers from unemployed youths.[36][56][61][62] It has been speculated that the reason Yusuf founded Boko Haram appears to be that he saw an opportunity to exploit public outrage at government corruption by linking it to Western influence in governance.[63] He is reported to have used the existing infrastructure in Borno of the Izala Society (Jama'at Izalatil Bidiawa Iqamatus Sunnah), a popular conservative Islamic sect, to recruit members, before breaking away to form his own faction. The Izala were originally welcomed into government, along with people sympathetic to Yusuf. Boko Haram conducted its operations more or less peacefully during the first seven years of its existence, withdrawing from society into remote north-eastern areas. The government repeatedly ignored warnings about the increasingly militant character of the organization.[37][64] The Council of Ulama advised the government and the Nigerian Television Authority not to broadcast Yusuf's preaching, but their warnings were ignored. Yusuf's arrest elevated him to hero status. Borno's Deputy Governor Alhaji Dibal has reportedly claimed that al-Qaeda had ties with Boko Haram, but broke them when they decided that Yusuf was an unreliable person.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)