SerikiGaskia's Posts
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Entprys:Is that so?
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raskymonojendor:Gbenu ofo soun, this is what the commissioner for health Ogun state had to say.
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LibertyRep:So what are you insinuating? |
A yet-to-be identified man has died while attempting to exhume a corpse at a cemetery in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital. The deceased who was said to have been removing corpses’ skulls was alleged to have been held down on the grave by a ghost at the cemetery.   Chief Imam of the Oke-Ona community, Alhaji Musiliu Nasir in a chat with Community Echo said, “It was early this morning that people came to me that they saw someone fell down at the cemetery, and when we got there we found out that he actually came to operate there. “Initially, many of them have been coming to dig grave and steal corpse’s skull, and we have tried to prevent that by hiring vigilante to secure the mortuary, we haven’t seen such a misery before, this is the first that was caught on act. And we have reported it to the police”. Residents of the area said the man d*ed in a pool of his blood, with several of them believing that he must have been struck d*ad by a ghost. They added that the body was whisked away by police with some instruments found with him, such as cutl*ss, knife and a mobile phone. However, Abimbola Oyeyemi, the police spokesperson in Ogun State, confirmed the incident on Wednesday. He said he could not confirm what killed the man, adding that the corpse has been deposited in a mortuary in Abeokuta.
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yoruboid:
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[quote author=raskymonojendor post=127290345][/quote]Are you sure? Even Abiolas son knows who yorubas are
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raskymonojendor:I hope you've eaten this morning?
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raskymonojendor:Please, don't change the topic
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raskymonojendor:Gbenu ofo soun, read what Ogun state government has to say. Hope your parents have started constructing toilets. We don't want to hear stories that touches.
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ChoCho54:It has nothing to do with hydraulic soup, it's innate. They are trying to preserve the tradition handed over to them by their forefathers just the same way Ibadan people have been preserving their rustic brown roofs. |
ChoCho54:According to Ogun state government
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yoruboid:Gbenu ofo soun..... Yoruba culture and open defecation is like 5 and 6.
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orisa37:If I hear! It's a cultural thing, it will take years to eradicate
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Lagos state government should do everything in their power to stop this unwholesome cultural display of yorubas. Let all Yoruba Obas convene a meeting of all stakeholders and chart the way forward. This thing is getting out of hand.
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happney65:It happens every where, in the city and villages. Something's can never change, It is their heritage
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Government across the south west should look into this open defecation of a thing and proffer solution with immediate effect. This is an eyesore. This Yoruba culture of shitting in the open must be abolished.
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Sorry to say this, Yoruba culture is in sync with open defecation. My Landlord and members of his family in Osun state always defecate in a plastic bowl and dump into the gutter. When I went to them to complain bitterly, I was told it's part of their tradition which was passed over to them from one generation to another. |
Residents of Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, are at the risk of an epidemic following the absence of toilets in many parts of the communities in the city. PUNCH Metro gathered that some areas with ancestral homes did not have toilets and resorted to open defecation. During a visit to some of the communities, including Fowosedo, Ago-Ika, Totoro, Ijofa, Sapon, Sokori, among others, it was observed that canals, bush paths, riversides and refuse dumps had been taken over by faeces, as both the young and the elderly engaged in open defecation. Our correspondent noted that the communities reeked from the stench of human waste, while the drainage bred bacteria and vectors. It was learnt that many of the residents defecated inside polythene bags and disposed of them at any available dump site, river or channel. Some of the residents, who spoke to our reporter, attributed the inability to construct toilets to poverty. Some also claimed that the rocky nature of their areas made it difficult for them to build toilets as blasting the rocks would “cost a fortune.” A landlord in Ago-Ika, Mrs Omowunmi Ogundare, said she inherited the house from her late father, who built it without a toilet. She said, “How do you expect me to use money meant for food to build a toilet? We do find our way in disposing of our faeces. “Even when the government came to lock this place some months ago, I told them we don’t have money to construct any toilet at the moment. They promised to provide us with an alternative; we hope they do that soon.” An Islamic cleric and community leader in Fowosedo, Taofeeq Adeyemi, said the community development association in the area was doing everything to ensure houses had good toilet facilities. He said, “The issue of houses not having toilets is something we are seriously looking at as a CDA. We are working with the state government in ensuring many of these houses provide toilets for their residents. “We have more than 80 houses in Fowosedo alone that do not have toilets and good bathrooms. It is worrisome; but this place is like this because many of these houses are old buildings.” The Ogun State Commissioner for Environment, Ola Oresanya, said the government had asked affected houses to build toilets before a stipulated time.  Oresanya said the government would be sealing up houses without toilets after the deadline elapsed. He said, “We are aware of those areas that you mentioned. Most of those areas are traditional areas and the majority of the people living there are mostly third generation owners. “But before we go with the full wrath of the law, we will first do a kind of advocacy and we will talk with the CDAs in the area. We will call them for a meeting. Immediately after this, they will see enforcement in those areas.” A medical expert, Dr Adewunmi Alayaki, warned that open defecation could lead to an outbreak of air or water-borne diseases. Alayaki stressed that open defecation could also cause cholera and diarrhoea. He said, “Any house or environment where there is no means where they can properly dispose of human waste, there is danger of any medical outbreak such as cholera and many others. “This is because when you expose human waste, most likely flies can go there and later infect human beings. It is dangerous. “We are in danger of having an outbreak because when rain falls, it can wash such human waste into nearby well water or streams that people consume, and you know what it means to people.” https://punchng.com/open-defecation-ogun-communities-stink-govt-threatens-crackdown/
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