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My Binoculars: A tribute to the late Comrade Dauda Haruna, former chair of the correspondents chapel Borno state and Correspondent of the Voice of America (VOA) Hausa service

My Binoculars: A tribute to the late Comrade Dauda Haruna, former chair of the correspondents chapel Borno state and Correspondent of the Voice of America (VOA) Hausa service
By: Bodunrin Kayode
I have heard two sudden deaths from protracted illnesses in less than two weeks today. They were both close to me which is why I grabbed my binoculars at least for my former chair Dauda Haruna whom most of my colleagues do not know I had known for a very long time before coming to Maiduguri.
I first came across Comrade Dauda Haruna through the internal radio service of the Daily Times newspaper in 1996. We got talking when I was transferred from the jalingo office to Jos to relieve Chuks Akaeme our senior correspondent who was proceeding on his annual leave. I was the closest relief hand asked to cover Plateau for three months. I arrived Jos from the Taraba office in January ’96 and met an elderly female radio operator who worked with my colleague Oga Chuks. Under normal circumstances, the radio operator should read my reports through the radio to our head office agidingbi near Alausa Lagos. But any time madam Bridget was not around, I do rush to the radio room and call Alpha Golf (Agidingbi )myself to send breaking stories especially when the fax was down. Because there was no radio relief hand and it was during the military regime of Mohammed Mana with lots of reports from his spokes man Mike Omeri, I had to learn to work alone.
First time meeting on radio
Dauda was the the first to reach out to me because everyone heard every other person who was sending his report using codes or Charlie Oscar, Delta, Eco. Dauda Haruna was skilled in his tuff then and he delivered our reports well. That day he asked for his colleague madam Bridget and I said she had traveled to enjoy her holiday. This is Dauda Haruna the radio operator in Borno state. Nice meeting you here. My boss Mallam Jirigi speaks well of you. Thanks I retorted. He is a very good friend. We used to meet at annual editorial conferences in Lagos before it was shifted to kaduna where we met under the supervision of Oga Kangiwa and Dr Farouk Umar who manned the entire north. He sounded warm on the radio. I promised checking on him anytime I was in Maiduguri for any program as it was my professional exposure target to know all the states of the north whether or not my employees posted me there.
The opportunity came and it was when Ibrahim Jirigi had a dastardly car crash which broke his leg. So for me, as a good colleague, I had to create time to go see him that year. On arriving safely in Maiduguri for the first time, I met Haruna Dauda in the house of Mallam Jirigi. After commiserating with Jirigi whose leg was in plaster of paris, in came some top VIPs so I pulled out to chat with Dauda Haruna at close range at the other side of Jirigi’s massive house. He was the organizer of the entire house then making Jirigi’s visitors feel at home. There was no GSM then but we knew each other’s line from the daily times directory. He took me to my hotel afterwards and I left the following day.
From then on we had intermittent calls through the telephone and sometimes if Lagos became incommunicado I radio send my reports to him and he will keep vigil until the coast was clear and send same to Lagos. By the time the papers arrived Jos or Makurdi the following day, my stories were inside. We who were reporters then used to have reliable radio operators whom we called reliables. And Dauda Haruna was definitely one of them. Very dedicated to his job. We worked as a family and if you made certain mistakes in your reports, they will help you amend it like a family.
Transition to international radio
So you can imagine my joy when I later realized that he had gone to mass communication school, broadening his skills and had chosen the voice of America Hausa service which was a similar one to that of his boss Jirigi who was making waves in the BBC Hausa service. I started listening to him not knowing that I would one day be routed to Maiduguri to work with my friend and helper. He would tell me later that he owed a lot to Mallam Jirigi who was his main motivator to join the hausa radio service. A lot of dangerous politics affected the daily times and the paper had to shut down due to mismanagement.
I applied to “the Nation” newspaper for a job and even before completion of the interview process with human resources, the news editor Oga Niyi had directed that there was no option for me but Maiduguri. I was not too happy because of the headlines of insurgency I was reading before arriving. But on arrival, I have had a smooth stay courtesy of chairmen like Comrade Dauda Haruna. I have come to accept that the Maiduguri I visited when himself and Jirigi were managing daily times office was quite different from the Maiduguri of January 2014. I came in joined the chapel and we became colleagues till Sunday that he breathed his last. His humility was one of a kind from the way he spoke to me but I had to remind him that we are now colleagues in the same chapel and that we should continue that way. He accepted and life went on as friends.
Enjoying his tenure as chairman Dauda Haruna of the correspondents chapel
Comrade Dauda was actually a man of few words because he was always looking out for the good in others. He was not a deliberate “fault finder” and never a “control freak” which is why some colleagues thought he was weak especially when he literally refuses to kill a fly with a sledge hammer when the circumstances cropped up. In a controversial chapel like that of the correspondents, where unity is not absolute due to vested interests, he was quite transparent and made sure that he united the chapel each time there was a congress. For some reasons, he understood “straight jacket” people like us and will always hint me of why certain decisions were taken even when i felt otherwise. As for favors, I actually thank God that the entire chapel was favored by way of welfare during his time. The entire reason for the existence of the NUJ is for the upholding of professionalism and welfare of colleagues and he navigated through that with ease.
The last day of seeing him in his lifetime was recently when I took a friend and drove to his residence in 1000 housing estate. We bought a pack of moringa tea and presented as a gift to him. To spice the visit I called for hot water and a tea cup to wash the tea in his presence. The wife brought a big flask with which we poured water into his cup and ours. He asked if I wanted sweetener but I said no I was fine. I had learnt to drink all my teas blank sometimes without cream having contacted diabetes too in 2014. So we were watching each other’s back as time went on.
He had a nice tenure as chair of the chapel and in conjunction with his colleagues in the executive, they actually took some indelible decisions that most of us will never forget. That was why we protected his interest when certain forces dared to go against the norm. He called me that day to thank me for my little role in the stabilization of the chapel. He longed to return to do what he loved best and was almost sobbing in the phone. He then admonished me to take care of myself and hung off. As Comrade Dauda Haruna returns to mother earth, may God grant the Nigerian Union of Journalists (NUJ) and the family the special grace to accept this big void that his demise would create for them. Amen.
My Binoculars: A tribute to the late Comrade Dauda Haruna, former chair of the correspondents chapel Borno state and Correspondent of the Voice of America (VOA) Hausa service
News
Indian factory manager slumps, dies in Edo community

Indian factory manager slumps, dies in Edo community
By: Zagazola Makama
A 47-year-old Indian national, identified as Kalidass Arunachalam, has died after suddenly slumping while on duty at a factory in Ologbo, Ikpoba-Okha Local Government Area of Edo State.
Zagazola Makama gathered that the deceased was a production manager with Green Hills Agricultural Products Ltd. He was said to have collapsed at about 11:30 a.m. on Friday while working at the company premises.
Company representatives, including another Indian national, Tushar Tukaram Phadtare, along with the Managing Director, Suleman Dauda, and the Chief Security Officer, Lt. Col. Thompson Udom (rtd), rushed him to God’s Spring Best Care Hospital in the Obaretin Community for urgent medical attention.
A medical doctor at the facility, identified as Dr. Kingsley Dele, later confirmed Arunachalam dead while efforts were still being made to revive him.
Officials later visited the hospital where the body was found lying face up on a hospital bed with a drip attached. No visible marks of violence were observed on the corpse.
The remains of the deceased were deposited at the mortuary, and efforts are ongoing to contact the Indian Embassy to inform his next-of-kin and facilitate diplomatic procedures.
Indian factory manager slumps, dies in Edo community
News
Three missing after boat carrying passengers, vehicles capsizes in Taraba

Three missing after boat carrying passengers, vehicles capsizes in Taraba
By: Zagazola Makama
At least three persons, including a two-year-old child, are missing after a boat capsized on Friday night while ferrying passengers and vehicles across the Namnai River in Taraba State.
Zagazola Makama reports that the boat, which was transporting several passengers and three vehicles, capsized around 8:40 p.m. due to overloading and reckless navigation by the operator.
According to sources, the operator defied standing safety protocols by loading three vehicles onto the boat instead of the approved maximum of two. The mishap occurred while the boat was attempting to dock at the riverbank, when a strong wave destabilised it, causing it to overturn.
While many passengers were rescued by local divers and first responders, three victims identified as Aishatu Rilwanu, Baharatu Danasabe, and Yusuf Badaru, a two-year-old child all residents of Jantaro Ward in Mutum Biyu remain unaccounted for.
Rescue team were mobilised to scene as both community members and security personnel intensify the search and rescue efforts.
As of the time of filing this report, the rescue operation is still ongoing.
Three missing after boat carrying passengers, vehicles capsizes in Taraba
News
Security operatives arrest 22 suspected Aiye cultists in Ogun, including two soldiers

Security operatives arrest 22 suspected Aiye cultists in Ogun, including two soldiers
By: Zagazola Makama
Security operatives in Ogun have arrested 22 suspected members of the Aiye confraternity during a coordinated raid at Hilltop Hotel in Osiele, Odeda Local Government Area.
Sources told Zagazola Makama that the operation, which took place on Friday night, followed credible intelligence received by officers at the Odeda Division regarding the unlawful gathering of cultists at the hotel.
The sources confirmed that a joint tactical team comprising officers from Aregbe Division, Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT), and the Anti-Cultism Unit stormed the hotel and apprehended the suspects.
Among those arrested were 19 males, three females, and two serving military personnel, suspected to be linked to the cult group.
Items recovered from the suspects include one UTC axe, a cut-to-size barrel gun, and several blue beret caps, all identified with the Aiye cult group.
The sources said that the State Criminal Investigation Department’s Anti-Cultism Unit at Eleweran has been directed to conduct a discreet investigation into the incident, while further profiling of the suspects is underway.
The sources said individuals or groups found engaging in such criminal acts would face the full weight of the law.
Security operatives arrest 22 suspected Aiye cultists in Ogun, including two soldiers
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