Connect with us

news

Babangida as a blessing and a lesson

Published

on

Last Sunday, retired military President, Ibrahim Babangida clocked 84. He had a “quiet” celebration. No drums. No cymbals. The Hilltop was quiet from his end. But admirers trooped in (Lagos boys would say; won gbori wole). Big boys wheeled in. Multiple photo sessions and selfies with him, saturated the digital and legacy media. Love him, hate him, the Minna retired general will always be news because he is the (in)famous (depending on your take), IBB.

There were even newspaper adverts. You ask why shelling millions of naira on someone with fading star in the power space. Yoruba will say “onikun lo mero” (recommending the first part of Proverbs 16:1 in interpreting this). Another Yoruba wise saying will rationalize as “ohun to ko iwaju seni kan eyin lo ko si elomiran (different strokes for different folks).
High-flying RCCG Evangelist J.T Kalejaiye is fond of saying “whoever you meet in life is not an accident, he/she is either a blessing or a lesson”. That is where I got today’s headline. Babangida impacted the Nigerian socio-economic political space so significantly that even in death, God preserving him for many more years, he would remain poignant in Nigeria’s political landscape. One photo that caught my attention was his, with a presidential predecessor, Goodluck Jonathan, beaming beside the fading General. The first thing I noticed is the significant depreciation in his visage between February 20 of the running year when he made a public appearance to launch his autobiography titled “A journey in service” and his apperance for photo-ops for his birthday.

Just an interval of six months. Jonathan is 67, so Babangida is significantly older with a gap of 14 years but in the photo, the younger President could pass for the older leader’s first son. Yes, numerous 14-year olds, especially girls of African descent in the US are already mothers and some unguided boys too, have fathered children for their mums to nurse, while still nursing the wannabe-fathers. While I run into these cases a lot on paternity court hosted by Judge Lauren Lake, the kid-having-kid phenom isn’t a black person disease and certainly not continent-exclusive.

Couched as adolescent births, global data says, maybe not surprising, it is mostly prevalent in sub-Saharan Africa. Yes, tradition, culture and some religious beliefs around Africa may be fueling this social problem but there is a way these findings always find their negative net in the continent as if hell is located here. Everything must be wrong with and in Africa, even when the West which usually coordinates the research works, isn’t actually smelling like a rose. Yoruba will tag hypocrisy as “ari teni mo wi” or “ipako oni pako lanwo, eni eleni lo nri teni”.

Available data claim that globally, approximately 13% of adolescent girls and young women give birth before age 18. In 2021, mothers under 20, reportedly accounted for about 10% of the total worldwide births, equating to roughly 13.3 million babies born of “babies”. In 2023, the total global birth rate for girls aged 10-14 was 1.5 per 1,000 women!

Arguably with 49 countries in total, sub-Saharan Africa is generally understood to include all African countries south of the Sahara Desert (all African countries minus those in Northern Africa), and of course Nigeria, which has produced both Babangida and Jonathan as leaders at different times, is not just a member-nation, but the biggest of all. Predictably, almost all socio-economic developmental indicators are in the negative for nearly all the sub-Saharan countries including their supposed Big Brother; Nigeria, mismanaged by locust leaderships.
It can however be argued that IBB left power 32 years ago and still-drifting Nigeria can’t be his fault. Yes, Nigeria remaining in the wilderness decades after the Minna-Maradona dribbled himself into a seemingly-unprepared-for retirement, can’t entirely be blamed on his much-vilified policies especially the economic and political, yet the beginning of the massive economic dislocation for many Nigerians is locatable in his economic programmes. His SAP birthed Sapa (financial hardship).
Briefcase billionaires, a term popularized by factional Emir of Kano, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, depicting surging illicit wealth, believed to have fathered today’s yahoo yahoo community, is widely held to be the making of his military presidency. Some of the emergency deep pockets, sucking from the feeding bottle of his regime’s dollar racket, ended up as leaders in his curated-to-fail multiple transition programmes.

However, there are national monuments standing to his credit. Three will race to mind; Lagos Third Mainland bridge, completing what Shagari administration started (the Fourth is being constructed by mouth since 1999), the International Centre in Abuja, (which he built for N240 million) and the massive development of FCT Abuja as seat of federal government after he bolted Lagos, following Gideon Orkar’s coup.
Then the fatal error that sealed his journey in service; June 12.
IBB has had his date with history. The massive pushback at his attempt to whitewash history in his book, must have been a great shock to him. Nigerians won’t allow him delete his wrongs from their memory. He is a lesson to Nigerians on what should not be tolerated and who their leaders must not be. But what appears to be working against Babangida in his quest for rebranding with Nigerians could be put down to how he came to power and what he was wearing; gun and khaki. Since him, and particularly the comeback of civil rule, leaders in agbada with stolen mandates have practically gotten away with murder. The Abuja ICC which he built for N240 million was recently renovated with N39 billion by today’s administration, just 34 years of erecting it. The same Tinubu administration is about spending N3.6 trillion to repair the Third Mainland bridge after 35 years of use and multiple repair efforts in-between. Ironically, while Nigerians are not ready to forgive IBB for annulling considered freest and fairest poll in Nigeria’s annals, handlers of elections with zero integrity have been allowed to get away with their thievery by the same Nigerians resisting IBB and now in every election cycle, it is always a sigh; of resigning to helplessness. Instructively, the abortion of majority mandate of voters for which Babangida got into the eternal black book of Nigerians, is what is routinely done by today’s politicians without consequences. IBB would be the hero of the people if he had the power to annul elections being conducted in this republic. He came too early and stole the destitute chicken. He will always be in the villain conversation.

But today’s piece isn’t much about IBB’s public service records. I felt sad seeing how he appears, now in the borderline of his mortality, though life and living rests with God. 1 Samuel 2:6 says “The Lord brings death and makes alive; He brings down to the grave and raises up”.

Yes, in a country with life expectancy of between 55 and 62 years, 84 is a big deal and God has actually been kind to the former military leader. The quantum of medical relief his wealth can procure is definitely above what is available to a lot of Nigerians. His friends and “boys” in high places can also be there for him. But General Babangida is not aging gracefully. In the last three years especially after the exclusive interview granted to Trust TV, something appears to be eating him up faster than excited children gobbling up ice cream.
Certainly old age comes with biological degradation of the body, but he is almost looking unrecognizable, considering that some of his agemates (don’t want to mention names) are still strutting all over the place, including doing unbelievable younger people’s stuff. I understand graces are different. There is a unique grace upon Olusegun Aremu Obasanjo. He bounces around like old plastic ball affectionately dubbed “unbreke” (shortened form of unbreakable). Yes, I know about IBB’s long-running battle with radiculopathy and very aware it can be degenerative, but the man that showed up at book launch and in birthday photos, has something close to permanent gloom even when trying to glow. In contrast to Jonathan, Babangida looked bored, broken, tired and disinterested in what was happening around him. He was like someone mummified while still with breath. Is the old man depressed?

In the January 15, 2022 interview I referenced, the General said he refused to replace his late wife Maryam in his heart by shunning other women, noting, “It is a matter of choice; I decided to honour her by being not a bachelor but being unmarried”.
Even lesser mortals in his situation would not be bachelors; cooking their meals and doing their laundry. An average widower with means can get that fixed too, let alone a Babangida. But there is warmth of spousal companionship an average widower would miss, taking his stance. God who created man, said in Genesis 2:18 “It is not good for a man to be alone” and the companion He deemed fit was a woman. Because men are believed to be capable of fixing themselves, the society hardly bothers about how an average widower feels while all attention is on the widow. Woe betide that widower who has adult children who aren’t ready to share their late mom’s space with some “random” woman. Most times, such men caught in the middle, give in to their children and tuck their loneliness in the inner recesses of their hearts, living outwardly but dying inwardly. If he decides to dare, he becomes an insensitive randy old man “who can’t respect mum’s memory”.
In a viral video on the recently-passed Nollywood icon, popularly known as Chief Kanran, a younger female colleague claimed the veteran thespian was regularly sending her pleas to have female companion arranged for him because he was lonely.

The actress said the ladies she approached on Kanran’s behalf declined because of his age. One of his children disclosed that his cause of death was a fall in the house but the man had no one around to help him up. He died right there on the floor.
The much-beloved former First Lady died on December 27, 2009. Ibrahim is still a single widower 16 years after. Hopefully it wasn’t their children that blocked his path to another help meet. The night of a man’s life should be filled with merry not misery. Happy birthday General.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

news

Ahmed Raji(SAN) Accomplish Another Landmark Feat, Launch New School Block, Handover Ultra-Modern CBT Center To JAMB.

Published

on

By

Renowned legal icon, philanthropist and Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Alhaji Ahmed Adeniyi Raji, has once again reaffirmed his unwavering commitment to educational advancement as he is getting ready to launch a newly constructed school building and hand-over a modern Computer Based Test (CBT) Centre to Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) in Iseyin, Oyo State.

This historic event, scheduled to hold on Wednesday, February 11, 2026, is expected to attract top educationists, including the Registrar of JAMB, Professor Isiaq Oloyede, who will officially receive the CBT centre on behalf of the examination body.

According to statement issued and signed by Hon. Saheed Adejare Yusuf Alaran, brother, development partner to the legal luminary and made available to media, said this intervention initiative is part of Alhaji Raji’s long-standing vision to make quality education affordable, accessible and all-inclusive, irrespective of students’ socio-economic background.

Hon. Adejare Yusuf Alaran disclosed that the legal icon has taken full responsibility for the construction of a modern school complex comprising classrooms, administrative offices and fully equipped laboratories for the Senior Secondary arm of Raji Okeesa Memorial Comprehensive High School. The new facilities are designed to enhance teaching, learning and overall academic excellence.

In addition, Alhaji Raji has also built a well-equipped JAMB CBT Centre with a seating capacity of 250 candidates, fitted to meet global examination standards. The centre is expected to significantly ease the burden on students who previously travelled long distances to sit for UTME examinations.

Hon. Adejare Yusuf Alaran further noted that the official unveiling and handover will ensure the CBT centre is efficiently managed by JAMB for optimal use. He stressed that the initiative would save thousands of youths from avoidable stress while promoting fairness and efficiency in examination processes.

With this latest gesture, Alhaji Raji has once again etched his name in gold as a steadfast champion of education and youth empowerment in Oyo State and beyond.

 

 

 

Continue Reading

news

*Oyo Govt. Plans 60,000 Laptops for WAEC CBT*

Published

on

By

Oyo State Government has reaffirmed its preparedness for the official commencement of the Computer-Based Test (CBT) mode of the West African Examinations Council (WAEC) examinations.

This is in line with the Federal Government’s directive for a gradual transition from pen-and-paper to full digital testing.

The Commissioner for Education, Science and Technology, Hon. Olusegun Olayiwola, disclosed this while receiving the Zonal Coordinator and Deputy Registrar of  West African Examination Council(WAEC), Mr. Waheed Amode, and his management team during a courtesy visit to his office on Wednesday, February 4, 2026.

Olayiwola revealed that Oyo State Governor, Engr. Seyi Makinde has directed that the cost implications for the procurement of over 60,000 laptops for public senior secondary schools across the state be worked out, noting that the move is aimed at positioning Oyo State ahead of the full adoption of CBT examinations.

He commended WAEC for the proactive measures taken to address the challenges experienced during the 2025 examinations, while pledging the Ministry’s continued support in curbing examination malpractice and preventing vandalisation of school facilities.

In his remarks, Amode said the visit was to appreciate the Oyo State Ministry of Education for its support during the 2025 WAEC examinations and for its consistent collaboration with the Council over the years, describing the Ministry as a key stakeholder in the success of WAEC operations.

He disclosed that registration for the 2026 May/June WAEC examination closed on 2nd February, 2026, adding that the forthcoming examinations would be conducted using both CBT and pen-and-paper modes depending on the readiness of individual schools, while schools interested in full CBT participation are expected to formally indicate their interest through official correspondence.

Amode also warned that severe penalties await any candidate caught with mobile phones in the examination hall.

He stressed that such misconduct could lead to the cancellation of an entire school’s results, depending on the circumstances, and urged principals and teachers to uphold integrity in order to strengthen educational standards.

Meanwhile, Honourable Olusegun Olayiwola has called on parents, guardians and teachers to strengthen collaboration in order to address moral decline in schools, noting that effective partnership between the home and the school is essential for raising disciplined, responsible and value-driven students.

The Commissioner made the call while receiving members of the National Education Reform Movement (NERM), urging stakeholders to prioritise discipline and quality teaching, while NERM leader, Mr. Adewumi Abass, warned that weak parent–teacher synergy and rising examination malpractice pose serious threats to Nigeria’s education system and recommended the use of the resource book, “Parenting for Excellence,” as a guide for improvement.

 

Continue Reading

news

*Oyo NUJ Celebrates Patron, Olooye Taofeek Adegoke on Birthday*

Published

on

By

The Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), Oyo State Council, has congratulated a distinguished Patron and renowned mediapreneur, Olooye Adeboyega Taofeek Adegoke, on the occasion of his birthday, describing him as a pillar of support for journalists and media development in the state.

In a congratulatory statement jointly signed by the Chairman, Mr. Akeem Abas, and Secretary, Dayo Adu, the Council extolled Oloye Adegoke’s outstanding commitment to the growth of the Union and the welfare of its members.

The council noted that as a responsible and dependable Patron, Oloye Adegoke has consistently demonstrated deep passion for the progress of journalism, maintaining a cordial and mutually beneficial relationship with the NUJ Oyo State Council.

It added that his unreserved benevolence to the Union and to journalists who cross his path, stressing that his interventions and support have positively impacted many practitioners within the media space.

According to the Council, the celebrant has remained a strong pillar behind several NUJ programmes and activities, offering support that has contributed immensely to the successful execution of professional and welfare-driven initiatives.

The Union particularly commended his rare gesture of giving without demanding anything in return, describing his selflessness as a virtue worthy of emulation within and outside the media industry.

Oyo NUJ added that Oloye Adegoke’s contributions as a mediapreneur have also helped in advancing media enterprise, capacity building, and opportunities for journalists across the state.

The Council wished him a happy birthday and prayed for continued good health, greater accomplishments, and more impactful years in service to humanity and the journalism profession.

 

 

Continue Reading

news

*Oyo NUJ Pledge Joint Action Against Misinformation*

Published

on

By

The Department of State Services (DSS) in Oyo State has reiterated its commitment to working closely with the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) to address security challenges and curb the activities of fifth columnists.

The State Director of DSS , Mr. Rasheed Adelakun, made this known when the executives of the NUJ, Oyo State Council, led by its Chairman, Mr. Akeem Abas, paid a courtesy visit to the state headquarters of the service in Ibadan.

Adelakun described the media as a critical partner in national security, stressing that effective information management and responsible reportage were essential tools to sustaining peace and stability.

He expressed concern over the increasing activities of fifth columnists, warning that their actions pose grave dangers to national security and peaceful coexistence.

According to him, the spread of misinformation and unverified reports could be exploited by such elements to undermine public confidence and social cohesion.

Adelakun, therefore, urged journalists to uphold professionalism and ethical standards in the discharge of their duties in the interest of national development.

Earlier in his remarks, the Oyo NUJ Chairman, Mr. Akeem Abas, assured the DSS of the union’s readiness to sustain collaboration with security agencies to promote peace, security and unity in Oyo State and across the country.

Abas added that NUJ would continue to sensitise its members on the importance of responsible journalism, fact-checking and adherence to ethical standards, noting that accurate and timely information remains a vital tool in supporting security agencies and strengthening national cohesion.

 

Continue Reading

news

One Death Too Many: Government Must Be Held Accountable ““The opposite of love is not hate, it is indifference.”- Elie Wiesel – By Lanre Ogundipe

Published

on

By

There are moments in the life of a nation when condolences become an insult. The massacre in the Woro and Nuku communities of Kaiama Local Government, Kwara State is one such moment.

Over one hundred and sixty Nigerians men, women and children were rounded up, bound, and executed in cold blood.

Not in a war zone. Not in a declared battlefield. But in their homes, on their farms, in the ordinary spaces of daily life where citizens are supposed to be protected by the state.

In response, government spoke. It always speaks. Condolences were offered. Troops were deployed after the fact. Statements were issued. And then silence followed, the familiar Nigerian silence that descends after tragedy, as though the mere passage of time could substitute for justice.

But when citizens are slaughtered in one coordinated attack and the primary response is sympathy, the issue is no longer insecurity alone. It is governance failure.

When warnings are ignored, graves multiply.
Several years ago, a former Chief of Army Staff and Minister of Defence publicly expressed loss of confidence in the ability of Nigeria’s security architecture to protect its citizens. He warned that communities were becoming sitting targets and suggested that citizens might have to defend themselves. At the time, the statement was controversial. Some dismissed it as reckless; others saw it as frustration.

Today, after repeated mass killings across the North-Central, the North-West, parts of the Middle Belt, and now creeping steadily into the South-West, that warning no longer sounds extreme. It sounds like an unaddressed alarm.

When a figure who once sat at the heart of the military establishment openly questions the system’s effectiveness, responsible governance demands inquiry and reform. Instead, the system closed ranks. The result is visible in mass graves.

Missing weapons, unanswered questions
Nigeria’s insecurity is sustained not only by ideology but by logistics. Armed groups operate with weapons, ammunition, intelligence and mobility. This raises a fundamental question that has never been satisfactorily answered: how do non-state actors consistently acquire arms in such quantities in a country with supposedly regulated armouries?

Over the years, there have been persistent allegations of missing or diverted weapons from police and military stockpiles. Senate inquiries have been announced. Committees have been formed. Investigations have been promised. Yet the outcomes remain largely invisible to the public.
Weapons do not simply disappear in a functioning state. When they do, and no one is held accountable, it creates an environment where criminal networks thrive. Citizens are entitled to know whether arms procured with public funds to defend them have been mismanaged, diverted, or abandoned to corruption.

Until there is a transparent forensic audit of arms procurement, storage and deployment, every massacre will raise the same disturbing suspicion: that state failure is not accidental.
Security agencies under scrutiny.

It must be stated clearly: many officers have paid with their lives trying to protect communities. Their sacrifice deserves respect. But institutions are judged by outcomes, not intentions.
Nigeria’s security agencies have long struggled with poor intelligence coordination, slow response times, weak oversight, and public trust deficits.

Allegations of corruption, abuse of power and selective enforcement are not new.

They are part of a documented pattern that has eroded confidence between citizens and those tasked with protecting them.

When attacks occur despite repeated warnings, when perpetrators operate for hours without resistance, and when accountability rarely follows, citizens are justified in asking whether the problem is merely incompetence or something deeper.

Asking such questions is not an attack on the uniform. It is a demand for institutional accountability.
Violence reaches the South-West.
For years, the South-West assumed a measure of insulation from the scale of violence seen elsewhere.

That assumption is now dangerously outdated. Criminal networks and extremist violence have found entry points into parts of Osun State through Ora-Igbomina and surrounding communities.

Farmers are afraid to work their land. Families fear nightfall. The early warning signs are unmistakable.

Yet political leadership appears distracted by ceremonies, anniversaries and public celebrations. At a time when security coordination should dominate governance priorities, optics and pageantry seem to take precedence.

Leadership is not measured by appearances in moments of comfort, but by decisiveness in moments of crisis.
Unequal seriousness across regions
Across Nigeria, a contrast is emerging. Some states, particularly in parts of the East and South-South, are investing in intelligence gathering, technological support, community surveillance and structured engagement with security professionals. These efforts are not perfect, but they demonstrate seriousness.

The question is unavoidable: what are other states prioritising? What value does infrastructure, celebration or political theatre hold when citizens are unsafe? Development without security is an illusion.
Security is not one policy item among many. It is the foundation upon which every other policy rests.

Beyond religion and ethnicity.
This tragedy must not be misrepresented as religious or ethnic conflict. Terror does not discriminate by faith. Bullets do not recognise identity. Christian or Muslim, Yoruba or Hausa or Igbo — the dead are united by vulnerability, not belief.

Reducing these massacres to sectarian narratives only benefits those who profit from chaos. The real divide is between citizens protected by power and citizens exposed to violence.

A government that cannot protect its people, regardless of who they are or what they believe, has failed its most basic obligation.

The dangerous appeal of self-help
In the face of repeated state failure, some citizens ask whether they must protect themselves. This is not rebellion; it is despair. But history shows that widespread vigilantism leads not to safety, but to cycles of revenge and instability.

The alternative is not lawlessness. It is accountability.
Citizens must demand:
Transparent investigations into security failures before and during major attacks.

A full forensic audit of missing or diverted weapons.
Clear responsibility for governors, commissioners and security chiefs where negligence is established.

Lawful, supervised community protection mechanisms under strict oversight.

Anything less is performance, not governance.
A quiet erosion of freedom.
There is an uncomfortable question many Nigerians now ask privately: are citizens valued only as statistics — to be governed, taxed, and mourned, but not protected?

When deaths are normalised and accountability is endlessly postponed, freedom becomes symbolic rather than real. Democracy cannot survive where life is cheap and power is insulated from consequence.

One death is too many
Let us return to the central truth. One death is too many. One hundred and sixty is a national indictment.

This massacre must not be absorbed into Nigeria’s long list of forgotten tragedies.

Condolences cannot replace justice. Silence cannot replace accountability.

History will ask what was done when citizens were slaughtered. Words alone will not be an acceptable answer.

 

Lanre Ogundipe , A Public Affairs Analyst, Former President Nigeria and Africa Union of Journalists writes from Abuja, Federal Capital City.
February 6, 2026.

 

 

Continue Reading

news

*UI College of Medicine Alumni Lead Nigeria’s Cancer Care Revolution* – By Tunji Oladejo

Published

on

By

*A landmark clinical trial is underway in Nigeria, thanks to the collaborative efforts of Obafemi Awolowo University, Lagos University Teaching Hospital, Medserve and Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Centre. The trial investigates PD-1 blockade immunotherapy in patients with mismatch-repair-deficient colorectal cancer. The trial was approved by the National Health Research Ethics Committee (NHREC)—the organization responsible for ensuring that all health research conducted in Nigeria is ethical and globally compliant—and by the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), the organisation that regulates and controls the manufacture, importation, exportation, distribution, advertisement, sale, and use of food, drugs, cosmetics, medical devices, packaged water, chemicals and detergents in Nigeria.*

This is a moment of great pride for the University of Ibadan (UI) College of Medicine! Three distinguished UI College of Medicine alumni: Dr Lilian Ekpo, Dr Zainab Yunusa-Kaltungo and Dr Tolu Adewole are instrumental in this initiative. They are part of a groundbreaking clinical trial that’s set to revolutionise colorectal cancer treatment in Nigeria. Their expertise underscores the institution’s commitment to advancing cancer research and treatment.

Dr Abraham Ariyo, a UI College of Medicine alumnus and cardiologist based in the US, shared this exciting news with me. We’d connected online about 4 months ago, bonding over our shared interest in UI and the College of Medicine. As he said, “I have read your pieces about Ibadanland and the University of Ibadan, especially about Profs. Ronke Baiyeroju and Olayinka Omigbodun. You are interested in UI and Ibadan. You are engaging in similar efforts with me regarding the alumni of the Ibadan College of Medicine. I appreciate you.” He’s been sharing stories about notable alumni achievements and this immunotherapy trial is the latest feat!

Back to the basics! This trial is a major turning point in Nigeria’s fight against cancer, with potential implications for sub-Saharan Africa. Alumni contributions reinforce the UI College of Medicine’s reputation as a hub for innovative research.

This trial’s success could establish Nigeria as a frontrunner in cancer research, demonstrating the nation’s capacity to tackle urgent health concerns. Kudos to the UI College of Medicine for nurturing talented professionals who are making a difference!

The trial is partially funded by the Thompson Family Foundation. Co-principal investigator Prof. Olusegun Isaac Alatise says, “The approval marks an important milestone in the fight against colorectal cancer in Nigeria.” Co-principal investigator Prof. Fatimah Abdulkareem adds, “This collaboration demonstrates our commitment to advancing cancer care.”

MSK’s Global Cancer Research and Training programme partnered with OAU Teaching Hospital in 2013 to establish the African Research Group for Oncology. Dr T. Peter Kingham says, “We hope this trial will lead to a similar shift in treatment possibilities for Nigerian colorectal cancer patients.”

Dr Tolulope Adewole, Medserve CEO, emphasises, “Quality oncology care should not be a privilege; it must be the minimum standard irrespective of location.”

If any advanced medical innovation occurs in Nigeria, UI alumni are likely behind it. They might not always be in the spotlight, but they are driving progress.

Globally, colorectal cancer is a significant issue, and Nigeria is not an exception, with less than half of Nigerian patients with colorectal cancer living one year after diagnosis. Colorectal cancer is a type of cancer that typically affects the colon or rectum, often presenting with no symptoms at first. But when it progresses, it can be tough to treat.

Some common signs to watch out for are changes in bowel habits (like diarrhoea or constipation); blood in stool or rectal bleeding; abdominal pain or cramps; unexplained weight loss; and Fatigue

Risk factors include age (50+); family history; diet (low fibre, high processed meat); lack of exercise; and smoking and heavy drinking.

Screening is key! Procedures like colonoscopies can catch it early when it is more treatable. The good news is that research is advancing, and treatments like immunotherapy (like the trial mentioned above) are offering new hope. Stay proactive about your health, and get checked if you’re due!

Tunji Oladejo, mnipr, JP, writes from the University of Ibadan and is the Chairman of The Progressive Forum, Ibadan (TPFI) via oladejo65@gmail.com

 

Continue Reading

Trending