1/ This week, a video of five female students of Oreyo Senior Grammar School, Igbogbo Ikorodu, Lagos State, smoking shisha in what is presumably a private home went viral.
2/ In the video, the students are in school uniform, so they either sneaked out of school or they are day students who detoured after school to someone’s place for a hookah smoking session rather than return home.
3/ I read somewhere that the girls have been suspended. I've never been in favour of removing students from the classroom unless they are violent (and/or disruptive). Suspensions (and expulsions) are often not effective forms of punishment (a discussion for another day).
4/ I also read recently in the Vanguard that the Lagos State Government has “waded into the viral video…with the order for the rehabilitation of the identified pupils.”
5/ I am happy with the swift response of the state government (that is assuming that the rehabilitation involves educating them on the dangers they expose themselves to when they are where they shouldn’t be and doing what they shouldn’t be doing...
6/ and also involves letting them know the health risks of hookah usage). I am delighted the girls are going to be offered help but rehabilitation (as long as it involves what I think it does) doesn’t, in my opinion, go far enough.
7/ Plus, there're more people involved than the 5 we see in the video. Of course there are.First of all, someone was filming them. This ‘someone’ is probably a person they are comfortable with because in the video, what we see of their faces through the cloud of smoke is relaxed.
8/ Some are smiling. One throws a peace sign at the camera. The cameraperson is culpable too. The newspaper article makes note of 5 pupils being identified and punished , so maybe the person filming isn’t a student. They are possibly older, likely an adult.
9/ If you get your kick from filming school girls in uniform inhaling and exhaling smoke, what else are you capable of?
Furthermore, those students were in someone’s home who may or may not be the same as the person filming.
10/ If that person, as I suspect, is an adult- because the newspaper reports have been of five students and no more- they probably helped with getting the hookah, and probably actively encouraged the girls to smoke.
11/ If this person is a grownup, it is possible that their ‘grooming’ isn’t limited to just these five students. How many more young people are they encouraging , and in how many different ways to “have fun”?
12/ Some Nigerians commenting on the video have blamed the school. I agree with them on that. Unless the girls are day students who left at the end of the day or during recess, I am curious about how they were able to leave school unnoticed.
13/ It’s been years since I was in secondary school, but I can't imagine how I could/would have left the school compound unnoticed , in school uniform, on a school day. Do these schools have no security? Did the girls get help from within the school to leave?
14/ So many questions, so few answers, so many opinions.
However, what isn’t an opinion but a fact is that shisha smoking isn’t safe, although there seems to be many people who believe that it is, people who think that because it is flavoured, it cannot be harmful.
15/ This is one of the most compelling reasons (young )people are drawn to it. This failure to recognise that its usage is a health risk isn’t limited to Nigeria. In the US, in 2018, 1 in 13 12th graders (SS3) had smoked shisha.
16/ A 2019 study by the Journal of Community Health showed a rise in its usage among college students. Yet, according to the American Lung Association “at least 82 toxic chemicals and carcinogens have been identified in hookah smoke.”
17/ Additionally, “Although the smoke passes through water, this does not eliminate the hazardous, addictive chemicals released from the tobacco..the combustion of charcoal used to heat hookah tobacco may pose additional health risks...”
18/ Smoking shisha increases the risk of oral cancer, lung cancer and heart diseases. Plus exchanging saliva with multiple people, sharing one pipe which isn’t cleaned properly (or cleaned at all between uses) is never a good idea.
19/ Herpes, syphilis and other infectious diseases can be passed on from person to person. And in a pandemic especially, sharing a pipe can be the kiss of death.
20/ What I would like to see happen in this case is this: if there are adults involved, that they are identified and punished, and the suspended students brought back into the classroom.
21/ Whatever punishment the school girls are given should not have them out of the classroom and missing lessons any more than they already have. Finally, the government needs to do more than “wade in with the order of rehabilitation.”
22/ There needs to be an awareness campaign in schools (all levels) and elsewhere to let these young ones know the risks they are taking using hookah. This is a matter of urgency.
23/ Consistent messaging of the dangers of smoking shisha will likely prove a much bigger deterrent than anything else. Just my own two kobo but what do I know?

PS: Happy Earth Day fellow humans. Treat the world better

#shisha #Students

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with chika unigwe

chika unigwe Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @chikaunigwe

16 Apr
1/ So Jack of Twitter, carried his business to Ghana and the Giant of Africa is raking because how dare he leave Nigeria with all its resources; human and otherwise to go and land in Ghana where their jollof is rubbish?
2/ Thing is though, that no matter how many more Twitter users Naija has than Ghana (36 million, almost 4 million more than the entire population of Ghana) an argument I have heard more times than I care to count, Jack owes us nothing.
3/ He is free to set his headquarters wherever he thinks it makes good business or personal sense for him to do so. Maybe he just likes Ghana. Maybe he wants it in a place where he’s not having to invest in security details and power supply
Read 17 tweets
1 Apr
‘The African Woman’ (For The ‘Real’ African Man)
1/ Never talk about African women as if they were individuals. Remember: they are a monolithic group. There is the African Woman of which there are two subgroups: the Bad African Woman (BAW) and the Good African Woman (GAW).
2/ Members of each group are easy to spot: The Bad African Woman is a feminist which means that she hates men and spends her days pretending to be happy and her nights crying in loneliness because she has put career before marriage.
3/ Note: it doesn’t matter whether she’s married or not, that’s beside the point. For her, always use adjectives like ‘bitter’, ‘frustrated’, ‘sad’.
Read 24 tweets
31 Mar
1/If you have the heart for it, and you understand Igbo, you can watch/listen to the original interview here. It's heartbreaking : bbc.com/igbo/afirika-5…
2/ How is he justifying domestic violence, sexual assault? In the name of culture? Whose culture? And women should be flattered when they are sexually harassed?
3/ How can he, working in the industry that he does , with smart, intelligent women, acting in movies with such women , even directed by such women come out and say that women have small brains. And imply that they are less intelligent (than men?)
Read 4 tweets
19 Mar
On Sunday, African Giant, Burna Boy won his first Grammy for Best Global Music, and Wizkid’s collaboration with Beyonce (and her nine-year-old daughter) won Best Music Video. Nigerians were ecstatic.
Even Tiwa Savage and the two Kuti brothers, Femi and Made, whose collaboration with Coldplay would have won them certificates (rather than Grammy statuettes) had it won (which it didn’t) were being congratulated on Twitter by Naijans for winning. All win na win abeg.
I am not being facetious. Far from it. It's easy for us, now, to take the fact of Nigerian music going global for granted. H/ever, those of us who were born in the 70’s and came of age in the 90’s know exactly how big a deal it is -
Read 21 tweets
5 Mar
I woke up (earlier this week) to the good news that the 279 girls kidnapped last week from Government Girls Junior Secondary School (GGJSS), Jengebe, Zamfara State, had been released.
I had my piece for this week all ready and had to discard it, but I have never been more grateful for a curve ball being thrown at me. When the news of their abduction broke, parallels were immediately drawn with that of the Chibok girls which happened seven years ago.
Everyone wondered if in 2028, the Zamfara girls would still be in captivity. Of the 276 girls kidnapped by Boko Haram from Government Secondary School Chibok in 2014, 103 were released, 57 fled and four later escaped while 112 are still missing.
Read 20 tweets
14 Feb
So last week I wrote about the disinheritance of daughters in parts of Igbo land & to my disbelief, there were Ndi Igbo claiming that this customary law of inheritance that privileges sons doesn't exist, that I had somehow fabricated this out of thin air
dailytrust.com/free-yourselves
(even as I and others on my TL gave concrete, real life examples and some Igbo daughters have successfully brought cases contesting the law before civil court).
One ill-informed young man stated that I had to “malign Igbo culture” so that “white people” would give me money. LOL. I understand that we don’t like to see the worst of ourselves reflected back to us but how do we progress if we refuse to confront it?
Read 25 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!