Ameyo Stella Adadevoh: ‘The ebola heroine’ How she stopped Ebola in 2014
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Ameyo Adadevoh was born in Lagos, Nigeria in October 1956. She spent the majority of her life in Lagos. Her father and great-grandfather, Babatunde Kwaku Adadevoh and Herbert Samuel Macaulay, were both distinguished scientists. Herbert Macaulay was one of the founders
of modern Nigeria. Her grandfather was from the Adadevoh family of the Volta Region of Ghana, to which she was very much connected, though she lived in Lagos. Her father Babatunde Kwaku Adadevoh was a physician and former Vice chancellor of the University of Lagos.
She was also the grand niece of Nigeria's first president Nnamdi Azikiwe, as well as a great-great-granddaughter of Sara Forbes Bonetta and a great-great-great-granddaughter of Ajayi Crowther. Adadevoh worked at First Consultant Hospital where a
statue of her great-grandfather exists.
Adadevoh graduated from the University of Lagos College of Medicine with a Bachelor of Medicine/Bachelor of Surgery. She served her one-year mandatory housemanship at Lagos University Teaching Hospital in 1981.
She spent her residency at Lagos University Teaching Hospital and obtained her West African College of Physicians and Surgeons credential in 1983. She then went to London to complete her fellowship in endocrinology at Hammersmith Hospital. She spent 21 years at the
First Consultants Medical Center in Lagos, Nigeria. There, she served as the Lead Consultant Physician and Endocrinologist.
Adadevoh was the first to alert the Nigerian Ministry of Health when H1N1 spread to Nigeria in 2012.
Ameyo Adadevoh married Afolabi Emmanuel Cardoso on April 26, 1986. The couple had one son, Bankole Cardoso
Adadevoh correctly diagnosed Liberian Patrick Sawyer as Nigeria's first case of Ebola at First Consultant Hospital in Lagos, Nigeria in July 2014.
Adadevoh kept Sawyer in the hospital despite his insistence that he simply had a bad case of malaria. Sawyer wanted to attend a business conference in Calabar, Nigeria. Adadevoh led the team that oversaw Sawyer's treatment. Adadevoh also kept him at the
hospital despite receiving a request from the Liberian ambassador to release him. She tried to create an isolation area, despite the lack of protective equipment, by raising a wooden barricade outside Sawyer's door. Her work saved Nigeria from widespread infection.
At the time of these events, Nigerian doctors were on strike, which could have led to a severe health crisis. She also provided staff with relevant information about the virus, procured protective gear and quickly contacted relevant officials.
As a result of her report, the Nigerian government declared a national public health emergency and the Nigerian Ministry of Health set up an Ebola Emergency Operations Center. WHO declared Nigeria to be Ebola-free on 20 October 2014.
Adadevoh died from the Ebola virus in quarantine on 19 August 2014 in Lagos, Nigeria. Her body was decontaminated and cremated by the government. Her family obtained her ashes and held a private interment ceremony while
upholding the funeral rights also on 12 September 2014, in Lagos. The Dr. Ameyo Adadevoh Health Trust (DRASA), a non-profit health organization, was created in her honour. The film 93 Days is dedicated to Adadevoh and tells the story of the treatment of Sawyer by
Adadevoh and other medical staff at First Consultant Medical Center. The film was directed by Steve Gukas. On 27 October 2018, she was honoured with a Google Doodle posthumously on what would have been her 62nd birthday.
In February 2020, a road was named after Adadevoh in Abuja, Nigeria's capital city. The road "Ameyo Adadevo Way" is directly linked to Ahmadu Bello Way, one of Abuja's major and longest roads. This is one of the first efforts made by the
Nigerian government to honour her valuable contribution to the country in the last weeks of her life.
Source: Wikipedia
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Oluwa of Lagos - Chief Amodu Tijani Took Britain to Court in 1921 for Stealing His Land and Won £22,500,39
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Chief Tijani was an Idejo Chief who controlled a series of villages and towns in the Lagos area. He held strong nationalist views, arguing that the British colonial government had no authority to interfere with the Oba's (ruler of Lagos) rule.
In 1921, Amodu Tijani also known as Chief Oluwa of Lagos along with Nigerian nationalist Herbert Macaulay took British colonialists to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council (JCPC) in London over a case of stolen land.
Why Abacha pronounced death sentence on Prof Wole Soyinka and How he escaped
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Soyinka’s relentless activism often exposed him to great personal risk, most notable during the government of General Sani Abacha (1993–1998), which pronounced a death sentence on him ‘in absentia.’ However, during Abacha’s regime, Soyinka escaped from Nigeria via
the ‘Nadeco Route’ on motorcycle.
Prof Wole Soyinka was born on July 13, 1934, in Abeokuta in Western Nigeria.Soyinka has published 21 works of art ranging from drama, novels and poetry.
He studied at the University College, Ibadan (1952-1954), and later at University of Leeds.
Sikiru Ayinde Barrister never did any rehearsal with his band members before recording all his "147 albums", with none of the band members knowing what he wanted to sing. His living band boys said he either started singing and they followed up with the most
appropriate beats or they started playing the instruments while he sang along.
The back-up watched keenly using their instincts or take initiatives from him to join the song as needed. An example was the interview granted by Samson Giga, his sakara drummer who gave an
account of the recording of one of their hit albums, " Reality".
According to the dark-goggle-wearing drummer, "Barrister started by asking Origade, another sakara drummer to play. Immediately he did, he clapped for him, and called in other talking drummers saying,
Jare Ijalana - Little Kid Dubbed As Most Beautiful Girl In The World
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A five year old beautiful girl from won the internet with her sharp features and her soulful eyes. Jare Ijalana has been dubbed the “Most Beautiful Girl in the World” after Nigerian photographer; Mofe Bamuyiwa posted three gorgeous portraits of her on Instagram.
Her photographs were taken by lifestyle and portrait photographer, Mofe Bamuyiwa, along with that of her sisters Joba and Jomiloju Ijalana.
People who were wowed by Jare Ijalana’s extraordinary look branded her as the most beautiful girl in the world.
Ayinla Omowura: The Social Commentator and Iconic Singer
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If you don’t know the name Ayinla Omowura, that is probably because of his untimely but predicted death and the fact that his genre of music was inspired by his Egba dialect which has been difficult to translate over the last 30 years.
Even though his music was particular to the time it was made, his social awareness is noted in this day and age.
He was born Waheed Ayinla Gbogbolowo in the late ‘30s in Abeokuta, Ogun State to a blacksmith father and trader mother.
Ọmọdé mẹ́ta nṣère Folktale Story - The Inspiration behind Toni Tetuila’s Classic with Plantashun Boyz & Ruff Rugged
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In the Yoruba Community when there was no Radio or Television and the Internet, children used to gather together to play after the return of the father and mother from the farm. Particularly, during the drought when there is less farming activities.
Three young boys were playing beside the beach carelessly
The first boy boasted that he could climb the palm tree to the top without a rope, the second said he could swim the entire length of the sea, the third boasted louder that he too could shoot arrow to the heaven.