By Dr.Abounu Abounu
He was killed and burnt beyond recognition whilst the other four escaped death by the whiskers.
His death has again exposed the insecurity that prevails in Nigeria, the lack of value placed on life and the inability of the security agencies to prevent and bring to justice the perpetrators of dastardly acts like this.
As President of the Nigeria Medical Student’s Association,Mr.Shanono was arguably, the leader of the second most influential student’s body in Nigeria, he was the leader of one of the most organised student’s body in Nigeria and in his position was an influential voice at the world body based in Geneva(The International Federation of Medical Students Associations).Amongst other roles of ensuring that the interest of medical students was represented effectively within Nigeria he also led a body that was in the fore front of health advocacy. Surely a lot was placed on him as the National President of NIMSA.Unfortunately today he is no more .Simply because some guy called Tokyo must control all the motor parks in Ibadan. What did Shanono have to do with motor park administration? Why brutally torture and burn him beyond recognition for simply using the Local Government owned motor park? It baffles me till now.
What is even more baffling is that in 2011 we are busy having national conferences on preventing maternal mortality when serious countries now take it for granted that no woman should die from child birth. In the UK the Secretary of Health is informed of all maternal deaths and a ministerial enquiry is launched. According to the WHO/United Nations Children Fund, UNICEF, in 1995, Nigeria had the third highest number of maternal deaths in the world. By the year 2000 the worrisome death-wave was yet to abate. For every 100,000 live births about 840 women died in the process of child birth. Out of the 27 million Nigerian women of reproductive age back then, about 2 million did not survive either pregnancy or childbirth. For you to understand the enormity of this; 2 million deaths will be like wiping out the population of Malta, Bahrain, Luxembourg, Brunei and Cyprus put together. So appalling has the maternal mortality rate become that in June 2008 Nigerian government officials were invited by the UN Special Committee dedicated to the protection of women's rights to explain the deplorable rate of deaths of pregnant women in the country. On its part UNICEF in it's the State Of The World Children Report, 2009 stated that "one out of nine global maternal deaths occurs in Nigeria." Pregnant women have better outcomes in Niger, Burundi, Congo Democratic Repulic, Rwanda and even Yemen compared to Nigeria.
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