Huge moment scoring against Liverpool, says Osimhen

Galatasaray striker Victor Osimhen has described as ‘huge moment’ his penalty goal in Tuesday’s victory over Liverpool in a UEFA Champions League match in Istanbul.

The former African Footballer of the Year made all the difference with the solitary winner after he struck from the spot in the 16th minute against the experienced Brazilian goalkeeper Allison Becker and he acknowledged that playing against the English champions was indeed a huge motivation for the Red and Gold.

‘I’m extremely happy about the performance we put in against one of the greatest clubs in the world,’ Osimhen told CBS Sports as per Liverpool FC News. ‘For us, we never get carried away because this is a true test that Liverpool gave to us. I’m really happy about this win.

‘It won’t take away that they are one of the best [teams] in the last decade. For us, it’s a really big motivation for us.

‘They made us even better and we know we have a lot of things to work on. I’m really happy for this win and the team.’

In what was his first goal of the campaign in the UCL, the former Napoli hitman explained further how he kept his cool under pressure to beat Alisson from the penalty spot.

‘You come face-to-face with one of the best goalkeepers in the world, Alisson,’ he said. ‘I have to be on high concentration for the place where I want to put the ball and I didn’t change it.

‘For me, it’s a huge moment. I came against him when I played for my previous club and he heard my penalty so I needed to be highly concentrated to do better.’

He added: ‘We have quality in our team and we just need to be focused in many games in this competition. This is a huge step for us and we won’t be carried away because we beat Liverpool. It’s a big motivation.’

Osimhen could have increased Galatasaray’s lead further when he went through one-on-one with Alisson Becker, but the Brazilian thwarted his effort, getting injured in the process.

Grange School tops Quomodo Inter-Schools Swimming Grand Slam

The 2nd edition of Quomodo Inter-Schools Swimming Competition ended recently at the Ikoyi Club 1938 with Grange School emerging the overall champions after a keen contest by all the schools.

The event, sponsored by Quomodo Systems Africa, witnessed spirited performances from young swimmers representing Avi-Cenna International School, Children’s International School, Corona Schools, Grange School, Greensprings School, Lagoon and Whitesands Schools, and Meadow Hall School.

From the opening event to the final relays, the poolside atmosphere was electrifying and charged with cheers, and bursts of school pride, banters and bragging rights of sort.

In the end, Grange School topped the scoreboard with 517 points, followed by Children’s International School with 389 points and Corona Schools in third place with 250.5 points.

Greensprings School came fourth with 196.5 points, while Meadow Hall School secured fifth position with 149 points.

Lagoon and Whitesands Schools finished with 87 points, while Avi-Cenna International School ended with 68 points.

The Chairman of the Ikoyi Club Swimming Section, Akinbulejo Onabolu, hailed the event standard, adding that it was a proof of Nigeria’s rising swimming prospects in the sport which is fast becoming a culture.

For Quomodo Systems Africa, the competition is aimed at investing in the future of young athletes.

Olufunke Preghafi, Quomodo’s General Manager, Finance, expressed joy at seeing children as young as six showing skills, energy, and determination to excel.

‘This is one of our key CSR projects this year,’ she noted. ‘Quomodo has always stood for youth development and all-round growth. Swimming builds confidence, strength, and resilience; qualities children can carry into every area of life. That’s why we are proud to support this initiative.’

With every stroke and dive, these young swimmers not only entertained the crowd but also embodied the promise of a new generation of swimmers for Nigeria.

School restates commitment to special needs children at fourth anniversary

The Place of Liberty School for Special Needs Children has restated its commitment to special needs children, stressing that many children with disabilities risk being neglected or forced to beg on the streets with their parents.

Speaking at its fourth anniversary celebration in Lagos, a board member of the school, Olusoji Oluwole, said: ‘Education for special needs children is very expensive, but with the support of our donors, we have been able to provide everything free of charge – uniforms, feeding, physiotherapy, speech therapy, and even training for our teachers,’

According to him, since its establishment four years ago, it has been dedicated to providing education for children with disabilities whose families cannot afford the huge cost of special education.

He said the school recently established a vocational training centre, where pupils now produce items by themselves as part of their foray into independent living.

He said the school is poised for free education, therapy and vocational skills for children from indigent families, ensuring that they become self-sufficient and not dependent on charity.

‘We’ve had some interventions; food donations, healthcare services, but more government support would allow us to do much more,’ he said.

Oluwole acknowledged support from institutions such as Randle General Hospital, which provides healthcare and physiotherapy.

The school’s administrator, Mrs. Olufunke Lipede, said the journey has been challenging and deeply rewarding, notwithstanding the difficulties involved in caring for children with disabilities.

She said: ‘If you spend just one minute with these children, you will see how wonderful they are. They are very loving and caring. You don’t even see any disability in them. Teachers at the school approach their work with love and patience. They didn’t look at the children’s conditions. They just believed that the more they try, the better for the children.’

Another board member, Oladipo Oluwole, noted that it was established to honour the legacy of his late parents, who were deeply passionate about supporting the poor and children with special needs.

Bill Maher’s irresponsible genocide claims

Sir: American comedian and talk show host, Bill Maher, recently stirred up a hornet’s nest when he claimed during a Friday episode of Real Time with Bill Maher that there is genocide of Christians in Nigeria. According to him, more than 100,000 Christians have been killed since 2009 and 18,000 churches have been burned.

There is a popular saying often attributed to Abraham Lincoln: ‘Better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak and remove all doubt.’ Bill Maher did not just speak out of turn, he exposed his ignorance.

Every Nigerian knows that the killings by bandits and insurgents in Nigeria are across the board. They bear no religious colouration. Muslims have died, Christians have died, and traditional worshippers too have not been spared. Whole communities have been displaced irrespective of their faith.

From Katsina to Zamfara, Niger, and other northern states, bandits have attacked mosques, killing Muslim worshippers even while they prayed. That is what makes Bill Maher’s statement, and the claim of some Western commentators about a so-called jihad war in Nigeria, not just misleading but laughable.

Perhaps Bill Maher thought that by claiming a Christian genocide in Nigeria, Christians would rise up against Muslims and the country would collapse. After all, foreign experts once predicted that Nigeria would disintegrate in 2015. I am sure they are still surprised that the country remains standing strong despite its numerous challenges.

If there is anything I have deduced from Bill Maher’s fake news, it is that Nigerians are wiser now. Bill would be disappointed reading some of the comments from Christians in Nigeria rubbishing his statement on social media. We know who our common enemies are when we see them.

Those killing innocent citizens in Nigeria are not Muslims, they are not Christians, they are not traditional worshippers. In truth, they are not even human, because they lack humanity. The only name of their religion is cruelty. They exist to maim, to massacre, and to tear apart the very fabric of our society. The fight has always been less about religion or ethnicity and more about resource control and criminality. And it is just a matter of time before the wind blows and the fowl’s buttock is laid bare.

This is why it is dangerous when people like Bill Maher reduce a complex national tragedy into a simplistic religious headline. Such careless statements not only distort reality but also hand fuel to extremists and opportunists who thrive on division.

Bill Maher and his co-travellers in fake news want to feed off our ethnic and religious fault lines and sow more seeds of discord. We must resist this trap. Our story is ours to tell. If we allow foreigners to define our struggles, they will also define our destiny. Before they divide us further with their careless narratives, let us strengthen our unity, confront our challenges with honesty, and tell our story ourselves, because if we don’t, others will twist it against us.

As Chinua Achebe wisely said: ‘Until the lions have their own historians, the history of the hunt will always glorify the hunter.’

Leadership, responsibility and state policing in Nigeria

The litmus test of true leadership lies not in flamboyant rhetoric or televised appearances, but in the daily, unwavering commitment to the welfare, dignity, and security of one’s people. Today, as Plateau State and many parts of Nigeria are consumed by waves of violence and recurring attacks by non-state actors, we are compelled to ask: who truly stands for the people? Who is prepared to place lives above politics and truth above convenience?

One feels compelled to speak out on a deeply troubling stance taken by a Federal House of Representatives member representing our dear Pankshin/Kanke/Kanam Federal constituency, Plateau State. His recent comments rejecting the idea of establishing state police forces reflect not only a misplaced fear but an insensitivity to the real and immediate threats that confront our communities daily.

Security is not a privilege reserved for the elite, nor is it an ornament of political status to be paraded around election seasons. Security is a right-a non-negotiable, fundamental right of every Nigerian citizen.

A contradiction in practice and principle

It is nothing short of ironic that the same individual who expresses apprehension about governors allegedly arming state police with AK-47s, himself moves about with a full retinue of military personnel wielding those very same weapons. These armed escorts are government-provided, taxpayer-funded, and justified under the same logic that validates state-level security interventions.

If the Federal Government can entrust the lawmaker with such heavily armed protection details, what moral or practical basis is there for denying state governors the ability to equip their own security outfits to protect vulnerable communities-communities that have endured immeasurable suffering, loss, and displacement at the hands of terrorists and bandits?

We cannot cherry-pick when and where security should matter. Security must not be exclusive to politicians. The people of Garga, Mangu, Bokkos, Riyom, Barkin Ladi, Wase, Qua’an Pan, and countless other areas across Plateau are not asking for luxuries-they are asking for their right to live in peace.

Leadership must be rooted in empathy

During his recent visit to Garga community-tragically hit yet again by terrorist violence-Hon. Gagdi arrived flanked by heavily armed security personnel. His presence, though appreciated, raises a fundamental question: if community policing and local vigilantes are good enough for the ordinary citizen, why were they not good enough to secure your visit, sir?

It is disingenuous to advocate one standard for oneself and another for the people one was elected to represent. If, indeed, you believe that local hunters and vigilantes are sufficient for community security, then lead by example. Relinquish your own federal protection and walk in the shoes of those you claim to understand.

There is a clear disconnection between the position you hold and the reality on the ground. The people of Plateau are not fooled by eloquent justifications that fail to translate into tangible protection for them and their families. We do not need more political semantics; we need solutions.

State police is a necessity

Nigeria’s security architecture, as currently centralised, has proven insufficient to meet the growing and localised security challenges across the country. The argument that governors may abuse state police powers is one that can be addressed with proper checks and balances-just as we manage accountability in federal institutions.

To reject the formation of state police out of fear of misuse is to deny millions of Nigerians the hope of a safer tomorrow. It is an argument that serves the comfort of the elite, not the interest of the people. Security cannot be micromanaged from Abuja. It must be localised, responsive, and community-driven.

State police would mean quicker response times, better local intelligence, and officers who understand the cultural and geographical terrain of the areas they serve. It is not only a smart security policy-it is a moral imperative.

Loyalty to the people, not just the position

Our allegiance as leaders must always be to the people, not to parties or positions. The dignity and lives of the people of Plateau are not bargaining chips in political debates. They are sacred.

I call upon the National Assembly, the Presidency, and all stakeholders to move swiftly and decisively toward the establishment of state policing structures. Let us be bold in our reforms, transparent in our implementation, and just in our intentions.

Let us remember that history will not judge us by the titles we held, but by the lives we saved, the truth we spoke, and the courage we showed in times of trial.

Save Kwara South from bandits’ siege

Sir: Insecurity in Kwara South, especially across Ekiti Local Government communities has reached a terrifying level. In recent weeks, communities have witnessed repeated attacks that have left families grieving, markets deserted, and livelihoods destroyed. From Babanla to Oke-Ode, bandits have unleashed violence with impunity, leaving ordinary citizens at their mercy. The recent killing of over a dozen local vigilantes and forestry guards in Oke-Ode on Sunday September 28 is one of the most chilling reminders of how bold and coordinated these armed groups have become.

Equally devastating was the incident of Saturday, September 27, along the Osi-Eruku axis. Bandits ambushed travellers returning from a wedding, abducting more than 15 people. Many sustained gunshot injuries, and one victim died despite being rescued. Though the intervention of local vigilantes forced the attackers to abandon some captives, the bandits still made away with three hostages. By Monday, September 29, they had already begun demanding ransom, leaving the entire town of Eruku in deep grief and hopelessness

These are not isolated crimes; they represent a pattern of coordinated raids that exploit our porous forests, weak intelligence, and overstretched local vigilante structures. The human cost is severe as families are shattered, schools disrupted, farms abandoned, and entire communities left to live under constant fear. Worse still, those who have volunteered to defend their communities are being overwhelmed, killed, or kidnapped themselves. This situation demands urgent attention from both the Kwara State government and the federal government.

This is an urgent call for immediate deployment of rapid-response security forces to the affected areas, with better intelligence, aerial surveillance, and support for local security networks. The state must also provide training, equipment, and backup for vigilantes, while prioritising the rescue of abducted persons and support for grieving families. Without swift and decisive action, Kwara South risks descending into a state of lawlessness that will cripple its economy and erode public trust in government. Now is the time to act!

Israel intercepts Gaza aid flotilla

A flotilla carrying aid to Gaza said Israeli forces yesterday intercepted its latest bid to break a blockade of the war-battered Palestinian territory.

The Global Sumud Flotilla – around 45 vessels carrying activists and politicians including Swedish climate campaigner Greta Thunberg – left Spain last month aiming to break Israel’s blockade of the Palestinian territory, where the UN says famine has set in.

‘The warships are moving in to intercept the flotilla – only 81 nautical miles remain to Gaza,’ said the Maghreb contingent of the Global Sumud Flotilla in a statement.

French politician Marie Mesmeur and Franco-Palestinian MEP Rima Hassan also reported that their boats were being intercepted.

The French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot posted on X that Israeli authorities were ‘currently boarding’ the flotilla.

Earlier, the Israeli navy warned the flotilla against entering waters under its blockade.

‘The Israeli Navy has reached out to the. flotilla and asked them to change course,’ the foreign ministry said in a statement.

‘Israel has informed the flotilla that it is approaching an active combat zone and violating a lawful naval blockade.’

Spain and Italy, which both sent naval escorts, had urged the ships to halt before entering Israel’s declared exclusion zone off Gaza.

After a 10-day stop in Tunisia, where organisers reported two drone attacks, the flotilla resumed its journey on September 15.

One of its main ships, the Alma, was ‘aggressively circled by an Israeli warship’, the group said, before another vessel, the Sirius, was subjected to ‘similar harassing manoeuvres’.

The flotilla had earlier vowed to press on with its bid to deliver aid to the devastated coastal territory despite what it called ‘intimidation’ tactics by the Israeli military.

It said on X it remained ‘vigilant as we enter the area where the previous flotillas were intercepted and/or attacked’.

Israel blocked similar attempts in June and July.

At around 1500 GMT yesterday, the flotilla said it was less than 90 nautical miles (about 170 kilometres) from the Gaza Strip.

‘We sail on undeterred by Israeli threats and tactics of intimidation,’ said the flotilla, which is also carrying Nelson Mandela’s grandson Mandla Mandela and Rima Hassan, a French-Palestinian European Parliament member.

Spain’s digital transformation minister, Oscar Lopez, had urged the flotilla not to cross into Israel’s declared exclusion zone, extending 150 nautical miles off Gaza.

‘Our message to the flotilla has been clear: do not enter that zone,’ he told Spanish public television, adding that Spain’s naval escort would not cross into the exclusion area.

Italy, too, urged the activists to ‘stop now’ after its frigate also halted at the 150-nautical-mile limit, broadcasting radio messages to the activists’ vessels asking them to abandon their mission.

The activists said Spain and Italy’s decision was an attempt to ‘sabotage’ their endeavours.

Abuja to hosts 2025 Women’s Nationwide Championship

The Nigeria Women Football League (NWFL) has officially announced the new kick-off date, venue, and fixtures for the 2025 NWFL Nationwide.

The championship is now scheduled to take place from October 10 to 17, 2025, at the Bwari Township Stadium in Abuja, Federal Capital Territory.

The NWFL Chief Operating Officer Modupe Shabi confirmed in a statement released on Independence Day, that the competition will feature ten teams divided into two groups of five. She described the tournament as a critical platform for emerging clubs seeking to advance through the league structure.

‘The Nationwide competition remains a vital platform for clubs across the country to showcase their potential and progress through the league system. We are committed to ensuring it is competitive, transparent, and successful,’ Shabi said.

The schedule will begin with the arrival of teams and a pre-match technical meeting on October 10, followed by the start of matches on October 11. Fixtures will continue on October 13, 14, 16, and 17, with October 12 and 15 designated as rest days.

Stressing the tournament’s importance for women’s football development in Nigeria, Shabi added: ‘At the end of the tournament, the two best teams from each group will be promoted to the NWFL Championship, which is a huge motivation for all the participating clubs.’

‘We wish all the clubs the very best of luck and look forward to an exciting week of women’s football in the Federal Capital Territory.’

The groups include Osklean FC (Rivers State), Rangers Women FC (Enugu State), Plateau Queens FC (Plateau State), DreamStars Ladies FC (Lagos State), and C2E Sports Academy (Abia State) in Group A.

Group B consists of Sporting Angels FC (Rivers State), Alexander Queens FC (Enugu State), Rosaria Victrix FC (Imo State), NAF Queens FC (Abuja), and Solo Wonders FC (Akwa Ibom State).

Lymphoma: far from the ‘belu belu’ razor sharp curved knife

Every September 15, reminds me of the neighbourhood surgeon of the 1950s and 1960s and his dangerous but seemingly unblemished surgical prowess. Mothers and fathers invited him to remove enlarged lymph nodes from the necks and armpits of their children and drooping tonsils from their mouths. The Yorubas call a swollen or drooping tonsil ‘BELU BELU’ . They believed contents of the swellings were poisnous enough to kill anyone who swallowed them if the ‘belu belu’ bursts. So, they invited home any mallam who specialised in the art of surgical removal of an infected tonsil. I witnessed some of these surgeries between the ages of nine and 10, but escaped them. Often, the local surgeons were malams from the north of Nigeria. They came in with unsterilised curved, sharp knives and other implements. The children who were to be operated upon were tricked indoor and forced down by about three hefty men. One sat behind him or her, and, with hefty muscular arms, arrested the child and tightly bound the young one’s body to his own. Another man steadied the head which was, also, under arrest. Finally, the third man sat on the child’s legs to ensure they did not move during the operation. The man who had the child’s head manipulated the cheeks to force the mouth open. Before these procedures, the mother and other females were forced out of the room. Outside, the women paraded the environment, praying or crying. The children who saw their sibling or playmate abducted and knew what was going on fled to safety. The native surgeon pressed down the tongue of the child with a wooden or bamboo appliance, and probed the distended inflamed tonsil or a drooping one with his knife to the root, on the plate of the upper jaw. He strikes. And down comes the infected organ, which is a member of the immune system of the body. Blood erupts. The surgeon’s aids force the patient’s head down and warns him to not swallow the blood or the excised tissue. He spits all out. He is given plenty of water to rinse his mouth and rid himself of remnants of the dismembered parts of his body. His mother is summoned into the ‘theatre’ which often times was the family’s single room tenancy. Her job was to immediately provide hot peppered soup she had been advised to keep on stand by. The patient will snack on it all day or for several hours until the post surgical bleeding was arrested!

Procedures for removing enlarged lymph nodes in the neck and armpit were similar except that the patient’s lot was not hot peppered soup plastered on open knife wound. I do not know the mechanism for stopping bleeding in these surgeries, but they were equally dangerous procedures in which blood vessels and muscles were often exposed. I do not recall now if the patients fell ill afterwards from infections or anyone passed as a consequence.

My childhood memories were lit up by announcements that September 15, 2025 was yet another global Lymphoma Day.

Lymphoma is what medicine calls a dangerous disease which may cause some of this swellings in the neck, armpits and groin which the crude medicine men of those days treated according to their limited understanding of the construction of the body and of how it works. Their ‘patients’ probably survived because their conditions were not full blown Lymphoma. I told Udeme Edet James that she was a lucky girl in the 1990s when her father, a palm wine tapper and Brewer of local gin, ogogoro used razor blade incisions on growths or swellings in her armpits and swellings below the ear lobe to aspirate through finger pressure whatever pus and fluid they haboured. She is from Ekwere Itam, near Uyo, Akwa Ibom State. She grew up in a culture in which children and adults alike often developed swellings around the neck which, today, are known as MUMPmumps. Pharmaceutical drugs prescribed by doctors often did not help the sufferers much. They recovered more, as I witnessed a case weeks ago, on a therapy of White Cocoyam meal at a special ceremony beside a plantain plant.

Lymphoma

As it is known today, lymphoma is a cancer in the Lymphatic System, a part of the Immune System. That is why surviving it may be difficult because it weakens the immune system which is meant to destroy it. It is like the bombardment of a military defence headquarters!

To make a challenged person appreciate what is going on, I often play around the question: What is the colour of blood? I guess you too would say it is ‘RED’. Absolutely, the colour of blood may not be RED. It only appears so because red blood cells are plentiful in what we call blood and , therefore, give it its red colour. What gives the red blood cell its red colour is haemoglobin, the oxygen-carrying pigment of red blood cells.

Blood, or the River of life as many physicians call it, is the liquid transport system in which are to be found such components as red blood cells, white blood cells, platelet cells, nutrients, hormones, oxygen, antibodies and PLASMA, the liquid portion of blood. Blood circulates in blood vessels such as arteries, capillaries, veins and organs.

Lymphatic System

Side by side with the blood circulatory system is the Lymphatic Circulatory System. This is leading to the realm of theLYMPH, which circulates in the LYMPHATIC system where LYMPHOMA takes place. Many persons know of blood vessels but not of lymphatic vessels.

PLASMA, a pale yellow or straw coloured liquid in the blood circulation which accounts for about 55 per cent of the total volume, separates from the blood and leaks out of the vessels. It leaks into the spaces around the 100 trillion or so cells known as the INTERSTITIAL SPACE, forming the interstitial fluid. Plasma is about 92 per cent water and comprises proteins such as albumin, globulins, fibrinogen, Hormones, nutrients (such as proteins, glucose and lipids). It transports waste products as well. There are as well electrolytes such as potassium, sodium, calcium, magnesium etc. Gases such as oxygen , carbon dioxide and nitrogen are in the mix, too. These nutrients diffuse into the cells through various mechanisms. Toxins and wastes from the cells also diffuse from them into the interstitial fluid outside.

The interstitial fluid carries away the wastes and toxins into special cells, the LYMPHATIC CAPILLARIES which take them into primary lymphatic vessels called AFFERENT. The drained waste loaded interstitial fluid is now known as THE LYMPH. The AFFERENT drains into larger lymphatic vessels. In this system are LYMPH NODES which filter the lymph of wastes and toxins, causing triggers of immune responses when the toxin load is overwhelming.

Lymphatic vessels pass filtered lymph to lymphatic ducts from where it enters the blood circulation through certain veins. The returning fluid may be described as BLOOD PLASMA which has completed its cycle or journey which is to take nutrients to the cells, remove their wastes and toxins for removal by the lymph nodes in the lymphatic system, thereby supporting fluid balance, living process, immune function and, if we like, homeostasis.

Lymph Nodes

They are among our STOP OVERS in the exploration of LYMPHOMA or cancer of the lymphatic system. There are about 500 to 800 lymph nodes in the body of an average person. They are in the head and neck, behind the ear, in front of the ear, arms, armpits (40-49 nodes), above the elbow joints, chest , abdomen, groin , behind the knee . Where are they not present in the masterpiece construction of the human body, each group servicing a specific area of the body?

The lymph nodes often mentioned in lymphoma are those in the neck , armpits and groin. As a child, I often had swellings in the groin which the Yorubas call PETELE(m:m:m). It often came with bad, open infections in the lower limbs, was painful and caused restricted mobility, but was easily resolved with warm or hot water presses. Those in the armpits cause women some extra worry because the armpit is connected to a breast and terminal breast cancers sometimes present large lymph node swelling there.

In the neck, the swellings were surgically defused through extraction by crude surgeons of the 1960s and perhaps 1970s as well. They did not realise they were thus removing road blocks against poison overload. Many doctors believe a cancer in this region, known as non Hodgkin’s LYMPHOMA, is a death sentence. However, herbal medicines sometimes prove them wrong. TINA ADUGBE can bear testimony of the case of an Editor who survived it. A director-general in Lagos State who later became provost at the College of Education at Ijanikin fared well on Amazon A-F until the medication became scarce. It was a proprietary blend targeted at bacteria and fungi while AMAZON A-V went straight for viruses. On his hospital clinic days, the doctors wondered if a mistake was made about his diagnosis. Sadly, he passed after the resurgence, shortly after a pilgrimage. Mrs. Folake Sanusi and I reminisced recently about the younger brother of one of her close friends, a woman from the Southeast of Nigeria who is a teacher in Lagos. The young man was dying in Enugu from chemotherapy and other pharmaceutical drugs when her sister contacted Mrs. Sanusi. Amazon A-F, guakatonga and Bell’s supreme immune booster were among the several herbal recipes sent to him. He came alive, filled with energy enough to continue his treatment in Lagos. His problem was that he had no money. His half siblings sister, a conventional medical consultant in England, was picking his hospital bills while his father was taking care of his wife and four children. His sister in Lagos could do only very little. His doctor sister insisted on chemotherapy. She and I spoke on the telephone. She agreed the herbs could help him from the descriptions of the chemistry of their actions. Nevertheless, she insisted on chemotherapy, if she would continue to fund his protocols. He obliged her. He died.

Lymphoma Types, Presentations

A hallmark of lymphoma is that LYMPHOCYTES, a group of soldiers in the immune system, become uncontrollably cancerous.

LYMPHOCYTES are found in different parts of the body, including the lymphatic vessels, blood stream, lymph nodes, adenoids, tonsils and spleen, for example. We may speak of two types of lymphoma. HODGKINS LYMPHOMA and NON-HODGKINS LYMPHOMA. Both may affect LYMPHOCYTES and lymphoid immobile lymph tissues such as lymph nodes, tonsils, adenoids and spleen. Non Hodgkin’s is differentiated in terms of the systemic manner by which it spreads.

Some of the presentations of both include swollen lymph nodes, fatigue, fever, itching, weight loss, coughing and chest pain, loss of appetite, abdominal swelling and pain, shortness of breath, inexplicable weight loss. However, not all swellings of lymphoid tissue are due to lymphoma. Other causes may be irritation, infection, inflammation and immune response. My generation of children whose swollen lymph nodes were invaded by ‘crude’ surgeons using unsterilized knives may have survived infections and death largely because the swellings were not lymphoma, that is not cancerous and the tormented tissues were deadened with hot spices.

Lymphoma in Nigeria

According to the GLOBAL BURDEN OF DISEASES, a comprehensive research effort which examines 459 health outcomes and their risk factors, 5,194 cases of non Hodgkin’s LYMPHOMA hit Nigeria in 2022. The rate could have been higher but for under reporting of cases. This was about 4.1 percent of all cancer cases which numbered 127,763. The others were breast cancer 32,278 cases; prostate cancer 18,019 cases. Children are more susceptible, especially to burkitt lymphoma, which affects B lymphocyte cells and grow rapidly. The symptom may include swollen lymph nodes, weight loss, abdominal pain, swelling, fatigue and fever, among others. Survival rate is poor, largely because of inaccessibility to medical care and treatment abandonment which, in Kano for example, a study said could be as high as 85 percent. In respect of Non Hodgkin’s LYMPHOMA(NHL), survival rate may be as high as 11 years, according to another study. Even then, disease groups within this ambit exhibit different time lines.

Herbal Remedies

The starting point is to remember that LYMPHOMA is a cancer and to treat it as such. In such a matter, I always remember DR MAX GERSON who taught us that tumours such as uterine fibroids and cancers develop when the cells lose potassium and are infiltrated by sodium. This alters their existence from oxidative (oxygen dependent) life to fermentative (non oxygen dependent) metabolism. Out of touch with the body’s signalling systems, tumours and cancers defy control and grow rapidly. They poison surrounding cells and incite them into a possible death-causing rebellion. Thus, Dr. Gerson suggested massive dietary infusion of potassium into the body through the consumption of fruit and vegetables juices which are potassium rich. He came by this idea when he used them, on the advice of a medical lay person, to cure his terrible migraines which knocked him out of work for about two weeks in one month. He later prescribed them to cure some cases of cancer and other debilitating diseases. (Please check his work online under Dr. Max Gerson or the Gerson Institute).

Dr. Gerson also advocated organic coffee enemas. The coffee must be organic, please. It detoxifies the liver and the colon. A liver and colon may breed toxins which consume metabolites such as potassium which the body recalls from the cells to neutralise ACIDOSIS in the bloodstream. Acidosis causes de-oxygenation, a cause of cancer, and irritation, a cause of INFLAMMATION, which is present in cancers.

Dr. Gerson also improved the nutrition of his patients to neutralise free radicals with anti oxidants and to boost immune function.

Modern herbal medicine therapies against cancer have built on foundations provided by physicians before and after Dr. Gerson. Thus, today, it is possible to speak about a SEVEN-STEP THERAPY. These are 1) detoxification 2) oxygenation 3)anti-oxidation 4) immunity boosting 5) energy boosting 6) anti- inflammation and 7) nutrition and healing.

Certain herbs are specific for each of these therapies. I have mentioned Dr. Gerson’s ORGANIC COFFEE ENEMAS. The entire body requires DETOXIFICATION. Milk thistle is a super protector of the liver against toxins. Jerusalem artichoke, too is good. So are common club moss, dandelion root, cleavers, bitter cola and bitter leaf among several others. Carqueja clears out this organ. On the Nigerian market today, there are many proprietary medicines for DETOXIFICATION. Among them are EDIMAS DIFFENS, a 12 herb warehouse which kills bacteria, viruses, fungi etc always found in cancer tissues. There are also, several colon cleansers .

As for oxygenation, I doubt if we still have OXYGEN TABLETS on the market. The HYPERBARIC OXYGEN CHAMBER may be trickling in. Green plants, in liquid, tablet or powder forms, provide OXYGEN molecules through their CHLOROPHYLL, as does a chlorophyll powder supplement itself.

There are many antioxidants on the market, some of them specific in action, others multilateral. CoQ10 provides energy to cancer cells to not grow but to have the strength to commit suicide (apoptosis) by activating their P.53 gene, as Dr. Karl Folkers did in a landmark Finnish experiment which resolved about 30 hopeless terminal breast cancers. Vitamin C at about 6000mg daily in divided doses is an antioxidant which boosts production of white blood corpuscles.

In the days of the SUPREME IMMUNE BOOSTER, it was a first choice supplement for this purpose. Upcoming now is REGENERATING DRINK, designed to activate STEM CELL production. These cells replace damaged, aging, dying or dead cells . It also combats inflammation.

Among my favourites in the nutrition category are ANTI AGING 247, which is contra indicated for persons below 30 years of age, and DAILY BUILD. They come with more than 50 nutrients which the body requires everyday to keep itself in top form.

Anti oxidants are everywhere in nature. The trouble is that many people are not aware of them. Banana peel for example is a richer source of potassium. Avocado pear is potassium dense. Unripe plantain are. Its peel, are similarly, potassium packed. Banana peel may be eaten raw with meals. Plantain peel may be cooked. ORANGE PEEL is a blood cleanser and anti microbial. STINGING NETTLE leaves and root are alterative, that is blood cleansing herbs. Burdock root, yellow dock are also worth trying. Sugar should be cut off or minimised as cancers feed and grow on it. The more alkaline the diet is the better are the chances of victory. Bitters help the liver and the kidneys. The Yorubas say OTA ENU NI ORE INU. Enemies of the mouth are friends of the organ. Any wonder my generation of children developed ‘dirty ‘ blood hemorrhoids and lymph node swellings and lymphoma. We ate too much sugar and carbohydrates as many children still do today, with some coming down with leukemia very early. The message of LYMPHOMA DAY is: report any growth early to your doctor or healthcare provider.

Boat accident claims 26 in Kogi

No fewer than 26 persons died in a boat accident around 4.30 on Tuesday evening, in Ibaji Local Government Area, Kogi State.

The accident involved mainly traders who were travelling from Ibaji Local Government Area to Ilushi market in Edo State. Commissioner of Information and Communications, Kingsley Fanwo, confirmed the incident in a condolence message on behalf of Governor Ahmed Ododo yesterday.