She however did not make it out alive, and died, despite efforts made by doctors to resuscitate her.
Fingila who described the incident as unfortunate sent a condolence message to the grieving family on behalf of the Kebbi government.
She however did not make it out alive, and died, despite efforts made by doctors to resuscitate her.
Fingila who described the incident as unfortunate sent a condolence message to the grieving family on behalf of the Kebbi government.
A patient has died after a man reportedly pulled off her oxygen mask to pray for her.
The patient was admitted in Bamenda Regional Hospital, Cameroon.
The yet to be identified man, was arrested and confessed to pulling the deceased’s oxygen mask, saying that oxygen is free.
The man who claimed to be a Christian, showed no remorse for his actions, and stated that he was sent by God.
An Instagram user, identified simply as towncryer, who shared the video, narrated what happened, saying, “This young man who claimed to be a pastor, walked into the hospital and removed the oxygen mask from a patient which led to the demise of the patient.
“The poor innocent woman has lungs infection, and couldn’t breathe properly while receiving treatment, so she was on oxygen support.
“This guy walked in and removed her oxygen mask and the drips on her, and started praying, claiming that oxygen is for free.
“She died after few minutes of rapid intervention, despite the attempt of the doctors to save the woman.”
Some persons have blamed the hospital for negligence, questioning how the man was able to have access to a patient.
Watch the video here…
https://www.instagram.com/reel/DDo1n6hoYEy/
NEW DELHI — Zakir Hussain, one of India’s most accomplished classical musicians who defied genres and introduced tabla to global audiences, died on Sunday. He was 73.
The Indian classical music icon died from idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, a chronic lung disease, at a hospital in San Francisco, his family said in a statement.
“His prolific work as a teacher, mentor and educator has left an indelible mark on countless musicians. He hoped to inspire the next generation to go further. He leaves behind an unparalleled legacy as a cultural ambassador and one of the greatest musicians of all time,” the statement read.
Hussain was the most recognizable exponent of tabla, a pair of hand drums that is the main percussion instrument in Indian classical music.
Considered the greatest tabla player of his generation, Hussain had a career that spanned six decades in which he collaborated with the likes of singer-songwriter George Harrison, jazz saxophonist Charles Lloyd, drummer Mickey Hart and cellist Yo-Yo Ma.
The son of legendary tabla artist Alla Rakha, Hussain was born in 1951 in Mumbai and was taught how to play the instrument by his father at the age of 7. A child prodigy, he was touring by age 12 and performing alongside India’s classical music legends during his teens.
In an interview that was shared widely on social media in India, Hussain says his father welcomed him into the world after he was born by speaking tabla rhythms into his ears.
“I was brought home, handed over to my dad in his arms. The tradition was that the father is supposed to recite a prayer in the baby’s ear … So he takes me in his arms, puts his lips to my ear and recites the tabla rhythms into my ears,” Hussain says in the interview, verbally imitating the rhythmic pattern of the instrument.
Both Alla Rakha and Hussain were given the honorific “Ustad,” an Urdu word that means master.
In 1973, Hussain formed the Indian jazz fusion band “Shakti” with jazz guitarist John McLaughlin. The band played acoustic fusion music that combined Indian music with elements of jazz, introducing a new sound to Western audiences.
In 2024, Hussain became the first musician from India to win three Grammy awards in the same year.
Hussain’s Shakti won Best Global Music Album, and his collaboration with Edgar Meyer, Béla Fleck and flutist Rakesh Chaurasia won Best Global Music Performance and Best Contemporary Instrumental Album. He had earlier won a Grammy in 2009.
In 2023, Hussain received the Padma Vibhushan, India’s second-highest civilian award.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi called Hussain a “true genius who revolutionized the world of Indian classical music” and “an icon of cultural unity.”
“He also brought the tabla to the global stage, captivating millions with his unparalleled rhythm,” Modi wrote in a post on social platform X.
Hussain is survived by his wife and two daughters.
Conan O’Brien’s family is facing an unimaginable loss.
The former late night host’s mother Ruth O’Brien died Dec. 12 at age 92, three days after his father Dr. Thomas O’Brien passed away at age 95.
Both of Conan’s parents were trailblazers in their fields, with Ruth being only one of four women in her Yale Law School class of 1956, according to her obituary. When she became a real estate attorney, she was the second woman to be a partner at her law firm in 1978. She retired in 1996 after 25 years.
Meanwhile, Thomas—who also shared kids Neal, Jane, Justin, Kate and Luke with his wife of 66 years—was a physician, epidemiologist and professor at Harvard Medical School for three decades, per the Boston Globe. During his career, Thomas worked diligently to address the threats of drug-resistant strains of microbes by pioneering the use of databases to allow doctors to respond quickly to outbreaks.
Although Thomas was a renowned expert in his field, Conan—who shares kids Neve, 21, and Beckett, 19, with wife Liza Powel O’Brien—also reflected on his dad beyond his career.
Nikki Giovanni, the poet, author, educator and public speaker who rose from borrowing money to release her first book to decades as a literary celebrity sharing her blunt and conversational takes on everything from racism and love to space travel and mortality, has died. She was 81.
Giovanni, subject of the prize-winning 2023 documentary Going to Mars, died Monday with her life-long partner, Virginia (Ginney) Fowler, by her side, according to a statement from friend and author Renée Watson
“We will forever feel blessed to have shared a legacy and love with our dear cousin,” Allison (Pat) Ragan, Giovanni’s cousin, said in a statement on behalf of the family.
Author of more than 25 books, Giovanni was a born confessor and performer whom fans came to know well from her work, her readings and other live appearances and her years on the faculty of Virginia Tech among other schools. Poetry collections such as Black Judgement and Black Feeling Black Talk sold thousands of copies, led to invitations from The Tonight Show and other television programs and made her popular enough to fill a 3,000-seat concert hall at Lincoln Center for a celebration of her 30th birthday.
In poetry, prose and the spoken word, she told her story. She looked back on her childhood in Tennessee and Ohio, championed the Black Power movement, addressed her battles with lung cancer, paid tribute to heroes from Nina Simone to Angela Davis and reflected on such personal passions as food, romance, family and rocketing into space, a journey she believed Black women uniquely qualified for, if only because of how much they had already survived. She also edited a groundbreaking anthology of Black women poets, Night Comes Softly, and helped found a publishing cooperative that promoted works by Gwendolyn Brooks and Margaret Walker among others.
For a time, she was called “The Princess of Black Poetry.”
“All I know is the she is the most cowardly, bravest, least understanding, most sensitive, slowest to anger, most quixotic, lyingest, most honest woman I know,” her friend Barbara Crosby wrote in the introduction to The Prosaic Soul of Nikki Giovanni, an anthology of nonfiction prose published in 2003. “To love her is to love contradiction and conflict. To know her is to never understand but to be sure that all is life.”
Giovanni’s admirers ranged from James Baldwin to Teena Marie, who name-checked her on the dance hit “Square Biz,” to Oprah Winfrey, who invited the poet to her “Living Legends” summit in 2005, when other guests of honor included Rosa Parks and Toni Morrison. Giovanni was a National Book Award finalist in 1973 for a prose work about her life, Gemini. She also received a Grammy nomination for the spoken word album The Nikki Giovanni Poetry Collection.
In January 2009, at the request of NPR, she wrote a poem about the incoming president, Barack Obama:
I’ll walk the streets
And knock on doors
Share with the folks:
Not my dreams but yours
I’ll talk with the people
I’ll listen and learn
I’ll make the butter
Then clean the churn
Giovanni had a son, Thomas Watson Giovanni, in 1969. She never married the father, because, she told Ebony magazine, “I didn’t want to get married, and I could afford not to get married.” Over the latter part of her life she lived with her partner, Virginia Fowler, a fellow faculty member at Virginia Tech.
She was born Yolande Cornelia Giovanni Jr. in Knoxville, Tennessee, and was soon called “Nikki” by her older sister. She was 4 when her family moved to Ohio and eventually settled in the Black community of Lincoln Heights, outside of Cincinnati. She would travel often between Tennessee and Ohio, bound to her parents and to her maternal grandparents in her “spiritual home” in Knoxville.
As a girl, she read everything from history books to Ayn Rand and was accepted to Fisk University, the historically Black school in Nashville, after her junior year of high school. College was a time for achievement, and for trouble. Her grades were strong, she edited the Fisk literary magazine and helped start the campus branch of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee. But she rebelled against school curfews and other rules and was kicked out for a time because her “attitudes did not fit those of a Fisk woman,” she later wrote. After the school changed the dean of women, Giovanni returned and graduated with honors in history in 1967.
Giovanni relied on support from friends to publish her debut collection, Black Poetry Black Talk, which came out in 1968, and in the same year she self-published Black Judgement. The radical Black Arts Movement was at its height and early Giovanni poems such as “A Short Essay of Affirmation Explaining Why,” “Of Liberation” and “A Litany for Peppe” were militant calls to overthrow white power. (The worst junkie or black businessman is more humane/than the best honkie).
“I have been considered a writer who writes from rage and it confuses me. What else do writers write from?” she wrote in a biographical sketch for Contemporary Writers. “A poem has to say something. It has to make some sort of sense; be lyrical; to the point; and still able to be read by whatever reader is kind enough to pick up the book.”
Her opposition to the political system moderated over time, although she never stopped advocating for change and self-empowerment, or remembering martyrs of the past. In 2020, she was featured in an ad for presidential candidate Joe Biden, in which she urged young people to “vote because someone died for you to have the right to vote.”
Her best known work came early in her career; the 1968 poem “Nikki-Rosa.” It was a declaration of her right to define herself, a warning to others (including obituary writers) against telling her story and a brief meditation on her poverty as a girl and the blessings, from holiday gatherings to bathing in “one of those big tubs that folk in chicago barbecue in,” which transcended it.
and I really hope no white person ever has cause
to write about me
because they never understand
Black love is Black wealth and they’ll
probably talk about my hard childhood
and never understand that
all the while I was quite happy
IBRAHIM QUADRI
A popular Muslim scholar and preacher, Muyideen Bello, has been confirmed dead.
The prominent scholar, who over the years has been an opinion moulder on governments’ policies, was said to have passed on Friday mourning.
His demise which has sent shock wave across Muslim community in Nigeria was confirmed by his son, Basit Bello popularly known as Aponle Anobi in a post made on his official social media handle.
Details later…
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There is apprehension in Okuama, Ughelli South LGA of Delta State, over the death of the President General of the community, Pa James Oghoroko, in military detention.
Oghoroko is one of the leaders arrested by the Nigerian military since August 2024 over the killing of 17 soldiers.
Late Oghoroko was arrested alongside Prof Arthur Ekpekpo, Chief Belvis Adogbo, Dennis Okugbaye, Pa Anthony Ahwemuria and Mrs Rita Akata between August 18 and 20, 2024, and had remained in detention since.
The news of his death was revealed by leaders of Okuama during an emergency meeting held in the community on Thursday.
It was also revealed that Pa Dennis Okugbaye, another community leader in the military detention, is sick.
The report of Oghoroko’s death raised tensions in the community, with the family and other residents thrown into mourning.
Angry community youths were seen with long faces discussing the tragedy.
The community had approached a Federal High Court in Delta to secure the release of Oghoroko and the other detainees.
The court, at its last sitting on 20th November, 2024, had adjourned the bail application of the arrested leaders to 9th December, 2024.
However, on Wednesday, 4th December, 2024, one of the claimants died in military detention, without being charged to court since their arrest in August.
The community had, in August, through their lawyers filed suit No: FHC/WR/CS/84/2024, between James Oghoroko and others versus the Nigerian Army and two others, demanding N100 million for the illegal detention of the community leaders.
Earlier, following the demolition and destruction of Okuama community after the killing of 17 soldiers, the community, through their lawyers led by Olorogun Albert Akpomudje, SAN, had approached the Federal High Court, Warri, to seek redress.
The community filed different suits numbered FHC/WR/CS/41/2024, FHC/WR/CS/42/2024, and FHC/WR/CS/42/2024. The suits are now being consolidated.
Reacting to the news of the death of Oghoroko, the lead counsel, Akpomudje, said he will meet with the family members and his team to know what steps to take next.
San Francisco 49ers Star Trent Williams, Wife Sondra Reveal Their Baby Boy Has Died
Trent Williams and Sondra Williams are grieving a devastating loss.
The San Francisco 49ers offensive tackle and the yoga instructor shared that their son Trenton O’Brien Williams Jr. was stillborn at 35 weeks after losing his twin earlier in her pregnancy.
“It’s been extremely hard trying to process the saddest Hello and Goodbye that I’ve ever had to endure,” Sondra wrote on Instagram Dec. 1. “I welcomed your lifeless 4lb 8oz 18.5 in long little body at 11:38 p.m.”
She shared that Trenton had been diagnosed with trisomy 13, a rare genetic condition that occurs when a person has an extra copy of chromosome 13, according to the U.S. National Library of Medicine. Most infants die within their first few weeks of life and only five to 10 percent live past their first year.
“As much as I tried to prepare myself for our meeting, I wasn’t prepared, nor would I ever be,” she continued. “After losing your twin early in the pregnancy, I prayed and hoped that your diagnosis of Trisomy 13 wasn’t true and wouldn’t be the fate of my long awaited beautiful Son-shine.”
The theater community is mourning a tragic loss.
Julien Arnold—a Canadian stage actor who founded the Shakespeare theater company Free Will Players—died on Nov. 24 after having a medical emergency during a performance of A Christmas Carol at Edmonton’s Citadel Theatre. He was 60.
While the specifics of his medical issue have not been disclosed, paramedics arrived at the theater around 8:28 p.m. and performed multiple resuscitation attempts on Arnold—who was playing the roles of Marley, Mr. Fezziwig, Banjo and a part of the ensemble in the production—before he was pronounced dead at the location, Alberta Health Services spokesperson Kerry Williamson told CBC News Nov. 26.
In light of his passing, the theater announced that it would be modifying the remaining dates of its A Christmas Carol play, which is scheduled to run until Dec. 24, to allow the cast and crew time to grieve Arnold’s death.
NEW YORK (AP) — Chuck Woolery, the affable, smooth-talking game show host of Wheel of Fortune, Love Connection, and Scrabble who later became a right-wing podcaster, skewering liberals and accusing the government of lying about COVID-19, has died. He was 83.
Mark Young, Woolery’s podcast co-host and friend, said in an email early Sunday that Woolery died at his home in Texas with his wife, Kristen, present. “Chuck was a dear friend and brother and a tremendous man of faith, life will not be the same without him,” Young wrote.
Woolery, with his matinee idol looks, coiffed hair and ease with witty banter, was inducted into the American TV Game Show Hall of Fame in 2007 and earned a daytime Emmy nomination in 1978.
In 1983, Woolery began an 11-year run as host of TV’s Love Connection, for which he coined the phrase, “We’ll be back in two minutes and two seconds,” a two-fingered signature dubbed the “2 and 2.” In 1984, he hosted TV’s Scrabble, simultaneously hosting two game shows on TV until 1990.
Love Connection, which aired long before the dawn of dating apps, had a premise that featured either a single man or single woman who would watch audition tapes of three potential mates and then pick one for a date.
A couple of weeks after the date, the guest would sit with Woolery in front of a studio audience and tell everybody about the date. The audience would vote on the three contestants, and if the audience agreed with the guest’s choice, Love Connection would offer to pay for a second date.
Woolery told The Philadelphia Inquirer in 2003 that his favorite set of lovebirds was a man aged 91 and a woman aged 87. “She had so much eye makeup on, she looked like a stolen Corvette. He was so old he said, ‘I remember wagon trains.’ The poor guy. She took him on a balloon ride.”
Other career highlights included hosting the shows Lingo, Greed, and The Chuck Woolery Show, as well as hosting the short-lived syndicated revival of The Dating Game from 1998 to 2000 and an ill-fated 1991 talk show. In 1992, he played himself in two episodes of TV’s Melrose Place.
Woolery became the subject of the Game Show Network’s first attempt at a reality show, Chuck Woolery: Naturally Stoned, which premiered in 2003. It shared the title of the pop song in 1968 by Woolery and his rock group, the Avant-Garde. It lasted six episode and was panned by critics.
Woolery began his TV career at a show that has become a mainstay. Although most associated with Pat Sajak and Vanna White, Wheel of Fortune debuted Jan. 6, 1975, on NBC with Woolery welcoming contestants and the audience. Woolery, then 33, was trying to make it in Nashville as a singer.
Wheel of Fortune started life as Shopper’s Bazaar, incorporating Hangman-style puzzles and a roulette wheel. After Woolery appeared on The Merv Griffin Show singing Delta Dawn, Merv Griffin asked him to host the new show with Susan Stafford.
“I had an interview that stretched to 15, 20 minutes,” Woolery told The New York Times in 2003. “After the show, when Merv asked if I wanted to do a game show, I thought, ‘Great, a guy with a bad jacket and an equally bad mustache who doesn’t care what you have to say—that’s the guy I want to be.’”
NBC initially passed, but they retooled it as Wheel of Fortune and got the green light. After a few years, Woolery demanded a raise to $500,000 a year, or what host Peter Marshall was making on Hollywood Squares. Griffin balked and replaced Woolery with weather reporter Pat Sajak.
“Both Chuck and Susie did a fine job, and Wheel’did well enough on NBC, although it never approached the kind of ratings success that Jeopardy! achieved in its heyday,” Griffin said in Merv: Making the Good Life Last, an autobiography from the 2000s co-written by David Bender. Woolery earned an Emmy nod as host.
Born in Ashland, Kentucky, Woolery served in the U.S. Navy before attending college. He played double bass in a folk trio, then formed the psychedelic rock duo The Avant-Garde in 1967 while working as a truck driver to support himself as a musician.
The Avant-Garde, which toured in a refitted Cadillac hearse, had the Top 40 hit “Naturally Stoned,” with Woolery singing, “When I put my mind on you alone/ I can get a good sensation/ Feel like I’m naturally stoned.”
After The Avant-Garde broke up, Woolery released his debut solo single “I’ve Been Wrong” in 1969 and several more singles with Columbia before transitioning to country music by the 1970s. He released two solo singles, “Forgive My Heart” and “Love Me, Love Me.”
Woolery wrote or co-wrote songs for himself and everyone from Pat Boone to Tammy Wynette. On Wynette’s 1971 album We Sure Can Love Each Other, Woolery wrote “The Joys of Being a Woman” with lyrics including “See our baby on the swing/ Hear her laugh, hear her scream.”
After his TV career ended, Woolery went into podcasting. In an interview with The New York Times, he called himself a gun-rights activist and described himself as a conservative libertarian and constitutionalist. He said he hadn’t revealed his politics in liberal Hollywood for fear of retribution.
He teamed up with Mark Young in 2014 for the podcast Blunt Force Truth and soon became a full supporter of Donald Trump while arguing minorities don’t need civil rights and causing a firestorm by tweeting an antisemitic comment linking Soviet Communists to Judaism.
“President Obama’s popularity is a fantasy only held by him and his dwindling legion of juice-box-drinking, anxiety-dog-hugging, safe-space-hiding snowflakes,” he said.
Woolery also was active online, retweeting articles from Conservative Brief, insisting Democrats were trying to install a system of Marxism and spreading headlines such as “Impeach him! Devastating photo of Joe Biden leaks.”
During the early stages of the pandemic, Woolery initially accused medical professionals and Democrats of lying about the virus in an effort to hurt the economy and Trump’s chances for reelection to the presidency.
“The most outrageous lies are the ones about COVID-19. Everyone is lying. The CDC, media, Democrats, our doctors, not all but most, that we are told to trust. I think it’s all about the election and keeping the economy from coming back, which is about the election. I’m sick of it,” Woolery wrote in July 2020.
Trump retweeted that post to his 83 million followers. By the end of the month, nearly 4.5 million Americans had been infected with COVID-19 and more than 150,000 had died.
Just days later, Woolery changed his stance, announcing his son had contracted COVID-19. “To further clarify and add perspective, COVID-19 is real and it is here. My son tested positive for the virus, and I feel for of those suffering and especially for those who have lost loved ones,” Woolery posted before his account was deleted.
Woolery later explained on his podcast that he never called COVID-19 “a hoax” or said “it’s not real,” just that “we’ve been lied to.” Woolery also said it was “an honor to have your president retweet what your thoughts are and think it’s important enough to do that.”
In addition to his wife, Woolery is survived by his sons Michael and Sean and his daughter Melissa, Young said.
A Labourer who got hit by a stray bullet in a clash between policemen and a soldier in Ebonyi State, has died.
The Commissioner of Police, Adaku Uche-Anya, confirmed the incident on Wednesday.
It was gathered that the unfortunate incident happened on Wednesday morning in Ugwuachara village in the Ebonyi Local Government Area of the state.
According to report, the deceased labourer was hit by a stray bullet when the policemen allegedly tried to disarm the soldier who was on mufti.
Three others also sustained injuries in the clash between the soldier who was on a bike and policemen on a ‘stop and search’ duty.
The State Commissioner of Police, who confirmed the incident, stated that the policemen were on a stop-and-search patrol and stopped the soldier who was on a motorcycle to search him which caused a scuffle between him and the policemen in the process.
She disclosed that the identity of the soldier has been confirmed, adding that he is a supposed to be serving in Operation Kachayanma in Kaduna, but was on a pass in Ebonyi State.
She stated, “The soldier was trying to disarm one of the policemen and the bullet went off and hit a bystander who was there. It was not as if the policemen opened fire on bystanders. What happened was that during the scuffle, the bullet went off and hit the bystander.
“One person died and three injured but they are responding to treatment in the hospital.
“We have confirmed the identity of the soldier, he is a soldier serving in Kaduna. Both the soldier and the policemen are in our custody.”
The young international midfielder (2 caps with Ecuador) was involved in an accident that left a total of three people dead. After 39 days in hospital, he unfortunately died from his injuries.
Having played for FC Cincinnati in MLS and Independiente de Valle, a major club in his country, Angulo was considered one of the greatest hopes of Ecuadorian football at the start. The young man had also returned to play in Ecuador on the Liga de Quito side, a sadly fatal return for the winner of the 2020 Copa Libertadores U20.
A medical emergency in the stands of the Allianz Arena overshadowed the match from the start. Out of consideration, the Südkurve refrained from its usual loud support for its team and the club also reduced its coverage of the match. About an hour after the final whistle, the club received the sad news that the fan had died on the way to hospital. FC Bayern is in mourning alongside his loved ones. »
In the 3rd minute, the ultras of the Südkurve of the Allianz Arena had stopped their encouragement when the emergency workers intervened in the south-east sector of the stadium. Half an hour into the game, when the emergency workers left the sector, Bavarian ultras made an announcement on the megaphone, before removing the flags from this stand.
At the end of the match, Manuel Neuer and Vincent Kompany reacted to this tragic event. “We didn’t know it was because of a medical emergency. It’s completely understandable that there was no encouragement. We didn’t celebrate this victory in the locker room,” said the German goalkeeper in the mixed zone. “It’s not easy to talk about football. We didn’t celebrate as we normally do for a success,” added the Bavarian coach in a press conference. We extend our deepest condolences to the family and loved ones of this young Bayern Munich supporter.
Ric Flair‘s family is in mourning
The WWE icon’s stepson Sebastian Kidder has died. He was 24.
His mother Wendy Barlow, the wrestler’s ex, confirmed to TMZ that her son died by suicide Oct. 26.
“I am devastated and shocked,” she told the outlet in comments posted Oct. 26. “This is an epidemic with your young men. And mental health.”
Wendy also announced Sebastian’s passing on social media, sharing one of his final photos, a selfie, which he had himself posted on his own page the day he died.
“There are no words to express the pain I am feeling from the loss of my Baby @sebastianonthemic,” she wrote on Instagram. “Mommy Loves you.”
Sebastian, whose mom played “Fifi the Maid” alongside Ric at World Championship Wrestling (WCW) events, grew up in the Atlanta area and is one of four siblings. He was a rock musician and had released his first album in July.
He told Fox 5 Atlanta the previous month that the record incorporates “a lot of pain, a lot of suffering,” plus romance, sexual energy and lust.
An 80 years old woman identified as Mariam Salako has been confirmed dead in a fire outbreak that occured in Ifelodun Agoka area in Abeokuta.
Spokesperson of the Ogun State Police Command, Omolola Odutola said the fire occured at about 1:00 am on Saturday.
Odutola noted that while the woman who lived in the building died, one Baba Ali, whose age is yet to be identified, was rescued through a window by community members.
She noted that the cause of the fire was yet to be known and the quick response of the Ogun State Fire Service brought it under control.
She said, ” lAround 1:00 am, a distress call was made regarding a building on fire located at No. 28 Ifelodun Ago Ka area in Abeokuta .
” The Area Commander promptly led a team of police officers to the site while the fire service was called for assistance. The Ogun State Fire Service quickly responded and managed to bring the fire under control.
” Unfortunately, an elderly woman, Mariam Salako, aged 80, who lived in the building, was unable to escape and died in the fire incident.”
Odutola stated that the remains of the deceased had been deposited at the morgue.
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