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Son of Nigerian Immigrants Wins Stop the Hate Essay Competition, $40k Scholarship

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Samuel Oguntoyinbo and parents

Samuel Oguntoyinbo, the son of Nigerian immigrants has been awarded a $40,000 scholarship for coming tops in an essay competition on racism.

His essay on racism was judged the best during the recently concluded Maltz Museum of Jewish Heritage’s 11th annual Stop the Hate essay contest on March 14 this year.



Photo Courtesy of Cleveland Jewish News

Oguntoyinbo, a senior at Solon High School in Solon, OH, won the top honors at the contest held at the Cleveland Museum of Art’s Gartner Auditorium.

Over 500 people attended the event.

More than 2,000 students entered essays competition.

Oguntoyinbo’s essay evoked a deep sense of helplessness most black teenagers feel today in America as it related to racism and bigotry.

“A crippling sense of powerlessness has washed over me time and again, as I feel powerless to change who I am as a black man, powerless to speak to the ignorance of the bigoted, powerless to free myself from the suffocating presence of deep-seated prejudice,” he said.

Oguntoyinbo was the first student to speak during the contest and was asked about his most likable quality. Oguntoyinbo said thoughtfulness. When asked about his least likable quality, Oguntoyinbo answered with the same quality: thoughtfulness.

“It can come with a lot of brooding,” he said.



The son of Nigerian immigrants is heading to Yale University to study neuroscience and comparative literature.

Read more of the story here.

Samuel Oguntoyinbo and other contestants

Photo Courtesy of Cleveland Jewish News

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French Doctors Call for Africans to Be Used as Coronavirus Guinea Pigs

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Drogba and Eto'o

Two French doctors are advocating for Africans to be used as guinea pigs by Western drug manufacturers looking for a way to test their coronavirus drugs.

The doctors said such COVID-19 drug tests should not be conducted on Europeans, instead should be done on Africans because “there’s poverty and other things over there, there are things we can experiment.”

Professors Camille Locht of Inserm, the French national medical research center, and Jean-Paul Mira of Cochin Hospital in Paris, were debating on French television last week when Jean-Paul Mira suggested that COVID-19 studies should be conducted on Africans, rather than Europeans.

Mira also compared testing potential coronavirus vaccines on African populations to AIDS studies being carried out on prostitutes who he said are typically more exposed to infections and diseases, and have less access to ‘treatment or intensive care’ than those in Europe and other Western countries.

African football stars Samuel Eto’o, Didier Drogba, Demba Ba and Mohamed Sissoko immediately condemned the comments, saying that what the two physicians are suggesting amounted to outright racism.

Drogba said it is inconceivable that Africans continue to tolerate such racism.

“It is inconceivable that we continue to accept this. Africa is not a laboratory,” the 42-year-old said.

He called the pair, “sons of b——”

“I strongly denounce these serious, racist and contemptuous remarks!” said Eto’o.

“Help us save lives in Africa and stop the spread of this virus which is destabilizing the whole world, instead of considering ourselves as guinea pigs.

“It’s absurd! African leaders have a responsibility to protect people from these heinous plots ”

SissokoSissoki, a former Liverpool defender called the comments “a scandal” and said actions should be taken against the professors.

“What the two doctors said is really a scandal,” ex-Mali international Sissoko said. “I can’t understand why they weren’t fired, and I can’t understand why there hasn’t been more commentary about the things they said.

“You really have to condemn this sort of discourse and take the necessary measures, because the remarks they made about African people are completely inadmissible.

“At this point, we must really be aware that this is not a joke,” he added. “When you make such statements against African people, or against any people, you must be measured and be aware of what you’re saying.”

“Africa hasn’t been touched [by Covid-19] compared to Europe, but clearly [the doctors] said ‘as there’s poverty and other things over there, there are things we can experiment’,” Sissoko continued, “but it shouldn’t happen like that.

“Close friends who I’ve spoken to about this are really wound up by what they said, and these kinds of comments are unacceptable, particularly in a country like France.”

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Lesson Coronavirus is Teaching Trapped Nigerian Elites: Develop Your Own Country

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Atiku Abubakar - learning less from coronavirus

Before coronavirus (COVID-19) you could always count on Nigeria’s elite to ignore the plight of ordinary citizens.

From the President to state governors and permanent secretaries, the only thing that mattered was their close families. They didn’t care about the rest of the people.

For decades, the federal government of Nigeria failed to invest the needed funds to upgrade health and medical infrastructures throughout the country, preferring to fly to US, England, the Middle East or India, when they needed medical care.

The result is a complete breakdown of hospitals and other medical infrastructures to the point where most Nigerians fear going to government-owned hospitals for fear of dying while waiting to see a physician, or picking up an infection while there.

My family and I were in Nigeria last year and visited a hospital in Ikorodu, Lagos area. The condition in that hospital was deplorable to put it mildly.

With the advent of COVID-19, Nigeria’s elite can no longer escape the reality of the condition of the country’s health infrastructure.

Coronavirus is forcing them to face reality.

President Muhammadu Buhari closed the country’s borders and announced the lockdown of Lagos, Abuja and Ogun State in response to the initial outbreak of the disease last month.

He grounded commercial flights and forced private jets to stay on the ground, meaning the elite cannot fly out of the country to get medical attention and relief.

Like most countries, Nigeria is isolated from the rest of the world.

As if things can’t get any worse for the rich and famous, coronavirus has proven that it does not discriminate on the basis of wealth or zip code.

In 2017, Buhari received a lot of criticism for spending about six months in London getting medical attention for an undisclosed ailment. Today, Buhari is forced to sit in Abuja, Nigeria’s capital, and pray that he or members of his family do not get sick.

So far, nearly 200 Nigerians have tested positive including Abba Kyari, Buhari’s chief of staff, one of the most powerful men in the country. Four state governors and a son of former Vice President Atiku Abubakar have also tested positive.

General hospital treating coronavirus in Lagos, Nigeria

Top government officials, including numerous state governors have gone into self quarantine. If their COVID-19 infections develop into full blown illnesses, they will have no choice but to use the services of the healthcare system they refused to fund or maintain for decades.

The problem, according to medical professionals is that besides the lack of adequate infrastructure in the country, the healthcare system cannot handle a mass outbreak of COVID-19.

According to Francis Faduyile, head of the Nigerian Medical Association, the nation’s umbrella group for medical doctors, the healthcare system will collapse should there be mass outbreak.

“The health system is not strong enough. After years of not improving the system, you know it can’t handle mass infection,” Faduyile told us by phone from Lagos this week.

“Over the years, it’s been denied adequate funding and things are not where they’re supposed to be. If the burden of the coronavirus is added, it may be too heavy; it may actually cause a total collapse.

“If we get a mass outbreak, the healthcare system will be in serious trouble,” he added.

Nigeria’s health ministry said it has 75,000 registered doctors, 180,709 nurses and 25,000 pharmacists, but over the years, about 50 percent of them have moved abroad, mostly to Canada, U.S., and England, in search of higher pay and better working conditions, leaving the country in dire straits.

Nigeria currently has less than 10 beds to 1,000 people, a ratio that falls far below World Health Organization’s (WHO) standards. To make matters worse, only five hospitals in the country are equipped to test for COVID-19 and other major infectious diseases.

Faduyile told The Nigerian Community the federal government still has time to make the needed changes to avoid mass casualties from coronavirus but he said that window of opportunity is closing fast.

“We don’t have time to waste. If nothing is done soon, many Nigerians may pay a heavy price for years of neglect.”

He added that this is going to be a lesson for the elite.

“It’s going to be a lesson for those who think they can neglect the health system,” Faduyile said. “The highest of the government officials, some of them will be infected, and they’ll have no option but to get local treatment.”

This is the lesson Nigeria’s elite are learning the hard way: Fix your own backyard. Stop running abroad everytime you sneeze because a time may come when you will need your local hospitals. That time is now.

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25-Year Old Nigerian Student in USA Dies From Coronavirus (COVID-19) Infection

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Bassey offiong - Nigerian in USA dies of coronavirus

Bassey Offiong was only a few days to graduating with a chemical engineering degree from Western Michigan University in Detriot, when he died this week.

Cause of death: Coronavirus (COVID-19) infection.

Offiong was 25 years old.

His family told the media Tuesday morning that he suspected he had COVID-19 and tried several times to get tested but was turned down in the Kalamazoo area of Detroit where he was living off-campus.

They said he told authorities he was running fever, was fatigued and had shortness of breadth, all known symptoms of COVID-19, but was refused the needed tests.

Asari Offiong was Bassey’s sister, and earlier today confirmed that her brother’s numerous requests for coronavirus tests were rejected several times.

“I told him to ask them to test him,” Asari Offiong said. “He said they refused to test him.”

One medical personnel told him all he had was bronchitis while another refused to even examine him.

Bassey offiong - Nigerian in USA dies of coronavirusAsari Offiong said her brother had no known prior medical issues. She declined to name the testing locations in Michigan that turned her brother down prior to his death.

She said her brother was hospitalized at Beaumont in Royal Oak and spent the last week on a ventilator in their intensive care unit.

She called her “baby brother” sweet and humble and a “gentle giant.”

She last saw him a week ago. “I know God has him in his presence,” Offiong said. “He loved God.”

Bassey Offiong’s dream was to start his own organic makeup line with Loreal that would enhance women’s beauty, his sister said. He was a graduate of Renaissance High School in Detroit.

“He’s just someone who thinks so big,” she said.

Western Michigan University President Edward Montgomery said Offiong had “enormous potential.”

“On behalf of the entire Bronco community, I want to extend my deepest condolences to his entire family, including his sister, Asari, who has been generous in communicating with us regularly,” Montgomery said.

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