A former Minister of Education, Dr (Mrs.) Oby Ezekwesili, has said that the recent stampedes in Ibadan, Okija and Abuja underscore the gravity and scale of economic distress in Nigeria.
Ezekwesili maintained that “Nigerians have become victims of widespread food poverty, especially among low and peripheral middle-income families.”
She made the statement following the death of 20 residents of Okija community in Anambra State, in the wake of a stampede for food.
The stampede occurred on Saturday during the distribution of rice.
On the same day, an unspecified number of people died following another stampede in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja.
The tragedy also occurred when one of the Catholic churches in the FCT was distributing food items to vulnerable persons.
Earlier in the week, about 35 persons, mostly children, also died in a stampede at a carnival in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital.
Ezekwesili, in a post on her X handle on Saturday, said: “The serial losses of several children who went in search of free food should send the strongest message yet to all self-indulgent ‘leaders’ in Nigeria’s public offices.
“My heart cries out for the families of the victims of the three stampedes that occurred during charity food distribution events in Ibadan, Okija in Anambra State, and Abuja.
“Nothing in recent times has signalled the gravity and scale of economic distress in our land more than these similar tragedies in a season of celebration.
“The fact that some like to deny is that Nigerians have become victims of widespread food poverty, especially among our low and peripheral middle-income families.
“I feel sad for the well-intended organizers of the three programs across the country who grossly underestimated the scale of beneficiaries that would show up in this season of famine in our land. And then, of course, our weak emergency response system that has often failed to mitigate tragedies.
“These serial losses of several of our children who went in search of free food should send the strongest message yet to all self-indulgent ‘leaders’ in Nigeria’s public offices. But will they hear?”