The deaths of three associates of Nigerian hip hop sensation, David
Adedeji Adeleke popularly known as Davido has brought to the fore the
disturbing claim of prevalence of hard drug use and alcoholic drinks
among entertainment stars in Nigeria.
Davido attracted negative publicity penultimate week following the
sudden death of one of his friends, Tagbo Umeike. Tagbo reportedly died
in a controversial circumstance on the eve of his birthday, with actress
Caroline Danjuma, who is alleged to be the girlfriend of the deceased,
claiming that Davido had questions to answer on Tagbo’s death.
Davido’s camp’s claim that his friend died after taking excess of
Tequila, a brand of alcoholic drink made from the blue agave plant was
pooh-poohed by the result of the autopsy carried out on the deceased by
the police. The result, according to the police, showed that Tagbo died
of suffocation and not drunkenness.
But if the autopsy report dims the correlation between Tagbo’s
death and alcohol, the death of another friend, Olugbemiga Abiodun, aka
DJ Olu and one Chime Amaechi, who was reported to be a member of the
young singer’s crew, three days after Tagbo’s controversial death, has
further accentuated the prevalence of hard drug abuse among artistes and
their associates.
The police, last week, recovered substances suspected to be hard
drugs from a car in which Abiodun and Chime died. The deceased were
found dead penultimate Saturday in a BMW car in a garage on Block B,
Banana Island, Lagos.
Their journey to stardom, though may be tortuous, requires a lot of
perseverance but achieving and maintaining untainted records having
reached the peak of their careers continue to remain elusive to most
entertainment stars with drinks, drug and sex being their major
pitfalls.
For many, club houses and joints where ladies swarm round them
almost nude and where hard drugs and cocktails of different hard drinks
can be easily got remain the slaughter slab for many of these idolized
music stars.
Most Nigerian entertainment stars have had to deal with sex scandal
at certain point or the other in their careers. The yoke of baby mama
syndrome hanging a round the necks of a good number of the nation’s
entertainers bears eloquent testimony to this injurious habit.
Sunday Sun investigation revealed that hard drugs are more
prevalent and cheaper as they are on sale at most night clubs all over
Lagos.
According to sources, the drugs could be purchased at the notable
joints such as New Afrika Shrine in Ikeja despite a big signpost saying
drugs are not allowed in the club.
Also 311 Road in Festac Town, Lagos and some other major night clubs on the Island remain hotspots for drug vendors and users.
For hard drinks, sources informed Sunday Sun that many Nigerian
entertainers no longer derive satisfaction in single brand of drink as
many have developed insatiable desire for cocktail of different brands.
According to experts, hard drugs work as central nervous system
(CNS) depressants by slowing down neural activity in both the brain and
the body. The brain and spinal cord make up the two main organs in the
CNS. Narcotics effects are believed to cause the nervous system to slow
down.
Apart from the CNS, experts say hard drugs weaken the immune system, thereby increasing susceptibility to infections.
They cause cardiovascular conditions ranging from abnormal heart
rate to heart attacks, nausea, vomiting and abdominal pain. In most
cases, hard drugs cause the liver to have to work harder, possibly
causing significant damage or liver failure.
Different drugs are said to have different effects on the body
system ranging from hallucination, depression, liver and kidney problems
and fits. Some illegal drugs are known to kill the first time the
person takes them.
Other dangers of using hard drugs include decreased performance in
school, behavioral problems, crime and violence, lack of good judgment,
health problems, brain damage and lastly, but not the least a descent
into drug abuse and alcoholism.
Narcotics are known to contain alkaloids, which are powerful
poisons. There are more than 800 known alkaloids. Alcohol and tobacco,
as well as opium and marijuana contain these poisonous alkaloids.
In view of the danger inherent in the use of these drugs, which
militate against the normal functioning of the body organs and the
nervous system, and definitely slow down the movements of the body, the
question arises as to why people use narcotics.
Experts say many people use narcotics because they claim they get a
“lift.” While others claim they use certain drugs as a matter of social
custom.
Although the use of illicit drugs is not a new trend, it is growing
at an alarming rate, with more entertainment stars embracing its use
for varying reasons.
Apart from the claim that drug users get Dutch courage from hard
drugs, findings by Sunday Sun also showed that the availability of some
of these hard drugs and drinks in Nigeria is also responsible for its
abuse.
In the past, Indian hemp, cocaine and heroin were the common drugs.
However, these days, they come in different forms and names with the
youths experimenting with all sorts.
Some of these hard drugs and drinks available in Nigeria include
Tequila, Big H (heroine), Happy dust, Crack, Devil drug, M&M, Do a
line, Mojo, China girl, Idiot pills, Joy juice, Red bullets, Apache,
Caps, Good fellas, Fantasy, Brown sugar, Charley, Stuff (cocaine),
Italian brown, Purple, Honey oil, Marijuana, Aunty Mary, Club Drug,
Beans, Blue devils, Mexican crack, Crank, Go fast, Big O, Chinese
tobacco, Crackers, Angel dust juice, Gym candy and Codeine.
Casualties
Legendary reggae singer, Majekodunmi Fasheke, aka Majek Fashek
remains a major reference point of the evil of hard drugs to youths
treading this perilous path. In 2015, it was revealed that Fashek
battled with drug addiction and was admitted into a drug rehabilitation
centre in Abuja after admitting that he needed help.
On November 17, 2013, Nigeria lost a rising music star in Olufemi
Mayomi, aka Fada U-turn. He was reported to have died after a long
battle with kidney disease. He was rumoured to have used hard drugs.
Fada U-turn’s death was preceded by the demise of another music
star, Susan Oluwabimpe, popularly known as Goldie Harvey. Goldie died on
February 14, 2013, just hours after she arrived from Los Angeles, where
she had gone to experience the Grammy Awards. Although the result of
the autopsy carried out on the late singer indicated that she died as a
result of an “intra-cerebral hemorrhage” caused by “hypertensive heart
disease”, rumour also linked the talented singer to hard drugs.
Similar allegation also trailed the late rap music star, Olaitan
Oladapo, popularly known as Dagrin, who died exactly eight days after he
was involved in a ghastly motor accident in front of Alakara Police
Station, Agege Motor Road, Mushin, Lagos. He survived a serious head
injury as a result of the crash and was initially admitted at Tai
Solarin Hospital, Mushin, before being transferred to the Lagos
University Teaching Hospital, (LUTH), Idi Araba, where he later died.
The prevalence of hard drug use and alcohol among music stars
according to Pastor Nathaniel Okafor, national coordinator, Rescue the
Lost Mission, a Christian organisation dedicated to assisting drug
addicts, is underscored by the false impression that hard drugs imbue
them with confidence needed to be able to face the crowd while
performing.
“It is a total misconception to nurse the belief that hard
drugs aid artistes to overcome stage fright. What most hard drugs do is
actually to confound their sense of reasoning. This is what most of them
erroneously interprete as confidence-boosting function of hard drugs.
Unknown to these youths the damaging effects of hard drugs on their
health and careers far outweigh the flawed belief they tend to have in
them,” Okafor submitted.
Okafor’s view was echoed by a one-time President of the Performing
Musicians Association of Nigeria, PMAN, TeeMac Omatsola Iseli. The
renowned flutist noted that only immature musicians would resort to
taking hard drugs to boost their confidence level before taking to
stage.
“I would say that applies more to immature musicians. For a
professional like me who studied music for 12 years and holds a degree
as a concert flutist and a degree as a philharmonic composer and also a
PhD, I don’t need that because I am self-confident. When I go on stage
and I face 100,000 people or I face cameras, my heart pumps adrenaline
and then, I don’t need any drugs to perform well. But when you are not a
trained musician and you’re shy, then you get into drinking or drugs to
gain self-confidence. But you don’t realize that when you’re drunk or
stoned, you’re actually reducing your capability to perform well,” Iseli said.
Attempts to get the reaction of the National Drug Law Enforcement
Agency, NDLEA, proved abortive as calls to the mobile line of the
agency’s spokesperson, Mr. Jonah Achema, were not answered even as a
text message sent to the same line was not replied, as at the time of
filing this report.
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Culled from The Sun News
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