The entire Ijaw nation was thrown into mourning Wednesday,
following the death of 42-year-old businessman, politician and philanthropist,
Mr Keniebi Okoko, in a Lagos hospital after a failed surgery.
The son of Prof Kimse Okoko – a former Pro Chancellor of the
University of Uyo and ex-President, Ijaw National Congress (INC) – Keniebi
Okoko, who was a governorship aspirant in the last election under the Peoples
Democratic Party (PDP) in Bayelsa, was confirmed dead in a private hospital,
due to hypoxia, which is the absence of enough oxygen in the tissues to sustain
bodily functions.
A doctor’s report sighted by newsmen said that the late pastor
at Salvation Ministries, Port Harcourt, who hailed from Obunagha community in
Yenagoa Local Government Area, had the primary cause of death as hypoxia and
secondary cause as cardiac arrest, following the failed procedure to remove
excess fat from the deceased’s abdomen and breasts region.
The death certificate was issued by the Amethyst Health Care and
Diagnostic Centre Limited, located in Lekki and was signed by Dr Benedict
Olusola on behalf of the centre where Okoko, whose death seemed to have brought
the entire Ijaw nation together in mourning Wednesday.
His demise came a few days after he made a donation of several
items including bags of rice to his kinsmen at Obunagha as a means of
alleviating the suffering experienced during the Covid-19 pandemic and
subsequent lockdown.
However, it was gathered that the surgery failed following an
alleged power failure in the hospital, while the back up generator failed to
start after the procedure was underway, leading to hypoxia and cardiac arrest.
The death of the Chief Executive Officer, KDI Engineering and
several other business concerns spanning construction as well as oil and gas
brought with it some drama as jubilation erupted in Port Harcourt and Yenagoa
after he was reported to have been revived and was at the Intensive Care Unit
(ICU), a development which was later found to be false.
Some of the early mourners of the late philanthropist who had
many sons and daughters of the Niger Delta on scholarships all over the world,
were former governor of Bayelsa state, Seriake Dickson, and the erstwhile
Director General of the National Maritime Administration and Safety Agency
(NIMASA), Dr. Dakuku Peterside.
Dickson who commiserated with the state governor, Senator Douye
Diri, and former President of the INC, Prof. Okoko, also condoled with the wife
of the late politician, his aged parents, his Obunagha community, the Gbarain
Clan, Bayelsa State, the Ijaw nation and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)
family on the sudden death of the politician.
The former governor who described the death of Okoko as painful
and sad said that he left indelible marks in the world of business and politics
at a young age of 42 in a statement on Wednesday.
He said: “Keniebi was somebody we all had a lot of hope in; he
proved to be an open minded, accommodating, large hearted, understanding
political leader that I encouraged to be under my wing henceforth for political
grooming and support.
“My family and I are pained and I have made a lot of calls to
our leaders. Everybody is pained and we should take it as bad as it is as what
God has done. Nobody can question Him.”
Dickson said this period of COVID-19 was a particularly trying
period for Bayelsa with the death of prominent politician George Fente, (still
being mourned) and the loss of the wife of Senator Ben Murray Bruce to cancer
in the US and the painful death of Okoko.
The former governor who urged all Bayelsans and indeed the Ijaw
nation to pray against a recurrence of such painful deaths in the state,
stressed that Okoko’s death was a heavy blow to Bayelsa and indeed the Ijaw
nation.
He said that he would personally visit the families of the three
prominent people who died recently in the state after the lockdown even though
he had spoken to them.
Also in his condolence message, Peterside, who described Okoko
as a brother and someone who impacted every soul he came in contact with, said
the deceased would forever be remembered for his good works.
“Yesterday I got a call and rushed to the hospital where I met
him lifeless . What is important is that he lived a good and impactful life and
sure he has gone to be with the Lord .
“Two things smacked me. The extent of human solidarity. I got to
the hospital and friends of his from across the country ( high , mighty,
ordinary folks ) have taken over the hospital and were ready to go to “war” for
our most loved Keniebi.
“It simply restored my faith in brotherhood and humanity. Too
many persons, in the midst of wailing, were willing to help to ensure that a
loving soul like Keniebi is not put to shame” .
“The second observation is that all and sundry was not happy
with the professional handling of the medical attention he got leading to his
death and are demanding that we must get to the root of the matter so persons
whose professional negligence led to this avoidable death must be held to
account for it,” he said.
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