Opinion
When A News Hunter Becomes The News
It wasn’t a fanciful way to start a day, any day at all, let alone the Muslim fasting. It would have been more convenient for me if the previous night was less hectic. But you could imagine the physical and mental fatigue of a newsman who retired home around 11.15pm after a hectic day in office, only to have his sleep interrupted by a call at 3.15am.
The call was from my colleague in the office, Bello. I thought he wanted to wake me up for the compulsory early morning meal that usually precedes the Muslim fasting. What else could he have called me for at that odd hour?
But I guessed wrong. He had a different message, a bad one for that matter. “The Tide head office has been consumed by fire”
What a ridiculous joke?
How and when did such disaster happen? After all, I left office 10.30pm the previous night and there was no sign of an impending tsunami. May be, Bello was playing a trick on me. But what for? I quickly reached out for my calendar to be sure of last week Friday’s date. But it was not April 1. You know what I meant.
After sometimes, I could no longer hold my breath and anxiety. Then, I remembered I left some of my colleagues (production crew) in office the previous night. I put a call through to one of them immediately, just for confirmation. Alas, it was the same bad news! I quickly raced to the office to see things for myself. Indeed, Armageddon had visited. What a bad way to start a weekend?
It was a disastrous sight. The left wing of the second floor of the two storey complex which housed General Manager’s office, the administrative office and the board room that stocked some newly acquired computer systems and office furniture, had been reduced to ashes. The inferno, according to my colleagues on night duty, would have been worse. But thanks to the Rivers State Fire Service and other private fire service teams especially, Total Fire service.
Like a wild fire, the news of the inferno had spread. As early as 7.am, The Tide premises had become a Mecca of sorts, playing host to stakeholders and sympathisers, mostly from the media circle. The news breaker thus became the news itself.
The State Commissioner for Information Communications, Mrs Ibim Semenitari led the team of stakeholders who paid first visit to The Tide as early as 8.am. She was initially ruffled by the incident. But by the time she returned to The Tide around 12 mid-day, she had put herself together. A newsman is a newsman. The commissioner would not allow the inferno to truncate the production of the paper. Devil is a liar. The Tide must come out. And indeed, The Tide reported itself, that Friday.
The State Commissioner for Special Duties, Hon Emeka Nwogu; Acting Chairman, House of Assembly Committee on Information, Hon Golden Chioma and two former General Managers of The Tide Newspapers, Messrs Dagogo Ezekiel–Hart and Amabipi Martins were among other stakeholders who came to sympathise with The Tide family.
For several hours, my General Manager, Mr. Celestine Ogolo was searching for answer from no one in particular. “How did this happen? And why?”
The more he tried to look for answers, the more questions that rumbled in his mind. He was certainly in a state of confusion.
He would have wished it was a dream, a nightmare even. A nightmare is easy to toss off from the memory. But with a roof off his head, and some essential working documents burnt to ashes, how would such pathetic scene disappear from his memory so soon? It would definitely take a long time.
What caused this fire tragedy is still a guests as I am writing. But let us assume that The Tide inferno was triggered off by electrical faults, what about the Rhythm 93.7FM station that was also gutted by fire the same early morning hour? And what about the Eneka fire disaster that resulted from tanker explosion and the Abonnema fire outbreak that claimed not less than eleven souls? The same Friday! What a confusing coincidence!
While the causes of these other inferno can be explained, I can not fathom the coincidence of the four fire incidents in just less than twenty-four hours. The gods must be angry.
Even if the frequent cases of fire incidents in recent times are meant to fulfill the prediction of the scriptures, that the second world would be terminated by inferno, must it be in our own generation? May be, the scriptures would guide us better.
Boye Salau
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