FUND ORPHANAGES,ORPHANS,WIDOWS FOUNDATION

Raising fund for humanitarian causes,here we tweet/share the plight of ORPHANAGES,ORPHANS, WIDOWS, LESS PRIVILEGE CENTRES to the whole world in order to access funding. we leverage on the network of crowdfunding firms[ gofundme.com kickstarter,crowdrise,rasor,youcaring,sms plus newspaper advert. to embark on fundraising campaigns. + 234 8030485016, jeffnkwocha@gmail.com

Saturday, February 1, 2020

help the less privilleged




CANCER: Man seeks N12.6m for liver transplant - Vanguard

Jan 21, 2020 - CANCER: Man seeks N12.6m for liver transplant ... is also a guitarist and had played with a number of famous Nigerian artistes, was diagnosed 




Help me to live,girl,21, with genital wound begs Nigerians,





www.sunnewsonline.com › Lifeline

Unemployed graduate needs N16m for liver transplant – The ...

Jan 24, 2020 - Unemployed graduate needs N16m for liver transplant. The health challenges of Aondowase Moses Raphael has crippled the resources of his family and caused his relatives emotional trauma.
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Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Victoria seeks N5m for heart surgery




s N5m for heart surgeryVictoria seek


By Cleopatra Eki
31 December 2019   |   4:17 am




Victoria
An appeal has been made to the government, non-governmental organizations and the general public to assist one-year-old Miss Victoria Uchenna Mmasichukwu, who is currently battling for her life at the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LUTH).
Her illness began two weeks after birth when she started breathing fast and was down with fever. When the illness persisted, a pediatrician advised she undergo echocardiogram scan, and that began the journey of misery for her parents as the scan detected a congenital heart defect but which can be corrected through open-heart surgery.
Her mother, Mrs. Mmuoh Perpetua ifeoma, said the heart defect has seriously affecting Victoria’s growth, making her look visibly stunted. She recalled that the baby was hale and hearty and full of life at birth until when she started developing fever and doctors referred her to LUTH from a private hospital at Ogba.
Narrating her ordeals, She told The Guardian that Victoria has been battling with the illness acutely since 9the age of nine months. “We have spent so much and we are still buying expensive drugs to sustain her before the operation. We have emptied all our accounts to save her life because she means everything to us now but we now drained and need the support of Nigerians to urgently raise N5 million for an open heart surgery in India by the end of March 2020.”
According to doctors, she requires urgent cardiovascular evaluation and open-heart surgery to correct her heart defects in order to forestall irreversible and life threatening complications, with any delay very dangerous.
Victoria’s mother can be reached on 08033824028. Her bank details are UBA, Uchenna Victoria Mmasichukwu, 2127890193.
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Wednesday, April 3, 2019

Six-month-old David battles hole in the heart, seeks N3m for surgery

The Guardian






Six-month–old David Nasiru with hole in his heart

A team of doctors at the Paediatric Cardiology unit of the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH), Idi-Araba, has recommended an open-heart surgery for six-month–old David Nasiru, a native of Ondo State.
After clinical evaluation in LUTH, it was discovered that David has a symptomatic congenital heart disease and was referred to Babcock University Teaching Hospital IIishan-Remo Ogun State, for Diagnostic Cardiac Catheterization at an estimated bill of N3,000,000 to correct his heart defects and forestall irreversible life-threatening complications.
According to the boy’s mother, Mrs. Rachael Nasiru, the defect in the heart was discovered shortly after David was born and he was experiencing severe pains breathing, eating and sleeping. The family had taken him through Paediatric echocardiogram tests and is therefore appealing to the public for funds to save their son.
His details are First Bank, Nasiru Oluwamayowa David 3134986015. His mother can be reached on 08034633842.

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Five-month-old needs N3.5m for heart surgery



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Published March 10, 2019
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FEMI MAKINDE
Parents of a five-month-old boy have cried out to Nigerians for financial assistance to enable them to pay for the cost of a surgery that is required to correct his heart defect.
The boys’ parents, Oluwole Nasiru and Rachael Nasiru, who brought the baby (David Nasiru) to The PUNCH Place, the corporate headquarters of PUNCH on Thursday, told our correspondent that they would need between N3m and N3.5m to facilitate heart surgery for the boy.
The father, who works in a hospitality firm, and the 39-year-old mother, a petty trader, said David was diagnosed and found to have symptomatic congenital heart disease.
The diagnosis, they said, was carried out at the Paediatric Cardiology Unit of the Lagos University Teaching Hospital in January this year.
He said the family had been looking for help to enable the boy to undergo the surgery.
According to the father, the family took the boy to the hospital because of the way he was breathing very fast and sometimes gasping for breath.
He said, “When we noticed this, we took him to LUTH and he was diagnosed with heart disease. We bought a certain drug which we gave to him to make the breathing normal but the permanent solution is surgery.
“My wife and I are here to let the public know our plight and that they should help save the life of my boy. We need money; some said N5m was required while some said we would need about $15,000.”
The Consultant, Paediatrician/Paediatric Cardiologist at LUTH, Dr O. J. Sokunbi, in a letter of introduction dated January 14, 2019, confirmed that the five-month-old baby is a patient of the paediatric cardiology unit at the hospital.
The letter read in part, “Clinical evaluation indicated that David has symptomatic congenital heart disease, which was confirmed by echocardiography to be pentalogy of fallot (two small ostium secundum atrial septal defects shunting right to left, large-sized sub aortic ventricular septal defect shunting bi-directionally, with 50 per cent aortic override, severe infundibula, pulmonary valve and main pulmonary artery stenosis, left pulmonary artery stenosis with a right sided arch).
“David will require further cardiovascular evaluation and possible open-heart surgery to correct his heart defects in order to forestall irreversible and life-threatening complications.”
The parents said they were told that they would need between $15,000 and $20,000 to take the boy to India for the surgery.
However, when SUNDAY PUNCH contacted the Public Relations Officer of the Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospital Complex, Ile Ife, Kemi Fasoto, she said the boy would need between N2.5m and N3m for the surgery at the hospital apart from the family’s travelling and personal expenses.
The family gave the bank details as First Bank Limited, with Account Name Nasiru Oluwamayowa David and Account Number 3134986015.
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PROJECT ANCHORED BY;
FUND ORPHANAGES,ORPHANS, WIDOWS FOUNDATION
With your support of $100 working Capital , we shall deploy our expertise in Fundraising and Network to Raise over $25k to the above.To support, email; jeffnkwocha@gmail.com,call +2348030485016

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Monday, April 1, 2019

In Abuja 130 orphans out in the cold as FCT demolishes orphanage




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These are not the best of times for the owners of Divine Wounds of Jesus Christ, an 
orphanage and rehabilitation home situated near Liberty Hotels, Arab Road, Kubwa, Abuja, as the Department of Development Control, in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) administration unleashed bulldozers on the orphanage. By the time the bulldozers went off, about 130 orphans were left homeless.
When The Guardian visited the home on Friday, personal effects of the inmates, utensils and sundry belongings of the orphanage and its school were strewn across the entire plot of land, which hitherto housed the facility, while the orphans and their teachers clustered under trees writing their terminal examination.
Jointly established by Mr. Cyril Ezemoka, and his wife Victoria, as part of their contribution to the wellbeing of the society, the orphanage, which also serves as a school started operations in 2009, and was formally launched in 2011, with a staff strength of 50 workers, who ran two shifts weekly.
After the death of her husband in 2014, the management of the home fell squarely on Mrs. Victoria Ezemoka who serves as the founding mother/ proprietress.
Trouble started a few years ago when the younger brother to the deceased allegedly showed up and informed the widow that his late brother had officially transferred the property to him.
Expectedly, the claim led to litigations as both the proprietress and the deceased brother both laid claims to ownership of the property.
An eyewitness and a mechanic, who shares boundary with the facility, Mr. Onuora Oko, told The Guardian that the incident came as a surprise to all of them.
Oko said, “The FCDA people first came a few weeks ago to demolish a neighbour’s house close to this home and left, but we were very surprised when they came on Tuesday and started demolishing the orphanage. They even came from behind, broke the fence before they started the demolition. They went ahead to cease and smash mobile handsets of people that attempted to video what they were doing.”
One of the orphans, Joseph Dawaliu from Kaduna State, told The Guardian, “We are feeling very bad because since the demolition, our education has been affected as we were in the middle of examination. We are now writing our examinations under these trees as you can see. I am now a Primary 5 pupil in this school, if this problem is not solved, and a new school built for us, where do we go from here?”
An assistant to the director of the home, Mr. Victor Godwin informed The Guardian that “it was disheartening that the FCDA demolished this property without any prior notice. It is unheard of that government no longer abide by the Constitution because if it does, it ought to know that this matter is already before the courts. So, why has the government taken laws into its hands?
“You can see that the pupils are now writing their terminal exams under these trees. What our madam now does is to take these children to one of her private homes, which is far away from here to enable them sleep well, pending when solution comes. My worry is that our hostel has been destroyed; our classrooms, our computer laboratory, dinning hall, poultry have all been destroyed,” he lamented
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Tuesday, February 26, 2019

Zainab needs N925,000 for corrective surgery.

The Guardian

Zainab needs N925,000 for corrective surgery.


Zainab’s legs
Twenty-year-old student of Kwara State Polytechnic, Miss Zainab Idris, is in dire need of N925,000 for corrective surgery on her two legs, according to the Medical Report signed by Dr. Izuagba E.B of the National Orthopaedic Hospital, Igbobi, Lagos.
The medical report indicated that the operation would correct her gradual deformity with Ilizarov device and ensure corrective osteotomy (the surgical cutting of a bone, especially to allow realignment).
Zainab’s mother, Mrs. Adenike Idris, who came to The Guardian recently to solicit public support, said the travail began when Zainab was 11 days old.
She said: “My daughter started crying at about 1:00a.m. that particular night. She could not suck and refused to sleep. We went to the hospital and after series of tests, she was given some drugs. She remained restless and the pains persisted“Since then, we’ve been in and out of the hospital. The legs weren’t so bad when she was young but as she grew older, they became more deformed and painful. I have spent all I had. I am a widow and I still pay her school fees and that of her siblings, all alone.“I received a call from her school that I should come and pick my daughter home. The management said she should not be allowed to return until she’s fine because of her screams.”Narrating her ordeal, Zainab said: “I am always in pains, especially when I trek to school and return. This has affected my concentration in school. I can’t carry out house chores like other children. I get bullied because of the way I walk. Please, I want kind-hearted Nigerians to help me.”Her details are: Idris Zainab, GTBank 0236790918. Or call 07015677712.
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Saturday, February 16, 2019

Parents of quintuplets recount experiences, challenges of caring for five babies



Mr. Ogbonnaya and Mrs. Ifeoma Nwaka, and their quintuplets (five babies)
On Tuesday, January 15 at the 10 Area N, Zone 3, World Bank, Owerri, Imo State residence of Mr. Ogbonnaya and Mrs. Ifeoma Nwaka, there was subdued joy as the couple recounted their experiences and challenges since the birth of their quintuplets (five babies) on August 8, last year, at Life International Hospital in Awka, Anambra State. It was interesting and exciting to behold the beautiful babies, but after listening to their parents about how challenging it has been sustaining them for the past five months, The Guardian became somehow worried about their survival and adequate upkeep.
This was heightened on discovering that their mother has been sick for a while now, possibly from the tedious task of parenting and caring for such number of babies at a go.
From their stories, every parent would have better understanding of what Mr. and Mrs. Nwaka have gone through so far since the arrival of the quintuplets. The challenge has been so enormous and has affected their lives adversely, especially economically. 
For instance, the babies since their birth consume two or more tins of NAN or Lactogem baby milk daily, with each tin costing about N2, 000.
So, it costs approximately N4, 000 to feed them on a daily basis. This is in addition of the cost of buying diapers, soaps, creams, drugs and other necessities.
Also, one can only imagine what it is like for the mother to withstand the cries of the babies for attention, sometimes, not just one at a time.
“I give God all the glory. It is only God that knows the reason it is me that he chose to bring forth these babies to the world at once.
“He is the one that gave me the strength to carry them for the eight months and two weeks before their delivery.
“Since I was delivered of them, it has been so stressful for me. Even my body, I have not recovered since that time. Right now, I am not even feeling fine, but I still thank God for everything,” a grateful Ifeoma told The Guardian.
Her husband and father of the children, Ogbonnaya, has not had it easy since then either, having lost his means of livelihood with the demolition and relocation of some markets by the state government, which affected his provision store.
And without an alternative source of income, he had to depend on his little savings to see through the needs of the newborn babies and the entire family. 
He said his shop has been closed down for over one year and apart from the support they got from the wife of Anambra State governor, Mr. Eberechukwu Obiano, who helped them to off-set the hospital bills, only a few good spirited individuals have responded to their cry for assistance.
Ogbonnaya, from Arochukwu in Abia State, recounted: “After my schooling and youth service, I wasn’t able to secure any job, so I went into business and finally ended up selling provisions in Owerri. That was after I ran away from the north because of the Boko Haram problem.
“The experience was quite challenging, because after the scan that day when we were told the number of babies my wife was carrying, the doctor gave us some recommendations, saying she should not be under any form of stress and that we should provide as much comfort as possible for her and ensure that her nutrition is up-to- date, so that she doesn’t fall sick or get blood shortage. 
“He said the information was not for the public yet at that point and that we should manage the information and the pregnancy very seriously and dedicatedly in order not to create unnecessary stress for her.
“So, I looked at the whole situation and said well, it is a very big project, because I know that having five babies at once is not going to be easy.
“So, from that moment, I went back to my shop and managed to sell off the goods that we had in the shop, so that they don’t expire and then I decided to look after her in the house. We practically closed up our business and focused on the pregnancy, coupled with the fact that during that period, there were lots of ups and downs in the state, as the governor was demolishing so many places and relocating so many markets and I was affected in the demolition.
“For one year now, I have not really being active in business since the point that the test was done till now, because increasingly, as the size of the babies were getting bigger, the discomfort and need for more attention kept increasing.
“So, I had to just take the second seat, while my wife took the first in the family. I mean, we just swapped our positions and then I became the hand in the house while she became the ‘oga,’ temporarily.
“We were doing that and managing ourselves until we got to a point where we were asked to come to the hospital for closer monitoring and observation. It has been a long time project from the discovery of the pregnancy till the delivery time.
“At the admission time in the hospital, we spent over a month before the delivery and a month again after the delivery. It has been a quite challenging period, but an interesting one, because the result, as you can see, is quite interesting.”
On his experience after the babies were delivered and they were discharged from the hospital, Ogbonnaya said: “We came back from the hospital when we were discharged after much delay, because the bill was actually high, about N2.3million.
“We couldn’t pay at that time, so we had to write to the Anambra State Government, because the babies were delivered in a private hospital close to the Government House.
“So, we wrote to the governor and his wife for them to assist us a bit in the bills. After a number of days of persuasion, they came and the governor’s wife paid N1, 620, 000 on our behalf, which was the last part of the bill.
“By then, we had paid close to N600, 000 and that settled the balance sum of the bill and released us from the hospital.
“Since then, we have been managing the babies on our own.”
Many would think it was through in-vitro-fertilisation (IVF), but they have a history of multiple births in their families. “Our both maternal and paternal families have twins, but not more than two at once.”
The couple, who has had a four-year-old daughter before, intend to employ a nanny to assist in looking after the quintuplets, but are yet to complete the arrangement.
Coping with the routine of caring for the children, especially at night, is another kettle of fish. “It is not funny at all. In fact, it has been an all-night vigil arrangement for the past five months.
“Initially, we were feeding them every two hours, but currently, they eat every three hours all through the night.
“We follow their numbers- one, two, three, four and five- and then the next time, we reverse the order, that is- five, four, three, two and one.”
On whether they have come across any severe case of worry regarding the health of the babies, for example, Ogbonnaya explained: “Yes, there was a time they were sick, but after due treatment and routine immunisation, they were back to normal. 
“There was also time they had malaria and we took them to the hospital, but after taking the recommended drugs, they were healthy again.
“Also periodically, they will have catarrh and we will give them treatment and they will be okay.”
The major challenge now is the feeding of the babies. “The thing they eat recurrently is milk, because they cannot depend on breast milk. They take breast from their mother, but the quantity is usually very small. You can imagine what all of them could get from just the breast. So, we simply balance it up with baby formula.
“All this while, we have been drawing from the little resources that we had from our savings to look after them. There hasn’t been any major external assistance. Individuals have made some donations, ranging from N1, 000 to N2, 000 as a kind of support, but we haven’t had any government assistance, apart from one non-governmental organisation (NGO) that made a donation of N100, 000, but that was soon after we arrived from hospital.”
Asked if he could still cope, given the situation at the moment, Ogbonnaya stated: “I don’t think so, because the savings we have has gone dry and there is no replacement yet. The shop that we were managing before the pregnancy has been closed down. So, no income is coming now.
“I humbly solicit for assistance. In fact, we have been making efforts to get across to a number of governments and NGOs to see whether they can come and assist us. Our accommodation is a rented apartment and would expire very soon. 
“If we can get assistance, in terms of accommodation, if there is a way something can relieve us of the periodic paying of rent for the moment, that would be wonderful. You know, these babies need a stable accommodation to improve on their hygiene and comfort.
“Also, we know that with this number, even when we start business, the rate at which money would be needed for their upkeep and training may be more than the rate at which the money is coming. So, we are not expecting to have much savings for the next 10 to about 20 years.
“We appeal to public-spirited individuals, NGOs and governments to come to our aid for the day-to-day upkeep of the babies.”
Mrs. Nwaka, who could not say much due to her condition, added, in tears: “I thank God for some individuals who have come to our help or some who have come around to identify with us in one way or the other. I pray that God will bless them.
“I pray that God will touch many individuals, NGOs and companies to see our plight and come to our aid. We can’t do this alone. We rely on their assistance to go through this. 
“Also we appeal to governments, especially of Abia and Imo states, to come and help us.”
No doubt, the Nwakas need as much assistance as they can get from any quarter and in any form regarding the upkeep of the new babies, in terms of feeding, clothing and provided them with good shelter, among other basic necessities of life, especially giving the fact that their parents have no tangible means of income at the moment and share a three-bedroom apartment with co-tenants.
The Nwakas can be reached through 07062994586, 07033587395 and 08155982405 or donations to Zenith Bank account number 2086662062.

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