I didn’t know I was 25 percent deaf: Obasanjo

Nigeria’s former President Olusegun Obasanjo has said that he was unaware that he suffered a 25 percent loss of hearing.

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Nigeria’s former President Olusegun Obasanjo has said that he was unaware that he suffered a 25 percent loss of hearing.

Mr Obasanjo stated this in Bauchi on Sunday l, October 20, 2024, when he paid homage to the Emir of Bauchi, Rilwanu Suleiman-Adamu.

According to him, many people in the world are deaf without knowing it until they go for medical checks on their hearing capacity before it would be revealed to them.

He recounted that he was abroad and could not hear clearly when someone was talking to him, and insisted nothing was wrong with his ears, and the man asked his permission to check on the ears.

Mr Obasanjo said the result of the clinical analysis showed he was 25 percent deaf.

“After my result came out, I had to ask the man to also check on my Chief Security Officer then but shockingly enough, he was more deaf than I was,” he said.

This experience, he said, formed the creation of the Olusegun Obasanjo Foundation, adding that thousands of Nigerians had benefitted from its ear treatment and provision of hearing aids in partnership with Starkey Hearing Foundation.

The former president said he would inaugurate the distribution of hearing aids targeting about 10,000 indigent people in the North East, starting from Bauchi State where 2,000 people would benefit from the initiative.

He said the exercise, tagged: ‘Sound Intervention Mission so Nigerians may hear’ would be implemented under the Obasanjo Foundation.

Mr Obasanjo further said that all hands must be on the deck to tackle the security challenges in the country.

Responding, Mr Sulriman-Adamu said that the former president’s presence in the state is a sign of his deep commitment towards the development and progress of all regions in the country.

Mr Obasanjo was received by the Bauchi State governor, Bala Mohammed, ex-Governor Adamu Mu’azu, Abdul Ningi, and other top government functionaries.