This Brilliant Inventor boy name is Emmanuel Okekunle ,
Please tell us about yourself and what you have been doing?
I am a young inventor. I graduated from secondary school in 2010. I
started trying my hands on innovations at the age of five. I made a
wheel barrow with copper wire at the age of five which was able to carry
five liters of water. I was using it to fetch water then. I moved from
there, when I was seven, I designed movable toy cars using motors,
batteries and tomato tins.
When I was in JSS1, I designed a toy helicopter. By the time I got to
SS2, I had a teacher who encouraged us to put in more efforts in
inventions as it could secure us scholarship to further our education.
This encouraged me to try my hands on rechargeable lamp, rechargeable
fan, emergency alarm, electric waste bin which converts waste to ashes,
aquarium and so on.
When I left secondary school – Cherubin and Seraphim College, Jos – I
started thinking of other things to do while waiting to further my
education. I went to the state Ministry of Science and Technology to
tell them of my innovations, but I did not get any support. So I went to
NTA, Jos which gave publicity to my inventions on national network.
Based on the publicity, the Plateau State Chapter of the Nigerian
Society of Engineers invited me to see my works. However, nothing much
came from that as they merely advised me to try and improve on the
finishing of my works. It is not that I do not know that the finishing
on my works is poor, but I cannot do much without financial support.
I was not discouraged and when I saw a promo on NTA on science
exhibition, I decided to go for it. I worked on a methane digester which
our science teacher taught us while in school but which did not work.
Luckily for me, it worked and I was able to use it to produce bio-gas
using poultry droppings mixed with other things. I represented Plateau
State in Abuja at a science and technology exhibition with it.
What exactly do you want now?
What people like me need is support to improve our knowledge and
capabilities. If government can assist us, we can take Nigeria to higher
levels technologically. Professors alone cannot achieve Vision 20-2020
for Nigeria. Government needs to encourage people like us. If people
like me can be assisted with scholarship to further our education and
advance our skills, we will be able to build on our natural talent.
For instance, I am currently working on an electronic device for
mitigating the effect of HIV/AIDS. It will use battery, resistor,
transistor, diode and so on, which will be attached to the arm to reduce
the level of virus in a victim’s body. I am still working on it and I
am optimistic it would work.
Where did you get the knowledge for your inventions considering your
level of education and what has been the reaction of your parents?
I see it as a natural talent from God. I just get the idea and begin to
try my hands on them. If I am able to acquire necessary education with
this God-given talent, I will be able to do a lot. At first, it was
difficult for my parents to appreciate what I was doing. I would pack
tins and all manners of junk into the house and they would abuse me as
being too playful. Those days, my mother would always throw away the
things I pack to make my ‘toys’ before I return from school and would
advise me to be less playful and face my studies. But when they saw that
I was making a headway, they began to encourage me.
One would have expected that you should be in a higher institution by now since you completed secondary school in 2010…
I have been applying for admission but I am yet to be lucky. I will
write the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) this year
again and I pray that I’ll be lucky. I know the value of education and a
lot of people have been encouraging me to try and go to school to boost
my talent. I believe that education will assist in actualizing my
dreams and I will keep struggling until I secure admission.
We often read about young inventors like you but we don’t hear of
them again after the initial publicity. What do you think is the
problem?
Many of them give up due to lack of encouragement from government and
other agencies. As my experience has shown, they just look at what you
have done but do nothing to help you improve on what you have done. I
have many friends who are gifted like me but many of them give up
because of lack of assistance or encouragement to carry their ideas
further.
One about innovations is that the more you practice, the more knowledge
you develop. So if we get sponsorship from government we will achieve
more or even better than some of these technologically advanced
countries.
We also need more encouragement from the ministries of science and
technology. It is not enough to organize competitions where the only
thing we get is coke and buns. They need to do more than that.
We need people who will be willing to move the country to the next level
in the area of science and technology. Both government and private
people should show interest in young inventors, train them and employ
them after that so that they can translate their ideas into reality.
People like Dangote and Adenuga who have been trying in different areas
should join hands with government to move Nigeria to greater heights
technologically.
Some of your inventions that we have seen are rather crude-looking. What are you trying to do to improve of this?
Everything is tied to finance, if I have the finance, it is not
difficult to have better and attractive finishing for my inventions. I
have gone to several exhibitions. What I need now is assistance to
translate my inventions into reality. I have a lot of invention ideas in
my head and with necessary assistance and encouragement, I will be able
to translate them into concrete innovations.
Hopefully, government takes up this case and that of others out there
and encourage their talent. These young chaps need all the support they
can get.
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