Usman Ahmed Abdul-Dimka

Co-Founder, Pzafaama Foundation, SP. (Dr) Abdul Dimka inducted into Council of Fellows of V.N. Karazin Kkarkiv National University

The co-founder and benefactor of foremost Nigerian registered charity foundation, Pzafaama Helping Hand Foundation, SP. Amb. (Dr.) Usman Ahmed Abdul-Dimka has been inducted to the Council of Fellows of the School of International Relations and Travel Business, V.N.Karazin Kkarkiv National University Ukraine.

  1. Abdul Dimka who participated in the certificate program of the University in Organizational Management With Modern Technologies was inducted to the prestigious Council of Fellows, on Saturday July 15, 2023.

According to the University SP Dimka was inducted into the Council of Fellows because of his distinguished public service which exemplified passion and dedication to advancing the police profession.

  1. Amb. (Dr.) Usman Ahmed Abdul-Dimka and his wife who also was inducted at Fellow of the University

“He was selected because of his significant and lasting contributions to his field of career – they are truly shaping the future,” the University said.

“He embodies the commitment, dedication, and ingenuity that exemplify the highest standards of professionalism and he is committed to serving the society,” the University added.

The School Fellowships were conferred to outstanding national and foreign citizens.

Speaking shortly after the induction reception, SP Dimka thanked the Inspector General of Police Ag. IGP Kayode Egbetokun for availing him the opportunity to participate in the certificate programme of the University even as he thanked his family, friends, and colleagues for their unalloyed support.

Earlier, while announcing the induction of the Fellows in Abuja, Dr. Cliff Ogbede, Country Rep Project Coordinator, said, “We are delighted to welcome a fresh set of Fellows into the School of International Relations and Travel Business, V.N.Karazin Kkarkiv National University Ukraine ,” he declared.

“This is a diverse and inspirational group with a strong dedication to service, poised to make significant contributions to the world”, he added

V.N. Karazin Kharkiv National University, established 1804, is one of the oldest and leading Universities in Eastern Europe-the Ukraine. Apart from being a major scientific and cultural center, the University is an academic hub of Ukraine and rated amongst the best Universities which have graduated so many professionals from many countries including Nigeria.

Within the framework of international programs, its researchers co-operate with scientists from the USA, Canada, Russia, Germany, Turkey, China, Japan, Switzerland. Bulgaria, Great Britain and other countries.

Hauwa P. Usman Dimka

Founder, Pzafaama Foundation, Mrs. Dimka, inducted as Fellow, International Economic Relations, Karazin Khrankiv University

The Founder of Pzafaama Helping Hand Foundation in Nigeria, Princess (Mrs.) Hauwa P. Usman Dimka has been inducted as a Fellow of the School of International Economic Relations and Travel Business of the V. N. Karazin Kharkiv National University, Ukraine.

She was inducted into the Fellowships based on her record of professional accomplishment, evident leadership skills, the potential for further growth, and a commitment to service to humanity.

 

This year’s V. N. Karazin Kharkiv National University Fellows advanced through a highly competitive selection process, but remarkably, Mrs. Dimka’s gifted passion and community service singled her out.

Speaking after she was conferred the Fellowship, Mrs. Dimka thanked the University for founding her worthy of the Fellowship and promised to continue her commitment to fostering deeper understanding and expanding dialogue on global affairs through community engagement.

Princess (Mrs.) Hauwa P. Usman Dimka with her beloved husband, SP Dr. Usman Dimka after their inauguration into the Fellowship of V. N. Karazin Kharkiv National University, Ukraine.

While congratulating her beloved husband, SP (Dr) Usman Dimka, who also bagged Honorary Doctorate Fellow of the VN Karazin Khrankiv National University, Mrs Dimka said, “First let me express my heartfelt gratitude for the Fellowship. V. N. Karazin Kharkiv National University is a fine institution and one which I am immensely proud to be associated with.

 

“I am truly honored to be here and would like to thank my beloved husband who is also here to be instituted into the Council of Fellows of V. N. Karazin Kharkiv National University, my family, friends, and the Children at Pzafaama Helping Hand Foundation. I want you to know this truly means a lot to me. When I originally received notice I was receiving this Fellowship I was very excited and honored.

“How could my small impact make a difference? We feel the world’s problems are so big, how can our little piece make a difference? But all of us are here today because V. N. Karazin Kharkiv National University, want more for our world.

“What an incredible honor from this great university. I am truly honored and I promise I will carry this with me

“I congratulate my fellow awardees on their Fellowship,” she concluded warmingly.

Others who were inaugurated into Fellowship of the University include outstanding citizens who represented broad range of backgrounds, interests, and professions from the private sector, local government, academia, medicine, law, and the security agencies.

How Pzafaama Helping Hand Foundation gives 36-year-old man succour

For 36-year-old Prince Friday the world, indeed, is not a bed of roses. The death of his parents prescribed untold hardship to Prince Friday Beaming and his siblings, but providence was later to take care of him. And, indeed, luck smiled on him recently when Pzafaama Helping Hand Foundation (PHHF) located him in an unhealthy dustbin environment in Asaba, Delta State (South South Nigeria), bringing unprecedented succor to him and his sick wife Mrs Blessing Ayulo.

 

Born in rural Igala, Kogi State, Friday was only 15 when his parents, both illiterate farmers, died. He was lived in an open space close to a garbage dump by the cow market section of the newly created Oko Market in the suburb of Asaba, Delta State capital, an oil producing area in the Niger Delta, Nigeria, where he scavenged for food and clothes. Daytimes, he sifted for plastics, aluminium and irons. He had leaved in the refuse dump for years with help cometh from nowhere.

 

At first sight, it was strange to see a man and a woman sleeping in a 3fts shackled made of old tadpole near a garbage bin. At second thought, they are lunatics, but of course, they are not. Friday  is an example of the potential buried even in humanity’s most hopeless haunts, and a sobering reminder of how seldom it is mined. Over the years he was smoldering in trash heap that was his home.       

            Moved by compassion, to indicate that police is a unique endeavor to serve God and humanity, which shows there are few undertakings so noble as the protection of lives and properties, the benefactor of the Foundation, SP. (Dr. Ambr) Usman Dimka, offered to take them to a safe place. Subsequently, drew the attention of the Foundation to the pathetic living condition of the couple and swiftly, the Foundation rented and furnished a two bedroom apartment for Friday and his wife and gave him huge cash to start-up business.

 

            Pzafaama Helping Hand Foundation (PHHF) visited the lonely and filthy dumpsite, the starved Friday stayed put, and when asked for interview, he obliged with good command of English language. Though he is a school dropout, but he hopes at advancing his education in Mass Communication.

            At first sight of him, one may absolutely not be wrong to say he is a lunatic because he leaves in a sprawling garbage dump that was home to hundreds of herds of pigs. The dirty murky waters around the dumpsite is completely a breeding ponds for mosquitos, the insects that cause malaria which kills 10,000 people across African daily, according to World Health Organisation.

             “I lived here, slept there, worked there. I built a place where I lived (pointing at 3fts shackled made of old tadpole. Mad people and domestic animals, all live together at the dumpsite.

            “My brother, sometimes I go out to look for food, and then would come back without it. There were times I don’t eat the whole day,” he said.

            He learned to spot trucks from hotels and bakeries that carried the tastiest castoffs, and to leap atop them to grab his share before they discharged their loads. For days when there was nothing to eat, he hoarded food in discarded cooking-oil tins, sunk into trash-fire embers to keep their contents warm.

            He recalled with nostalgia how nearly he was buried alive by a bulldozer pushing mounds of garbage into a pit.

            On how much he makes daily, he said, “I did not make money because over a thousand people would be struggling for just a piece of an item. At times, in a whole day, one could make N1,000 or thereabout.”

            According to him, “it was not my wish to live at the dumpsite, but that was where life challenges pressed me to. I pick wastes, buyers buy from us, sell to other buyers. At early age, I lost my parents. My siblings and I were left on our own and life became nasty, brutish. My thoughts and memories lingered around criminality because of the fear of the unknown. But I would wave such thoughts aside telling myself that any hidden thing is not worth doing. I remember how my dad would provide for us and go through our books each day when the going was good.

            “While still leaving on the streets, instead of indulging into crime, I resorted to scavenging of metals, irons, slippers, nylon and plastics. I was able to pull resources together and rented a room apartment but the building was demolished. Most tenants lost their properties including mine. I used my hand to build shanty close to Oko, and when the area was turned to market, the shanty was demolished. I came back to dump site because I lost everything and I have no money to rent another apartment in a better place,” he told the Foundation.

            He said he was confronted with the fear of the unknown. “People have lived on the dump and became mad. People on the dumpsite were faced with the challenge of self-defeat and their only source of survival would be drugs and Indian hemp. If I was not strong-willed, I could not have lived and survived there because we lived in a negative world which dominates the thought. I was not easily influenced by the lifestyle in dumpsite, I never smoked Indian hemp or joined my mates to go for women of easy virtues. With my experience on the dumpsite, I advise parents to support and train their children. Family challenges brought most people to the dumpsite.”