Ghanaian businessman, Ibrahim Mahama has offered to pay for the treatment of Ningwei Leonard Lanyeli, a former participant in the popular National Science and Maths Quiz (NSMQ) whose dreams of pursuing medicine was cut short after he suffered from bipolar disorder.
According to an aide to the businessman, Mr Mahama has also offered to see Leonard through the remainder of his medical programme and to support his study abroad.
“On behalf of Mr. Ibrahim Mahama, I contacted Nurudeeni and the family of Leonard led by Eugene. I contacted them last Saturday and earlier today (February 6). Leonard'll receive the best of medical treatment. After the treatment, he'll complete the remaining two years of the six years programme at KNUST and subsequent post graduate studies either in Ghana or abroad. He'll be given the best of all the support he needs,” Mr Mahama’s aide, Rafik Mahama shared in a Facebook post.
The story of Ningwei Leonard Lanyeli
Ningwie Leonard Lanyeli attended and completed the Ganaa Memorial Junior High School, emerging as the best-performing student with an aggregate of 8.
In senior high school - St Francis Xavier Junior High Seminary, Leonard pursued General Science as a course and earned the name; ‘Dr. Ningwie Leonard Lanyeli’ from his open ambition to become a medical doctor.
With this ambition, he pushed to score 6 As in his WASSCE exams and B2, B3, and B2 in biology, English and social studies respectively, in 2007.
Not only did his final results show his academic prospects, but his participation in the National Science and Maths Quiz in 2007.
After senior high school, his dreams to move to the University of Cape Coast to read medicine were crashed when his parents told him about the difficulty in paying what was the school’s high fees at the time.
Consequently, he joined the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and technology which had relatively more affordable fees to study as a doctor of optometry.
“I gained admission to read medicine at the University of Cape Coast at the cost of GHC4,100 a year and my father was a teacher who couldn’t afford to pay the fees, so I opted to read Optometry (Dr.) at KNUST,” he said in an interview with Joynews' Mahmud Mohammed-Nurudeen.
There also, he performed incredibly and his feats were recognized by all, in fact, he says, he was the best in his class – at least for the first four years of his course in medicine.
And then his woes began.
His 60-year-old mother, Ninwie Gladys told Joynews that Leonard developed a mental disorder after 4 years in school, after a friend at the university took Leo to his hometown.
His family would only get to know later that the condition of their son was Bipolar Disorder 2 after he took a break from his university studies to seek medical attention at the Pantang Psychiatric Hospital in 2013.