A
17-year-old secondary school student, Ismaila Suraju, has built a planting
machine and a locally-made power generator that uses water and batteries, among
others.
The boy doesn’t plan to stop, he
says his next goal is to build an aeroplane. Ismaila also claims to have a
know-how to create a gadget that can frustrate election riggers in Nigeria.
When the student was younger, he had
to make a pair of slippers out of a cardboard to protect his feet from the scorching
soil of the farm path.
The necessity of protecting his face
from the sun also made him create a baseball cap, then cars, train, grinding
machines, all with the same cardboard.
Half way through his secondary
education, Suraju graduated into using aluminum sheets in making not only
miniature automobiles, such as fire extinguishing vans, excavators, but a large
size planting machine that can be used for planting, as well.
“Anything I see, I will like to do. We went for competition. I saw some
people do a motorcycle they were riding. I said I would do a planting machine
in a form of a vehicle that a person can drive. I thought in our country we
don’t have planting machines. Farmers are suffering. Then I took iron and
aluminum sheets. I first did a small one that a small boy can enter. Then I did
a bigger one. I used wheelbarrow tyres, iron from metal bed, electric motor and
motorcycle gearbox to make it,” the teenager
says.
The boy has also built a miniature
boat with aluminum sheets and radio motors. Thus, it can move forward or
backward when powered by dry cell batteries.
However, Suraju believes that he
could do more with if he had better training and access to materials.
A power generator, introduced by the
young prodigy, is powered by dry battery cells and water. He showed how to use
the generator to charge a cell phone battery and the standing fan he made
himself.
What is more, the boy also has the
solution that will help to handle Nigeria’s electoral malpractices.
The solution is a laptop-like device
he fabricated which he calls “electronic voting system”. He
demostrated how voting is recorded on a pair of screens that look like those of
small calculators. The “electronic voting system” is equipped with a central
screen made of a translucent plastic with voting approval and disapproval
written on either halves of it.
When he inserts a card that has
voted into the voting box, the half that disapproves of voting will be lighted
from within. If the one that has not voted, but registered is inserted, the half
that approves of voting will be lighted.
Suraju has managed to embody several
ideas of his and now plans to develop new projects for the benefit of the
country.
“I want to be a mechanical engineer. I want technology to go forward in
our country, Nigeria. We need to develop technology. I want to make a
bigger excavator that human beings can enter, and it will be working,” Suraju
says.
Though he has created a miniature
airplane, Suraju is confident he can built a big one that will carry people.
Suraju’s maternal grandfather Malam
Isa, who has raised the young talent, is proud of his grandson and always helps
him with money to buy some of the things he needs.

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