The Future Awards co-founder Emilia Asim-Ita is dead

Co-founder of The Future Awards Africa Emilia Asim-Ita has reportedly died after a brief illness.

According to qed.ng, the multi-sector strategist and business leader died on Friday morning.

She was until her death the practice director of AML, formerly known as A’Lime Media, which she founded in 2010.

Ms Asim-Ita founded what was then known as The Future Awards along with Chude Jideonwo and Adebola Williams in 2006.

She ended her partnership a few years later and worked or collaborated with other organisations in areas like social media marketing, management consulting, writing, public speaking, brand design, public relations, project management and training.

“Words fail us. You were more than a boss. You were a friend, an inspiration and an outstanding person. You will forever remain in our hearts. Rest well, Emilia,” AML said in a message posted on Facebook on Friday night.

The Punch newspaper reports that the brother to the former partner, Red Media Africa, Williams Asim-Ita, revealed that she died after an appendicitis surgery at the age of 33.

He said, “My sister died yesterday at about 8:20 am. She had an appendix rupture. The appendix had a small lump underneath it and that lump burst; that spleen went to her intestines and it polluted some parts of her intestine. She had to go through a surgery to cut the affected part of the intestines. It was successful as it was done by a specialist.”

Williams noted that his sister was already active and was meant to be discharged today but she slumped yesterday when she was about taking her routine stroll.

“She was supposed to be discharged today. She had been okay, strolling around and they had even changed her hospital dress to normal dress, which showed that she was ready to go home. 

“Yesterday, she was about to take her normal morning routine stroll and that is how she slumped; before we knew it, we had lost her. She was in hospital for about nine days. Immediately she learnt that she had a ruptured appendix, she went for the surgery the next day. The next morning the surgery was done and it was successful,” he said.

Also, her sister-in-law, Jane, who was with her during her last hours, said, “The discussions we had bordered on the fact that she would soon be out of the hospital, nothing serious. We tried to keep her happy, lively and give her hope. We majorly had the ‘how are you feeling today’ kind of discussions.”

Jane told The PUNCH that no one saw death coming because her sister-in-law seemed to have recovered.

“She did not know that she will be dying, she never left those kinds of messages. She was to be discharged the next day. She did not expect death; none of us expected death because she was recovering. Seven days after her surgery, she was to be discharged the next day so she was fine. Her body was fine.

“She was going to the toilet properly because she had a digestive issue. When that was done we expected that she would be fine. She had a ruptured appendix which affected her digestive system. The experiment was to see if she can eat well and go to the toilet well and she did that. We were all lively and waiting for her to be discharged.”

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