Category: Life – The Midweek Magazine

  • Lagos Global on TV to make its debut soon

    Lagos Global on TV to make its debut soon

    Lagos Global on TV, a new television programme designed to promote Lagos investment opportunities in development and emerging economies, will soon hit the television screen. It will run for 26 weeks. The programme, which is expected to make its debut on Lagos Television (LTV)) and Television Continental (TVC), is also to inform the people on the state’s drive for investment. At the recording, Governor Akinwunmi Ambode speaks on the content of the programme, how to improve on the ease of doing business and the relevance of Lagos Global to driving investments to the state. Assistant Editor (Arts) OZOLUA UHAKHEME, who was there writes.

    What is the administration’s vision in the state’s drive for foreign investment?

    First, Lagos State has received more foreign direct investment in the last 16 months than in the last 10 years. And the vision of the administration is to make Lagos safer, cleaner and more prosperous for doing business. We are putting in place a 24/7 one-stop investment structure. We are running on a tripod of security, job creation and infrastructural renewal.

    If Lagos is safe, more businessmen will do business and more investments will come to Lagos, thereby creating more jobs and growing our Gross Domestic Products (GDP).

    What is the relevance of Lagos Global to all of these?

    When I won the election, one of my priorities was to see how to improve on the ease of doing business in Lagos and I also believe that we need to carry out some kind of public sector reforms to drive the vision, which we had actually set for ourselves and we needed to also have a kind of structure and institutional framework that would drive the vision.

    But we decided to come up with the Office of Oversees Affairs and Investment, otherwise known as Lagos Global. It is designed to serve as one-stop shop to facilitate local and international investments.

    How is the administration handling issues of credibility, transparency and use of technology to provide access to government?

    The state is willing to partner any investor that would add value to the people. Primarily, our business is to create enabling environment for business to thrive. We can sometimes waive some charges like land charges, depending on how impactful the investment is to the people of the state. This administration has deployed technology to bring about seamless service delivery while scaling up the identity card scheme for data, economic and financial planning.

    But, we need infrastructure to make it happen. We are limited by resources and we cannot increase taxes, but with more funds from taxes, we can do better. The N25billion Empowerment Trust Fund is not for big investors but SMEs and the youth.  Our ID card project will be for planning and accessing government services. The contract has been awarded. However, we need to know the real census figure of the state as well as those going in and out of the state.

    There is no government money anywhere. What we get as tax is what we use to create services. The more efficiently we collect the taxes, and the more willingness of the people to pay, the better for us. I urge investors to see Lagos is on the rise and the future of Nigeria rests in her commercial capital, which is Lagos.

     

    What are the reforms in transport and judicial sectors?

    Reforms in the transport sector have reduced travel time, thereby making Lagosians more productive. Again, our civil service has been very responsible. Our judicial sector reform has been effective with the rule of law respected. Investors are coming in droves and what we have put in the last 16 months is more than what has been done in the last 10 years.

    What is your energy security?

    We need energy security to protect the investment. We are in talk with the DISCOs to come up with a new roadmap. But I don’t want to pre-empt the advisory committee report on that. Energy security of our economy is the way to go.

     

  • Shattered revisits girl-child abuse

    Shattered revisits girl-child abuse

    To mark this year’s International Day of the Girl Child, the Performing Arts Workshop and Studios (PawStudios) and the Festival Director of the Lagos Theatre Festival, Kenneth Uphopho, supported by Temple Production Foundation and Eko Hotel, staged Shattered. The play is meant to revisit the social menace – rape.

    Starring Jide Kosoko, Bola Haastrup, AMVCA award-winning actress Bikiya Graham-Douglas, Goodness Emmanuel, Tomi Odunsi and Patrick Diabuah Shattered portrays the pressures from the family, institution and peers that triggers the culture of silence in the aftermath of rape and sexual assault, particularly on women and girls.

    The six-man cast in the play were symbolic. Each character represented the key participants in a typical rape scenario. The play centres around a young lady, “Lovette”, who was raped by Uncle Dave, played by Kosoko.

    “Lovette” was played by Emmanuel, a lawyer. In the play, Uncle Dave was the husband of her mother’s friend, “Nneka” played by Graham- Douglas. Uncle Dave became their benefactor after her father died. Her mother, named “Folake” and “Mama Lovette” in the play, was played by Haastrup. Patrick Diabuah acted “Pastor”, while “Nancy”, Lovette friend, was played by “Odunsi”.

    The play, which was staged at the Presidential Suite of Eko Hotel and Suites, Victoria Island, Lagos, questions the culture of silence and the society’s complacency on rape. The venue for the two-day performance gave it its uniqueness.

    The play, which accommodated 40 people per performance, incorporated the audience in the show. One got the feel of being part of the performance as the cast went about their business around the suites.

    “This was deliberate,” the producer, Brenda Uphopho, said. “We wanted people to get the feel of being part of the performance – as if it was happening around them.”

    While examining series of events that happen after a rape occurred, it forces society to re-examine the issue, and urges victims of sexual assault to break the silence.

    According to the producers, ‘combined statistics from the Mirabel Centre, Amnesty International and the United Nations show an increase (21.7 per cent) in both reported and non-reported cases of rape’. “This must not continue. It is in this light that we decided to propagate breaking the silence on this scourge.”

    Shattered is based on a story written by Bode Asiyanbi that was entered into the story writing competition for the BBC, and adapted into a play by the critically acclaimed theatre director Mr Uphopho.

    This award-winning play was first premiered at the British Council, Lagos Theatre Festival in 2013, and again last year with a question and answer session afterwards that provoked widespread advocacy leading to the hash tag #BreakTheSilence both on social media and other news platforms.

    According to the director, the two-day performance was kick-starting a national tour in the six geo-political zones.

    “It is also part of the launch of the Friendship programme for the is a rape centre based in Lagos State.”

     

  • Celebrating 50 years of Joop Berkhout in Nigeria

    Celebrating 50 years of Joop Berkhout in Nigeria

    He came to Nigeria in his 30s. He stayed on for scholarship and publishing sakes and became known as the ‘publisher of publishers’. The Chairman, Safari Books Ltd., Chief Joop Berkhout is 50 years in Nigeria. Intellectuals gathered to celebrate his golden feat at the Centre for International Advanced and Professional Studies (CIAPS) in Lagos. EVELYN OSAGIE reports.

    It was a day of reminiscences and tributes. A day Nigeria’s highbrow thronged the Centre for International Advanced and Professional Studies (CIAPS) in Lagos to celebrate Chief Joop Berkhout,  chairman of Safari Books Ltd.

    Tagged: Encounter with Joop Berkhout, the high-profile event was attended by many dignitaries. Many praised his passion for Nigeria, the education and publishing sectors.

    He is a man with a wealth of wonderful memories, which guests attested to.

    To former Commonwealth Secretary-General, Chief Emeka Anyaoku, Chief Berkhout is a rich repertoire of knowledge about Nigeria.

    To the wife of the late Chief Chukwuemeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu, Mrs Bianca Odumegwu-Ojukwu, he was her “husband’s surety during her traditional ‘’wine carrying” ceremony.

    Latter Rain Church founder Pastor Tunde Bakare, called him a “grand old man who you can count on his words”.

    The event’s convener, Prof Anthony Kila, said Berkhout’s attainment of  the milestone of 50 years in Nigeria’s publishing sector was a feat worth celebrating. The event was part of a series of events themed: The creatives, initiated by the centre, in contributing to building a society that appreciates and celebrates its creative minds.

    He said: “As “The Creatives” , we have a story to tell. I feel we are here today to be part of history. There is no better way to start than with the person we are starting with today – Chief Berkhout. Here is someone who started publishing in Nigeria 50 years ago, who has shaped the idea of writing and writers.

    “He is someone, who has set a standard. He also someone who has done what many people cannot do, which is to move very fluidly from one company to the other (Evans, Spectrum Books to Safari Books), and to be consistent. He stayed when others left. He is the doyen of publishing in Nigeria, a chief of Ife, the Okun Borode of of Ile-Ife, the great mentor, welcome Chief Joop Berkhout.”

    Born in Amsterdam, Berkhout, 86, is a naturalised Nigerian, who has been christened the “doyen in the publishing world “, because he gave Nigeria’s publishing a new direction.

    He has headed Evans, Spectrum and now Safari Books. He was the founding Managing Director of Evans Brothers in 1967, established Spectrum Books Ltd. in 1978 and retired in 2008, and now chairs Safari Books Ltd.

    Having spent 50 years in Nigeria’s publishing sector, giving his best to the development of scholarship and the book industry, Berkhout has remained an inspiration to many. Berkhout, who has many publications to his credit, has trained several publishers who are doing well in the industry.

    Spectrum Books Executive Chairman, Chief Soladayo Ogunniyi, is one. The event, according to Ogunniyi, was apt. He stressed that the celebrator was also well-deserving of the accolades. He recalled that Berkhout mentored and guided him not only into publishing the first book on social sciences in Nigeria, but into the world of publishing as well.

    He said: “Out of the 50 years that Berkhout has spent in Nigeria, 45 years out of it, we were together. I was teaching Social Studies at the Government College, Ibadan when, as a publisher, he encouraged me to write. I wrote the first Social Studies textbook and it became successful. The first salary I earned was bigger than my annual salary.

    “He is a workaholic, he has proved to me that the stronger you are, the more energy you put in your work, the longer you live. This is the most interesting man to work with. He trains you to be yourself and for the future, he trains you to work hard. He is a man to learn from.”

    Berkhout has since received several awards for his contributions to the promotion of the  publishing and educational sectors, including a national honour, Officer of the Order of the Niger (OON) and the Silverbird Lifetime Achievement Award.

     

    Reminiscences and tributes

    With this in mind, it was no surprise that guests, made up of his close friends and well-wishers, spoke fondly of him. It was, indeed, a day of reckoning for the “doyen of publishing”. He was there with his son, Mr George Berkhout, Safari Books Executive Director.

    Berkhout, the celebrator, was all smiles, but maintained a business stance, as he fielded questions from guests and  seasoned journalist Bode Modupe who steered the conversations.

    Berkhout seemed excited to share from his many nuggets of wisdom, which young bright the minds would find particularly useful. His modest personality and confidence paved way for the smooth conversation that followed.

    Expectedly, Berkhout spoke about how  many things have changed from the Nigeria he came into in the 60s. He was particular about the educational system and reading culture,  lamenting the decline in general knowledge and standards. He blamed the downward trend in the education sector on the failure of leadership and commitment of educators and students He called for more support for the publishing and education sectors.

    He said: “When I came here in 1966, Nigeria was a country known for reading and writing. The primary students in my days were employable, they knew the sum, they could write, read, but now the primary school students are illiterates; even the secondary school students are illiterates.”

    Praising Berkhout’s efforts and commitment to scholarship, guests named him a “pacesetter”, “rich reservoir of knowledge”, “successful and savvy businessman”, and “motivator, mentor”.

    According to Chief Anyaoku, Nigeria owes it to Berkhout to recognise his contributions to intellectualism, urging leaders to do more in encouraging reading and writing.

    “My tribute to Chief Berkhout is to affirm and stress his huge contributions to the intellectual life of our country. I realised how very knowledgeable Berkhout is in the affairs of this country The name Joop Berkhout came up after my memoir was published by Evans Brothers, while I was in England. When I returned, we had a common friend, Pius Okigbo, and it was at his burial in Anambra that I realised how very knowledgeable Berkhout is in the affairs of this country, and his deep interest in education. We’ve read many books published by Safari Book,” Chief Anyaoku: said.

    While commending Berkhout’s passion for Nigeria, Pastor Bakare observed that unlike most natural-born Nigerians, Nigeria was actually “born inside Berkhout and this has made his passion glow more that many born Nigerians”.

    He said: “The first time I set my eyes on him was in my home. He came to review Accidental Public Servant with my brother and Governor of Kaduna State, Nasir El Rufai. I missed narrowly your 85th birthday. It is a joy to be here, to see you going on and waxing strong after 50 years of what could be a frustrating work environment. You have a made a different.

    “When Chief called me last night, but again, he said, “bring along your manuscript”. I said, “I am not bringing you any manuscript when you are celebrating your golden Jubilee of pioneering publishing.

    “Like many said, being born in a country does not make you love that country. A nation that is not married by our sons and daughters will be raped by outsiders. Thank you for being a Nigerian by choice.”

    Mrs Odumegwu-Ojukwu noted : “So many young people today read because of him.” She praised Berkhout’s commitment, recalling that her late husband referred to him as a “detribalised Nigerians”.

    “My own experience: I was in the living room with my husband when one of the aides brought a piece of paper to inform him that a guest was there to see him…That was my first introduction to Berkhout, who I was to find out, became through our 21 years, a very devouted friend. As a matter of fact, he was there at my wedding. At my traditional “wine carrying” ceremony, he was my husband’s surety, a mixture of best man and father. So, if anything was to happen to me, he was to be held responsible.

    “When my husband was sick, he visited him in the hospital four good times. He would sit there for hours. When my father died, he was there with us every step of the way. He flew in, spent three days or more with us. Also, when my mother died, he was engaged but still managed to find time to come down to Enugu to commiserate with me and stayed throughout the ceremony.

    “I appreciate so many things and the fact that whenever I worked into my husband’s study, there were so many things in the study that point to the relationship he had with you. I remember you always tried to ask him about what you called the book. All the time, you would ask. And my husband would say to me, if Joop doesn’t publish my book, it would probably never be published because I won’t write it. I would just like to say, you have displayed very rare type of commitment not just to him but to Nigeria. Thank you for choosing to stay with us; for being with us through thick and thin.”

    The A-list guests included Senator Olabiyi Durojaiye; Minister of Solid Minerals Development, represented by former Ekiti State, Commissioner for the Environment, Dr. Eniola Ajayi; The News, PM News  Executive Editor, Mr Kunle Ajibade; founder, Chrisland Schools, Dr Winifred Adefolahan Awosika; Prof Charles Aworh; Chief Gladys Ani and  Mr Chudi Offodile.

    Others were MUSON Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Mr Gboyega Banjo, a former Executive Director of Spectrum Books; Dr Awosika; Prof Hauwa Imam; Elder Nathaniel Okoro, and Dr Umar Farouk.

     

  • Ode to joy:  Tribute to Sankara

    Ode to joy: Tribute to Sankara

    Former Foreign Affairs Minister and Deputy Chairman, National Conference 2014, Prof Bolaji Akinyemi, pay tribute to unsung hero, Burkina Faso’s former military president, the late Captain Thomas Isidore Sankara. He was killed during a military coup in 1987.

    All creatures drink of joy

    At nature’s breast.

    Just and unjust

    Alike taste of her gift;

    She gave us kisses and the fruit of the vine,

    A tried friend to the end.

    [Even] the worm has been granted sensuality,

    And the cherub stands before God!

    Gladly, as His heavenly bodies fly

    On their courses through the heavens,

    Thus, brothers, you should run your race,

    As a hero going to conquest.

    (Friedrich Schiller, Ode to Joy, 3rd verse and chorus)

    This is odd. Quite oxymoronic.Ode to Joy as tribute to a fallen young hero? Should this not be appropriately titled: Lamentations?:

    “How the mighty have fallen in battle!

    ‘’ Jonathan lies slain on your heights.

    ‘’I grieve for you, Jonathan my brother; you were very dear to me.

    ‘’Your love for me was wonderful, more wonderful than that of women.

     ”How the mighty have fallen!

    ‘’The weapons of war haveperished!” (2 Samuel 1: 25-27)

    The ancient Greeks resolved this conundrum when Perseus answered boldly: ‘’Better to die in the flower of youth, on the chance of winning a noble name, than to live at ease like the sheep, and die unloved and unrenowned.’’ (Charles Kingsley: HEROES).

    My own people, the Yoruba, have a similar attitude when they say: “O san k’akunikekere, juk’ad’agba, k’ad’arugbok’ama riadiyeirana”(Better to die young and be celebrated than to die at a grand old age and lack recognition.) Remember Lt. Colonel Francis Fajuyi.

    Yes, Captain Thomas Sankara died at the age of 38 on October 15, 1987. And yet in a book called NATIONALISTE published in October 2012 by Livres Groupe, Sankara is included, along with Kwame Nkrumah and Patrice Lumunba while the names of Presidents For life and other pretenders are missing.

    President Sankara still occupies a special place in my heart for three reasons. Firstly, he was the ureka spark for the Technical Aid Corps scheme. Secondly, he was indirectly responsible for my first and only meeting with the irrespresible and unforgettable Fela. Yes, the same Fela. Thirdly, he occupies the high table in my own pantheon of African Heroes along such figures as Kings of Ancient Kingdoms of Ghana, Mali, Songhay, Patrice Lumumba, Amical Cabral, Kwame Nkrumah, Samora Marchel etc.

    But first the beginning. I had planned to spend my first Christmas as a Minister with my family. Around 2am on December 24, my phone rang and it was from our Ambassador in a neighbouring country alerting me that there were rumours that a boundary war had broken out between Mali and Burkina-Faso. There was nothing I could do at that hour as we did not have, at that time, a situation room in Dodan Barracks to call. I thought I would brief President Babangida in the morning. At 7am the following morning, the security phone rang and President Babangida was at the end of the line wanting to know what I was still doing in Nigeria when my Libyan counterpart was already shuttling between Mali and Burkina Faso. I replied that I had not secured permission to travel (a playful cheeky reply). By the end of the day, we were airborne for a five- day shuttle between Mali and Burkina-Faso. That would be the first time that I would meet Sankara. This is not the place for the full story of that mediation effort. But three take aways from that trip. The first was the professionalism of our airforce pilots. One day, we had done four or five roundtrips between both capitals and had planned to spend the night in Burkina Faso. But President Sankara made an offer which I had to convey to General MoussaTraore that very night and bring back a reply to Captain Sankara. By this time, it was past midnight. I turned to the airforce officers and asked if we had exceeded their daily flying hours. They replied “Sir, just tell us where you want to go and we’ll fly you in there and put you on the ground.” We flew into Mali, the airport lights were switched on, we drove to the Presidential Palace where the President was waiting in full General’s combat dress. I delivered the message. He stared at me for sometime and asked me for my views on the proposal. This was tricky because he could react to my interpretation rather than the message itself. But in discussion during the flight, my officers and I had thought of the possibility. So after a decent diplomatic hesitation to give the impression that I was thinking about it, I said I thought it was a win-win offer. He agreed but wanted an innocuous rephrasing of two sentences. He wanted a reply by 10am. I told him his airport was shut for the night. He replied: “No, it is waiting for you to fly out.” I asked for an extension to noon for a reply. He agreed. He walked our delegation to the door and as  he shook my hand, he bent over and whispered in English, with a heavily French accent “No Victor, No vanquished”. Both of us burst out in peals of laughter to the consternation of our officers (his and mine) who did not know what he had whispered in my ears.

    When we got to the airport, it was a perfect take off and a perfect landing at the other end. Close to 15 hours of going to and fro. What brilliant airforce guys. The best and the brightest.

    The second take away was hilarious. On one occasion, we got to the Burkina Faso airport for urgent take off only for us to be told that the airport was closed and the runway lights switched off. On further prodding, we were told that they were expecting an august visitor whose identity they would not reveal. But we were told that we could take off after the arrival of the anonymous august visitor. And so we waited in the V.I.P. lounge which is used for both arrival and departure of V.I.Ps. After a while, there was a flurry of activities and in marched in Flt. Lt. Jerry Rawlings, President of Ghana, in his customary flight suit. I knew him and of course he recognised me but there was no exchange of formalities. Then we were allowed to take off. The irony in all of that episode was that if I had been allowed to take off when I was ready, I would not have been any wiser about the visit of Rawlings.

    The third take away was my meeting with the Libyan Foreign Minister when I landed in Burkina Faso. He told me that he was under instruction to cooperate with me and that he wanted us to jointly sponsor the Nigerian proposal which was what we did.

    I bonded with President Sankara and I found him very simple, very direct and very appreciative of Nigerian leadership. Incidentally, President Houephuet-Boigny of Cote D’Ivoire shared the same view but wanted Nigeria to be more patient in its dealings with the Francophonie African countries. He was so certain that France would withdraw from Africa as she faced increasing financial burden at home. More about this but not here and not now.

    Sankara had a strategic vision of African unity that was devoid of egoism or parochialism. When IBB came in, in 1985, Nigeria was occupying the Chairmanship of Economic Comunity of West African States (ECOWAS). But the Francophone West African countries had practically lost interest in attending the ECOWAS summit. Therefore one of the objectives of the 1986 planned summit was to reenergise their interest. On the advice of President Eyadema of Togo, we headed for Cote D’ivoire to consult President Houephouet-Boigny. He promised to attend in the company of all the Francophone West African leaders. But he laid down one condition. By rotation, President  Sankara was due to be elected Chairman of ECOWAS at the 1986 summit. Houphouet-Boigny insisted that this would not be acceptable. Instead, he suggested that Nigeria should be prepared to accept a second term, and he would be prepared to sponsor such candidature. Under all circumstances, this was a diplomatic blow against Sankara. How would Sankara react? Would he decide to boycott the conference? Would his ally, President Rawlings, join in the boycott?

    I was dispatched to smoothen things out with Sankara. He not only accepted with grace, he led a 27-man delegation to the Summit. Grace under pressure: the definition of a great man.

    On another official visit to Burkina-Faso, President Sankara pulled me aside and made a simple request. Would Nigeria please build a primary school and staff it with English teachers because he believed that the future in Africa belonged to the English language and he wanted the Burkinabes to become bilingual. The cost of building the school was only N60,000. On returning home, I received approval for the aid. More importantly, it gave me the opportunity to get President Babangida to approve in principle the concept of technical assistance instead of financial aid. Even though we gave financial assistance on this occasion, President Sankara would have had no objection to sending a Nigerian contractor to execute the project with cement and other materials sourced from Nigeria. There was no Nigerian contractor interested in the contract at that sum. But the seed of the Technical Aid Corps scheme has been planted in my mind and more importantly, in President Babangida’s mind. And we have Sankara to thank for that.

    The second debt I owe Sankara was my meeting with FelaAnikulapo-Kuti. When Fela was released in 1986, I sent my Personal Assistant (P.A.) to him at the Shrine, that I would come that night to congratulate him on his release. My P. A. came back and told me that Fela said I should not come because I would not like it (diplomatic language for “you won’t fit in”). Fela said he knew my role in securing his release and he would call on me later. I thought he had forgotten about this.

    Then one day, the unthinkable happened. Normally, the Ministry of External/Foreign Affairs is the royalty of the service. The Ministry is very quiet; officers carry themselves with regal postures and deliberate steps; and voices are never raised. Then one day, there was a positive commotion like the type one encounters in a sports stadium. There were cheers like rolling thunder. There was an uproar. Over the intercom, and with no attempt to hide the alarm in my voice, I asked my Secretary what was going on. She replied that Fela was coming to see me. I rushed to the corridor and there was Fela acknowledging the cheers like a gladiator with his two hands in the air. He was accompanied by the ever protective BekoRansome-Kuti. Not even my presence dampened the acclamation.

    Having welcomed him to my office, my Secretary came in to ask him what he would like to have. He looked round at the opulence of the office and waved her away. He said he was coming from IBB with a message that I should facilitate his trip to Burkina-Faso as he had accepted an invitation from Thomas Sankara to participate in a Cultural Festival. That was news to me and I had no idea what IBB wanted me to do. But you did not argue with Fela. I told him to give me a few days and he replied that the Festival was starting in three days time. With anybody else, I would have replied that it was not possible. With Fela, I did not dare. He got up to leave and signaled to Beko who pulled something from his bag. Fela turned to me and said “I understand you like Cuban cigars. Here is something for you”. It was the biggest cigar, wrapped of course, that I had ever seen. It was about the size of a small bottle of bottled water. I thank him and promised that I would do justice to it. I was going to walk him to the lift but he excused me. It would have cramped his style. Another roar greeted him and saw him on his way. Thanks to IBB, within twenty-four hours, we had met Fela’s requirements.

    The following week, I related the whole episode to Professor OlikoyeRansome-Kuti, Fela’s eldest brother, who was the then Minister of Health. He said in a very raised alarm “Bolaji, I hope you have not smoked that thing.” I said “actually no. But I smoke cigars”. Prof. said “Bolaji, that is not a cigar. It is marijuana”. I almost fainted at the irony that here we were in the Council of Ministers chambers where also the Armed Forces Ruling Council met and we were talking about marijuana. On top of it, the offending item was still on my table in the office. My God, heresy in the House of the prophet!

    The final debt I owe him was reawakening my faith that Africa will continue to always have a hero, no matter how many traitors abound. I will do injustice by attempting a deconstruction of what Thomas Sankara stood for. Let his own words do justice to him:

    “You cannot carry out fundamental change without a certain amount of madness. In this case, it comes from nonconformity, the courage to turn your back on the old formulas, the courage to invent the future. It took the madmen of yesterday for us to be able to act with extreme clarity today. I want to be one of those madmen. We must dare to invent the future.”

    Thomas Sankara

    “The revolution and women’s liberation go together. We do not talk of women’s emancipation as an act of charity or out of a surge of human compassion. It is a basic necessity for the revolution to triumph. Women hold up the other half of the sky.”

    “Comrades, there is no true social revolution without the liberation of women. May my eyes never see and my feet never take me to a society where half the people are held in silence. I hear the roar of women’s silence. I sense the rumble of their storm and feel the fury of their revolt.”

    “Che Guevara taught us we could dare to have confidence in ourselves; confidence in our abilities. He instilled in us the conviction that struggle is our only recourse. He, was a citizen of th free world that together we are in the process of building. That is why we say that Che Guevara is also African and Burkinabe.”

    “While revolutionaries as individuals can be murdered, you cannot kill ideas.”

    Thomas Sankara

    “I want people to remember me as someone whose life has been helpful to humanity.”

    “It took the madmen of yesterday for us to be able to act with extreme clarity today. I want to be one of those madmen. We must dare to invent the future.”

    Thomas Sankara

    “It’s really a pity that there are observers who view political events like comic strips. There has to be a Zorro, there has to be a star. No, the problem of Upper Volta is more serious than that. It was a grave mistake to have looked for a man, a star, at all costs, to the point of creating one, that is, to the point of attributing the ownership of the event to captain Sankara, who must have been the brains, etc.”

    “If you take a walk around Ouagadougou and make a list of the mansions you see, you will note that they belong to just a minority. How many of you who have been assigned to Ouagadougou from the farthest corners of the country have had to move every night because you’ve been thrown out of the house you have rented? To those who have acquired houses and land through corruption we say: start to tremble. If you have stolen, tremble, because we will come after you”

    His Grave October 2 2016

    When he was assassinated on October 15, 1987, I prepared a very emotional tribute which President Babangida vetoed. When I offered to sign it over my personal name, he still vetoed it with the words “You have no personal name. You are Nigerian External Affairs Minister”. It is 29 years later and the tribute is 29 years late.

     

    • Prof Akinyemi was Minister of External Affairs, 1985 to 1987 and Deputy Chairman, 2014 National Conference.

                                                   

  • Firms and forex

    Firms and forex

    •CBN has to ensure judicious use of their allocations 

    The reported claim by the Chief Executive Officer of Erisco Foods Limited, Chief Eric Umeofia, that about 1,500 employees of the $150m Lagos plant would lose their jobs if the company closes, following the lack of foreign exchange, invited our sympathy. Indeed, the worries expressed by the placard-carrying workers further heightened our concern. But a claim by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), that the company recently received about N2 billion worth of foreign exchange leaves us bewildered as to what could have happened to the humongous forex, which the company received.

    The reason by Erisco, for threatening to close shop, is not far from what other companies that are supposedly indigenous manufacturers also complain about. In the words of the CEO: “We cannot get forex to buy machinery. We run our big factory with forex sourced from the parallel market at the exchange rate of N450/dollar. The companies that get forex at the official exchange rate are those that import items included in the list of items not valid for forex”. He went on:   “We cannot continue this business because we are running at a loss while importers continue to flood our markets with banned tomato paste and prevent our products from selling.”

    So, much as we sympathise with Erisco and other companies in similar situation, we dare say that if the companies source their raw materials locally as they ought to, then the foreign exchange they get would be used to import only spare parts and new machinery. Indeed, many people earnestly thought that Erisco is fully indigenous, and were hoping that it will greatly impact on the local economy, through technology transfer, and also help reduce the pressure on our scarce foreign exchange.

    Even while we are not discountenancing the enormous investment by the company, or others in similar challenge, we guess that the solution to the scarcity of forex actually lies in backward integration, instead of moving the factory offshore, as threatened. As the CEO ought to know, the enormous market potentials which Nigeria has in abundance, cannot be compared to any other country in the sub-region.

    While urging the company to stay, we also expect that the Central Bank and the primary sellers of our scarce foreign exchange would keep a watchful eye on the use of forex sold by them. While the dealers and the supervisor must ensure that those given forex as manufacturers don’t divert them, it must also ensure that only those allowed by the current regime to get forex get it. The claim by the CEO that traders in banned items get forex at official rate while his company buys from the parallel market needs to be examined.

    Part of the challenge of having divergent forex exchange rate, between the official and the parallel, is the temptation by beneficiaries of official forex, to resort to round-tripping, instead of using the forex for the purpose for which it was gotten. This temptation is always so strong, that unless the regulator has a far superior capacity to monitor, and a strong deterrent measure, the temptation to start dealing in forex, instead of in goods and services, further compounds the pressure on the officially available forex.

    So, while wishing Erisco a rebound in business, to save the jobs of its numerous workers, and the investment by the investors, we urge it to look inward, in sourcing its paste, if it has not been doing so. We guess that the middle belt of our country, has all the potentials to produce all the raw materials to produce enough tomato paste for the west-African sub-region.

  • Art, humanities experts seek solution to poverty

    Scholars of the Arts and Humanities have gathered at the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, to examine poverty, which has been troubling African countries. Their studies point to the humanities as an area from which a solution can spring up, PAUL ADE-ADELEYE reports. 

    Scholars of the humanities gathered recently at Oduduwa Hall, Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife to examine the issue of poverty, towards proferring solutions.

    The event held at the Faculty of Arts Conference with the theme: Humanities and the discourse of poverty in developing countries.

    Setting the tone for the conference, Dean, Faculty of Arts, OAU, Prof Gbemisola Adeoti, noted that the conference was in fulfilment of the faculty’s position as a centre of knowledge production towards a better humanity.

    He said: “The annual conference over the years has remained an avenue for scholarly reflections on pertinent issues affecting our existence as Africans in the modern world through intellectual lenses provided by our various humanistic disciplines, from performing and literary arts to language, history, religion and philosophy.”

    Poverty, he continued, had not only interested scholars in the humanities, but has also occupied a prominent position in many government policies and programmes from independence till date.  He recommended investigation into the wealth of opportunity and the diverse and passionate ways in which poverty could be eliminated through music scholarship.

    Provost, OAU PostGraduate School, Prof Charles Akanbi, representing the Acting Vice Chancellor, spoke on the timeliness of the discourse, saying that poverty had come under international scrutiny. He noted that Nigeria and other countries are experiencing recession, and that the conference should offer an intellectual approach to mitigating  poverty.

    Stressing the importance of the humanities to combatting poverty, Prof Adebayo Ekanola, the Dean, Faculty of Arts, University of Ibadan, said to understand poverty, the country must take a step forward and  re-examine the educational system.

    He said it was a shame that  Nigeria was travelling in reverse, and that many people were dying not because of poverty, but because of structural violence.

    Meanwhile, Dr Atinuke Olayade of the Department of Music, Delta State University, presented her study on poverty through music, noting that music and poverty co-exist in Africa.

    She said African literature has blossomed through the works of Profs Wole Soyinka, Chinua Achebe and others. Its more rhythmic counterpart, music, has struggled to secure proper placement in the society.

    She said: “Many students feel that subjects that are not listed with proper status are inferior to those that are adequately scheduled on the timetable.” She further revealed that her research found that the activities of grassroots traditional artistes and music scholars are yet to be acknowledged by the Nigerian society because music education in Nigeria has not reflected the music business opportunities.

    Deconstructing poverty as a concept and a scourge was Professor Rufus Akinyele of the department of History and strategic studies in University of Lagos, who described the problem of poverty as “one of the problematics that development economists generally classify as age-long issues because they have proved very difficult to resolve.”

    He said: “History can contribute to the discourse in two major ways.  First, through the branch of the discipline called subaltern History.  This is the branch of history that is concerned with the study of the poor, the low class or the voiceless in the society.  As of now, scholars in this area seem to concentrate mainly on the urban poor. At another level, economic historians can study the process by which some countries have moved from less developed countries to advanced countries and the lesson we can learn from this.”

    He also noted that the search for a solution to any problem, poverty included, usually starts from a correct diagnosis of the problem, adding that in the search for these solutions, the Humanities should take a respectable lead.

  • Art Fair holds Nov 4 to 6

    Art Fair holds Nov 4 to 6

    Discussions by top-flight artists and collectors on how to restrategise in a multi-billion naira economy as well as art business will form a major segment of a new art fair, ARYT X Lagos, which holds between November 4 and 6 at the Civic Centre, Victoria Island, Lagos.

    The collectors’ series (panel of discussants), according to the fair curator Bisi Silva, would also examine why women are in the forefront of promoting creative industry, the rise of women entrepreneurs and women artists who are pushing the boundaries in the sector.

    “Panel discussions featuring Africa’s biggest art collectors speaking on themes relevant to the art of collecting and the significance of art as an asset class. This session will open with a champagne brunch for 75 VIP collectors,” she said.

    Founder/Director ART X Lagos Tokini Peterside assured that pupils in arts schools in Lagos would be reached to mobilise their interest in the fair.

    “We expect to see hundreds of youths at the fair, especially on November 6, which is dedicated to musical show for the youth,” she said.

    She continued: “I am encouraged by the interest and support we have received so far from all partners. This affirms our decision to go ahead with the project. As Nigeria and its neighbouring countries seek to diversify and expand their economies, our investment in the creative industry via Art X Lagos, offers a vital platform for growth and increased visibility, to artists and galleries.”

    The fair, designed to widen the country’s connection to the contemporary art scene in Africa and in the world, would also feature talks, exhibitions of painting, photography, sculpture, video art, performance art mixed media graffiti and sound art by no fewer than 65 African artists, the organisers said.

    It would attract no fewer than 14 Africa’s most prestigious galleries, exhibiting the  best contemporary artists. They include South Africa’s William Kentridge, Zimbabwe’s Kudszanai Chiurai, Ghna’s Jeremiah Quarshie, Cameroon’s Barthelemy Togou, Mali’s Amadou Sanogo and Nigeria’s Sokari Douglas Camp, Rubi Onyiyechi Amanze, Alimi Adewale, George Osodi, Victor Ehikamenor and Lakin Ogunbanwo.

    Eight galleries from Nigeria are expected to participate in the fair while six curated exhibitions of photography and illustration would feature artists, such as Malick Sidibé and Ogunbanwo.

    Among the galleries are Stevenson Gallery (South Africa), Barthelemy Toguo (Cameroon), Goodman Gallery (South Africa), William Kentridge (South Africa), Misheck Masamvu (Zimbabwe), Sam Nhlengethwa (South Africa), Ruby Onyinyechi Amanze (Nigeria), Ghada Amer (Egypt), Kudzanai Chiurai (Zimbabwe), Gallery 1957 (Ghana) and Jeremiah Quarshie (Ghana).

    Nnotable speakers, such as Prof El Anatsui, Prof Bruce Onabrakpeya and Mark Coetzee, Director of the Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa, are being expected.

    There would be live art, sound and performance installations at the event, featuring some of the country’s brightest emerging art stars, and a special collaboration project with the music industry, featuring musicians, such as Vector, Simi, Ikon and Poe. This is to make the fair attractive for a broader audience.

     

  • Good leadership is panacea to recession

    Good leadership is panacea to recession

    How did a country so rich in resources – human and minerals – descend into the depths of recession and unemployment? How did the ‘giant of Africa’slip to the background in the affairs of nations? Revd Sam Adeyemi, founder, Daystar Christian Centre, at his Leadership Academy, answered these questions, Paul Ade-Adeleye reports.

    For 14 years, the Daystar Leadership Academy has consistently provided leadership training to many Nigerians, especially its members.

    Revd Sam Adeyemi, Senior Pastor, Daystar Christian Centre, Lagos, is certain that some of the people who have passed through the academy will eventually become leaders who will make a difference in the country.

    Speaking at ninth edition of the Excellence in Leadership Conference, he said: “We want to present models before the younger generation. The conference has been growing in leaps and bounds over the years since we started. People come even from outside Nigeria to attend this conference. This year, our theme is: Maximising your influence.”

    He noted that there is a problem of leadership in Nigeria, saying the country did not need to experience recession. Explaining, he said the problem with leadership in Africa is that it is tied to position.

    “The marks of true leaders are sacrifice and service. But we have a structure of leadership in our part of the world where being a leader makes you superior to the people you are leading and most of the resources are used to sustain the leader. So, our objective in the conference of this year, is to let each person realise we are not as helpless or as powerless as you think we are. We all have capacity to influence and I want to teach people how to do it because some of us have tried it.”

    The senior pastor added that while many of the oil-producing countries were experiencing recession, Nigeria is particularly in the thick of it because the ruling class got cheap money and refused to empower Nigeria, and what Nigerians need to understand is that the three arms of government will not work to empower the masses to create wealth.

    “Our purpose has always been to raise role models in the society and people who will be examples. So, we started various platforms for doing this. But, practically, everything we do in our church is about growing people. It’s about helping people to find their purpose. This is why weset up a leadership school in 2002,” he said of the purpose for establishing the centre.

    He stressed that there was no short-term fix to the recession, noting: “There is no short-term solution to it. It is long-term. It is the laws of demand and supply here. We simply are not earning enough foreign exchange, and we are not producing well enough to sell to the world.”

    He explained that while the sale of the country’s assets is not a bad idea and is, in fact,  logical, the problem with it is that “all of us know that if they sell those assets, nothing will come to Nigeria.” The result, he said, is predictable, adding that the people need to go for the jugular of the structure.

    He identified a deficiency of leadership programmes in the country as the cause of poor leadership in the country, adding that Africa has a reputation of turning out the worst examples of leaders in the world.

    “We help people to break free from self-centeredness so that they will focus on people’s needs, and then we help people to discover how they have been equipped by God with gifts and talents to meet people’s needs. We encourage the acquisition ofskillsand education as well as development of the mind. We tell ourselves that our services are merely leadership conferences,” he said.

    He said Africa has acquired quite a reputation for producing some of the worst quality of leaders in the world. To provide a solution so that Nigerians would not remain helpless, he said we needed a generation of leaders that have conscience.

    Empowering people at the conference, which will run from November 2 to 4, will be Bill Hybels, Pastor of Willow Creek Church in Chicago, United States, Mrs. Folorunsho Alakija, Africa’s richest woman, Kenyan Pastor and businessman, Julian Kyula, TV host, Mo Abudu, Pastor AguIrukwu of the Board of the Redeemed Christian Church of God in the United Kingdom, renowned economist Bimbo Olashore, CEO of Lead Capital Plc and Chude Jideonwo, CEO of Red Media. Each session will be streamed on the Internet free.

    He urged people to look beyond their noses and not be inhibited by their circumstances. There are opportunities in the recession, he explained. All it takes is for each individual to identify what other people need, and if such a person could provide for that need, it would be a step towards reversing the recession.

    He stressed that wisdom should be watchword in expenditures during the recession as  people need to readjust their priorities.

     

  • Onobrakpeya: Ode to the master

    Onobrakpeya: Ode to the master

    Hogan Lovells, a global law firm, and the Lagos Court of Arbitration have celebrated one of Africa’s most-respected artists, Prof Bruce Onobrakpeya. They hosted a group exhibition titled: Onobrakpeya and the Harmattan Workshop at the Lagos Court of Arbitration, Lekki. The exhibition featured over 300 artworks created at the yearly Harmattan workshop organised by Onobrakpeya at Agbarha-Otor in Delta State. Assistant Editor (Arts) OZOLUA UHAKHEME reports. 

    IT started 23 days ago and it will hold for four months. The first three floors of the Lagos Court of Arbitration (LCA) building in Lekki will host no fewer than 300 artworks by Prof Bruce Onobrakpeya and 124 Nigerian and international artists who participated in the yearly Harmattan workshop which began in 1998. The event,which started on September 16, will end on December 16.

    The exhibition, titled: Onobrakpeya and The Harmattan Workshop, is the first to be hosted by the LCA. It is also the first time a global law firm is partnering a Nigerian court to promote contemporary indigenous art. Aside the size of the collections, the exhibition is being sponsored by two notable corporate bodies committed to the promotion of intellectualism and cultural values in Africa.

    The Onobrakpeya workshop was conceived in 1988, when the famous artist began an informal training for his colleagues.

    A giant metal sculpture Forest of keys stands close to the entrance of the LCA building, literarily welcoming guests. Also on the ground for visitors to savour are artworks in The road to Agbarha-Otor series. The works by 124 artists capture the various scenes, emotional and physical landscapes of the serene Agbarha-Otor community in diverse media, ranging from painting to sculpture, print and mixed.

    At close range, The road to Agbarha-Otor gives viewers the panoramic view of the vegetation of the Niger Delta community, its flat landscape, thick mangrove and rain forest and the human activities that include farming and fishing. But the styles of presentation of the works vary from one artist to another: stylised, realistic, impressionistic, expressionistic and abstract, among others.

    A walk to the other three floors gives the visitor a holistic view of the collection, including works by Onobrakpeya on the first floor; Our Culture Our Wealth, which shows sculptures and video screening of objects on the second floor as well as Friendship & connectivity/experimentation and self discovery on the third floor.

    At the preview recently were the Hogan Lovells Africa team, including their Head of Africa office, Andrew Skipper; the President of the Lagos Court of Arbitration, Yemi Candide-Johnson; Onobrakpeya and the curator of the exhibition, Sandra Obiago.

    On the firm’s interest in Nigerian art, Skipper who is also a director of the Smithsonian National Museum of African Art, said: “Hogan Lovells has great respect for Africa and the art of Africa. We support African culture for its uniqueness, beauty, and transformational quality. Professor Bruce is an inspiring artist and teacher whose works we are in awe of, and who is changing the lives of the disempowered people across Nigeria who he trains.”

    He noted that Nigeria is one of the key markets the global law firm operates in, and that when you understand the culture of people it is easier to do business with them.

    Skipper reiterated Hogan Lovells’ commitment to investing in Nigeria despite the economic challenges. “Hogan Lovells has a global view. We look at things in the long term and we know that Africa will be strong, so it is critical for us to be here. Nigeria is a country where you simply cannot Not be in, and we are here for the long term,” he reassured.

    Lagos Court of Arbitration President Yemi Candide-Johnson expressed the court’s willingness to continue supporting art and culture in Nigeria, noting that the court had opened its doors to art lovers to showcase art works, and challenging other corporate bodies to do same.

    Commending Hogan Lovells’sponsorship of the initiative, he said: “Sponsorships like this shouldn’t be a one-time initiative. It is important to find sponsors who are in it for the long term and Hogan Lovells is filling a huge vacuum in this regard by lending their support to this initiative.”

    Candide-Johnson said works of art were a product of rigorous intellectual reasoning, which helps a people identify their root, project the future and showcase their cultural diversity. He said LCA would encourage and invest in any intellectual endeavour capable of promoting sound minds and intellectual advancement, a category works of art falls into.

    He said LCA staged the exhibition to show the world that Africa has a rich culture and is blessed with many great intellectuals that are able to project what Africa stands for through world-class works of art.

    On the link between arts and arbitration, Candide-Johnson said both involve deep thinking and systematic building of variables to arrive at end results that promote harmony in the society. 

    Onobrakpeya described the Harmattan workshop as an alternative source of art education, saying that the artists have the freedom to express themselves without being bogged down by academic settings or expectations, and are actually able to develop themselves. “People in the rural areas also get access to learning that they would not normally have, and we are discovering people who are able to use their art to tell stories,” he said.

    The three-month exhibition is the fourth outing by the workshop. To Onobrakpeya, this year’s show is of very high standard, adding that there were some works that are not exhibited as a result of logistics. “Time to prepare for the exhibition was relatively short. So, we couldn’t present all the works. I look forward to more of this quality show and our corporate bodies should take the initiative in joining in the promotion of Nigerian art,’’ he said

    Curator of the exhibition Mrs Sandra Mbanefo-Obiago said instead of complaining of space constraints, she decided to look outside the box to present art in multipurpose buildings in Lagos, such as LCA building. She noted that such window of opportunity is what the Wheat Baker Hotel and Radisson Blue Hotel in Lagos are offering the art.

    She however recalled the challenges she went through to hold he exhibition, saying it took her almost two years of seeking sponsorship and ideal venues. “For two years, I have been looking for sponsors and ideal venues. Hogan Lovells is an example of a great sponsor of African culture. We started the dialogue about this partnership last year. In fact, I need to show art to a new community that is leading in the nation’s economy in the area of law. Interestingly, some of the works on display have not been shown anywhere,” she said.

    Obiago described the curating of the exhibition as a tough assignment, especially the selection of works that made the final collection on display.

    She disclosed that the exhibition is one of the most complex shows considering the works and size of collection, funding and supporting as well as finding ideal venues.

    The preview session also featured several discussions on the potential importance of art to the economy as an alternative source of income, as well as the need for more corporate entities to invest in art and culture by supporting informal education centres and developing art in Nigeria.

    To ensure that the threevmonths are effectively maximised in luring larger and diverse audience to the exhibition, four tour guides are on ground to take viewers round the exhibition. This, she said, was expected to lure other corporate bodies to follow suit in opening up to art shows.

  • Soslimm signs two new acts

    Soslimm signs two new acts

    UNITED Kingdom-based entertainment marketer and promoter Soslimm Entertainment has signed on young artistes Lewes Goon Boi and Beejay Smallz, for a two-year recording deal.

    Speaking at the signing in Lagos last week, the firm’s  Chief Executive Mr. Olumide Fadayo said the acts are talents that should be marketed and promoted.

    He noted that he listened to the acts’songs and was satisfied with their quality, wondering why they had not been discovered. “We have a lot to offer the entertainment industry. We are not going to be just a record label owner versus artistes, but a family,” he said.

    Fadayo said the recording firm would be attending to issues of accommodation and mobility that would enhance their productivity. According to him, the two-year contract would cover digital sales, recording, marketing, merchandise, performances, endorsement among others, adding that the two musicians are by law, representatives of the company.  He disclosed that the sharing ratio of their earnings during the period would be 60-40 to company and act.

    “Soslimm was established in London in 2009 to promote African music and culture. It has keen interest in hardworking youths and ready to turn the face of entertainment industry,” he added.

    Soslimm Manager Mr. Omonije Samuel Ayomide said the ceremony was a happy moment for the family, saying he would do his best to perform his obligation as manager as well as make the new acts under the label A1.

    Goon Boi (real name Adeleye Wewe), son of former Ondo State Culture and Tourism Commissioner Chief Tola Wewe, disclosed that he would soon do a collaboration with another act.

    He said instrumentals were his source of inspiration. Boi, a student of Performance and Film Art at the Elizade University, Ilara Mokin, Ondo State, has two releases to his credit – Bmyne (2011) and Player (2016). “If I were not into music, I would have been into Fine Art,” he said.

    For Smallz, meeting Soslimm was a big opportunity from which much was being expected.