Category: Life – The Midweek Magazine

  • Lagos Rotary holds free blood screening at Sandgrosse Market

    In continuation of its activities for the Rotary Year 2015/2016, the Lagos Rotary Club recently carried out free blood screening for market women and men at the Sandgrosse Market, Obalende, Lagos. The screening was carried out by certified professionals under the supervision of officials of the club, led by its president, Larry Agose.

    In the end, those whose blood pressures were high were given referrals and also counselled on how to manage their blood pressures.

    The market women and men were impressed with the initiative by Rotary as many of them felt they hitherto believed nobody would count them worthy of such initiative.

    Speaking to The Nation after the event, Agose explained that during a Rotary year, one theme is tied to each month under which humanitarian activities are carried out. He said the visit to the Sandgrosse market to give free blood screening to market men and women was part of the humanitarian initiative for the month under the theme, disease prevention and control.

    He disclosed that as part of the initiative for December, they held autistic children to an end of the year party at Campus Square, also in Lagos, while they also visited the Regina Mundi Catholic Church, Mushin, Lagos, where they hosted old people in the church. He said his club had to lead the way as the oldest Rotary club in the country.

    “As you may know, Rotary is a world-wide humanitarian organisation with over 4.2 million members worldwide and 34,000 clubs. Rotary Club of Lagos is one of those 34,000 clubs and our District, 9110, has 82 clubs and we are the oldest surviving club in the country. The first one was Kano but no more functioning. This year we are 55 years old.”

    Agose said the month of December was for disease prevention and control and the month of January of humanitarian service. He said the disease prevention and control had spilled to this month, hence the free blood screening exercise. He said the disease prevention and control actually started in October when the club donated an incubator to General Hospital at Ifako Ijaye in Lagos. He explained that the hosting of elderly people at Regina Mundi Catholic Church, where drugs and food items were donated to them, was also part of the disease prevention and control.

    The club also bought inverters for the ophthalmology department of the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital while they also did economic empowerment for small scale traders by giving them loans free of interest. He explained that they chose Obalende because of what he termed “needs assessment”. He said they had to look at what is needed in certain areas and Sandgrosse market in Obalende is very strategic, hence the decision to do the free blood screening exercise for them there.

  • ‘Inadequate funds affecting our programmes’

    ‘Inadequate funds affecting our programmes’

    Prof Gbemisola Remi Adeoti assumed office about six months ago as Dean, Faculty of Arts, Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, Osun State. Before the appointment, he was Director, Institute of Cultural Studies, at the university where he distinguished himself. Under him, the institute hosted the first-ever Conference of Nigerian Playwrights in collaboration with Emeritus Prof Femi Osofisan. Few days ago, Adeoti hosted the revived Faculty of Arts Guest Lecture Series with Minister of Information and Culture Alhaji Lai Mohammed as  lecturer. In this interview with SOLA BALOGUN, a lecturer at the Federal University, Oye-Ekiti in Ekiti State, Adeoti speaks on his mission and vision.

    Sometime last year, you became Dean, Faculty of Arts of the great Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife. Can you reflect on the journey so far?

    I resumed duty on  August 1, 2015. Of course, I had some preparations for that office, especially in terms of administration. From 2010-2012, I was the President of the Staff Club. In 2011, I was appointed as the Acting Director of the Institute of Cultural Studies. In 2012, I was confirmed as the substantive Director, which means effectively, I became the Head of the Institute for four years. The Institute of Cultural Studies is part of the Faculty.  I also worked with the previous Deans so I knew some of the challenges and prospects of the Faculty. Settling down was not so difficult, although by the time I got to the office, I had greater insight, especially of such challenges as funding. Funding has always been a critical problem and I was assuming office at a time when the resources were dwindling. During this period, the resources came from within. They were little and we still did not get them on time. This meant, apparently, that one was left with one’s creativity or ingenuity. So right from the beginning, I knew that we had to look outside the University to source for funds. So that was what we started with. Fortunately, we got one of our own who donated funds to improve the lighting system, and by extension the security system around the Faculty premises at night. So we started that, lit up the place, and completed the first phase of the lighting so that whenever you come to the Faculty at night, you are pleased with what you see. We are beginning the second phase very soon. The Faculty is located in three places; here, the Humanities Building, the Institute of African and Cultural Studies Building, and then the several buildings occupied by some of our staff, which were recently vacated by the Administrative staff of the University.

    What are the programmes you have in mind as the head of the faculty.

    One of the programmes that we revived was the Guest Lecture Series but we repackaged it so that whenever we invited eminent personalities to give lectures, we identified three or four alumni whom we honoured and gave awards to, in the hope that they, in turn, put in something to support their alma mater.  We did that last November. We invited Chief Bayo Akande; founder of Splash FM, who gave the guest lecture, and in support of the faculty, he promised us a bus and fulfilled his promise. So, you can see this worked. We hope to follow this up. We have reenergised the Distinguished Guest Lecture series with the aim of inviting alumni in order to raise funds from them.

    Also, the faculty had a website but after a while, it stopped functioning. When we came on board however, we revived it and it is on now and gets regular updates. We have equally inaugurated different committees. We will have the Faculty conference next May or June. Eventually, what we tried to do these past six months was to bring back some of the good things the Faculty was known for and then sustain those that are on ground, e.g. the Faculty seminar series. We are also on the lookout for other innovative ideas that would enable us to get funds.

    How does the university authority support the faculty in all of these?

    We have support from the University, led by the Vice Chancellor, but there is a general constraint about funding and also the way the system works. Between that time and now, this Single Account System was imposed on everyone and this has limited us and it became difficult for us to access even our own legitimate funds. This put much pressure on us and led us to seek funds from other sources. The funds we receive from the university, no matter how little, would help launch us to achieve our set goals. We enjoy the cooperation with the university, up till when the issue of PSA came on board.

    With the enormity of your administrative duties as Dean, do you still have time for literary and scholarly works?

    Yes, I still have time for my literary work, although this has been drastically reduced. I still teach courses at the undergraduate and postgraduate levels. I also supervise the Masters and PhD candidates. But I have not been able to attend to my creative writing which I have suspended for now till after my term in office. I still engage in a lot of academic writing. There is a monograph I am working on and I still edit books.  I serve as external examiner to other universities. My hands are full for now.

    For the remaining part of your tenure, what are your dreams for the Faculty and things you hope to realise?

    Yeah, one of it is, if the bus comes, then we have a functioning vehicle for our students. If they want to go for excursions or they want to go for research or they have things to do, you know, it would be easier to access a bus from the faculty rather than to be at the mercy of the larger ones at the university level. So that will be a dream realised. Apart from that, we have challenges with office spacing. Some of our colleagues, they don’t have conclusive offices to work in. Sometimes we have about three people sharing an office.  We were hoping that some of the people that would be involved in the Guest Lecture Series would be kind enough to build a structure that can be named after them but they should make available offices. So I am hoping that at least one structure will be realised towards settling some of the space constraints. It would also include lecture rooms for our students. So I would be happy if that is realised too. Apart from that, I want improved Internet access within the Faculty so that our colleagues can access Internet at any point in time. I want to bring back the wireless system to make it work. It has been on before but it is down now so we want to restore it. We also want to link up with the former students in Diaspora who can give us aid so that we can give them a sense of belonging. We want to create a forum whereby we can meet up with them.

    A former colleague of yours, Professor Ogunleye died recently. She was a member of your faculty and her funeral was done not too long ago in Ile-Ife and Ibadan. Can you give us your  comments about her?

    Professor Ogunleye was a wonderful colleague, sister, senior and person in all our lives. She has always been a serious source of inspiration, especially in terms of scholarship. She never thought of the constraints or impossibilities when it came to achieving goals or tasks. It was my participation in her International Paint Festival in 2008 that motivated me and gave me the courage to organise scholarly conferences, not just for your benefit but for also for others.  She was always smiling. Even if she got angry at somebody, after a short while, the smile would return. She was a fine scholar. She never placed too much on perfection. She was always concerned about the beneficiaries of scholarly work. That is why I am not surprised that all her many works are still living on after her. She also rekindled my interest in the practical aspect of the theatre. She acted and directed plays showing that it is not enough to be a critic but one can also show practically one’s criticisms. I learnt that from her; don’t just interpret other people’s works, also create. You can also act and do creative work.

  • Women journalists bemoan low coverage

    Women journalists bemoan low coverage

    Women journalists have lamented low reportage of women activities by the media. They said women involved in other developmental efforts should be showcased rather than those in entertainment and showbiz. They also said the voice of women in the rural areas should be heard as opposed to women in the urban areas. They advised that journalists should make efforts to interview rural women instead of talking to only urban women so as to give a balanced overview on the issues.

    Speaking at the review of a report titled: Mainstreaming gender reporting on affirmative action of women and girls rights issues published by Journalists for Christ (Nigeria), the Assistant Director (News) Voice of Nigeria Mrs. Ugonma Cokey said: “Women have received scarce representation in media reportage despite their contributions to development for several reasons including cultural and social norms which has resulted in stereotypes and right denials.’’

    She added that women’s voices should be heard more when writing a story that pertains to women affairs, as it was discovered that men speak for women. She said even where women’s voices are supposed to be heard, the men do the talking.

    She added that the media  should not be gender biased in their reporting, and should not treat the issues of women in isolation, but mainstream gender in all reports.

    Mrs Cokey, however, advised women to assert themselves as they are already being marginalised by nature. She said they should make extra effort to do more good stories and interview more women when writing stories that pertains to them. She stressed the need for women rights group to also make themselves available for interviews on all issues as this will foster gender neutrality in journalism profession, thereby hindering stereotypes and right denials of women and girls in media reporting.

    The occasion was a public presentation of a one- month media monitoring reports on the portrayal and reportage of women and girls rights issues held at the International Press Centre, Lagos to discuss issues of gender discrimination in journalism. The report used six newspapers – The Punch, The Nation, The Guardian, Vanguard, Daily Trust and Daily Sun – for its analysis. Other issues discussed were domestic violence, failure of men to perform their responsibility at home, among others.

    A board of  Trustees member of JFC Mrs. Betty Abbah said media organisations should imbibe the habit of gender neutrality in media reports. She also said selective reporting should be put aside when doing reports on women’s issue. Mrs Abbah cited where issues of rape are just being reported without a follow-up on how the accused is being punished to serve as a lesson to others who may also have the intention of doing such.

    The report, which focused on how women are being reported in these six national newspapers revealed that coverage of women was reported mainly in the showbiz and entertainment sections while the stories on women were highly urban-based. It was observed that spaces allocated to women were not limited to women, as men still preferred to be quoted as sources over women. Also, it was observed that reports advocating gender balance is low.

    The report by JFC, a Non-Governmental Organisation, sets to point at how women are represented in the media. The body intends to follow up its report with advocacy visits to media gate keepers and editors of monitored media to present the media monitoring report to management and other journalists in the news room, training of select journalists to serve as gender advocates to advance affirmative action of women and girls via media reportage, roundtable sessions to bring together journalists and local women groups to bring right based issues involving and affecting women such as agriculture, land rights, denials to active participation in society and governance, to mention a few.

    Present at the event were the Managing Editor, Online and Special Publications, The Nation Newspaper Mr. Lekan Otufodunrin; the Chairman of Nigerian Union of Journalists Lagos State chapter Mr. Deji Elumoye, represented by Mrs Kehinde Ajayi, the Chairperson of Nigerian Association of Women Journalists, (NAWOJ) Mrs. Dupe Olaoye-Osinkolu, among others.

  • Some acts  of Aare Arisekola Alao

    Some acts of Aare Arisekola Alao

    Veteran journalist Lekan Alabi pays tribute to the late frontline businessman Aare Azeez Arisekola Alao, who would have been 71 on Valentine’s Day.

    Last Sunday was Valentine’s Day, a day for lovers all over the world and the 71st posthumous birthday of the lovable first Aare Musulumi of Yoruba land, late Vice President – General of the Nigeria Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs (NSCIA) and Aare of Ibadanland, businessman and philanthropist, Alhaji AbdulAzeez Arisekola Alao, to be called by his popular title, Aare, in this tribute.

    Aare was a well-connected man in and outside Nigeria, as attested to in a book of tributes titled, “Arisekola In Our Minds”, edited by Professor Rusheed Aderinoye. It was launched by Governor Abiola Ajimobi of Oyo State at Aare’s Oluwo Kereke Basorun Area home in Ibadan, at the 70th posthumous birthday Fidau of Aare on Valentine’s Day last year. Besides writing the foreword to the book , my tribute forms part of the book.

    The life and times of the late successful businessman, best known for his charity, who started out as an apprentice ‘Gammalin’ trader under his late uncle, Alhaji Karimu Olasupo Jenrola, at Ogunpa Business District in Ibadan in the 1960s, were very open and still open vide the said book. In this wise, I shall focus on some public acts of Aare  between  1975 and 2014 when he died as witnessed  by me. In Yoruba, “Awon ise Aare ti won soju mi korokoro” (translated – Some acts of Aare Arisekola Alao before my very eyes) as the title of this piece above indicates. May the kind and noble soul of the witty dapper continue to rest in Aljannah Fridaous. Amen.

     

    Act I

     

    I started my journalism career in 1973 with the defunct Sketch Publishing Company Limited, Ibadan as a reporter/writer/reader, in addition to writing a column  in the Yoruba language weekly in the Sketch stable – “Gboungboun”. A year later in 1974, a late editor of the popular “Sunday Sketch”, Mr. Phillip Bamidele  Adedeji, did the unprecedented not only in the Sketch Group, but in the Nigerian media history by offering me a column and later a page in the weekly, thus making me Nigeria’s first bilingual (Yoruba & English) columnist (“Mo ri firii” in Gboungboun and “Its what’s happening” in the Sunday Sketch). Old  generation newspapers readers would remember that there were just three weekend (no Saturday papers) newspapers in Nigeria in the 1950s to early 1970s) – (i) the mother of them all, Sunday Times, (ii) Sunday Sketch and the then new arrival, (iii) Punch, which started as a weekly on Sundays. One day in 1975, our News Editor, the late Mr. Abiodun Famojuro, a vibrant wordsmith and tireless journalist, assigned me to go and interview the young, with due respect, Alhaji AbdulAzeez Arisekola Alao.

    I did my job, but politely turned down the kind offer of Aare – “a token for your transport fare back to Sketch”. The editor of “Sunday Sketch”, had warned us not to receive gifts in any form, with emphasis on pre-publication gifts. That interview in 1975 was my first contact with Aare.

     

    Act II

     

    Upon my graduation and return from the famous College of Journalism, Fleet Street, London, UK in 1978, I resigned from the Sketch and joined the services of the Nigerian Television Authority (NTA), Ibadan. I resigned from NTA in 1982 to join the newly-established, Television Service of Oyo State (TSOS) now called BCOS TV. I was a pioneer editorial staff member– the first reporter to appear on the channel on its first day of transmission (October 30, 1982) and the first Chairman of the station’s chapel of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ).

    In February 1983, I was seconded to the then Governor of old Oyo State (present day Oyo and Osun States) the “Cicero of Esa-Oke”, Chief ’Bola Ige, my boss and mentor, as a Press Secretary. God grant his soul repose. Amen.

    In the general elections of 1983, the defunct Federal Electoral Commission (FEDECO) declared Chief Ige of the defunct Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) a loser in the governorship election to Dr. Victor Omololu Olunloyo of the also defunct National Party of Nigeria (NPN). Three months later, on December 31, 1983, the military staged a coup detat that toppled President Sheu Shagari – led NPN Federal Government and state governments also. Our incumbent President Muhammadu Buhari became Nigeria’s military head of state, and the then  – Colonel Oladayo Popoola (now a retired Major –General, lawyer and printer) was appointed the Military Governor of old Oyo State.

    Governor Popoola, in what I always describe as the  “eighth” wonder of the world, ordered that I resume as his Press Secretary, after my appointment had been terminated earlier in October 1983,  like some others, by Governor Olunloyo’s NPN government. I thus returned to my old desk in the Governor’s Office, Ibadan.

    One day in 1984, my friend and colleague, the resident media consultant to the Independent Corrupt Practices and other related Offences Investigation Commission (ICPC), Folu Olamiti, then a senior editoral staff of the Nigerian Tribune, Ibadan visited me in the office and told me of Aare’s urgent need for an appointment with the  Military Governor. I replied Folu, a close acquaintance of Aare, to give me some time to arrange the visit. It will be recalled that the new military government was wary of civilians. After strategic maneuverings, I succeeded in fixing the appointment for Aare which Governor Popoola graciously approved. Their meeting, at which I was present, took place in a private home (not connected to Aare) on Bodija Estate, Ibadan.

    It was about a decade after the 1984 ‘rendezvous’ that Aare got to know that I was the ‘Mr. Fix It’ of his audience  with the military governor. Of course, that further cemented our relationship.

     

    Act III

     

    Our fourth child was born in August 1987. Aare was one of my invited guests to the new baby boy’s naming ceremony. Although he could not attend, Aare sent a representative with, as usual, his trademark of a cash gift. But, the representative played a smart game with Aare’s gift, unknown to me. He slashed the cash gift, and gave me a third of it! One day, the rip-off became public.

    Not long after the naming, I visited the late Managing Director of Sketch Press Limited, Ibadan, Mr. Peter Ajayi, in his office at Dugbe on an official matter. As I was ushered into Uncle Peter’s office, I saw him and Aare (backing the door) discussing. The shouts of “Lekuze, se a se o” (Lekuze, I hope we have not offended o) by Uncle Peter made Aare to look back and say, “Lekan, Onitemi, I have offended you. I didn’t attend your son’s naming ceremony”

    I immediately greeted and replied Uncle Peter first that neither he nor the Sketch group had offended anyone. And to Aare, I said his representative had explained the reason for his absence. Moreover, his handsome cash gift of ‘x’ naira was delivered to me. On hearing the ‘x’ figure mentioned as his gift presented to me, by his representative, Aare stood up and shouted “Lahila Ilalahu! Ko seniyan gidi laye mo” (My God! Trustworthy people have become rare in the world). He requested to use the landphone on Uncle Peter’s desk, a request which was granted. Aare called the representative, “Can you please remind me of the sum I sent through you to ’Lekan Alabi on his son’s naming ceremony?”

    The receiver answered. Aare, raising his voice, then said, “Lekan is here with me in the office of the MD of Sketch. But you gave him one-third of the gift I sent to him, and that’s unfair. You know the press people, they can publish your dismeanour. You better see ’Lekan unfailingly tomorrow with the balance”. In compliance with Aare’s order, the representative visited me very early the following morning in my office within the Governor’s Office, and released the two-third balance, pleading that his earlier act “was an oversight”. I called Aare immediately I received the balance, as it were. He appealed to me to forgive the representative. I did, or didn’t I?

     

    Act IV

     

    On my last day ( March 30, 1989) in office as the Press Secretary to the fourth governor of old Oyo State that I had the good fortune of serving, the late Brigadier–General Sasaenia Oresanya, God bless his kind soul. He asked me, at the end of our long farewell chat, to make a request, any request, with a vow to grant it. I stood up, thanked him, as it was unprecedented in Nigeria, and requested for 1989 Hajj sponsorship. My request was granted on the spot.

    I visited Aare on my departure to Saudi Arabia. He prayed for me and my two professional colleagues (Alhaji Mikhail Adeogun and Alhaja Labake Adebiyi, both of the  now defunct Concord Press Nigeria) who I took along to his home on Rotimi Williams Avenue, Bodija Estate, Ibadan.

    On my return from Hajj, I paid him a thank you visit accompanied by my wife, Adetokunbo,  at his office in Lister House, Ring Road, Ibadan. He was so delighted to see us, particularly I. We went into a long, lively discussion which suddenly turned sour the moment I answered his question of “Which of your houses did you return to from Makkah?” with a  “Sorry, sir, I have not built a house”. Rising from his seat with the famous frown on his face, he retorted “Lekan, se emi loo maa pa iro fun? Sebi won ni o ko ile si Bodija ati Oluyole? O ko fe soro loju iyawo re? (‘Lekan, why will you lie to me? But, people say you have built houses in Bodija and here in Oluyole Estate. Or you don’t want to disclose the secrets before your wife?)

    He sat and requested that ’Tokunbo should please excuse us. I repeated my earlier denial of ownership of any personal house either in Bodija, Oluyole Estates or anywhere in the world. At that point, he called ’Tokunbo back into his office to join us. Facing her, he blamed her for not “pushing” me hard enough into owning  at least a house in the course of sleepless nights of running around for four governors of Oyo State for six years! I added petrol to naked fire when I interjected by saying, “Sir, my former bosses are not to blame. I didn’t ask them for favours”. Aare hissed and said something like this, “From today, ’Tokunbo, you and I have a duty of waking this my aburo up. He needs to open his eyes”, to which ’Tokunbo replied, “Yio dara fun yin, sir. Kii fe gbo otito oro (God bless you, sir. He detests the truth).

     

    Act V

     

    In 1998, Aare asked me when I would be promoted from Mogaji to the Olubadan Traditional Chieftaincy line and to let him know what the requirements were. I made enquiries and recounted to him my missed chance of  what would have been an instant appointment/promotion by the late Olubadan Yesufu Oloyede Asanke 1 in 1986, who said that he felt honoured and proud of me for acceding to his royal order to forgive two civil offenders, despite the fact that I was the press secretary to the then Military Governor of old Oyo State, Colonel Adetunji Olurin (now a retired Brig-Gen). That one–in–a–million chance was stalled then by a subsisting decree promulgated by the Buhari / Idiagbon Federal Military Government in 1984 banning civil servants / public officers from receiving traditional chieftaincy titles. Those who had been honoured before the decree, were to repudiate them or quit service.

    One day in August 2002, after closing from my office at Odu’a Investment Company Limited, Dugbe, Ibadan, where I was the pioneer General Manager Corporate Affairs, I paid a routine visit to Aare at his Oluwo Kekere home.

    On getting to the “Red Carpet” sitting room, where I met him reading newspapers amid some visitors, I paid courtesies to Aare and others. He answered with his trademark of a curt “ E kaa” (Welcome) without looking up – a sign that something was amiss. I gave him some minutes before making a statement to measure the depth of his (bad) mood. He only nodded. I immediately knew that someone or something had put the otherwise ever-jolly Aare in a bad mood. I thought to myself that since he was in such a mood, immediate departure was the best answer. This style of exit was known only to the inner caucus of  Aare’s “Oluwo Roundtable.” As if he was reading my mind, before I could say goodbye to him, Aare stood up, collected his bunch of keys on the table and walked out of the sitting room .

    I was asking the people in the sitting room what transpired before my entry, when I heard Aare calling my name from the lobby. This was echoed by visitors and bystanders in the lobby and the staircase. I answered and went out to meet Aare. By then he had descended the staircase. When I caught up with him in the car park, he held me by the hand, asking where my car was. I pointed it out to him. He literarily dragged me to the car, ordered me to get into the driver’s seat and open the front passenger’s door for him. I did.

    Aare entered my car, and asked me to drive the two of us out of his palatial home. “Turn right, turn left, go straight” were the directives given by him to me till we got to the front of Olubadan Ogundipe’s palace at Oranyan where he asked me to stop and park. By the time I  parked the car, got out and entered the palace, Aare had climbed the staircase to meet with Kabiyesi upstairs.

    After spending an hour or so with Kabiyesi, Aare came out and we departed the palace for his Oluwo home together again in my car. His convoy had since got to hear of our unceremonial departure from Oluwo and had found its way to the palace. He did not tell me his mission to Oba Ogundipe, neither did I ask him. On getting home, he said to me, “ I will teach you the secrets of success.” He bade me good night, came out of my car, shut the door and walked into his apartment. I started the engine and left for home. A few weeks after that dash by Aare and I to his palace, Olubadan Ogundipe broke the good news of his intention to promote me from Mogaji to Jagun Olubadan of Ibadanland. And this took place on December 14, 2002.Aare had initiated my promotion on that unscheduled visit to Olubadan Ogundipe.

     

    Act VI

     

    One night in 2008, Aare called me on the telephone to see him very early the following day before the usual stream of visitors would begin. I reported at Oluwo Kekere at 7.00am. I alerted him of my arrival on telephone, he then summoned me inside his bedroom. After exchanging pleasantries, Aare in a very sober mood told me of his decision to marry an Edo lady who resides with her parents at Apapa – Ajegunle area of  Lagos State. He said three of us – himself, his late uncle (Baale Abidoye Olaniyan) and I would be going for the introduction ceremony the following day. I would be his family’s representative / spokesman at the ceremony. He instructed me to keep the information to myself and  not to tell anybody.

    Very early the following morning, the three of us, accompanied by Aare’s usual retinue of bodyguards and escorts departed Oluwo Kekere for Apapa -Ajegunle, Lagos State. We arrived the young, pretty and well – mannered lady’s Ajegunle home where we were warmly received by her Christian parents, a brother and about three other family members. It was a very private family introduction ceremony.

    I performed the duties assigned to me with solemnity and brevity after which traditional rites in Edo custom were performed. We were entertained with a modest feast, after which we departed for Ibadan. The fair – skinned lady eventually moved into Aare’s home. But, after a while we did not see her again, and Aare did not tell me about her whereabouts.

     

  • Murtala: The unforgettable leader

    Murtala: The unforgettable leader

     As Head of State, the late Gen Murtala Ramat Muhammed led a simple life. He moved without a siren-blaring convoy and mixed with Nigerians in the market and other public places.Forty years after his death, his life and times were celebrated last week at a photo exhibition tagged: Our Hero Past at the National Museum in Onika, Lagos. Assistant Editor Arts OZOLUA UHAKHEME reports.

    Murtala jolted a sleeping nation into life. The vibrancy in his voice was arresting. The fire in his eyes charmed and awed the nation. …Murtala adopted a low profile policy. The 504 replaced Mercedes Benz as the official government car. Only the Head of State rode a Mercedes Benz: not bullet proof and not the 600 series type. For the 200 days Murtala was Head of State, he lived in the house he had occupied as Director of Army Signal Corps. He drove to work at the Dodan Barracks every morning from his house accompanied by his driver, his orderly and his ADC. No convoy. No sirens. No outriders. Few days after his assumption of office, Murtala shunned the sirens and convoy and rode alone with his driver from Lagos to Kano, a journey of more than 1000 kilometres in his personal car.” These were the words of former Nigeria’s High Commissioner in Namibia Ambassador Adegboyega Christopher Ariyo, guest speaker at an event organised by the National Commission of Museums and Monuments (NCMM), in collaboration with Murtala Muhammed Foundation and Ikoyi-Obalende Local Council Development Area (LCDA) to mark the fortieth anniversary of the death of former Head of State Gen Murtala Ramat Muhammed.

    He said the late general had only N70.20 in his account when he died on February 13, 1976.

    According to him, Muhammed brought activism and forthrightness into the Nigeria diplomatic enterprise in the actualsiation of the national interests of Nigeria. “Nigeria justified by the moral authority of his campaign for the total eradication of colonialism and obnoxious, dehumanising apartheid white racist regimes in South Africa and backed with strong economy and committed diplomatic and military machines, was able to influence decisively programmes, tasks and strategies that contributed significantly to the liberation of the Southern African states and restored the dignity of Africans.

    “Indeed, the activities that led to the golden era of Nigeria foreign policy were hatched under General Muhammed and his colleagues. Though geographically in West Africa, Nigeria became a member of the Frontline States of Southern Africa,” he recalled, adding that his ‘Africa has come of age’ speech at Addis Ababa,  Ethiopia was a clear signal that Nigeria had the resources to tend her future in dignity and would not take any nonsense. But, unfortunately, Nigeria lost focus as money became the god of our leaders.

    Ambassador Ariyo said competition and self-centredness took control of our living as a people while destroying our culture and values. He noted that we adopted foreign culture, uncaring and undisciplined system of governance, destroyed systems, institutions and processes for national stability and prosperity through strange political acrobatics unknown to real ideas-based democratic practices.

    Continuing, he said: “Our people lost hope and human life became worthless. Insecurity, corruption, disunity, lack of focus, joblessness, excruciating internal and foreign debts rendered us voiceless where it matters. Our military lost the steel to protect us and be relevant in power equation in Africa and the world to allegedly inept and corrupt leaderships.” The former Nigeria’s High Commissioner to Namibia asked what lessons can Nigeria learn from the life of the great legend?

    Information and Culture Minister Alhaji Lai Mohammed said the late general left an indelible mark and record that were difficult to surpass, noting that his patriotism and love for the nation and her people is certainly unquestionable.

    “As a military officer, he was a gallant, brave andpatriotic soldier. He served the nation in variuous capacoities during his military career. He was among the crop of young military officewrs that represented Nigeria as part of a Uniteed Nation’s peace keeping mission tot he then Congo (Zaire) now Congo DR in 1962. During the 30 month Nigerian civil war between 1976 and 1970, he fought gallantly to keep the unity of the nation. He was one of the heroes of the war.

    “His brief reign as head of military government witnessed several landmark achievement , the legacy of which we still have with us today.  One of these was the creation of seven additional states on February 3, 1976 among others.

    The minister who was represented by the Director-General of Centre for Black African Arts and Civilisation (CBAAC) Mr Ferdinand Anikwe said there is nothing that is done to remember the late Muhammed that is too much but rahter it is in appreciation of his great contributions to the socio-economic and political development of the nation. he described the photography exhibition as a challenge to the wide spectrum of today’s leaders to serve the nation with patriotic zeal, eschew corruption, nepotism, political thuggery and rigging, tribalism and personal aggrandisement. According to the minister, the event is a clarion call to the youths to see themselves as key players in the nation’s socio-economic and political development.

    “It is a call to the military to serve the nation with patriotism and help safeguard the unity of the country and protect our young fledging democratic process. It is a call to all Nigerians in all facets of life to love this country that we call our own so that we can individually make very meaningful patriotic contributions towards national development in tandem with the change agenda of this present democratic administration. I implore us to see ourselves as veritable tools in the change agenda and vision of the present administration and endeavour to make meaningful contributions to the socio-economic and political development,” he added.

    First daughter of the late general, Aisha Muhammed Oyebode, who is Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Murtala Muhammed Foundation, said she was humbled by the legacy of his late father. “I am always humbled by his legacy. I also feel humbled when I see the kind of response that people have towards him 40 years after. So, I really feel it is something that makes me very proud. At times I realise that he really was a visionary because so many things that he talked about 40 years ago are the ones affecting us today,” she said.

    Aisha, who was 12 and a Form 2 pupil at Queens College, Lagos, when her father was killed in a coup spearheaded by Lt. Colonel Buka Sukar Dimka, recalled that for quite a while she did not know her father was killed. “As soon as it happened, the Head Mistress called me into her office and said  I needed to go home. The lady that came to pick me was the Principal of my former school. “It was when we got to Kano the following day which was on Sunday morning that my father’s mother told us that my father had been killed. That was after he had been buried. All this while my mother was away, maybe if she was around we would have known earlier,” Aisha recalled.

    Earlier in a message, Aisha said the event provided the foundation the platform to celebrate the contributions of her late father to the project of nation building for which he was very passionate. She added that it also allowed the foundation to highlight the very ideals eschewed by the late Muhammed on which the foundation is founded.

    “It also allows us an opportunity to remind the younger generation of the rich heritage already laid down by Hero’s Past, which ultimately will enable us all to attain the full development and scope of the potential that this country is capable of attaining. Such an endeavour will surely be the greatest tribute we could pay to the memory of our Hero Past, General Murtala Muhammed,” she said.

    Director-General NCMM, Yusuf Abdallah Usman, said despite the short rule of the late Muhamamed, he made quite some long-term contributions to the nation’s development.

    “General Muhammed ruled Nigeria for only 200 days but they were the most action filled, most dynamic and probably the most impactful 200 days on the contemporary political and social history of our nation. Three things remain indelible: His commitment to good governance, robust attempt to root out corruption and fierce battle against indiscipline,” Usman said.

    He disclosed that the late General’s tomb has been proposed as a national monument as a  reminder of the great contributions of the great man.

    Our Hero Past showcases some of the vantage photographs of the late general at different locations and events during his service in the military. It also shows some of his public pronouncements especially after the civil war. Such pronouncements are: “In the endeavour to build a strong, united and virile nation, Nigerians have shed much blood, the thought of further bloodshed, for whatever reasons, must, I am sure, be revolting to our people…”

    “It is incumbent on us not to misuse our public offices and to hold sacred and utilise in the most efficient manner, the public funds entrusted to the care of the Federal Military government,” this was made during the swearing in ceremony of 10 of the new governors on July 31, 1975.

    The exhibition is to honour a national hero whose numerous attributes are worthy of emulation by the present greneration. The show is also to encourgae young Nigerians to be deligent in service, truthful and courageous. According to the late SG Ikoku, Muhammed ‘is a martyr of the new Nigeria. What we owe General Muhammed is to work even more painstakingly for the realisation of the dynamic disciplined and self-directed nation he toiled so hard to build.’

    The event also witnessed the presentation of a collection of postage stamps by representatives of Nigerian Postal Services as memorabila in commemoration of Muhammed ‘s 40 years anniversary.

     

  • Between Olumo and Aso  (II)

    Between Olumo and Aso (II)

    •Reminiscences from Ogun at 40

    It proved a sham. The newly discovered fissure in the sides of Zuma Rock in Abuja was from the peripatetic Aso incumbent splitting his sides with laughter – ke, ke,ke!

    That Olumo/Aso combine attempted a similar crushing strategy in Lagos, but failed to roll over that city. First was the ominous withdrawal of security detail of the sitting governor – on “orders from above” of course. By the time Aso’s goons went for him however, he had disappeared. Even his own supporters, rushing to secure his safety, could not find the highly prized but elusive bird.  He had shifted his operations deep underground among one’s ultimate security – own people!  Aso Rock, in desperation, decided to ‘go for broke’. It ordered the posting of false, victory results, confident that the public would swallow them supinely – ‘for the sake of peace’. I know for a fact that the generalissimo was quietly warned that Lagos would terminally explode if he persisted. He quietly beat a tactical retreat, transferred his supervisory energy to other designated “must-wins”, Edo at the forefront.

    In Edo, it was indeed a case of Aso/Olumo Strikes Again! The mastermind took over the functions of a supposedly neutral Electoral body and raised “Federal might” to its personalised apogee, dictating orders to the Edo State Electoral officer. Edo was one of our ‘special interest’ states and we followed that contest in real live time.

    “I said, declare those results.” Aso Rock bellowed down the line “Announce   them!”

    That officer fled to Abuja rather than announce falsehood. Distraught that they had been unable to capture the main prize – Lagos – Edo at least would not elude them.  But the opposition already had the authentic results.  The folder was rushed to me by Oshiomole’s aides as I was seated in a plane, virtually as the gates were about to close. I was able to present the truthful picture at the Congressional Hearing in Washington D.C. where a position that endorsed a fictitious election was already holding sway. There I met Kenneth Nnamani, former Senate president, seemingly in an unvoiced, genteel quandary, I felt. No matter, I fulfilled my mission,  silenced the misled lobbyists for democratic injustice with authentic facts – and figures! It was a totally unexpected intervention.

    And so, today?  The toes of the corpse that had been confidently buried have kept pushing up – a recording here, a confession there, threatened arrests, plots to silence witnesses and whistle-blowers. Where it will all end? Perhaps in nothing. But then, it only means that the corpses will remain restless. The undertakers of democracy – as they proudly, indeed contemptuously deemed themselves – are scampering for cover, but not without releasing toxic jets of distraction. But these protruding toes are only forerunners of more skeletons to be unearthed – or more accurately – tens of thousands of corpses – and millions of the displaced and traumatized, on account of those misapplied funds that were meant to keep society secure. For now, we shall spare the festivities stressful thoughts of abducted school pupils, trapped in an eternal nightmare.

    Yes, the disciples are exposed. They are being arraigned before both public and formal tribunals. But their mentors? The originators? Those who facilitated their emergence in the first place, by the same dastardly, egotistically unprincipled means. The real concrete mixers for the foundation of the home of electoral fakery?  Basking in the glow of impunity.‘Gracing’ commemorations. Milking gerontocratic toleration at milikis. The grimace that contorts our faces when we watch the architects of a nation’s democratic retrogression gleefully cavorting under the generosity of amnesia or forgiveness from an abused people, is neither wished for nor enjoyed. Few of us are willing masochists. It is simply the intrusiveness of that hard taskmaster – memory – essential for the protective – and survival armoury,  even of peoples who already boast a historic tradition of resistance – such as Ogun, the people of ise ab’ojumu. Tolerating the intolerable is not tolerated by a culture that was formative of the growth of some of us. Upholding the principles of such formation or accidental acquisition through life experience enables any people to say, with pride – we have never succumbed to tyranny, not even when it wears the diversionary mask of buffoonery.

    So many mixed recollections and emotions as one’s gaze flitted across the faces of converging celebrants – the inspirational, the superfluous, and the best forgotten. Crowned heads and ancient regalia on call, radiating lustre through a white tent marooned atop the new plowed festive grounds whose name, Kobape, (May the crown endure)  suddenly acquired an aura of fulfilled prophesy – yes, the crown has endured. Time has however rendered the fortunes of those monarchs precarious, and the ‘unkindest cut of all” has been inflicted, more often than not, by their scions. Custodians of culture, they are trapped in the power play of their progenies. Yet Culture is never on terminal leave even in the domain of power.  Even some of the greatest culture reprobates and denigrators know it – witness how ostentatiously they have taken to prostrating full length before, and acknowledging “the source of all Yoruba”,  for the testamental delight of media cameras!

    ‘How long ago did the obverse obtain?  Take your minds back to early months of the Sanni Abacha era. You may recall a certain gathering of the Council of Obas who had met to fashion a common ground to answer the truncation of democracy in the nation, and the amoral deprivation of an Ogun state indigene of a hard won victory. Who else but a son of Olumo would break into that meeting of crowned heads of Yoruba land, snatch the microphone from a royal contributor and proceed to deliver an insolent tirade at the assemblage. Not always the fault of Olumo, but that stoic rock sometimes discovers that it is landed with dubious exponents of its values.

    ‘Where we come from’ – to borrow a common preamble – you do not, even in a fit of power possession – intrude on a gathering of a people’s venerated custodians of cultural mores in their search for justice and equity. Such conduct defeats all behavioral norms, but of course it usefully serves to remind us of one of my favourite motor lorry inscriptions – No Condition is Permanent.  An even sterner rebuke would be the Yoruba  ‘ti won ba ran ni’se eru, aa fi t’omo je – if we are sent on a slave’s errand, we perform that errand it in the manner of a free born.  But why marvel at such anomalies! Conducting oneself in this uncultured manner boasts both precedents and emulations galore.  An even more senior member of the fraternity of the “managers of violence”, one who once notoriously mocked the Owelle of Onitsha for supposedly reducing his stature from ‘Zik of Africa’ to the ‘Owelle of Onitsha’, would later seek membership of his own local conclave of traditional rule, same as his earlier target of ridicule.  After which – Aso Strikes Again! – even his middling rank sufficed to enable him to browbeat the entire chieftaincy structure of Olumo by shredding the findings of kingmakers in one Olumo domain, flinging the confetti in their faces, before proceeding to install his own nominee.  He would top this feat also by pulling out a gun in his church – albeit intoning ‘Praise the Lord’ –  to settle a disagreement. The late Chief Simeon Adebo, doyen of the Nigerian civil service, was so distraught by the latter event that he sent for me, simply to discuss it. Somehow, that grand old man felt that, as a writer, I had an explanation for all forms of human aberrations.  I told him quite simply, “You can take Olumo out of Aso, but you cannot take Aso out of Olumo”.

    Should one have expressed astonishment when his civilian protégé in Olumo – before their terminal fallout – commenced proceedings to dethrone one of the revered monarchs of Olumo – and over what? For praying the government not to forget the promised completion of a minor bridge on a rural road in his domain!  That constituted an unpardonable criticism of government, said the Lord! I listened to the tape of that ‘improper interference’ in governance affairs and could only recall the recommendation of the late psychiatrist, another son of Olumo, Professor Thomas Lambo. He it was who once recommended an annual check-up for the mental state of African rulers!

    Each reminiscence triggers off another.  Here is one in an edifying mode, one that enables us – indeed reminds us in timely manner – to abandon the immediate locus of Olumo Rock for its expanse.  Contrast much of the foregoing with an outsider visitation, following the demise of the Olumo national sage, Obafemi Awolowo.  The Grand Impresario of Aso electoral culture, the Iwuruwuru chieftain, paid a condolence visit to the Awo home, which I have described elsewhere as the nation’s Inspirational Shrine of Democratic Culture, located – where else? Ogun State, specifically the town of Ikenne. The august visitor was reported to have declared:

    “My visit to Ikene and the home of Chief Obafemi Awolowo is quite  symbolic, because this is one great leader who had shown how things should be done in this country.”

    Thus spoke Iwuruwuru. He went on to laud Obafemi Awolowo as having laid a sound foundation for the development of Western Nigeria and the whole country by his contribution. Wuru also paid homage at Awolowo’s grave, where he prayed that his  ‘labour for a great Nigeria would not be in vain.’  How Awolowo’s body was responding to this untoward visit by an institutionalized scourge of democracy we can only conjecture, but the mind of the living may be forgiven for fastening onto that image of a body turning in its grave.

    What we do know however, is that his widow, the grand matriarch herself matched Wuruwuru culture for ‘culture’. She received him with characteristic Yoruba courtesies, only permitting herself to remark, and I quote:

    “ I am so happy you are here. I never thought you could visit Ikenne, not to talk of Awolowo’s house,” and she directed that Iwu and his entourage be taken on a tour of the house.”

    You or I would have sent a child to ‘accidentally’ empty a pail of slop on him, but then, when you look for exemplars in the culture of ib’ojumu, there she reposes, unflappable on her marble plinth. Such rarities diffuse a glow of matriarchal magnanimity that rebukes one’s inclination towards ‘just deserving’ as opposed to ‘just conduct’ – ise ab’ojumu  against wuruwuru, jankariwo and janduku etc.  Concerning her late partner, he was, very simply, a lifelong quester for, and expositor of a democratic culture, theory reinforced by praxis, for its unvarnished establishment on earth as an existential imperative.  Awolowo’s home remains, till this day, the acknowledged shrine for true pilgrims committed to that democratic vision, and the finest, unmatched ‘solid mineral’ that this nation can claim to have mined from her unlimited resources. Those who dispute this are urged: simply read his prodigious political treatises, and make informed comparisons. Bring on your ‘solid’ mineral of that generation and let us have an independent assayer.

    Alas for Olumo, her fated, twisted partnership with Aso seems interminable. Here is an excerpt from my 2007 lecture, when Olumo had virtually become an extension of Aso, jettisoned all restraining culture from the former and ‘returned to sender’ – that is, returned to infect Olumo with the – not simply uncultured, but – uncouth face of power. I quote:

    “Aso – let us continue to stress – is not just a static symbol of Power, but embraces both the exercise of, and the manners, and affectations of power even after an individual’s departure from office. It signals an active essence that percolates through to individuals and coteries, affects agencies and satellites of power throughout a nation, including, alas, here in Ogun state.  Traversing Ogun state at this time, a visitor cannot but remark a phenomenon that triggers off memory of that phase of Abacha’s desperation for self-perpetuation, one that resulted in the sprouting of sycophantic excrescences on the landscape and air waves of the most stomach-churning kind, the unbridled praise-singing that seeks to conjure up universal approbation even from trees, rocks, hills and valleys – extending even to infants! At least, Sanni Abacha had a purpose, however sinister and warped. To what end is the present inundation of such fulsome choruses in Ogun State? Is governance no longer supposed to be by performance and example?  Or have we settled for a culture of governance by billboards?” End of Quote

    Today, at the very least, one can claim that the sordid implantations of “governance by billboards”, noisome phrase-mongering for non-existent achievements, have vanished off the Olumo landscape.  For nearly eight years of dubious claims they were once inescapable, sprouting up every few yards along the streets, fouling up urban centres, desecrating villages with the ego-driven advertisements of non-achievement, and the patronizing exhortations to the people to give praise to  “the giver of all good things”.  Even infants were pictured singing praises of the colossus who brought them education! How many thousands of billboards, I would ask myself, would Awolowo have deserved by comparison for his seminal educational policy, and its execution? In my bush forays, I had become accustomed to encountering these displays fighting for survival beside dilapidated buildings that were supposed to be schools, and nondescript shacks that denoted abandoned projects.  Billboards where our biblical eponym fought and vanquished illusory monsters while trapped “in the lion’s den”!

    All vainglories sooner or later pass away, leaving nothing but the transience of power and the corruptibility of birds of passage with human heads.  And, to bring us down to earth, down to objective assessment of how we have augmented  the bequest of sound foundations, what greater mortification could possibly befall the people of Ogun, than to see this pioneer beneficiary of Awolowo’s vision fall to an abysmal low in the annual scholastic contest called WAEC! When and how did the rot commence?  These are hard, soul-searching questions that do not brook evasion.

     

    Enough of reminiscences, sweet and sour. Let us make room for a final narrative of immodesty.  After all, others have not been niggardly of late in praise of their own corners of the nation, even to the extent of dubbing us (among others) envious of their own achievements. I read one lately whose catalogue of Firsts in virtually every human undertaking checked me in stride. True or false, I have not bothered to check, but it all sounded authentic. Fortunately, one remains blissfully self-sufficient and content in the uniqueness of one’s own collective attainments. It goes beyond chauvinism or sentiment therefore that I designate our own historic landmark, Olumo, as the critical touchstone for assessing Ogun’s fidelity to her own history.  Its significations – as instructive contrast to other representative rocks, rivers, waterfalls – indeed any landmarks – may be read, admittedly, more as an act of faith or a case of selective history. My response is simple: let us take it as a provocation to the potentials of a people, an attempt to recall all, to whom Olumo is home, to their finest values, bring them to a recognition of the need to re-configure and re-furbish what is not merely symbol but also history.  Olumo – let us recollect – was a site of resistance, and it was impregnable in its time!

    The culture of ise ab’ojumu – just conduct – leads to Justice, which remains one of the ineradicable intangibles of human heritage. No culture that the world has ever produced can surpass a culture that is founded on justice – and this includes the culture of resistance to injustice, one that may manifest itself through modes of overt activism and militancy to those of passive resistance.  Now, why do I so righteously attribute to Ogun state an exemplary status within that culture of justice and fair play?

    The obvious answer lies in that immediate and vivid history that should be taught all children, right from infancy.   Even more grievous than the act of deprivation of Olumo by Aso Rock of the harvest of a universally acclaimed contest, was the assault on her dignity and entitlement to equity and undiscriminating regard! A disdainful attempt was made to shove down the people’s throats a whimsical substitute for a nationally evolved leader, violating the expressed will of millions. With near total unanimity, this surrogate was rejected. This is not an attempt to open old wounds, but what is history good for, if not to act as our pointer and teacher? Once made, history cannot be effaced.

    Rejection of that proxy was widespread within the nation, among Yoruba and non-Yoruba, but was naturally lodged at its deepest among his own people in Ogun state: they reacted with contempt for that substitute, inducing almost total social ostracism.  All known human communities will always harbour the negative exceptions, the collaborators and time-servers – I believe that Christian history records one among twelve. Well, the proportion was far, far lower among the people of Olumo where, in fact, the spearheads of resistance to that offered insult were most resolutely entrenched. That is the culture to which I refer, the culture that looks Power in the face and rejects its culture of dictation and imposition, guided by the faith of ise or iwa ab’ojumu.  It is also known as the democratic culture. Unabashedly, I hold this history enshrined as the finest hour of the people of Ogun state! If nothing else, this moral triumph remains well worth celebrating.

    But now, is this perhaps a new opportunity to redress that past? Aso Rock came down physically to Olumo this past week, decked in its cultural outfit, adorned by the idiosyncratic ‘steeple’ cap of the host, and decked in national colours. This was the occasion when the wheel seemed to have come full circle, and closure appeared to be within grasp. Here is the explication.

    The historic results of Olumo’s bid for power – as already emphasized – may have been annulled by Aso Rock – they were never discredited, never challenged.  It is the annulment that stands discredited, even treasonable! The 2015 election that brought the present Aso incumbent to power was also not disputed, the votes were overwhelmingly and freely given, defeat conceded by the opponent – the first ever such national unanimity since that watershed election of June 12th 1993.  In that respect, both Visitor and the martyred president are two of a kind – authentic products of the democratic venture, leaving all intervening occupants – that is, for over two decades – mere impostors.  Power holders they were, indisputably, but examined through a truthful democratic prism – a succession of  fidi hee, without exception.

    Viewed from an accommodating mind, the vicious cycle of denial appears to be moving – symbolically – towards terminus. If it is claimed that this visit was a birthday gift from Aso to Olumo however, then it is still a paltry handout, incomplete, since Olumo has stood at the vanguard of democracy and paid a heavy price. She won gold, but was offered pewter.

    Still missing is a final rectification that remains overdue to the festering wound of injustice, scabbed over – yes – but raw and pulsating for all that! The beneficiaries of that dogged pursuit are many, including the current incumbent of Aso Rock, himself an exemplar of the rare breed of persistence in the ambiguous face of justice, one whose name, in gargantuan letters now dominates the final approach to Abeokuta, home to Olumo.  The lettering hits you in the face! I could not help conceding – yes, a tribute so typical of the ise ab’ojumu of his hosts, children of Olumo, to name this ultra-modern housing project after the Aso Rock visitor. Musing across faces of Ogun State worthies at the rites of commemoration, among them those who had the opportunity but failed to overcome guilt, envy, personal inadequacy, and deep character warp to make their peace with history, it struck me as an opportunity for a historic but welcome irony, were Aso Rock itself, the originator of the infamous democratic disjunct, to confront the terms of a moral debt incurred by that Aso promontory, and bring to closure an unruly chapter in a nation’s history.  Now, how may this be effected?

    First – and here we come to my final act of anniversary reminiscences – a wedge of history that is both instructive and – puzzling! After the brutal curtailment of a military occupancy of Aso Rock – ‘Dodan Camp’ more accurately at the time – his successor, our same surviving spawn but suspect growth of Olumo at that first coming – ordered that the portrait of the murdered ruler be hung in all government and public offices for a full calendar year afterwards. It was, in effect, a diarchy of the living and the dead under whose shade he negotiated survival. That macabre display of fearful deference was eased out only when the departed was further immortalized on the nation’s postage stamp. Was it however  Olumo’s  ise ab’ojumu – just conduct – that had yet to thin out in the veins of that incumbent through time and power? Or was it wise inner promptings that his anointment was a mere forerunner of future power contrivances that would be known as  f’idi hee, the appeasement of, indeed pandering to, forces of which he was then mortally in awe?  It should not matter to us. The demands of Olumo today are actually far more modest, less bizarre, eminently doable and of positive augury:

    Honour this democratic flag-bearer and martyr with a postage stamp or currency bill, AND inscribe that name – MOSHOOD ABIOLA – in the scroll of Nigeria’s past presidents, that the restless ghosts of Aso and Olumo may retreat, and settle back, hand in hand, in their primordial caves!

    Abundant Anniversary Returns of this Fortieth to the people of Ogun and other celebrant states across the nation!

    Wole SOYINKA

  • Between Olumo and Aso

    Between Olumo and Aso

    •Reminiscences from Ogun at 40

    Why?” demanded my  argumentative friend, “ is it always you people? “ Why do you make so much trouble? Always Ogun, Ogun, Ogun! – are you the only state in the nation?” And he proceeded to reel off a number of names of notorious “trouble-makers”, dead and living, pin-pointing their birthplaces in Ogun State.  It was a teasing, rhetorical question, no answer expected. If one had been required, I would have volunteered, as a birthday present to Ogun:  Ise ab’ojumu. Sometimes Iwa ab’ojumu. A pursuit (or character) of what is right. Just conduct. The people of Osun articulate something close –  Omoluwabi.  Both, and a number of allied formulations, hover around that basic foundation of all humane pursuits – Justice.  Perhaps we are simply more vocal, more persistent about it.  

    The precedent body of this mixed birthday offering is contained in a lecture that I first delivered nearly a decade ago, in Abeokuta. I shall resort to that lecture once or twice for purposes of invoking a comparative ‘state of the state’ – then and now – but only in the context of governance characterisation that enables us to grasp the essence of ab’ojumu, not to make any invidious assessments. Memory is a crucial function of existence. There is much to recall, much that justifies breast beating, but also much to lament, deplore, even repudiate!  Individuals make up nations. National anniversaries are not that much different from the individual, being, for some, not merely calendar notations for jubilation, but also pauses for recollection, reflection, and hopefully a positive surge of renewal, and progressive energy.  It was a very well attuned mind that fashioned out those words in the Ogun State Anthem:  Eyin omo Ogun, Ise Ya! (The task is just beginning – let us move!).  I like that. I urge it also on Ogun’s sister states who are co-celebrants of the day.

    An even-handed assessment tempers uncritical euphoria, enabling us to place, on well calibrated scales, triumphs side by side with defeats, solidarity beside betrayals, dedication beside opportunism….and so on, and on. We must not be Killjoys, but we also should not be overly exultant. Ogun State has been very much put upon but, if only my colleague thought about this carefully, Ogun has also experienced the agony of putting a lot on herself, internally, as much as being put upon by others. For instance, between Olumo Rock and Aso Rock, the relationship is sometimes manifested as a tussle between Culture – that is, Democratic Culture – and Power, the centralised distortion of which remains dominant across the nation – sometimes at war within the same individuals who loved to play both ends of the axis. I would not like to estimate what, for the people of Ogun, would be an accurate tally of profit and loss.

    In this brief, unabashedly partisan exercise, let me admit in advance that co-option of these two landmarks goes beyond, but is not unrelated to the obliging fact that, for better or worse, both – Aso and Olumo – are conjoined by some key Ogun state indigenes in a somewhat unusual fashion. I have focused on a triad that self-constructed gradually during a critical phase of the nation’s history. It was the wistful shadow of one of this threesome cast list – a now permanent absence at any celebrations, alas! – that flitted across my mind and provoked these reflections. All three are reference points for Ogun State on the pursuit, and the ironies of power, but one remains a spectre that haunts one’s memory. That spectre certainly loomed large as I watched Ogun State governor shepherd his Aso Rock guest – and eminent train – around ‘Olumo’ town.

    The three figures defined a national crises in vastly different, but interwoven ways. One enjoyed the harvest of that tussle. Another earned his place by dint of hard work, and against overwhelming odds. He was elected across the nation by undisputed popular acclaim, including belated affirmation by those who callously thwarted his deserving at the time. Thus it is that, today, it is only voices in chronic denial that still qualify their references to that 1993 election with the phrase, “presumed winner of…”  “generally presumed to have won”, and similar ignoble attempts at diluting an unassailable truth. The third of that triad was known as Fidi Hee  (Half-arsed incumbency).

    Power bestowed, power betrayed, and – power derided. This nationally unique trilogy framed the political portrait of Ogun across two decades, and struck me only some days ago as I recalled past images from that crisis, the faces and comportment of some surviving principal actors, contributors to an entity whose character has undergone remarkable contortions and distortions, internally and externally, over the past four decades. The events produced both Ogun’s finest hour and, yet again, her most demeaning. Again, just a reminder: one, now departed – retains his position as Nigeria’s president that was never permitted to rule.  Another, a fellow indigene takes his place among the dubious handlers – some say undertakers – ending up as the eventual harvester, though not without his own dose of retributive fate –  while the third governed at the behest of the most vicious and thieving dictator the nation has ever known. When that military dictator had had enough of his game of cat and mouse, he simply blew f’idi hee a kiss, which blew him away from the peaks of Aso back home to the foothills of Olumo.

    Let me quickly emphasise this:  I am aware that Abeokuta, where Olumo rock is situated, is not Ogun State, only a tumulus within the entire landscape. I invoke that rock only as a symbol. Also, my assignment of Culture to the Olumo end of the rock axis – Aso at the other end – may be regarded as somewhat arbitrary; it is however historically appropriate. Power attaches unarguably to one end – Aso.  Culture – and especially democratic culture – however betrayed and degraded – should be the jealously guarded preserve of the states.  Minna is the exception – over the archway of the entry to its military cantonment is a boastful rubric that Niger State has bequeathed to Nigeria more rulers than any other – and their names are proudly listed across that archway. At least, such was the display when I last visited.  Outside that aberration however, the role of states, I consider, is to civilise power, bring it to civilian apprehension and finally, humanise it. Thus emerges an interest in the fortunes of both at the hands of each other, whenever they intersect. Did Olumo civilianise Aso, for instance? Or did Aso successfully corrupt and distort Olumo’s civilian existential mandate?

    In co-opting the two rocks – Olumo and Aso –  as symbolic representations of the provinces of Culture and Politics, I do not imply mutual exclusivity. There is no intention of implying the totality of culture by invoking Olumo Rock, any more than I restrict politics, or the power game, or indeed any particular activity of power to the latter, Aso Rock.  It is all a question of relativity.  So kindly indulge me and let Aso Rock  stand for power and its politics, including their modes of human conduct, while Olumo Rock signifies Culture – Democratic culture, and Culture writ large. Our problem is that we have endured far too many protagonists of power who are simply devoid of culture of any kind, be that written with a small “c”, or in capital letters.  They pursue power hammer and tongue, obsessively, untempered by the ameliorating virtue of Culture.

    What then have we, in Ogun, generated?  What exported? What contributed to the entirety of national character? At a time of commemoration, several past events run their reels across the memory template. Here is one enduring scene to set us ruminating:

    It takes the shape of a state house of assembly, shuttered, barred and barricaded by armed police, in a time of peace. At the time of the decade-old lecture to which I earlier referred, the closure had yet to happen, but it was in the offing, and my lecture was a warning.  One is reminded that such a travesty of democratic culture under Olumo was enabled by – indeed would have been unthinkable without – the collusion of “federal might” at the Aso end of the axial rocks. In other words, that the gates to treachery against Olumo’s democratic integrity were thrown open by the very custodians of the historic Rock. Worse still, thanks to such internal undermining, Ogun state has the set the ignoble record of creating a precedent for what – with variations –  has dominated political culture around the nation. When thwarted in the arbitrary and questionable exercise of power, or merely democratically challenged, simply seal up the oversight structure of governance –  the House of elected representatives of the people. The active complicity of Aso Rock is guaranteed in advance – especially at the approach of elections.

    Memory is a turbulent taskmaster for some, and that handful must fulfill – if only on behalf of the future – the role of a memory prod. It was again under the aegis of Olumo – exported to Aso  – that a sister state across was placed under siege and vandalised for three days – with the police on “emergency” duties of non-interference in their ringside seats! Anambra was on fire! Billions of naira worth of assets – including state owned – were pulverised, a rampage that involved the kidnap of an elected governor, and his confinement in a toilet. Among that incumbent’s crimes was a refusal to sign an open cheque on the state treasury for a ‘political godfather’. For further fleshing out of memory, we may like to recall that it was in protest against that act of Aso empowered brigandage, a conspiracy between the two Rocks fortuitously fused into one, that a Nigerian citizen, Chinua Achebe, later rejected the national honour that was offered him. Chinua could not condone The Rape of Anambra, and told Aso Rock to shove its medals up its fundaments.

    The foregoing – and more, a lot more – are natural associative recalls in the midst of celebration, with the unavoidable succession of wrestling emotions – pride and shame – in whatever role one’s acknowledged or imposed protagonists have played under the incidental twinning of these symbolic rocks. Guilt by association is a burden we sometimes bear – ask my interlocutor with whom we began this piece. This includes the residual impact of such governance ‘ethos’ within the state itself.  Power feeds on power, even far from where first exercised. A successful formula becomes a call to emulation. From Ogun, via Anambra, and more recently Ekiti, the tried and tested template held sway. Vile precedents can only give birth to monstrosities.  Yet truth eventually comes out in the wash, and the mottled faces of erstwhile triumphalists are gradually or dramatically exposed for what they truly are – straw masks. Was it not within these same national borders that packs of rabid mongrels, snarling through the judas-holes of the gates of hell, spat venom at those who had not even gone beyond saying of the 2015 Ekiti governorship elections:

    “There is a mystery about these results”.

    Nothing more, just that.  Simply expressing disbelief.  Others tried to rationalise the ‘upset’, citing deficiencies in governance style of the incumbent etc. Pontifications galore to admonish the robbed and rub pepper in the wound, to rubbish the option of  low-cost governance and unostentatious style of governance. A coinage – ‘stomach infrastructure’ –  was minted to explain the inexplicable. A handful of ‘heretics’ however persisted in keeping the taunting puzzle alive. They warned:

    “There is a mystery. Something is askew somewhere, only we haven’t quite laid a finger of certitude on it”.

    And some went further and confidently predicted:

    “It is a mystery that will be unraveled some day, and even sooner than expected.”

    And now is the time to ask: why were we so sure?  Why did Governor Fashola, for instance, pen a soberly argued article in that vein? Why did I – if I may also cite myself – declare at Governor Fayemi’s valedictory event that this puzzle would be solved, must be solved, for democracy to survive, predictably pulling down a rain of rancid spittle from the self-vaunting, but deep-down apprehensive ‘victors’?

    The answer was simple. Ekiti had precedent. Ekiti was merely the bastardised child of Olumo, only the pupil had brought a thuggish refinement to the Olumo template – including the yet unaddressed physical assault upon, and public humiliation of the judiciary. It had happened before to us in Ogun State – plotted, cooked, and served up sizzling.  Only with variations. We had also undergone a blitzkrieg right within Olumo domain  – and of course there were other victim states – in  2003.  The pattern was familiar – a centralised coordination, military style, of the most insolent electoral robbery in state history.

    The internally inspired assault scored a grand success. The Ogun State incumbent, confident in the observation of the rule of law, basking in a mutual, loudly trumpeted accord of peaceful conduct and a level playing ground, went on a joy ride with his would-be electoral rapist, proclaiming to the nation that this bipartisan road show was a manifestation of democratic harmony between contending parties, a gift by example from the consummation of Aso and Olumo to the nation and the world.

    It proved a sham. The newly discovered fissure in the sides of Zuma Rock in Abuja was from the peripatetic Aso incumbent splitting his sides with laughter – ke, ke,ke!

    That Olumo/Aso combine attempted a similar crushing strategy in Lagos, but failed to roll over that city. First was the ominous withdrawal of security detail of the sitting governor – on “orders from above” of course. By the time Aso’s goons went for him however, he had disappeared. Even his own supporters, rushing to secure his safety, could not find the highly prized but elusive bird.  He had shifted his operations deep underground among one’s ultimate security – own people!  Aso Rock, in desperation, decided to ‘go for broke’. It ordered the posting of false, victory results, confident that the public would swallow them supinely – ‘for the sake of peace’. I know for a fact that the generalissimo was quietly warned that Lagos would terminally explode if he persisted. He quietly beat a tactical retreat, transferred his supervisory energy to other designated “must-wins”, Edo at the forefront.

    In Edo, it was indeed a case of – Aso/Olumo Strikes Again! The mastermind took over the functions of a supposedly neutral Electoral body and raised “Federal might” to its personalised apogee, dictating orders to the Edo State Electoral officer. Edo was one of our ‘special interest’ states and we followed that contest in real live time.

    “I said, declare those results.” Aso Rock bellowed down the line “Announce      them!”

    That officer fled to Abuja rather than announce falsehood. Distraught that they had been unable to capture the main prize – Lagos – Edo at least would not elude them.  But the opposition already had the authentic results.  The folder was rushed to me by Oshiomole’s aides as I was seated in a plane, virtually as the gates were about to close. I was able to present the truthful picture at the Congressional Hearing in Washington D.C. where a position that endorsed a fictitious election was already holding sway. There I met Kenneth Nnamani, former Senate president, seemingly in an unvoiced, genteel quandary, I felt. No matter, I fulfilled my mission,  silenced the misled lobbyists for democratic injustice with authentic facts – and figures! It was a totally unexpected intervention.

    And so, today?  The toes of the corpse that had been confidently buried have kept pushing up – a recording here, a confession there, threatened arrests, plots to silence witnesses and whistle-blowers. Where it will all end? Perhaps in nothing. But then, it only means that the corpses will remain restless. The undertakers of democracy – as they proudly, indeed contemptuously deemed themselves – are scampering for cover, but not without releasing toxic jets of distraction. But these protruding toes are only forerunners of more skeletons to be unearthed – or more accurately – tens of thousands of corpses – and millions of the displaced and traumatized, on account of those misapplied funds that were meant to keep society secure. For now, we shall spare the festivities stressful thoughts of abducted school pupils, trapped in an eternal nightmare.

    Yes, the disciples are exposed. They are being arraigned before both public and formal tribunals. But their mentors? The originators? Those who facilitated their emergence in the first place, by the same dastardly, egotistically unprincipled means. The real concrete mixers for the foundation of the home of electoral fakery?  Basking in the glow of impunity. ‘Gracing’ commemorations. Milking gerontocratic toleration at milikis. The grimace that contorts our faces when we watch the architects of a nation’s democratic retrogression gleefully cavorting under the generosity of amnesia or forgiveness from an abused people, is neither wished for nor enjoyed. Few of us are willing masochists. It is simply the intrusiveness of that hard taskmaster – memory – essential for the protective – and survival armoury,  even of peoples who already boast a historic tradition of resistance – such as Ogun, the people of ise ab’ojumu. Tolerating the intolerable is not tolerated by a culture that was formative of the growth of some of us. Upholding the principles of such formation or accidental acquisition through life experience enables any people to say, with pride – we have never succumbed to tyranny, not even when it wears the diversionary mask of buffoonery.

    So many mixed recollections and emotions as one’s gaze flitted across the faces of converging celebrants – the inspirational, the superfluous, and the best forgotten. Crowned heads and ancient regalia on call, radiating lustre through a white tent marooned atop the new plowed festive grounds whose name, Kobape, (May the crown endure)  suddenly acquired an aura of fulfilled prophesy – yes, the crown has endured. Time has however rendered the fortunes of those monarchs precarious, and the ‘unkindest cut of all” has been inflicted, more often than not, by their scions. Custodians of culture, they are trapped in the power play of their progenies. Yet Culture is never on terminal leave even in the domain of power.  Even some of the greatest culture reprobates and denigrators know it – witness how ostentatiously they have taken to prostrating full length before, and acknowledging “the source of all Yoruba”,  for the testamental delight of media cameras!

    ‘            How long ago did the obverse obtain?  Take your minds back to early months of the Sanni Abacha era. You may recall a certain gathering of the Council of Obas who had met to fashion a common ground to answer the truncation of democracy in the nation, and the amoral deprivation of an Ogun state indigene of a hard won victory. Who else but a son of Olumo would break into that meeting of crowned heads of Yoruba land, snatch the microphone from a royal contributor and proceed to deliver an insolent tirade at the assemblage. Not always the fault of Olumo, but that stoic rock sometimes discovers that it is landed with dubious exponents of its values.

    ‘Where we come from’ – to borrow a common preamble – you do not, even in a fit of power possession – intrude on a gathering of a people’s venerated custodians of cultural mores in their search for justice and equity. Such conduct defeats all behavioral norms, but of course it usefully serves to remind us of one of my favourite motor lorry inscriptions – No Condition is Permanent.  An even sterner rebuke would be the Yoruba  ‘ti won ba ran ni’se eru, aa fi t’omo je – if we are sent on a slave’s errand, we perform that errand it in the manner of a free born.  But why marvel at such anomalies! Conducting oneself in this uncultured manner boasts both precedents and emulations galore.  An even more senior member of the fraternity of the “managers of violence”, one who once notoriously mocked the Owelle of Onitsha for supposedly reducing his stature from ‘Zik of Africa’ to the ‘Owelle of Onitsha’, would later seek membership of his own local conclave of traditional rule, same as his earlier target of ridicule.  After which – Aso Strikes Again! – even his middling rank sufficed to enable him to browbeat the entire chieftaincy structure of Olumo by shredding the findings of kingmakers in one Olumo domain, flinging the confetti in their faces, before proceeding to install his own nominee.  He would top this feat also by pulling out a gun in his church – albeit intoning ‘Praise the Lord’ –  to settle a disagreement. The late Chief Simeon Adebo, doyen of the Nigerian civil service, was so distraught by the latter event that he sent for me, simply to discuss it. Somehow, that grand old man felt that, as a writer, I had an explanation for all forms of human aberrations.  I told him quite simply, “You can take Olumo out of Aso, but you cannot take Aso out of Olumo”.

    Should one have expressed astonishment when his civilian protégé in Olumo – before their terminal fallout – commenced proceedings to dethrone one of the revered monarchs of Olumo – and over what? For praying the government not to forget the promised completion of a minor bridge on a rural road in his domain!  That constituted an unpardonable criticism of government, said the Lord! I listened to the tape of that ‘improper interference’ in governance affairs and could only recall the recommendation of the late psychiatrist, another son of Olumo, Professor Thomas Lambo. He it was who once recommended an annual check-up for the mental state of African rulers!

    Each reminiscence triggers off another.  Here is one in an edifying mode, one that enables us – indeed reminds us in timely manner – to abandon the immediate locus of Olumo Rock for its expanse.  Contrast much of the foregoing with an outsider visitation, following the demise of the Olumo national sage, Obafemi Awolowo.  The Grand Impresario of Aso electoral culture, the Iwuruwuru chieftain, paid a condolence visit to the Awo home, which I have described elsewhere as the nation’s Inspirational Shrine of Democratic Culture, located – where else? Ogun State, specifically the town of Ikenne. The august visitor was reported to have declared:

    “My visit to Ikene and the home of Chief Obafemi Awolowo is quite  symbolic, because this is one great leader who had shown how things should be done in this country.”

    Thus spoke Iwuruwuru. He went on to laud Obafemi Awolowo as having laid a sound foundation for the development of Western Nigeria and the whole country by his contribution. Wuru also paid homage at Awolowo’s grave, where he prayed that his  ‘labour for a great Nigeria would not be in vain.’  How Awolowo’s body was responding to this untoward visit by an institutionalized scourge of democracy we can only conjecture, but the mind of the living may be forgiven for fastening onto that image of a body turning in its grave.

    What we do know however, is that his widow, the grand matriarch herself matched Wuruwuru culture for ‘culture’. She received him with characteristic Yoruba courtesies, only permitting herself to remark, and I quote:

    “ I am so happy you are here. I never thought you could visit Ikenne, not to talk of Awolowo’s house,” and she directed that Iwu and his entourage be taken on a tour of the house.”

    You or I would have sent a child to ‘accidentally’ empty a pail of slop on him, but then, when you look for exemplars in the culture of ib’ojumu, there she reposes, unflappable on her marble plinth. Such rarities diffuse a glow of matriarchal magnanimity that rebukes one’s inclination towards ‘just deserving’ as opposed to ‘just conduct’ – ise ab’ojumu  against wuruwuru, jankariwo and janduku etc.  Concerning her late partner, he was, very simply, a lifelong quester for, and expositor of a democratic culture, theory reinforced by praxis, for its unvarnished establishment on earth as an existential imperative.  Awolowo’s home remains, till this day, the acknowledged shrine for true pilgrims committed to that democratic vision, and the finest, unmatched ‘solid mineral’ that this nation can claim to have mined from her unlimited resources. Those who dispute this are urged: simply read his prodigious political treatises, and make informed comparisons. Bring on your ‘solid’ mineral of that generation and let us have an independent assayer.

    Alas for Olumo, her fated, twisted partnership with Aso seems interminable. Here is an excerpt from my 2007 lecture, when Olumo had virtually become an extension of Aso, jettisoned all restraining culture from the former and ‘returned to sender’ – that is, returned to infect Olumo with the – not simply uncultured, but – uncouth face of power. I quote:

    “Aso – let us continue to stress – is not just a static symbol of Power, but embraces both the exercise of, and the manners, and affectations of power even after an individual’s departure from office. It signals an active essence that percolates through to individuals and coteries, affects agencies and satellites of power throughout a nation, including, alas, here in Ogun state.  Traversing Ogun state at this time, a visitor cannot but remark a phenomenon that triggers off memory of that phase of Abacha’s desperation for self-perpetuation, one that resulted in the sprouting of sycophantic excrescences on the landscape and air waves of the most stomach-churning kind, the unbridled praise-singing that seeks to conjure up universal approbation even from trees, rocks, hills and valleys – extending even to infants! At least, Sanni Abacha had a purpose, however sinister and warped. To what end is the present inundation of such fulsome choruses in Ogun State? Is governance no longer supposed to be by performance and example?  Or have we settled for a culture of governance by billboards?” End of Quote

    Today, at the very least, one can claim that the sordid implantations of “governance by billboards”, noisome phrase-mongering for non-existent achievements, have vanished off the Olumo landscape.  For nearly eight years of dubious claims they were once inescapable, sprouting up every few yards along the streets, fouling up urban centres, desecrating villages with the ego-driven advertisements of non-achievement, and the patronizing exhortations to the people to give praise to  “the giver of all good things”.  Even infants were pictured singing praises of the colossus who brought them education! How many thousands of billboards, I would ask myself, would Awolowo have deserved by comparison for his seminal educational policy, and its execution? In my bush forays, I had become accustomed to encountering these displays fighting for survival beside dilapidated buildings that were supposed to be schools, and nondescript shacks that denoted abandoned projects.  Billboards where our biblical eponym fought and vanquished illusory monsters while trapped “in the lion’s den”!

    All vainglories sooner or later pass away, leaving nothing but the transience of power and the corruptibility of birds of passage with human heads.  And, to bring us down to earth, down to objective assessment of how we have augmented  the bequest of sound foundations, what greater mortification could possibly befall the people of Ogun, than to see this pioneer beneficiary of Awolowo’s vision fall to an abysmal low in the annual scholastic contest called WAEC! When and how did the rot commence?  These are hard, soul-searching questions that do not brook evasion.

     

    Enough of reminiscences, sweet and sour. Let us make room for a final narrative of immodesty.  After all, others have not been niggardly of late in praise of their own corners of the nation, even to the extent of dubbing us (among others) envious of their own achievements. I read one lately whose catalogue of Firsts in virtually every human undertaking checked me in stride. True or false, I have not bothered to check, but it all sounded authentic. Fortunately, one remains blissfully self-sufficient and content in the uniqueness of one’s own collective attainments. It goes beyond chauvinism or sentiment therefore that I designate our own historic landmark, Olumo, as the critical touchstone for assessing Ogun’s fidelity to her own history.  Its significations – as instructive contrast to other representative rocks, rivers, waterfalls – indeed any landmarks – may be read, admittedly, more as an act of faith or a case of selective history. My response is simple: let us take it as a provocation to the potentials of a people, an attempt to recall all, to whom Olumo is home, to their finest values, bring them to a recognition of the need to re-configure and re-furbish what is not merely symbol but also history.  Olumo – let us recollect – was a site of resistance, and it was impregnable in its time!

    The culture of ise ab’ojumu – just conduct – leads to Justice, which remains one of the ineradicable intangibles of human heritage. No culture that the world has ever produced can surpass a culture that is founded on justice – and this includes the culture of resistance to injustice, one that may manifest itself through modes of overt activism and militancy to those of passive resistance.  Now, why do I so righteously attribute to Ogun state an exemplary status within that culture of justice and fair play?

    The obvious answer lies in that immediate and vivid history that should be taught all children, right from infancy.   Even more grievous than the act of deprivation of Olumo by Aso Rock of the harvest of a universally acclaimed contest, was the assault on her dignity and entitlement to equity and undiscriminating regard! A disdainful attempt was made to shove down the people’s throats a whimsical substitute for a nationally evolved leader, violating the expressed will of millions. With near total unanimity, this surrogate was rejected. This is not an attempt to open old wounds, but what is history good for, if not to act as our pointer and teacher? Once made, history cannot be effaced.

    Rejection of that proxy was widespread within the nation, among Yoruba and non-Yoruba, but was naturally lodged at its deepest among his own people in Ogun state: they reacted with contempt for that substitute, inducing almost total social ostracism.  All known human communities will always harbour the negative exceptions, the collaborators and time-servers – I believe that Christian history records one among twelve. Well, the proportion was far, far lower among the people of Olumo where, in fact, the spearheads of resistance to that offered insult were most resolutely entrenched. That is the culture to which I refer, the culture that looks Power in the face and rejects its culture of dictation and imposition, guided by the faith of ise or iwa ab’ojumu.  It is also known as the democratic culture. Unabashedly, I hold this history enshrined as the finest hour of the people of Ogun state! If nothing else, this moral triumph remains well worth celebrating.

    But now, is this perhaps a new opportunity to redress that past? Aso Rock came down physically to Olumo this past week, decked in its cultural outfit, adorned by the idiosyncratic ‘steeple’ cap of the host, and decked in national colours. This was the occasion when the wheel seemed to have come full circle, and closure appeared to be within grasp. Here is the explication.

    The historic results of Olumo’s bid for power – as already emphasized – may have been annulled by Aso Rock – they were never discredited, never challenged.  It is the annulment that stands discredited, even treasonable! The 2015 election that brought the present Aso incumbent to power was also not disputed, the votes were overwhelmingly and freely given, defeat conceded by the opponent – the first ever such national unanimity since that watershed election of June 12th 1993.  In that respect, both Visitor and the martyred president are two of a kind – authentic products of the democratic venture, leaving all intervening occupants – that is, for over two decades – mere impostors.  Power holders they were, indisputably, but examined through a truthful democratic prism – a succession of  fidi hee, without exception.

    Viewed from an accommodating mind, the vicious cycle of denial appears to be moving – symbolically – towards terminus. If it is claimed that this visit was a birthday gift from Aso to Olumo however, then it is still a paltry handout, incomplete, since Olumo has stood at the vanguard of democracy and paid a heavy price. She won gold, but was offered pewter.

    Still missing is a final rectification that remains overdue to the festering wound of injustice, scabbed over – yes – but raw and pulsating for all that! The beneficiaries of that dogged pursuit are many, including the current incumbent of Aso Rock, himself an exemplar of the rare breed of persistence in the ambiguous face of justice, one whose name, in gargantuan letters now dominates the final approach to Abeokuta, home to Olumo.  The lettering hits you in the face! I could not help conceding – yes, a tribute so typical of the ise ab’ojumu of his hosts, children of Olumo, to name this ultra-modern housing project after the Aso Rock visitor. Musing across faces of Ogun State worthies at the rites of commemoration, among them those who had the opportunity but failed to overcome guilt, envy, personal inadequacy, and deep character warp to make their peace with history, it struck me as an opportunity for a historic but welcome irony, were Aso Rock itself, the originator of the infamous democratic disjunct, to confront the terms of a moral debt incurred by that Aso promontory, and bring to closure an unruly chapter in a nation’s history.  Now, how may this be effected?

    First – and here we come to my final act of anniversary reminiscences – a wedge of history that is both instructive and – puzzling! After the brutal curtailment of a military occupancy of Aso Rock – ‘Dodan Camp’ more accurately at the time – his successor, our same surviving spawn but suspect growth of Olumo at that first coming – ordered that the portrait of the murdered ruler be hung in all government and public offices for a full calendar year afterwards. It was, in effect, a diarchy of the living and the dead under whose shade he negotiated survival. That macabre display of fearful deference was eased out only when the departed was further immortalized on the nation’s postage stamp. Was it however  Olumo’s  ise ab’ojumu – just conduct – that had yet to thin out in the veins of that incumbent through time and power? Or was it wise inner promptings that his anointment was a mere forerunner of future power contrivances that would be known as  f’idi hee, the appeasement of, indeed pandering to, forces of which he was then mortally in awe?  It should not matter to us. The demands of Olumo today are actually far more modest, less bizarre, eminently doable and of positive augury:

    Honour this democratic flag-bearer and martyr with a postage stamp or currency bill, AND inscribe that name – MOSHOOD ABIOLA – in the scroll of Nigeria’s past presidents, that the restless ghosts of Aso and Olumo may retreat, and settle back, hand in hand, in their primordial caves!

    Abundant Anniversary Returns of this Fortieth to the people of Ogun and other celebrant states across the nation!

    Wole SOYINKA

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • ‘Why some languages die’

    ‘Why some languages die’

    The Bible Society of Nigeria (BSN) was 50 on Monday. In this interview with reporters, BSN General Secretary/Chief Executive Officer Rev Richard Dare Ajiboye speaks on its   achievements and challenges, among others. Joseph Eshanokpe was there.

    Why are you celebrating?

    Although we are celebrating 50 years, Bible work started in Nigeria in 1807 by The British and Foreign Bible Society (BFBS), The American Bible Society and The Scottish Bible Society. The three of them were in this country. American Bible Society will be 200 years old by May this year while the BFBS was founded in 1804. This our building was donated to us by The British and Foreign Bible Society when they were in Nigeria. They were operating from here.

    Between 1959 and 1971 we had three expatriate General Secretaries – Rev James Taylor, Ross Manning and Jacob Wood. The first indigenous General Secretary was Most Rev Dr. Joseph Soremekun; he took over in 1971. And from then till now, we have had seven and I am the eighth indigenous General Secretary. When translation started, the first Bible to be published was the Efik Bible in 1868, but in 1965, the then Eastern State Governor Sir Akanu Ibiam agitated for the establishment of a Nigerian Bible Society and in February 8, 1966, The Bible Society of Nigeria (BSN) was formed. Since then we have been doing our best to translate the word of God. In addition to what was done by the ABS, BFBS and The Scottish Bible Societies, we now have the complete Bible in 24 Nigerian languages and this year we should be able to add the 25th.

    We are celebrating the goodness of God to us as an organisation. If I am the eighth General Secretary, having eight successions is not a joke. For an organisation to pass through such generation of leadership and still standing in an environment like ours in Nigeria, it is not a joke. In our Bible distribution, in 2000, we distributed less than 300,000 Bibles in a year, but last year we distributed 2.3 million copies. In translation, before now, we have never completed any translation project in less than 38 years, but we started some projects last year and we are trusting God that before the end of 2020 we should be able to dedicate them.  These projects are Epie and Ogbia Languages in Bayelsa State. We are also starting this year Okun Bible Language translation. The language is spoken in Kogi State. We believe God that these projects will not take up to 12 years to complete.

    For an organisation that depends on donations, considering the nature of things in the country to survive for 50 years, is by the grace of God. That was why we had to celebrate. This  kicked off on January 31, with a thanksgiving service at the Cathedral Church of Christ, Marina. On February 2, we were in Enugu for a lecture delivered by Most Rev Emmanuel  Chukwuma. The event was chaired by Chief Emeka Anyaoku and on the Fourth in Abuja, there was a lecture by Bishop Matthew Kukah. It was chaired by General Yakubu Gowon and on the Eighth in Lagos, a lecture was delivered by Chief Olusegun Obasanjo; the event was chaired by Mr Felix Ohiwerei. On February 6, there was a luncheon with staff and former staff and our donors, while on February 5, a Mary Jones’ Walk to replicate what Mary Jones did in 1804 held. She was a young Welsh girl who loved the Bible so much and the parents could not afford it. So, she would go to the church to read, but not satisfied, she was going to the house of a neighbour to read. Her parents could not buy, so she saved money for six years to buy the Bible. She walked a distance of 40 kilometres to buy the Bible. When she got to the place, the only Bible left had been paid for by a priest. When she was told, she broke down. The person selling the Bible had to arrange accommodation for her because it was late and gave her the copy, saying that the person that had paid for the Bible would wait until they got another consignment. So, we want to demonstrate what she did that led to the formation of Bible Societies. When the priest that sold the Bible to her got to London, he narrated his experience and asked the people, why don’t we form an organisation that will make the word of God available and be waiting for people, rather people waiting for Bible? That was how the British and Foreign Bible Society was formed in 1804. On the sixth we held another thanksgiving at Fountain of Life Church.

    We planned to give out 100,000 copies of the Bible free if the funds were available. This would cost us N50 million. We would unveil our Legacy Bible. It is meant to be handed over from generation to generation. This process of bequeathing it can last as long as 200 years.

    What does it take to be the chief executive officer of this organisation?

    Well, it takes the grace of God. Before now, I thought I had known much about leadership having occupied leadership positons at different levels, in this organisation until I became the General Secretary; I now know better. To influence people, for an organisation like this, you need the help of the Holy Spirit. You need also to be deeply rooted in the Word of God. You must be able to balance discipline in line with the word of God. I have seen that in a Christian organisation, people do not believe that discipline should be maintained. They will remind you that the Bible said we should love our neighbours as we love ourselves. So as a leader you should know when to draw the line and discipline people with love. Besides the spiritual competence, occupying this position requires that you have sound leadership competence. Now I have to think of how to pay the salary of about 200 staff members and, for me,  to do that, will not an easy task. It requires leadership competence. So, it means you must be versed in leadership skills. You must be sound in both educational and professional competence. Your attitude to money, women must be impeccable. You must have a good home to occupy this seat because you must be of good example to others.

    Does BSN have a printing press?

    Our business is not like the secular businesses because we are not profit making. We do not have a printing press because we cannot afford it. I went to China to find out the cost of a small press that can print two million copies of the Bible in a year. It will cost about N2.5 billion to buy such a machine. We do not have such money.

    What are BSN’s challenges

    My greatest challenge as the CEO is funding and the second challenge is piracy. If I have fund, I will drive away pirates out of the market.

    How has BSN contributed to national growth and development?

    In Nigeria we are near zero when it comes national growth or economic development. Nigeria is one of the poorest countries in the world. Her per capita income is very low. When we talk about economic growth, it is about increase in Gross Income or our Gross Domestic Product (GDP).  In essence what other companies produce in a year can increase in terms of volume but if it does not translate into the personal life of people, in basic amenities, we cannot claim to have economic development. Translating to having housing, basic needs, transportation, security etc will mean economic growth and development. Let me relate BSN to national growth and development. In BSN, we are contributing to securing our culture. Somebody said that the death of a language is the death of a culture. Some of the languages that are dead today are dead because they did not have any orthography. They were not in any written form so when the older generation that could only speak the language pass on the language dies. Nothing for anybody to refer to. We have translated to 24 Nigerian languages and are working on 13 at the moment at the cost of N40 million per translation project. By this, we are securing the language and culture of the country. Culture, to a large extent, is communicated through language. By translating, publishing and distributing, we employ people and pay them salary. We pay salary of over 200 staff, helping them earn income which contribute to economic growth. We pay the Customs to clear our Bibles; we pay the shipping companies.

    So with all these, we are contributing to national growth.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Battling diarrhoea, the global child-killer disease

    Battling diarrhoea, the global child-killer disease

    The fight against diarrhoea got a boost when Reckitt Benkisser, the world’s leading consumer health and hygiene company, upped its commitment to the eradication of the disease among Nigerian children. The intervention could not have come at a better time than now when the nation is battling other health challenges, such as polio, Lassa fever and HIV/AIDS.  But, what are the socio-economic implications of the company’s multi-billion naira partnership with the Federal Government to fight the scourge? Assistant Editor (Arts) OZOLUA UHAKHEME reports. 

    Unknown to many, diarrhoea is much deadlier than AIDS, malaria and measles combined as it kills 2,195 children daily. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention described diarrhoea as a common illness and a global killer. Diarrhoea accounts for  one in nine child deaths worldwide, making it the second leading cause of death among children under the age of five. For children with HIV, diarrhoea is even more deadly; the death rate for these children is 11 times higher than the rate for children without HIV.

    Despite the sobering statistics, strides made over the last 20 years have shown that in addition to rotavirus vaccination and breastfeeding, diarrhoea prevention focused on safe water and improved hygiene and sanitation is not only possible, but cost effective: every $1 invested yields an average return of $25.50.

    According to the United Nations Children Education Fund (UNICEF), the diarrhoea prevalence rate in Nigeria is 18.8 percent and is one of the worst in sub-Sahara Africa and above the average of 16 percent. Diarrhoea, it said, accounts for over 16 per cent of child deaths in Nigeria and an estimated 150,000 deaths mainly among children under five occur yearly. It is mainly caused by poor sanitation and hygiene practices.

    Respiratory infections kill another 240,000. The body observed  that trends in the past five years allow for cautious optimism that significant progress will be made in reducing  the number of people globally, who practise open defecation.

    According to the Director of Project, Pharmaceutical Society of Nigeria –Partnership for Advocacy in Child and Family Health, Remi Adeseun, no fewer than 195,000 children died of pneumonia while about 150,000 lose their lives as result of diarrhoea in Nigeria yearly.

    Diarrhoea is also closely linked to mal-nutrition, a condition that is associated with more than half of all under-five deaths. Undernourished children, in turn, have compromised immune systems and at higher risk for developing pneumonia – which also contribute to high children mortality in the country. This chain reaction illustrates that good hygiene practices such as hand washing are critical for child survival and development

    In fact, 2008 was declared by the United Nations General Assembly as the International Year of Sanitation with the primary objective of mobilising both political and financial support for accelerating progress on sanitation development.

    In Nigeria, the Hand Washing Campaign is one of three targets outlined in the Action Plan developed by stakeholders for commemoration of the 2008 International Year of Sanitation (IYS). The two other targets are creating enabling environments to sustainably expand sanitation and hygiene programmes and construction of one million latrines.

     

    Timely Interventions

     

    However, it is not all gloomy for the Nigerian children. Already, the Federal Government in partnership with other NGOs and corporate bodies is determined to eradicate diarrhea among children. Recently, Minister of Health, Prof Isaac Adewole, who admitted that these are tough times, assured that Nigeria has an ambitious plan to introduce new life-saving vaccines over the next several years to tackle children related illness such as polio.

    On January19, in Abuja, Nigeria’s capital, Reckitt Benkisser upped its commitment to the eradication of diarrhoea among Nigerian children with the announcement of a multi-billion partnership with Federal Government to fight the scourge of diarrhoea among Nigerian children. This was disclosed when officials of the company paid a courtesy visit to the Vice President, Professor Yemi Osinbajo where they presented the ‘Save a Child a Minute’ N7.2billion  programme to him. Under the programme, Nigeria will receive N1.2 billion towards creating what the company called, a Healthier and Prosperous Nation.

    The RB delegation included- Rahul Murgai, Managing Director, RB West Africa; Andrew Fleming, Deputy Head of Political Section, British High Commissioner and Patty O’ Hayer, RB Global Head of External Communications & Affairs.

    Others are  Chairman RB Nigeria  Chief Olu Falomo, Marketing Director RB West Africa Oguzhan Silivrili and Chief Financial Officer RB West Africa Alasdair Peach, Deputy Country Director, Save the Children Kwame S. Boate and  Director of Advocacy and Media, Save the Children Dr. David Olayemi.

    Murgai stated that RB’s global vision is “to provide our consumers with innovative solutions for healthier lives and  happier homes”.

    He disclosed that RB has been operating in Nigeria for over 50 years and remains one of the key priority markets for continued focus and investment. Accordingly, he maintained that RB has been working to create a culture of health and hygiene and is present in country with its portfolio of trusted brands like Dettol, Nurofen, Strepsils, Gaviscon, Durex, Harpic, Mortein, and Air Wick.

    He said RB is not looking at the Nigerian opportunity over short term but see a longer term potential and that Nigeria will remain the epicenter for African growth and plays an important strategic role in serving and developing other key markets in West Africa.

    “With Dettol, a trusted name among Nigerian households and mothers, we have been actively partnering with Ministry of Health, Nigerian Medical Association, Save The Children and other NGOs to create scaled awareness around good health and hygiene. As part of our ongoing commitment, we have already reached five million mothers and 3.9 million school children over last six years to improve maternal health and reduced infant mortality in line with Nigeria commitments to the Sustainable Development Goals.

    “However, these interventions though in right direction, need much greater participation and scale from like-minded corporate NGOs and government if we were to build a truly healthier and prosperous nation.

    ‘’We believe that the implementation of National Health Act, Rota-Virus and Wash Policy will all contribute to making Nigeria healthier,’’ Murgai said.

    The impact, according to the RB boss, is startling in human terms- as ‘one child dies every minute’ under the age of five from preventable diseases, specifically diarrhea.

    “Accordingly, we are announcing the ground breaking ‘Save a Child a Minute’ programme in partnership with Save The Children and Lagos State government being piloted in Shomolu LGA where we are working to reduce prevalence and incidence of diarrhea by 50% and mortality by 80 percent.

    “What  makes the programme ground-breaking is that for the first time, a holistic approach on the WHO Seven  point plan is being implemented in Africa. The knowledge is being shared with the Federal government in anticipation of creating a national movement to fast scale the programme,” Murgai added.

    Speaking specifically on Dettol’s commitment to increasing awareness around the importance of adopting healthy hand washing habits among children, Murgai revealed that the Dettol School Hygiene Programme (SHP) which was launched in 2009 has reached more than 3.9 million children since inception with various education materials and school visits to enlighten the pupils on the importance of personal hygiene

    ”Every year Dettol reaches over 1million new moms in hospitals and 1million school children through hand washing programmes in schools to reduce infant deaths and improve maternal health through its Dettol grassroots hygiene programmes,” he said.

    Not a few analysts agree that these joint interventions have become very critical as the Water and Sanitation Programme Research reports that Nigeria loses N455 billion yearly, which is 1.3 percent of the Nigeria’s GDP to poor sanitation and hygiene which increases the risk of disease and malnutrition.

    Diarrhea disease remains a leading cause of mortality and morbidity of children in Sub-Saharan Africa, where unique geographic, economic, political, socio-cultural, and personal factors interact to create distinctive continuing challenges to its prevention and control.

    A number of different social, political, and economic factors are present in Sub-Saharan Africa which contribute to the constant morbidity from acute and persistent diarrhea, as well as intermittent epidemics of cholera and dysentery common to this region of the world.

    This continuing epidemic deserves sustained programmatic and research attention as international public health moves on to confront newer issues in infectious disease and the changing burdens of disease associated with the demographic transition.

    There are a lot of scientific evidence showing the significance of hand washing at critical moments to reduction in diarrhea which is the second leading cause of death amongst Nigerian Children (after malaria). The most recent study indicates that hand washing can reduce diarrhea episodes by about 30% and up to 47% reduction has been achieved in some cases.

    Globally, UNICEF is supporting 50 countries, including Nigeria, to implement Community Approaches to Total Sanitation (CATS) such as Community Led Total Sanitation. This is aimed at empowering communities to identify their sanitation challenges and take necessary actions to end open defecation.

    Considering the critical role of healthcare system in a nation’s well being, no amount of partnership between corporate bodies and government will be too much in order to provide adequate and effective healthcare services to Nigerians especially the children under-five years. It is expected that multinationals and other corporate bodies should key into initiatives in critical sectors that truly touch lives.

    Little wonder that four northern states refused to let down their guards in the fight to kick polio from the region even though Nigeria has been delisted from polio endemic countries. Recently, the states signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Dangote Foundation, a pact worth about $100million to provide technical assistance to eradicate polio in the region.

    Aliko Dangote, while speaking at the ceremony in Kaduna, hailed the fact that Bill Gate believes that immunisation is life-saving, cost effective and a cornerstone of every primary health care system.

     

    Prevention and control

     

    There are key measures to prevent diarrhoea, which include: access to safe drinking-water; use of improved sanitation; hand washing with soap; exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months of life; good personal and food hygiene; health education about how infections spread and rotavirus vaccination. Diarrhoea is usually a symptom of an infection in the intestinal tract, which can be caused by a variety of bacterial, viral and parasitic organisms. Infection is spread through contaminated food or drinking-water, or from person-to-person as a result of poor hygiene.  Interventions to prevent diarrhea, including safe drinking-water, use of improved sanitation and hand washing with soap can reduce disease risk. Diarrhea can be treated with a solution of clean water, sugar and salt, and with zinc tablets.

     

    Causes of diarrhoea

     

    Infection: Diarrhoea is a symptom of infections caused by a host of bacterial, viral and parasitic organisms, most of which are spread by faeces-contaminated water. Infection is more common when there is a shortage of adequate sanitation and hygiene and safe water for drinking, cooking and cleaning. Rotavirus and Escherichia coli are the two most common etiological agents of diarrhea in developing countries.

    Malnutrition: Children who die from diarrhea often suffer from underlying malnutrition, which makes them more vulnerable to diarrhea. Each diarrhea episode, in turn, makes their malnutrition even worse. Diarrhea is a leading cause of malnutrition in children under five years old.

    Source: Water contaminated with human faeces, for example, from sewage, septic tanks and latrines, is of particular concern. Animal faeces also contain microorganisms that can cause diarrhea.

    Other causes: Diarrhoea disease can also spread from person-to-person, aggravated by poor personal hygiene. Food is another major cause of diarrhoea when it is prepared or stored in unhygienic conditions. Water can contaminate food during irrigation. Fish and seafood from polluted water may also contribute to the disease.

  • History as Osofisan wins prize

    History as Osofisan wins prize

    Renowmed playwright Prof Femi Osofisan has made history as the first black African to win the Thalia Prize for Theatre Criticism. He will be conferred with the award by the International Association of  Theatre Critics (IATC) in Septermber, EVELYN OSAGIE reports.

    Weeks after Prof Femi Osofisan won the coveted Thalia Prize 2016 for Theatre Critics, the Nigerian literati are still celebrating the feat.

    He will get the award from the International Association of Theatre Critics (IATC) in September.

    IATC, a United Nations Educational Scientific Cultural Organisation’s (UNESCO’s) Statute B partner in theatre criticism, is an association of theatre critics, scholars and  journalists in over 50 countries. The Thalia Award is the organisation’s highest honour awarded every two years to a scholar, theatre critic, or theatre practitioner whose writings have influenced critical thinking about theatre.

    Although the organisation is 60 this year, the prize is only 10 years old. Since it was created, its laureates include Eric Bentley (2006) and Richard Schechner (2010) of the United States, Jean-Pierre Sarrazac (2008) of France, Kapila Vatsyayan (2012) of India, and Eugenio Barba (2014) of Italy.

    Osofisan, who is Thalia Prize sixth laureate, has written over 50 plays and has hundreds of critical essays, four novels and five collections of poetry and the subject of several celebratory volumes in his honour. He bagged the prize two years after Nigeria became a member of IATC.

    In a statement announcing this year’s winner, former President, Canadian Centre of the IATC, Don Rubin, states that it was the Nigerian and Canadian Centres that nominated Osofisan in the belief that he is immensely deserving of being the first recipient from Africa of the IATC’s Thalia Prize.

    Rubin praised Osofisan for changing the way many people in other parts of the world now perceive Africa and African theatre.

    “He has led African theatre and drama through both his playwriting and his criticism, through his art, his journalism and his immense scholarship… Words have been his weapon against tyrannies of all sorts. Bringing his name to the whole world through the Thalia is not only appropriate but also a fitting addition to the distinguished names who have preceded him. We welcome Femi Osofisan to the ranks of Thalia laureates,” Rubin states.

    Winning the prize, Osofisan said it is, “heart-warming”. “I am happy to win. I was runner-up the year before last. I am happy that I got it this year.”

    In the same vein, the Nigerian literary community has expressed excitement over the playwright’s feat.

    Some have described the celebrated playwright and critic’s achievements as testament of the resourcefulness of the nation’s intelligentsia. Others say though Osofisan is not new to laurels, winning such a prestigious prize at 70 shows like old wine, the professor’s creative zest grows stronger with age.  Excerpts.

     

    President, IATC-Nigeria,

    Prof Emmanuel Dandaura

     

    “On behalf of the IATC-Nigeria secretariat, I am happy to inform you that one of our own, Prof Osofisan has been named winner of the coveted Thalia Prize 2016.

    “Osofisan becomes the first African and indeed first black to ever win this highly contested award which is coming shortly after I became the first Black and first African member of the executive committee of the IATC in 2014.”

     

    Prof  Olu Obafemi, Chairman, IATC

     

    “This is the first time the Thalia Award for theatre critics has been won by a black man and an African. We, on the IATC-Nigeria and the entire practitioners and critics of the theatre of Africa, proudly claim the honour. Osofisan is a worthy laureate of Thalia award which will certainly bring fillip and recognition to Nigerian and African theatre.

    “As a friend, I am richly enthused by the honour and I congratulate Femi for an honour most deserved.”

     

    Executive Secretary, National Institute for Cultural Orientation (NICO),

    Dr Barclays Ayakoroma

     

    “Professor Femi Osofisan has again made us proud in winning the 2016 Thalia award. He has always been my mentor. He is a genius. It is just unfortunate that Nigeria does not celebrate her intellectual repositories of knowledge. God no dey sleep.”

     

    President, SONTA, Prof Sunny Ododo

     

    “At the SONTA level, we are very happy and excited because Prof Osofisan is the first Blackman to win that award. As one of our foremost members, the award is an encouragement to other creative artists in our fold to continue to create new works. It is also a reward for consistently working hard.

    “IATC, which is the umbrella body of that awards the prize, has some working relationship with SONTA too. In fact, it is SONTA that brought the association to Nigeria. Prof Emmanuel Dandaura is the president of its Nigerian fold.

    It is just two years old in Nigeria and we have made this feat. It is also an endorsement and a clear testimony to the resourcefulness of Nigerian theatre critics, playwrights and artistes.

    “We can only wish him more creative strength, good health to continue to create as long as he is strong and agile. And we believe we are yet to still see the best of him because he keeps getting better and better. We look forward to more awards and recognitions. And we look forward to other theatre scholars, playwrights and artistes in our fold to also bring enduring and coveted laurels to Nigeria.”

     

    Executive Editor/Director,

    The NEWS/PM NEWS, Kunle Ajibade

     

    It attests to the greatness of Prof Osofisan’s gift as a playwright. I’m so happy for him partly because it is a wonderful birthday gift. Whoever is reading this should sing a song for the award winner who loves spicing his plays with songs.

     

    Past President, Association of Nigerian Authors (ANA), Prof Remi Raji

     

    “The name Femi Osofisan is staple in contemporary African drama; this award is an overdue recognition of his status, achievement and influence in modern drama. He has taken his genius as playwright, poet and director to other countries in Africa, Asia, America and Europe. The Thalia Prize is well deserved.”

     

    Former Member, House of Representatives and past ANA President, Dr Wale Okediran

     

    “Osofisan, easily Nigeria’s foremost theatre practitioner has remained active over the years plying his trade all over the world. His playwright skills, which has taken him to far flung places like China, Thailand, Serbia, among other places, has established him as an international artiste of note. In an era where some critics wrongly believe that literary awards are only the preserve of young writers, it is gladdening to see Prof Osofisan at almost 70 years prove the critics wrong. Apart from raising the bar of literary competitions, Femi Osofisan’s award is a refreshing reminder that the practice of Art is a lifelong career. My hearty congratulations to a teacher, mentor and friend.”

     

    Award-winning novelist and

    Professor of English Federal University Ndufu-Alike, Ebonyi State, Akachi Ezeigbo

     

    “I’m immensely proud of my colleague and friend, Prof Osofisan, for all his achievements. The Thalia Award is a strong affirmation of his greatness as a playwright, dramatist and theatre artist. He deserves the award.”

     

    Executive Producer, Thespian Family Theatre & Productions

     

    “On behalf of THESPIAN Family Theatre & Productions (TFT), I would like to say a big congratulations to Prof Osofisan on being awarded the 2016 prestigious Thalia Prize.

    “This is very well deserved. He is an author of very meaningful literature that touches the core of humanity and societal values. This aligns perfectly with our core purpose of ‘impacting the community through the performance arts’ and also informed our choice when we decided to stage two of his plays – the Midnight Hotel and Altine’s Wrath.

    “The underlying messages in the plays were so apt for the times and the social – political environment ,that in addition, we organised a special show, book reading and group discussion sessions for students in order to synthesis the key learning from Altine’s Wrath. We were quite pleased that the play made the young ones strongly resolve to uphold a value-based system that showcases the Nigerian as good family and community members, and not corrupt, insensitive and destructive.

    “Prof!’ as we at TFT fondly call him, is an icon that we are tremendously proud of. Thank you for making us proud in the Theatre Space and for engrafting a vision of what human and societal coexistence ‘should be’ or ‘should be not’ in the hearts of many!”

     

    Associate Professor of Theatre Arts University of Lagos, Dr Osita C. Ezenwanebe

     

    “Nigeria, congrats to a man who inspires me in the theatre industry. It is an honour well deserved. More grease to your elbow!”