Category: Arts & Life

  • For an ideal leadership

    For an ideal leadership

    Title: The Promise and Peril of Power
    Author : Soji Obebe
    Publishers: City Drum Ventures, Ibadan
    Reviewer: Edozie Udeze

    In The Promise and Peril of Power, Soji Obebe chronicles the reasons why many leaders in Africa and world-over, on assumption of office become tyrants and tin gods who end up terrorizing and traumatizing their citizens.  It is a booklet but it contains all the necessary ingredients that make it truly a treatise on political authority.  To him, there was the urgent need to write such a powerful and instructive booklet, letting readers see the fertility of being extremely wicked and abrasive while in office.

    He began thus: “Leadership with political power is transient”.  Even life itself in all its entirety is transient.  However, when entrusted with power, which is meant to be a guide towards making life and its circumstances good for the people, then a leader ought to use it well for the progress of the society.  Nevertheless, if you use this same power to oppress or hound and haunt the masses, sooner than later, you become good riddance to bad rubbish, “pleasantly forgotten and joyfully ignored,” so says the author.

    In essence, this booklet was done purposely to show leaders, men and women in positions of power and authority what power really entails.  It is a book meant to highlight the gains of good use of power in relation to the consequences or penalty of its misuse.  And even though power is sweet as espoused by Bertrand Russell, it is equally intoxicating.  “It is like a drug, the desire for which increases with habit and the quest for more acclaim.”

    Unfortunately, due to the intoxicating nature of power, those who have seized it even for the noblest and most desirable motives soon persuade themselves that there are indeed good reasons for not relinquishing it.  In Africa, for instance, the situations have been more worrisome and troubling with the likes of Emperor Bedel Bokasa of Central African Republic who rose to power on the crest of wickedness to torment his citizens.  His role saw the worst human enslavement and debasement in that part of Africa.

    So also was Field Marshal Idi Amin Dada of Uganda who became so swollen-headed that thousands of people lost their lives especially those who stood up to defend the common people.  Obebe situates his horrendous tenure this way.  “In the seventies, Idi Amin Dada, an uncouth and improperly tutored soldier, a glorified cannibal, gained power via a coup in Uganda.  He began to unleash a reign of terror on the land-locked nation of Uganda.  On this, two Ugandan journalists wrote: “three weeks after the take-over, seventy army officers and more than 2,000 men had died.  Within three months, 10,000 civilians had been slaughtered.  Indeed crocodiles basked beneath the Karume Falls Bridge, the Bridge of Blood, spanning  the River Nile…  For eight years the man they called the Black Hitler ruled over Uganda with unprecedented brutality.  Over these years, thousands upon thousands of innocent people had been murdered and tortured by Amin and his henchmen.”

    Others in his mould in Africa included Sergeant Samuel Doe of Liberia and Saddam Hussein of Iraq.  Close to them in Nigeria was General Ibrahim Babangida who ruled and plundered the nation’s huge and vast resources.  He was nicknamed Maradona, for he was indeed a good political dribbler who named himself, the evil genius.

    The author described Babangida this way: “His political philosophy could be summed up as lust to dribble.  He truly dribbled, hoodwinked and bamboozled Nigerians for eight years.  Eight years when he wasted the nation’s hard-earned petro-dollars on mindless and fruitless political engineering which he derailed by himself and his cohorts and advisers.  When he was in power, Babangida was more of a tin god.  He surrounded himself with intelligentsia to give his regime creditability, but then he went about doing what pleased him…”

    Sergeant Samuel Doe’s tenure was even worst, for, in the process he plunged Liberia into serious ethnic and internecine war that lasted for years and which also decimated the country.  Today Liberia has not recovered fully from the after effects of that pogrom and torment and torture.

    Obebe is saying, nonetheless, that leaders ought to be servants of the people.  He goes more biblical when he gave examples with Christ’s admonition to his apostles.  Whoever will be your leader will be the one that serves you.  Leadership in its truest sense is for service.  It is for the leader to see the numerous needs of the people and accede to them.  But a nation with a dictator is doomed.  “It is like casting one’s pearl before the swine… Gold ought to be sold to the person who knows its value.”  However, a good leader should know when there is good in what he does for the people.  His advisers should be able to give him sound advice to better the lot of the people; making them savour his leadership acumen and qualities.

    Invariably, no one truly knows the worth of a man until you entrust him with power.  “In Nigeria, the prayer of the people should be, let God give the country men who will be able to differentiate between the use and abuse of power.  Men who will be honest enough to admit it when their greed lure them to exceed the bounds of the power and trust reposed in them.  Indeed men who will remember always that political power, economic power, all powers, are ephemeral.  “No condition,” says the Zik of Africa, “is permanent.”  They should therefore do their best to use the authority they have for the joy and prosperity of many because to be in position of power is a rare privilege.”

  • Invisible Borders featured at the 56th Venice Biennale

    Invisible Borders featured at the 56th Venice Biennale

    As part of All the Worlds Future curated by Okwui Enwezor, Invisible Borders Trans-African Project is featured at the 56th Venice Biennale from May 9 to November 22, 2015.

    Featured at the Arsenale, Section 8, The Invisible Borders presentation at the Venice Biennale is titled A Trans-African Worldspace. The body of works is set up as a constellation of impulses, experiences, and deductions from five years of being active and on the road across myriad forms of borders.
    It is a space-installation aimed at presenting the project as a complimentary association between process and outcome.

    According to information, a part of the installation (Room 1) is designed to immerse the visitors in the processes of the road trip through collage of images, audio-visual documentations and cartographic depictions.

    Another part, Room 2, focuses on outcomes: specific bodies of works – photography, video and writings – realised by artists who were part of the road trips, workshops and site-specific interventions. Its works are beamed from a projector mounted almost 9 metres high and projecting vertically downwards onto three different screens laying flat on a black-carpeted floor. The room is kept dark to allow the projection pop out and be immersive.

    Also, texts from Emmanuel Iduma play the role of a mediator, creating reflective intermissions while sending pointers to the audience. The exhibition also features videos whose sound becomes the audio component of the entire installation.

    “The images, videos and texts have been carefully arranged and synchronised across the three screens such that they relate and reference each other while retaining the specificity of each artist’s intentions. In this sense, this exhibition is not a group show, but a collective one, the difference being that the focus is on presenting our endeavour as the outcome of impulses which took shape within a collaborative frame and context,” a statement from the body reads.

    Invisible Borders Trans-African Photographers Organisation” is an artist-led initiative founded by Emeka Okereke and registered as a not-for-profit organisation in Nigeria. The pioneer members and participants at the first road trip of the Organization include Ray Daniels Okeugo, Emeka Okereke, Uche Okpa – Iroha, Amaiza Ojeikere, Uche James Iroha, Nike Adesuyi Ojeikere, Lucy Azubuike, Charles Okereke, Chriss Aghana Nwobu and Unoma Giese.

  • Another chance at school

    Another chance at school

    Medinat Kanabe who recently visited an adult school, writes on a developing urge by Nigerian unlettered adults to take another shot at schooling.

    UP until recently, Chinwe Obianuju was an illiterate who had never had any form of education. To take her out of the ‘hood,’ her husband enrolled her in an adult school; but she didn’t take it seriously, so he stopped paying her tuition. But Obianuju did not mind, as she was never interested in the first place.

    Obianuju was however forced to make a u-turn one day. Hear her: “One day, I was disgraced as a result of my inability to read and write English, so I ran back to the school.  My husband insisted that he would not pay my tuition again, but I decided to shoulder the payment myself, not knowing that he didn’t want me to continue because he had gotten into a relationship.

    “One day, I caught him sending a love SMS to his girlfriend; he was doing it in my presence because he didn’t know that I had learnt to read and write. In school we were also taught Mind Programme, which included how to relate with our spouses at home; so I didn’t quarrel with him, unlike before.

    “Rather, I read out the text clearly and told him ‘well done o!’ He realised his folly, apologised and we made up.”

    Now in her forties, Obianuju is proud of her achievement and now goes around encouraging her illiterate friends to go back to school.

    On her part, Mrs Oluwatobi Jamiu said; “Since I started going to school, I have changed a lot. My children too noticed the changes in me. One day I was very sick but insisted on going to school. My children thought I was charmed because they knew the condition I was in. I threatened to sneak out unless they called my aunty (her teacher) to tell her I was sick, which they did before I stayed back home. I hate missing classes because I learn a lot at school.”

    She, like Obianuju enrolled to learn to read and write after having all her children, and she is happy about it.

    Another woman who gave a testimony of her new-found knowledge was Khadijat Musiliu, a trader. Musiliu told The Nation that she didn’t just learn how to read, write and speak good English but also grew her confidence and learnt to manage her business very well. “I learnt how to manage my business very well and respect my customers. It was raining one day and I went to my place of business in the rain. If it were before, I would have stayed back at home. The sale I made that day was unbelievable.”

    As if echoing the feeling of the three respondents above, a professor of Curriculum and Science Education, Obafemi Awolowo University, Shola Ehindero, said when a person achieves adult literacy, he or she becomes happy.

     “The problem of inferiority complex will no longer be there. She may have had problems relating with her children and husband before, but she will now gain more confidence. She will not see herself as a burden to the children and husband. She may be very rich but that inferiority complex will be there, if she is an illiterate. So if she acquires these basic things where she can communicate confidently and with conviction, the family becomes one and they will be involved in collective decision-making.”

    Expatiating further on the value of adult education and the best way to apply it, Ehindero said literacy is of different types and the concept of adult education should be regarded as basic literacy because there can be technological literacy, scientific literacy, medical literacy, literary literacy among others.

    He said “The basic thing the adult goes through is the basic literacy because he or she is learning how to write and read.”

    A nation of high level of illiteracy

    In 2013, Mr Nyesom Wike, then acting as Supervisory Minister of Education declared that the number of adult illiterates in Nigeria had risen to an alarming 35 million. That was from the previously established figure of 25 million in 1997, justifying inadvertently a strong need for stakeholders to redouble effort at educating the adult citizenry.

    The minister, who made this known at that year’s International Literacy Day, also added that an embarrassing 10.5 million children were out of school; most probably on their way to swelling the current figure (of 35million). He therefore identified literacy as one of the key solutions to national challenges of insecurity, poverty, poor health condition amongst others.

    He also said that eradicating illiteracy in the country should not be left in the hands of the federal, state and local governments alone, stressing that such era was gone.

    As if corroborating the minister’s declaration, Ehindero said one of the major problems Nigeria is having is high illiteracy level. He said a country with low level of literacy is very likely to have high level of corruption and explosion. For instance, he said if President Buhari, despite his good intentions of fighting corruption, is not able to carry the populace along, all sorts of negative consequences will set in, including superstition, corruption and the likes.

    He concluded that the greatest problem any country can have is a prevalence of illiterate citizens, and lamented the current situation, where the government is investing massively on higher education at the detriment of basic education.

  • 50-year-old widow  needs N5m to battle cancer

    50-year-old widow needs N5m to battle cancer

    Adebayo Oladunmoye, a council worker currently battling a protracted cancer ailment needs N5 million to effect treatment.

    Pale-looking Mrs. Adebayo Oladunmoye was a pitiable sight penultimate Friday. It was few minutes after her arrival from India on an aborted medical trip. She had to cut short the trip because she couldn’t raise the required amount to undergo a cancer treatment.

    The once bubbling woman had shrunk from 68kg to 49kg. She had to be aided to sit, and looked every inch in pain. “All I need is the help of Nigerians and God,” she managed to say after much effort.

    The 50-year-old widow’s troubles began in March 2014. The native of Fiditi in Afijio Local Government in Oyo was diagnosed with obstructed jaundice at Bowen University Teaching Hospital, Ogbomosho, Oyo State. A referral to India therefore became imperative. At Global Hospital Chennai, India, various tests showed she was suffering from cancer of the pancreas.

    The community development worker, who had been diabetic for 30 years, underwent surgeries. That was in August 2014. She was placed on radiotherapy after the surgeries. At the last count, she had gone through 24 cycles of radiotherapy.  She also went through four cycles of chemotherapy.

    The extensive medical treatment gulped a whooping N5.6m raised from amongst relations and a philanthropist.  She was discharged in October and returned on 2nd of November 2014. The medical team asked her to return for review of the case in March 2015, but all efforts to raise the required N5m have proven abortive.

    To worsen matters, she started experiencing severe stomach aches, which have further aggravated her condition. Though she managed to return to India, Oladunmoye could not be treated because she didn’t have the required amount. In the last six weeks, the staff of Oyo East Local Government Council has been unable to eat anything.

    “She cannot eat. Anything she takes is vomited,” Tijesunimi Oladunmoye, her last child, said. The 24-year-old, who is on National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) in Anambra State, said watching her emanciate has been heart-wrenching. ‘She used to be lively and bubbly until this came up. It’s such a painful thing to see how her condition is deteriorating.”

    At the moment, Oladunmoye lives only on liquids such as tea or coke.

    “Everything else that I try to eat gets thrown out,” she stated. A medical report obtained from Global Health Hospital confirms that she needs N5million to undergo another round of chemotherapy and an immunity-building mechanism in her body.

    She appealed to public-spirited Nigerians to come to her aid. “I believe in miracles,” she stated. “I know God has a purpose for my life. Therefore, I will ask Nigerians to help me out. I will appreciate whatever anyone can render to make me regain my health,” the widow stressed.

    Well-meaning Nigerians who wish to help out should make their donations to ADEBAYO, OLADUNMOYE OLAYEMI

    GTBANK Account No: 00050722328

  • ‘Our mission is to make people regain their confidence’

    ‘Our mission is to make people regain their confidence’

    Founder of Genius Camp, an adult school with branches in Lagos and Ogun States, Oluwarotimi Johnson, speaks with Medinat Kanabe about his passion for educating adults amongst others.

    Why open a school for adults instead of the normal school? What have been the challenges?

    I believe God opened my eyes to the area of adult education to make the ‘illiterates’ relevant to today’s world. When we started, we faced challenges of adults who thought there was no way they could learn to read again, that they have other things to do and responsibilities to meet…. So what we did was go the extra mile to encourage them.

    What makes us unique is that even if you have not been to school at all, we make sure that you’re able to read under a few weeks. We have a curriculum that we have developed, because if we say we should follow the laid down primary school curriculum, we would take too long teaching something we can teach in a short time.

    I also believe God wants me to help a lot of people regain their lost confidence. I know people who look big from the outside but small things will make them feel defeated. Another reason why I opened the school is that there are many people between age 16 and 70, who get insulted because they can not  write a teller to deposit money in the bank. Whenever I see such people, I try as much as I can to cover them up by assisting them.  So, it is a passion in me.

    Some parents have come here to enrol their children for JAMB or WAEC or other exams tutorials, but end up registering themselves because they see other adults like themselves here learning.  I also like to build people’s confidence.

    How do you convince them to enrol?

    Many people want to enrol for adult education, but for some reasons they refuse. I tried to find those reasons, work on them to my advantage and then advertise the school to them.

    One of the reasons is that most of the places where they teach adults do not befit them. You don’t expect a man who has four houses, several cars and very comfortable, to come and receive lectures sitting on a chair meant for primary school children.

    Another problem is time. Many of them are very busy people, so we allow them decide the time that is convenient for them. Apart from that we have professional lecturers who understand their profession.

    What do you put them through when they first come in and what reason do they give for coming to school?

    Because we are professionals, we already have an idea of what they are coming in with. We first do an interview to know each person’s reason for coming. Some want to go to school to prove their past generations wrong; some because they just want to learn to read and write; some because they want to do well in business; or just meet up in the society  not necessarily to go to the university. Some, as pastors want to go to school so as to relate in English language with their congregations who cannot speak the local dialect used in the church.

    We also ask the level of education they have had before to determine their level of intelligence, so we can know where to fix them, because no matter how far or low your educational background is, we have a place for you.

    We teach anything as long as that is what the person requires to learn. We teach adults the A B C alphabets; we have gone as far as holding their hands to write. We also teach them the two-letter words and other basic things. The way we have structured it, even if you have never been in a formal school setting and no matter you age, you will be accepted.

    What do you call the classes?

    We call them levels because the word level makes them feel better than calling them Basic 1. We also refer to some as language class and exam class too. Usually, they learn in three weeks, what a 4-year old would learn in a year; don’t forget that the adult brain is more developed.

    What else do you teach them?

    We have a course called the Mind Programme, structured to help programme their minds so that they can manage issues that occur outside the classrooms, like communication, how to do business differently from an illiterate; such basic things that they don’t pay attention to, including how to deal with people, how to handle family issues, break barriers; how to

  • At the mercy  of new wave  Lagos traffic robbers

    At the mercy of new wave Lagos traffic robbers

    It seems the bad old days are back on Lagos roads, as the city recently applauded for its relative safety from crimes, seems to be receding fast. Gboyega Alaka reports.

    Some fifteen odd years ago, Tunji Bello, the current Secretary to the Lagos State Government, had a most scary experience in the perennial Lagos traffic. He was on his way to work at the Thisday Newspaper office in Apapa, where he was a member of the editorial Board, when a certain young man, loitering in the traffic popped out a gun and ordered his driver to wind down in an obvious robbery attempt. But rather than comply, stories had it that his driver decided to play a movie hero, and instead stepped on the acceleration pedal and tried to maneuver his way through the thick traffic. Seeing that it was an effort in futility and one that might cost them their lives, Bello ordered his driver to stop and they promptly complied with the gunman’s request.

    The gunman made away with cash, a heavy suitcase of papers and valuables, but at least the now high-profile public officer had his life intact and is forging on.

    In another horrifying case, Toyosi Johnson, then a reporter with a leading glossy lifestyle magazine was driving back home on the Lagos Third Mainland Bridge, when she was attacked a gun-toting robber. She had just learnt to drive, having only recently bought her Opel car and couldn’t have attempted any stunt, as the gruff-looking guy pretending to be selling in the long traffic, popped a short pistol at her. Scared stiff, she handed over her bag, her phones and virtually every valuable object around her. Not satisfied, her assailant ordered her to pull up her blouse, so he could see her plum laps and undies, to which Toyosi immediately complied. One could only imagine how far the robber would have gone if it wasn’t for broad daylight and the moving traffic. The above incident took place about ten years ago.

    At the old Oshodi end of Lagos, before the administration of former Governor Babatunde Fashola liberated the area and made a thoroughfare out of its old gridlock, stories abound of broad daylight and early evening robberies. In fact, it became foolhardy for any Lagosian with his senses intact to attempt driving through the Oshodi-Isale end of the Agege-Motor Road in the early evening, much less in the late evening, because often, they get chastised and blamed, rather than pitied for any misfortune that befell them. A passenger in a public bus once narrated a story of how he was robbed in traffic, right under the Oshodi flyover and how when he finally got to a police point further down the road and complained, hoping for some action or pacification, only to hear the officers on duty telling him “Oga, why you self go pass Oshodi for night?”

    Deadly dangerous

    If the victims in the above instances were lucky, a middle-aged woman, Clementina Saduwa, who was a manager at one of the Ericson Lagos offices, was not so lucky a few years back. Her assailants, who had laid siege at the gallop spot right at the Leventis end of the Eko Bridge around 8pm in February 2007, pounced on her and gruesomely shot her dead, in what many initially thought was a case of paid assassination. A member of the gang of five that attacked her car, wasted no time in shooting Saduwa dead, as she struggled to explain that she had no money on her, while her driver escaped narrowly. The story heard it that the robbers had laid in wait at the end of the bridge, knowing fully well that vehicles inevitably slowed down at that spot.

    Lagosians would however learn four months later, when the police cracked the gang, that it was indeed a case of traffic robbery and not assassination.

    Saduwa’s case was highly publicised because the media latched onto it, but there are several others that never made media headlines, but which were equally gruesome. Some have escaped with bullet wounds, while those who have been fortunate narrowly escaped the criminals’ bullets, but not without serious emotional trauma.

    That incident also caused the Lagos State government to smoothen out the bump on that end of the bridge and ensure smoother and faster drive through the hitherto dangerous spot for motorists.

    The safe era

    Aside cases of robberies in traffic, Lagos had always lived with its share of outright armed robberies and car-snatching at gunpoint on highways; but these dropped significantly at the onset of Governor Babatunde Fashola’s regime in the state and especially during the tenure of the erstwhile Inspector-General of Police, MD Abubakar, then Commissioner of Police in the state. Many would recall also that probably due to the state government’s doubled effort on security, made largely possible by the Lagos Security Trust Fund, the police were duly equipped and motivated, such that even visitors testified to the strategic positioning of the police at suspicious locations in the state, leading to a relative peace, hitherto alien to the commercial city.

    Night life gradually returned and businessmen could afford to stay out late at night, holding business meetings and dinners and confident that they would still get home in peace.

    Olaseni Ayinde, a Lagos Businessman who relocated from the UK to Lagos around 2010 recalls that he was surprised to see that his business partners confidently stayed out late into the night, whenever business so required, and not a single case of violence or robbery was recorded.

    The state also received positive reviews on safety. According to a report released by travelstartblog, an online tourist sight in February 2014, Lagos remained the safest city in Nigeria in recent memory, coming first on a list of top 10 Safest Nigerian cities. And that was despite its over 20 million population and dense business concentration.

    According to the site, “The state government spends huge sum on its security, providing well-equipped response and different security units around the city. Thousands of tourists and visitors visit the city every year and they appear to be at ease  anytime they are around. It has low crime rate, no religious crisis, wonderful parks, environmental supporters and friendly people.”

    The city fondly dubbed ‘city of aquatic splendour’ by its inhabitants and visitors, also made it on the site’s list of Top 15 Safest cities on the African continent, coming in on a comfortable tenth position.

    Bankole Johnson, who used to work on Lagos Island, put that achievement at the feet of a well-funded, well-motivated and organized police command. He recalled how a few years ago, armed policemen used to be stationed on the Iyana-oworo exit of the 3rd Mainland Bridge during the evening rush hours, right into the night. He said “That gave road users a sense of safety and immediately eliminated all cases of traffic robbery, which that part of the city had become notorious for. I do not know if that pattern still plays out as we speak, because I no longer work on the Island, but I can tell you that it is just what we need in Lagos, and it will be nice if the police can replicate that strategy in other crime hot-spots.”

    It was therefore no surprise that Lagos continued to attract investments from foreign interests despite the unsavoury  reputation of insecurity been fostered on Nigeria as a whole by the Boko Haram insurgency in the Northern part of the country, kidnappers in the Niger-Delta Region and numerous ethnic clashes in the North-Central and other parts of the country.

    Even Nigerians from other troubled parts of the country trouped into the city in droves, in search of prosperity and peace of mind.

    Turn of event

    Unfortunately this situation seems to be changing for the negative, much to the chagrin of the state’s citizenry and its government that has invested so much towards its low crime rate and safety.

    More recently, reports of gun-point robberies and phones and other valuables-snatching incidents in traffic have been on the rise in the city, bringing back, as it were, a preferably forgotten past. Hardly does a day go by these days without one case of robbery occurring in one heavy traffic spots of the state or more, or all. Some of the emerging crime hot-spots according to our investigations include Oshodi-oke, Oshodi-isale, Mile-2 Oke, Mile-2-Isale, the Badagry Expressway currently under construction, right through maza-maza, through to the Agboju-Amuwo end, the Ketu-Mile 12 traffic, the Olopomeji entrance to the 3rd Mainland Bridge, and the Apongbon end of the Eko Bridge.

    The Apogbon end of the Eko Bridge seems to have become the hottest spot for crime in the city, with horrifying stories emerging on a daily basis. Just last Wednesday, a Lagos motorist narrated on a popular blogsite the unfortunate story of how his car was brazenly attacked and its occupants that included himself and his sister were robbed just about 9pm.

    Wrote the victim: “This evening, around 9pm, myself and my sister were robbed on Apongbon Bridge in traffic. The robbers didn’t even give us a chance to wind down the mirrors. They just broke the glass with all of us in it and dragged out our bags.

    “It’s unfortunate that in a country like this, with all the news every day from a common spot that there is robbery ever day, nothing has been done about it. Hopefully, one day, something would be done to protect our lives n property.”

    During the past week, a popular television channel did a special news package on the rising incidents of brazen robberies on the Badagry Expressway, complete with interviews. The motorists and commuters raised their voices against what they say has become a daily occurrence, with nearly everyone falling victim at one time or the other. They therefore called on the Lagos State government to speed up the ongoing reconstruction, while also appealing to the police and other security officers to live up to their responsibility and protect Nigerians on the road.

    A young man, Uche, who spoke to this reporter, said the situation has become such that everyone going down the other end of Lagos between Mazamaza, Agboju and Iyana-Iba would prefer to cross over before dusk. “We always want to close early from our shop before it gets dark, because these boys become more deadly at night, and there are hardly any police or soldier around to fend them off.”

    He called on the government to pay more attention to the safety of the people on that axis by deploring police and even soldiers to the road, saying ‘It is not only Boko haram that needs government’s attention. Even dangerous criminals like the ones we’re talking about need to be attended to.”

    At Mile 2 Oke, a newspaper vendor told this reporter how the area, right down to Alaba Express have become a regular spot for traffic robberies. He said this normally takes place at the early hours of the morning, when Lagosians are struggling to beat the nasty traffic on that axis of the road to get to work, or in the late evenings, when it has become dark. He said he knows this because “Usually in the morning, we see people who had been robbed either in the night or ealier in the morning, coming to look around to see if they could recover their vital documents that might have been dumped by the roadside after the robbers would have helped themselves to the cash and other things like phones and jewelries, which they could turn to cash.”

    According to him, the tanker concentration on the road, which has seemingly locked down the place in traffic is affecting road users and making virtually everybody vulnerable to robbery. And to make matters worse, he laments the fact that the police are hardly around to arrest the situation, wondering what it would cost the police to station its personnel on such dangerous spots.

    His story was corroborated by a Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA) staff, who said what the guys do is attack a car, force the victims to wind down, rob them of their valuables and cross to the other side of the express. “Usually,” he says “they are so fast that within two minutes, they’re gone.”

    He also says “They usually scare the victims stiff (probably with a gun or knife) such that we only hear of the robberies when the assailants have crossed to the other side and gone.”

    Curiously, a banana hawker on the other (Orile) side of the bridge however said he could not remember any case of robbery in recent time. Pointing to an empty police shed by a triangular spot, as one ascends the bridge, he said robberies no longer happen on that side of the bridge, since the police started posting officers to the spot.

    3rd Mainland, Safe as Aso Rock

    A visit to the Iyana-oworo end of the 3rd Mainland Bridge however revealed an impressive scenario that keeps one wondering why the same police cannot adopt the same strategy to police the other parts of the city. A LASTMA official stationed at the Iyana-Oworo Bus stop said there are no incidents of robberies on that end of the bridge. He actually said “It is near impossible for robberies to happen here, because as soon as it is early evening around 4-5pm, you see fully armed eagle-eyed Rapid Response Police team taking positions on the bridge. Usually, you see one at every 100-metre radius, as you approach the end of the bridge and I tell you, it will be suicidal for anyone to try anything funny under that situation.”

    He said if in truth traffic robberies is on the rise in the city, it has to be in other areas and said “probably the guys who used to operate here relocated.”

    A groundnut seller also corroborated his story. Although, he says he does not hawk on the bridge, he said he hasn’t heard of any case of robbery on that bridge in recent time.

    Another gentleman, an Ice cream vendor however said the only robberies that occur now are pick-pockets, who usually operate in the BRT buses.

    Another LASTMA officer, still at Iyana-oworo bus stop however said the only cases of robberies that occur in the area are on the other side of the highway, near the Olopomeji axis, as motorists ascend the 3rd Mainland Bridge in the early morning hours. He said this is usually perpetrated by hoodlums who take advantage of the fact that there are no policemen on the road in those early hours to rob motorists of their money and other valuables. He pointed accusing fingers at neighbourhoods like Oworo, Bariga and Gbagada as the hideouts of the hoodlums and implored the police to extend their operations to those hours.

    One respondent, John Babatunde, who said he had been a victim of traffic robbery once, said the first thing the government and police need to do is ban hawking and any kind of loitering in the middle of traffic on highways outrightly. He said that stemmed from his own experience. “I was driving along Pako bus stop on Okota Road, a few years back, when someone tapped my car on the drivers’ side. As I turned to take a look at what the matter was, another guy, whom I had noticed earlier but didn’t pay any serious attention to, quickly reached for my phone and made away with it.” He said this would never have happened if the government totally outlaws loitering and hawking in traffic and station policemen to enforce the law.

    He also spoke of a major robbery operation in which a top business executive was disposed of his posh Nissan luxury car just about 8.30pm, almost at the same spot around Pako Bus stop, Okota , as one prepares to link up with the Oke-Afa Road, leading to Ikotun. He however said this took place about five years ago. He said he also learnt that the police retrieved the car the same evening, as the robbers made to take it through Badagry across the border.

    Police PRO speaks

    Following the avalanche of stories of robberies, it became necessary to seek the opinion the Police. Are they aware of the sudden rise in traffic robberies in the state? What exactly are they doing; or is it a case of shortage of personnel or equipment? The Nation caught up with the Lagos Police Public Relations Officer, Kenneth Nwosu, who confessed that the police is aware and “concerned about a few incidents of a robberies along the traffic gridlock places including Apongbon.  Because of that, we have increased the security in those places, Apongbon in particular. If you drive pass those areas recently, you will notice increased number of policemen stationed on the road.”

    He said “The idea is to ensure that the area is properly dominated, so that those hoodlums will not have a field day. This strategy is not only restricted to Apongbon, but several other areas identified as crime hot-spots like Ikorodu, Mile-2 axis and co. You would have noticed our policemen on snap checks doing stop and search as they patrol in motorcycles and vehicles.”

    Prodded further on what exactly the police are doing, considering that cases continue to emerge, the Police spokesman said “We will not tell you the strategies we have adopted, but I can tell you that all those areas are under serious watch.”

    On his advice to Lagosians, he said “Moving forward, we want to assure Lagosians that we have enough policemen on ground, we have our strategies, and we have enough logistics on ground to ensure that they remain safe; but again, we want to advice that anybody who falls victim should please come forward. We need the constant reporting, because the idea is that when we get to know that robberies are happening in certain areas, we move in and map out strategies on how to tackle the area. But what we have noticed is that in such cases, when they attack them, people don’t come forward to make a report. Instead, they complain to you journalists.”

    He said although the police don’t have any problem with people reporting to journalists, but that doesn’t solve the problem. It is by reporting to us instantly that we can recover the things that have been stolen. Sometimes last year, there was an incident like that along Mile 2 axis; we received a call and went into action. Some two hours later, we caught the hoodlums and recovered a pistol from them. The same thing happened in Oshodi area and we moved in immediately. The hoodlums abandoned their loots and ran away; and when the victims came to the headquarters, their belongings were handed over to them. That is the importance of reporting; but when they go unreported, the police are not magicians to know what has happened. So as part of your own responsibilities as journalists, please educated them while writing, to always report to the police when these things happen and as soon as they happen. God willing we will keep dominating our areas for the safety of Lagos and Lagosians.”

    Regarding what the police is doing about hawkers and people constantly roaming in traffic, Mr Nwosu said “The law on environmental is on now; they are mopping all the street of hawkers. That one is ongoing; it is a comprehensive strategy to rid the state of all these menace.”

  • Successful Nigerians offer career tips to students

    Some select secondary school students recently gathered to drink from the fountain of experience of some successful Nigerians at a counselling programme organised by the Association of Professional Women Bankers in Lagos. Daniel Adeleye reports

    Determination is vital to succeeding in life. That was the summary of the message delivered by Mrs Nwanna Joel-Ezeugo, Chief Commercial Officer of Accion Micro-finance Bank Ltd, at the career counselling programme of Association of Professional Women Bankers (APWB) held at Golden Triangle College, Lagos. The event was tagged ‘Achieving Success’.

    The Association of Professional Women Bankers (APWB), according to its chairperson, Mrs Mercy Tinuola Ajayi, is the women’s wing of the prestigious Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria (CIBN) established in 1983 with a wide range of objectives that include their contributions to the economic development of the nation through workshops, seminars, research and publications.

    The aim of the career counselling programme is to empower students to think more broadly, by opening up their minds to various career options available, given their varied and unique skills, to help them make more intelligent, creative and rewarding career decisions in life.

    Ezeugo, a successful accountant with experience spanning over 25 years and covering all aspects of banking, told over 150 students from 10 secondary schools across Lagos State, how she made her career choice in 1977, when she was in primary 5.

    “I told my father that I want to read Accountancy, although I didn’t know what accountancy meant at the time. When I gained admission to secondary school, I came back home and told my father that I would not go back to the school again because there was no accountancy in the school. It took the efforts of the school principal to prevail on me after my father followed me to the school the next day.”

    Choosing not to dwell on her challenges, the Enugu State University of Technology, ESUT graduate, told the students how she dealt with plateaus and came out with flying colours in her WASSCE and later the university.

    “The achievers work harder and they don’t allow their success to be compromised. Set high expectations for yourself. In order not to be myopic in your plans, commit them to writing and put them beside your bed. Give your best efforts and get help when you feel that you are at a cross-road.”

    Rather than looking for the cloud, she told the pupils to always look for the silver lining and convert their challenges to opportunities.

    But Ezeugo was not the only speaker at the workshop, John Odubele, another astute banker and a member of John Maxwell team of USA, told the students that before anybody can achieve anything in life, such person a must first discover what he wants.

    “Your success can be sabotaged in life, if you don’t have a set goal. A student who wants to be successful in life would not sabotage his success story by engaging his time on irrelevant activities.”

    The certified speaker, who shared the story of how he made excellent results in 1979, tasked the students to make hay while the sun shines by “studying structurally.”

    Another speaker at the event, Mrs Modupe Onabanjo, who started by bowing to the students because, she is already seeing them at the helm of affairs in the future, shared with the pupils the story of how she lived above her challenges, being a female child from a very large family.

    She said the only school her mother could afford to send her, was the Nigerian Institute of Journalism, Lagos. But she seized the opportunity and made the best of it and was employed at the late MKO Abiola’s Concord newspaper, where she worked as a reporter for about ten years before the closure of the organisation by the then government of the day. She said she later joined TNT Express where she rose to the position of Public Relation Manager.

    She said “The only height of success before you today as secondary school students to the best of my knowledge is how you make a success story out of this twelve years sojourn of your education. The major bridge to cross from this journey is your Senior School Certificate Examination, be it WAEC or NECO.”

    According to her, success is not a cheap word. She cautioned the pupils on the culture of following crowd, “because he who follows the crowd cannot stand out.”

    “Despite the numerous problems attached to our education system, we still have students coming out of school system with flying colours. I want you to give this issue a private thought by having a meeting with yourself, by yourself and for yourself.”

    At the end of the programmes, some students participants shared their expression with The Nation.  Pupils like Alabi Tolulope of Joke Ayo College, Ajiyor Jexandra of Golden Triangle College and Emmanuel Madu of Tommy Gee Schools confessed to have learnt many things from the workshop. “I learned how to use my time judiciously on things that are relevant to success alone and also to imbibe the culture of moderation on everything I do from now henceforth,” Madu declared.

  • ‘Sycophants are taking the shine off Ewi poetry’

    ‘Sycophants are taking the shine off Ewi poetry’

    Legendary Yoruba Ewi poet and writer, publisher, artiste producer and TV/radio presenter, Olatubosun Oladapo goes down memory lane with
    Taiwo Abiodun.

    The name Olatubosun Oladapo easily comes to mind when prominent Yoruba poets and literary artistes are being mentioned. For his prowess, his Yoruba listeners and admirers nicknamed him Odidere-Ayekooto Akewi – two names of birds reputed for their singing and chirping ability. He has been a Yoruba Ewi and Ijala poet, radio and television presenter and producer, recording artistes, artistes producer, herbal medicine expert, to mention a few. For the records, he has published over 29 Yoruba books, released 51 records and produced over 200 artistes.

    Just last week, he was also honoured with the title of Aare Afedegbayi of Yorubaland by the Egbe Awon Colleges of Education of Nigeria.

    And for all these, the 72 year-old legend of the Yoruba arts has over 200 awards and certificates to show. This indeed is the brief summary of the life and works of Pa Olatunbosun.

    The philosopher-poet

    His shop at Sayotik Complex, Lagos Garage Iwo Road Motor-park Ibadan is a bee-hive of activities; hardly devoid of customers. They throng the popular outlet for different reasons including to buy books and CDs on sale – both his and others’; and herbs. Some, like this reporter also drop by for interviews or to get appointments for future interviews. Some also visit for medical advice, while others visit for research in herbal medicine and therapy.

    But whatever the motive of visit, Baba Olatubosun Oladapo always attends to all with total humility and respect.

    Said one of the visitors: “If you come to Baba Olatubosun with heavy hearts, you will most likely leave smiling with joy and laughter. He heals with his words of advice, while his songs have therapeutic effects on the soul, healing the emotionally wounded.”

    On the occasion of this reporter’s visit, his latest ewi album Taa Le ntan? (Who are you deceiving?) and Ara Igbaun Da? (Where are the men of yesteryears?) blared out of two giant speakers positioned right in front of his shop. Typically, the CD comments on human attitudes and the vanity of life, and is laced with highly philosophical and moral lessons deep thinking.

    Settling down for this interview, the man, whose rich rack of awards qualifies as the most honoured and respected Yoruba philosopher-poet, revealed that he is the copyright owner of one of the most popular Yoruba wedding songs of all time, ’Ki la nse taa fi po bawonyi o? Iyawo L a ngbe ooooo’ (For what reason have we assembled here today? It is for a wedding) which he released way back in 1972. That song, he says, has only been overshadowed by Ebenezer Obey’s ‘Eto igbeyawo laye’ released in 1983. To underline its success, he also said the song sold over 1 million copies.

    As an author, his books are popular in schools, and are used as recommended text across primary and secondary schools and even the Universities. He is so well-respected that even professors come to him for research. He also currently presents on Premier FM in Ibadan and FM 107.5 Radio, Lagos. He also does not joke with his herbal practice, which he says is one of the reasons he has continued to look young.

    His story

    Pa Olatubosun took time out to express his appreciation to all the institutions and people who have impacted his life one way or the other, starting with St. Luke’s Teachers’ Training College Ibadan, Western Nigeria Television, (WNTV), Ibadan, Western Nigeria Broadcasting Station (WNBS), Dr. Adebayo Faleti, Prince Adebayo Sanda et al. Above all, he gives thanks to almighty God, whom he says never disappoints.

    Born Abraham Olatubosun Oladapo, he recalls how it all began for him. In 1965, they had been asked as graduating students of St. Luke’s Teacher Training College to make presentations during the festival of arts usually at the end of the year. But while others presented craftworks, artworks and poetry, he came up to the podium and rendered the Yoruba Ijala in front of judges who had come from the two reputed radio stations of the time, Radio Nigeria and the Western Nigeria Broadcasting Corporation (WNBC). At the end of the day, the judges acclaimed his efforts and told him it was the first time anyone was chanting an Ijala on such stage.  Thereafter, he simply blossomed.

    Speaking further on his St Luke’s experience, he said: “My first play ‘Ogun Lakaye’ was written for the college to perform at St Paul’s College Abeokuta, St.Louis College, Ibadan and Anglican Girls Grammar School Abeokuta. The popularity that came with it helped me a lot and I was posted to St Lady Kudeti, Ibadan as a pupil teacher. I quit teaching in 1969 to join Sketch newspaper and GbounGboun, a Yoruba newspaper. I spent about a year there and left for the WNTV, WNBS in 1970.”

    There, he met Adebayo Faleti, who impacted him greatly and Prince Adebayo Sanda, who presented Kaaro Ooojiire and Tiwa N’ tiwa on radio. By this time, he had also become like a flag-bearer for the Yoruba culture, traversing the whole of Yorubaland. “I would go to Owo during the Igogo festival and stay there for about a week, learning about the people’s history and culture; next I would be in Ijebu Ode to witness the Agemo Festival; another week I would be in Ekiti for the Ogun festival; Efon Alaye for the sabarikolo festival.”

     The enormity of this endeavour also caused him to resign from the WNTV and WNBS in 1977, creating room for top performers like Chief Yemi Elebuibon, the Araba of Oshogbo, Chief Lanrewaju Adepoju, Chief Alabi Ogundepo, Kayode Aremu, and even my master, Adebayo Faleti to vie for the job.

    “I had to resign to concentrate on my productions.” He said.

    Some of his works

    He established Olatubosun Oladapo Records on July 7, 1977, a label under which he says he has dished out 51 different albums and produced 200 artistes’ records. “I have produced about 14 different albums for different artistes like the late Ojogbon Ogundare Foyanmu from Ogbomoso; 14 different albums for Odolaye Aremu from Kwara; I have also produced 14 different albums for Awoyemi Atokowagbowonile, the talking drum specialist; Alabi Ogundepo 18 albums, Duro Ladipo International Theatre, 4 albums (Moremi Ajasoro, Osun Oshogbo); for Apepe from Ijebu Ogere Remo, I produced one album. I also lunched several other artistes, including Odolaiye Aremu from Kayaomo, Foyanmu from Oshogbo to recognition.

    I have produced 200 artistes, I have also released about 29 different books, some of them are recommended for secondary schools here in Oyo State and some for primary schools. Aroye Akewi was recommended for WAEC as far back as 1972, when I was about 28 years old. Even my book, Ogun Lakaye was published when I was 22.

    Harsh words for praise singers

    Olatubosun is not happy with the way some Yoruba poets have turned themselves into praise singers. He however says “Not all Yoruba poets are scavenger poets. I took after the great man himself, Dr. Adebayo Faleti. We started reading his book since 1954, when he was writing for a bilingual magazine in Oshogbo, but we did not copy him. Up till 1970, there were no books on Yoruba poetry, if not for the efforts of the likes of Professors Akinwumi Ishola, Afolabi Olabimtan, Adeboye Babalola (who started it all), and Wande Abimbola, who started with Ewi Iwoyi. That was the first book that encouraged Yoruba poetry. They started in 1958; but our own books started coming out in 1972.

    “We decided to popularise Yoruba poetry, but over time, we discovered that traditional Yoruba poets have become sycophants and praise singers. We see them in the palaces, we see them on the streets, and we asked ourselves, do we want to be sycophants and scavenger poets? Some poets will go to PDP Ogun State and sing Gbenga Daniel praises today and next they are praising Amosun. During the second republic, they would sing Awolowo’s praises today, and the next day they are with the NPN.”

    He recalls the fate of a certain popular Yoruba poet, whom he says was stoned and almost killed when he wanted to chant the Ewi poetry for a UPN crowd at the Liberty Stadium in 1981.

    Recalling his moments of glory as an Ewi poet, he said “In 1971, the governor at that time, General Adebayo invited me to chant Ewi; when the present Olubadan was about to be installed, I was asked to chant poetry, same thing during the time of the past Olubadan, Oba Arapasanwu. I also chanted the ewi during the time of Adeyemo, who installed me as Balogun Majeobaje of Ibadan; same for the Elejigbo. I was also there during the installation of Soun of Ogbomoso. Those were the glorious moments of Yoruba poetry. But now people have bastardised it. If Prof Wole Soyinka had been a scavenger poet, nobody would respect him, whether home and abroad.”

    Olatubosun said he also produced some juju artistes, including Micho Ade and Remi Olabanji of the ‘This World is Beautiful’ fame.”

    Piracy as an industry bane

    He said the general problem of recording companies is piracy. “You release 1000 copies of Sokorogho of Owo music today, and somebody comes and buys one copy and starts reproducing it for the people of Owo, such that the artiste begins to think that you have sold millions.

    Education & childhood

    “I started my schooling at Araromi, Owu in 1950; then St James’ Olanla in Akinyele 1951-1954. It was at St Luke’s that my talent in drama was discovered, and it was on account of this that I was sent to the University of Lagos to study for a diploma in Yoruba Studies free of charge. I came out with a distinction in that programme.”

    He recalls that his book, Ogun lakaaye shot him into limelight; otherwise he would have remained an obscure teacher.

    As a young man, Pa Olatunbosun says “Women naturally flocked after successful artistes and mine was no different. But I simply chose one woman. Besides I had no time for others. If I followed women, I wouldn’t have had time to pursue my career.”

    Today, the 72-year old gives thanks to God for that decision. Three of his children are distinguishing themselves and imparting knowledge in their various endeavours, even across the oceans. His youngest son, Kola Tubosun, who studied Linguistics at the University of Ibadan, was chosen on completion of his programme to go and teach Yoruba in the USA; his daughter Omolara Tubosun currently doing her PhD is also teaching at the university’s Institute of African Studies at the University of Ibadan, while the other is teaching Accountancy in the UK.

  • ‘I will  love to reincarnate as artist’

    ‘I will love to reincarnate as artist’

    US-based Nigerian scholar and artist Prof dele jegede turned 70 last April. He will be celebrated by his colleagues at the University of Lagos and Yaba College of Technology, Lagos from tomorrow.  To him, good artists never die, never fade away, but simply become more vivified; a category  which he belongs to at 70. Though disengaged from teaching, he sees the disengagement as an opportunity to re-engage himself with his studio practice,   Assistant Editor (Arts) OZOLUA UHAKHEME reports. 

    With the marking of your 70th birthday, you have joined the elder statesmen’s club. How do you feel hitting the mark?

    Where’s the King of Soul, James Brown, when you need him? “I feel good….pa para para para!” I am nothing but thankful. There are no two ways about that. The older you get, the more introspective you become. The more exposed you are to occurrences and developments, which humble you and cause you to be appreciative of the grace without which your very existence will be naught. When I was young—let me re-phrase that, because I am still young—when I was much younger, a 40-year-old man was old, very old; a 50-year-old was ancient; and a 70-year-old? That was simply antediluvian! I have since realised that your perspectives on things shift as a result of your age.

    I remember in 1995 (when I was 50), a student of mine complained innocuously about the ways of her very old dad. And then I asked how old was her father. “50,” she responded. Of course I changed the topic. Hitting 70 (which, by the way, happened in April) was something that I had no control over. It was not as if I could choose how long I would live; no one has that power. I had been in a position that I wished that death had come for me instead of someone else. It is in that sense that I talked about grace and clemency. Ageing is one thing; ageing gracefully is another. And that is something that I aspire to do, especially in terms of the extent to which I inspire my peers and colleagues, and become a positive role model for the younger generation of citizens and artists. Living gracefully has nothing to do, in my estimation, with your sartorial taste anymore than does your height. Rather, it is your personhood: your moral probity, integrity, principles, forthrightness, professionalism, and commitment to enlightened citizenship. It has to do with using your professional and intellectual abilities to positively influence society. And that is one of my new mantras.

    Retiring now at 70, how fulfilling is it to end your career outside your country?

    Retirement ke! One point of correction, I have not ended my career. In actuality, I’ve just revved it up a notch. As a vocation, art is not a 9 to 5 job. Rather, it is an organic cocoon: something that you live; a life that you exude. How can you talk of retirement in that situation? The committed artist never thinks of retirement. You have heard of the maxim about old soldiers who never die; who simply fade away. Well, that is not so with old artists. The good ones never die; they never fade away; they simply become more vivified. Examples abound. Look around the Nigerian art scene today and you can construct a strong list of artists, living or departed, vertical or perpetually horizontalised, who are continually written about in the present tense. While it is true that I have disengaged from teaching, I construed that as an opportunity to re-engage with my studio practice. As to where I practice, the age of globalisation has shrunken the world so significantly that location is no longer an issue. While my primary residence will remain where I’ve been in the last two decades, I will also take advantage of the opportunities that my ancestry offers.

     

    Looking back, how fulfilling has it been teaching in the US?

    It has been both challenging and fulfilling. It has also been rewarding. Like all countries, the U.S. has its strengths and weaknesses. For everyone, who is career-oriented, motivated, and inspired, the opportunities are super-abundant. Indeed, the United States remains as perennially advertised: a land of opportunities. If you are so inclined, you can chart your own path, create new avenues for personal success, and intuit novel ideas. But, living in the U.S. can also signal perpetual misery for those who are interested in the dream but lack the capacity, willpower, or wherewithal to prepare their beds aright. For many, the U.S. is the proverbial El Dorado. Americanisms permeate the imagination of many young and not-so-young Nigerians, who are desirous of capitalising on life styles that Hollywood has so ingenuously marketed on a global scale. But one of the unwritten canons pertains to the power that culture exerts on many, who go to the U.S. but are ill-prepared for the inevitable culture shock that they will have to contend with. Before I retired from the University of Lagos in 1992, I had worked there as a faculty member for 15 years. It was from there that I went on a leave of absence to study at Indiana, where I obtained my doctorate in 1983. And in 1987, I had taught for one year and curated a major exhibition at Spelman College, Atlanta as Fulbright Professor.

    Although exposure to American culture and the qualifications that I paraded certainly helped, they were not the primary reason for my eventual emigration, with my family, to the U.S. in 1993. Two of our children, who were born in the U.S. were asthmatic. In particular, our oldest son, Tolu, was chronically asthmatic. There was hardly a week that we did not make an emergency run from our place at Ikeja to Unilag Health Center for emergency health help, often in the middle of the night. Those were the nights when the parental adrenalin countered whatever dangers were posed by hoodlums and men of the night. Tolu became something of a recurring face at the Health Center, known to virtually all the medical personnel at that time. The situation was so dire that the sing-song by our children was that we needed to return to the U.S. Today, Tolu is professor at a college in Florida.

     

    In retrospect, are there decisions you would have taken differently now concerning your career growth—studying art, media job, teaching at UNILAG—and checking out to US?

    With full 20-20 hindsight, it is very easy to second-guess decisions that I took in the past, which have obviously inflected the trajectory of my professional growth and personal development. I have no reason to do that. As one, who has continually advocated the application of contextualism in analyses, I could not envision reversing any of the major decisions that I took in the past without asking for corresponding reversal of the context within which such decisions were taken. On the contrary, I took these decisions with deliberation and embraced the outcomes with pride and enthusiasm. My studentship at the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, was the culmination of sheer determination of a young lad, who single-handedly set and attained the loftiest dream of attaining a university degree in the face of adversity. That decision was significant and momentous in my life. In terms of my career, I coveted the opportunity to work at the Daily Times when I was a third-year student at Ahmadu Bello University and worked assiduously towards that end. I was giddy with excitement when I interned at the Daily Times in the summer of 1972. At the end of my NYSC in 1974 (as a pioneer corps member), my career as a cartoonist had been launched with a series of cartoons in Lagos Weekend and Sunday Times. You could not have enticed me with anything not to accept the offer, which the Daily Times gave me, as Art Editor in July 1974.

    As students in Zaria, some of us had determined to spruce up the exhibition scene in Lagos after graduation. Kolade Oshinowo, Shina Yussuff of blessed memory, David Dale, and my humble self became quite active in the exhibition circuit. I also took up critical reviews in the Daily Times during this period. I left the Daily Times because I was simply enamored of academic life. Besides, I figured I could continue to do my cartoons from anywhere without being in the employ of the Daily Times. I joined the University of Lagos as Junior Research Fellow in January 1977 and was thrilled to be directly involved in organising certain aspects of Unilag’s FESTAC 77, which the Center for Cultural Studies undertook under the directorship of Prof Joe Alagoa. Hankering after additional degrees was something that you would do as an aspiring young man. So, by 1979, I was on my way to Bloomington.

    I should note, with extreme pride, the stable and blessed marriage that I have had. This, indeed, ranks as perhaps the best decision that I ever took. Of course, Joke, my wife of 40 years, took all evasive actions way back in 1972 when I first laid eyes on her and embarked upon the customary pursuit of a love that made itself elusive. But the more unconcerned she appeared the more determined I was to prove that I was worthy of her hand. Although she always contests my claim that it was my cooking that eventually sealed the deal, it seemed that she ultimately took pity on me, especially after learning of the day that I almost got crushed by a “tipper” as I made a dash across Ikorodu Road trying to catch a Somolu-bound danfo to her place at Akoka. No matter. Joke remains my adorable friend, partner, wife, and counsellor. She is a woman of unparalleled strength, something that I became even more appreciative and respectful of in the wake of the cataclysmic shock that the loss of our son, Ayo, unleashed on us in 2011. Without Joke (who was herself grief-stricken), my story would have taken a tragic turn.

    Are there any memorable experiences at the early stage of your stay in US?

    I learned pretty quickly that the United States is at once opened and closed. It is through its openness and transparency that I was able to secure a job based solely on my academic and professional pedigree. It was the same system, one that places premium on excellence and healthy competition, that ensured my rise within the academic system. I became, at two different times and in two states, chair of two art departments. This could have been achieved only through a transparent academic culture. But I also learned that if you were, like me, thoroughly immersed in your cultural heritage, you would have a steep culture shock to contend with. Thankfully, my immediate family provided the succor that I needed. It could get easily dreadful and lonely for those who do not have that kind of support. I learned that racism, both overt and covert, is alive in this country. I learned that a considerable degree of naiveté permeates the American social fabric with particular regard to how people from Africa are generally perceived or related to. I once ran into an American couple at the mall. Once I confirmed my African pedigree, the next question by my new mall friend was whether I knew his wife’s boss, a certain Stephen who is also an African, from Tanzania! But my overall experience has been nothing but positive.

    What are the post-retirement plans?

    There is a caveat to this retirement thing: it pertains only to my job as professor. The plan, thus, is to roam; to produce, explore, and become creatively pontifical. This I will do without being bound by geographic demarcations. A two-day conference (July 23 and 24), which Kunle Filani and his team organised, comes under the aegis of the Society of Nigerian Artists. It is gratifying to be accorded this honour and I am beholden to all who are involved in this gesture. In July 2016, I will be having a solo exhibition at Terra Kulture. This is the immediate project. Along the side, I will, where practicable, participate in a few group exhibitions across continental divides. The primary goal is to immerse myself in my studio life and savour the pleasure of professing my art. Of course, opportunities to contribute essays, deliver lectures, and consult for a diverse array of organisations, abound both in Nigeria and the U.S.

    Having lived and studied in US for so long, what is the performance level of African artists in Diaspora on the global scene?

    Laudable. So much has happened in the last two decades that has catapulted artists of the African Diaspora to the stratosphere. It is probably not that helpful to adhere to the old, rigid idea of compartmentalising artists on the basis of media singularities or geographic location. In the 21st Century, the boundaries have become so pulverised that what emerges, at times, is essentialised more by notional specificities or idiosyncratic givens than by traditional media. From Southern Africa to the Maghreb, from West Africa to East Africa, there is a catholicity of creative expressions that was either not fully made manifest or was simply non-existent a mere two decades ago. As part of this robust emergence of African art on a global scale, we should recognise the origination of vibrant, collateral fields that have quickly become formidable in the curating, analysis, and historicisation of the artists and the various genres that exist. Auction Houses such as Bonhams and Arthouse Contemporary, for example, have broadened access on a global scale. A cursory look at the list of Diasporic scholars of African art reveals the dominance of some of Nigeria’s best scholars.

    If you were to come to this world again, would you be an artist?

    My answer is unequivocally yes. Additionally, I would, with the benefit of hindsight, amplify my interest and talents in theater and music. But I would still marry Joke.

  • Oyo sanitises hospitality

    Oyo sanitises hospitality

    Oyo State government officials are inspecting  hotels, event centres, night clubs, restaurants and other public facilities.

    The move, the government said, is to boost revenue and ensure compliance with the laws guiding the operations of hotels and allied organisations in the hospitality industry.

    The visit to hotels, part of the yearly routine monitoring and inspection of establishments in the hospitality sector, was carried out by officials of the Ministry of Culture and Tourism, led by the Permanent Secretary, Dr Bunmi Babalola, in Ibadan, the state capital.

    Over 20 hotels, event centres, night clubs and other hospitality enterprises were visited.

    Babalola said the operation, which is continuous, was expected to boost revenue from the hospitality sector, adding that it would ensure compliance with the law and regulations guiding the hospitality sector.

    “As the chief regulators of the industry in the state, we have to move round to ensure that standards are maintained; to re-emphasise the need for operators of this sector to report  questionable characters  to law enforcement agencies and also expedite action on the payments of all outstanding levies to the government.

    “On the issue of security, we enlightened them on the need to complement the efforts of the state government on safety of lives and properties of people in the state by their provision of a micro security arrangement that will cater for their immediate environment and the response was good as we observed that most of them are security conscious,” he added.

    The Permanent Secretary harped on the need for prompt payments of yearly renewal dues and other levies, warning that  recalcitrant operators and other defaulting establishments would be appropriately sanctioned, urging operators to do adequate checking of their customers.

    He said: “We appreciate the hoteliers and other allied enterprises in this sector for partnering with the state in the area of job creation. However, I want to say categorically that the government will not tolerate any hotel that fails to comply with the standard of operations and prompt payment of all dues. Compliance will empower the government to expedite action on the ongoing urban renewal  projects across the state, which will in turn be a boost to tourism development in the state and expectedly, a concomitant boom in hotel patronages.”

    He, however, assured that the inspection would be extended to Oke-Ogun, Ogbomoso, and other zones in the state.