Category: Arts & Life

  • Artist shares his experience in the other world

    Artist shares his experience in the other world

    Everybody who lives in Lagos is aware that Lagos is a busy place. The morning and evening traffics make it unbearable for those who live on the mainland and work on the island, a contemporary topic which makes Lagos more of a suffering and smiling place for many, even though the place is called the Centre of Excellency.

    Chika Idu, a contemporary Nigerian artist who lives and does his painting in Ikorodu but goes to the island to market his artworks, said the traffic in Lagos forced him to abandon his car for boat. The artist said he was struck by the activities that go on in the water when he started using the route

    He said: “Lagos is a very busy city with a very poor road network. A 20 minutes trip can turn into a three hours journey, so I sought an alternative to driving; a friend introduced me to the ferry terminal, what a relief….now I can reduce a four hours journey by three hour thirty minutes. A ferry ride is quick and relaxing; from the lagoon, I began to see Lagos from a whole new angle but the peace is quickly disturbed when I sight the dredging that goes daily on hourly basis”

    In order to create awareness and draw attention towards these activities, Idu said during a press session last week in Lagos that 20 of his recent watercolour and oil paintings will be on display on Saturday, May 23, at Alexix Gallery, Victoria Island, Lagos, which he is using to campaign against this. The exhibition with a theme: The Other World; will run until May 30. “The Other World is more of environmental awareness campaign due to my experience on the water from Ikorodu to Victoria Island.

    “The water is calm, the boat ride gives a different view of Lagos but you cannot totally ignore the rate of environmental liquidation and pollution that goes on in the water and the boat ride is not very safe because of the high buildings creating a caution over the waters. There are signs that say this part of the water is safe or unsafe,” said the Auchi Polytechnic, Edo State, graduate.

    He is of the view that there is an urgent need for the government to check what goes on in the lagoon. “The last time I counted eight dredging companies scattered from Ikorodu to Victoria Island, tons and tons of plastics and unidentified objects submerged floating in the waters, families living by the river banks defecating, dumping, washing and at the same moment fetching water for cooking and children swimming in the waters, I mourn for the life that is supposed to be underneath these surfaces, the waters look dead,” he pointed out.

    With Idu’s emerging awareness for environmental pollution, natural disaster and health hazard, he fears what will happen if the storm should strike. He believes natural disaster could occur if the sand excavators are not controlled. Also, he pointed out that the waste and defecation, which the inhabitants discharge into the lagoon, could lead to health catastrophe.

    “Through my works, I have tried to draw attention to the subject, how it should not be necessary, how it is, with the intension to open a dialogue on our endangered marine,”he said.

    His works are characterised by its heavy texture and hazy rendition. Idu calls this technique “light against visual distortion”, a technique he has used for 16years, inspired by observing the behaviour of light striking against visual imperatives like dust and misty fog.

    His themes are women and children. He sees himself as an activist and his work as the beginning of a dialogue, and not the centre of the dialogue or the end of it. “My work is around children because they also have problems such as child abuse, child trafficking; children becoming the breadwinners of their families, the negligence and the abuse, which children are forced to endure. I know this has been banned in Lagos but do you know what goes on after a law is enacted?”

    You may say Idu is a painter who changes your mood about life when you look at his paintings; this you will see in works such as Task, Dept, Descend, which will also be on display.

    Idu specialises in oil and watercolour and he works with pallet knives for oil and sable brushes, tooth-brush for water colour. His works have his footprints at the back of the canvas. He is from Delta State.

    He had his early childhood education in Lagos. In the year 2000, he in conjunction with eight other painters opened a studio in Ebute-Meta, Lagos, called Defactori Studio, where he was elected coordinator. In the same year, he created the first ever watercolour society of artists called Sables. He is currently an art teacher at the French International School Lagos. He has participated in over ten group exhibitions and many solos.

    The exhibition is being curated by Mrs. Patty Mastrogiannis. She said: Chika’s work can diversify very low key paintings and vibrant colours. He actually can switch moods as he paints.

    “His work is very nicely palliated and he uses the media which is not very easy to copy. You will immediately know Idu’s work when you see it. His style is unique and I have been dealing with Chika for the past three years and we have been doing well in terms of sales. We are very proud to show him in Alexis Gallery even though he is not signed under us.”

     

  • ‘The trumpet moves me spiritually’

    ‘The trumpet moves me spiritually’

    Biodun Adebiyi, otherwise known as Biodun Batik is not only a lecturer in Dramatic Arts at the Lagos State University, Ojo, Lagos, he is also one of the most outstanding jazz musicians in the country at the moment.  A prominent Saxophonist, Batik participated in the last Lagos International Jazz Festival, where he shared his experiences, high and low moments as an entertainer, teacher and music instructor and more with Edozie Udeze.  Excerpts

    With the stage name of Biodun Batik, the type characteristic of most jazz musicians, Biodun Adebiyi has indeed moved a bit higher in his career.  A thorough-bred saxophonist, he has been into this sort of entertainment for over fifteen years where he has somewhat carved a niche for himself.

    As a teacher and a molder of characters, he finds it easier to reach out to his people via the melodious rendition of music.  “Yes,” he began with an aplomb of gusto in his voice, “I teach music at the Lagos State University where I answer Biodun Adebiyi.  But while on stage, I am simply known as Biodun Batik.  I have been at the music department of LASU for about thirteen years during which I have encountered and groomed so many students.”

    When Biodun is not too engaged with his students, he runs his jazz band, “when you talk of jazz in this part of the world, or the type of music where you have so many instruments – horns and so on.  That is why Femi Kuti, Lagbaja, Professor Laz Ekwueme in his days, all of whom played well.  All these people traveled round the world to play at world jazz festivals.  So, for me, I play African jazz,” he said.

    About his role at the 3rd Lagos Jazz Festival, Biodun was first of all grateful to the organizers for their interest in this genre of music.  “The first edition was in 2008 and I played there.  It was hosted by Ayo Sadare.  And believe me what the guy is doing is great.  Around here, the kind of music he is promoting is not appreciated by many.  Art music, simply put, is music that is not in anyway popular.  This includes Western classical music like jazz.  This also includes Apala music here in Nigeria.  Yet we have the popular ones that the people can always yearn for.  This is a high breed of African, a little bit Western, put together like hippo and all that…  But you see, popular music is popular in principle, theory and in practice.  Popular music attracts the most attention even in all climes of the world.”

    He gave examples with Whizzkid, Davido and the rest whom he described as the rev of the moment.  “The kind of crowd you see here today, if it is Davido or so, it will be more than this.  As a popular music, you only need to do a little advert and people would be here in thousands.  But our own brand of music is for the elite.  It is indeed enlist both in terms of composition and the pattern of presentation.  You must be a real art enthusiast and so to be in tune with jazz music.  It is a music that paints the picture of life through the usage of instruments.  It is to depict the mood and the inner feelings of people.  That is why I said I just feel for Sadare for having the time and the resources to organize this sort of show.”

    Although, to him, jazz music may not be totally Western in terms of origin, Biodun however believes it is a fusion of African percussion.  “Western, African and Afro-Cuban percussion give you the right source for jazz.  They all come together to produce that unique sound that sends people asking for more.  Western instruments and musical form those are the things that come together to give you jazz tunes.  In all you still have the African effect.”

    But must jazz always be made an elitist form of music in every sense?  “Ah, generally, there is no way you cannot make it elitist.  No way.  Let us even talk about some other media, like painting and all that.  Enter where they are doing art exhibition.  All you see are big people, rich men and women.  Hardly you ever see a poor man buying art works.  What will he do with it?  He doesn’t even know the value not to talk of entering an exhibition hall.  This is also the sort of euphoria surrounding jazz music.  So it cannot change, it cannot be made for everybody.

    “At times a jazz musician would be playing, someone like my grandmother in the village would ask; who is this one making noise?  But to the elite, to the informed person, that is good music.  That is why the orientation and appreciation of jazz cannot change.”

    Biodun also elaborated on the role of some traditional instruments that without them jazz ensemble or arrangement is not complete.  “Oh, let me explain this in two ways.  “Historically jazz actually started as an acoustic sort of music.  Acoustic because when jazz music started, some instruments were hard to come by.  So, then, you had double bass, then you have fido bass.  You have trumpet, you have drums, you have banjo.  So, you also have piano.  These are the basic ones that give the rendition its proper blend.  These are instruments you don’t electrical connect to play on stage.  And that was how jazz started.  People like Louis Amstrong, King Oliver, then gave new phase to jazz.  They are the masters of all times.”

    As a trumpet player, Biodun revealed that once he handles the instrument he is in another world.  “Trumpet appeals to me spiritually.  Of course I started from the church.  The oldest instruments, even when you check the Bible is the trumpet.  It was used to fall the wall of Jericho.  That shows you how powerful it is and that is what it does to me when I handle it.  It touches my heart; or moves me both physically and spiritually.”

     

  • ‘Life working  in refugee camps’

    ‘Life working in refugee camps’

    Dotun Olugbemi is CEO of World Hope Foundation and he is passionate about the plight of refugees, amputees, as well as changing the fortunes of children that are less-privileged. In this interview with Yetunde Oladeinde, he talks about what drives him to do the things he does, the challenges, as well as leaders who have inspired him.

    How did the passion to help displaced persons and refugees begin?

    I am an accountant and I worked with Zenith Bank but somehow I wasn’t fulfilled. I resigned from Zenith Bank in 1997. I wanted to do something on development and I started doing research on what I could do, international development precisely. So I started doing my research from 1997 to 2002. I started serving as volunteer at refugee camps at Ijebu Oru in Nigeria and in a refugee camp in Ghana.

    I was doing a lot of research here too. After doing some research at the refugee camp, I worked as a relief worker there. I did assist on areas like care for Persons Living with HIV/AIDs, as well as on Leadership trainings. At the refugee camp then, we established an HIV campaign team. We also distributed a lot of prosthesis for amputees.

    One person who has inspired me greatly is a former Director General of the Institute of Directors, Mr. Akin Iroko. He believed so much in me at the time I left Zenith Bank and was putting my structures in place.

    What was the turning point in your life?

    The main turning point in my life was in 2004, when I was recognised for my contribution by Greg Birhoz in the United States. He had lost one of his legs and wanted help others in his shoes. He told me that he wanted to supply prosthesis to African amputees and thereafter got my organisation registered in the US. That was how World Hope Foundation started supplying prosthesis to amputees in Africa, not just Nigeria.

    The prosthetic project was great and we touched lots of lives through it and gave many a second chance. Once we identified those who needed it, we started the processing. What gives me joy everyday is touching and affecting lives. I actually made a covenant with God that the day I stop touching lives, He should take me away.

     Some of the refugees you worked with must have served as inspiration for you on the job. Is there a case or two that you can immediately remember?

    One case that inspired me was a lady called Markafi; she was from Liberia. While the other refugees were involved in social vices like prostitution, she was focused. That was the time they were building Covenant University and she was one of those who went there to do manual work. She wanted admission but Covenant University did not admit her. But she was determined to further her education before returning to Liberia, so she went to Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria; got admission to study for a degree and eventually graduated. This gave birth to my organization, the World Hope Foundation and from year 2002 to 2005, I was exposed to the global community, attending conferences and delivering papers. In the Nigerian context, the civil society is still growing. Many people get into civil society for the wrong notion.

    Apart from the refugees work, what else have you done?

    We have done projects with so many organisations; my organisation also partners with other organisations. We have worked with Born Free Foundation; they are into animal conservation and we worked on that foundation at the Yankari Games Reserve and Kanji National Reserve in 2009.The focus basically was on lions’ conservation and they came from the United Kingdom. We have also done some projects at the destitute home at Okobaba and we got support from the Ten Dollars Club in the United States. We worked with the children of destitute on the street; and we also discovered them in the course of our field work.

    What are some of the things that you did for them?

    We have been able to distribute free books, school uniform and foods; we did that project for about two years. We have done some follow-ups as well but we have completed the project now. What we do now is facilitate the necessary links and that is why we are working on the NGO development centre.

    We presently are working on an NGO development centre, which would be a resource centre for NGOS all over the country. It will be the first of its kind in the country; we don’t have anything like it in Nigeria yet. We are also working on the Leadership Centre; we also just got the copyright for the Nigerian Celebrity Award.

    What is the focus of this award?

    It is to appreciate those celebrities that are into charity projects and encourage new ones to be involved. We just discovered that celebrities can be involved in charities and their names would open doors.

    Is the Resource Centre going to be opened to everybody?

    Yes, it is going to be opened to everybody. It is going to be a resource centre for those doing research on civil society organisations and other projects. So if you go there, you would be able to get what you want. It would also be useful for those who want to start a civil society organisation.

    Some people are of the opinion that NGOs should be taxed?

    NGOs cannot be taxed. They serve as checks and balance on government, but they can be monitored. Taxation may come in but it is not going to be easy, it may bring a little conflict between civil societies and the government. What I see is that there is a way government can do it, if they use wisdom. Let the two of them come to a round table and find a way around it.

    Some people start a project or organisation and mid-way, they feel like opting out. Have you ever felt like this?

    One thing I normally ask people is before coming into Civil Society, what were you doing. Did you go into the civil society because of money? If you went into civil society because of what you are going to get, then you have missed it. If you are a civil society practitioner, I still encourage that you have a job that is bringing income, so that money would not be your priority. If you go in just because you want to make money and discover the money is not coming, then you would pull out.

    Let’s talk about some of your memorable moments on the job?

    One of such moments was in Glasgow, when I met Yemisi Ransome Kuti and Erelu Bisi Fayemi. Both of them really inspired me. They have been in the civil society for long and there was so much to learn from them.

     Who or what is the greatest influence in your life?

    My mum. The way she raised me up, she gave me a very solid foundation in life. She is a very hardworking woman and I learnt charity from her. She can give everything she has.

     If you have to advise young people, what would you tell them?

    I would tell them to create value for themselves. When you create value, the substance would come. However the problem today is that most of our youths are not ready to create value. By this, I mean that you should take time to build yourself, build an identity, a brand. To succeed in life is the easiest thing but you must build a brand.

    Insecurity, especially threats of Boko Haram has increased the number of displaced persons in the country. What do you feel about this?

    The Boko Haram issue is a very serious thing but I would pass the blame to the time that we got our independence. The timing was wrong, we didn’t have people that could develop the country positively; there was only one university and few professionals. The leaders that also got the independence had selfish interests. They got it because they needed power and they started struggling for power. In the course of this, they built tribalism in us and that was how it all started.

     What are the other things that you do?

    I am a consultant; I do things in line with my profession as an accountant. I prepare reports and make a number of presentations.

    What plans do you have for the future?

    I should be able to have contributed towards many sectors in Nigeria. I don’t need to be a politician to do this; I will forever be a pressure group, always ready to make a difference.

  • How new Cross River Institute  is transforming  West Africa’s most populous indigenous community

    How new Cross River Institute is transforming West Africa’s most populous indigenous community

    Unlike Simeon the God-Receiver who was visited by the Holy Spirit and told that he would not die until he had seen the Lord Jesus Christ, the immediate past Obol Lopol of Ugep and Paramount Ruler of Yakurr, Late Obol Ujong Inah, had vowed during his 80th birthday in 2010 that even at that age, he would never see death until Ugep had an institution of higher learning.

    Immediately after his 80th anniversary, death had several times come knocking, and several times too, he stubbornly refused to yield to its cold hands, until he had his wish fulfilled.

    Even if death had had its way with the late monarch, it is difficult to tell if he would have been resting peacefully with his ancestors today had his request not been met.

    Exactly five years ago, the state governor, Senator Liyel Imoke, who was the Chief Guest of Honour at the monarch’s 80thh birthday, had asked what he wanted done for him. The then Octogenarian had responded that at his age, what could he be asking for when he was already in the midnight of his life.

    But then, he made a passionate plea to the governor, which was to help ensure that Ugep had a tertiary institution, a plea Governor Imoke graciously granted with the establishment of Institute of Technology and Management (ITM), Ugep, a first class institution, not only modelled after the prestigious Highbury College, United Kingdom, but equally affiliated to the upscale institution.

    And sometime last year, when the Institute of Technology and Management (ITM) was commissioned and officially opened for academic activities, the monarch, elated that Imoke gave him what he ultimately asked for, declared: “I can now go and join my ancestors.” And in March this year, he breathed his last, having had his wish fulfilled.

    As the most populated indigenous community in West Africa, Ugep had for so long been without any tertiary institution, let alone an iconic one like the ITM. Worried by this basic desideratum, Governor Imoke, in his ever burning desire to boost human capacity, ensured that it was not just enough to establish a higher institution of learning in Ugep, but a world-class entrepreneurial Institute, the first of its kind in Nigeria.

    In going into partnership with Highbury College, the governor considered international rating of UK-based institution as a grade one outstanding college in the UK and the need to develop a world-class entrepreneurial technology Institute in Nigeria.

    In terms of vision, mission and core values, ITM, a Technical, Vocational, Educational and Training (TVET) institute, shares the same ideals virtually with Highbury College.

    Speaking on the ideals of the institution, the Rector, Dr. Williams Pedley said: “Our goal is to develop a world-class entrepreneurial Institute, the first of its kind in Nigeria. The Institute will provide students a unique opportunity to be taught in a learning environment with state of the art facilities that represent international best practices in the educational industry. The school currently offers full time Ordinary National Diploma Programs and will in no distant time offer full courses in Higher National Diploma.”

    Furthermore, as an incentive to students studying at ITM, he disclosed: “We provide an opportunity for successful students to progress to higher level programmes at Highbury College, Portsmouth, United Kingdom.

    The Institution has well-seasoned lecturers from the United Kingdom and Nigeria. With their wealth of experience, they are duty bound to provide high quality teaching and learning opportunities that meet the needs of individual students and groups in line with its strategic goals.”

    The school which currently runs courses in Computing, Business Management, Entrepreneurship, Leisure & Tourism Management is preparing its pioneer students for their second semester examination.

    Expressing her joy at her enlisting at ITM, Joy Eko, studying computing said: “My experience has been very wonderful and awesome, I must say. I am completely transformed both in character and learning. I now speak as an entrepreneur, reason like an innovator and most importantly, work and express myself freely at any gathering as guided by our code of conduct. One good thing about this school is that we live as a family.”

     One of the cardinal principles of the school which is pioneering innovative approaches to education and training is already manifesting, judging from testimonies from the students during their respective interactive classes.

    For Miss Abodunrin Seun, an ND 1 student in Computing: “You must wonder why I came all the way from Lagos to Ugep. I have visited so many schools round the country and I can tell you what they offer, but my experience here has given me a different assessment of other schools. For me, others are like glorified secondary schools. This school has brought out so many things in me. I will not be far from the truth if I say that ITM is first IT supported learning environment in Nigeria today.”

    The story is not different with Mr. Richard Etim, who is studying Leisure and Tourism in the institution. For him ITM is the best thing that has ever happened to him, even as he calls on other youth to join him. “ITM is a world -class institute and it is known for its uniqueness in Cross River State and in the UK. In ITM, you are taught among other things, to be a critical thinker, exposed to problem solving, time management skill, which is critical for a successful business, team-work skills and applying the lessons to real life situations. So if you have a child and you believe in them and want them to get the best in life and qualitative education that is entrepreneurial-based, then ITM should be your next stop.”

    As expected, take off of the school has come with its attendant socio-economic spin-offs. Already, locals are taking advantage of the opportunities of the presence of the institution by opening shops and building hostels and hotels around the school.

    Not to be left out of the imminent boom, most traders in Abakiliki, in neighbouring state of Ebonyi are beginning to relocate their businesses to Ugep.

    According to Mr. Tony Otuokoro, from Ebonyi State, who runs a provision store, “The establishment of this school has really brought a very big change to this environment. If you look around, you will notice it is a new site. People have started building around here. Even though the population is not much, business life has started and more people have approached me to secure spaces for them, which are now becoming expensive.”

    Monday Ichie, who runs a cyber cafe, one of the businesses in the institution, spoke of his joy at the establishment of the institution.

    The Rector of the institution,  William Pedley said apart from the world-class curriculum adopted for the school, to achieve the main goal of ensuring that between 90 and 100 percent of its graduates are gainfully employed upon graduation, he will not relent, given the progress already made and the kind of response gotten from their staff.

    “I’m confident that we will get there. Our intension is to be international leader in vocational education and we are confident that with the foundation we have laid, we are not far from achieving that.”

    He said: “Highbury was selected from a rigorous process by the state government.

    That was after assessment by the government that Highbury College matched the requirement of the state after proper examination of our track records in entrepreneurship development in the UK and outside the UK. So we were contracted to keep the institution up and running for five years and thereafter hand it over to an indigenous Nigerian management which we have already started training in line with current realities and according to our standards.

    “Here in Cross River State, there has been a great welcome, and fantastic support. The academic institutions we came across have been very supportive and we have recruited young and energetic Nigerians who have come to realise that truly, this is the right place to be and they are doing their work effectively as expected. From the state government, I will affirm that so far, the support has been firm and constant and that has kept us up and running.”

  • Nollywood cry of pain Help, pirates  are chasing us  into extinction!

    Nollywood cry of pain Help, pirates are chasing us into extinction!

    Faced with what seems like a veritable threat to their means of livelihood and survival, major players in the Nigerian movie industry are closing ranks and taking the battle to the movie pirates, while calling on the government to come to their rescue with stiffer legislations and penalties. Gboyega Alaka reports 

    It’s a hot Tuesday afternoon in the heart of Ikeja, a commercial axis of Lagos noted for its huge trading and white-collar business activities. Expectedly, traffic was tight and fast nearing a gridlock situation, as it was just past lunch hour. This will continue until close of business around six o’clock, when more vehicles will be join up. The fact that it had rained the evening before also means that the heat was more intense and both those already on the road and those peeping from their high rise offices know they are in for a ‘swell’ journey back home.  This was certainly one of those days they’re all going to hate working in Lagos.

    But not so for the street traders, who are already meandering through the long stretch of vehicles, taking advantage of the bad situation to do brisk business and make quick money. And not so particularly for the poorly clad teenagers brandishing movie CDs and literally shoving them through the windows of cars and buses that have their glasses wound down. As one of the boys shoved the CDs into one of those tightly-packed 16-seater buses, this reporter’s eyes caught a glimpse of October 1, Kunle Afolayan’s yet to be released block-buster movie. One of the passengers immediately reached for it and started negotiating. Within minutes, money and goods changed hands. As if catching the bug, a couple other passengers quickly made their purchases, as the bus eased forward and the boy-seller moved quickly to another vehicle. The lucky passengers had bought their own copies of a movie currently showing at the cinemas at N5,000 per head at a meager N500. Who would blame them? They can now get home, loosen their ties, possibly have their bath and watch in a relaxed mood. Probably on weekends too, they would invite their family and friends, and they would all have a private viewing session in the comfort of their living rooms. And when they are done and tired of watching, they’re going to lend it to friends, who would repeat the same ritual as described above, and those would most certainly also lend it to some other family and friends. The extension goes on and on and on, such that even the buyer soon gives up on the CD’s where about. After all he bought it with just N500  an equivalent of two English pounds

    Yet these are only pirated CDs high-jacked from God-knows-where and massively reproduced and pushed onto the streets. Without doubt, their proliferation also effectively puts paid to the revenue that should ever have accrued to the original owner of the work. Surely, there would no longer be any need to drive and go see the movie at the cinemas.

    And yet this is a film reputed to have cost a whopping N115million, out of which Afolayan, who was not available for interview at the time of working on this story,  reportedly confessed that he had only raked in just about N100million from its special screening and showings at the cinemas. Aside being one of the most expensive films ever made in the country, it has also been largely adjudged the best ever. The film also features some of the best collection actors across the country and beyond; the likes of Sadiq Daba, who played the lead; Kayode Aderupoko, Kehinde Bankole, Kunle Afolayan himself, Kanayo O. Kanayo, Ibrahim Chatta, Bimbo Manuel, and even distinguished industry outsiders like Deola Sagoe. In recognition of its quality, the movie has also amassed series of top quality awards, including Best Featrure Film, Best Screenplay and Best Lead Actor, Sadiq Daba, at the 2014 Africa International Film Festival; it also won nine of the 12 awards at stake at the 2015 Africa Magic Viewers Choice Awards notably in the Best Movie of the Year, Best Movie Director and Best Actress (Kehinde Bankole).

    According to Yinka Akanbi, a playwright and film and music producer, who runs Pisces Audio Visuals Limited, in Ikeja and says he was taught play-writing by the legendary late Ola Rotimi at the Obafemi Awolowo University, this is the scenario across the city of Lagos, and possibly Abuja and other major Nigerian cities. It is also this annoying scenario that got him going after the movie peddlers one faithful afternoon in April this year. He’d been driving on a Lagos road one afternoon and suddenly saw copies of October 1 being brandished and pushed at commuters in traffic. Immediately, his instinct told him something was wrong. He tried to call Afolayan, to confirm, but couldn’t get through; and then he put a call through to Tunde Kelani, a senior colleague and a revered veteran in the industry, who confirmed his fear that it had not been released and also told him matter-of-factly to “better go and sit down, that it’s a terrible situation.”

    Power of anger

    But Akanbi somehow was not going to just go sit down. For a moment he snapped, got into an altercation with the pirate agents hawking on the street, and subsequently confiscated all the CDs in the teenagers’ charge. Inadvertently, Akanbi had started a fight-back.

    The pictures went viral on social media, notably facebook, where Akanbi has a huge followership, and an awareness was gradually been created. Less than one week after, another big player in the industry, Yemi Shodimu followed suit. In a picture that had the usually suave and calm actor looking really mean, Shodimu held out copies of October 1 that he had confiscated, with the caption: “Come on Let’s stop this (sic) bastards before they stop us. More seizures today.”

    As if galvanized, a huge crowd of frontline actors, movie producers and other auxiliary professionals in the industry marched to the office of the Lagos State Governor, Babatunde Raji Fashola, a couple of days later to register their grievances. The group which includes the likes of Tunde Kelani, Jide Kosoko, Adebayo Salami, Iyabo Ojo, Yemi Shodimu , Tunji Bamishigbin, Yinka Akanbi and Kunle Afolayan amongst others.

    Kelani lamented how the theft of their creative and intellectual properties by some dubious people has reached a really critical level, and demanded an immediate government intervention; else it might be swan song for the promising industry.

    Their latest victim, Kunle Afolayan also told the governor the pathetic story of how his highly celebrated but yet-to-be-released movie got into the market ahead of him; while the governor, who acknowledged that piracy is a global problem, in turn promised his support at furthering the battle from legislative angle.

    Asked what spurred him into action, Yinka Akanbi said “It is anger. Anger at the fact that you have so many ideas you want to express and the fact somebody out there is saying you cannot, because the moment you finish work on a project, they are out there on the streets and nothing comes back to you. I have gone to school as society requires; I have my masters in Theatre Arts; I am doing my PhD currently, and at the end of the day, one has nothing to show for it? Could you believe that everything Tunde Kelani has produced has been pirated, everything including his retirement? And these people do it with so much impunity!”

    As if connecting by telepathy, Yemi Shodimu, responding to the same question at a different place and time also said “Anger is one. Anger at what has been going on for so long and disenchantment about the unfortunate things happening within the industry. I also feel the deprivation within the industry, as in the inability of players in the industry to reap from their sweat…. I think I probably just snapped. Here are works being sold on the streets, even when they had not been released.”

    Continuing, Shodimu, who said even Oleku, a Yoruba film set in the early sixties, released about a decade ago, where he played the lead, was also hugely pirated, said what irks him most is the impunity with which the pirates reproduce the works and go hawking them on the streets in broad daylight. “I think there can’t be a better word to describe it than impunity, because you just see the bravado on the part of the pirates. They don’t give a damn about the owner of the work and the law and they just keep doing it. To imagine that a lot of investment has gone into these works, and for somebody who obviously did not lift a finger to just smile to the banks, while the owner of the job languish in debt and penury, is just ridiculous.”

    He also spoke of the perennial damage being done, which he said is grave. “Make no mistake about it. When you have an investor that goes the whole hog to put a creative work together, he expects to reap from it, so as to reinvest into another project; but this hinders him or her. And the multiple effect of this is the greater danger, because we cannot afford to unleash the people in the industry into the about market. We cannot. And for that reason, all hands have to be on deck.”

    Akanbi on his part said the piracy menace “is killing. It is as painful as death. There is no way you will shoot a film in Nigeria and you would not have to get entangled in some kind of debt. Some of us have had to sell our cars and every other sellable to raise money for some films. You can imagine how much was spent on October 1, probably N100million. Let’s say N50million was loan and the rest goodwill. What the present situation spells is that he has squandered that goodwill. Anyone who has watched the clean copies being sold on the street will definitely not need to go viewing at any cinema. Once they’ve infiltrated your work, you don’t get anything again, because there is no way buyers can differentiate.”

    Asked to quantify the damage the pirates are inflicting on the industry and the economy in figures, Akanbi said that surely would run into billions of naira. He said the situation is so blatant that most of the pirates’ distributors insist on selling to only retailers willing to buy 1,000 copies and above. Usually, he says the real retailers are hiding somewhere in a corner of the streets, waiting to collect their money back from the visible teenage hawkers in the traffic.

    He said “Piracy is like a canker-worm that eats up the foundation of your work, leaving the whole business to collapse.”

    Frustration and dearth of creativity

    Shodimu is very wary of the frustration that follows this blatant rip-off. “The whole situation is frustrating to the producers. Look, people go out there to take loans, people use their properties as collateral in an attempt to access loan and give life to their creativity, hoping to reap something in return. So aside the artistic satisfaction you get in seeing your creativity come to life, it is supposed to be a commercial success. But when this is not allowed to happen, how do you go to the next one? Disenchantment sets in. It’s also a big invitation to unemployment. Don’t forget, each production is tied to hundreds of people: the technical hands, the artistes, the creative hands, the distributors, the marketers….”

    Worst of all, he says, is that the creative mind is endangered. Art is endangered, because the creative mind is not been nourished with the expected reward and satisfaction. “You ought to nourish the mind with the feeling that what you’re producing is bringing rewards. If within you, you know that you’re working for some faceless cabal, you’re just disillusioned!

    “Kunle woke up to find his work on the streets. And we’re talking about the best film ever shot in this country. Imagine the resources expended on bringing those great actors from within and outside the country together; a post-production done in and outside the country; and then you just sit back and some idiots take it over and cheapen it! It’s the same with 30 days in Atlanta. You won’t believe that that one too has been pirated. Imagine the amount of money that went into it: the trip abroad, the artistes, the crew, name it. Add these to the emotional investment that went into it.”

    Like corruption, like piracy.

    It was former Chairman of the EFCC who said “when you fight corruption, corruption fights back.” Victims of piracy will tell you that fighting back is not an exclusive preserve of corruption. The Yinka Akanbi’s of this world, the Charly Boys of this world, the Kunle Afolayans, Gabosky, his appointed marketer and all those involved in intellectual property creation, will tell you as a matter-of-fact that piracy fights back, and in a real bloody manner too. Although when pointedly asked if he does not feel endangered fighting these people, whose modus operandi has been likened to that of drug syndicates, Akanbi agrees on the one hand, saying “they are worse than a drug syndicate;” but tend to undermine them on the other hand, when he said: “One thing I know is that they are not as powerful and organised as we think they are.”

    Akanbi’s latter response might stem from the feeble response he has so far got from the boy-traders hawking the CDs on the streets. Some of the artistes and stake-holders, who have however tried taking the battle to the real kingpins in their Alaba International Market den, will however tell you a different story.

    As far back as 2005, when a group led by Charly Boy, Kenny Ogungbe, Kenny St. Best amongst others stormed the dreaded pirates’ base to challenge their damaging actions, they literally came back with bloodied nose. Female gospel singer, Kenny St Best left the market in rags, as the Alaba goons didn’t spare any respect for her sex and gave her the same treatment as the men.

    Most recently, Gabriel Okoye, aka Igwe Gabosky, a popular movies distributor, with whom Kunle Afolayan had entered an agreement to distribute his films, raised an alarm that the movies he had been contracted to distribute were already being massively reproduced and sold.

    The battle almost toed the ethnic cum political line thereafter, when an obviously annoyed Afolayan, a Yoruba, lost his cool and stirred the hornet’s nest, when he allegedly tweeted that the main cabal behind the criminal business of intellectual property theft otherwise known as piracy in Nigeria is populated by people of Igbo extraction. Coming on the heels of a heated election campaign that divided the country along tribal lines, it was no surprise that a lot of people of Igbo extraction went for his jugular.

    But Gabosky himself, an Igbo, publicly supported Afolayan’s claim, reiterating that about 99% of the people involved in professional theft of intellectual works at Alaba are Igbo. He fingered Ubakason Plaza and Obosi Plaza as the den of the pirates and wondered why Nigerians are always quick to cover up criminal acts with tribal cloak. He wondered why his kinsmen were trying to mix criminality with politics, saying that “A criminal is a criminal and should be pronounced a criminal, whether he is a Yoruba, Igbo or Hausa.”

    Gabosky also revealed that “The people in piracy are the big men that you see around. Some of them are former stakeholders who have found lucrative jobs in piracy under different guises.” He said their manner of operation is to pirate the works at night and then sell to miscreants in the day.

    His attempts to confront the cabal along with the Nigerian Copyright Commission, NCC, ironically turned out to be a wrestle with the devil. That confrontation resulted in a bloody battle that left one of the policemen with a broken skull.

    To underline their boldness, the pirates, days before releasing October 1, had allegedly called Gabosky, asking him to negotiate with them; else he would not sell the movie beyond one week before they infiltrated the market with fake copies. It could therefore safely be deduced that it was his refusal to negotiate with criminals that led to the high-jacking and release of the movie, early April.

    Not willing to sit back and watch, Gabosky has also at different times, taken the battle to the criminals. At different for a, he has spoken of how he has had to mobilize the police and even some military boys with huge sums of money, to storm the Alaba den of the pirates. While they were able to confiscate some CDs and make some arrest, Gabosky however lamented the bold resistance put forward by the crooks, narrating how they came out to fight back with sophisticated weapons.

    Gabosky revelation on invitation to negotiate tallies with one made by another player in the industry, Foluke Daramola, who once narrated on TV how she was prevailed upon to negotiate with a pirate, who ‘sat confidently behind a huge desk,’ if she ever intended to make any returns from her movie.

    Like Gabosky, Foluke declined the insulting invitation, and found herself on the losing side.

    Comedian Ayo Makun aka AY, might seem to have opted for the easier way out, when he instructed Gabosky (also his distributor) to release the movies in the substandard copies that the pirates usually sell. But Gabosky, it seems, does not believe in the negative mantra of joining them, if you can’t beat them.

    He lamented that the same treatment being given to October 1 has also been given to his other franchises, including Half of A Yellow Sun, 30 Days in Atlanta; which he said the fake copies hit the market just as he was preparing to release them.

    The above therefore establishes the fact that the pirates may be far more powerful than the stick wielding fake video vendors, who tried to attack Akanbi, penultimate week.

    But the artistes seem to be prepared for this battle. Shodimu says “We’ve never been under any illusion that it will be a tea-party. Even robbers protect their loots. What we’re doing is only a reminder to our people in authority that they’ve got a lot to do.”

    Akanbi on his part says, “now that they have started attacking and fighting back, it means we have to take the battle to another level. We need to let them know that they cannot continue to mess with our livelihood. “

    Way out

    With this renewed vigour, will the artistes be pushing for the arrest of the street peddlers, with the hope of tracing the chain to the final sources?

    Tunde Kelani, arguably one of the biggest and most respected players in the industry says “No, no, no. that is not the objective. The objective is that the law and punishment specified for piracy offences is not strong enough. I think it’s about three months or a fine option of N100, 000. That is nothing more than a slap on the wrist and a stipend; and we’re talking about something that is destroying the economy of the country and threatening the means of livelihood and survival of some people.

    Displaying copies of all his past works that have been pirated, Kelani said “these are all the works I have done all my life; they are supposed to be my retirement benefits; but that’s all gone now, because once they hijack and flood them into the market, we simply cannot compete.”

    Way out for him would therefore be to be proactive, educate the people not to patronise pirated products and get the government “to elevate piracy to the level of financial crimes and drugs, and create an agency to combat it, like the National Drug law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA), the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).”

    Akanbi on his part said the practitioners will have to wait and see, following the march to the office of the governor of Lagos State, Babatunde Fashola.

    The solution for him therefore is to criminalise the offense, adding that he was recently told that piracy is a civil offence.

    He also said “the interpretation of a law depends on those who are interpreting it, adding that the government in power also determines the general air of lawlessness or otherwise. “

    Shodimu on his part says piracy is so hurtful that any penalty other than the death sentence would suffice.

    Alaba International Market, the source and the cul-de-sac

    Expectedly, a visit to Alaba International Market, ordinarily reputed as an electronic market, revealed nothing more that the labyrinth of shops and alleyways, plazas and an array of some of the latest home entertainment electronics and appliances. This reporter actually got a friend within the market to point out a couple of buildings where he suspected the illicit productions were being made, packed and shipped into the Lagos market and beyond, but nothing more came out of it, as mute seemed to be the response to all further enquiries. He said on a good day, you could get any movie you need on request, but said you have to be a familiar face, to be able to purchase some of the contraband CDs in huge numbers, as no-one is ready to take any kind of risks with strangers. He revealed that times without number, law enforcement agencies and artistes have stormed the place, some resulting in fierce battles, to arrest ‘the boys,’ but said they always find ways to ‘settle’ and get on with their business.

    A young man, Uche, who will give no other information order than being a printer, admitted knowing fellow printers who have made fortunes from printing movie jackets for the pirates.  He said that in itself, is one huge business opportunity that he himself is trying to break into. At least, no one will accuse him of any illicitness in that one.

    A chance discussion with one of the movie hawkers in the traffic of LASU-Volks, along Badagry Expressway, also revealed nothing. The boy, an Igbo, who refused to give his name or allow his picture taken, said the CDs were given to him by his oga (boss) and said where and how he gets them is not his business. Following more questions, he because suspicious and asked if this reporter wanted to purchase CDs or ask questions: “Oga, wetin now? You wan begin sell CD? I beg, me I no want wahala o.”

    And that effectively put paid to the questioning. Further attempts to speak with the other hawkers was mission impossible, as it seemed our friend had spread the word to them, not to say a word.

    One thing was however sure, these peddlers parade some of the hottest movies CDs in the country including: October 1, Ole ku, Oyenusi, 30 days in Atlanta, and any kind of American movies you want to see.

    Someone actually boasted that the only film you may not find in Alaba, are the ones that are yet to be shot and produced.

  • ‘It’s a battle for the soul of Nollywood ‘-Tunde Kelani

    ‘It’s a battle for the soul of Nollywood ‘-Tunde Kelani

    Renowned film-maker, Tunde Kelani speaks on the damaging effects of intellectual property thieves otherwise known as pirates, on the movies industry and calls for sustained government and stakeholders’ support to chase them underground, else they spell doom for the industry.

    PIRACY, it seems has taken another dimension in the country, to the extent that some people now release yet-to-be-released movies into the market. What does this spell for the industry?

    Absolute disaster. In fact it is threatening our livelihood and none of us is sure whether we’re ever going to do another film. It’s that bad. Take the case of Kunle Afolayan for instance; with all the huge amount of money the young man invested in October 1, and without releasing it, you suddenly find it being peddled all over the streets. We at Mainframe Productions were hit very hard in 2008, when the film Arugba, was massively pirated and we never made any penny from it thereafter. And then Maami, featuring Funke Akindele and a host of others was worse. Once it came out on CD, it was hijacked and massively pirated within 24 hours. With a lot of capacity building and investment in the industry, hopefully, neighbourhood cinemas can spring up again, but the truth is that if this piracy is not dealt with in a decisive manner, as to drive the perpetrators underground, by the time these infrastructures are ready, there may be no films left. We would all have stopped making films.

    I’m thinking that if a film is yet to be released into the market and yet you suddenly find it everywhere, one should be able to trace its leakage, since it would only have had limited contact with very select people.

    No. Once a film crosses into the digital realm and then is distributed into about 15 cinemas, even if it is one cinema, it cannot be denied. But the thing is we are not dealing with the problem, if we’re chasing after the source of the leakage, then we’re justifying criminality. We should look at what needs to be done to curb it. There has to be a joint, decisive action.

    More recently, stakeholders like Yinka Akanbi, Yemi Shodimu, took the battle to the streets, physically challenging the pirated CD peddlers and even confiscating their contrabands. What do you think is influencing this?

    It might not have been really effective, but you may never know how you will react, until you see your work being peddled by these people. It’s more like seeing your livelihood been threatened.

    It’s a bit surprising to learn that even your Mainframe Productions has suffered in the hands of the pirates. The general consensus is that you’ve been able to circumvent them by first taking most of your films through the cinemas, before putting them on CDs.

    We have been worst hit. Every single work we have produced in Mainframe Productions has been pirated. Besides, we can’t make our money from the cinemas because the ratio of cinemas in the country at the moment is the worst in the world. It is not possible to make your money from the about 20 cinemas in the country at the moment. And then, you have to look at the sharing ratio, taxes and all that; so a producer cannot make more than 35% of his investment from the cinemas. Before Kunle and others, they’ve pirated my works, everything. (At this point, he brings out pirated copies of all his past works.) The most devastating ones were Arugba and Maami. Maami was pirated in less than 24 hours after we released it. Somebody here in Lagos called to alert me of copies he suspected to be pirated. Not long after, I got another call from Abuja, where the person told they had started hawking the film in a wheelbarrow. The situation is so bad that I hardly get a good sleep these days. Till today, I think we still have about 40,000 copies of Maami not sold, because the pirates hijacked it and met the needs of the public ahead of us. Even up till last week, they’re still reproducing Maami and Kunle Afolayan’s October 1.

    How threatening is the action of these pirates.

    It can push the industry go into extinction because who will put money into a business where there is no guarantee of recouping your capital, not to talk of your profit. It is already a big risk and a threat and it is winning. Go and ask around, there are not great films being made anymore. It has reached a level where people advise me to look for something else to do. You may talk about my passion for it, but if I do not make any money in return from my investment, creativity and passion, what will I use to take care of myself and family? Imagine my current film, Dazzling Mirage; if they play their hands on that one, I will just go and kill myself.

    The good thing about that film is that I took a soft loan to produce it. If it were a bank loan, I probably would have killed myself. So this current battle against the pirates is a battle for the soul of Nollywood.

    I understand that one film was released last Monday and pirated on Tuesday. Almost everything in Nigeria is being pirated. I understand that a writer, who won a prize on a book he had yet to publish, suddenly came across copies of the same book being sold on Lagos streets.  He asked, has this book been published? The seller said yes, and said he could take the original owner to his manager, if he wanted to buy huge quantity. A commissioner of police told me that story.

    So then they’re aware of the problem. Are they willing to tackle it? Are they picking up the boys on the streets to start with?

    No, no, no. that is not the objective. The objective is that the law and punishment specified for piracy offences is not strong enough. I think it’s about three months or a fine option of N100,000. That is nothing more than a slap on the wrist and a stipend; and we’re talking about something that is destroying the economy of the country and threatening the means of livelihood and survival of some people. (Displaying copies of all his past works that have been pirated, he continued). These are all the works I have done all my life; they are supposed to be my retirement benefits; but that’s all gone now, because once they hijack and flood them into the market, we simply cannot compete.

    What then is the way forward?

    I think we must be really proactive. We must begin to educate people not to patronise pirated products. The pirates are probably thinking that if they can pirate American films, then there really shouldn’t be anything wrong in pirating Nigerian films as well. But America has solid infrastructure.

    They have over 3000, 4000 cinemas, and they can make their money back, with profit in just one weekend. That is not the case here and once they pirate Nigerian films, they destroy us and we don’t have any means of making our money back.

    So our target is for government to elevate piracy to the level of financial crimes, drugs and create an agency that can combat it, like the NDLEA and the EFCC.

    I was watching Foluke Daramola on TV not too long ago and she was talking about how she was taken to the main man pirating her film, who was sitting behind some massive desk and with whom she was supposed to negotiate; this means these people are not spirits afterall.

    Look, everybody knows this information. Piracy is organised and controlled by a section of Alaba called Fancy and Furniture. It is a cabal of powerful people, who are held together in a kind of criminal bond. And you cannot upbraid them, they are powerful and rich. And they have organised themselves in a way that it is tough to tackle them.

    How much is the industry losing to piracy?

    I don’t know. No one can put a figure to it. Besides it cannot be quantified in terms of money alone, because it affects a whole lot of different people, with different talents.

  • UGOCHI IGWILO ‘How I broke  through Indian  fashion industry’

    UGOCHI IGWILO ‘How I broke through Indian fashion industry’

    Scores of foreign models have walked down one of fashion’s most celebrated platforms in India, Lakme Fashion Week (LFW) over the years. They have all been tall, slender, confident and most importantly, white. 23-year-old Ugochi Latoya Igwilo from Nigeria who broke the spell 15 years shares her success story with Yetunde Oladeinde

    Ugochi Igwilo is an international model and former practicing interior designer based in Delhi India.

    Standing at 6ft tall she spends her time between scorching the ramps of different fashion shows in India; her walk is often describes as the perfect mix of edge and sensuality.  She has done campaigns and editorials for fashion designers and has  also worked with photographers to explore new depths in fashion photography.

    After her graduation at Vivian Fowler Memorial College, Lagos, she went to India to further her education at her father’s suggestion, while studying interior design in the university; she saw an opportunity to model. Fashion students approached her to shoot for their fashion portfolio and that was how she started modeling.

    The slender structure with boyish curl worked for a while with an architectural firm in New Delhi. She is often commended for her efforts in continuing to push the boundaries of modeling in India. Igwilo has done shoots, fashion shows with premier designers in India. She is known to be the first Nigerian model to walk down one of fashion’s most celebrated platforms in India, Lakme Fashion Week (LFW). Over the years scores of foreign models have walked down this particular platform, they have all been tall, slender, confident and most importantly, white; until now.  She is said to be breaking the spell of white model favoritism in India.

    Cutting a powerful picture with her short blonde crop, Igwilo is well aware of the attention she has been garnering as the first black model to walk the ramp at LFW. “I am not the most conventional face here, so a few designers are apprehensive to work with me. But again, there is also a certain level of excitement of working with an African model, which I really like. It’s great that designers are willing to experiment and take chances,” she gushes

    She reveals that  she enjoys travelling, experiencing new sights, meeting new people, going on exciting outings and reading as

    these are the things that inspire her the most. She plans to model in Europe or the states as well as Nigeria and eventually start her own design company.

    We asked her what advice she had for aspiring models and she said “Be realistic about your expectations and choices. Avoid being desperate, it shows. People will take undue advantage of you. Believe in yourself and let your inner voice guide you. Rejection is a part of success. Take it in the right spirit. Use it as a learning tool; don’t let it affect who you are.”

    She tells us she does yoga to stay in shape and she takes a lot of protein and fiber-based foods now, less carbs and drink a lot of water.

    Asking her about her greatest learning’s she tells us” modeling is not as cool and easy as she had thought or as most people believe; that the life of a model is not always glamorous. Modeling is still a business and a profession, and just like any other profession; it requires hard work, personal, intra-personal and professional skill.

    She believed that one should always live in the moment. ‘Make the most of your time today. Don’t give in to depression or self pity. Improve your skills and try to be a better person than you were yesterday’Igwilo advised.

    Are there any sartorial preferences or inhibitions she has? “I like things that are stylish and quirky. I am open to wearing anything that fits well. But I wouldn’t want to wear a thong on the ramp. That’d be horrible,” she adds with a laugh.

    Ugochi is fast becoming one of the most recognizable models in the Indian fashion industry, and one of the most recognizable faces in the Nigerian community in India. She is well read, well versed, a young and versatile socialite. She takes pride in her ability to communicate with different types of people and go for the things she appreciates.

  • ‘ANA needs reorganisation’

    ‘ANA needs reorganisation’

    Denja Abdullahi has been in the exco of the Association of Nigerian Authors (ANA) for close to 15 years in different positions. Currently the Vice President of the association, he now wants to be the president as the election draws near. He spoke to Edozie Udeze on why he is the man for the job

    The 2014 ANA Convention was rescheduled twice before it was eventually held in Ibadan. What exactly was the problem and how was it resolved?

    The problem of the 2014 Convention had to do with the perennial problem of ANA in being over-dependent on States’ governments for the financing of its annual conventions.Rivers and Kaduna States’ chapters of ANA were considered for the hosting and both states could not come up in good time with assurance of the capability to host.At a point,we decided to give it to Rivers State and it was a cat and mouse game in getting their state government to endorse the hosting for sponsorship.The government gave some initial endorsement but the arrow head was caught up irretrievably in a political struggle we are all aware of. That was how that went away.We then decided to look inward to do the convention within our modest means as an association in Ibadan.In the build up to that,we at the late hour got some support from the Presidency and we had a very successful convention. Right now,we are already looking to the future of ANA conventions where we would wean ourselves from going cap in hand to states’ governments and where members would start enjoying fewer subsidies.If we crave financial independence and less stress for everyone,that will be the way to go.

    It is an election year at ANA and as the incumbent Vice President. Are you one of the likely candidates for the ANA Presidency?

    Naturally,I should be interested in becoming ANA President at the next election going by my long years of service to the association. I established a chapter of the association in early 90s in Kebbi State when I was lecturing at the WaziriUmaru Federal Polytechnic,Birnin-Kebbi.I moved to a public service career in 1998 and revolutionized the operations of the association in the FCT where I have become one of the pillars of the association.In 2001, I was elected into the National Executive Council of ANA as an ex-officio member; in 2003 I was elected as Assistant General Secretary; in 2005 I was elected as the substantive General Secretary and returned unopposed for the same position in 2007;between 2009 to 2011 after the expiration of my very eventful tenure as General Secretary under theDr Wale Okediran Presidency,I reverted to the position of an ex-officio member by constitutional provision; and in 2011, I was invited to contest for the position of Vice President,which I won.So you could see that it is only natural I aspire to be the next President. I have served the association in so many capacities; I have been the longest serving member of the Association in the National Executive Council ; I have rendered innumerable servicesto the association and I have been faithful to the ideals and causes of the association and it is only natural and a matter of duty for me to offer myself to serve again at the highest level.

    Having come through the ladder, from Ex-Officio toAssistant Secretary to Secretary General, then VP in the last four years,that should qualify you as the longest serving ANA Executive. Should you emerge the next ANA President, what should be the expectation of the literary community? What would you be doing differently?

    The literary community should expect an all-inclusive administration where every member will be given the chance to contribute his or her talents and expertise to the development of the association. ANA is a voluntary organization with no war chest funds lying out there for it to use or pay staff to mind its affairs daily.In that kind of set up and from my experience, it is only freely given, sincere and committed outpouring of self that give vibrancy to the association’s activities. I will also take the hard-nosed decisions that will wean the association from dependence on government patronage with regards to funding our conventions and other programmes. Rather, I will stake ANA’s claims to legitimate support from the government at all levels. I will advance this by intensifying along with other like creative associations the advocacy for the establishment of the national endowment funds for the arts ,so that the creative sector can access funds for viable programmes and projects. I will also internationalize the operations of the association by collaborating with other writers’ unions across Africa and the world. I am already talking to the Pan –African Writers’ Association(PAWA) with headquarter in Accra ,Ghana on  how to galvanize Africa through the literary and cultural fronts as it was in the 60s but in line with the contemporary world. ANA under my watch, ANA will return to its fundamental objectives of being a writers’ craft union that will be committed without fail to the advancement of the interests of its members within the overall pursuit of building and maintaining an egalitarian society. Of course, the developmental objectives of the association such as hosting of workshops, seminars, conferences and celebratory activities will not be relegated to the background.Lastly,I have plans to repackage the annual convention to make it more of a writers’ affair where books, authors and creativity will be fully celebrated.We will pull out some activities within that annual convention to stand on their own as full-fledged events.

    How does your Presidency intends to solve the problem of funding which has been a major headache of the association in recent time? What are your plans for the association?

    I have mentioned some of the ways in which we can overcome the perennial problem of funding in my earlier response.Ensuring that we overcome the problem of funding will start by members paying their dues and even extending that by making voluntary contributions.We shall create platforms for the facilitation of that so that we do not have to wait for the year end at conventions for members to pay their dues.You must pay your dues to the association whether you attend the yearly conventions or not or you cease to be a member. I told you of some hard decisions that must be made to attain financial solvency. Members may have to reasonably pay their way to the annual conventions and through them though a subsidy regimen will still be in place. ANA will also approach individuals, corporate bodies, local and foreign grant giving agencies and foundations for institutional supports that will free us from the problem of funding our projects and programmmes. I told you earlier of staking our claim for institutional support from the government at all levels; as somebody who has a lot of experience working in government,I know where this pool of support lies and how to access them. I also know that ANA has done more than enough all these years for the society in the area of arts ,literature and culture to be in good stead to ask for such support.I will also ensure a business model is introduced to the running of the association’s financial and economic affairs and that will be premised on the MammanJiyaVatsa Writers’ Resort we are working on in Abuja. I will ensure that resort is eventually built with all the income generating facilities that are being thought-out placed on it and subsequently run like business so that the association will at least become financial solvent to run 50% of its operation without looking outward.

    You are a public servant and a cultural activist, are we likely to see a change in ANA’s attitude towards national issues in the last four years. ANA is supposed to be a pressure group but not much has been seen in this direction of the Association.

    Yes, there will be a change. ANA is a craft union and it is given as writers that we will always be on the side of the people.ANA will always  be pro-people as it has been no matter the period. ANA can also engage in advocacy in line with its founding objectives.We will put pressure on governments and institutions where our interests and that of the generality of Nigerian people are threatened or violated.We will also not wait for that to happen as we will be working not to even get to that stage. My conception of the writing business is not that of a recluse standing aloof from the society, looking on with disdain on happenings and maintaining a hypocritical sanctimonious self.No, we will be involved in subtle and direct ways in shaping a working society as envisioned by us and others.

    With the rise of various literary prizes like the NLNG and Etisalat Prizes among others, don’t you think there is need to review ANA prizes in terms of its monetary value and general appeal?

    The review of ANA prizes has started with this administration. I was at the head of a panel set up to review the prizes and our recommendations led to the abrogation of Prizes that have long been abandoned by the endowers with ANA just maintaining the prizes for the sake of it.I am referring to the erstwhile NDDC Prizes and others. We have a manageable prize regimen that we administer now,so what we need to do in the near future is to further audit them and repackage them in line with contemporary expectations. New prizes will also be introduced that will be meaningful,developmental and sustainable.

    What do you make of the current political climate in the country? What is the role of the writer/ANA?

    We are in perilous times with agents of darkness working round the clock to subvert the progress of this country. What is good for all of us, whatever are our political associations, religious inclinations and ethnic derivations is to allow the people to exercise their sovereign right to elect their leaders as provided for in our constitution and laws.We should all support INEC to deliver a credible 2015 elections and whatever is the true outcome of that process, we should be ready to live by it. The writers’ role is to work towards ensuring that this happen and we should not join hands with those canvassing for this not to happen.

  • Tourism Minister denies sale of National Theatre

    Tourism Minister denies sale of National Theatre

    Nigerian’s Tourism and Culture Minister, Chief Edem Duke early Friday morning, denied the purported sale of Nigeria’s National Arts Theatre located in Lagos, as recently reported by some section of the media.

    Sounding very much alarmed in a telephone conversation to the Nation newspaper, the Minister said that, “I have not sold the National Theatre to anyone or organisation as purportedly being written about or talked about.”

    In the last few months, the public have been informed variously by some media organisations that Chief Edem Duke acting in his capacity as the Minister of Culture and Tourism, had entered into negotiations to sell off the National Arts Theatre, a national monument which was built for the Festival of Arts and Culture in 1977, under the government of Lt. Gen Olusegun Obasanjo.

    It was reported that the secret deal “was shielded from the Nigerian media, in spite of a subsisting concession arrangement with the Bureau of Public Enterprises, BPE.

    But Duke said that, “the media should stop this spread of rumour. I belief that the Nigerian media practitioners are too enlightened to embrace such rumour. The national Theatre I insist is not going to be turned to a hotel. What the Federal Government has been planning to do in the last three years which the media should have followed and monitored to date, is that the fallow land around the National Theatre, is going to be developed to an entertainment city.  And there is a due process in place for that purpose. In the last three years, there have been sequential processes in this direction.”
    Asked when the intended entertainment city would materialise, the Minister told the Nation that the information will be duly passed to the public in due course; being that the process is still on-going. He however added that, “anything that the government is doing, it does in the interest of the nation as a whole. There is no individual who is going to take the National Arts Theatre and pocket it, no individual, I assure you. I do not know why this matter has repeatedly been an issue.”

  • Enwezor curates spectacular exhibitions

    Enwezor curates spectacular exhibitions

    Hundreds of knives studded into the ground to resemble spiky flowers; a four-metre wall of battered suitcases; a grainy video of a man choking; the words “Death Love Hate” revolving on a circular neon: these are the first works you see inside Okwui Enwezor’s exhibitions at the Giardini and the Arsenale. Spectacular and unassailable, they announce this curator’s themes and concerns: violence, deportation, oppression, the essential role of language in art. Adel Abdessemed calls his knife-blossoms “Nympheas”, defying lineages of beauty after Monet. In a gap between his trunks and valises, Fabio Mauri has slipped a paper explaining that his work “The Western Wall or the Wailing Wall” references journeys of no return to Auschwitz and modern migrations. Christian Boltanski’s “L’Homme qui tousse” (1969) and Bruce Nauman’s “Life, Death, Love, Hate, Pleasure, Pain” (1983) are classic distillations of claustrophobia and fear heralding a dark, troubling biennale.

    Enwezor, Venice’s first African curator, called for a “parliament of forms” of global contributions. But his own vision is so powerful that he has swept up all voices into an epic display of protest. With lively national pavilions (see below) rising to his challenge, he orchestrates a multi-part chorus which rings out as the most cohesive, authoritative, arresting, urgent biennale for decades.

    For Iceland, Christoph Büchel transforms the disused church Santa Maria della Misericordia into a simulated yet actual environment, “The Mosque” — Venice has never had one — welcomed by the city’s Muslim community. Qibla wall, mihrab, prayer mat facing Mecca are juxtaposed with the Catholic architecture: analogy for layers of history and religion fuelling both progress and conflict.

    For Poland at the Giardini, CT Jasper and Joanna Malinowska record the staging of a Polish opera in a Haitian village, with animals criss-crossing the set, to question cultural identities and colonisation. In the Arsenale, Chile’s Paz Errázuriz explores marginal urban existence in intimate yet formally composed black-and-white photographs of male transvestites in drag make-up in underground brothels in 1980s Santiago: a story of the resilience of secret, unacknowledged lives.

    Against projects of this seriousness, the British pavilion looks the tritest thing in town: Sarah Lucas’s huge yellow sculpted phalluses and torsos with vaginas, buttocks and belly buttons studded with cigarettes, sometimes draped over toilet seats, are embarrassingly puerile and have nothing to say.

    For Enwezor’s show, the stage is set by Oscar Murillo’s giant, black, oil-drenched drapes obscuring the classical columns of the Giardini’s international pavilion, and lending a smouldering smell. The edgy/laconic aesthetic and personal myth of 29-year-old Murillo — London-based son of immigrant Colombian cleaners, he paints with a broom — have made him the market’s hottest currency. Here he inaugurates black as the colour of revolution. It dominates throughout: Adrian Piper’s blackboards repeatedly inscribed “Everything will be taken away”; Glenn Ligon’s black silkscreens “Come Out”; Wangechi Mutu’s caged black nude “She’s got the whole world in her”; Huma Bhabha’s quartet of fraught, totemic black wooden sculptures with staring faces entitled “With Blows”, “With Words”, “Mechanic” and “Against What? Against Whom?”.

    With nonstop declamations of Das Kapital in a central arena — a comically incongruous, popular meeting place from the first hour, when I glimpsed billionaire collector François Pinault and über-dealer Iwan Wirth hanging out there — Enwezor’s was always going to be a stridently political biennale. The current art world is rich, global, self-satisfied, swollen with hype, and irrepressibly smart at co-opting critique. In this it mirrors the capitalist system on which it depends: the market buys, manipulates and absorbs almost anything. Where, then, is the spirit of dissent? Enwezor’s triumph is to explore the multi-faceted ways in which artists young and old are responding to what he calls “the state of things      .              .              .              the exploitation of nature through its commodification as natural resources, the growing structure of inequality and the weakening of broader social contract”.

    Tunisian Nidhal Chamekh, 29, shows a drawing cycle, “De quoi rêvent les martyrs?”; sketches of body parts, animal heads on human forms, guns and batons combined with Arabic scripts and phantasmagorical landscapes in confined spaces: a dystopian record of the upheavals of the Arab Spring. Alexander Kluge, 83, who began his career as assistant to Fritz Lang and was a friend of Theodor Adorno, presents “Nachrichten aus der Ideologischen Antike: Marx, Eisenstein — Das Kapital” (2008-15), a Tower of Babel video montage splicing footage of Russia’s 1905 uprising with talking heads: a lawyer debating guilt and accountability, a pianist hammering out key by key an argument for music’s revolutionary role.

    Charles Gaines’s lyrical crossover of songs, texts and drawings turning on traditional spirituals, “All on Account of the Tariff”, is an unusual poetic rendering of radicalisation. Painting, rare here, is political: Kerry James Marshall’s sonorous “Lovers” and “Playground”; Chris Ofili compressing menace into willowy theatrical figures in “Bending over Backwards for Justice and Peace” and “The Caged Bird’s Song”. After many sprawling junk-and-entropy installations in the Arsenale — Katharina Grosse’s volumes of painted fabrics, soil and aluminium debris “Untitled Trumpet” is typical — Enwezor surprisingly concludes at an octet of colossal, frail, upended naked self-portraits by Georg Baselitz. With gouged eyes and throbbing red members, they recede into inky jet backgrounds against rough walls: the 77-year-old artist still fighting an upside-down, unjust world.

    That the personal is political here is axiomatic; the documentary impetus overwhelming. Isaac Julien interviews Marxist theorists. Hans Haacke proposes a 2015 “World Poll” via iPad. Andreas Gursky’s photographs “Chicago Board of Trade” and “Toys R Us” dissect capitalist strategies. Ukrainian Mykola Ridnyi’s film “Regular Places” chronicles everyday confrontation (“Get the fuck out of here you bitch”) in Kharkiv.

    Political art has never had this level of global visibility, and there is something about this biennale’s gravitas and broad platform that feels inevitable and right for now. Enwezor’s specific reading of art’s social responsibilities is not the only approach to culture, but at this scale and in this geopolitical climate it is an immensely potent one.

     

    •Culled from Financial Times