Category: Sam Omatseye

  • Angel of analgesics

    Angel of analgesics

     The Nigeria Bar Association (NBA) must be the boldest association in the country. They committed a public wrong but everywhere they claim to be the holy nation.

     In their last meet in Enugu, they thrived on the people’s amnesia, or so they thought.

    They collected money from Rivers State but would not refund it, and would not even admit it was wrong. It is what Joseph Conrad calls the “the bravado of guilt.” What I want is not just the refund, but a public report of their auditor’s breakdown on how that money was spent.

    One of the charades came in the form of Obiageli Katryn Ezekwesili, the unabashed Obidient, who was a speaker at the event.

    She was also speaking economics that must be her forte.

    But she faltered when she was saying she accepted that President Tinubu should remove fuel subsidy and collapse the exchange rates, but that it was too radical – my words.

    Tunji Ojo, interior minister, said what she and others were calling for was applying analgesics to a deep problem. She is now our angel of analgesics.

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    It is the professional perfidy of such assertions that worry this essayist.

     It all shows that Oby and people like her are not following  what they have believed all their lives because they don’t like the person who is doing what they believe. They are frowning at their own mirrors.

    Oby was in OBJ’s government and wanted all Federal Government schools to be privatized. She was part of the government that hitched itself to the IMF and World Bank now hailing the Tinubu approach.

     She honed her career behind the portals of those organisations. Now she wants to apply Band-Aid to a sore, to deoderise a sty. She was weaned on the sanctity of the market, a doctrinaire laissez-faire expert now clad in a new theology.

    That was the spirit of the last NBA meeting. They invited the multiple hate speech convict, Julius Malema from South Africa, because the conference was to evangelise hate. And hate dripped from every pore of the conference.

     It was the Sultan of Sokoto, Saad Abubakar III, who chastened them and reminded them about their justice as a commodity.

     The NBA itself has become a commodity. It was not a conference of rumination. With all the reports of carousing and arousing, no one expected it to  empower ideas.

  • Suicide by accident

    Suicide by accident

    A festival is the voice of a culture. It is when a people play. It is an icon in time and space and, often, everyone wants to keep politics at bay.

    This day, in the flourish of his white agbada, purple cap and dark shades, Ekiti State Governor, Biodun Oyebanji, upends a festal mood. This is the Udiroko Festival, the day the Ado-Ekiti people celebrate centuries under their king, the Ewi. If the festival is their icon, the iconography is dance, songs, customs and costumes, drama, parades and, of course, food. The Ekiti will not live down their signature pabulum: the pounded yam.

    Udiroko festival is one of the big-time emblems of Nigeria, from the Durbars in the north, to the Ojude ObaFestival in Ijebu land, to the Calabar Festival, and promising Ghigho Aghofen in Warri under the Ogiame Atuwatse III. There are many, like the yam festivals in the east, many of them under-tapped tourist potential. It is the people’s scent.

    Governor Oyebanji, popularly known as BAO, is a public figure whose demeanour  calms a public. He spots a smile, gladhands,not prone to rhetorical spills  and projects a quiescent charisma.

     His style recalls, without irony, the opening lines of Chinua Achebe’s A Man of the People, in his characterization of his protagonist. “No one can deny that Chief the Honourable Minister, M.A. Nanga, MP, was the most approachable politician in the country. Whether you asked in the city or in his home village… they will tell you he was a man of the people. I have to admit this from the outset unless the story I am going to tell will make no sense.”

    Achebe wrote this tongue in cheek, but that is because men with such attributes are rare in public life, especially in the terrain of politics. That is the image of BAO. But on the festival day, BAO unclads. He gives his dovish persona a makeover.

    He reminds me of a press briefing that President Shehu Shagari has with editors and the president, known for his unflappability, sparked at a question. “Jesus” I said to myself, “the president is angry”. That is the title of Dele Giwa’s column on the incident.

    BAO addresses the underhand moves and rumours to undermine his party, the APC, and the work of the President, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

     His face loses its subdued bonhomie and takes on a grave, sometimes combative mien. The quiet man’s gloves are off.

    His attacks are not on the opposition. He launches at members of his own party who are undermining the president, and want to also dent his own doings as the chief executive of the state. Holding brief for the president, he refers to two major roads now under works under this administration.

     The first is the Ado-Ikere- Akure Road. I was at the Federal Executive Council meeting a few months ago when Works Minister David Umahi presented it and it was approved, but not without some theatrics from Solid Minerals  Development  Minister Dele Alake, an Ekiti indigene.

     Alake had said he supported it wholeheartedly and that the road had been neglected for too long and he had been to that road.

    The president, in a whiff of mischief, asked him, “Are you sure,” more than once, and Alake said, “Yes sir.”

    The other road BAO refers to is the Ado-Afe Babalola  Road, which would soon take off. He says the president could not do everything within two years and he is doing all that is humanly possible. He belts out the proverb that the cock is sweating but the feathers conceal it all.

    Some may think those he is referring to are lovers of Ekiti.

    Rather, they are lovers of themselves. They love Ekiti less. Their eyes are set on the APC primary in October.

     In a statement, his Chief Press Secretary, Yinka Oyebode, alleges that one of them has recruited an army of 250 souls for social media onslaughts.

    The fellow, though unnamed, is the Atiku of Ekiti State. The disrobed Adamawa man may want to call him “mini me. Or minimum me.” The Ekiti APC wannabe governor, like Atiku, does not live in Ekiti.

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     When he is there, he is a sojourner for ambition. Like Atiku, his pocket is deep and mischievous. Like Atiku, he is a perennial candidate. Like Atiku, a perennial loser. BAO’s recent anger recalls what Shakespea                                           re writes in Hamlet: “Beware Of entrance to a quarrel, but being in,Bear it that the opposèd may beware of thee.”

    That is his attitude. He is going to the battlefield, and he knows that war is not for gentlemen.

    Some have speculated that former governor and minister Kayode Fayemi may be one of the culprits. My investigations say he is not.

     But the former chief executive cannot take his coattail off some of the rumblings in the state.

     Perhaps some of those undermining the president may be taking a cue from Fayemi’s dig at the Federal Government when he said the people are not happy and they are hungry, and complained about the Omuo-Ilasha-Ayedun-Oye road, and was querulous over refunds to Ekiti.

    Fayemi has not refuted in clear language that he did not make a dig at the centre, and the defence of some of his acolytes that his words were taken out of contempt sometimes undermines the commonsense and literacy of those who heard and even applauded him.

     Just as he did not deny what Amaechi said about his presence on the creation day of the interloper ADC, the former Ekiti State governor must learn, at least, to resist the urge to ambivalence.

     He can learn from the treacherous audacity of his friend from Osun State.

    The fact that BAO has received endorsement from elders, a wide range of party chieftains as well as even those of other parties, including Fayemi himself, should be an indication that BAO has a foothold in the heart of his people.

    Yet a primary should hold, and when it holds, it is the party that will decide who is on the people’s side. But from all indications, those who are fighting should be aware that a BAO has boar inside. His speech at the Udiroko Festival is symbolic.

     The festival often bustles under the Iroko tree. BAO may be daring his challenger if they have the gumption to fell the tree.

    That may result in how historians describe the cause of the fall of the Roman Empire: it committed suicide by accident.

  • Governor Eno scores for albinos

    Governor Eno scores for albinos

    Governor Umo Eno did something that touched my heart and that of anyone who understands the power of connection and humility.

    He devoted an occasion to associate with albinos.

     He gave them donations, and used his platform as the state’s first citizen to evangelise empathy.

    The governor told his audience how he was mocked as a child because of his looks, and when he was running for governor, some insensitive souls balked at the prospect of an albino governor.

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     The Bible says, call not a person common that God supports, and that is the eternal testimony of the chief executive of Akwa Ibom State.

     He tickled the audience when he said his wife responded to the mockers by calling him “my golden boy.”

    He did not only give them gifts, he embraced the boys and girls, as well as the grownups. They will never forget the moment. They know that albinism is no handicap. The last time a governor exemplified this public trait was when former Nasarawa governor Tanko Al-Makura joined a parade of handicapped persons in Abuja.

     During the French Revolution, Abbe Sieyes quipped, “power from above, confidence from the below.” Such humble gestures fulfill such a line.

  • Two acts, Two Olatunjis

    Two acts, Two Olatunjis

    Two great developments happened last week, and they serve as beacons of large hearts in an age of greed. The first was the donation of a magnificent auditorium to the Lagos State University (LASU) by friend and brother Olatunji Bello, current CEO of the FCCPC. The other is a donation of a house to the Kogi State University by Olatunji Dare, well-known columnist and professor of Journalism.

    I attended the event of Bello’s donation, and in attendance were well-known dignitaries.

    Enter the BOS of Lagos, Babajide Sanwo-Olu. Enter his deputy, Femi Hamzat. Enter Aremo Segun Osoba, and many dignitaries.

    These two efforts were not just a show of love. they demonstrate that to give is better than to get, and the former makes sense only in the latter.

    Bello, a former editor, columnist and three-time commissioner and secretary to government in Lagos State, exemplifies what many lack who occupy public office: the meaning of giving. For many office holders, to give is to “dash” money and ignite the vanity of the man of power.  For Bello, he is giving as legacy. His wife, Professor Ibiyemi Olatunji-Bello, is the vice chancellor of a school that has grown under her watch to be a top-ranked institution and the most subscribed not only in Nigeria but on the sub-continent.

    The hall, an over 500-seater, is a modern edifice with tech bells and whistles, and should give the students a reason to ponder. Located in Epe, the place was corralled by the Nigerian army and made a wanton with their power and distorted glory, and former head of state General Sani Abacha was commander.

     The locals resisted them and uprooted them as nauseating neighbours.

    Today, it has moved from ragtag to renaissance, brute to beauty, which is the essence of learning

    Poet John Keats calls it truth is beauty. Bello started it also as a homage to his late father, and it was a testimony to how we can change thing with just a little thought.

     I recall a line an American trainer taught us in Concord Press about writing a lead sentence, and referred to a story of how a house gets its first brick.

     He crooned: “In the beginning there was nothing.” So, it was before Bello said, let there be an auditorium and we have a monument of the mind.

    Professor Dare has a similar story, only this time it is a tribute to his late mother. He started the idea years ago, and informed the university top brass including the ebullient Professor Olu Obafemi.

     The house is located in Kabba, and that is where he hails from in Kogi State. Dare, a role model in the media and self-effacing exemplar of fine prose, was not even present at the event, but local worthies, the cream of the community and university including Professor Obafemi, materialized for him.

    Theirs contradict what a Pastor Biodun Fatoyinbo of COZA said about Christ Apostolic Church Founder. That he had anointing but was poor.

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    Such an irresponsible drivel from a so-called man of God.

    He apologised, though without contrition. His ilk who populate the Pentecostal brand have raised money over values.

     Their followers deceive themselves they love God, but it is money over the holy of holies.

     Hear Jeremiah: “Let the rich man not glory in his riches.” Christ asked a rich man to sell his wealth to the poor. How many times have you heard that in the churches?

    What a coincidence. Two top media names, though of different generations, have bestowed grace to education.

     In an absorbing novel, The Safekeep  by Yael van der Wouden that won the women’s prize for Literature, the Dutch author makes the point that a house is not just a house, but a memory, a history, a hope and a striving.

    It is my hope that the students and faculty will make these two gems into fuel for progress.

     As Euripides wrote: “Whoso neglects learning in his youth, loses the past and is dead forever.”

     These two are legacies forever.

  • Men as shadows

    Men as shadows

    The phrase litmus test is often abused. But no time in this republic have so much stakes attended by-elections like the one we witnessed last week. The trigger was not the PDP, but a sense of euphoric illusion by the new party in town.

     New in guise. ADC, we are told, has been refurbished. A new set of bigwigs strode in and raped it.

    The deflowered party, though stooping from waist wounds, turned a limp into a swagger, and boasted it was going to fell a giant in a wrestling match.

    Well, the battle is over, and it was an anticlimax for being a shellacking.

     “Anticipation,” wrote Samuel Coleridge, “is more potent than surprise.”

    We sought them. We found them not. We cannot say how are the mighty fallen because the Lilliputians  did not rise.

     Jonathan Swift, the English satirist, wrote in his famous classics about moral pigmies.

    In the by-elections, we saw them as though we saw them not. Not in the places where they made a boast. Not Zamfara, Kaduna, Taraba, Kano, and not even in the east except in a skewed story of a moral Lilliputian. Not anywhere.

    By-elections are mock exams, foreshadows of the big battle ahead. It is the people’s pulse, two years after their chiefdoms are hailed. It is often a chance to bait and switch from the president and governors, or to hail them.

    So, we saw that Pitobi urged his supporters to shun Labour Party, which is and is not his home to ADC that will and will not be his home.

     In Kaduna State, former governor and now pigmy in the state Malam El-Rufai mobilized his  ADC supporters , and he could not even deliver his ward. He was warded off.

    More important, it is a sign that the social media, and to great extent, the mainline media may need to do more work to understand the pulse of the grassroots.

    There were a number of messages. The Taraba story and Southern Kaduna twist have upended Muslim-Muslim hysteria.

     In medicine, doctors use virus to kill virus. The Muslim-Muslim ticket is an antidote to bigotry. So, it is a Nigerian-Nigerian ticket as this essayist advanced during the tempestuous campaigns.

    For El-Rufai, and the rodents of the social media, Governor Uba Sani of Kaduna may have given us the quote of the year: that there are no polling units on Twitter and Facebook.

     Voters do not ululate or gyrate on TikTok, or Instagram. It shows that political engineering is paying more dividends than pundits and their hirelings are ready to admit. It also demonstrates that, for all the hardships in the land, there is a growing understanding that the nation is largely at one with President Bola Tinubu’s approach and philosophy.

    Media pundits have decided to look the other way, and pretend the elections did not happen. The cry of rigging by some is passe and self-serving. We did not see any rumination from the errant tongue of Obi, nor a dance from ADC Southwest alawada man. Neither is El-Rufai, so quick to act the philosopher, sighted in public. The Adamawa chieftain still chafing from his disrobing from honour has said he is no more desperate. We’ll see.

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    In Zamfara State, where many know to be flashpoints of bandit violence, the party in office still prevailed. The fight against the hoodlums will not go away in short order, but the leadership of Nuhu Ribadu is bearing fruits.

     Gone Ansaru leaders. Away with many a big-name gang leader. Peace comes in small doses, and they are coming. If the social media does not see it, the people who voted did. Governor Sani’s Kaduna victory combines empathy with transformational work in schools, roads, industry, commerce and financial engineering.

    Bago made the enemies bang in Niger State. Okpebholo has turned Edo, for all Obi’s outcries, into fortress APC.

    We cannot underplay the power of governors, as they delivered. Anambra State Governor, Chukwuma Soludo, the boom of Anambra orchestra, can boast of his party APGA’s first senator in Anambra South. But for Taraba, Kano and Adamawa states, all governors delivered. APC victories in those states are not only plus for religious embrace, but also indication of APC’s growing strength.

    If anything, it is a challenge for the other parties, including the PDP that played bridesmaid in most of the polls, except in Oyo State, to wake out of its torpor.

     But the news of its inability to decide on zoning only emphasizes why it continues to wobble.

     Governor Seyi Makinde, however, evinced his hold on the state last week.

    ADC recalls a story in the Bible of a soldiers on a mountain. The scriptures described them as shadows as men. That is Atiku, El-Rufai, et al. But men as shadows will strike before you know it.

    ADC confirmed it has big names but small power. They are like bubbling froths on a bowl of water but nothing beneath.  As Sunny Ade croon, e simi ariwo – stop the noise.

  • Who loves the North?

    Who loves the North?

    When they are in the news, it is when they have beggarly bowls in hand, when they are hailing some errant elite with Ranka dede, thin, underfed boys under corpulent lords,  when they are recruited into a gang, when they glower over Ak-47s and lurk in shadows of death, when they riot, when they are hungry.

     The most important time when they are in the news is when they are not in the news.

     It is when the elite use them for leverage in boardrooms, gladhand in ballrooms, and navigate on the negotiating tables of politics.

    They are used as spoilers and spoils. Spoilers as battering rams of blackmail, to get things for the region. As spoils, when they get what they want like big allocations, appointments, and votes on the ballot box.

    It is because of these acts that men like Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF) Chairman Bashir Dalhatu complain that the North is being neglected. I didn’t hear his voice in the eight years of the Buhari administration in such strident terms.

     He spoke not only like an ignorant man but also like an entitled man. I don’t know which persona is worse. His ignorance or his sense of entitlement.

    As an ignorant man, he is deficient in the senses of sight and touch. Maybe he has lost his capacity to read. If not, he would have known 50 percent of the federal allocation in the 2024-2025 budget was allocated to the North.

     He would have known that Gombe State secured a whopping N60 billion from the centre for farming alone. He would have read of the over two thousand tractors secured from Brazil for agriculture. As a northern chieftain, he should have acknowledged that the Northwest Development Commission gulped N585.9 billion, and North East counterpart shoulders N291 billion.

    He should have travelled to see with his eyes one of the biggest road projects ever in the North in progress from North east to Northwest, the Mararaban-Kankara-Katsina expressway, or the Kebbi-Badagry.

     He would have done better to use his eyes and also feel the North he represents, or claims to represent. He grieves over Lagos-Ibadan expressway that has been in construction for all of  a decade. And he will not celebrate those that are sprouting under his eyes. Let them see that have eyes. Amen.

     He should have heard BUA chief Abdul Samad Rabiu when he said the North for the first time is having the infrastructure to connect North to business. He should as the northern statesman asked the governors how they are working with the centre.

    Men like Dalhatu give ACF a bad name. People like him give the august body a partisan glue.

     He is a politician. He has been with politicians, and he is believed to be in league with Atiku.

     His claims about the north providing the victory in 2023 is self-serving. He did not contribute to the victory. He actually was against the president.

    He is like Babachir Lawal, who also may have confessed to losing his eyesight.

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     He cannot see what is going on in his region because he is too offended to see.

     Is it blind anger or anger blindness, or both? Babachir the boor, of the vulgar tongue. We should not have blind men in charge of sighted bodies. A man like Babachir, who fought the president because of the so-called Muslim-Muslim ticket, should not say anything. He is a false prophet who predicted woe for Christians. Now he cannot say anything except to whine for losing.

     It is the reporters who pay attention to him that I blame. The man, who cannot save his name from the dirt he put in office has the effrontery to bluster on governance? Why has he and his cohorts not raised questions in the North with the non-performing governors? A few are doing well, though.

    But Kwankwaso, who is confused , would visit the president today and afterward belch out his rhetoric of vanity and defiance. Why did he not raise his points with the president, or tell us whether he did?

    They confirm Farouq Aliyu’s assertion that the ACF is “an opposition group” under the spell of Atiku. They are errand boys of partisan sponsors. They burp with loquacity instead of speech.

     Men like Dalhatu want to corner appointments rather than progress for the North. As this essayist has noted, a Dalhatu should embrace the ministers from the North who cradle the positions dear to the northern heart, like defence and security, education, agriculture, health, livestock, etc.

     They are the hotspots of urgency, not portfolios often seen as juicy. When those so-called juicy posts went north, what was the accountability? They held those posts disconnected from the people, like outposts of decadence.

    We don’t want rhetoric of opportunism? We want men with rigour, not bigots of exploitation, not men like Dalhatu, who have spent a great part of their lives living on government largesse from appointment to appointment in the centre. Such men are not removed from politics.

     They pout tainted points of views.   

        They are official renegades posing as mainstream. Dalhatu tried to form a political party in the past and it went belly up. With such partisan failures, how can he lead a neutral organ?

    It is the almajiris and their sisters that suffer in the end. Elites recruit them as avengers of their private interests. This is nothing new in history. We saw this in Argentina, if a more gruesome story. After the Peronist years, a dictatorship crippled the South American country. The conservative military government rounded up so-called “enemies of state” and placed tens of thousands of them in detention where they were drugged, raped, killed. Many were tossed into the ocean alive. It was the era of the “disappeared.”

     The men and women were “disappeared” while their babies were kidnapped and given to military families as “legitimate” children.

     They were exposed later when the grandmothers formed a resistance force. The junta wanted to recruit the children to form a new vanguard of conservatism against their dead parents’ liberal worldview

    . But for the grandmothers, and the reinforced rage of DNA and MTDNA technologies, many of the children would not have known their true parents.

    This narrative in a new book titled: A Flower Travelled in My Blood, by Haley Cohen Gilliland, is perhaps one of the best non-fiction works so far this century. It is marvel of research, rigour and writing, unveiling the sin of a generation. The whole of its capital, Buenos Aires, was a landscape of unearthed bones just like the story of dry bones in the book of Ezekiel.

     Children had to confront, with DNA clarities, the fact that their mothers and fathers lack their blood ties. Grandmas became the heroines of a revolution of knowing and cultural retrieval.

    They wanted to exploit innocence.

     The almajiri case is different only in the sense that they are not given to strangers who claim to be their parents and no one killed their fathers and mothers for their beliefs. But they are suffering their own version of rogue parenting.

     Hence men like Dalhatu, Babachir Lawal, Kwankwaso, et al, feel empowered to indoctrinate them or speak on their behalf.

    The almajiri is in the age of innocence. Innocence is a fraught idea, though. It was in their innocence that some people gave them flags of a foreign country, and made them to twirl it. They who had no money to feed, or who could hardly read, suddenly could afford a piece of cloth more expensive than the food they beg for.

     They have, in the words of Nehemiah, “no heritage, right or memorial” in the land. They were asked to protest inflation when they don’t go to the market, to rage against insecurity when they are the recruits of rapine and deaths, they are asked to fulminate against a system but hey do not even understand concepts because they can’t read or write. It is such state that led Shakespeare in Hamlet to write, “The lady doth protest too much.”

    They are the native sons who, like the novel of Richard Wright also known as Native Son, show that innocents can be forced to be guilty by the system.

    I pity those guys and their sisters. The guys do not grow with their fathers and mothers. They are deprived of the cuddle of family intimacy. I recall a few years ago when lorries of almajiris were shipped away from city to city in the North. No one wanted them. It was a moment in alienation. When I was a Corps member in Kano, I experienced them first hand. I befriended one Mumuni in Wudil, and he was like a personal assistant to me, and he performed every errand with heart and gusto. When I fell ill on the camp, he helped me back to health.

    As a teacher in Kano city, I had a few of them, including Sunusi and Sagir, who were of use to me as well. But I sensed wasted childhood in all of them. They could have had the chance to become doctors and lawyers and writers like me. But the system held them down.

    Years later, when I visited Kaduna, I saw a few of them who were taken away from the streets to a boarding school, and I interviewed them. They thrilled about the future professions they craved. A girl wanted to be a pilot.

    But such arrangements are tokenism. A drop in the pond. That is the tragedy, and what the North needs is not to exploit the little guys.

    They have become the pawns of the North, the ubiquitous currency of the region. Some cynical elites love them and use them. They are not permitted to make choices except those forced upon them. It is called the Hobson’s choice.

     In her novel, The Age of Innocence, Edith Wharton writes about how a love is not often genuine. “He loves me, he loves me not.” Such is the almajiri fate.

  • The Doyi(e)n

    The Doyi(e)n

    There are few personages in the history of journalism, or any profession, like Dr. Doyin Abiola. Yet in her hoary years, few media houses or journalists set her up as a reservoir. When she died though, we all drool with eulogies as to what loss she was.

    This essayist reflected on that when she paid a courtesy call on The Nation’s editorial board before the Covid-19 pandemic, and it was a fest of about an hour. Slight in build but inhabiting a dynamo and grace, Dr Abiola spoke modern media and journalism with us, and one takeaway I recall was her insistence that a media house should not operate without an ideological backbone.

    “Make sure you stand for something,” she barreled out in a thin voice.

    She knew about standing for something. In the hurly-burly of June 12, she was a sort of submarine in the struggle. She was not just the editor-in-chief of the Concord group of publications, she was an activist at war with atavists, against carriers of a foul tradition of fiefdoms and hegemonic thralldom, of entitled cabals who rewrote history with gunfire, and feuded with feudal rights.

    She looked contented that late morning in our boardroom, the same look I saw a few years earlier at an event at NIIA when she said the saga of the Concord newspapers was over, and new papers were on board, and we all should move on. In the language of Alfred Lord Tennyson, “though much is taken, much abides.”

    As a submarine, she had stopped firing. The major quarry, the man IBB and his cohorts, had fallen in the smoke.  It was a battle of a generation, and she played her role as a general.

    Few knew that she deployed the resources of the newspapers for the man’s election. The Concord was a fearsome campaign machine before and after the fabled polls, and she brought together the cream of the stable, on top and below, to play roles.

    She once boasted that her own organisation was as formidable and legit as any one deployed by the Hope ’93 organ, that is, Abiola’s campaign. The war chest was the Concord purse, and she did not have to borrow a kobo. She was running a media house awash with cash. She was not only a success as editor but as a manager. She knew her onions and she cut it so the scent rent the air.

    The adventure was to pauperise the organization since the military banned the paper, locked up her husband and scared a timid public of businesses and advertisers from patronizing an institution that fought for all. It is a lesson in Nigerian fickle faith and loyalty that must one day fancy historians of that era. If Concord fell, it was not Dr. Abiola’s doing. She made the sacrifice. She should belch with joy in her grave.

    That explains why she gave us that message about standing for something. She appointed me managing editor of Abuja Bureau during the election. Indeed, I passed the information of the annulment to her after our state house correspondent handed me the annulment “note” that had no letter head or signature. I called editor Nsikak Essien and he asked me to convey it myself to the editor in chief, perhaps because he felt it too hot for him or because he wanted her to hear it from the source.

    She insisted, after I told her, that I should read out the release. I could hear her heart sink. She blamed me the messenger for waiting for the release before letting her know. She knew the implication of the news. A struggle lay ahead. A fight of fury, a rumble of a military caste against a people’s case, of state power of craven men against the rage no one knew we could ever see in our civil society.

    Maybe because she was involved, the Dr. Abiola I knew before then showed only a little hint of the defiant. I recall when the same IBB proscribed the newspaper a few years before June 12, 1993, she never begged.

     When it was unbanned, she spoke in a note of granite feminine charm, “it is business as usual.” Nobody ever spoke back to the army in that tone. In the army, such rhetoric equals mutiny, and it came in a small female package.

    In the runup to June 12, she presided over a few editorials over IBB’s transition rigmarole. Her take was to guide, not condemn, and I saw the editorials as naïve, because they gave the army general a benefit of the doubt.

     In one of the editor’s meetings after one of such outings, she asked the editors in a tone of satiation what we thought of the editorial.

    The editorial board had the great Tom Borha – alias Tombee – as chairman and the members like Nnamdi Obasi, Segun Babatope, late Chike Akabogu as members.

     To her reply, most members on the editors meeting, which comprised editors of the major titles like Dele Alake of the Sunday paper, Mike Awoyinfa of Weekend Concord, Tunji Bello as political editor, and of course their deputies. I, perhaps, was the most junior at the meeting as deputy political editor before I was promoted as managing editor at Abuja. I often  raised my quiet reservation that was often explicit in my fulminating writings.

    In spite of my sometimes turbulent writings, she handled me with grace. Once I wrote a piece ribbing Awo’s daughter, Dr Tokunbo Awolowo-Dosunmu, for eyeing Lagos governorship  chair for the only reason that she was the sage’s daughter. The lady fumed, and called Dr. Abiola. Ever the diplomat, Dr. Abiola did not condemn my piece. She only said to leave the matter alone.

    A few days later, I was at the Law School graduation of my friend and now former director general of the Nigerian Governors’ Forum, A.B. Okauru. Senator Femi Ojudu, then of the African Concord, was with me. With a whiff of mischief, he told me he had sighted Dosunmu with our M.D., Dr. Abiola. He suggested we said hello to them. We did.

    “So, you are the Sam Omatseye,” she said looking at me from head to my shoes. She repeated the same words. A clever Abiola put her arms around her friend, and said, “We must resolve this issue today between you two.” She said those words while pulling her friend away. That was the end of the matter, although Awo’s daughter kept looking back at the brat who twitted her.

    Another editorial moment was when she ordered the press to stop one weekend after she read an article I wrote arguing that Nigeria had no founding fathers. She thought it was subversive. She never discussed it nor summoned me over the piece. I only heard of it from Bello, who, of course, saw nothing wrong with it.

    Yet, she was always ready to commend. I had in Abuja appeared on live television and posed a knotty question at a political event in which IBB and the top military brass were present.  The question that poked politicians and the transition programme resonated to my surprise. When I returned to Lagos, editor Essien told me the M.D. saw it and was impressed, and it was not long after I covered the military air crash at Ejigbo when soldiers gave me the Amakri treatment. She asked the personnel department to write me a commendation letter with a huge cash gift.

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    I cannot forget her empathy when she heard that two journalists, Chris Imodibie and Tayo Awotusin of the Guardian and Champion were missing in Liberian war zone. She had approved my travel. She asked Tombee if I had  traveled. If I hadn’t, the trip should be canceled. I had fantasies about writing among others, a story in the mould of my hero Roger Rosenblatt’s prize-winning Children of war. She saved my life.

    No one can talk of weekend journalism without Mike Awoyinfa, but it was a testament to her vision and her eye for talent. During editors’ meeting when she saw a fault in the paper, she would say, “Mike, you know Weekend Concord is my baby.” The same eye for talent made her pick Alake, a young 30-year-old as Sunday editor and Tunji Bello, even younger, as political editor. When she called Bello to her office to offer him that position, she had wondered whether he was not too young for it. Bello shot back with historical insight referring to William Pitt, who became prime minister of Great Brittain at 24. That was it.

    She loved intellectual exchanges. Quite a few times, she would see me in the hallway and would ask a few questions on the state of the political affairs, and we could stand for up to 30 minutes. At one time it was three of us, herself, Bello and I.

    After the paper was banned over June 12, I returned to Lagos, and I visited her at the Abiola residence on Bello’s suggestion. It was my only private visit to her one-bedroom apartment, tasteful and understated. I sat and we spoke on the roiling politics and the implication for the country. The big man suddenly materialized.

     “Sam, Sam,” he belched out in his deep voice, and he joined in the intellectual affray until I left. That was the last time I would stand with the June 12 patriarch, before that being when I was in Abuja and was about to walk into a lift, and viola, it was him and his security man coming out. “Sam, Sam,” he had bellowed out, and I became his hostage throughout the day. And he introduced me as “Concord landlord in Abuja” to his political guests of governors and senators all huddled in his Hilton suite.

    It was during the meeting in her home she hinted that I was the irritant voice always warning that IBB was not to be trusted and that he wanted to perpetuate himself in office.

    She said I was vindicated. Bello had informed me of her remark made in an editors’ meeting in Lagos.

    That was the quality of the gem we just lost. Some editors had a problem casting the headline: Was she Abiola’s wife or a doyen. No question, she was both, and that reinforces her mystique. As Poet Tennyson wrote, “I am part of all that I have met.” She was blessed to meet Abiola, and so was Abiola to have met her Doyin.

  • Tinubu’s North ambassadors

    Tinubu’s North ambassadors

    When they met last week, Tinubu a appointees and APC bigwigs showcased the north for the president. It was an impressive outing as counterweight against cries from hegemonists like Kwankwaso and Boss Mustapha.

    What the north needs is accountability and facts. That is what the Kaduna meeting set in motion. But the sort of engagement I had advocated was for Tinubu’s appointees to do individual interactions with the northern poor, and showcase what they are doing.

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    President Tinubu gave the north portfolios not for chop chop but for work work. The north’s main problems include education, healthcare, food and security. All those in charge of these areas in the cabinet are northerners, except education but the minister of state is from the north. There are other portfolios where northerners run important positions.

    That is the next step for Tinubu’s northern ambassadors. They should go each to the grassroots and evangelise their doing. Let the agriculture minister go from Sokoto to Dutse to southern Kaduna and engage with the people, and let them know that they are working to stamp out hunger. To do is not enough, even if the recipient is enjoying it. He will have to be told or someone else can do two things. One, the masses can be told that what they get is not from the government, or that it is not what they should be getting. Facts are not enough. They can be twisted. Facts can become lies in a clever tongue. Evangelists are important because they can redress the facts. What is before them is what they tell you it is. Reality is not as obvious as we think. Someone can tell me today that my work is not mine, and with arguments, they may be right.

    The ministers and advisers should stop placing their lamps under their gorgeous desks in Abuja. Of all of them, NSA Nuhu Ribadu is up and doing. More, though, can be done.

  • In defence of Falcons splash

    In defence of Falcons splash

    ‘For upon all the glory shall be a defence,’ Prophet Isaiah.

    When they played, we cheered. When they were paid, we jeered. They received a pot of joy but we are throwing potshots.

    There was a lot of hoopla over the largesse showered on the Super Falcons who brought glory to the nation. The sum, N153 million, is no doubt a hefty bite.

    But so was their performance. Some commentators have said the money undermines the services of other patriots, and they ought not enjoy that sort of magnificence, too.  A writer spewed statistics to show how doctors, teachers, et al, earn too little compared with what the ladies of soccer took home.

    I had exchanges with a few wise men, and how wrong they were. One person, while comparing our girls’ bounty with what England paid Burna Boy to serenade the English team’s captain, noted it was done not by government but by their Football Association. Good argument.

    Another said their English counterpart visited their Prime Minister Keir Starmer without an outpouring of pounds sterling. Great point, too. Except that they fail to understand that the system of western societies has imprimaturs of gratitude. They are built to reward athletes for the rest of their lives. Gratitude flows in the system until they grow old. They get jobs, endorsement, contracts as a reward system built over the years.

    Their careers on the stage are fleeting. But what they enjoy is systemic compensation. Unlike in Nigeria where their sun goes down when the spotlight shifts, they move from spotlight to sunshine, though mostly under the radar. This is not for the British alone, but the west, including the United States and Canada.

    What has happened to Michael Phelps, the all-time Olympic star? He does not play again, but he cannot starve because his talent is a treasure. They will have to keep him as a role model, and today he is doing many things as mental health advocate, philanthropist and business man. The system yields itself to pay back. An affluent society makes room for its own heroes. Things cannot be too tight for its titans.

    But it is not the case with us. Part of the reason is that this is a poor country. Secondly, we may applaud our heroes in public, but do we help them as a society? It is not the case of sports heroes alone. It is all over. It is not a government flaw. It is cultural drawback. Government can only start the dialogue but society must embrace it.

    Look at some of our best. Let us begin with Best Ogedegbe, the great goal keeper. Sebestian Broderick, the ace defender and coach. Sunday Eboigbe, Charles Bassey, Joe Erico, Kadiri Ikhana. Not long ago, we wept over the fate of Peter Fregene, who struggled to pay his health bills until the Delta State Governor Sheriff Oborevwori came calling.

    But he had been too neglected for long decades for any help to change a riptide. What of Rashidi Yekini, and his woes that mangled our faces to tears before he passed on? The society looked with impotence as newspaper article over article played out his mental and financial struggles.

    We cannot forget so easily what ace defender Christian Chukwu suffered even in spite of the intervention of Femi Otedola. The man Ernest Okonkwo praised as chairman, a charismatic presence in defence, could not move his limbs. Time mocks nature, and belittles the memory of our agile years. It watches as we slow and fade.

    My boyhood hero Haruna Ilerika died a poor man. Then Governor of example Babatunde Raji Fashola (SAN), like the good Sheriff with Fregene, stepped in for him, but the star of the 1970’s Second All Africa Games gold medal and Stationary Stores Maestro had struggled for too many years trying to make a living before the good governor came calling. Ilerika, who made mincemeat of defenders with dribbles as poetry might have been a Messi in his time.

    But he did not play in Europe because soccer stars were homebound in those days.

    I know of an Olympic-class boxer who was a street neighbour as a young man who struggled in a one-bedroom apartment in Surulere after his golden years had punched vitality out of him.

    These girls, most of them, may never get this treasure for the rest of their lives. It might be the only pension their passion will grant them, except of course those of them who play in Europe, to whom even $100,000 may not be that much for them compared to what they earn.

    A doctor may not earn this, nor a journalist, nor a teacher, nor a cleaner, all of whom deserve accolades. But most of them can earn, no matter how little, incomes up to their hoary ages. The athlete has a meteor of a career, and a few years of glory.

     They, like Peter Rufai, cannot live on their paltry income to their old age. It is not what you earn as a young person that matters as much as whether they can sustain you when their powers fail for fertility and gain. In his play Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Tennessee Williams says you can live without money when you are young but you cannot live without money when you grow old.

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    I read a poem authored by an unknown person lamenting the toils and sacrifice of a soldier. They do not get as much, yet they give their lives as sacrifices for country. It is a moving poem. I think it reinforces the value of sacrifice, and President Tinubu did it to families of fallen heroes of the army last year with life scholarship to their children and forever homes for their families.

     That should have triggered conversations for the country’s heroes of all types but some are using the wrong accolade for argument. Soldiers did not do it for their own while in power for a generation.

     A democratic president has done for them what no military leader did for them. In his novel The Secret Agent, Joseph Conrad wrote that the first impulse of “luxury and opulence is security.”

    In advanced countries, athletes, especially in soccer and other group sports, enjoy abundance, and it is society that gives it to them.

    Sports has replaced worship there, and they cherish their sports heroes like mystic figures. In the United States, their version of football is described as a religion because the game takes the hallow of faith, like a ritual for a shrine, and the citizens attend their shrines on Sundays. They describe baseball as American pastime. I would not make the case for a person like Michel Obi or Osimen. Not all who play professional earn a lot. We should always make the distinctions.

    We have faith without works.  We have faith in our players but give little offerings. They are deities without pots of life. Love that does not give. Faith without fetish.

    Some of the rage stems from partisan resentment but we should rise above it for our Falcon heroines. The Falcons were rewarded by the falconer, so let us allow the things to fall in their pleasant places. May things not fall apart for them in their old age when their only thank you is that they would be hailed as once famous when they cannot pay their rent or pay their masseurs.

  • Supreme Court, Akwa Ibom and Cross River

    Supreme Court, Akwa Ibom and Cross River

    It was at the Sheraton Hotel in Lagos, and Rotimi Amaechi was only very early in his first term as governor.

     Beside him was Godswill Akpabio, then the governor of Akwa Ibom.

     Both did not like each other very much and could not conceal it in the presence of editors.

     The matter of contention was 86 wells that the Supreme Court returned to Rivers State, and Akwa Ibom had to concede.

     Akpabio smiled a pained and dignified smile. He knew the facts, and no one ought to court the outraged majesty of the law.

    Akpabio would later smile with triumphal creases when he had to savour another verdict. The Supreme Court restored 76 oil wells to Akwa Ibom. It was agony for then Cross River State governor, and for over a decade, the state has gone to court to try to change the verdict. But no dice. In the Niger Delta, oil is the pepper soup of all dialogues.

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    Recently the 76 oil wells is boiling over again. Cross River State I pity a lot. It is the only state in the region that cannot boast a pitcher of oil. It is a spoof of Samuel Coleridge’s lines, “water, water everywhere but not a drop to drink.” For Cross River State, it is oil, oil everywhere, no derivation fund. But law is not about pity, it is about fact. In Merchant of Venice, when the case became clear to Shylock, he exclaimed, “Is that the law?” The court has ruled twice, and the Cross River has had an oil version of o lule. The matter is simple. Is Cross River a littoral state? Does it have a territory that abuts on the sea? It is not only a legal question; it is a cartographic issue. Maybe we can blame those who mapped out the state, and the people of Cross River may find it hard to do so since a people can only claim a territory where they planted their customs, language, practices and citizens. If that means they are not overlooking any water, then it is what it is.

    In 2002, the apex court ruled that “Cross River no longer has a seaward boundary.” In 2012, the same court asserted that “The facts before the court do not support the claim of the plaintiff to being a littoral state. A non-littoral state cannot claim oil wells offshore, as it has no maritime boundary.”

    No time for bellyaching now. Both states can sit at table to jaw-jaw, not war-war. The law is what it is. But they can arrange for ways that some sort of regional concessions, with the cooperation of the Federal Government, can bring some sort of money to Cross River. Cross River should not do like Shylock who waited for a bitter verdict after he turned his back on mercy.

     “The quality of mercy is not strained/ it droppeth like the gentle rain upon the place beneath.” That is the line Akwa Ibom under Governor Umo Eno wants to take, and I think both states are cousins, and should follow the éclat of peace, not hecklers online.