Category: Saturday

  • Semper Fidelis

    Semper Fidelis

    I came across the Latin phrase, Semper Fidelis, some years ago in the writings of the Christian thinker and inspirational writer, Steve Farrar. Translated in English as ‘Always Faithful’, it is the motto of the famed Marine Corps of the United States. The novelist Leon Uris’s novel on the Marines, titled ‘Battle Cry’, offers a fictive but gripping account of the tenacity, sheer doggedness of will, extraordinary capacity for endurance in the face of adversity and inflexibility of the will in the pursuit of a stated mission characteristic of this elite corps of the world’s still undisputed military superpower.

    According to Farrar in his book ‘Point Man’, “More than two hundred years ago, when the United States Marine Corps was being formed, much time was given to considering an appropriate motto. They finally chose the Latin phrase, ‘Semper Fidelis,’  which is engraved on the mind of every United States Marine. What does it mean? ‘ALWAYS FAITHFUL.’ Expatiating on this, he wrote, “Those are two powerful words. But of the two, the first is the most important, for it explains ‘how’ a marine is to be faithful. A marine is not to be faithful only when it is personally convenient, or when the circumstances will guarantee his personal happiness. Semper Fidelis means always faithful – regardless of personal convenience or happiness”.

    The phrase, Semper Fidelis, came to my mind when I received the news that renowned mass communications scholar, journalism teacher, elevated prose stylist, esteemed columnist, biting satirist, public intellectual and unobtrusive fighter for social justice, Emeritus Professor Olatunji Dare, had, last month, donated his expansive country home in Kabba, Kogi State, to the Kogi State University (KOSU) located in the town. For this gesture did not just drop uncharacteristically from the blues. Rather, it mirrored and simply marked the apogee of the scholar and writer’s life-long demonstration of consistent fidelity to those self-sacrificial values he sees as indispensable to the pursuit and attainment of the public good.

    Now, it was not just some base, unremarkable and easily disposable property that the professor had gifted the KOSU, Kabba community and environs and indeed Kogi State as a whole. For, as this newspaper stated in its report, “The elegantly furnished five-bedroom duplex was named the Olatunji Dare Building. Located along Late Pa Peter Seleke Road, Oluwatobi Quarters, Kabba, it is a model of comfort and aesthetic taste. It boasts two spacious living rooms, all en-suite bedrooms, dual kitchens, a dining room, stores, laundry, a borehole, a new soundproof generator, a gatehouse, and boys’ quarters.

    The report continued, “The compound is landscaped with flower gardens, paved with interlocking tiles, fitted with solar lighting, and secured by twin gates”. A perhaps little noticed aspect of the story noted that “The domestic staff are to be retained for one year by the institution”. The donor did not just hand over the property to the institution and move on; he exhibited faithfulness to his domestic staff that would be catered for by the new owners for one year to enable them some breathing space to plan for the future. That is the essential Professor Dare, ever humane and compassionate.

    When the name Olatunji Dare is mentioned, it is not a notion of a life devoted to the accumulation of wealth and its vulgar exhibition that comes to mind. It is not of one who is part of the elite preoccupation and obsession with a ceaseless rat race in which even seasoned academics are eager to show their fellow competitors in material acquisition that ‘my domiciliary bank account is more luscious than yours’, my expansive residence more palatial, and my latest SUV more spectacular.

    Rather, he exemplifies an uncompromising commitment to the life of the mind in the service of the higher causes of the advancement of knowledge and the promotion of communal wellbeing. It is a reflexive example of the virtues of servant-leadership that prioritizes the collective good over personal interest; the invaluable wealth of compassion, kindness and generosity of spirit over grasping accumulation in which the superabundance of possessions justifies the means of their acquisition, no matter how detrimental to the health of the Commonwealth.

    His celebrated immense cerebral endowment could easily have been channelled to the purpose of being counted among the society’s nouveau riche if Professor Dare were so minded. He could have easily leveraged on the sheer influence and subliminal power of his columns over decades to jostle for public office, particularly during the military regimes that would have paid any price to have an intellectual and journalist of his stature in their corner. He would easily have been counted among the financial movers and shakers of society even if he was not necessarily a billionaire.

    Read Also: Gbajabiamila hails military, unveils 1,200-seater auditorium at Lagos Army Barracks

    But the story of the property he has just gifted to the KOSU is one of sweat and sacrifice over the years to develop. In his words, “My mother, Charity Ajoke Dare (nee Lewu), acquired this site in 1974, hoping that I would put up a building on it within a year or two. I regret that I did not fulfill her expectations… Construction on the site began 40 years later, and 17 years after her death. My immediate younger brother, Emmanuel Dare, kept land grabbers away, but unfortunately passed away in the final phase of the construction. My primary school classmate and friend, Samuel Olowosulu, a retired specialist in stores and supplies, supervised the building with scrupulous integrity. He witnessed the completion but passed away some three years ago”.

    Professor Dare’s generous gesture to KOSU certainly was not a decision taken lightly. It came at considerable cost. As a scholar, he belongs to a global community that transcends narrow sectional boundaries. He has demonstrated in his contributions to public discourse over the years his indisputable credentials as a patriot and nationalist. Yet, his has also always been a life of faithful commitment to the community that sprang him.

    Thus, on his motivation to endow KOSU with the property, he states that “Long before the creation of Kogi State, the people of Okunland had been yearning for a University. After all, education is their industry. At the very least, they expected the College of Agriculture, Kabba, established in the 1960s as an affiliate of Ahmadu Bello University, to be upgraded to a full-fledged University. The basic infrastructure was in place…Also guaranteed was a faculty of senior and middle-level academics of Okunland origin, willing and ready to relocate from universities in Nigeria and abroad… Everything was in place, except the political will.”

    With the summoning of the requisite political will to establish the University, Professor Dare has identified with the institution and the community in a gesture that will surely endure and inspire similar acts of selflessness on the part of future generations. Professor Dare’s gesture also illustrated his abiding faithfulness to academics, the pursuit of knowledge and the society’s responsibility to offer the youths every opportunity to fulfill their potentials in this regard. Thus, his admonition that “Kogi State University, Kabba, should not strive to be just another university. It should, instead, explore opportunities provided by the history, culture, ecology and environment of its location to expand the frontiers of knowledge and widen the mental horizons of its students and members of the larger community.”

    Continuing in this vein, he advised that “We shall always have with us those who thirst for knowledge but have had no opportunity to do so. Help them in their quest for self-actualisation through promoting and sustaining literacy and through teaching those skills so vital to functioning in a world that waits for no person. Do not leave them behind .”

    Reflecting on his decision to bequeath the property while watching the inaugural matriculation ceremony of the institution, he said, “I had just turned 75 at the time, and realised that I had fewer years ahead of me than behind me”. But is it not exactly the lack of appreciation by our elite of the all too obvious brevity of life, the ultimate ephemerality of material accumulation, that motivates the desperate quest for the acquisition and maintenance of political power and the mindless pursuit of wealth by all means and at all costs, including massive corruption that impedes development and deepens poverty and inequality?

    One thing that struck me about Professor Dare’s speech on the occasion was his graciousness of spirit and readiness to acknowledge and praise positive qualities in others. He did not take it for granted that, in representing him at the event, his nephew, Colonel Yomi Dare (Rtd), was simply doing his duty. Rather, he thanked him as “an Officer and Gentleman in whom I am well pleased” who “has taken precious time away from his demanding law practice and incurred considerable personal expense to hand over the edifices on my behalf. “

    He commended the Chairman of the Governing Council of the University at the time, Emeritus Professor Olu Obafemi, who “With his accustomed dynamism…quickly devised a ceremony for the formal transfer of the property. Perhaps he was fearful that I might change my mind. There was no chance “. Fulsome in his appreciation of the institution’s Vice Chancellor, Professor Kehinde Eniola, he noted that “Even if I had been minded to change course, Professor Eniola ‘s courtesies alone would have dissuaded me…he displays those attributes, rare these days, that our people consecrated in the term, OMOLUABI”. And even “To the artisans who built the house” he expressed” my grateful thanks for the cordial relationship we enjoyed from start to finish”.

    Yet, the professor’s humility, modesty and unassuming disposition belies the fierceness with which he opposed military dictatorship in Nigeria, worked largely from the background to oppose and seek to ensure the rectification of such unjust acts as the annulment of the June 12, 1993 presidential election or refused to be part of a delegation to apologize to the military dictator, General Sani Abacha, to plead for the reopening of The Guardian newspapers which had been shut down by the regime.

    Recalling the latter incident, Editor, ace columnist and now Lagos State Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Mr Gbenga Omotosho, writes that the Guardian management had resolved that those who refused to participate in the placatory trip to Abuja should not benefit from the outcome of the trip. In Omotosho’s words, “In fact, I learned that Prof. Dare was specifically named by proponents of that proposal. As the management was contemplating how to break the news to Dare, he tendered his resignation letter. It was shocking. “Since I didn’t participate in the resolution of the crisis”, he was quoted as saying, “I think it will be unfair to those who did if I benefit from the gains of the trip”. If this is not courage, I wonder what it can be called. Such is Dare’s stubborn disposition towards the principles he holds dear.” Semper Fidelis.

  • Give us this day!

    Give us this day!

    Soccer fans are tired of Super Eagles‘ penchant of breaking their hearts with their shambolic outings for Nigeria. Fans have jettisoned the now defaced drawing boards since that object must be tattered, having suffered several cancellations arising from failed expeditions by easily the most pampered but highly unreliable soccer team when the stakes are high.

    The trajectory of how the Eagles causes us pains on match days loom large, with all the emphasis on ensuring that FIFA deducts three points from Bafana Bafana’s 13 points being upmost on the mind of our sports administrators, as if Rwanda, our opponents in today’s game count for nothing. Interesting. Rwanda, dear reader has eight points and are joint second with Benin Republic by virtue of inferior goals advantage on the Group C table.  Nigeria beat Rwanda in the first leg and we would be playing with a banana peel if we underrate them in Uyo, a bad hunting ground for the Eagles in recent times.

    Indeed, if the Eagles fail to beat the Rwandans today, Nigeria would have no business going to South Africa for the September 9 game inside the Toyota Stadium in Bloemfontein, especially if the South Africans win the September 5 clash against Lesotho,

    According to Google: ‘’In reality, since they lack approved stadiums, Lesotho and Zimbabwe are staging their matches in South Africa. As a result, both countries are scheduled to play as “hosts” against Bafana Bafana on South African soil on September 5 and October 6, during the 7th and 9th rounds of the 2026 World Cup qualifiers.”

    One isn’t surprised at the South Africans’ insistence on our players sorting out the entry visas for the game inside the Toyota Stadium in Bloemfontein. This, of course, is to slow down the preparations of the Super Eagles. Worst hit would be the fans who the South Africans know have a way of motivating the Super Eagles to victory. Indeed, about 150 fans had concluded their plans to secure a charter jet to storm the Toyota Stadium in Bloemfontein. Now that this plan has been botched, the players must work their socks wet to get the desired three points on September 9.

    For the South Africans all is fair in warfare, especially with the unmanning manner in which our federation’s chieftains have repeatedly kept the aspect of the three points from Bafana Bafana’s 13 points haul with four more games left. What has happened to the Norte Verbal policy? Don’t sporting contingents enjoy the privilege of stamping their visas at the point of entry anymore? Whose fault was it not to have second-guessed this kind of unsportsmanlike attitude by our hosts towards our players, fans and officials, ahead of the September 9 clash in Bloemfontein? Was this how we treated them before the first leg game in Uyo? It is time our sports administrators began to be proactive, rather than this blame game session in getting entry visas to participate in sports competitions.

    Read Also: Gbajabiamila hails military, unveils 1,200-seater auditorium at Lagos Army Barracks

     The implication is that the number of days which we would have used to prepare for the Rwanda game has been reduced to three, with the third day being 24 hours to the game. Of course, training on Friday would be light, with players watching the group’s first game for the fourth round between ‘hosts’ Lesotho and Bafana Bafana, in one of the South African cities. Dey Play!

    “The World Cup, that’s the biggest stage for a footballer in your career, especially playing for your country,” Dele-Bashiru told Nigerian journalist Victor Ademola.

    “It will be a very massive moment for not just me; I’m sure, all the players here. It will be a massive moment for all the staff and all the fans. So, yeah, that’s what we are working towards. God willing, we will win the next two World Cup qualifying games and then after that, we’ll take it from there.”

    The injury bug has also stung the Bafana Bafana, with the latest players to withdraw being Orlando Pirates star Patrick Maswanganyi and Hannover 96 defender Ime Okon, who has a Nigerian father. Pirates marquee player, Sipho Mbule and Stellenbosch FC’s Thabo Moloisane, have since replaced the duo.

    It will now most likely be a new defence that will come up against Victor Osimhen and Ademola Lookman next Tuesday.

    What our players must do today is to beat the Rwandans with at least three goals, knowing that the South Africans would throw all systems at us on September 9. One only hopes that no ineligible player is fielded in today’s game. Our federation’s chiefs are capable of making silly mistakes. Need I list them? Group C’s sole ticket would be decided on September 9. And our players must be schooled on the principles of selfless play – meaning they must be told that the ball should be given to the person in a better position to drive the ball accurately into the net. You don’t need to destroy the net to score a goal. Place the ball into the net like Chelsea’s gangly striker Cole Palmer.

    If Nigeria fails to qualify for the 2026 World Cup, our players’ approach to reporting to camp should chiefly be one of the causes of the disaster. How would a camp be opened on September 1, a Monday and by Wednesday, the coaches were struggling to get a full house in training. Had the South African game been our first game and not Rwanda, it would have been a fiasco.

    What our players must recognise is that the balance of power among African nations has been bridged in spite of the armada of stars being paraded by countries such as Nigeria, Ghana, Senegal, Cote d’ Ivoire etc. Sadly, the fear factor which enveloped teams drawn against the Eagles has fallen off like nectar on hibiscus – fickle, making the team to wobble and fumble through matches.

    It is instructive to note that the South Africans are no novices to the World Cup qualification series having played 31 of such fixtures, winning 23 of them, drawing four and losing four, one of which was a game against Nigeria. Yes, the two teams on September 9, will fight to the finish. One hopes that Nigeria’s manager Eric Chelle isn’t fooled by what he sees during training sessions.

    Hello, Chelle, if you don’t start Ademola Lookman and Victor Osimhen on September 9, you will be done for. We need fighters who have been through this path before. We need players who can attract markers from the opposition, yet would remain unchecked on Tuesday; not those weaklings who would be hiding behind defenders instead of running forward into space to receive defence splitting passes.

    Dear Chelle, have you spoken to Stanley Nwabali over his injury penultimate Saturday? We shouldn’t put our hands on the head when the South Africans attempt to injure Nwabali. They know the prognosis of Nwabali’s injury while keeping for his South African side and could place the balls in particular areas which could spell doom. Nigeria mustn’t field any injury prone player. Please, the doctor and coaches should interrogate the nature of Nwabali’s injury.

    We placed ourselves in this dangerous position when we drew three of our four home matches. How did Nigeria fail to beat Benin Republic on neutral ground in Ivory Coast during the first leg game which we lost?

    Let us beat Rwanda later today. Let us ensure our players aren’t seriously injured. Let us pray for luck, but after we must have given our best against Rwanda. Eagles, give us this day.

  • The decision by RMAFC to review the salaries of political office holders is indeed insensitive!

    The decision by RMAFC to review the salaries of political office holders is indeed insensitive!

    The recent declaration by the Revenue Mobilisation Allocation and Fiscal Commission (RMAFC) that Nigeria’s political office holders deserve salary increases represents one of the most tone-deaf and insensitive propositions in the nation’s contemporary political discourse. The commission’s characterization of President Bola Tinubu’s monthly salary of N1.5 million as “a joke” and ministers earning less than N1 million as “grossly underpaid” reveals a staggering disconnect from the harsh realities facing ordinary Nigerians. This proposed pay rise is not merely incredulous—it is an unconscionable affront to the sensibilities and sufferings of millions of citizens struggling through the nation’s tasking times in decades.

    The RMAFC’s justification for this proposed salary review rests on several arguments that, when examined against Nigeria’s current socioeconomic landscape, reveal themselves to be both hollow and hypocritical. The commission’s primary contention that political office holders’ salaries have remained static for 17 years conveniently ignores the astronomical increases in allowances, perks, and unofficial compensation that have ballooned over this same period.

    The argument that current salaries are inadequate becomes particularly incredulous when one considers the comprehensive compensation packages enjoyed by these officials. Beyond their basic salaries, politicians receive vast allowances, estacodes, constituency project funds, security votes, and countless other perks that dwarf their nominal salaries. As revealed in the analysis, while the President’s official salary may be N1.5 million monthly, the total package with allowances can exceed N100 million. Similarly, senators earn up to N21 million per month when all allowances are factored in, with top lawmakers receiving N500 million for constituency projects alone in the previous year.

    READ ALSO: Trying times for ladies in Edo as state govt declares war on prostitution

    The commission’s assertion that these officials are “underpaid” compared to their counterparts elsewhere willfully ignores certain factors such as the purchasing power disparities and the economic context within which they operate. In a country where the minimum wage struggles to cover basic necessities, where inflation has rendered the N70,000 minimum wage practically worthless, and where the average Nigerian cannot afford a bag of rice, not to talk of three square meals, the suggestion that politicians earning millions monthly are somehow disadvantaged is not just incredulous—it is insulting.

    This proposed pay increase represents more than policy misjudgment; it constitutes a deliberate assault on the dignity and intelligence of the Nigerian people. At a time when families are forced to cut back on meals, delay medical treatment, and withdraw their children from school due to economic hardship, the political elite’s preoccupation with enhancing their own compensation reveals a callous disregard for public sentiment and social responsibility.

    The timing of this proposal is particularly galling. Nigeria’s economy stands on the precipice, with debt servicing consuming half of all government revenue. Unemployment rates have reached catastrophic levels, driving young Nigerians to seek opportunities abroad in unprecedented numbers. Hospitals remain underfunded, universities barely function as they should, and critical infrastructure remains in deficits. Against this backdrop of national decay and citizen suffering, the RMFAC’s singular focus on personal enrichment exposes a level of moral bankruptcy that would be comical if it weren’t so tragic.

    The contrast between the proposed salary increases and the grudging concession of the N70,000 minimum wage after months of strikes and negotiations highlights the hypocrisy embedded in Nigeria’s governance structure. While workers’ demands for a living wage of N494,000 were dismissed as economically impossible, RMFAC’s “asheju” members apparently believe the national treasury can accommodate  enhanced compensation for our office holders without strain.

    The proposed salary review becomes even more egregious when viewed against the Tinubu administration’s repeated calls for sacrifice and patience from the Nigerian people. The administration has consistently urged citizens to endure present hardships for the promise of future prosperity, asking for understanding regarding painful policy decisions like fuel subsidy removal and currency devaluation. This appeal for collective sacrifice rings hollow when  RMFAC comes up with such an idea, seeking to  exempt these leaders from the austerity they preach.

    The hypocrisy is staggering. While ordinary Nigerians grapple with skyrocketing petrol prices, astronomical electricity tariffs, and crushing inflation, their leaders contemplate increasing their own comfort levels. This selective application of sacrifice—where hardship is for the masses while privilege is preserved for the elite—undermines any moral authority the administration might claim in asking for public endurance and cooperation.

    Historical precedent demonstrates that responsible leadership involves shared sacrifice during national crises. Irish ministers accepted pay cuts of up to 30 percent during the 2008 recession. New Zealand’s Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and her cabinet reduced their salaries by 20 percent during the COVID-19 pandemic. Greek public officials absorbed substantial salary reductions during their debt crisis. These examples illustrate that genuine leadership means leading by example, particularly during times of national hardship.

    RMFAC’S ‘s failure to embrace this principle of shared sacrifice not only undermines its credibility but also perpetuates the dangerous disconnect between rulers and the ruled that has historically characterized Nigerian governance. By attempting to insulate political leaders from the economic reality they have helped create, RMFAC only seeks to make Nigerians more embittered with the political class, who knows if the citizenry will be able to bear such extra strain.

    Rather the funds contemplated for political salary increases could address critical national needs that have been neglected for decades. Nigeria’s healthcare system requires massive investment to function effectively, yet politicians prioritize personal compensation over public health infrastructure. The education sector, crippled by years of underfunding and neglect, desperately needs resources to train teachers, equip schools, and ensure access to quality education for all citizens.

    The unresolved 2009 agreement with the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) represents a particularly glaring example of misplaced priorities. For over a decade, successive administrations have failed to fully implement agreements that would revitalize Nigeria’s university system and end the cycle of strikes that has disrupted academic calendars. The funds being considered for political pay rises could significantly advance the implementation of these agreements, ending the educational uncertainty that has plagued Nigerian students and their families.

    Beyond education and healthcare, Nigeria’s infrastructure deficit requires urgent attention. Roads, power generation, water supply, and telecommunications infrastructure all need substantial investment to support economic growth and improve living standards. The irony is profound: while basic infrastructure crumbles and citizens struggle with unreliable power supply and impassable roads, RMFAC is debating  enhancing their own compensation packages.

    The proposed salary increase fails not just on economic grounds but on fundamental moral principles. In a democracy, public service should represent a commitment to collective welfare, not an opportunity for personal enrichment. When political leaders prioritize their own financial comfort over citizen welfare, they violate the basic social contract that legitimizes their authority.

    The Revenue Mobilisation Allocation and Fiscal Commission’s proposal for political salary increases represents everything wrong with Nigeria’s governance culture: insensitivity to public suffering, disconnection from economic reality, and prioritization of elite interests over national welfare. This proposal deserves not debate but outright rejection.

    Rather than increasing political salaries, Nigeria needs leaders who understand that true leadership involves sacrifice, particularly during national crises. The resources being contemplated for pay increases should be redirected toward healthcare, education, infrastructure, and the implementation of long-overdue agreements like the 2009 ASUU accord.

    Until the minimum wage reflects economic reality and Nigerian workers can live with dignity, any discussion of enhanced compensation for politicians represents not just poor judgment but a provocative assault on national sensibilities. The time has come for political leaders to demonstrate that they understand the difference between public service and self-service, between leadership and lordship. Only then can they legitimately ask for the patience and sacrifice they have repeatedly demanded from the Nigerian people.

  • Ukachukwu’s vision for Anambra’s Renaissance

    Ukachukwu’s vision for Anambra’s Renaissance

    In the heart of Nigeria’s southeast region, where the Omambala River whispers ancient secrets and the industrial hum of Nnewi and Onitsha  echoes with entrepreneurial dreams, Prince Nicholas Ukachukwu stands poised to orchestrate Anambra’s greatest symphony of transformation. As the All Progressives Congress gubernatorial candidate for the November 8th elections, Prince Ukachukwu presents not merely a manifesto, but a covenant of renewal—a sacred promise to weave security, prosperity, and progress into the very fabric of Anambra’s destiny.

    The Foundation Stone: Security as Sanctuary

    “No tree bears fruit in a storm,” Prince Ukachukwu often reminds his audiences, and indeed, his administration’s first pillar rests upon transforming Anambra from a landscape of uncertainty into a sanctuary of safety. Security, in his vision, transcends mere crime prevention—it encompasses economic security, social stability, and the fundamental right of every Anambra citizen to dream without fear.

    The Prince’s security architecture envisions a state where farmers tend their fields without trepidation, where entrepreneurs build empires without intimidation, and where children walk to school as dawn breaks over peaceful communities. Through strategic partnerships with federal security agencies and community-based security networks, Anambra will become the beacon of safety that illuminates the entire southeast.

     Powering Progress: Energy as the Lifeline of Prosperity

    In Prince Ukachukwu’s Anambra, darkness will no longer steal dreams. His power revolution strategy recognizes that electricity is not merely about lighting bulbs—it is about illuminating possibilities. Every kilowatt generated becomes a catalyst for transformation, every power line erected becomes a bridge to prosperity.

    The manifesto envisions an Anambra where industrial machines never sleep, where hospitals operate life-saving equipment around the clock, and where students study under reliable light. Through aggressive power infrastructure development targeted at 318 Megawatts for the state and other strategic energy partnerships, Prince Ukachukwu promises to make load-shedding a relic of the past and uninterrupted power supply the norm of the future.

    The Trinity of Industrial Renaissance: Three Clusters, Infinite Possibilities

    Perhaps no aspect of Prince Ukachukwu’s vision captures the imagination quite like his revolutionary concept of three industrial clusters—each serving as a cathedral of commerce in Anambra’s three senatorial zones. These are not mere economic zones; they are destinies being forged, legacies being written in steel and silicon.

    Read Also: Nigeria’s gas production rises to 7.59BSC daily

    The Nnewi Engineering and Industrial Cluster will transform the already bustling commercial heart into a manufacturing marvel, where precision meets production and innovation dances with industry. Here, the legendary Igbo entrepreneurial spirit will find its most sophisticated expression.

    The Omambala Agricultural Cluster represents a return to the soil with modern sophistication—where ancient farming wisdom meets cutting-edge agricultural technology. This cluster will be the breadbasket that feeds not just Anambra, but the entire region.

    The Commodities and ICT Cluster emerges as the digital gateway to the future, where bytes and bandwidth create new forms of wealth, and where Anambra’s youth will code their way to continental relevance, a Bangalore of sorts.

    The Green Gold Revolution: Agriculture as Anambra’s New Oil

    “Agriculture will put Anambra on the map,” declares Prince Ukachukwu, and his agricultural revolution strategy reads like poetry written in grain, greens, tubers and prosperity. The commitment to mechanize 30,000 hectares represents more than land development—it symbolizes the transformation of farming from subsistence to significance.

    In this new Anambra, agriculture becomes agribusiness, farmers become entrepreneurs, and rural communities become centers of wealth creation. The uptakers program will ensure that every produce finds its market, every harvest translates to prosperity, and every farmer rises from survival to success. This is agriculture reimagined, farming revolutionized, and rural communities transformed.

     Learning for Liberation: Education as the Great Equalizer

    Prince Ukachukwu’s educational philosophy can be summarized in three words: “Learning for Empowerment.” His manifesto recognizes that in the 21st century, education is not just about acquiring knowledge—it is about acquiring power. Power to create, to innovate, to compete, and to transform.

    The massive investment in vocational and technical education represents a paradigm shift from certificate worship to skill celebration. State-of-the-art facilities will emerge across Anambra, where young hands learn to build the future, where technical skills become the new currency of success, and where every graduate emerges not just educated, but employable and entrepreneurial.

    Free and qualitative education becomes the great equalizer, ensuring that poverty never stands between any Anambra child and their destiny. With recognizable certificates that open doors across the globe, Anambra’s educational system will become the envy of the nation.

    Health as Wealth: The Complete Care Continuum

    Prince Ukachukwu’s health care vision unfolds like a three-tiered fountain of life—primary care forming the foundation, secondary care providing the structure, and tertiary care crowning the system with excellence. The 21 general hospitals scattered across the state will serve as lighthouses of healing, while three reference hospitals will position Anambra as a medical tourism destination.

    This is healthcare reimagined, where prevention meets intervention, where community health workers become warriors against disease, and where every heartbeat in Anambra is protected by world-class medical care. Through strategic investments in facilities, training, professional development, and competitive remuneration, Prince Ukachukwu promises to make quality healthcare not a privilege for the few, but a right for all.

     The Sacred Circle: Empowerment Through Tradition

    In a stroke of innovative governance, Prince Ukachukwu’s manifesto weaves traditional institutions into the fabric of modern administration. Traditional rulers and town unions will not merely be honored guests at government functions—they will be active participants in governance, bridges between the people and government, and guardians of cultural continuity in an age of rapid change.

    This integration represents a renaissance of respect for indigenous wisdom, where the ancient and the modern dance together in perfect harmony, and where governance becomes truly grassroots.

     The Promise of Tomorrow: A Covenant with Prosperity

    As November 8th approaches, Prince Nicholas Ukachukwu’s manifesto stands not as a collection of promises, but as a blueprint for transformation. It is a vision where security nurtures prosperity, where power illuminates possibilities, where agriculture feeds aspirations, where education empowers excellence, where healthcare heals hearts, and where tradition guides transformation.

    In choosing Prince Ukachukwu, Anambra chooses not just a governor, but a conductor of its greatest symphony—a maestro who will orchestrate the diverse instruments of development into a harmonious melody of progress. The future beckons, and Prince Nicholas Ukachukwu holds the baton that will lead Anambra into its most glorious dawn.

    •Igboeli Arinze writes from Abagana

  • Royal rivalry in Yoruba land (1)

    Royal rivalry in Yoruba land (1)

    The rivalry between Oonirisa Adimula of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Ogunwusi, Ojaja II, and the Alaafin of Oyo, Iku Baba Yeye, Oba Akeem Owoade, Elewu-Etu, has polarised the Yoruba land.

    Many sons and daughters of Kaaro Oojiire have become self-acclaimed professional historians, taking sides in a clearly divisive issue, apportioning blames and dragging the institution of kingship in the mud.

    The supporters of the Alaafin are upholding his claim to the overlord of Yoruba land, based on the reality of the ancient Oyo Empire, where his illustrious forebears were undisputed Suzerain. Therefore, they fire salvos at the Ooni for overstepping his bounds by allegedly conferring an honorary chieftaincy title of ‘Okanlomo of Yoruba land’ on the Ibadan rich man, Chief Jubril Sanusi ‘Ilaji.’

    Derisively, some of them invented their own version of history, describing Oonirisa as a mere ‘Arole,’ ‘acting father,’ and keeper or custodian of deities in Ile-Ife, the cradle of the Yoruba race.

    The supporters of the highly revered Ooni are offended by what they see as demeaning remarks from the Oyo axis. To them, the Ooni is the number one ruler, the undisputed head of the household of Oduduwa, the progenitor of the entire race. Also, they point out that Oduduwa was the father of Okanbi, who gave birth to Oranmiyan, the founder of Oyo.

    Mercifully, despite the contrasting claims, the supporters of the two royal fathers agree that Ife is home.

    Not even the clarification that Sanusi was conferred with ‘Okanlomo Oodua’ or Okanlomo of Ife or Okanlomo of the Source has doused the controversy and tension. They are angling for a definite pronouncement on who between the two monarchs is superior.

    The result is that Yoruba land is taken back to the pre-colonial epoch; the primitive days of cruelty, adversaries, adversity, and enmity.

    Read Also: Phyna apologises for tagging road beggars as ‘Yoruba boys’

    Back then, the Yoruba land was in turmoil. Wars and rumours of wars characterised daily life. Kith and kin were callously sold into slavery. Human sacrifices, which are an eyesore in contemporary times, were part of a cherished tradition.

    The historical accounts are awful. In some ancient communities, child immolation was a critical element of the burial for a chief or warrior. An aged traditional ruler would die peacefully, and those who should survive him were buried with him. They were described as messengers mandated to announce his passage to those who had gone before him. When Alaafin Atiba tried to put a stop to it, Aare Ona Kankanfo Kurunmi of Ijaye resisted. It led to a war that ended the life of the Generalissimo and his sons.

    It was a barbaric life. Stronger communities led by war-mongering chiefs were terrors to weak neighbours who became victims of unprovoked attacks. Their farm produce was hijacked. They were deprived of the fruits of their labour. Their young ladies were forcefully captured and married away in captivity.

    Seizing caravans was a threat to peaceful trading. Illegitimate tolls were erected by traditional rulers, and travellers were deprived of their cowries, the old legal tender, goods and other possessions.

    Powerful Yoruba towns colonised their vassal villages and sent ‘Ajele’ (Resident), who became troublers of the hinterlands and thorns in the flesh of natives. They demanded ‘isakole’ and other burdensome levies that must be paid to the paramount rulers. Resistance was met with brutality, killings, imprisonment, and banishment into exile.

    Boundary disputes were common. They were only resolved after a bloodshed. Usually, it was the triumph of might over right. It was one way of showing supremacy in kingdoms and chiefdoms in inter-tribal relationships. These acrimonies dragged on till modern times when monarchs like the Deji of Akure and the Owa of Idanre agreed that the court should be the arbiter on land disputes.

    Many monarchs were locked in protracted feuds, conspiracies, competition, hate, and other petty matters, which were mostly settled on the battlefields. A traditional ruler invited his colleague to an annual festival. His chiefs insisted that the visitor or guest should die. His offence was that he stormed the town in a dress that was adjudged superior to that of the host.

    The people of Benin, whose rulers are Yoruba, in their quest for territorial expansion, travelled miles to conquer Lagos and set up a monarchy.

    In Lagos, a chief dug up the corpse of the mother of a rival and dispersed it into the lagoon. When the superior rival regained the throne, he bundled the chief in a drum, sealed it, and threw it into the lagoon in vengeance.

    The Ijebu and the Egba fought many needless wars that resulted in the death of numerous able-bodied men in those dark days.

    The Ijesa invaded Ekiti towns at will to foment trouble. In fact, an Owa once portrayed himself in an old almanac as a Lion, surrounded by Ekiti kings, who were depicted as sheep. The calendar drew fear into the rulers of the far-flung Ekiti, who declined fraternity with the potential oppressor.

    Ibadan loomed large over the rest of the Yoruba race, although its warriors also saved the race from the oppression of Fulani expansionists who planned to dip the Koran in the lagoon. The invaders were stopped at Osogbo by Balogun Oderinlo, whom Aare Ona Kankanfo Latosa sent to halt the external aggression.

    But Ibadan warriors, who were the armies of the Alaafin, head of the Oyo Empire, also terrorised many rulers in Yoruba land. They waged war against the Egba and the Ijebu. But they also waged war against their Oyo brethren. Thus, Oluyole oppressed the Prime Minister of Oyo, Gbenla, by hijacking his Basorun title. Latosa also hijacked the title of Aare Ona Kankanfo from Ojo Aburumaku of Ogbomoso.

    As the emergency overlord, Ibadan appointed Ayikiti as the Owoni of Ile-Ife. At a time, only the candidate approved by Ibadan could ascend the Owa stool among Ilesa princes.

    The foray of Ibadan forces into Ekiti was disastrous. Ekiti resisted, leading to the Kiriji war. For 16 years, the fire raged. However, despite the unity of the Ekiti Confederates, there was also a war at home. Ado-Ekiti and Ikere-Ekiti could not participate in the Ekiti Parapo expedition because they were fighting over the boundary.

    The greatest contribution of the British colonial masters was the abolition of wars and slavery, which served as a motivation.

    The war ended and the empire collapsed, but the acrimony and rivalry among the traditional rulers have persisted. Driven by economic interests, the British interlopers erected their indirect rule on ‘divide and rule.’

    Ogedengbe Agbogungboro returned from the war to embark on a rebellion against the Owa, until he was pacified with the title of Obanla. His compatriot, Prince Fabunmi, returned to Okemesi to start fighting the Oloja-Oke. A kingdom was arranged for him at Imesi-Ile so that peace could reign.

    In the later days of colonialism, Yoruba obas took their rivalries to their British conquerors. An Akarigbo of Remo, Oba William Adedoyin, once took his case against Awujale Gbelegbuwa Adesanya of Ijebu-Ode to the Privy Council for Remo to get freedom from Ijebu. The legendary Deji of Akure, Oba Afunbiowo, asked the colonial Resident to carve his territory out of Ekiti Pelupelu (Confederation) to avoid repeated insults from Alaaye Adeniran Kekereata of Efon-Alaaye. Ikorodu (Remo) and Epe (Ijebu) conflict raged over a boundary dispute, which the British later settled by force. For decades, the Olukare of Ikare and the Owa Ale never saw eye to eye. The feud between the Ogoga of Ikere and the Olukere lingers…….

  • FIFA free points, my foot!

    FIFA free points, my foot!

    What kind of soccer administrators do we have in Nigeria, and how did they get into such positions of trust? I have this funny tendency of looking through my phone for news, though I end up feeling very upset listening or reading information therein, which would have been better ignored.

    One of such interviews was that on Facebook, where a top NFF boss revealed that Nigeria had filed a protest to FIFA urging the soccer ruling body to, as a matter of necessity, deduct three points from South Africa’s points haul and hand them to Lesotho who didn’t lodge any protest when they played against South Africa. It would have been better if this official had kept quiet rather than utter such laughable statement.

    This official, who ought to have covered his face in tears, prided himself in telling the world how Nigeria fielded an ineligible player in an away game against Algeria during the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualifiers. A clear case of failure of leadership, the official ought to have kept his trap shut rather than bask in airs while spewing excuses that belie his academic qualifications. In other climes, this official ought to have lost his job to save Nigeria from such anomalies in the future. Isn’t it shameful that Nigeria is fighting for action to be taken against an offender who incidentally is one of our group opponents? The immediate poser would be, if the points would be added to ours?

    Read Also: Nigerian scholar Tolulope Oladeji wins prestigious USGIF doctoral scholarship

    I ask, isn’t it true that FIFA alerts federations through the mail, informing them about ineligible players and their punishments before each round of matches begin? Our soccer chieftains should face the business of getting the 12 points left and see what others in the group can get. Otherwise, we would find ourselves in a clay pot and rat situation, where others in the group would be working to eliminate Nigeria. I’m glad that renowned journalist and lawyer, Osasu Obayiuwana spoke with a spokesman of FIFA on the delay and he gave his explanation.

    Obayiuwana revealed to OwnGoalNigeria.com that: “The matter should be before the FIFA disciplinary committee. They don’t tell the administration what cases they have before it, as they are independent.”

    “We will only hear of their decision when they have made it. If they have not made a pronouncement before South Africa’s next match in September, I will encourage you to ask why a decision has not been taken on this matter,” the FIFA source said.

    Perhaps, NFF’s men and their trumpeters would let the three points which won’t be ours be, and face the daunting task of preparing a battle-ready Super Eagles now that the shocking news of goalkeeper Stanley Nwabali’s injury was made public on Monday. The optics of Nwabali being attended to frantically on the pitch by the doctors showed how serious the injury was. In fact, Nwabali was stretchered out of the pitch into the ambulance and driven to the hospital for further treatment. If the Chippa United man is ruled out, Chelle will be forced to look elsewhere. The alternatives include former Bendel Insurance goalkeeper Amas Obasogie, one-time Hapoel Jerusalem shot-stopper Adebayo Adeleye, and teenage prospect Ebenezer Harcourt. None, however, possesses the experience or reliability of Nwabali, whose presence has been vital for Nigeria since his emergence.

    Surprised? Don’t be. Last weekend on this column, I warned about the effects of the voodoo called injuries as if was a seer who foresaw what has happened to Nwabali. Yes, I’m not a seer but my experience on this job has taught me a few things which I reveal intermittently here for those who have ears and can assimilate what they read in this column, without sounding immodest.

  • Akogun Tola Adeniyi’s take on politics and ‘betrayal’

    Akogun Tola Adeniyi’s take on politics and ‘betrayal’

    After more than five decades in practice as one of Nigeria‘s most noteworthy, versatile and courageous columnists, Akogun Tola Adeniyi’s pen remains as pungent, unsparing and hard-hitting as ever, even as he clocked eight decades this side of eternity earlier this year. Popularly known as ‘Aba Saheed’, his pen name during the golden era of his career at the defunct Daily Times conglomerate, easily Africa’s leading newspaper in the 1970s, his pen was an unrelenting thorn in the flesh of the military dictatorships of the time. In a recent characteristically fire-spitting article published online, he unleashed his undisguised wrath against what he described as ‘God-complex and Sycophancy’ in Nigerian politics.

    Akogun Adeniyi was particularly irked by occupants of public office in Nigeria at all levels – local government Chairmen, State governors, all the way to presidents – who tend to play God and “frighten, humiliate, suppress, oppress and victimise whosoever of their constituents that have the courage and guts to challenge their authoritarianism”. Of course, the veteran journalist offers no concrete examples to validate his allegation, and so his assertion remains at the level of unproven analytic generalisation. For him, “These political office holders at the top of the ladder see themselves as mini-god! And they are made so by the pitiable farmers and praise-singers who worship at their feet”.

    Continuing, he avers that “It is people who have lost self-worth or personal dignity and an otherwise honourable family identity who constitute the bulk of the unfortunate beings that have now created gods in political office holders and sadly, insist that others, those who still have their heads screwed on their necks, should follow them in their blind servitude”. Akogun Adeniyi’s vitriol in this regard is quite interesting given his own journalistic career trajectory. The earlier Aba Saheed’s vehement and thunderous denunciations of the excesses of power-drunk dictators at the Daily Times of the 1970s were a key factor in my being attracted to journalism as a medium of speaking truth to power and fighting for the greater public good.

    Read Also: France, Nigeria strengthen collaboration in animation sector

    But the Tola Adeniyi who moved on to the Nigerian Tribune during the second Republic (1979-1983) was far different from the Aba Saheed I had earlier idolised. Though a fervent admirer and supporter of Chief Obafemi Awolowo myself, indeed a polling agent of the Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) in the 1979 elections as a secondary school student, I found the fawning and uncritical reportage of the activities of Awolowo and other UPN top shots of the time by the Tribune titles as unprofessional, irritating and largely unhelpful to the party.

    Akogun Adeniyi’s column, such as ‘Till Death Do Us Part’ or Tai Solarin’s ‘The Stolen Presidency’ in The Tribune, lionised Awolowo and scathingly denigrated his opponents. If such journalism is borne of personal conviction, it has its own acceptable place in the profession. But Akogun unfortunately gives the impression that such idolization of political figures could only be a function of pecuniary considerations and servile sycophancy, a damning self-indictment.

    One of my criticisms of Akogun Adeniyi and many other columnists of the period, not excluding the National Concord set up by Chief MKO Abiola to counter the pro-UPN media and fight Awolowo, was excessive over-generalization in analysis without the requisite theoretical or empirical contextualization or validation. The Punch to some extent but more especially the emergence of the path-breaking ‘Guardian’ titles provided a corrective to this unsavoury tendency.

    We find this trait in the write up under consideration when Akogun Adeniyi submits with magisterial presumptuousness that “Nigeria is entering another stage of their comical and usually tragic political engineering cycle which invariably awards purchased victory to losers, blinds the actual winners with curious electoral loss”. Again, no concrete examples to prove the point. No attempt at logical or empirical justification. We must simply take the omniscient columnist’s word for it. Another example of the fabled ‘God-complex’ at work? His columns thus contributed significantly to entrenching the notion that the 1979 presidential election was won by Chief Awolowo, who was allegedly rigged out when a detached analysis of the polls and the dynamics of the politics of the time demonstrates that there was no credible pathway to an Awolowo victory in that election.

    But then, the veteran journalist’s main grouse in this piece is with what he describes as a development over the last decade in which some Nigerian politicians claim to have ‘created’ or ‘made’ other politicians and thus demand undiluted loyalty from their supposed ‘creations’. In an essentially appeal to emotion, Akogun Adeniyi goes on to administer savage blows to this straw man of his creation, without citing even one instance of any politician allegedly claiming to have ‘created’ a fellow politician.

    Adopting a rather romantic notion of democracy, he says that it provides “a guarantee for freedom of association, freedom of choice, and enhancement of fundamental human rights” in which “children of the same parents, husbands and wives can compete against one another in their bid to render service to the community. The husband may say he wants to provide roads, while the wife says she wants to provide clothing for the masses. No offence. No name-calling. No character assassination”.

    It is doubtful if such a mythical rendition of democratic practice exists in most parts of the world that lay claim to adherence to liberal democracy – a system, by the way, under severe illiberal strain in most parts of the world. Akogun cites with approbation Mazi Samuel Goomsu Ikoku running in an election against his own father in an election and winning in the first Republic. I have no details of what led a son to such ruthless de-robing of his own father in the political marketplace, but it is the exception rather than the norm. In any case, following several political and ideological somersaults in his political career, suggesting an infirm philosophical and ethical foundation, SG Ikoku did not necessarily exit the political terrain in a blaze of glory.

    In Akogun Adeniyi’s school of political thought, there can be no credible talk of ‘betrayal’ in politics. Politicians are free to pursue any line of action at any time. He defines politics in basically moral terms but endorses an essentially amoral disposition to political behaviour on the part of political actors. Of course, the perception of ‘betrayal’ is value-laden and, like beauty, may be in the eye of the beholder. Most active participants in politics who rise to prominence possess certain innate qualities that work in their favour. But it is illusory to pretend that there are no mentors or benefactors in politics; that there are no codes of conduct that bind leaders and the led, the violation of which may be construed, albeit debatably, as betrayal.

    Of particular interest to me is the example of Chief Awolowo’s politics in the Western Region that Akogun Adeniyi cites to justify his thesis of democracy offering what amounts to a morally anarchical terrain in which political actors are free to act in any way they choose while pleading the right to democratic free choice as justification.

    According to him, “Chief Obafemi Awolowo invited the best of the best to form a formidable team to constitute the best government there ever was in Africa in his time, but he never claimed he created Chief Adekunle Ajasin, Chief Samuel Akintola, brilliant journalist and lawyer, Chief Joseph Oduola Osuntokun, Dr Stephen Oluwole Awokoya, Professor Samuel Aliko, Chief Anthony Enahoro and several others. He regarded them as colleagues and assets. They were distinguished in their own right. He needed them. He saw quality in them. He was their leader, the team leader “.

    This is at best a partial reading and rendering of history. For, what in the final analysis was the cause of the crisis between Akintola, Premier of the Western Region, and Awolowo Leader of the Action Group (AG) as well as Leader of opposition in the federal parliament; a crisis that not only led to a descent to anarchy in the Western Region but also directly resulted in the collapse of the First Republic and ultimately the tragic civil war? Some saw it as a result of differences in political strategy, with Awolowo wanting the AG to continue its quest for power at the national level, while Akintola preferred the party to restrain itself to the West while having a working accord with the NPC in the North.

    Others saw the conflict as an inevitable result of the unrealistic divorce of the leadership of the party from the leadership of the government it controlled in the Western Region.

    But the widespread perception, which is perhaps only gradually receding into distant memory with the passage of time, was that Akintola betrayed his leader in a bid to gain political control of the Western Region, and he acted in concert with extraneous forces bent on destabilising the West and decapitating Awolowo politically. Perhaps the most vociferous critic and opponent of Awolowo’s politics in the West was the exceptionally brilliant and charismatic Adegoke Adelabu of the ‘Penkelemesi’ fame. Instructively, no one ever accused him of being a betrayer.

    In his interview with the famous Peter Enahoro in the ‘Africa Now’ magazine in the Second Republic, Awolowo had remarked that, while he had forgiven Akintola, he wished the site where he was assassinated was preserved to serve as a lesson to future generations on the consequences of treachery. I thought this was a rather chilling and extreme proposition at the time. Some of Yorubaland’s most illustrious sons were politically opposed to Awolowo in the Second Republic. They included Chief MKO Abiola, Chief Adisa Akinloye, Chief Olu Akinfosile, Chief Soji Odunjo, Chief Adeniran Ogunsanya, Chief Richard Akinjide, Chief Remi Fani-Kayode, Dr Omololu Olunloyo, Chief Adeyinka Adebayo, Chief Adeleke Adedoyin, Chief Areoye Oyebola, Chief Toye Coker and Chief Akanbi Onitiri,  to name a few. Although politically unpopular in the South-West, nobody labelled them as traitors or betrayers.

    However, when Chief Sunday Afolabi, Chief Akin Omoboriowo, who had authored a book on ‘Awoism’ as a political ideology, and Chief Busari Adelakun revolted against the UPN’s decision that its five governors be given automatic return tickets for a second term and dumped Awolowo for the NPN, they were promptly labelled traitors in the popular consciousness. I remember that Awolowo was on the campaign trail in Ekiti State when Afolabi and Adelakun decamped. The following day, he cut short his campaign and headed back to Ibadan. A mammoth crowd had gathered from morning at the historic Mapo Hall and waited patiently, dancing and singing, until the leader arrived at around 5 pm.

    The crowd carried coffins bearing RIP inscriptions of the political decampees. The root of the perception of politics and betrayal, particularly in Yorubaland, runs deep and requires profound sociological, political and philosophical investigation to facilitate understanding, not simplistic and superficial analysis.

  • The street renaming madness

    The street renaming madness

    Lagos State finds itself at the center of a controversial debate that threatens to undermine its hard-earned reputation as Nigeria’s most cosmopolitan city. The recent call by Apapo Oodua Koya (AOKOYA) for the renaming of Ozumba Mbadiwe Road and Sir Ahmadu Bello Way in Victoria Island represents more than just a name change—it is an example of a dangerous drift toward ethnic chauvinism that could fundamentally alter the character of a city that has long prided itself on inclusivity and diversity.

    The current agitation reads like a poorly scripted political drama, complete with oversimplified villains and heroes drawn along ethnic lines. AOKOYA’s demand that  prominent streets, particularly, “Ahmadu Bello”, named after one of the most influential Northerner and Nigerian, Sir Ahmadu Bello and “Ozumba Mbadiwe” named after the verbose and colourful politician and Member of Parliament , K. O Mbadiwe be renamed with Yoruba appellations because both Bello and Mbadiwe were allegedly “enemies of the Yoruba people” reveals a troubling misunderstanding of both history and the principles that have made Lagos Nigeria’s economic powerhouse.

    Such a facile categorization of historical figures as friends or foes based solely on ethnic considerations ignores the complex realities of Nigeria’s political evolution. Ozumba Mbadiwe, who served as a Minister in the First Republic, and Sir Ahmadu Bello, the Premier of the defunct Northern Region, were products of their time—politicians navigating the turbulent waters of a nascent nation grappling with the challenges of unity in diversity.

    Read Also: Marker Day madness in Bauchi’s public schools

    Readers here should recall that not too long ago, the uninspiring local government chairman of Bariga Local Council Development Authority, LCDA, Kolade David seeking some kick into his lacklustre tenure announced the renaming of some streets. Laced with ethnic bile, he quickly became the posterboy of what we should always expect from  an accident of history when he renamed the popular Charly Boy Stop, named after the Nigerian entertainment maverick, Charles Oputa popularly known as “Charly Boy Street”  to “Olamide Badoo Street”, justifying such nonsense by alleging that the likes of Olamide who I consider a great talent deserved such street renaming owing to the fact that he (Olamide and Gongoaso crooner, 9ICE) had projected positively the Bariga Council on the global spotlight, one now wonders whether the Area Father  had been projecting Gbagada negatively!

    So, like Herod after the killing of James, the AOKOYA too have fallen into the frenzy of street name change. Now, 

    If we accept the logic driving these renaming demands, we open a Pandora’s box that could engulf the entire nation in a frenzy of ethnic score-settling. Following this reasoning to its logical conclusion, why should streets named after the Philosopher King in Chief Obafemi Awolowo remain untouched in the North, East, or even the Midwest? After all, using the same ethnic calculus, Awo could equally be labeled an “enemy” of these regions based on the political dynamics of his era, even when Zik had always called him his “ good friend”.

    This dangerous precedent threatens to balkanize Nigeria’s public spaces along ethnic lines, creating a patchwork of exclusionary zones where historical figures are judged not by their contributions to national development but by their perceived loyalty to specific ethnic groups. Such an approach would rob the nation of its shared heritage and common symbols of unity.

    Lagos has thrived precisely because it transcended narrow ethnic boundaries to become a melting pot where Nigerians from all corners of the country could call home. The city’s streets, bearing names that reflect Nigeria’s diversity, tell the story of a nation that chose unity over division. Victoria Island, with its mix of indigenous and pan-Nigerian nomenclature, stands as a testament to this inclusive vision.

    Renaming these streets based on ethnic considerations would send a chilling message to non-Yoruba residents and investors that Lagos is retreating from its cosmopolitan ideals. It would suggest that contributions to Nigerian development are now being measured on an ethnic scale rather than on merit and national significance.

    The characterization of Mbadiwe and Ahmadu Bello as “enemies of the Yoruba people” demonstrates a fundamental misreading of Nigeria’s complex political history. These were not ethnic warriors but political leaders operating within the constraints and possibilities of their time. Their legacies, like those of all historical figures, contain both achievements and shortcomings, but reducing them to ethnic caricatures does disservice to historical truth.

    Moreover, this ethnic lens could be applied to virtually any Nigerian leader. The political alliances and rivalries of the First Republic were complex, often crossing ethnic lines and involving pragmatic considerations that defy simple ethnic explanations. If we begin judging historical figures solely through the prism of ethnic loyalty, no leader would be safe from retrospective condemnation.

    The irony of this situation becomes apparent when we consider that even President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, despite his Yoruba heritage, might not be immune to such revisionist tendencies, after all, he has made a lot of enemies via his reforms and policies. Political fortunes change, and today’s hero can become tomorrow’s villain through the accidents of history and shifting political narratives. If ethnic considerations become the primary criterion for honoring public figures, then streets and edifices named after Tinubu could face similar challenges should future political dynamics paint him as an “enemy” of other regions.

    This possibility underscores the folly of ethnic-based historical revisionism and the importance of maintaining objective criteria for honoring public figures based on their overall contributions to national development rather than their perceived ethnic loyalties.

    Lagos State Government must resist this pressure to rename streets based on ethnic considerations. Instead, the state should reaffirm its commitment to being a home for all Nigerians, regardless of their ethnic background. The city’s strength lies in its diversity, and its street names should continue to reflect the contributions of Nigerians from all regions to its development.

    Rather than engaging in ethnic point-scoring, Lagos should focus on adding new streets and infrastructure that can bear Yoruba names without erasing existing symbols of national unity. This approach would honor Yoruba heritage while maintaining the inclusive character that has made Lagos Nigeria’s most successful state.

    The street renaming campaign represents more than a simple administrative exercise—it is a test of Lagos’ commitment to the cosmopolitan values that have made it Nigeria‘s economic capital. The state must choose between the narrow path of ethnic exclusivity and the broad highway of inclusive development that has served it well.

    History will judge whether Lagos chooses to maintain its position as a beacon of Nigerian unity or succumbs to the divisive forces that seek to fragment the nation along ethnic lines. The decision on Ozumba Mbadiwe Road and Sir Ahmadu Bello Way will signal which direction the state intends to take.

  • ADC: Failure at first test

    Politics is a game of numbers and strategies. It works best when the players focus on doing good for all and not on a mission to hunt fellow players like games.

    For the now rebranded African Democratic Congress (ADC), the party’s leadership seems to focus mainly on how to shoot down the ruling party’s leading lights. Their antecedents, actions, and utterances show a lack of depth. The party’s outing in last week’s by-elections proved disastrous. Despite its effusive self-congratulations ahead of the polls, ADC could not fly.

    It has no identifiable programme. Its leadership has been grandstanding. Nigerians are not taking the political experimenters in the coalition very seriously. There is no impact yet. ADC is not new. What is striking is that it has been loaned to new investors who have acquired its liabilities. But the returns on the investment are not forthcoming.

    During the recent by-elections in two senatorial districts, seven federal constituencies, and eight state constituencies, the party lost its deposit, despite the bravado of its loquacious leaders.

    ADC was off the radar on poll day. The noise-making briefly subsided. Then, after the announcement of the election results, the party’s leaders cried foul. But its lamentation did not elicit any sympathy from observers.

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), which they decimated through self-imposed ostracism, still exhibited some strengths. It won a critical federal seat in Oyo State, which it had lost in previous elections, thereby affirming the indisputable leadership and influence of the governor, Seyi Makinde.

    The PDP also came second across the board, which means that despite its weakness, its structures are not dead. They are only ailing, fragile, and fragmented.

    The All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) of Anambra State Governor Chukwuma Soludo tried to maintain dominance in its sphere of influence, unlike the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP) of Senator Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, which seemed to have lost its grip on some constituencies in Kano State. While APGA won the Anambra South senatorial seat, NNPP could not win the House of Assembly seats in its supposed stronghold. The party, in utter dejection, is threatening litigation.

    APGA recognises its limitations. It is not a national party. It is the legacy of the Great Ikemba Chukwuemeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu of Nnewi. Its ambition is limited to maintaining dominance in Anambra, and nothing more.

    Read Also: ADC coalition deceiving Nigerians, says Datti Ahmed

    The NNPP is a one-man party woven around the personality of the Kwankwasiya leader, who is really not looking for an ally, as long as the party remains in control of the poll-confident Kano.

    The crisis-ridden Labour Party (LP) of former Anambra State Governor Peter Obi and his adversary, Julius Abure, was nowhere to be found during the election. Its chances were sacrificed on the altar of internal division, protracted conflict, and glaring self-destruction, which no court judgment on the leadership tussle can avert.

    Why the coalition’s curators cannot spy on the APC blueprint and replicate its fusion strategies by bringing together PDP, LP, APGA, NNPP, and ADC to form a formidable mega party is confounding. The corollary of the situation is that former Vice President Atiku Abubakar lacks the semblance of political stamina and bridge-building acumen, sagacity, persuasive talent, and leader-servant virtues that have made Asiwaju a towering figure in the polity.

    ADC’s motive was the liquidation of the All Progressives Congress (APC). Its intention is to  displace the ruling party in the 2027 presidential poll, and with last week’s by-election as a dress rehearsal.

    But the ruling party never slept on guard. National Chairman Nentawe Yilwatda led the inspiring campaigns. All APC governors supported the chapters involved in the by-elections. Nothing was left to chance.

    At the close of polls, the ruling party checkmated ADC’s planned incursion to the chagrin of the boasters. APC won the Edo Central senatorial seat vacated by warrior Governor Monday Okpebholo, and the Ovie Federal seat vacated by his deputy, Denis Idahosa. Overall, APC consolidated as the ruling party through its huge victories, sending signals about its capacity to repeat the feat in future contests.

    Predictably, it was wailing galore in ADC as its leaders regressed to defence mechanisms, attributing their failure to imaginary malpractices and other forms of inexplicable irregularities.

    Morning shows the day. The beginning, particularly a false start, can predict a future doom.

    A month after hijacking the ADC from its original members, the Atiku forces have not broken new grounds. Its membership drive has been hectic as split followers at PDP chapters in some states only reluctantly gravitate to the ADC. The few that left for ADC did so with  reservations.

    If ADC claimed to have an ideological background or leaning, it has either been damaged or polluted as there is no unifying idea other than fighting President Bola Ahmed Tinubu without tendering sound, objective, constructive, and reasonable alternative solutions to the socio-economic and political challenges. The motive of the prime mover is not nation-building or development. It is the desire to fulfill the ego of getting power and occupying the coveted seat by all means and at all costs.

    Neither has the ADC found internal peace since the invasion of the party by the new tenants. Apart from the cracks within, as exemplified by the bitter struggle between the divided old handlers and the newcomers, there is also a suspicion between the acclaimed intellectual wing responsible for the spade work and the ageing politicians itching to fulfill their long-standing presidential ambitions.

    A crisis is also brewing in the crawling party over the disagreement on zoning. The general feeling in the country is that the South deserves four more years after 2027. The puzzle, then, is: which bloc zone of the country should take the ADC presidential slot – North or South?

    Lacking the courage, foresight, strategy, and wherewithal to raise a new party or mobilise successfully for fusion or alliance of political parties, the only option left to the Atiku forces and their tiny club of collaborators was the adoption of ADC as a borrowed platform.

    Former Rivers State Governor Rotimi Amaechi, a former Transportation Minister, was said to have unveiled himself as the visioner and missioner of the feeble opposition crusade in a video last week. He is indirectly throwing a challenge. The early disclosure may be a signal that an internal rift is imminent over the presidential ticket, which ADC chieftains from the South have the legitimate right to demand, based on the subsisting agitation for zoning.

    Unlike the open consultations among the like-minded legacy parties that formed the APC in 2014, the ADC coalition settled for the style of a secret cult. The party was not a product of group mobilisation but an alliance of aggrieved and disgruntled individuals in the PDP who were locked in the supremacy battle, and a few stalwarts of the APC who have an axe to grind with the President.

    The main grievance of the few APC collaborators was that they were not picked as ministers by the Commander-in-Chief.

    What have the ADC leaders done for Nigeria to make them think that Nigerians would see the party as a credible alternative? Were the ADC leaders not part of past PDP governments that were rejected by voters in 2015, 2019, and 2023, after 16 years of profligacy, ineptitude, and maladministration? Have they repented?

    With Atiku in ADC are politicians of his time: they may be finding it somehow difficult to penetrate the nooks and crannies of the vast country, apart from battling with fading influence at home. In the past, they were big names in the polity. Now, they cling on to an old reputation and the glory of their illustrious past.

    Senator David Mark, Army General, former military governor, ex-minister and Senate President for eight years, is from Benue State, which is now controlled by the APC. His disciple or mentee, Senator Abba Moro, who objected to the balkanisation of the PDP, has vowed not to jump ship along with his former leader.

    Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, eminent public servant and Third Republic governor of Edo State, is a former national chairman of the defunct All Nigeria People’s Party (ANPP). He became APC National Chairman after the Tinubu/Akande/Osoba forces prevailed on the late Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, following a serious protest and resistance to his candidature. It is doubtful if he or his compatriot, Chief Tom Ikimi, can now be a factor in political mobilisation in Edo State and the Southsouth region, where ADC was routed by Okpebholo’s APC. It is the same awful picture in the Southwest, where the ADC Interim National Secretary, Rauf Aregbesola, is now complaining of being hunted.

    The only harm ADC has done is to further reduce the chance of the PDP at the polls, following the split.

    APC has not lost any members. It operates in an advantageous position. It has less headaches than the PDP and ADC.

    Serial defectors who left the PDP are now hibernating in ADC. After the 2027 poll, they are likely to retrace their steps to the PDP, as usual, and work out a reconciliation plan.

  • TB, LASU and the grace of selfless giving

    TB, LASU and the grace of selfless giving

    On Wednesday, this week, friends, associates, colleagues, government officials including the governor of Lagos State, Mr Babajide Sanwo-Olu and Minister of Education, Dr Olatunji Alausa and critical stakeholders in the education industry gathered at the Epe Campus of the Lagos State University (LASU), on the invitation of respected journalist, editor, columnist, lawyer, environmentalist, politician and public administrator, Mr Olatunji Bello. The occasion was the formal unveiling of a spectacular new physical structure donated to the institution by the Executive Vice-Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC).

    The 550-seat sprawling building is an architectural masterpiece. It once existed only in the thought and imagination of the man fondly called TB by large numbers of his mentors, mentees and admirers. Thought translated into action, mutated into vision and is today a phenomenal material actuality, adding value to LASU and by extension Nigeria’s beleaguered educational landscape. In his speech on the occasion, TB traced the genesis and trajectory from idea to concreteness of the project.

    In his words, “At my 50th birthday in 2011, I had committed to instituting an annual prize in five disciplines, namely, Law, Mass Communications, Social Sciences, Engineering and Medicine. I was very intentional about the criteria to qualify. Academic brilliance was one. Two,  coming from a poor background. And three, the beneficiary must be an indigene of our dear state of Lagos. The whole idea is targeting those brilliant minds at the risk of dropping out of academic pursuits on account of poverty. To the glory of God Almighty, we have been able to sustain that scholarship programme to date.”

    Fast forward a decade later as TB’s narrative continues, “So, as my 60th birthday approached in 2021, the concern was how I could do more. For me, the idea of throwing a big party to mark the occasion was completely off the table. My darling wife, Professor Ibiyemi Olatunji-Bello, the very able Madam Vice-Chancellor of this great university, is the one who initially mooted the idea of building something for LASU to mark my 60th birthday. She was not yet the Vice Chancellor then. I never gave much thought to her suggestion immediately until a few days later. Eventually, after much reflection, l agreed it has to be an auditorium, truly befitting and fit for purpose”.

    Although the architect, Mr Kunle Ayinla, came up with an impressive building plan, the projected cost, TB found staggering. Yet, he remained undaunted, ploughing on with determination and fortitude. Did not the Lord Jesus say that he who puts his hand on the plough and looks back is not worthy of the Kingdom of God? He put his fertile mind to work. According to him, “After days of wrestling with the architect’s budget in my head, it suddenly occurred to me I could ask those going to buy me gifts for the 60th birthday to monetise such and hand me the cash to do something really dear to my heart. It worked. A very wealthy friend and well-known businessman had wanted to surprise me with a brand new Toyota Land Cruiser Jeep. I appealed to him to convert it to cash. With donations from other able friends and well-wishers, we got started in 2021”.

    It was a tortuous journey filled with unanticipated challenges such as the drastic fall of the Naira’s value and the attendant inflationary spirals of 2023 and 2024, but TB’s trust in the faithfulness of God to facilitate the completion of the dream never wavered. In the process, he had to sell his property at Magodo Estate in Lagos to keep the project going. Thus, Mr Olabode Opseitan writes, “It is not the size of the gift that stuns – it is the source. By every reasonable measure – whether by asset declarations, Forbes rankings, or real estate holdings – Tunji Bello is not among Nigeria’s wealthiest citizens. Yet, he has done what perhaps fewer than 10 Nigerians have ever done: build a legacy structure for a public university – not with surplus, but with scarcity…What emerged is not just an auditorium – it is a monument to moral courage, a structure built not on concrete alone, but on conviction”.

    TB’s life has been built on the foundation of compassion, kindness, generosity, selflessness and a commitment to justice and the pursuit of public purpose. Myriads of those he has touched within and beyond the journalism profession over the years readily testify to his all too many acts of self-sacrificial giving, mostly getting nothing in return but gratitude and prayers.

    For instance, in the book, ‘In Pursuit of the Public Purpose’, a collection of reminiscences, memories and reflections onTB’s life, published to commemorate his 60th birthday in 2021, a journalist and former Chairman of the Concord Chapter of the Nigerian Union of Journalists (NUJ), Ogbeni Goke Odeyinka wrote, “I remember also how he assisted his first PA to study for his Master’s degree in Law in England. I know because the man involved happens to be my in-law.

    Incidentally, TB’s gesture of altruistic philanthropy at LASU is coming at a time when the world is entering a new phase of chronic individualistic selfishness and self-centeredness. Seek ye first the kingdom of your individual greed and personal egotism, and all other things shall be added unto you, seems to be the new human credo, especially with the advent of President Donald Trump and his ‘Make America Great Again’ mantra. Consequently, America has turned inward particularly during his ongoing second term, terminating its financial contributions to the World Health Organization (WHO), scrapping the USAID, turning its back on the gripping poverty and immiseration that grips much of humanity despite the world’s wealthiest and most powerful country’s capacity to do much good and help fashion a fairer, more equitable, just and compassionate world.

    This seems a far cry from the spectacular manifestation of amazing generosity of the spirit and overflow of the milk of human kindness exhibited by some of the world’s richest persons in the early years of this century. In his essay on different dimensions of this revolution in altruism, titled ‘What Should a Billionaire Give – and What Should You?’, Peter Singer writes, “In the same world in which more than a billion people live at a level of affluence never previously known, roughly a billion other people struggle to survive on the purchasing power equivalent of less than one US dollar per day”. Writing in 2007, Singer noted that most of the world’s poorest people were undernourished, lacked access to basic health services, including safe drinking water and could not send their children to school, with the result that at least 10 million children died yearly, according to statistics by UNICEF.

    Read Also: Nigeria Health Watch, partners train 20 journalists on solutions journalism for reproductive health

    Responding to this dismal and desperate situation, Singer states that “Last June, the investor,  Warren Buffett, took a significant step toward reducing these deaths when he pledged $31 billion to the Gates Foundation and another $6 billion to other charitable foundations. Buffett’s pledge, set alongside the nearly $30 billion given by Bill and Melinda Gates to their foundation, has made it clear that the first decade of the twenty-first century is a new “golden age of philanthropy”. On an inflation-adjusted basis, Buffet has pledged to give more than double the lifetime total given away by two of the philanthropic giants of the past, Andrew Carnegie and John D. Rockefeller, put together. Bill and Melinda Gates’ gifts are not far behind.”

    What is intriguing is that many of the world’s billionaire philanthropists are atheists or agnostics, not excluding Bill Gates and Buffet. TB is a Muslim married to a Christian and pastor of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG). Compassionate kindness is thus not limited to religious inclination or orientation. In their book, ‘Greed is Dead-Politics after Individualism’, published in 2020, two eminent economists from the United Kingdom, Paul Collier and John Kay, contend that the world, despite Trump, is moving from an essentially narcissistic individualism to a return to a more communal, cooperative ethos without which human survival in the long run cannot be guaranteed. This is because “humans are first and foremost social animals and our successes always depend on cooperation”.

    TB has shown the light for many more privileged persons to find the way to compassionate giving for the communal good. There are all too few affluent Nigerians, such as Aliko Dangote, Femi Otedola, Afe Babalola, Wole Olanipekun, and Tony Elumelu, among others, following this path relative to the number of Nigerians of considerable means. I am told that Anambra State, for instance, has the largest collection of billionaires in the country. How has that benefited their state? TB announced to the audience that, courtesy of another friend, Mr Biodun Omoniyi, Managing Director of VDT Communications, there will be free WiFi at the auditorium to enhance the learning experience of students. Moreover, the maintenance of the auditorium will be handled by another private management company for one year.

    Tracing his orientation to philanthropy and public service to the examples of his late father, Alhaji Azeez Olatunji Bello, his late boss and mentor, MKO Abiola and President Bola Tinubu, TB stressed that “this auditorium is my own token of appreciation to God Almighty for his grace and to my dear native Lagos State for the great opportunities given me. First, I have also been one of the beneficiaries of the Lagos State Government’s scholarship award as an undergraduate at the University of Ibadan in the early 1980s. And later the privilege to serve in public office in various capacities”. TB has obviously never forgotten that to whom much is given, much is expected. All too many of us disdain this truism all too often to the detriment of the collective good.