Category: Celebrity

  • Teslim Folarin recoils into anonymous shell

    Unknown to many, the limelight is not always as pleasurable as it appears. Sometimes, it blinds those it beams its rays upon, forcing them to scurry into a shell of anonymity. That seems the fate that has befallen Sen. Teslim Folarin.

    No longer does the internet buzz with his every deed, and no longer does the mention of his name elicit adulation. He no longer controls the pace of the Ibadan social scene, as the former Senate leader and governorship aspirant in Oyo State is no longer visible on the social radar.

    No one is sure why Folarin suddenly disappeared from the social scene. His wife, Agela, seems to have taken a cue from her husband as she appears to have also recoiled into her shell.

  • How IBB spends his day now

    Former Military President, Gen. Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida is reputed as one of the most vibrant former leaders in the country. In his heyday, he could be described as a jolly fellow to be with.

    Recently, there was a rumour of his death when he travelled to Germany for medical treatment. But he and his son, Mohammed, wasted no time in debunking the rumour, declaring that the erstwhile Nigerian leader is very much alive.

    Since his recent medical trip abroad, the General, as he is fondly called, has been recuperating. He now looks frail and his advanced years are all the more evident. In the last few months, the 75-year-old ex-leader has not been going to the mosque for Jumat service.

    Very much unlike him, he was conspicuously absent at the last Id el-Fitr prayers at the Id praying ground in Minna, forcing the state governor, Alhaji Abubakar Sani Bello, and former Head of State, Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar, to pay a visit to his hill top residence after the prayers.

    It was a clear departure from what obtained in the days of former Governor Mu’azu Babangida Aliyu, when  IBB would lead Gen. Abdulsalami and other elders in the city to pay sallah homage to the governor.

    These days, Babangida hardly stands to take group photographs with visitors. He is aided to walk and performs most tasks sitting. But the former military president continues to host an avalanche of visitors on a daily basis.

    Political leaders and other eminent individuals have continued to troop to his house to get his advice and views on various issues. In fact, there is no day he does not receive visitors unless he is out of the state.

    A source close to the family, who pleaded anonymity, said Gen. Babangida these days, he stays indoors most of the time.  He wakes up in his room upstairs to say his morning prayer, after which he descends the staircase between 11.00 and 11.30 am to attend to visitors, only on appointments.

    “After that, he has lunch with friends and visitors. And after the 4 pm prayers, he goes upstairs and returns at about 7.30 pm to meet with some of his old friends mostly based in Minna. They chat and rub minds together until about 10 pm in most cases.

    “One thing you cannot take away from the General is his love for his grandchildren. He loves having them around him in the evenings. He always plays with them, asking them about their schools, their subjects and any challenge they want him to know about before he retires to bed.”

    Asked whether there is a medical doctor dedicated to him on account of his health challenge for which he travelled out recently  (he was said to be suffering from radioculopathy since he became head of state), the source said: “He undergoes physiotherapy but not every day, although he is being encouraged to take a walk daily, which he does with the aid of his mobility aid. But he visits Abuja regularly for his medical check-ups depending on appointments.”

    The source also said that one thing that the health challenge would not take away from IBB is his rich sense of humour.

    She said: “One thing you cannot take away from the amiable General is his high sense of humour and his ability to recollect the past and people despite his fragile frame.

    “Whenever he sees a guest, he calls them by their first names and jokes with them by referring to the past.

    “If you have met General Babangida one on one or in a group in the past, do not be surprised when he tells you the event that took place during the meeting, because as it is said, once a general, always a general.”

    A close family friend of the general told our correspondent that the former military president is still physically and mentally alert, adding that he is still full of life and energy.

    He, however, added: “As one grows old, it is expected that one slows down on some activities and take a lot of rest. That is the reason why he is mostly indoors these days. Normally, he is growing old like everybody else, and old age will catch up with everyone. He is expected to rest.

    “When we visited him along with the governor and General Abdulsalami during the Sallah celebration, he was full of energy and he walked with us to his dining room where we all had breakfast. He joked and exchanged banter with everybody.

    “You will notice he is still mentally alert because he called everybody by their first names, and his memory was as sharp as ever. But as I said, the reason why he is not as active as before may be that old age has slowed him down and he needs rest.”

  • Leonardo DiCaprio raises $45m at star-studded gala

    Leonardo DiCaprio lent his star power for the good cause. The Oscar-winning actor threw a star-studded fundraiser at St. Tropez to support environmental awareness and research for climate change. The event was a big success, raising a whopping $45 million.

    The A-list attendees included Bono, Chris Rock, Mariah Carey, Tobey Maguire, Jonah Hill, Naomi Campbell, Bradley Cooper and Edward Norton. Prince Albert of Monaco was feted with New World Leadership Award while Lana Del Rey, The Weekend and Andrea Bocelli performed at the gala.

    The guests had opportunity to bid for a week on set with Martin Scorsese, a private game of Texas Hold ‘Em with Norton and Hill, an evening with Carey, a lunch with Margot Robbie as well as a Harley Davidson motorcycle and the “Terminator: Genisys” skull from Arnold Schwarzenegger.

    Meanwhile, “The Revenant” actor auctioned his Rolex, the diamond cufflinks he wore when he won his Academy Award earlier this year and a seven-night stay at his property in Palm Springs. A portion of the proceeds will benefit victims and survivors of the recent Nice attacks and the rest will go to the actor’s foundation dedicated for environmental efforts.

  • Jari Williams brings charm to Bi-courtney

    Success is no accident. It comes from hard work, perseverance and, most of all, love of what you are doing or learning to do. Ask Jari William and he will attest to this fact as he carries out his duties at MMA2.

    He was recently appointed the Chief Executive Officer of Bi-Courtney Aviation Services Limited (BASL), the operator of Murtala Muhammed Airport Two (MMA2). Since he resumed at the place, the atmosphere and travellers’ experience are said to have vastly improved, all thanks to the experience and diligent expertise of the man who until his new appointment was the Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of Ibom Airport Development Company (IADC), Managers of Akwa Ibom International Airport.

    Widely travelled and experienced, Capt. Williams is an FAA/ICAO certified airline transport pilot who has flown over 10,000 flight hours both locally and internationally.

  • OYEGUN:my years of struggle as labourer, hawker

    OYEGUN:my years of struggle as labourer, hawker

    National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, is reputed for prematurely retiring from the Federal Civil Service where he rose to the position of permanent secretary because he could not continue to tolerate the ills that were gradually creeping into public service. He went into private business and later became a politician elected as first executive governor of Edo State in the short-lived Third Republic. He later became an active member of the National Democratic Coalition (NADECO), the pro-democracy group that mounted pressure on the Gen. Sani Abacha-led junta to hand over power to an elected government. With the return to democracy, Oyegun decided to pitch his tent with the All Peoples Party (APP) which later transformed into All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), one of the parties that coalesced to form the APC. He chose to remain in opposition for 16 years even though most of his friends and former political associates were in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). TONY AKOWE had an interesting encounter with the APC National Chairman, in which he told the grass-to-grace story of his life.

    Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, born to a man who was an only child, told The Nation that his father apparently wanted to compensate for being an only child, so he wanted his family name to be everywhere. Recollecting his growing up years in Benin, he said: “Growing up was lovely. It was a beautiful large family with a well educated father who worked with white judicial officers at the early stages, went on tours with magistrates at the time and all that. He was a court registrar, and whenever he was coming back, we were always happy because there would be lots of chicken and those little, little things. So it was fun because there were many children. We were 26 at the peak and that went relatively well.

    “Of course, in a situation like that, you tended to depend on your mother. They became the focus, the rallying point, and he (father) coped in spite of the large family. He was a one-child product of his family and I suppose he wanted to ensure that the family name lives forever. And I think he has succeeded because there are so many Oyeguns now all over the place.”

    Looking back into his early history, Chief Oyegun said even though his father was a well educated man who had a job, meeting all the family needs was not an easy task. So, most of the time, he had to rely on his mother for some petty needs.

    He said: “It was good even though there was not always enough to meet all our needs. He (father) paid our fees religiously and our mothers took care of the slack. You know, when you are going to school, the garri, sugar and all those things, you take along.

    “Of course, at that time, there was this tendency after secondary school to ask the female children to go into one of the professions whilst the male children struggled along. But what was good was that for many of us that went to the university then, we were basically on scholarship. So, it helped a lot.”

    At a tender age, Oyegun, who graduated from the University of Ibadan in 1963 with a degree in Economics, wanted to be a lawyer. But destiny had something else in store for him.

    He said: “I was preparing to go to the University of Hull in the United Kingdom to do a Law degree when my federal scholarship arrived and that immediately changed that possibility and my career path.

    “It was a beautiful time, and since there was not enough to meet all our needs, most of us the older ones took to supplementary occupations now and then just to earn some pocket money. Sometimes, we worked at building sites.

    “In those days, the scarcest commodity in Benin was water. With just a few taps in the city, you had to queue for a long time to get water. What we did was to work at building sites, more often than not filling drums with the water they used to mix concretes.

    “Occasionally, we hired trucks to carry things for market women. The third thing a lot of us did was selling. I sold soap. We put them in trays and went round town hawking. But it was quite a wonderful experience.”

    Oyegun had a distinguished career as a civil servant, rising to the position of Permanent Secretary at the age of 46, becoming one of the youngest Permanent Secretaries of his time. Quitting after about 22 years in service, Oyegun is not happy with the changes that have occurred in the service today.

    He summed up his civil service experience in just one wordfantastic. “Truly, there is nothing like it,” he said.

    “When you look back to those years and you look at what is happening today, you see a totally different world. At that time, you did not even dare go to your permanent secretary not to talk of discussing loot or lobbying for anything. That was an anathema.

    “I remember the very first position, I was left out. I wrote a petition in that regard and at the end of the day, I was called and told to take it easy, that I would be promoted when it was time, and that was the end of the matter.

    “During our time in service, you do not lobby for promotion. You do not lobby for posting or anything, and merit was very critical because it was highly recognised.”

    After his protest, luck smiled on him and he had the opportunity of working with some of the best leaders in the service.

    He said: “I had the singular fortune of being deployed, after my protest, to the Ministry of Economic Development where I had very enlightened leaders like Alison Ayida, I.D Ebong, one of the most forgotten now but one of the most intelligent civil servants of those days. And in many instances, I collaborated with Chief Phillip Asiodu and other very brilliant persons who were not in the ministry but collaborated a lot with us. These were people who encouraged you to reason; encouraged you to argue, encouraged you to speak your mind.

    “So, one grew up in that fearless mould but always reminded you that once a decision was taken, the issue was closed. Before the decision was taken, you could argue your point and they would listen to you, no matter how junior you were. So, it brought us up in a mould where we could speak fearlessly. There was no fear of witch hunt. In fact, it was a problem if you could not reason and you could not speak and you could not defend your point of view.

    “So, some of us, because of that kind of background, had problems much later in our career. But it was a fantastic civil service.

    “For instance, I got whispers about the possibility of me becoming a permanent secretary when I was attending a board meeting of the Nigeria Ports Authority (NPA), because you never knew things like that would happen. Somehow, somebody heard of it and called me out of the meeting to inform me. Just to give you the idea that at that time, the golden days of the civil service, merit was everything. Lobbying and corruption were absent. You dared not buy a car that was out of sync with your economic possibilities. It was not done. They would ask you.”

    Having had a flourishing career in the public service, Oyegun did not wait until he had attained the mandatory retirement age or number of years in service. He chose to disengage voluntarily.

    But why take such a decision when he had the opportunity of staying longer at the apex of his career?

    He said: “I retired voluntarily because the kind of upbringing we had in the civil service became a disadvantage when the military came in. For a long time, we had no problems, but I think there was a stress factor involved. When the Buhari administration with which I empathised a lot came in, discipline was becoming a problem. Corruption, drugs were becoming a problem. I was on all fours with that administration and when the coup happened and they were removed, I was truly upset. So in the usual forthright manner in which I grew up in the service, I said a few things and resisted a few things that created issues for me. So, I just knew it was time to go.

    When the new (Ibrahim Babangida-led) government came in, my problem started immediately, and I knew that by the time they would appoint permanent secretaries, it was almost certain I would not be on the list. So, I just said to myself, instead of facing that humiliation, I better just go whilst I was still on my feet.”

    So, while not waiting to be shown the way out, Oyegun took a decision he considered good for his future and left the service.

    After his retirement from the civil service, he was practically in the cooler for most parts of the Babangida regime until the doors of politics opened and he pitched his tent with the Social Democratic Party (SDP) on whose platform he was elected the governor of Edo State, defeating the more popular candidate of the National Republican Convention (NRC), Lucky Igbinedion, in an election that did not take money politics into consideration.

    Many who followed the election believed that if money had been allowed to play a major role, Oyegun would not have come near the Government House.

    What was the experience like for the former Edo State chief executive? He said: “It was lovely and beautiful. It taught me one thing and I think it is a universal truism, that when people trust you, when they believe you are acting in their own interest, they tend to take to you, and that was clear during most of my period in Edo State.

    “Then, almost like now, there was no money. I think we got less than N100 million most times in any month, because the last budget I presented was about N1 billion; the first time everybody was declaring billions. And that was for the entire year, and salaries almost took everything.

    “At the end of the day, you are left with almost nothing. At the best of times, I do not think we were left with more than N15 million or N20 million to manage the state in any month. But that is where resource management comes in.”

    In terms of liability, what did his government leave behind at the time they were eased out of office by the military?

    He said: “At the time I left, I owed nobody no salary. I owed nobody no pension; no lack of payment for work done. My habit from the time I became permanent secretary was that unless the money was there, I would not give out a job, because the effect is simple: people would go and borrow money to execute the job, then they come back after one, two, three months or even a year and you are unable to pay them. You have only ruined them, and for me, that was totally unacceptable.

    “So, unless the flow of resources was reasonably sure to me, I would not allow a job to be awarded. I had the challenge finally with the salary issue and I called the unions for a debate. I told them I did not want to lay off staff. They had just gotten one or two increments, that was during the Babangida regime when they would just virtually decree things. Two, three times, they reduced our percentage of the Consolidated Revenue funds while workers’ salaries went up.

    “So I called the workers and persuaded them to give up some of the increments they got, but repayable to them at retirement. We called it compulsory savings. I told them that would save their colleagues from being fired. The union leaders agreed.  But, of course, it turned out that they had difficulty persuading the workers. That was the issue we had. Otherwise, it was a most pleasurable experience.”

    How would he defend the argument that while in office as governor, he did not initiate new projects? He said: “When I came in, there were so many abandoned projects and I decided that instead of starting new projects, let me complete the ones that were there and bring them into use by the public because they had invested a lot of money in them and we could not just write them off.

    “The very day I was sworn in, I declared education free. So, when people today talk about free education being unaffordable, I do not understand it. I called the vice chancellor, rector, provost and heads of other tertiary institutions and asked them to tell me what each student paid into the system. They gave me the student population as well as how much they generate from them and I told them ‘fine, subject to increases everywhere, I will give you what the students are supposed to pay. So they are free to attend classes.’ And that was it. We managed that very well.

    “I introduced the public bus service and registered it as a limited liability company and we had an arrangement with those that were managing it. I would buy the buses, you would manage and maintain them properly and meet your recurrent costs, but I would always provide the capital. That worked very well.

    “When we needed to build a students’ hostel in what was then Edo State University, I called the students of Auchi Polytechnic and asked them to design it, do the architectural drawing. I called the students of the then Edo State University to supply the labour while we would supply the materials. We had to do these innovative things to succeed. It was a very lovely experience, such that till today, from the very first day I left office, I could walk the streets of Benin freely.”

    While working to put the new state on the path of development, his four-year tenure was cut short by the intervention of the Abacha junta thereby truncating the Third Republic after the annulment of the June 12, 1993 presidential election by the Babangida regime.

    To Oyegun, it was a very bitter experience. He told The Nation that he considered it a bitter experience not because his tenure was cut short, but “annoying as that was, it was a period of promise. You could see the future. The governors were mostly of high quality and we interacted very well and had a mission of where the country was going. Then, the military struck again and it became clear to me all of a sudden that the military was the source of the nation’s problems and that they had to be voluntarily or with a little push, be taken out of the political scene on a permanent basis. That was why NADECO came about. That was the mission of NADECO: an end to military rule.”

    But how did MKO Abiola come into the NADECO struggle?

    “June 12 was grafted when Abiola came to join us. We were meeting then somewhere in Ikeja GRA when Abiola applied to join and I remember I got up that day and said he had to accept that the core of the struggle was a permanent end to military rule; that we were ready to accommodate. Once we got the military out, we could cope with democracy with all its imperfections, but it was still a better option than military rule.

    “We fought till the end, won 50 per cent. We would have won 100 per cent but for the strange death of the dramatis personae. But we got the military out of politics with God assisting us in the process.”

    When it became clear that many of the leaders of NADECO which had become like an opposition to the military junta were either in detention or had fled the country, Oyegun knew that it was time to go into exile in order to survive to tell the story. It became worse when his name appeared among those that were wanted by the government.

    He said: “The minute I was declared wanted, the choices before me became very stark. We were bitter political enemies in Edo State. The late Aikhomu, for example, believed that I organised those who burnt his house and other attacks in Edo State, including the attacks on some leaders of the then NRC and those even within the SDP who became collaborators, not to talk of the political people that I defeated in Edo State. I was even in Lagos when all that happened.

    “So, it was clear that if I found myself in Benin Prisons, I might never come out alive. So, the choice became stark. The truth of the matter was that I went into hiding for quite a while and it became uncomfortable for those who were hosting me. Even for me, it became a bitter assault. And I contacted friends in the security services to say, ‘Look, I am tired of hiding. I’ll come out, stay in my house and I won’t say a word.’ And I was told, ‘Well, that may not be enough. You have to say you support us.’ And I told them, ‘Sorry, I will not do that. I am ready to keep quiet, but I am not ready to say I support you’.

    And it was a friend. So, he said, ‘Well, my advice is if there is any way you can get out for a while, please do so.’ That was how I went on exile.”

    Even though he has presided over a state which many believe to be stressful, Oyegun believes that the task of running a governing party is only tough, rough and stressful, but totally a rewarding experience.

    Asked to speak on his experience running the APC as its National Chairman, he said: “I did not know I still had so much to learn and I am still learning everyday. We were dealing with groups that had never held power at the centre. So, there was a little bit of inexperience.  Before we got into government, the vision was a lot clearer. The mission was definitepush out these people who are running the country. So, we all rallied around that single bannerget rid of the destroyers of our nationand we succeeded.

    “But once we succeeded, the issue of putting everyone in positions became problem number two. How do we fill the positions? Who is more important than who? Who occupies what position? Who are the most important groups in the party? What level of hold would they have on the structures? All those became divisive issues which, to be honest, we have not totally resolved up to this point in time, and which also gave rise to some of the problems that exhibited themselves in the National Assembly and places like that. But we are working on it. Distresses have come, but in the long run, people would start accepting the relative positions within the party, settling for what they have or what they can get, and the party would get into a more even state. But until people start accepting the realities that we need everybody on board, that influences within the party are to be shared relatively equitably, that all those who contributed majorly to the victory must feel an equal sense of belonging, an equal sense of ownership; once the individuals start accepting that it is not an all-or-nothing situation, this unfortunate problem that we have would recede to the background.”

    Retiring from service at an early age, having his tenure as governor cut short, being in the opposition for 16 years and watching the country drifting and now becoming the National Chairman of the ruling party, is he a fulfilled man?  He said: “As a human being, God has been generous to me. So, I am totally fulfilled. Many years ago, I looked at the lives of Awolowo, Zik, Papa Ajasin, Ahmadu Bello, Tafawa Balewa and the rest of them who contributed to the development of this country, but who on their death-beds felt a lot of frustration that the vision they had for the nation, we were not even yet on the road to realising them, and I said to myself, ‘God, I want to be on my death-bed knowing not that all the problems of this nation have been solved, but knowing that we are finally on the right path to greatness.

  • MARRIED OR NOT?

    A secret wedding purportedly undergone by popular Nigerian hip-hop artiste, Dapo Oyebanjo, popularly called D’Banj, is enmeshed in controversy.

    The news had filtered out early on Monday that the self-acclaimed Koko Master secretly wedded his long time lover, Lineo Didi Kilgrow.

    The two were said to have tied the nuptial knot at a marriage registry in Lagos during the weekend.

    Inside sources, who pleaded anonymity because they are not official spokespersons of the musician, said the ceremony was attended by about 25 guests, many of whom thought they were going for the birthday party of the musician’s father.

    They were, however, shocked to find that it was not a birthday but the wedding of the multiple award-winning singer and entertainer.

    One of the sources said the couple had started dating early last year while D’Banj popped the question about four months ago and followed it up with the traditional wedding at the bride’s base in Jos, Plateau State, early last month.

    The purported secret wedding was said to have been attended by D’Banj’s father, who is a retired army colonel, and 25 others.

    But millions of the singer’s admirers  are now be in a quandary on whether to congratulate the Koko Master for finding a wife or wish him well in his continuous search for one. The stoic silence in his camp on the veracity of the story or otherwise has left his followers confounded.

    His manager, Amudo Franklin, who spoke with our correspondent on the issue, neither confirmed nor denied the story when he was confronted with it.

    “You speak as if the wedding is a fact and that you have such evidence. And if it was a secret wedding, why do you want to know?” he queried.

    Continuing, Franklin said: “As D’Banj’s manager, his private life is none of my business. His publicist is in a position to speak on his affairs.”

    While many believe that the wedding actually took place, others say it is just another media hype which could have been created by the media team of the popular musician.

    In another reaction to the alleged secret wedding, Franklin said: “D’Banj didn’t do any secret wedding. He had a private event meant for only a few family members and friends. How that turned to a marriage ceremony is what I don’t know.

    “Some people obviously didn’t understand simple English and we would not dignify them with a response on such false tale.”

    D’Banj himself would seem to have prepared the ground for the confusion when he said: “…I would tell you the truth: I am not married. But if I am, nobody would hear about it. It is going to be a very quiet wedding because I am tired of people asking me that question.

    “It is my personal life and it is not going to change my music or brand. I am not going to get married just because people want me to. Neither would I do it just to enter another phase of my life just like some of my colleagues have done.

    “They make it seem as if once you are married, you have retired. But that should not be the case.

    “Marriage would not change anything about me. And whenever it happens, nobody would hear about it. There would only be speculations.

    “My wife would not be seeking for fame because the one I have is already enough for all my family members.

    “When I get married, it will be a very quiet one. Who knows? It might have already happened.”

    But a close associate of the Koko Master, who wished not to be named, wondered why Nigerians are falling over themselves because of D’Banj’s purported wedding.

    “Do you ever believe that D’Ban’j would wed and the world would not see the photographs?” he asked.

    Speaking further, he said: “Nigerians should know by now that D’Banj uses this trick to cause a media hype.

    “If you recall, this is not the first time this is happening. It was a similar story with Genevieve. There were other women too.”

    However, despite the tongue-in-cheek rebuttal of the purported secret marriage by D’Banj, many people still believe that the wedding held and that D’Banj is only acting out a script like he had done in the past with similar tales.

  • I left home a married woman, returned a widow  -Belgium-based Nigerian billionaire’s widow  Halima Fernandez laments as she lands in Kano

    I left home a married woman, returned a widow -Belgium-based Nigerian billionaire’s widow Halima Fernandez laments as she lands in Kano

    It was an emotional moment as Baroness Halima Fernandez, widow of the late Belgium-based international businessman, Ambassador Anthonio Oladeinde Fernandez, returned to her Kano hometown for the first time after the death of Fernandez on September 1 last year, lamenting the death of her beloved husband.

    Announcing her arrival in Kano with a post on her social media platforms, she said: “Good afternoon Kano. The sun feels incredible. Never knew Kano heat like this. Kowa yabar gida, gida yabar sa.”

    Then she added: “Alhamdulilahi. After five years, I’m home. It is more bitter than sweet though. I left a married woman and now I’m back a widow. Allah kayuma Garsan Fulani Rahama. ka gafarta masa.”

    The Baroness later went visiting some places and individuals around the ancient city, including the Emir of Kano, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, where the two had a private discussion. She also visited Marietta, among other places.

    Weeks after her husband was buried, she had splashed some photographs of their love life on the social media, including those in which they were tongue-deep in kisses as they hung out in different countries on impromptu holidays. And after her weeks of mourning were over, she went visiting some of the romantic places she had once visited with her husband, trying to recapture some of those cherished memories.

    The news of Ambassador Anthonio Oladeinde Fernandez’s death on September 1 last year had spread around the world within seconds. His death affected many people in different countries and continents because the deceased billionaire was a highly influential businessman with varied business interests in the economies of many countries. Although he boasted a large family and hordes of friends, the closest individual to him at his moment of transition was his wife and Baroness of Dudley, Halima Fernandez.

    Naturally, therefore, the task of implementing the alleged wish of the late Baron of Dudley and one of the richest men to come out of Africa that his body be buried in Belgium fell on Halima. The late Fernandez who had acted as the permanent representative of many African countries was known to be friends with many world leaders like the late Nelson Mandela, George Bush Senior, Mobutu Seseseko, Gnassimgbe Eyadema and Kofi Annan. Organising a funeral befitting of such a world class figure was, therefore, never going to be an easy task.

    “It was a deep moment for me having to take in the pains of my beloved husband’s death and at the same time face the task of putting together a funeral that he would have loved,” Halima said.

    Insider information revealed that family members were assisted by the bereaved baroness in different ways to ensure that they gathered in Belgium to honour their late hero at his funeral service in far away Belgium. The choice of Belgium as the late businessman’s place of final rest of course became an issue among family members, many of whom were said to have expressed disappointment that they were not privy to the late billionaire’s wish. As would be expected, their reservations about the arrangement soon snowballed into a face-off between aggrieved family members and Fernandez’s widow.

    Halima, however, said the late Fernandez, who was born to the Olumegbon royal family in Isale Eko in the late 1920s, had anticipated the situation and had planned against it. She said her late husband was admirable for his eye for details and had talked to some members of the family on how life should be within his family even after he must have gone. “I continually admire his innate ability to be in charge of the details of everything. He was indeed a great man. A man I admired and loved deeply,” she added.

    A friend of the late Fernandez, Mr. Chimazuru Oblong Nnamdi, who was said to have read the oration at Fernandez’s classy funeral, said he was privileged to witness the occasion when the late businessman told his eldest child that Halima should be given good support by the family after he must have passed on.

    The late Fernandez had a loud marriage with Halima, who hails from the Maude family in Kano. A source said the love birds were introduced to each other by the late Emir of Kano, Alhaji Ado Bayero, who was said to be Fernandez’s good friend. It was the Emir who also turbaned Fernandez as the Garsan Fulani Kano, a title that translates as the Champion of the right of the Fulani people of Kano.

    “Our marriage is a part of me that I cherish. That we were married shouldn’t be in contention because it was a popular marriage in Kano with documentation, and important dignitaries were present,” said Baroness Halima after the burial of her late husband.

    Life after Fernandez’s death

    Given the way Fernadez and Halima doted on each other, it has been difficult for the late billionaire’s widow to come to terms with the death of her loving husband, a close family source said.

    “She was always with him. She was at his bed side and was with him all through his dying days,” added the source. “The late billionaire businessman was in and out of an age-related sickness which he battled with great effort until he finally gave up.”

    Halima herself said Fernandez had serious battle with sickness.

    “My husband was a strong man. He had lived a good life, and even in his dying days, I was proud of him. He fought back sickness. You wouldn’t even know sometimes that he was sick. He was a strong man, a great man,” she said.

    Months after the death and burial of her late billionaire husband in Belgium, she is still struggling to come to grips with life without him. Halima, as her close friends call her, was said to have told a friend that she was greatly missing her late husband.

    When the Ambassador Plenipotentiary took Halima to the altar many years ago, despite the large turnout and the general public excitement that greeted the event, not a few society people doubted the ability of the marriage to endure. This was particularly so because Ambassador Fernandez had only a few years before then had a bitter divorce with his then wife, Aduke, who is now deceased. But Halima’s marriage to Fernandez lasted till the latter’s death, leaving observers in no doubt as to the peace the billionaire must have found in the arms of Halima.

    “Their love life was good. Sometimes it was like those written in story books,” said a source, adding: “Chief (Fernandez) loved his wife a lot. He wanted her to be with him almost all the time.

    “His wife doted on him too. She is presently grasping with picking up her life from where her late husband left it off through death.”

    Back to life

    Halima, however, made a resplendent appearance at this year’s Cannes Film festival, an appearance that immediately became viral on the internet. It was her first appearance at an international event after her husband’s death and burial.

    It was later found out that she was at the event on invitation by the famous House of Boucheron, who it was scooped invited only 10 of such top world personalities.

    “Definitely, the Baroness had a swell time as she walked on the red carpet with the poise and grace of royalty and became the cynosure of all eyes,” said a foreign news source at the event, which also quoted the Baroness as having referred to the event as “magical.”

    For many of her friends, it was a relief to see her in her social mien after her long period of mourning.

    “It was an event which was difficult to ignore because the House of Boucheron has been our close friends while my husband was alive,” she said.

    The present and future

    Still grappling with the reality of the death of Fernandez, a UK-based friend of Halima said the Baroness will still be minimal with her public appearances, as she is still putting her family affairs together as instructed by her late husband before he breathed his last.

    Another family source said; “The Baroness is now too busy with the duties that her late husband left in her care. The work is enormous and needs serious concentration which definitely wousld not allow her time for a lot of other things.”

    According to another family source, much of the issues that would have caused much rancour within the family had been well taken care of by the late billionaire, who was well blessed with shrewd intelligence and power to create wealth.

    Soon, it will be a year since Fernandez waved final goodbye to his family, friends and business associates across the world.

  • Monalisa stirs the  hornets’ nest again

    Monalisa stirs the hornets’ nest again

    Popular Nollywood actress and show host, Monalisa Chinda Coker, is no new to controversy. From her purported fight with fellow actress, Rita Dominic, to her acrimonious divorce with former husband, Dejo Richards, the beautiful actress is not known to shy away from standing up for whatever she believes in.

    But nothing could have prepared her for the condemnations that have been thrown at her since she appeared in church in a dress, which many believed left very little to the imagination.

    Reacting to the head-turning dress on the social media, many of her fans rebuked the popular actress for her ‘daring act’.  Some of the fans believe that the dress was too transparent for a holy place.

    For any other outing, the burnt gold lace blouse with a matching headpiece and red choker would be a big hit among fashion aficionados.

    But those who saw her in church believed that the actress wore the dress to a wrong place.

    Some of the comments by the fans read:

    “Dress more decently when you are going to church, not putting your bra and body on display, my beautiful woman.”

    “When going to church, cover up please. Respect God.”

    “You’re beautiful already, exposing all this is not necessary and does not add to your beauty…”

    Efforts to reach Monalisa were unsuccessful. All the calls put through to her MTN line were not answered. A text message to the number was also not replied as at the time of filing this report.

  • Happy times for Mohammed Babangida

    FATHERHOOD is not a matter of wealth but a matter of desire, diligence and determination to see one’s family exalted above lack or penury. Ask Mohammed Babangida and he will tell you that being a great father has nothing to do with one’s social status. Having had a good father himself, Mohammed Babangida has worked towards becoming even a better one.

    For some time now, his heart has been troubled by despairing tales concerning the health of his father and former head of state, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida (rtd). But now he has a reason to rejoice. His daughter, Maryam Babangida, has just won an award as the best in Fine Arts student at her school, El-Amin International School, Minna, Niger State.

    She received the award during her graduation ceremony on Monday. Mohammed was reported to be elated by the artistic traits of his daughter.

  • Julius Rone takes birthday to orphanage

    THE true meaning of life is in finding your gifts and the purpose is to share such gifts with those who have not found theirs. Delta State born billionaire businessman, Julius Rone, has not allowed fame and fortune detach him from humanity.

    The brains behind UTM Group added another year to his age and rather than follow the elite norm of throwing a town-halting party, he chose to spend his special day with orphans. As Rone clocked 42 last Saturday, he visited some of the popular orphanage homes in Abuja where he gave out several gifts to the less privileged.

    With a strong resolve rarely found among men his age, Rone has conquered lack and has grown into a man of his own. He is one successful businessman whose lexicon has no place for failure. His hatred for lack inspires him to make life easier for the needy. He is no doubt a gift to this generation.

    What is more, his generous disposition is spiced with humility. While the Nigerian oil and gas sector is dominated by the big dogs, Rone has managed to carve a niche for himself in the sector.

    At 42, there is no doubt that Rone has made a huge impact in the Nigerian business circle. Since he made his foray into the Nigerian oil and gas industry, through his UTM Group, a globally recognised energy, shipping and power conglomerate, has demonstrated outstanding abilities as a leader, manager, and visionary.

    A good family man, he is married to a fashion icon and Microbiology graduate of the University of Port Harcourt, Utibe Umoh-Rone.