Category: Celebrity

  • Marriage on the card for Bobby Eke?

    Celebrity hair-stylist and owner of Bobby Signatures, Bobby Eke, is excited to leave the singles club and eager to unwrap the exciting institution of marriage. He is bubbling with excitement as he eagerly counts down to his big day.

    Fondly called Bobby by friends, the handsome dude suffered a mild stroke two years ago and was treated in one of the best hospitals in India. But all that is now firmly in the past as Bobby is now as fit as a fiddle.

    Having spent more than 50 years as a bachelor, Bobby has had his fill of the travails and triumphs of a single man. At the time he was down, it was obvious to many of his admirers that he had no serious relationship with the opposite sex. His single status has provoked all manner of insinuations, but his friends insist he is only taking his time to search for ‘Miss Right’ who unfortunately had been elusive.

    The latest gist is that he has located his ‘missing rib’ and he is ready to say ‘yes, I do’ anytime soon.

  • Eno Olafisoye regains groove

    It takes a man with a tough hide to see every setback as a setup for greater comeback, and Eno Olafisoye seems to understand this better than most people. After carving a niche for herself on the social scene, the beautiful and influential socialite began to shuttle between the limelight and the privacy of her home. With unrivalled skill, she transits from fame to privacy and privacy back to the limelight.

    It cannot be forgotten anytime soon that she used to be married to popular hotelier, Biyi Olafisoye. Neither can it be forgotten that the marriage did not stand the test of time. But being an unrepentant optimist, Eno got back in the saddle and gave love another chance. Before long, she found affection in the arms of Benue State-born businessman, Terry Waya, for whom she bore a son. For some time, there were speculations that Eno and Terry were about to give up on their relationship. Neither Eno nor Terry confirmed this, and their deportments did nothing to hint of an impending break-up.

    After a short absence from the social scene, Eno seems to be making a comeback. All eyes were on her at a recent function in Lagos. It was difficult for admirers to stop staring at her elegant designer’s outfit and accessories. With the confidence of a queen, she flaunted her beautiful body, ignoring whispers and envious stares.

    There are rumours of a reunion between Eno and Terry, and many believe that this must be the secret behind her recent glow.

  • Timi Alaibe spotted

    Former Managing Director of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), Timi Alaibe, embraced the calmness of solitude for some time and stayed off the social scene. However, penultimate Sunday, he was sighted at the Ikoyi residence of oil baron, Dapo Abiodun, on the occasion of the latter’s birthday.

    The politician looked every inch his bubbly self and blended so well that there was no indication he had been off the social scene for quite a while. Like the proverbial cat with nine lives, Alaibe seems to have bounced back on his feet. There have also been strong indications of late that he may be drafted back as the head of the Presidential Amnesty Programme, following the seeming inability to curb the activities of militants in the oil-rich region.

  • Bimbo Okoya ups her game

    No man who is unwilling to persevere to the end in their nature and education should bring children into the world, says the great Greek philosopher, Plato. Alhaji Rasaq Akanni Okoya, the Aare of Lagos, appears to have adopted Plato’s words as a guiding principle.

    Besides paving the way for his children’s success by building world class companies, many of which are under his children’s control, Alhaji Okoya has instilled in them good moral values. This is evident in the life of one of his daughters, Bimbo Okoya, who after attending Ivy League universities and gathering work experiences, is set to rule the corporate world.

    Bimbo, who once ran AOMS, an integrated marketing agency sited at Eleganza Biro Plaza on Adeyemo Alakija Street, Victoria Island, Lagos, has joined British America Tobacco Company. Bimbo frowns against the frivolous lifestyles of some sliver-spoon kids and has vowed to follow a different path.

  • Ambode dedicates birthday to campaign against cancer

    Governor Akinwunmi Ambode has no doubt won the hearts of most Lagosians since he became the governor of Lagos State. His simplicity, humility, infectious smiles and drive to build a better Lagos are some of the reasons that many have fallen in love with him.

    On Tuesday, Ambode clocked 53 and it was a day of jollity for those who share the governor’s vision for Lagos. While many expected him to roll out the drums in wild celebration, Governor Akinwunmi shocked them by opting for a more fulfilling way of celebrating his birthday. He dedicated the day to the fight against dreaded cancer by hosting a special luncheon to raise funds for the provision of three Mobile Cancer Centres across the three senatorial districts in the state.

    Tagged #GivingTuesdayLagos, the event was strategically put together by the Committee Encouraging Corporate Philanthropy (CECP-Nigeria). At the event, the amiable governor said the centres would go a long way to save millions of lives from preventable suffering and death. He lamented the daily loss of lives to cancer and emphasised the importance of the public health programmes the Lagos State Government is focusing on. He urged all hands to be on deck as the government cannot do everything.

    The purpose of the luncheon was to raise funds for one mobile cancer centre for Lagos. The celebrant urged the people to not only give towards the project but also towards the provision of three mobile cancer centres servicing each of the senatorial districts in Lagos. The performing governor further reiterated that the luncheon was not a celebration but a call to service.

    At the occasion, Dr. Christopher Kolade, anchor of CECP-Nigeria, eulogised the governor’s heart of gold and dedication to enhancing humanity. He was later decorated as the State Patron of CECP by the organisation’s Convener, Mrs. Adetutu Adeleke. Others at the luncheon included the Chairman, Zenith Bank International, Jim Ovia; the MD of the bank, Peter Amangbo; Publisher, Guardian Newspapers, Maiden Alex Ibru; Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede; Dr. Michael Omolayole; Chief Adebutu Kessington; Chief Rasaq Okoya; Rtd Justice Adesola Oguntade; Mr. Gbenga Oyebode, captains of industry and members of the diplomatic corps.

  • Mo Abudu gets new trim look

    The Managing Director of Ebony Life Television, Mo Abudu, knows the value of good looks. She understands that if you look good, you feel good, and if you feel good, you will do good. She has always had it in mind to work hard towards becoming the best in her chosen field and to look smashing while at it.

    Mo’s appearances on TV do not only present her as an inimitable talk show host but also as a style icon. And now she has taken the business of looking good to another level. At an event that paraded giants from different sectors of the economy recently, Mo Abudu unveiled her new look to the admiration of many.

    The busy businesswoman, talk show host, development expert and corporate executive behind the cable television, ELTV, looked every inch youthful and radiant. Ever since Mo Abudu graced the socio-economic milieu of Nigeria with her talk show, Moments with Mo, she has not only continued to inspire her audience throughout the continent, she has also set a standard that may be difficult to match in a long while.

  • Ooni Ogunwusi in historic tour of America

    The Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Enitan Ogunwusi, got a royal farewell when he left the country last week with his beautiful wife, Yeyeluwa Wuraola Ogunwusi. Amid pomp and fanfare, they arrived the United States of America penultimate Thursday, accompanied by the Ooni’s siblings and entourage of about 80 people, including prominent Yoruba monarchs like the Orangun of Ila, Oba Wahab Adedotun; the Timi of Ede, Oba Munirudeen Adesola; the Ajero of Ijero, Oba Adewole Joseph; the Olubaka of Oka-Akoko, Oba Yusuf Adeleye, among others. Also on the trip with the monarch were kingmakers, chief priests and his traditional guards.

    According to Comrade Moses Olafare, the Director of Media and Public Affairs at Ooni’s Palace, Ooni Ogunwusi travelled to the U.S. on a two-week visit to attend the 2016 annual Odunde Festival believed to be the largest gathering of the blacks in America. The Ooni is also scheduled to receive the White House Ambassador of Peace Award on June 22.

    On Friday, June 10, he was a guest at the United Nations Population Fund Building in New York. He also visited the African burial ground, Manhattan, New York, where many African slaves were said to have been buried alive in the early 18th Century. He was honoured with the presentation of the historical city of Newark and hosted to Colombia University town hall meeting at Lerner Hall, Broadway, New York.

    Other programmes lined up to mark the Arole Oodua’s historic visit to the US included a grand reception at New Jersey on June 11, put together by Ife Ooye in North America, the Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Art (MoCADA) New York on June 13, a symposium at Howard University, Washington DC, on June 15 and Oduduwa Economic Development/Transformation Leadership Summit at Gaylord Hotels, Maryland on 16th June.

    He will also pay a business visit to HERSEY Chocolate factory for bilateral talks with the American biggest chocolate company, with a view to perfecting the markets for the newly unveiled cocoa plantation in Ife Kingdom. The visit will be climaxed by the annual convention of Egbe Omo Yoruba in Dallas, with a royal dinner organised by the Ajilesoros at Husto, Texas on June 25.

  • My plans for lecturers who can’t keep their Libidos -Ekiti State ‘varsity  VC Prof Bamidele

    My plans for lecturers who can’t keep their Libidos -Ekiti State ‘varsity VC Prof Bamidele

    Recently appointed Vice-Chancellor of Ekiti State University (EKSU), Prof. Samuel Oye Bamidele, will superintend over the 21st convocation ceremony of the university next week, barely six months after his appointment. In this interview with ODUNAYO OGUNMOLA, the senior pastor of Deeper Life Bible Church speaks about his experience on the VC’s seat so far, his vision, his achievements, and how, as a lecturer, he managed to overcome temptations from the opposite sex. 

    How has the experience been for the six months you have been in the saddle as Vice-Chancellor?

    I want to thank God for the experience and the great challenges. And in the midst of the great challenges, I want to say that it is a sort of experience that I was able to go through with the help of God and His grace. All through the time when I resumed and till now, my experience has had a positive impact on the university community.

    Recently, the West African Students Union (WASU) gave you an award, the Kwame Nkrumah Award for Excellence in Academia and Administration. How did you feel about the award which came less than a year after you assumed office?

    I want to say very categorically that I am averse to taking awards, and that was the first award that I would take since I became Vice-Chancellor. It is good to say that many people and bodies contacted me with letters, saying they wanted to give me awards, but I said no. I told them that they should let me settle down first, measure my performance before giving me awards. But when these people came with suggestions, I said that I was going to reject it until I was educated that this one was a credible international award and I accepted. Then they came, and when I saw the pedigree of those who came, about 16 of them. They were introducing themselves, one said I am from Ghana, another said I am from Côte d’ Ivoire. I saw all of them coming virtually from all the West African countries. Therefore, I accepted this award. To say the least, I was particularly elated that I have this privilege of being recognised to be given this award.

    On the other side of the question, the challenge I have taken is that I will continue to increase my tempo and my passion for the students because it is historical and strategic that the first award I would receive as the Vice-Chancellor of this university came from international students. They said many things I didn’t know they were ever aware of, because since I came on board, I have been fighting a great crusade on behalf of the students. I believe that this starts from parents. We are here, the biological parents have committed the lives of these students into our hands and my own simple analogy is that we should be the closest parents to them while they are in school.

    I was not fighting my colleagues. It was just like a battle to say let’s change our mindset; let’s know that when parents gave these children to us, the intention was that we should let them get out of this university as better materials than they came in. It is like a factory; you put the raw materials into the system and you want to get a very good product. That has been my crusade in this university.

    Shortly after you assumed office, you held revenue and academic summits. Have these policies had positive impact on the university since you concluded them?

    I came into this university with a vision. In fact, in my application, I said brighter vision, bigger mission. I came here as a Vice-Chancellor with a brighter vision because I am an insider and I have taken time to critically examine the condition of our university and I felt that I should be able to understand this place more than an external candidate. I came with a vision. I knew that in this present situation in our state, in our country, except one wants to deceive himself or herself, there is no higher institution, no university that can say it would rely on the government to fund its educational activities. Therefore, I came with a vision for IGR (internally generated revenue). I also came with a vision for academic quality, because it is not enough to have money as an institution without an equal effort at improving quality.

    So we had two summits. We had the academic summit and then we had the IGR summit. I am happy to say here very clearly today that these two summits are bringing positive dividends to our university. The IGR summit has radically changed the face of our university. As you are entering the university, we have a building by the right. That is our water project. I am not rushing it because we are being strategic. I could have as well restructured one of the old buildings, but I said no. We want to make it international, and when we have the water, it will be one of the best in this country.

    If you get through our roadside, you will see that our bakery is growing. The building is under construction. We didn’t have a bookshop before we came on board. The shelves of the bookshop are being installed now. Our block industry before I came was comatose. It was leased to an external consultant, but I said this is a university and we are talking about IGR. It is already our own and we have tons of blocks now. Any building that is erected on the soil of this university must use blocks produced from here. We are reviving our press. Because the university is an academic environment, we have publications, journals, exam booklets. How can we rely on printers outside alone? So, these are some of the good things that came from the IGR summit.

    Let me also mention that we have what we call the university auto care. That will be a masterpiece by time we complete it. Other universities will come here, by the grace of God, to look at it. In the auto care, we are going to have a quadrangle. We will have a petrol station, a service bay, a car wash, a theatre. We are going to have our own inverter, batteries and distilled water. Some of the things we go outside to buy, there is a particular sector that is working on that under the leadership of Prof. Akintayo, who is a chemist. So work is going on that particular area.

    If I have my way, I would tell them to go and harvest some of our mushrooms for you and you give to your wife to cook for you. So, a lot of things are happening with this IGR. I want to believe that it is a confirmation of my vision which came through the channel of this IGR summit. So, academic summit was out to bring quality to our academic enterprise in this university. This we are already achieving.

    I said it in the last Senate that I have just spent six months and I have started the second six months. This second six months, I am focusing on academic quality and discipline in the university. This is where I want to showcase again the products of the academic summit that we had, which would impact on students. It would impact on the staff and it would impact on the entire academic community. I want to say that the two summits have been fantastically productive.

    Staff and students welfare is key to the output of staff and students. What is your agenda for their welfare?

    In fact, if you ask any question from either the students or staff of this university, the quick answer you are likely to get is that the VC is a welfarist vice-chancellor. My passion is to see to the welfare of staff and students of this university. I want to say that if somebody comes to the helm of affairs and does not put the welfare of staff and students first, what is he or her coming there to do? Since when I came, there has been no strike because they know that I pursue the welfare of members and unions. If you are an ASUU chairman or NASU chairman, we are to pursue the welfare of staff and students. Some think I am pampering them, but it is because I also believe that I am a parent, even a grandparent to them; that I am here to passionately take care of them and pursue their welfare just like that of the staff.

    I have been pleading with my staff members that, please give them quality attention and let them pass. I am not saying that they should mortgage standards, but give them quality attention and let them come out good. Don’t cut your lecture. Don’t organise a single lecture and then you do exam, because these students will fail. If you reel out failures to the society, we are reeling out expert armed robbers, expert miscreants, and I don’t want that. I want my university to reel out products that will impact positively on our society.

    A university cannot survive in isolation. How do you intend to explore partnerships and exchanges with universities all over the world in order to take EKSU to a higher pedestal?

    We are working seriously in that regard. My little experience before I came into this university, we are already trying to re-engineer partnerships with foreign universities. I just came from the meeting of the Association of Vice-Chancellors of Nigerian Universities which we attended in Jos, and one of our major agenda was this area of realistic collaboration. We were told in that particular place that most of what is called collaboration in Nigerian universities is just jamboree and opportunity to travel out of the country. But that is not what is going to help our universities. I have asked for a list of all foreign universities collaborating with us and they are about 10. My plan is to just zero in on two for now. By July, God helping me and God willing, I want to travel out and visit two of the major universities we are collaborating with and these are the University of Nottingham in the UK and I want to visit the University of Houston in Texas (USA). I intend to go there, study their programmes, look at the areas of collaboration.

    We are not going to look at everything together; we are just going to pick one. Initially, we had a collaboration with the University of Nottingham on engineering, I want to see how we can revive that one, then our Engineering students and staff will be going there and they will be coming here. That of Houston may not be engineering; it will be in another direction. It can be on entrepreneurship and we can also collaborate. If it can be Houston on entrepreneurship, I will do it critically, I will go deep. That is the part of the vision and inspiration I got from this meeting of the Association of Vice Chancellors of the Nigerian Universities, and that we are going to accomplish from mid-July to early August. The intention is for us to have a symbiotic relationship with the local universities and the international world so that we can be really international.

    You are a pastor and at the same time an academic. How do you cope with the challenges of both callings?

    I want to put it to you today that every human being is also a spiritual being. And that is the mistake many people make. There is no single person that stands and just says I am for the physical. That is pretence. Even those who don’t pray, those who don’t believe those things, they still pursue other spiritual things either when they run into problems or when they have some needs.

    I want to say that God has helped me to balance the two. The problem of people in the world is that they cannot find the balance. I am an academic person and I have been a pastor for more than 30 years. I am a senior pastor in Deeper Life Bible Church, and that has never affected my academic life. My academic life can never affect my spiritual life, if you meet me in the office, you can never tell that this one is a pastor because I don’t believe in bringing or importing pastor things into academic matters. Also, if you see me in the church, you will think that I am a full-time pastor because I am there to do pastoral work. If human beings can balance and know that as we are in the physical and so also we are in spiritual realm and both must be balanced. I want to thank God that He has made me to balance the two, and that’s why I have not been found wanting at both ends.

    In the course of your career as an academic in this university or elsewhere, have you ever been tempted by female students?

    I want to say that every human being is tempted at one point or the other. And maybe I should say it today, the power of being a Christian is that God will give you the ability, the unusual supernatural power to be able to overcome temptation without falling into it. There is a difference between temptation and falling into temptation. For example, we are all men here and that makes it good. Supposing a woman is here now, the atmosphere will not be the same. I will not say I have not been tempted in the sense that maybe an amorous person comes in, wanting to show a quarter of her breast. I will say, ‘Excuse me, go out and dress properly. As a lecturer, you can’t come into my office like that.’

    Some students will come with the intention to tempt you, trying to make eye contacts, and I will say, what are you trying to do? For you to be able to overcome temptation, you must resist it. But some people don’t resist the picture of temptation, so they run into it. So, to respond to your question directly, I want to say that to God be the glory, since I gave my life to Christ, I have not been tempted to the extent of falling, touching another person’s wife or student; never, never. And it is not only girls or women that cause temptation; some are tempted with money. They supervise students and collect money on projects. I supervise Ph.D students and I don’t take anything from them. You cannot even try me. So, all those ones, if you can keep yourself from being attracted by women or by money or material things of this world and you are contented, it will be easy for you to overcome temptation. But summarily, every human being will face temptation at one point or the other, but the power to overcome that temptation can only come from Christ.

    What measures has your administration put in place to prevent cases of sexual harassment of female students by their male lecturers?

    We are going to work on that. I have said I am committing my first year to IGR and this other one is academic and discipline. We are trying to put some things in place that will checkmate some lecturers that cannot keep their libido, and to that extent, we are going to go through management and then the Senate to fashion out some strategies to protect our female students from sexual harassment. That one is being planned, I may not feel out everything now.

    Things are changing in this university and that is the truth. The head matters. If there is seriousness at the top, everybody will fall in line. They know that if I catch you sexually harassing female students, you will be in trouble. If as the vice-chancellor I am also one of those carrying girls and ladies around, I won’t have the mouth to tell those who are doing it to stop or sanction them in line with the rules. Now, it is no longer going to be business as usual. Some regulations will come out in a short while to checkmate all those things in terms of the dressing of the students, because students also can be harassers. Female students can harass male students by their amorous outlook. We want to checkmate those things and for the staff, admin, teaching and non-teaching, we are going to have some codes that will create a level of restriction as to how they can harass female students.

    The university is having its 21st Convocation next week. What will you be showcasing to the world through the event?

    I am happy to tell you that this year’s convocation will be a celebration of excellence; a celebration of emancipation for a university that has come of age. We are now on the path of making ourselves known nationally and internationally, that this is a university that is growing into prominence. One, we want to showcase our students. Our students in this university are excellent, and that is the truth. They are very excellent. Recently, we had a literary competition and my university came first in the entire South West. We have a lot of talents in our university. We have some of them who are making waves in their disciplines. We want to showcase them. Apart from this, we want to showcase our current developmental innovations. Our ICT platform has moved to the next level and we want to have some of our eminent members of the society honoured by recognising and celebrating them. We are giving honorary doctoral degrees to two eminent personalities in this country. The Governor of Bayelsa State (Seriake Dickson), we want to give him a honorary award. Then our own here, Gbenga Oyebode, who has made it in the business world, in the corporate world and in the legal world, we want to showcase and celebrate him.

    So, this year’s convocation will be a celebration that is unique; a celebration to which we are inviting our alumni. They are also going to be part of it. We want to celebrate excellence. We want to celebrate the Fountain of Knowledge that has become the pride of education. It will be a weeklong programme featuring a press conference, convocation environmental sanitation, convocation lecture to be delivered by no other person than the indefatigable pillar of law, pillar of education, legal luminary who is recognised beyond the shores of Nigeria, a business mogul, that is Aare Afe Babalola. All this will precede the award of diplomas, first degrees and postgraduate degrees. It promises to be historic in all respect.

  • There’ll be zero tolerance for money sharing in Ogoni clean-up -Environment Minister Amina Mohammed

    There’ll be zero tolerance for money sharing in Ogoni clean-up -Environment Minister Amina Mohammed

    On the back of the recent launch of the clean-up of Ogoniland by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, the Minister of Environment, Hajia Amina Mohammed, says there is a collaborative effort to get the entire Niger-Delta area cleaned up. But she warns in this interview with BISI OLANIYI against any form of mismanagement of the resources meant for the projects. She also speaks about her upbringing, her world view and government’s plan to clean up the environment on a national scale. 

    Why did it take President Muhammadu Buhari more than one year to flag off the clean-up of Ogoniland recommended by UNEP?

    It is important to look at the background. First, it was a campaign promise he made before coming into office. You know that it took some time before the cabinet was actually put in place. Even at that, there were various processes to look at what had happened before and where we had stopped so we could know where to continue from. It is important that one looks at what had happened in the past. So, you learn lessons on what not to do in the future and plan for success.

    We (ministers) came into office in November (2015) and very quickly attended the climate change conference that lasted two weeks. So, at the end of that conference, coming back in December, one of the first things we did was to come straight to Ogoniland to see what this is about, because it was one of Mr. President’s campaign promises.

    A lot has happened since then, including reaching out to the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), which carried out the environmental assessment of Ogoniland, issued its report on August 4, 2011 and received by the then President Goodluck Jonathan on August 12, 2011. UNEP was asked to come and review its report, looking at the processes that had taken place in the last government and then actually visiting the area to see what in fact needed to be done.

    This year has been all about getting the stakeholders back on board. There has been a lot of mistrust and we have been making this promise for decades. This government is about going to where the problem is, not everybody trooping to Abuja to make their complaints. So, we have spent a lot of time here (in Rivers State) engaging the people, knowing their expectations, what went wrong in the past and how to get people back on board, among others. This is not a prescription by the Federal Government. It is a collaborative effort to try to get the Niger Delta cleaned, and to start from Ogoni land.

    There were many issues that came up. This is why it has taken a long time. We were planning to succeed, and that takes time. We went as fast as we could. We hope that in the next few days, we will begin to deliver on our promise.

    Of all the major polluted sites in Ogoni land, the fish pond of Numuu Tekuru, Bodo in Gokana Local Government Area of Rivers State was chosen as the spot for the kick-off of Ogoni clean-up. Won’t President Buhari be accused of getting back to where he inaugurated the fish pond as Head of State in 1984, rather than going to another site?

    We did not choose the site because the President inaugurated another project there so many years ago. It is a coincidence that we found out when we went to look at two, three sites. It is actually the best site. It shows the creeks, the damage done to the mangrove and to the waterways. It shows how a source of livelihood has been killed off by the oil pollution. It also was accessible. You have to look at all sorts of factors, when you are choosing a site.

    So, I do not think that the premise of choosing a site was the person going there before, but I do believe that the coincidence has served us well, because it does show you that some years ago when things were so prosperous, we could commission livelihood from fish farming. The difference is clear. The opportunity has come once again for us to right the wrongs of the past and make it clear that the investments in the Niger Delta, starting with Ogoniland, should restore the ecosystem to what it should be.

    Besides restoring the Ogoni environment, what else would an ordinary Ogoni man benefit from the clean-up?

    Firstly, it is a very big benefit to know that you now drink and eat and breathe cleaner than you were in the past. Things that you and I take for granted are not things that can be taken for granted in Ogoniland. The second thing is that once we keep the Niger Delta and Ogoniland cleaned, it is about giving alternatives to what has happened now and giving a future to young people, especially women and young men.

    So, we will be looking at the livelihoods. We will be looking at that whole scenario where we talk about the diversification of the economy beyond oil.

    What would we gain by doing that?

    There is so much to be done. We can have industrial parks. We can look at fishing. We can look at so many other parts of the ecosystem that can profit not just everyone in the country because revenue goes into one pot, but actually profits the lives of people in there.

    What definite programmes have been planned for the post clean-up period?

    The first set of programmes is to actually look at the emergency response, because in many of these polluted areas, people cannot drink the water. The ground they till for agriculture is poisoned. The toxicity in water and plant and the food we eat, that is the first thing that we will have to deal with.  Where people are living, we will remove the toxic substances and then deal with the water issue. So, these are some of the first things that will happen.

    The second is really providing a baseline to understand where we should start. This is a programme that is going to take 20 to 25 years. So, you just can’t land in one part of the creek and say you are starting to clean. You have to clean where there would be a definite return to livelihood. So, if you look at the demonstration site, we thought we could deal with the fish ponds that are dead. We said if we revive that, then we have revived fishing opportunity for young people.

    The other immediate programme is that we want a centre of excellence. The UNEP report promised a centre of excellence and a laboratory. So, we will be looking to where we position the child, the centre of excellence and where we position the soil laboratory so that we will begin to do some of the technical works of how to make it sustainable in Bodo. We can clean up what is already there, but in future as some of these accidents happen, some of the third-party oil spills that we are seeing, we can deal with them.

    The third is that a lot of training has to be done. We want people in the Niger Delta to benefit from the clean-up and the clean-up will happen in different ways in different places; water and soil, among others. So, the training programme for young people will take place, giving them skill sets that they can benefit from the contractors that come to clean up the Niger Delta.

    UNEP recommended initial fund of $1 billion for capacity building, skill transfer and conflict resolution in Ogoni. Where is the money?

    The $1 billion is a commitment that the Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited (SPDC) has made to provide. So, it is with SPDC. What we have done now is to set up governance structures, so that we first of all agree on the kinds of programme that will take place. And there is a Board of Trustees (BoT) that will make sure that the resources for Ogoniland are used for the recommendations the UNEP report had done openly and transparently.

    We hope that we will have funds manager to take care of the money, because $1 billion is not going to be enough. When we get the $1 billion, we need to start the job. But we also need to use that to leverage on the funding from the budget, from other donors and from other opportunities around.

    The structure of the council also includes key stakeholders, Ministry of Niger Delta Affairs and the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), among others. These are key stakeholders in the Niger Delta that are already investing and spending money. So, we want better coordination and coherence, and not duplicating but actually adding value to one another’s investments.

    Re-pollution or secondary pollution may be a bigger issue than the current pollution in Ogoniland and other parts of the Niger Delta, especially with breaking of more pipelines. Have you taken that possibility into your plan?

    It is a very real concern. First, oil companies have to do better. When we go to the sites where it is an oil spill as a result of their (oil firms’) faults, then you know you can really talk about the remedial work that needs to be done, to make sure there are no seepages from where the oil spill has come. You can contain that.

    What you cannot contain so easily is where you have young people coming back to start breaking pipelines or having illegal refineries. That is why you have to do things in collaboration with the communities. Communities have to take responsibility. This is a collective responsibility. Do we want to clean this up, so that it is in the interest of the person in Ogoni land first? Cleaning up the Niger Delta is first the responsibility for the people in the Niger Delta. They need to take that responsibility. If they (Niger Deltans) continue to pollute their own communities, there is not much the government can do about it. You will just stop the work. It is very clear to us that there is rule of law here. There will not be any criminality that will be accepted.

    Once the people of the communities decide that they want the clean-up, we will make the investment. People of the communities and government have to try to protect the Niger Delta environment to prevent re-pollution. We have to convince young people that this is not the best way to go. If it happens, then you have to stop work, because you cannot be throwing good money into a bad investment.

    There has to be an understanding, because that just cannot continue. It is a sorry situation that we have found ourselves in. If we really look at the pollution in the Niger Delta today, over 60 per cent of it is third party. While we are addressing what oil companies did in Ogoniland, we really have to think about tomorrow. So, we have started in Ogoni land, but we know that the wider Niger Delta has very different kinds of reasons for pollution, and we have to deal with that. I think together with our colleagues in Amnesty office, in NDDC and the Ministry of Niger Delta Affairs, we have to work together to change the mindsets of people who believe that there is some future in polluting their communities.

    How will your ministry address gas flaring issue in the Niger Delta?

    When Nigerians signed on to the declaration that was made in Paris on Climate Change agreement, there were a number of decisions we took there, including an end to gas flaring by 2020 and a number of other objectives such as emissions. The more emission you have from different places, the more you warm the globe and cause a rise in sea levels. So, there are issues we have to take on and string them together, to say that gas flaring is damaging our environment and houses. No matter what the world is saying, emissions matter to us first.

    Many things were involved in stopping us, such as policy decisions and regulations in the Ministry of Petroleum Resources. We have also joined the World Bank coalition on ending gas flaring. There is a roadmap on how to do that, not just say it. We have got concrete steps to it. Next week, we will join a breakfast meeting with fellow ministers, because this is collaboration. We have Ministries of Petroleum Resources, Transportation, Power and Agriculture. This is because we cannot do a lot without agriculture, because of the agric chain. It is not just cleaning. If you clean, staying clean brings a lot of other responsibilities.

    What parameters has your ministry set to measure the milestones in the clean-up exercise?

    One of the things we observed when we came in was absence of any clear framework for monitoring and evaluation. It is not good for government to set the measurement alone. There must be independent measurement frameworks because government is always measuring its successes. We have to have independent feedbacks. What we are proposing is involving civil society and experts in framing those measurements and indicators to have the scorecard. That is one of the things the committee will have to design.

    The tools we use to frame the indicators will not be designed by government, but by those outside, who will hold us to account when we say this is the target we are setting for the clean-up. To measure and say whether it has been done or not should come from the end users, those that are going to be impacted by it. There was no such mechanism in the former arrangement.

    In day time, most Ogoni people will demand clean-up. But at night, they will ask for compensation. How will you handle that?

    That is really an interesting perspective. It is not whether it is the Ogoni people or not. People that have been in a situation of the tragedy that we have seen in the Niger Delta, once they begin to lose trust in government, anybody that they see coming to bail them out, they develop all sorts of responses, usually survival instincts.  They will want you to clean up, and they will like to benefit in a clean environment, in investments and jobs. But just in case that is not where you are going, they will want night-time discussion. So, it is truly hedging your back, because people do not have any trust in the system. To reverse that, it is going to take time. The first thing I want to say is there will be zero tolerance for sharing money. We are taking money meant for Ogoni people and investing it in clean-up and livelihoods thereafter. That is the first message that we have to put out there.

    We have to follow it up with actions and we too do not have to join them at night doing deal. That happened in the past, it is not going to happen in the future. You surely will not find me doing deals at night. You may find me drinking pepper soup, because I am having a conversation to agree on some issues, but it will not be about sharing money. The oil companies have to help here, because it has been about compensation all these years. I think it has suited people to solve problems in the past by just saying you want to compensate. But money has not compensated for the toxicity and the lives of the people in the Niger Delta, and that has to stop. Compensation is when you pay people their dues. But that is not all. When I look at the way oil companies clean up after spill, it is not the gold standards for Nigeria. We want the gold standard, because that is what our people deserve.

    The standards used in other parts of the world are better than what we get in Nigeria. We want human beings to get the gold standards in Nigeria. Oil companies have to be taken up on that.

    The clean-up is a big project that may take long. How do you get all groups to support and participate, because the Ogoni issue should transcend politics?

    Politics is warped now. It is supposed to be response to your people and their constituencies on their challenges. It has changed. We derailed. What politicians say they are doing for their people is far different from what they want today. We have to get back to the issues and reinforce the voice of the people over what they want and what their so-called representatives get for them. That is why in any place where there is true representation, you find stability and investments going there.

    We also have to look at how governance is done at the local level and institutions that help them to function, not just in Abuja. It is going to take some time, but what we can hope to do is get back on track and lay a solid foundation in the next three years. After that, who we leave behind will determine if the people will find a system where people will demand a good thing, because we did a good thing.

    If Amina Mohammed leaves and all this crumbles, it would have been failure. President Buhari has got integrity and experience and we have got experience. We are just pulling all of that together. We do not have all the answers, but if we put the matter on the table and we get the key stakeholders together, it will amaze you where the solutions will come from.

    You have been talking as if you were trained for the clean-up of Ogoniland and other parts of the Niger Delta. Did President Buhari have you in mind for this kind of task, going by the depth of knowledge and sophistication you have brought to the table?

    I do not believe anybody had any idea that he (President Buhari) was going to put me in the Ministry of Environment. I did not even know he was going to nominate me. It was a surprise. My career track has proved that. What I know is, whatever you throw at me in the civil service, I will embrace it, because I am a daughter of a civil servant. I was brought up in a family where integrity matters, name matters, performance matters; and you cannot walk past anyone where you see injustice. I am allergic to injustice. That does not work. It does not matter where it comes from. It is about humanity. Injustice is injustice, to man or to animal. That is the way I am. Wherever you find yourself, you must fight that fight, so far as it is about your humanity.

    I do not believe that you can fight a fight without experiencing it, even if it is for 24 hours. To think you can prescribe solutions to Ogoni people’s problems from Abuja is absolute nonsense. You must come down to Ogoniland and feel what the people are going through. Once you experience that, you can go back and tell anybody anything, because you have the conviction. You do not have to refer to a book with figures you are not even sure of. So, when I say to people that it is unacceptable that a people should eat a type of food with the level of toxicity in it, it is because I have tasted it.

    President Buhari has asked us to do a job. It is a privilege because millions of other Nigerians could do it perhaps better than the way I am doing it. So, I have to put in my best, knowing that I am answerable to the Almighty. So, I do the best that I can do and I leave the rest to God.

    What is the Federal Government’s plan to adequately tackle pollution in Nigeria?

    The overall plan is to tackle pollution anywhere in the country. That is my mandate as a minister. But we are mindful that the genesis is what happened in Ogoni where the struggle started and which is the target of the UNEP report. That is the first bus stop. The second bus stop is the nine oil producing states (Rivers, Bayelsa, Delta, Edo, Ondo, Akwa Ibom, Cross River, Abia and Imo) and the third bus stop is the whole country. It is not about where the pollution is the largest or where oil was first discovered in commercial quantity. It is about the struggle and where it (the struggle) started and the promise Mr. President made.

    What is your message for Ogoni people and other Niger Deltans?

    There is light at the end of the tunnel. Specifically as we have a President that is delivering on a promise. This is a collective responsibility and we want to get the job done. It cannot be done by me alone or by Mr. President alone. All hands must be on deck.

    Crude oil and gas pipelines are still being destroyed in the Niger Delta. How will you advise the youths who have returned to militancy after the 2009 Federal Government’s amnesty offer to repentant militants?

    The criminal acts will not augur well for them and for the people. In the end, it will contribute to destruction. That is not a future for anyone. There are alternatives and there can be dialogue. There is nothing done by force anymore. The one thing that President Buhari has given us is an opportunity to do things right, and if you have the opportunity, grab it, because it may not come again.

  • Nike Oshinowo goes off radar

    The name Nike Oshinowo is not one that can be forgotten in a hurry. But her recent hiatus from the social scene may cause many to forget the radiance of her beautiful face and the magical tilt her lips make when she smiles.

    Although many remember her as an ex-beauty queen, Nike is much more than that. She is a talk show host, an entrepreneur, a style icon and a mother to adorable male twins. Her pictures adorn the rooms of many young ladies as they hope, work and pray to be just like her. However, those who look up to her have been left disheartened since she vacated the social scene.

    Frantic efforts so far made to figure out where she is and what she is currently up to have been unsuccessful. When her marriage to Dr. Tunde Soleye crashed, Nike began to strategically select her outings. Now it seems the stunning lady is gradually abandoning the social scene, recoiling into a shell of isolation.