Category: Saturday Magazine

  • Deputy Governor Onoja’s sterling qualities

    Deputy Governor Onoja’s sterling qualities

    By Oladapo Sofowora

     

    Armed with a humane demeanor and uncommon poise, one would wonder how a man of valour, poise, and aura like Kogi State Deputy Governor, Edward David Onoja got involved with politics presumed to be a dirty game. Questions that often arise will be what is this man looking for in politics owing to his background as a boardroom guru, successful banker, and technocrat. On several occasions, he has said his incursion into active politics is divine coupled with his love for humanity. For Onoja, humanity comes first and those close to him have often confirmed that one thing the Igala man loathes is the sight of those around him in dire need of anything as he strives to put smiles on people’s faces. This and many more, we gathered, pushed him into full-fledged politics after his union days at the University of Jos.

    Onoja’s name will go down in history as a man who is all about progress, loyalty, support, calculative, sincerity, love, and passion. During the first tenure of his principal, Governor Yahaya Bello, Onoja – as the Chief of Staff – was regarded as the proverbial multipurpose swiss knife and support system of the regime. He ensured that no lapses occurred, with his vast knowledge in board room politics, he ensured projects were supervised with an eye for quality. He also ensured that appointees key into the vision and mission of the governor to remodel Kogi, unifying everybody with the common goal of making Kogi State great.

    Many were amazed at his emergence after the impeachment of ex-Deputy Governor of Kogi State, Simon Achuba. Onoja’s loyalty and trust have earned him so much that his principal can go to sleep and the government will function smoothly. He is a workaholic blessed with native intelligence. Lately, he was singled out and targeted with several campaigns of calumny and unfounded claims on the media space. Each time his detractor runs out of concept in their pull him down campaign, they resolve to create unrest, putting unverified information to mislead the public and also try to create a dichotomy between him and his boss.

     

  • Senator Daisy Danjuma looks forward to 70

    Senator Daisy Danjuma looks forward to 70

    When you think of a woman who would always defend children against the invasion of the proverbial hungry hawk, Senator Daisy Danjuma comes to the mind most especially for the role she played in the protection of children as the Chairman ECOWAS Parliament’s Women and Children’s Rights Committee and Senate Committee Chairman on Women Affairs and Youth Development at the senate. She was fierce, outspoken, intelligent, and glamorous.

    In a few months, she will turn 65, it can be said that being advanced in age has not taken a toll on her beauty as she is gliding to the septuagenarian club with such impeccable finesse.

    Interestingly, Danjuma, the Executive Vice Chairman, South Atlantic Petroleum, who still commands deep respect from young and old, tells whoever cares to listen that she is still in tune with the modern trends in the fashion world. She is a showstopper any day, any time. Danjuma, a Law graduate of the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, Kaduna State, began her career as a State Counsel in the Lagos State Ministry of Justice (Department of Public Prosecutions).

    Her numerous political followers and her admirers are quite worried about why she has recoiled into her shell leaving the social scene. She rarely attends social events again even before COVID-19, and she has slowed down on her public appearance. Sources said she is taking things easy. ‘She has attended enough social events in the past it’s time to retire and channel that energy on some other productive things. She spends more time at her home facing business and other things. She might celebrate her 69th birthday in August. If she does not because of the pandemic, she will be throwing a grand soiree when she clocks 70 next year. She is not silent, she just channeled her energy into other things.’

  • Wale Tinubu still grateful at 54

    Wale Tinubu still grateful at 54

    By Oladapo Sofowora

    Jubril Adewale Tinubu’s sojourn into entrepreneurship, building a multi-billion dollars business conglomerate, is worthy of a biopic. At a relatively young age of 27, he had doggedly settled with a steely resolve to rule his world later in life. Call it an audacious ambition you are still spot on. Therefore, having conquered his greatest fears, while on the threshold of leaving the family law firm that had begun to give him fame, he, together with trusted and tested friends, set up Ocean and Oil, Oando, which has now grown to be a conglomerate.

    Interestingly, he will surely reminisce on this slice of his inspiring journey in life tomorrow June 26, 2021, when he will turn 54. We gathered that family, friends, and business associates, who all know his humble beginnings, could not agree less with him when he announced that he would rather mark the day glorifying God for all he has done for him instead of throwing an elaborate party.

    In the past years, another side of his life that has enjoyed interesting discourses is his philanthropy. In today’s Nigeria, when you think of a philanthropist, his name will pop up so deservedly.

    In 2019, he, alongside some prominent Nigerians, visited the IDP camp in Maiduguri, Borno State to attend to the needs of some of the casualties of terrorism.

    Recently, he also donated books to 15 universities and two national libraries across Nigeria. Speaking on the initiative, he said it was aimed at educating students and the public on the country’s an oil & gas sector, a sector that remains the largest contributor to the country’s forex earnings. In addition to giving back to society, Tinubu, also a devout Muslim, recently donated hundreds of millions of Naira towards the building of a mosque in Abuja. For this and more, friends, close associates as well as well-wishers will surely have nice words to say about him tomorrow as he marks his birthday.

  • Rabiu Olowo celebrates

    Rabiu Olowo celebrates

    By Oladapo Sofowora

     

    For Dr. Rabiu Onaolapo Olowo, living his dreams at a very young age is in fulfilment of destiny. While growing up, he aspired to become an accounting and finance giant with a business conglomerate that will consult for top firms across the world. It did not take long for providence to grant him his heart as he achieved a feat most of his peers would not have achieved in donkey years. It never came easy but with hard work and consistency, armed with the intelligence of the biblical King Solomon and the grace of King David, he was able to climb the ladder of success up high within a short time.

    With less attention, the highly cerebral graduate of Accounting from Kogi-State University loves to let his achievement speak more volumes of him. The tennis lover, who holds a Ph.D. in Forensic Accounting & Auditing loves to give back by sharing his God-given knowledge with others. With his burning passion for academics, he heavily supports research & learning by offering his services at the Lagos State University as an Associate Lecturer/Adjunct Professor and Executive in Residence where he teaches finance and accounting pro bono.

    On June 14, the Lagos Mainland politician celebrated his 36th birthday devoid of unnecessary attention. Ranked as one of the youngest and brightest commissioners in the Babajide Sanwoolu’s cabinet, his staff, friends, and well-wishers were full of excitement to celebrate and share in his pot of joy. In his office, several gifts, birthday cards, and gigantic cake trooping in as he was serenaded with birthday songs.

  • 12 unmistakable signs his love for you has burnt out

    12 unmistakable signs his love for you has burnt out

    By Ekaete Bassey

    Author of the popular novel “Act like a lady, think like a man” Steve Harvey “said: “A man’s love is expressed in three forms: he declares his rights for you in public, protects, and takes care of you.”

    However, a part of this saying can be doubted because in our time, not all women need to be provided for or protected by men.

    What they in fact need is love.

    Unfortunately, sometimes women tend to see love when it’s not really there.

    Sometimes a woman can feel that something is wrong without having to hear it from her partner.

    Here are 12 unmistakable signs a man’s strong feelings of love and adoration for a loved one has burnt out completely:

    · Ignores you

    It’s like you don’t exist anymore. He completely begins to live a life of his own.

    Before, anything he or you did was a mutual decision. And now, you don’t even know that he’s planning on doing anything.

    When you are around, he gets all weird, and he pretends he’s alone.

    Even if he needs something like: “Did you iron my shirt?” he won’t ask you. He’ll go and find it and if it’s not ironed, he will do it himself.

    · Lack of communication

    One of the biggest signs he doesn’t love you anymore is a lack of communication. This is not like ignoring you.

    This is much more serious and on a deeper level. When he loses interest in you, he will cut you off. He will lose the need to communicate with you in any way. Whether it’s body language communication, verbal or just eye contact; he will break off all of these.

    · Criticism of appearance

    A philosopher once said: “A person will like everything, even the flaws, of their beloved, but will be annoyed at the perfection of those whom he does not love.” For a truly loving man, you are always beautiful, even with messy hair and even in your oversized nightgown. He will not notice that you have gained a couple of extra pounds after birth if you do not say it yourself.

    But if your man constantly tells you to go to the gym or hints that you need plastic surgery, do not rush to indulge him. It is most likely that it’s not your appearance that doesn’t suit him but you yourself. And even if you lose weight, he will find other faults in you.

    · Discussing your shortcomings with friends

    No one is perfect but truly loving people focus on the advantages of their partners instead of focusing on the flaws.

    If your partner publicly humiliates you and laughs at your failures, do not expect anything good from such a relationship. Such a partner doesn’t respect you, and a strong and reliable union is impossible without respect. By criticizing you with other people, he unconsciously tries to prove to others (and himself) that it’s your fault that he stopped loving you.

    · His attitude towards your habits

    Loving men, as a rule, endure all their partners annoying or strange habits like eating from his plate, occupying the bathroom for hours while chatting with their girlfriends, filling the wardrobe with unnecessary stuffs, singing same songs all day and so on and remain silent or react with humor.

    But if your man is constantly scrutinizing every little thing you do and making negative comments about your behaviour, it means that the only feeling he has left is irritation instead of love.

    · Lack of attentiveness to your stories

    Scientists have proved that a man is able to listen to a woman attentively for only 6 minutes

    Yet, if a man sees that something is very important to you, he will make an effort to listen to you attentively, even if this topic is completely uninteresting to him. When he loves you, he won’t leave you without attention. But if he keeps changing the topic or runs away using different excuses whenever you try to talk, most likely, your worries do not bother him.

    Accordingly, he is not going to participate in the resolution of any issues that may come up during the relationship.

    · His attitude toward your emotions

    Men absolutely cannot stand women’s tears. And recently, a scientific explanation has been found: it turns out that female tears contain special volatile substances that lower the level of testosterone in the blood of men which leads to a decrease in sexual desire.

    In fact, when you cry, the only thing a man wants to do is run away and not see it. But if he loves you, he will pull himself together and do everything he can to try to comfort you even if the reason you’re crying seems trivial to him. He will calm down only when you start smiling again. However, if he doesn’t love you, then your tears will be just one more reason to get angry at you .

    · Flirtatiousness

    Flirting is very good for relationships. This is a great tool to revive feelings and overcome routine when you have been together for a long time. Text messages, intriguing hints, playful photos; all these helps rekindle mutual interest, as in the first days of the relationship.

    Of course, it is very important that both partners actively respond to each other’s advances.

    However, if you have already sent 10 erotic selfies in different poses to your partner and he still hasn’t been coming up with new lines, rather his reaction is zero, stop doing it. Or consider what could be causing your partner to ignore your advances.

    · His reaction to your requests

    For a loving man, the requests and wishes of his beloved (not friends or distant relatives) will always take first place.

    In fact, men like to help women as this gives them the opportunity to demonstrate how cool, strong, and responsible they are.

    Of course, there are situations when a man cannot help, for example, he does not know how to repair a tap, he certainly should not leave you alone to deal with this problem but call the plumber, instead.

    However, if the most innocent request, like asking for help changing a light bulb, is perceived with annoyance and as just “yet another unbearable task,” the relationship is worth reconsidering. Is it possible that your man is helping some other woman and with greater enthusiasm?

    · Jealousy

    It turns out that even monkeys are able to feel jealous of their partners around other males. Jealousy arose in the course of evolution as a way to maintain the integrity of the couple. A man is wired so that subconsciously he wants to declare his rights to a woman and to be the only “owner” of her beauty.

    Therefore, it is quite natural that your man starts to get nervous when someone pays attention to you. But people, of course, are not monkeys, and bouts of excessive jealousy will only harm the relationship.

    But when a man is absolutely indifferent to the signs of attention that other men show his lady, this is an alarming sign. He no longer wants to fight for her and doesn’t want to try to become better to stay the best for her.

    · Protection from danger

    The need to protect their loved ones is also the basis for men while the need to be protected is the basis for women. And although modern men no longer have to protect the weaker sex from predators and wild tribes, there are still dangers in our troubled world.

    Therefore, it is pretty natural that a loving man becomes worried when his second half comes back from work late or is alone in an unfamiliar place. If he cannot be around, then he’ll at least call her and make sure she’s fine. By protecting a woman from threats, whether real or imaginary ones, a man feels like a superhero.

    Therefore, if you do not get protection and support from a man in difficult situations, such as having to walk home alone at night, getting lost in an unfamiliar city or getting yelled at by your boss, this is a very bad sign. Your chosen one is either a coward or simply doesn’t like you.

    · Gentle words and expressing feelings

    The language of love consists of tender words, touches, hugs, and kisses. When we call a partner names like “sweetheart,” “darling,” or “dear,” we create a special intimate atmosphere. The choice of affectionate names occurs unconsciously and shows how one partner relates to the other, who dominates the relationship, and how well they are balanced.

    By the way, men need all this lovey-dovey stuff just as much as women do. Researchers have proven that married couples – husbands who often kiss and hug with their wives feel 3 times happier in a marriage than those who don’t.

    So if your man frowns every time you try to hug him and call “sweetheart,” the reason is not his natural male rigidity. As sad as it may sound, his feelings have probably faded away.

  • Criminal herdsmen in Ibarapa aided by jobless indigenes — Igboho monarch

    Criminal herdsmen in Ibarapa aided by jobless indigenes — Igboho monarch

    The Ona Onibode, Oba AbdulRasheed Adetoyese, is one of the three traditional rulers in Igboholand, Oke Ogun part of Oyo State. In this interview with GBENGA ADERANTI, Oba Adetoyese talks about his relationship with the other traditional rulers in the community, why attacks on the community by criminal herders have been frequent, the roles that monarchs should play in governance, his relationship with ethnic activist Sunday Igboho and why it is difficult to stop criminal activities in Oke-Ogun area.

    The people of Oke Ogun appear to have suffered more than any other community in Oyo State as a result of attacks by criminal herders. What could be responsible for this?

    In my area here in Oke Ogun 2, we have little problems. When I say Oke-Ogun 2, I am talking about the Saki axis of Oyo State. It is different in Oke-Ogun 1, which is Iseyin and Ibarapa areas. There are more herders there than here. But the herders here have been living with us from time immemorial.

    Also, we have constituted a security committee, and Fulani people who have been living with us for a very long time are members of this committee. Any time they see new sets of herders coming into the community, they would inform the monarch of the town. This has helped us in keeping tabs on the new herders that are coming into Igboho. Also, the Old Oyo National Park is very close to us. There some criminal herders used to hide. But to the glory of God, it is impossible now for the criminal herders to hide because of the combined efforts of local hunters, Amotekun, vigilante and the police.

    The army barracks at Saki also deters criminal herders from using the forest. So crime among herders is not pronounced in our area. We have little problem here, unlike other Ibarapa areas.

    What do you think the government can do to stop the problem of herdsmen attacking communities?

    I don’t think you should limit the problems of insecurity to criminal herders alone. I would prefer we address the crimes being perpetrated by both herders and indigenes.

    Some of our sons are unemployed and they engage in one crime or the other. If the government gives local government autonomy, these problems will be reduced. At least, governance would be nearer to the people. It is sad that graduates do not have anything to do other than ride okada (commercial motorcycles). This set of people is tempted to commit crime or act as accessories to crime if tempted with money.

    If there is local government autonomy, there will be jobs in the community. The law that established the local government should be re-examined and the government should pump more money into the local government.

    Government should also fund the local hunters in order to fight crimes. They are closer to the community and they know the terrains.

    Unfortunately, these criminals have continued to come with different tactics day in and day out.

    Look at Niger State; it used to be safe and peaceful, but not anymore. The increase in crime rate is not peculiar to any region in Nigeria. Everybody is feeling the pain of unemployment.

    The crime rate would have been high in this part of Oke-Ogun if not for the security measure we put in place, though we still have pockets of crimes here and there, like herders going to destroy farms. But if you compare this with the way these criminals attack villages in the north, the difference is poles apart.

    Crime in Ibarapa is high because some of the indigenes are working in tandem with the criminal herders in perpetrating crimes in the area. Things are worse there because there is a forest in that axis that shares a border with the Benin Republic. The forest is the hideout for the criminals. Government needs to support the local hunters in fighting crime on that axis. If local hunters go there and invade the forest without the support of the government, it could be counterproductive. For example, those who arrested a suspected kidnapper, Wakili, and handed him over to the police were detained. Government needs to find a solution to insecurity. For the problem of Nigeria to be solved, we need a new constitution, not constitution amendment.

    In all this, what role do you think traditional rulers should play?

    Unfortunately, the present political arrangement does not favour traditional rulers. The traditional institution is not part of governance. Traditional rulers are not part of political decision making. Yet traditional rulers are closer to the people. For example, here, in each of the local government areas, there are traditional council members. Each council has 15 members who are expected to be meeting periodically. Besides that, we have the ones for states too. But most of them are currently not meeting. Some governors do not even consult these traditional rulers on security matters.

    Traditional rulers do not have any role to play in the Nigerian constitution. In the olden days, monarchs were charged with ensuring peace in their communities. But now, the local government chairman is in charge. Even in electing or appointing these local government chairmen, the traditional rulers are not contacted. The traditional institution will address the problem of insecurity if the new constitution is made.

    There are three traditional rulers in Igboho. How have you managed to avoid clashes?

    Each of the monarchs has his own domain. If something happens, we call ourselves to manage whatever happens in the wards.

    Also, the government has created wards. In my domain, I have four wards. I have the largest quarters in the town. We are always in touch.

    When there is a conflict of interests, how do you resolve it?

    Yes, we sometimes have conflict of interests, but what we have resolved is that whatever benefit is coming, is coming to Igboho and Igboho people are the ones that would benefit. It is one town under the umbrella of three kings. The government is aware that there are three kings in Igboho.

    Majority of the people are more familiar with Sunday Igboho than Sunday Adeyemo. What is the relationship between Sunday Igboho and the Igboho community?

    Sunday Adeyemo is a native of Igboho. He had in many interviews explained that he grew up in Modakeke, Osun State and his father, while living in Modakeke, was known as Baba Igboho because he hailed from Igboho. Then people were calling him Sunday Omo Baba Igboho. Later, they removed the ‘omo’ and started addressing him as Sunday Igboho when his father left Modakeke and returned to Igboho. He is an Igboho son. His father and mother are from Igboho.

    Not all the Yoruba are in support of his crusade, especially his quest for an Oduduwa nation. If you were to advise him, what would you be telling him?

    You should understand that something brought about the agitation. The killing of the Yoruba in Ibarapa area brought about the agitation. Even many people were in pain before his own agitation started. Many people felt these herders would not stop oppressing the natives to the extent that even when their cattle graze on the farms, if the farmer resisted, he would be arrested. And the police were helpless too. Many of the natives were displeased with this. That was the beginning of the agitation. Some who were displeased but could not do anything decided to support him.

    For those who are against him, you should understand that not everybody would accept your cause. Some people who feel that a united Nigeria holds more benefits for them than a fragmented country would not support him. Probably in his own wisdom, he feels if Yoruba stands as a nation, it would be beneficial than being part of a united Nigeria.

    Even among the traditional rulers, there is no consensus.

    Traditional rulers are suffering. Ideally, we are supposed to assist the populace. But it is not so. And that is why you see traditional rulers pandering to the wishes of politicians. Those who are advising Sunday Igboho to do this or that have reasons for doing so.

    Traditional rulers are now running away from tradition and some rites. Do you think this is healthy?

    Yes, that is true. And there are many reasons for this. If you don’t know the foundation of something, it will be a lot difficult for you to destroy it. If you check the history of Yoruba monarchs, you would see that the majority of them had short reigns. The reason was not far-flung. Most of these people who were privy to the traditional rites had the key to the lives of these monarchs, and they would do anything to terminate the reigns of such traditional rulers if they were displeased with them. But the present day monarchs are wiser. They avoid some of these rites in order not to be entangled. This is the more reason they run away from certain rites and they live longer. Monarchs are more careful now.

  • How false killer herdsmen alarm caused panic in Lagos community

    How false killer herdsmen alarm caused panic in Lagos community

    In the wake of reports of alleged herdsmen attacks in a Lagos community, KUNLE AKINRINADE visited the community and reports that it was a false alarm.

    Not a few Lagos residents felt disturbed a few days ago when a story filtered out that some herdsmen had invaded Odo-Egiri community in Eredo area of Epe Local Government, with widespread apprehension that the attack could spread to other parts of the state.

    In the report published by a section of the media, it was said that farming activities in the community had stopped, following herdsmen’s invasion of farmlands.

    The herders were also said to have attacked farmers, forcing them to flee from the community.

    The herdsmen, who were said to have migrated from Igangan in Oyo State, reportedly settled on the large expanse on Iganke farmland owned by the Ali Moibi-Balogun family and were already erecting their structures on the land.

    The disturbing news followed a petition to the state government and police authorities by one Ali Moibi-Balogun family, which sought the intervention of Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu to reclaim the farmland from the herdsmen.

    In the letter, dated May 10, 2021 and signed by its counsel, Adeyemi Adegbite, the family said that it resorted to the letter after the police station in Noforija in Epe had allegedly labelled the family members suspects after they complained that their farmland had been invaded by herdsmen and that they were already threatening to wreak more havoc within the community.

    “We hereby urge your Excellency to deploy your very good office to intervene in this matter, cause a very discreet investigation to be conducted, and ensure that our society is not turned into a lawless one where might is right and power can be hijacked by a few powerful and privileged individuals or group of individuals to the detriment of the common and law-abiding citizens.”

    The family explained further that they inherited a large expanse of land housing Iganke farmland from their forebears in accordance with Yoruba custom.

    They noted that they had been exercising “rights of possession and ownership over the expanse of land without hindrance or challenge from any person, persons, or quarters whatsoever.”

    However, when The Nation visited the community a few days after, residents explained that no herdsmen invaded the community or attacked anyone in it.

    Respondents, including community leaders, told our correspondent that the purported herdsmen invasion was nothing but scare tactics.

    “When we heard that some herdsmen had invaded this community, a lot of people panicked, but I laughed when I heard the report during a newspaper review programme on the radio.

    “I couldn’t help but just laugh because there was nothing like that at all,” said a community leader, Yusuf Afolabi.

    He added: “What really happened was that some of the people who are laying claim to a parcel of land in the community raised the alarm to dislodge the occupants of the land who had given a part of it to a cattle breeder operating a ranch on two plots of land.

    “The herder is a Yoruba man from Kwara State. He is not a Fulani and did not fight with anyone in this community and no one had any issues with him.

    “Therefore, the allegation that herders dislodged from Igangan in Oyo State invaded our community and attacked farmers is nothing but fake.

    “I am a farmer too and I have been going about my farming activities without herder confronting me.”

    Like Afolabi, Muraina Abdullahi, a resident, said some land speculators contesting ownership of the said land were behind the report.

    He said: “The man is Yoruba and not Fulani. The cattle were given to him by a community leader living outside this community to breed with agreed compensation with cattle.

    “The man is operating a ranch on two plots of land with his wife and children and never for once had issues with us. But some persons contesting ownership of the land with another family suddenly twisted the story to ensure that the Yoruba cattle breeder is chased away or evacuated from the land by security agents so they can take over the land.

    “Ask other residents around, they will tell you the same thing I am telling you now. Or, better still, visit the man’s ranch and hear from him directly.

    A farmer in the community, Akanbi Adewale, also described the report of herdsmen invasion and attacks as false.

    “It’s just a hoax by some land speculators to dislodge others from the land they are contesting with another family.

    “I am a farmer and I have never been attacked by any roving herder, because there is none here.

    “The man they are labelling as Fulani herdsman is even a Yoruba cattle breeder who does not engage in grazing. Rather, he operates from a ranch he built on the land where he lives with his wife and children.”

    The cattle breeder, Saliu Imoru, his wife, and children were sighted by our correspondent on the land on which they built some thatched houses.

    Imoru said: “I am a native of Ilorin, not a Fulani. I am from Afon in Basa Local Government Area of Kwara State and did not come from Igangan.

    “We bought this land from a traditional ruler in Badoore.

    “There used to be another ranch in this area, but the owners have since left the community and I am the only one here now.

    “I am duly registered as a cattle breeder in the state, and my documents are with authorities in Alausa, Ikeja.

    “We have been living in fear since we heard that some people claimed we are Fulani herdsmen. We usually run at the sight of strangers on this land.”

    It was said that policemen from both the Area Command at Elemooro and state police headquarters had visited the land for on-the-spot assessment of the situation.

    Contacted, the police spokesman, Mr. Olumuyiwa Adejobi, a Chief Superintendent of Police (CSP), said it was not true that herdsmen invaded or attacked the community and its residents.

    He said: ”I have contacted the Divisional Police Officer(DPO)  in charge of the division overseeing the area, and he said there was nothing like herdsmen attacks or invasion in the community.

    “I think that some persons fighting over land matters are the ones behind the false alarm of herdsmen attack in the community.”

    Odo-Egiri community described as untrue the report that Fulani herdsmen invaded the community, urging the state government to carry out a diligent investigation on the matter.

    In a letter they wrote to Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu, the community said there was no iota of truth in the media report that some Fulani herdsmen had attacked some residents on their farmlands.

    The letter dated May 19, 2021, written on behalf of the community by their lawyer, Tunde Jinadu, reads in part: ”On Thursday May 6, 2021, the Baale of the community (Odo-Egiri) got a report from two members of Ali Moibi Balogun Family that their family head told them that they saw a Fulani man with cows on their portion of the community land, and that he was already erecting structures on the land.

    “The Baale, being indisposed, directed one of the community chiefs to confirm the information from the family head.

    “On getting to the family head, he said they had resolved the matter with the family who were claiming their portion of land at Iganke.

    “The two chiefs got to the land and saw a man with his wife and children, a few cows settled on two plots of land and we’re being fed on the same spot.”

    The community noted that the cattle breeder was subsequently invited to the Baale’s palace and advised to vacate the land, or breed his cattle in open space or market in view of the insecurity pervading the country.

    “Surprisingly, in the evening of the same day, the Baale saw different stories in the social media that Fulani herdsmen fleeing from Sunday Igboho had settled in Odo-Egiri community farmland at Iganke, causing mayhem and shooting sporadically at people in the community.

    “We strongly believe that there was no such shooting by herdsmen in the community or any persons at all.

    “An investigation would also reveal to your good office that there is no presence of Fulani herdsmen in Odo-Egiri community.

    “The claim by the Ali Moibi Balogun Family that their residence was attacked by herdsmen would be revealed by intelligent investigation as a lie in its entirety.”

    The letter added that the farmland in Odo-Egiri community belongs to the community with the supervision of the Baale and other accredited representatives of the cardinal families in Odo-Egiri, noting that “the community gives a portion of the farmlands to persons that want to cultivate farms on the land. However, there are respective portions that some families have been farming on and are recognised by the community, which was what led to the petition written by a family that was contesting ownership of the land with another family.”

  • Living on the fringe…Sad, sorry world of Sokoto’s Almajirai

    Living on the fringe…Sad, sorry world of Sokoto’s Almajirai

    By Hammed J. Sulaiman

    • How parents dump underage kids in Almajiri schools

    • Children take to begging, forced labour in face of starvation

    Sometime around noon in April 2021, Salisu retreated under the shade of a mango tree to escape the scorching rays of the Sokoto sun. From a distance, he looked tired, worn. Closer, he looked starved, and his eyes nestled in their sockets, emitting a glow like dying embers.

    Salisu does not know his age but his prepubescent frame detailed it between six and seven years old. The native of Zabarmawa has vague memory of home but he remembers how his parents dumped him in an Almajiri school.  He is only opportune to go home during the Sallah festival.

    “We are between 100 and 150 in the Almajiri school. And we recite the Quran every morning,” he said, adding that, “the Mallam doesn’t cook for us. My parents bring food, garri for me, at least every week, in a sack. We usually give it to Mallam. Sometimes, they will bring it together with pure water. I only go home during Sallah.”

    Like Salisu, Adamu looked hungry. Light-complexioned with a piercing look, the 13-year-old claimed his father is a farmer and his mother, a trader. He said he was dumped in the Almajiri system at age 10.

    The native of Tuluwa, in Sokoto, claimed that he and his colleagues rely on begging to survive because their Mallam hardly gives them food. When they are not out begging, they fetch water for use by their Mallam’s household.

    “During the rainy season, we used to go to our Mallam’s farm. Sometimes, the rule is that if you don’t go to the farm, you won’t be given food.”

    Like Salisu, Abban looked hungry at first glance. Although he was much older and looked like he was in his early 20s, he persistently complained of hunger. This sounded odd given his age and the season: it was the Muslim Holy month of Ramadan and his lamentation elicited questions concerning his observance of the fast.

    living-on-the-fringesad-sorry-world-of-sokotos-almajirai

    In response, he said he wasn’t fasting because he hadn’t taken predawn meal  (sahur).

    Abban disclosed that there are about 200 boys under the tutelage of his Mallam, including him, and they survive on handouts: the clothes they wear, food they eat are donations from private individuals and NGOs.

    According to Abban, the more you give your Mallam, be it food or cash earned on your begging tours, the more love you earn from him. When asked why he is not going to school despite free education, he said, “My father didn’t put me there.”

    He, however, disclosed that after leaving Almajiri school, he intends to start a business and get married, or become a soldier or a security guard.

    Until then, Abban, like fellow Almajirai will continue to loiter public places including filling stations, shopping malls, motor-parks, and cinemas with his bowl, to beg for leftover food and loose money.

    The law on a child’s rights

    Under Islamic law, child maintenance is the ultimate right of a child thus parents are responsible for providing maintenance to children and providing them with appropriate (formal and Islamic) education. Moreover, the Child’s Right Act (2003) is the law that guarantees the rights of all children in Nigeria; it is an Act that provides and seeks to protect the rights of a Nigerian child— and other related matters. However, currently, 11 states, all in northern Nigeria, are yet to domesticate the Child’s Rights Act. These children, especially Almajiri children are bearing the brunt of this inaction.

    The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), last year, released the “2019 Poverty and Inequality in Nigeria” report, which highlights that 40 percent of the total population, or almost 83 million people, live below the country’s poverty line of N137,430 per year.

    living-on-the-fringesad-sorry-world-of-sokotos-almajirai

    More so, fewer than half of the children in mainly Muslim northern Nigeria attend “overcrowded government primary schools, official data from 2015 shows.

    Almajiri schools help fill the gap and parents pay as little as N500 ($1.30) a month in fees.”

    Issues revolving around the practice of Almajiri include child destitution, child trafficking and alms seeking.

    Meeting Mallam Muhammad of “Makaranta Muhammadiya”

    Mallam Muhammad is the owner of one of Almajiri schools in Sokoto, named Makaranta Muhammadiya. “I believe God will give me reward for what I’m doing,” he said, adding that he doesn’t know the number of boys in his school. “Their parents used to come to check on them sometimes. After they finish and leave here, they would go and start a business. They can only leave here if only God wishes; God is their timer,” said Muhammad.

    According to him, “I have a farm but I’m not eating it with them. They will come with their own foodstuff. Government doesn’t bring food, except God. Even if you come (join us), God will give you food.”

    Muhammad stated that the government does not have a stake in the Almajiri system, stressing that it is an age-long practice that has stood the test of time.

    Almajiri System: A Faded Legacy

    The Almajiri system of education, which dates back to the 11th century, is an Islamic school system with a long history in northern Nigeria. Under the Sokoto Caliphate, the Almajiri regime was solidified by the Islamic revolt of the 18th century. This educational system focuses on Quranic and Islamic education, with students learning a trade for a living, too. Schools were governed under the Sokoto Caliphate, and teachers reported directly to the Emir of their province.

    Teachers, parents, officials, and the community as a whole raised the schools’ students. Students will farm and carry food to the school to complement the Almajiri scheme. It was a course in the region’s society and culture, similar to Western education, where students were taught the Islamic and northern Nigerian way of life.

    Now, most of these children are lacking access to formal education. According to a UNICEF study in 2014, Nigeria has 9.5 million Almajiri children, accounting for 72 percent of the country’s out-of-school children. Estimates in 2019 revealed that Nigeria has between 13.2 million and 15 million out-of-school children, the majority of whom are in northern Nigeria.

    living-on-the-fringesad-sorry-world-of-sokotos-almajirai

    On the UNICEF website, it is estimated that “In north-eastern and north-western states, 29 percent and 35 percent of Muslim children, respectively, receive Qur’anic education, which does not include basic skills such as literacy and numeracy. The government considers children attending such schools to be officially out-of-school.”

    Nowadays, most of the students, known as Almajirai learn to be self reliant. And this has seen too many of them spill to the streets to beg for alms and engage in menial work. Sometimes, they are made to engage in forced labour. In 2019, the International Labor Organization revealed that nearly half of Nigerian children are enslaved.

    According to the ILO, at least 43% of the country’s children are trapped in child labor, including in private businesses. Most of these children are stuck in different forms of forced labor, despite international conventions prohibiting it.

    Children as divine gifts

    “Children… are what they called Amana; they are a gift from God Almighty”

    Reacting to the situation, Safiyyah Mohammed, a Sokoto-based lawyer and lecturer of the Department of Public Law and Jurisprudence, Faculty of Law, Usmanu Danfodiyo University, Sokoto, gave a full breakdown of why the problem keeps evolving.

    On the part of the government, she said, there are a lot of issues regarding implementation of policies and laws and how to ensure that parents abide by laws set out in our statutes. She said “We have the Universal Basic Education (UBE) law, which provides that children must be sent to school but then we have issues of not being able to keep track of children whether they are in school or sent to other states. So it becomes difficult.”

    Safiyyah argued that “There are differences between Western and Islamic culture values,” lamenting that most of these Mallams are not thinking about the danger of setting up schools without regulations.

    “We are bound to have issues because we don’t know the qualifications of most of these Mallams,” she said, adding that one of the key issues regarding the implementation of policies and laws is the attitude of citizens and attitude of individuals as it plays a major role in how the laws are being implemented and carried out.

    living-on-the-fringesad-sorry-world-of-sokotos-almajirai

    She said, several decades ago, the way Almajirici was practiced— it was “something noble for a good cause. But the way it is practiced now, parents used it as a way to get away from their responsibilities because when you see the issue of people sending their children to faraway places without any means of income, sometimes it is a recipe for a lot of ill in the society.

    “Islamic law comprehensively gives children adequate rights. Children under Islamic law are what they called Amana; they are a gift from God Almighty, so they are to be treated in the best of ways. There is nothing that justifies children being sent out for Almajirici and being made to fend for themselves at such a young age.” She expressed emphatically and authoritatively.

    Work done seems futile

    Zainab Yunusa, a co-convener and assistant field officer with Almajiri Child Right Initiative (ACRI) Sokoto Chapter, explained how the organisation has been implementing its mission on the eradication or reformation of Almajiri system, reiterating some difficulties on the part the state government. The ACRI is a non-governmental organization initiated by Muhammad Sabo Keana, advocating for reformation of the Almajiri system in Nigeria.

    According to Yunusa, the organization has been embarking on community sensitization to concerned parents, hosting rallies and conferences, rendering services ranging from medical outreach, food, shelter among others. She revealed the organization has been working tirelessly with the ministry of women and children affairs in tracing, documenting and reintegrating the children back to their parents.

    Saddened by the state government’s delayed response regarding this issue, Zainab said that, “The State government cannot be precise when it would end because it has to do with religion and culture…and many mistake it’s reformation for abolition. So, work done seems zero.”

    During the course of this story, all effort to reach the state government and ministry of women and children affairs proved abortive, albeit when the Sokoto State Commissioner for Youth and Sports, Honourable Bashir Gorau, was contacted, he said he was not in the right position to respond to questions stressing that all queries should be channeled to the right authorities.

    • names changed to protect identity.
    • This Investigative Report is supported by Orodata Science.

  • I made N70,000 daily supplying bread to bandits, abducted varsity students, says suspect

    I made N70,000 daily supplying bread to bandits, abducted varsity students, says suspect

    By Ebele BONIFACE

    A syndicate allegedly supplying drugs, bread and other food items to bandits operating in Zaria, Kaduna State and its environs has been smashed by operatives of the FIB Intelligence Response Team (FIB-IRT).

    An alleged member of the syndicate, who admitted to making about N150,000 weekly from supplying bread to the bandits, said his income from the venture rose sharply at a point to N70,000 a day while some university students abducted in Kaduna were in their custody.

    A police source, who said the suspects would be charged with criminal conspiracy and kidnapping, revealed that the syndicate was busted by the team of FIB-IRT at the Rigachikun base after supplying bread to the bandits in their hideout in the forest at about 5pm on June 8, based on reliable information.

    Among the arrested suspects were Abubakar Ibrahim a.k.a Abu Rewire of Kuregu village in Wasasa Zaria; Auwal Abubakar of Zaria City; Hassan Magaji of Galadimawa village and Ibrahim Kabiru a.k.a. Abba of Galadimawa village.

    On interrogation, the suspects confessed to being the ones supplying bread to the bandits at Galadimawa, Damari, Kidandan and Awala camps in Birnin Gwari and Giwa local government areas, Kaduna State.

    The suspects were said to have led the detectives to their factory where 150 loaves of bread were recovered.

    In his confessional statement, Auwal Abubakar, was said to have admitted that the syndicate was giving information to bandits on account of which they carried out kidnapping and cattle rustling in the Zaria axis.

    Hassan, a native of Galadimawa village who is married with two wives and three children, said: “I started the bakery business in 2018. Before then, I was an okada (commercial motorcycle) rider, but I was always losing them to bandits who sometimes ambushed us.

    “Some time ago, one of my relatives, Mustafa Magaji, came to our area and taught me how to operate a bakery, and with the little money I had saved, I started the business.

    “I started with about N21,000 and now make about N400,000 a month. The boom in my business began when I started supplying bread to bandits.

    “I was born and brought up here in Galadimawa, and I know most of our young men who decided to become bandits.

    “Initially I was going around the area to sell bread in small quantities. That was when I met one Mohammed from Galadimawa.

    “The community has a good relationship with them because they do not attack us. Initially, they were raiding our villages, but some of our community heads made them understand that we were not the cause of their problem; that we are poor villagers also struggling to survive. That was why they stopped attacking us and most of them started coming out to mix with the villagers.

    “I normally stay close to the part of the forest where they are camped. It was during one of such movement in 2019 that I met Mohammed and he bought 10 loaves of bread and took my phone number. I sold the bread for N200 each instead of the regular market price, which was N170.  The next day, he called me, saying that the bread was so sweet and asked me to bring 20 more loaves.

    “The day I took the 20 loaves to him, I saw him with three others and they told me that they would like to be buying in larger quantities, but I told them that I did not have enough cash. We agreed that they would pay the entire money before I bake.

    “They started with N20,000 worth of bread and gradually increased it to N50,000 a day. After removing the cost of the ingredients, I make as much as N150,000 in a week.

    “We had a meeting point close to their hideout in the forest, but I was not allowed to enter the bush. It is not even accessible by car, so I had to stop there and share the bread to those that contributed money.

    “They never threatened me because I minded my business. They know that people are avoiding them; that was why they normally encouraged me by paying for the bread before I baked it. So, I do not know about their kidnap business; I only sell my bread and leave.

    “It was my workers that were arrested by the police while they were on their way to delivering bread, and they brought them to my factory.”

    Hassan said he observed that whenever the bandits kidnapped a lot of people like they did some university students in Kaduna, the quantity of bread they bought would increase.

    “During that period, I supplied up to N70,000 worth of bread every day till recently when it dropped to about N50,000,” he said.

    Since December last year, armed men have attacked many schools and universities in the Northwest, abducting more than 700 students. Among those abducted were about 20 students of Greenfield University in Kaduna kidnapped on April 20, about one month after attackers stormed a forestry college in the same city, seizing dozens of students.

    The abducted students of the university spent as many as 40 days before they were released after their parents had paid heavy sums as ransoms.

    Hassan, however, said there was not much he had done with the money other than marrying a woman “I had always loved. And I was able to save money to take care of my two wives.”

    Another suspect, Abubakar from Galadimawa, said: “I am married with a daughter. I only attended Arabic school. I am a farmer, and while we are waiting for the crops to grow, I normally look for other sources of making money for my family.

    “I started working for Magaji about three months ago. I am paid N500 and a loaf of bread every day.  My job is to join and bake the bread and also sell them in the various communities.

    “Most of our bread was sold to bandits. I know that they are bandits. Everyone knows them. I did not fear that they would kidnap me because we minded our business.

    “They don’t cover their faces. We know their villages. The only thing is that they now live in the forest.

    “They have no families. It is only some of their commanders that are married with children.

    “I do not know that it is a crime to sell. I am only selling my wares and nothing more. I am aware that they are kidnapping people up and down, but since I did not participate in it, I never cared to know whether what they were doing was right or not.

    “There was never any need for me to worry. It was at the police station that they told me that I was encouraging them by giving them food.”

    He said the only way to stop banditry was for the government to give them what they want. “They are so many in the bush, and the more you kill them, the more they recruit.

    “I did not join them because of my family. My relatives had warned me that one day, the army would bomb the place and I would die.”

    The third suspect, Ibrahim, a 17-year-old indigene of Galadimawa, said: “I dropped out of Galadimawa Primary School. My parents are farmers and they made me join them in the farm instead of sending me to school.

    “I have been saving money to buy a motorcycle to start a commercial motorcycle business, but I could not save enough money.  Luckily, I got a job at Magaji local bakery about a year ago.

    “I am paid N500 and a loaf of bread daily. Sometimes I would sell the bread instead of eating it.

    “Part of my job is to sell it in the neighbouring communities every day. The bandits are our best customers. Instead of trekking around and begging people to buy bread, we just deliver everything to them and go home.

    “I am not a bandit because if I try it, my father will hunt me down and hand me over to the police. He has warned me that those bandits kill innocent people, which is wrong.

    “I know a lot of them who have since relocated into the forest. They only come out when they have money; to look for girls and visit their families.”

  • My wife would  have lived if she  received prompt  medical attention -Husband of late celebrity chef Peju Ugboma

    My wife would have lived if she received prompt medical attention -Husband of late celebrity chef Peju Ugboma

    By Jill OKEKE

    Almost two months after popular Lagos chef and CEO of I Luv Desserts, Mrs. Peju Ugboma, died from complications arising from a medical procedure, her immediate family members and loved ones are yet to get over the loss as fresh facts indicate that she could have lived if help came on time.

    This was the summary of the two-day public inquiry into possible violation of the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Council (FCCPC) Act prompted by the circumstances surrounding the death of Mrs. Ugboma came to an end with the husband of the deceased, Mr. Felix Ugboma, maintaining that his wife died because of delayed medical intervention.

    The distraught widower said: “On hindsight, if the doctors that carried out the procedure on my wife at Premier Specialist Medical Centre (Premier SMC), Victoria Island, had referred my wife a day after the surgery to Ever Care Hospital that has an ICU (Intensive Care Unit) and if they had listened to the counsel of the specialist doctor based in the United Kingdom, she would have lived.”

    Commending the convener of the public inquiry, Ugboma expressed satisfaction with FCCPC’s redress, saying: “I am satisfied because I think it took a lot of efforts for FCCPC to put this together. I have stated my own case of what I witnessed and we have heard other experts speak.

    “Unfortunately, Premier Hospital did not show up, and by virtue of that, Ever Care Hospital did not give their own testimony.”

    It will be recalled that 41-year-old Peju Ugboma, the Chief Executive Officer of I Luv Desserts, had gone to Premier SMC for an elective hysterectomy surgery on April 23 but died on April 25.

    Lending credence to Ugboma’s claim, Dr. Ayoade O. Akere, a Chicago, Illinois, US based medical doctor and Managing Director of Family Medicine, which specializes in complete healthcare for the reproductive system in women obstetrics and gynecology, said that “anticipatory and early intervention would have helped in the case of the late Peju.”

    In his testimony which he gave virtually, Ayoade, who has over 33 years of practice, gave a damning verdict after analysing the case notes of the deceased.

    He said: “Anticipatory care was not fully there. Her deterioration was too fast for their response. She was moved to the Intensive Care Unit too late.

    “There was adequate but delayed response to the deceased’s blood transfusion reactions. There was slothfulness in the documentation of blood pressure; it could have been done better. There was evidence the patient was experiencing low blood pressure after the surgery.”

    According to him, the deceased’s hospital case notes showed that she developed low blood pressure in the morning after the surgery. The blood pressure was 118/48. “I would not have given the intervention they did then because it would lower the blood pressure further, but that was what they did.”

    Giving his testimonial, the husband of the deceased said that when it was obvious that the medical condition of his wife after the surgery was deteriorating, he put a call to a foreign based gynecologist friend of his. He said on getting properly informed with the symptoms of the deceased, the gynecologist, who is based in the UK, requested to speak with the medics on ground at Premier SMC. They obliged and he spoke with them, advising them to open her up as it was a case of internal bleeding.

    He said the UK-based doctor emphasised that time was of essence but the doctors at Premier SMC did not heed his advice. Rather, he said, “after about four hours, they transferred Peju to Evercare Hospital, as they told me, for possible kidney dialysis and CT scan. My wife got to the hospital without a pulse. She probably died even before getting to Ever Care.”

    Unfortunately, doctors from Premier SMC were not available to state their case.

    Frowning at the attitude of the hospital’s proprietor, who the CEO of FCCPC, Mr. Babatunde Irukera, said ignored the sum mons of the body despite reminders to that effect, Irukera accused the proprietor of deliberately ignoring FCCPC’s summons which he said he could have received before making his travel plans.

    He said the FCCPC, upon receiving the letter from the counsel to Premier SMC that the proprietor was out of the county, requested for his travel itinerary, which they never obliged the Commission.

    Irukera added further that if the counsel felt that the FCCPC lacked the power to invite the proprietor and about 25 doctors from the Hospital to appear before the panel of inquiry, she should have filed an objection to that.

    Responding, counsel to Premier SMC, Abimbola Akeredolu (SAN) told the panel that there was no way Premier SMC’s proprietor Dr Lolu Oshinowo could have been physically present, because he was out of the country, adding that a letter sent to the FCCPC requesting that he be granted access to the panel through virtual means was never responded to.

    Akeredolu, in further defending the actions of the hospital and its doctors for their inability to be present, said the regulatory body in the medical profession- the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN) advised otherwise, saying the matter would be better handled by the body.

    However, Ugboma said that the family sent a letter dated May 20, 2021 to the MDCN but received no response from them. He wondered why the medical body advised doctors at the Premier SMC not to attend the inquiry. The MDCN mentioned patient’s confidentiality as one of the reasons why the doctors should not participate in the FCCPC hearing.

    Pressed further, Ugboma claimed that he had signed a waiver and had agreed that his wife’s medical details could be discussed at the public hearing.

    Speaking at the end of the two-day inquiry on Wednesday, the Chief Executive Vice Chairman of FCCPC said that investigations and review of the documents relating to the manner the late Peju was handled by the hospitals were still going on.

    “You have not heard the last on this matter. We are still gathering evidence and engaging all the parties involved. Once we are through, which will be very soon, we shall release the report to the public,” he promised.

    Asked what had been achieved during the two-day inquiry, he said enthusiastically: “We have achieved a lot. Everybody has been learning from what happened. At the minimum, the awareness is not just for health practitioners alone but for all professions.

    “We have recognised that there is a standing mechanism that will scrutinise and second guess what they have done or how they do their work.

    “It will make people to improve their process just to assure themselves if scrutiny ever occurs that they will not need to be worried about their credibility.”

    Expressing satisfaction with how fast the panel of inquiry was set up, considering that the deceased passed on, on April 25th, he said that the inquiry also turned out very well.

    “As you can see, you heard an expert testify for hours, the family did, the Billing Supervisor from Premier SMC did. We are still working on those records. I am quite confident we will be able to come to a conclusion, which will include the testimony of Premier’s doctors or in the event we decide that it is not necessary,” said Irukera.

    Earlier in his testimony, Ugboma, husband to the deceased, said the circumstances surrounding the death of his wife could have been better managed by Premier SMC and could not have led to death.

    He alleged that it took Premier SMC over four hours to conclude paper works for the wife to be transferred to Evercare Hospital in Lekki , which he said was just a 15 minutes’ drive, adding that the four-hour period further worsened her health condition

    Present at the inquiry were officials of the Lagos State Ministry of Justice, Lagos State Consumer Protection Agency (LASCOPA), Lagos State Health Facility Monitoring and Accreditation Agency (HEFMAA), Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) and the FCCPC represented on the panel.

    Irukera explained that the public inquiry was neither a fault finding inquiry nor a professional disciplinary process but to determine if there was any possible violation of Consumer/Patient FCCPC Act 2018.