Category: People & Politics

  • ‘Lessons life has taught me’

    ‘Lessons life has taught me’

    Like the queen of hearts, Aisha Babangida-Shinkafi’s love for the underprivileged is apparent in her continual quest to impact positively on their lives, courtesy of her Better Life Project (BLP). “I know God brought me into this world to do just what I am doing because I have never enjoyed doing something so rewarding as this and I am totally enjoying it,” she enthused. Aisha has evolved from the proverbial silver spooned-kid to a self-driven compassionate being. In this chat with KAYODE OLANSHILE ALFRED, Aisha bares her mind on her BLP dream and sundry issues.

    You have touched many lives through your Better Life Project (BLP). How does it make you feel when you see people relieved from their hardship?

    I feel fulfilled and truly inspired. Inspired to do more, fulfilled that people smile thereafter. This will enable them secure their children’s future, learn skills and education.

    So, how many people have benefited from your BLP?

    There is absolutely no way I am going to count the number of people I might have supported. That defeats the art of giving from your heart. But I know that we are creating an enabling environment for them to learn through adult literacy programs, to learn skills through skills acquisition programs. This, we have, God willing, been able to get a lot of women involved and participating in the programs. So, if along the line, they are in their thousands, then I have to do more.

    How far would you say better life has succeeded in pursuing this vision and mission?

    BLP is work in progress. It is not something we rush into, because it involves lives. It is a legacy for me, for you, for my children, our children and their children. So we are getting there steadily but firmly. It is also important that the structures are in place. I have one mission in life right now with the BLP, and that is to educate and empower millions of families, especially women. With the support we have from amazing families, friends and various organisations, we will succeed, God willing.

    Is Better Life Project in line with your late mother’s vision?

    Absolutely! Empowering women with education and skills is the only way forward for the rural women. So, we have continued that way, with added programs such as the ”Servant Learners’’. We embarked on the Servant Learner Program to give the youths an opportunity to interact, live and impact with the rural people in their own environment. Then, there is the Village Community Feeding Programme. During the of Ramadan, it was an exceptional success, thanks to the Dangote Group, that graciously and generously supported the feeding program with food items. The BLP awards scholarship to children from various communities with our Scholarship Program so that they can further their education.

    What are you doing differently that your mom didn’t do with the project?

    I tell people that God brought me into this world to do just what I am doing because I have never enjoyed doing something so rewarding as this and I am totally enjoying it. So, everything we are doing or will do has been and will be in line with my mother’s vision. I just fine-tune the little details. And the exciting thing is that I physically participate and enjoy being in the villages.

    What are the major challenges of your project?

    Well, we thank God we have not encountered any major challenges. But as I said, this is because of the devoted family and friends that support us endlessly. Personally, my only challenge is not being able to be here and there always.

    What is the greatest lesson life has taught you?

    Never ever take anyone for granted and learn to respect and appreciate every single person I meet in life.

    Would you say you have enough time for your family?

    Totally! They are my priority and my passion.

    Your role as a wife?

    My role is to nourish, learn, appreciate, respect and love unconditionally.

    Who are your role models?

    My parents have been and will always be my role models. But I have a few people that do inspire me. First is Mohammed Yunus. Then, there is an amazing woman in Justice Mary Odili.

    When did you discover that the most important part of one’s life is to be prayerful and be close to God?

    Allah SWT has always been in my life. But seeing what other people less fortunate than me go through has brought me even closer to God. I have very strong parents who instilled the teachings of Allah, the importance of prayers, charity, and humility in my siblings and me. I am trying to instill that into my kids and those close to me.

    What gives you the greatest joy in life?

    Putting a smile on people and being around loved ones.

    What do you like about being a Nigerian woman?

    Well, I walk with my head held high being a Nigerian woman, and enjoying the admiration of being a Nigerian.

    Which of the Nigerian women do you like, admire and look up to?

    They are a lot, but as I said, Justice Odili, Senator Zainab Kure, I could go on and on.

  • ‘At ease  Major, at ease’

    ‘At ease Major, at ease’

    Many are yet to overcome the passage of Major Akinloye Akinyemi, an officer par excellence, who stood head and shoulders above his peers. Many believe that he was done in by the substance injected into his body while in prison during the late Gen Sani Abacha’s regime. Last Friday, family, friends and colleagues eulogised the late officer at his funeral in Lagos. ABIKE ADEGBULEHIN AND OMOLOLA OLAOLUWA were there.

     

    THE tears are yet to dry for the late major Akinloye Akinyemi despite the burial of his remains in Lagos last Friday. Those who knew him are still mourning the loss of this outstanding office, who stood out among his peers. He is being mourned more by his colleagues in the Army, some of who are generals today. Akinyemi’s remains were buried at the Victoria Court Cemetery, Lagos, after a funeral service at the Redeemed Christian Church of God, The Lord Central Parish, Lekki.

    The body was conveyed in a brown casket; part of it was covered with the Nigerian flag, a symbol of last respect for the retired soldier. His pair of shoes; cap and sword were on the casket.

    A military ovation was done by the National Chairman, Association 13Reg/SS5 intake 1973, Major Gen Abdul Malik Halidu-Giwa. This was followed by another by the Commandant of the Nigerian Army School of Signals, Brig Gen Donald Oji.

    The body was lowered into the grave at 1:45pm.

    An achiever, the late Akinyemi was the Best Army Cadet at the Nigerian Defence Academy, leading to his nomination to complete his training at the Royal Military Academy in Sandhurst, Surrey, United Kingdom (UK). There, he won the Cane of Honour as the Best Overseas Cadet. He proceeded to the Royal Military College of Science at Shrivenham in Swindon, UK, where he graduated with a First Class.

    At the church, decorated in brown and peach, the choir, dressed in black and blue suit, rendered solemn songs.

    A bevy of beautiful women ushered guests to their seats.

    Suddenly, military salutations drew the guests’ attention to the entrance.

    That signalled the arrival of Akinyemi’s remains borne by six uniformed men, who marched into the church and carefully placed the casket on the table.

    The late Akinyemi’s profile was read by Gen Halidu-Giwa. In his biography, the late Akinyemi, was described as an achiever.

    “He was a man of integrity, professionalism, thoroughness, selfless in service, a patriot who sacrificed his life, his marriage and all for a course he believed in. Indeed your name has been carved in the history of Nigeria and the Nigerian Army,” Gen Halidu Giwa read.

    The late Akinyemi was a product of the Government College, Ibadan. He later joined the cadet unit; he went to the Nigerian Military School Bush Camp before joining the Nigerian Army.

    The officiating minister, Pastor Olu Olusakin, sympathised with the bereaved family.

    The cleric spoke on Let Not Your Heart Be Troubled – John 14: 1.

    The late Akinyemi, Pastor Olusakin said, was a diligent man who worked for God.

    “He has definitely left a vacuum in our hearts and I pray that God shall help fill this vacuum, especially in the life of his family,” he said.

    He urged all to emulate the Akinyemi’s virtue.

    After the sermon, Pastor Kunle Ajayi sang Amazing Grace and It is well with my soul.

    The deceased’s elder brother, Prof Bolaji Akinyemi, described his exit as painful.

    Prof Akinyemi, a former Minister of External Affairs, wrote: “It is natural in schools for seniors to write character profile on their juniors. In real life, it is only natural for a younger brother to write an obituary- tribute on an older brother and not the other way around. But, since your death, so much has happened from unexpected sources that as unnatural and painful as it is, I just have to write this. I have been visited by retired and some serving Generals who had just broke down for reasons which I cannot fathom. For some, it probably was atonement for what happened to you, for some, it was the agony of what might have been not necessarily for you but for the nation. For some, I just don’t know. What I know is that your death has been a very painful experience for many and for me. And now, it’s time for me to say goodbye. At ease major, at ease. I will miss you and your indomitable spirit. If you, with all you went through, did not give up, why should I?”

    The late Akinyemi’s first son described his father as a role model.

    “My father was a great man; I’m honoured and proud to be his son,” the younger Akinyemi, a retailer with Game Store, Ogun State, said.

    The immediate younger brother, deceased’s Mr Akin Akinyemi, a businessman, said: “It is difficult today to say anything about my brother because it was when he died and I listened to what people said about him that I knew how great he was. There lies a man of integrity, a man that loved his country; he fought for his nation and believed in his country. He was candid and outspoken and will be greatly missed.”

    A friend of the late Akinyemi, Mr Olusegun Olubowale, the manager of K&K Event Management, Sagamu, Ogun State, described him as a fine officer and gentleman.

    “He was my school grandfather at the Government College, Ibadan. Nigeria has lost a very competent soldier and what more can I say. He was a very gentle and amiable man,” he said.

    Lt Col G.F. Majekodumi of the 13 Regular Course met the late Akinyemi, whom he fondly called ‘Bobbylenge’ in 1972 when in Nigeria Defence Academy (NDA), Kaduna.

    “The then Commandant in NDA, Major Gen Adeyinka Adebayo, asked who was candidate Akinyemi? Hearing the commandant asking of a candidate, I thought he wanted to influence your selection. Whereas, I never knew you were a self-made cadet right from the time you started attending the Nigerian Military School (NMS). I could remember when you would collect machine gun weapon from any of our course mates who got tired, additional load to your own, during rigorous routine march and endurance training. I will miss your deep knowledge and lecture on the British conquest of Nigeria and various inter-tribal wars. Your relentless struggle for justice for the inhuman treatment meted out to you by agents of darkness in uniform made you to cry out for justice. This led to your appearance at the Oputa Panel with me.

    “Your ideas and desires to promote justice, fair play, equity, productivity and national development in Nigeria were far ahead this generation. You were a star that was located but was not utilised. The feat you could not make in the military was made and manifested in the Kingdom. Adieu, my four-star general,” Majekodunmi wrote.

     

  • Pro-Chancellors should not meddle in varsities contracts –Babalakin

    Pro-Chancellors should not meddle in varsities contracts –Babalakin

    The Chairman Committee of Pro-Chancellors of Nigerian Federal Universities and Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Dr Wale Babalakin is not a small fry far among the nation’s icons. Today, his business interest criss-crosses law, real estate, aviation, construction, oil and gas, telecoms, maritime, banking and financing, among others. But in this interview with ADEGUNLE OLUGBAMILA Babalakin, also the Pro-Chancellor of the University of Maiduguri (Unimaid), spoke extensively on issues bordering on university education. Chancellors of Nigerian federal universities today are hell-bent in ensuring ivory towers are lifted of Chairman of Bi-Courtney Limited. Babalakin berated Pro-Chancellors of universities would always want to exercise their influence in the award of contracts which often run them on a collision course with their Vice-Chancellors and university management. The alumnus of the University of Lagos Faculty of Law and Cambridge University of London assured however assured the present crop of Pro-Chancellors under which he chairs would not dabble into such because they are worried about the state of university education and are ready to put in more efforts to reverse it. Dr. Babalakin an astute philanthropist and a member of the Body of Benchers, said the nation’s development will continue to be elusive except university education is strengthened. He also said the autonomy of Nigerian universities is the only way ivory towers can recapture their lost glory. Excerpts:

     

    There are allegations that some Pro-Chancellors of universities want to dictate how contracts are awarded, when and who gets what? Would you relate this to your experience as the Pro-Chancellor of the University of Maiduguri?

    Well, I wish somebody else told me the story. Whatever I say, may fall under the category of immodesty. But if it would further education, I would then say a few things. When I assumed duty as Pro-Chancellor of Unaimaid, we took a position that we are there to solve education challenges and nothing more. As I speak today and these facts, we have expended the resources of the university of Maiduguri solely for the university.

    When we got to Unimaid, the sight of a brand new car in any faculty was unusual. Today, there is no department in that university without a brand new car. When we got to unimaid, developmental issues did not occur rapidly, we took a position that we would ensure all projects are delivered on time. To the glory of God we have achieved this. Over 20 projects which we commenced are ready for commissioning all within 15 months. The TetFUN 9tertiary Education Fund) intervention projects were carried out in a manner which we believe the commission was very happy with us.

    We also subscribed to the idea that university education requires creative funding. Waiting for government, no matter how substantial, to continue to fund university education means there will be no development in the university sector. Maiduguri is not a commercial centre comparable to Lagos or Abuja, but opportunities are there as well. As we speak today, through creative thinking, we enjoy 20 hours of uninterrupted electricity in the university everyday, and all year round. The question now is ‘why not 24’? That is our ambition. But I’m reliably told that with20 hours uninterrupted power, we are probably the only federal institution with the most amount of electricity.

    Before the end of this year, we will commission our guest house in Abuja. This has been on the drawing table for over 25 years. When we got in there, we realised this was a potential source of good revenue for the university and we pursued it. This project, when finished, would generate revenue outside the university’s resources. It will shock ypu that we did not borrow a dime to build the edifice. All we did was utilize our little IGR with lots discipline. The idea is that when this revenue starts coming, we are going to use the money to train exceptional students from Unimaid in the best universities abroad. It’s going to be a source of scholarship with the understanding that these students would come back to Unimaid and enhance scholarship there.

    I’m surprised to hear that pro-Chancellors and Vice-Chancellors are always at loggerheads over contract awards. In my near four years in Maiduguri, there has never been any issue, no dispute, no quarrel and as the Pro-Chancellor, I have not participated or taken interest in any projects. Awards of contracts go through a system where I insist on the best value for money irrespective of who delivers it.

    Pro-chancellors as the head of universities, I feel, shouldn’t descend to the level of issuing contracts, while the management too shouldn’t it see their role as simply to award contracts; it is to create creative manner of funding g education; and if Pro-Chancellors and Vice-Chancellors realise this, they will not even have the time for arguments over contracts.

    As the Chairman of Committee of Pro-chancellors of Nigerian Universities, what is the thinking in that sector? Or are you comfortable with the state of education?

    First, let me say this with all sense of responsibility, the crop of Pro-Chancellors of Nigerians universities today are dedicated to the furtherance of university education. The country should commend them for their efforts especially in the face of their challenges. We meet quarterly and during emergencies to debate education, share ideas and assist each other. The commitment and quality of debates at these meetings is one of the highest I’ve see nationwide. I do not think there is any Pro-Chancellor who thinks the university system today is acceptable; we all believe there is great room for improving the system.

    Speaking for myself, I believe the university system is at the crossroad. I believe very strongly that the system is incapable of supporting Nigeria’s development generally. I believe there is a direct correlation between the quality of education in the system and the welfare of its people; and that today, Nigeria’s welfare is very poor because the quality of education is also poor. However, I’m not disillusioned. I believe President GooodluckJonathan is keen on education being repositioned; and he has demonstrated this at many fora.

    Could you explain how?

    One, on the tenure of university council, once the President was told the council’s tenure was statutory, he reversed the decision dissolving the Governing Council and reinstating them and stating clearly that every Council must spend their four year tenure. We need this level of stability to make these enduring changes in the university. If you do not know the tenure of your administration, how can you plan?

    Second, although the university amendment bill which gave autonomy to the university council in the appointment of university administrators was signed in 2003, but did not begin operation until 2007 under late President Mus Yar’ Adua, and President Jonathan has tried not to interfere with the appointment. With this, the university system has achieved nearly 90 per cent success within its first five years of operation.

    Third, soon after the president was elected, he held an education seminar where a roadmap was presented and discussed and now awaiting implementation. These are commendable efforts. The ball is now back in our courts as administrators to take advantage of presidential encouragement in refashioning the education system in Nigeria. I am a firm believer that in waiting for the federal, state or local government to champion the cause of education alone will not create any monumental progress.

    What efforts are you making to ensure that the Federal Government- and the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) Agreement signed into law in2009 is implemented to the letter?

    One of the things slowing down Nigeria today is that we have a cavalier attitude to agreement. In our culture, agreements are only to be obeyed if they are favourable to us. This is a wrong attitude that reflects the level of our underdevelopment. As the Chairman of the Implementation Monitoring Committee for the 2009 the agreement with ASUU and non-academic unions, I can say categorically that it has been a relatively good outing. We’ve had more months of peace in the universities than in previous years. But we also had two or three industrial strikes that are inconsistent with the agreement. The first one was the sympathy strike by ASUU in support of universities in the Southeast when they were all closed down for having problems with their proprietors. There is no provision in the agreement for sympathy strike. I did make a statement at the university of Maiduguri convocation condemning this action. The second strike occurred owing to the implementation of the 2009 Agreement in the area of retirement age of scholars. That strike, though avoidable, was caused by the inefficiency of the federal government. And I want it to be on record that it was promptly resolved by Mr President under the leadership of the Secretary to the Government Pius Anyim, Minister of Education, and other committed players in the education sector. Serious commendation must go to this team for the resolution of that crisis. Strike as a weapon of protest should be used when there is a demonstrable infraction, or a clear violation of agreement of stated position. And I hope my brothers in all the unions will adopt this approach. Let us explore the mechanism provided for dialogue, honour the various agreement before embarking on the industrial action.

    How can we make government wake up to this?

    Each time people mentioned government, people easily forget that government is only representatives and no more. We as citizens should be the one not only suggesting to government but providing a roadmap.

    Have you seen any government who doesn’t want to succeed? But it’s not enough for gifted citizens to say governments do this or that. Have you formed yourself into a pressure group or civil society and come up with an education agenda to be pursued? Have you as an individual, come back to your locality and said we are going to have a primary or secondary school that will be the envy of this nation? I went to one of the best, arguably the best secondary schools secondary schools in the country which was Government College Ibadan (laughs).But there is school called Loyola Jesuit in a very remote and obscure Gida Mangoro in Abuja, somebody created that oasisi of learning in the desert of ignorance. And four years consecutively best students in WAEC West Africa came from. In a particular year, the first, second third and fourth best students in WAEC emerged from the school. That is leadership. For as long as you think you can do things by cutting corners

     

  • Zoning: Why Ekwueme lost presidential  ticket to Obasanjo —Kwankwaso

    Zoning: Why Ekwueme lost presidential ticket to Obasanjo —Kwankwaso

    In spite of his hectic schedule, the Governor of Kano State, Engr. Rabiu Kwankwaso, spared about 30 minutes last Saturday to interact with three newsmen at Kano Governor’s Lodge in Abuja. The session, which gave insights into the politics of the ongoing constitution amendment, was captured by our Managing Editor, Northern Operation, YUSUF ALLI. Excerpts:

    What difference did you make in Kano during your first term in office?

    Well, you see first term, as the name signifies, was the first time I became a governor. Definitely, we did things that are ordinarily given the chance again, we will do them differently. And I believe that is why the constitution made provision for second term to review what you did during your first term and see where you can improve. So, there are many areas, many things that we did during our first term in 1999 to 2003 and now by the grace of God, we have opportunity again after eight years. And we are doing them differently.

    An area that we realised that we did them correctly, we are now doubling our efforts to do more. I am happy to say that in the last one year or so, we were able to work very hard; we were able to bring in some programmes and projects that are very important to the people of Kano State.

    First of all, we worked so hard to ensure that from our own side, we do what we believe is correct, what is right and that is to ensure that right from the governor, deputy governor, commissioners down to the civil servants and politicians, everybody was made to understand that government is about service.

    And we are lucky that we made such statement right from the days of our campaign. We told everybody that anybody who was looking for money should go to the market and become a businessman. But you should not be in government and start competing with Aliko Dangote and Mike Adenuga and so on.

    We now have no difficulty at all in ensuring that people are doing the right thing. And that is why by the grace of God, we were able to save a lot of money for projects and programmes for our people in Kano.

    To crown it all, we looked at areas of wastages, especially various governments are used to this issue of security votes and in the opinion of the state government in Kano that is an area that governments take money for their personal use in the name of security. So, we decided to cancel the issue of security votes.

    Can you be specific?

    We have started so many programmes and projects. In education, we have done so much on primary education, including feeding our children five times a day. We are giving them free lunch, two sets of uniforms; we are rehabilitating our classrooms, hostels and so on.

    We have so far built well over 1,300 classrooms in just one year. We have also built about 600 offices and similar number of toilets or pit latrines and so on across the state. We have created four mega secondary schools, the Government College and in three other local governments. That is in addition to expanding many of them with additional hostels, classrooms and so on.

    We have employed many teachers. We employed the first batch of 1,200, the second batch is now of 1003, and most of them (in fact 70 per cent of them) are teachers. On secondary school education, we built 200 houses in various secondary schools, especially in the rural areas, for teachers to go and stay there.

    We trained all our teachers in primary and secondary schools. In the last one year, all of them have gone for various trainings.

    And of course, tertiary institutions, if you go to any of them, we are upgrading their facilities. If you go to the College of Education, Komboso, all their equipment, materials and money for accreditation have been provided for them. The state has no problem, we have settled them. The same thing Audu Bako.So also, Aminu Kano College of Islamic Studies and so on and so forth. Of course including College of Arts and Science.

    In other words, we are handling all those. I am sure you remember that the state established Kano University of Science and Technology during our first term. We have just received a report from the Visitation Committee which the state government is reviewing now and at the end of the day, we will come up with the white paper on how best to improve the university.

    Why are you establishing a new university? Will Kano State be able to sustain it?

    When we came, we realised that the state was in dire need of an additional university because the Wudil University is a specialised University of Science and Technology and we realised that there are thousands or even millions of young men and women who will want to go for higher education in Nigeria but they don’t have the opportunity because the slots are too few for them. That was why we decided to establish 21 institutes. Most of these institutes have been completed, they are working either on the temporary sites and some of them have moved into their permanent sites.

    And above all, we have the North-West University which we are officially laying the foundation on the 29th of September this year. We are inviting you to come to Kano to see what we are doing here. We are working on the permanent site of the university but we realised that we cannot finish the site before October, that was why we decided to use Ado Bayero House at Kofar Nasarawa. We have now partitioned some wings to create classrooms, laboratories, lecture theatres, libraries and so on. I am happy that the NUC has given us the approval to go ahead. We are working with JAMB for our first admission which is coming up this October.

    I am sure you are aware of the institutes, I don’t need to mention them but they range from Kano Film Institute to poultry, fishery, livestock, corporate security and Kano Journalism Institute where many of you will even come there to improve your skills. And we have a total of 21 institutes, including the university.

    I am happy to say that so much is happening in the area of education and because of these institutes, we know we will need manpower to manage them and that was why we selected 501 indigenes of Kano who have got First Class or Second Class Upper and we have almost finished the visa, we have paid the school fees and all of them would leave end of September or October to 11 countries across the globe. Next year, we are sending another 500 to go and have at least Master’s Degrees to come back and manage our institutes. And of course, if they like, they can go to Leadership or The Nation newspapers to go and work.

    What of funding of these universities?

    We are building the manpower, we are working hard and I am happy to say that the people are cooperating, especially when it comes to money. People are always asking where you get the money. It is simple. One, we decided to block all the loopholes, wastages within the government circle and even beyond. Two, we have decided to improve our Internally Generated Revenue (the IGR). And I am happy to say that when we came in, we were getting N400m and N450m from the records of the last administration but now we are well above N1.7billion per month, of course, even under the present security challenge. And our salary has come down because we had to do all sorts of screening, including biometric and the figures have gone down in terms of the total number of civil servants and money.

    Our target is that by the end of December, the state should be able to generate enough IGR to cater for salaries and allowances for government officials, civil servants and all what you can call recurrent. That is our target and we are working towards achieving that. If Kano cannot pay its own recurrent expenditure, then to me, it is an unfortunate situation. We have enough resources, we have enough ways of getting the revenue to handle them. So, the game plan is to ensure that we get enough money locally to handle recurrent and whatever money we get from Abuja or elsewhere we use it for capital projects. And that is why our budget for this year is 67 per cent capital, and 33 per cent recurrent. And that is the position of the state government.

    And any state government that cannot do much in terms of capital projects, it has to look at itself or examine itself because government is not just about coming to eat well and get big vehicles or big houses, but it is all about service.

    Is it true that your state is being deserted as a result of violence?

    You see, there was never a time in the history of any country or any state that there was no crisis. During our first term, that is why I have a lot of respect for former President Olusegun Obasanjo. Some people in Nigeria are very, very forgetful. When we came in 1999, there were all sorts of religious crises, ethnic crises, killings of northerners in the South-West and in the South-East, even in the South-South and vice versa. We were just sleeping with one eye from 1999 and 2003 because the governors of Niger, Kano and others on the road would say corpses are coming to Kano, watch it.

    We had few cases they were bringing corpses and immediately people saw them in Kano, they would start rioting in protest. And along the line, they would attack people from those areas who were living in Kano.

    These are things that people have forgotten. We also had the issue of Sharia which started in Zamfara and came through many other states, including Kano. And that was really an issue of interest at that particular time. So there were many things. I don’t think there was any time in the history of this country that leaders were not faced with challenges.

    And what we have today is our own version of the security challenge that we are facing today in Nigeria. That is why we are all up and doing, we are working around the clock to ensure that our states, especially Kano and all other states, are safe so that Nigeria can continue to be peaceful and so that people can continue to be running their normal businesses.

    I just saw somebody reporting on the situation in Kano but he has no idea of what is happening. Maybe he just went through the Internet or just phoned somebody who does not understand what is happening to say the least. You see, Kano is peaceful and I can assure you that there is no city of the size of Kano that does not have criminal activities. If you go to any state , if you go to any country, if you go to the US, the UK, France or Germany, we have people just taking guns to schools or public places like cinemas and start shooting.

    So, it is not something that is peculiar to Nigeria or peculiar to Kano. What is important is that the state, the authorities in the state are on top of the situation. We are working with security agencies, the general public is working together with everybody to ensure that Kano is peaceful. Kano is a centre for commerce and anybody who is there will always want to support commerce. And we cannot run commerce and industries without peace.

    Of course, we had an unfortunate attack on the 20th of January but if you checked the graph, you will see that it has gone down to almost zero. During the attack, we decided to put a curfew of 24 hours, it was reduced 18, 12 hours and now it is zero.

    Really? Eeeh…

    You could come out 24 hours to do your businesses. That is why if you go to Kano now, we have our street and traffic lights working, we have good roads, we have the interlocking on the walk ways, good drainages and so on. Kano has changed. And we have worked so hard to put up infrastructure, especially water.

    So far, we are able to spend over N4billion to purchase ductile and pipes and we were able to buy 600 millimeter by 42 kilometres that means a distance of 42 kilometres, the pipes are on site and contractors are working just to put all on the line. The water works is already there and all that we need to do is to connect them.

    We have millions of cubic meters of water additionally coming into Kano. So also, we purchased 1000 millimeter, that is, one meter, diameter, ductile and pipes which we are going to lay from Chalawa waterworks to the tank and we have paid. The contractor assured us that they will start moving the pipes to the city of Kano. So, we are working in all the areas you can remember.

    In agriculture, we have distributed fertilisers to farmers and they are happy. Civil servants, we pay them 26th day of the month because we have enough money to pay them. We have also started paying N18,000 minimum wage and with this level of management, we still have money to do other projects, including major roads. Go to any road that leads into the city, Zaria road, Gwarzo road, Hadeija road, these are brand new roads that we have started working on. We are dualising them, we are putting street lights and so on. If you go to Kano in the night by air, you may think that you are in Dubai.

    Let us go back to the recent violence in Kano. Is it true that aliens are the ones perpetrating it?

    I have not heard or read about such a statement or conclusion from security agencies. But you see, the security agencies are owned by the Federal Government, they don’t take permission from us to go and make any arrest or get any information and once they get that information, they pass it to Abuja. And actually some of these things we hear are from Abuja because we don’t own the police, we don’t own the Army, we don’t own SSS, I am the chief security officer but they don’t report to me.

    So, you have not got any security brief?

    No, no. I don’t have any security report on that. But all I know is that whatever information we have or people have, they pass it to the appropriate authorities.

    In the light of this experience as the chief security officer who is not in control of security agencies, why did the northern governors oppose state police?

    You see, people don’t understand really. All of us, probably 19 minus one, are totally against the issue of state police; 18 of us are bitterly against the issue of state police, we are not supporting it at least for now because there are dangers; there are issues on the ground that have to be sorted out before we land on the issue of state police. That is the position of 18 governors of the north.

    If you are opposed to state police, are you in support of state creation?

    Yes, state creation is an area really which I do not want to comment on but just recently, I was watching NTA, I was watching this presidential retreat on constitutional review and there was a comment made by the Chairman of the Constitution Review in the National Assembly, Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu. Now, he made comparison between Lagos and Kano. He said Kano has 9.4million people going by 2006 census and has 40 local governments and Lagos has 9.1m people and has 2 0 or 22 local governments.

    You see, that comparison did not go well with many of us but I did not want to worry myself talking or chatting about the constitutional review. But as the governor of Kano State and somebody by all stand, who should, under any circumstance, defend the interest of the people of Kano, I think I should comment on that.

    What is your take on that?

    Before I do that, let me say that because some people don’t know me, they misunderstand my position. You see, right from my primary school, I have been lucky. After primary education, I went to boarding school in Kano and there I met so many people not even from my village or state but people from across Nigeria. I went to school when at that time, we had people from across the state and beyond. And when I came to technical school, I had people from the North-East. Our technical school was catering not only for Kano catchment area but also the North-East and of course when I went to Kaduna polytechnic for five years, I was in contact with Nigerians and people from beyond and I am happy to say that I was in the UK for about 10 years. That is in the area of education.

    When it comes to politics or work itself, I joined water board RACCA then in 1975. I was there for 17 years before I retired in 1991 and in 1991, I joined politics and I was very lucky to win my election, even though I was not surprised. I have being working with my local community, not only on the issue of politics but so also for development and so on. So, I had no difficulty winning my election to the House of Representatives and when I came to the house, I was also lucky to become the deputy speaker of the House of Representatives.

    When we were overthrown by the military regime of the late Head of State, Gen. Sani Abacha, I contested again and became an elected delegate to the constitutional conference in 1994 and 1995. We formed PDM together with Shehu Musa Yar’Adua that time and so many things happened between 1994 and 1995. When the PDM was not registered, I joined DPN. I spearheaded DPN in Kano and as the leader of the party then, even though it was not in the good books of the then government of Sani Abacha, against their wish, we were able to get the majority of the local governments in Kano State and of course, ex-Head of State, Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar, came after the death of Abacha, we joined PDP and I was the first governor during this Fourth Republic in Kano from 1999 to 2003. And I made so many friends. So also, when I was Minister of Defence, I made friends not only here, but all over the world. Of course, I was adviser to the president on Darfur and Somalia and after that, I am sure you remember that I was appointed a commissioner in the NDDC and I am sure you know what happened. When I saw things were not going well, I resigned my appointment and told them the reasons.

    What are you driving at?

    Each of these appointments and elections has its own version of experience. If you take the issue when I was deputy speaker, you see that what I learnt was how these presiding officers like the Senate President, the Speaker and others operate. You have either principal officer, minority leaders serving minorities. Majority leader serves the interest of the people in the majority. Now, we take you to be the presiding officer, who takes care of people from all over the country. When I was among the presiding officers in the 90s, all the ethnic groups were represented at that time, just as it is now. We were 593 representing each local government, which was the number of the local governments in the country at that particular time.

    When we came to the constitutional conference, based on my personal experience, we decided that 593 are too many for the House of Representatives. What was the appropriate number? We came up with 360 during the constitution review. That is how we became 360 and it was accepted in the 1999 constitution.

    Along the line, when we were in the House, I was in the defunct Social Democratic Party (SDP). I am sure you will remember that during that time, we had an election in 1993 where Abiola won the election and I am sure you remember that I am from Kano, where Bashir Tofa who was a candidate of the NRC from Kano lost.

    In fact, our houses are within a short distance. Yet, we worked so hard to defeat him in the polling booth so also in the in the ward, local government and in the state in favour of Abiola who is from the South. And throughout the days of Abacha, I was one of those who were tagged as NADECO. Why? Because I was a member of the SDP and the supremacy of the party was very important to us. We were loyal and we were strong then and we supported our party, it did not matter if somebody was from the south or from the west or somebody was a Christian or a Muslim or a pagan. That was the nature of party politics at that particular time. We worked so hard.

    Could you be more forthcoming on why this background is necessary?

    I am coming to that. I want to dwell on the experiences of the constitutional conference because that is where the issue of this state creation and issue of zoning came from. You see, at that particular time, we had so many respected people from across the federation at the conference. Many of them were appointed by the military and some contested election and won like my humble self. We had respected people like the late Shehu Yar’Adua, ex-Vice-President Alex Ekwueme and so on. With Yar’Adua, we started the PF and we joined SDP together. We supported so many people together. I am sure you remember that our own candidate in PF contested election with that of the PSP and our own group (PF) won the election. That was how we had Babagana Kingibe as our chairman and so on and so forth and later, we had Chief Tony Anenih who was also in our group and also in our party.

    How relevant was that constitutional conference to the issue at hand now?

    In that constitutional conference, so many things happened. I am sure you know Alex Ekwueme, a much respected Nigerian, who has been our friend, brought so many ideas. Why I am giving you this background is to tell you that my personal politics is not about regional or about religion or about ethnicity. We are the Aminu Kano descendants who have worked so hard to ensure that Nigeria unites; we have worked so hard to assist the poor and ensure that they are assisted. I always talk about the poor because these are the people who need the support of government, and all those who have got the opportunity to help them should do so.

    So… (Cuts in)

    The issue of zoning came up in the constitutional conference. It was a big issue, and we did not take the issue of zoning lightly. Few of us went and confronted General Shehu Musa Yar’Adua of blessed memory. We said, there is the issue of zoning coming from the South-East and spearheaded by a respected Nigerian, Chief Alex Ekwueme and to us, he has been very respectful and somebody the North supported.

    We said to Yar’Adua that Alex Ekwueme was almost single-handedly picked by northerners when northerners were very powerful in the Nigerian politics. That time, there was no zoning, he was picked on merit. now, he is bringing zoning and the understanding then during our analysis was that South-East even during the First Republic included the South-South or it was plus a portion of the South-South. So, what they wanted was to carve out a particular tribe, a particular geographical location, people who have got everything in common to one zone.

    They proposed the South-South in the constitutional conference to be another zone, and of course Yorubaland in the South-West has been a zone itself, especially after the Mid-West was carved out of the then Western Nigeria. The understanding then was just to hit at the North because the North has been one. So, bringing this zoning-North-West, North-East, North-Central- was really alien.

    How did the zones come about?

    Some us tried to convince Gen. Yar’Adua to oppose it. he said no, don’t oppose it, it will not help their zone, let us support it. What Yar’Adua told us that time was that, look don’t worry.

    Well, we did not understand what he meant but in politics, if you have a leader you accept, even if you don’t agree to what he says. So, we supported it in a way and we had these zones but we refused to give in to support what some people from the same zone now are propagating. That is, giving it the constitutional backing. Yar’Adua said many things and it was later I realised what he said was right. He said: “It will not help the workers; it will not help the zone”.

    In 1998 to 1999, all of us were in PDP and that was when the issue of zoning echoed in Jos during the election. Ordinarily, people from this part of the country would have massively supported the author of the zones because Alex Ekwueme is a respected Nigerian. I respect him very much and he is our friend but you see, that issue of zoning, rightly or wrongly, people did not take it kindly and that was why despite his political credentials, being the former Vice-President from 1979 to 1983 and he went for second term with our the President, Shehu Shagari; even though Ekwueme was not VP under my party but most northerners were in NPN. So, zoning was echoed in Jos and that gave ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo an advantage and people massively voted for him.

    So, zoning palaver has been on since?

    Yes. Of course, there were other issues but this particular issue was a pillar, it was very important at that particular time. Now, you see, the North has gone through its own version of ups and downs; now, I think it is down. If I say North here, I don’t mean these 19 states we are talking about, we are talking about all those states and issues that have common things with us. Here I mean poverty, illiteracy, disease, all sorts of things. It does not matter whether you are geographically in the North or in the South. You know economists have got their own way of doing things in the world. When you say North, people understand that you are talking about Europe, North America but there are still some few exceptions that are down the line that are in the South but still by that definition part of the north, so also in Nigeria. If you say North-South, it is upside down in the economy.

    In the world economy, if you say North, you are talking about prosperous nations of the world and of course in terms of South you are talking of the opposite. So if I talk of the North, I am not talking about the 19 states, I am talking about those who have things in common with us. Even in the North, we have geography but that is not the important binding issue, the binding issues are what I just told you. If you look at it, Benue is closer to the South than Sokoto, Keffi or Kano. Kogi is closer to the South than it is to Sokoto, Kaduna or Kano. This North consists of different tribes, different religions, but these are binding factors.

    So introducing that really to us was an agenda to partition the zone and it is not flying now. How many years from 1994, 1995 to date now? It has been so many years but where is the chairman of the North-East zone? where is the chairman of North-West and others? We have one chairman because zones cannot fly in the north at least for now, you can put them in the papers but they cannot fly and it won’t work. That is the reality of this country today that is the reality of the North.

    How does the Deputy Senate President come into this?

    You see, some people, maybe because they don’t know history or they easily forget history, are bound to repeat similar mistakes. What we see Senator Ekweremadu doing, he is making a big mistake at least for himself. He is a young man, I just saw in the papers that he is just 50; at the age of 50 you will begin to wonder what he is up to and for whatever reason now, we have somebody from the South-East in the senate who is the chairman of the constitution review. We have a young man in the House of Representatives, Deputy Speaker Emeka Ihedioha, who I know very well since 1992. At that time he was one of the young people who were working in our office, the Office of the Speaker at that time. Emeka is a good man but you see, some people take advantage of some people’s weaknesses.

    What I mean is that we hear that they want to create a state from the South-East. They say the East has five states, the North-West has seven states. Yes that is the reality but the truth of the matter is that, during the constitutional conference, we tried to create eight states for Kano and other places, we applied for it.

    Kano should not be the Kano we know today under normal circumstances. Kano by 2006 census was 9.4million people, we have states today that are smaller in size and they are having three senators each to represent; the same three are representing 9.4million’

    We worked so hard during the constitutional conference to get recognition but for whatever reason, people have refused to create additional state for Kano. Kano should not be a state; it is a combination of many states by using any criteria. There is an issue of land mass, population and anything. About 1.6m or 1.7m is the population figure of some states in this country, how many 1.6m do you have in 9.4m? How many square metres do we have in our states? I have some figures based on 2006 census, Nasarawa is 1.86m. Bayelsa is 1.7m. Others like Ebonyi, Taraba, Gombe, Kwara, Ekiti, Abia, Cross River, all these states are over two million people and Enugu over three million something. I think that is where he (Ekweremadu) comes from and he wants to create a new state for them. How many square metres, how many people are there?

    Why are you personally touched?

    Is it because we are weak now, everybody is putting his suit looking good, pretending to be representing an ethnic group or state and that is why I started with my history. You see, principal officers or presiding officer, if you are presiding over the whole Senate, you are presiding over the whole house not presiding over the South-East, not presiding over PDP, not presiding over another party.

    You should be seen to be fair and you see people are taking all these weaknesses to do a few things. We hear they are inviting speakers, my speaker and other speakers of state. What business do they have on constitutional amendment? Why could they not go through the governors and along the line they are instigating them, trying to cause confusion and destabilise our state Houses of Assembly. Look at the constitution, we have these tiers of government; federal state and local government. As for federal, that is where they belong, they should stay there, they should not be poke-nosing into our own businesses, we are politicians.

    These senators, including Ekweremadu, come from states and how does it feel now if I phone my senators and members of the House of Representatives and start instigating them against the leadership of the House or the Senate? We hear recently that they are talking about independence, which independence? Independence for state Houses of assembly? They want to get more money for them, how and from where will they get the money? Will the money come from the Federal Government or from our own money in the states? You see, state assembly members are kings in their states, they are well respected. I think members of the National Assembly should start looking for independence for themselves. My state assembly members have 24hours access to me. They walk into the state Government House and see me, they tell me their problems, including personal problems. Anywhere I go, I take them along, we are friends.

    I have 40 in the state assembly, 30 are PDP. I raised their hands and call PDP and of course we won election with them, we are the same family. We are running the government with them though they are handling their own side, we are handling ours as the executive. So, for people to be talking of the independence of the state assembly, I say nonsense because they do not understand. Don’t destabilise states, don’t poke nose into our affairs. If you want to do state assembly member, go and do that and look for independence. Look for independence for yourself not for somebody. If you want to give them money, get money from Abuja and give them, we will welcome that. All these instigations, I think that will not be acceptable.

    So, what is your opinion on the constitution review by the National Assembly which is ongoing now?

    We have a situation where the chairman is already biased, he is talking of Kano having 44 local governments. How many local governments do we have in Enugu? three million population, you want to create a state and if you look at it, in North-West, we have about 36 million people, if you put the South-South and South-East together, they are just 37million. The difference in population going by 2006 census is one million. South-East plus south-south is one million difference. All these points make people feel that something is really wrong with us. Actually, the population of the South-East plus the South-South is 35, 786,000 plus and if you subtract this from the population of the North-West alone, you will have 1.6million. With two zones, just one million people difference and this is why they want to create a new state.

    What should they do? They are seeking equity and justice not population matter.

    They are not talking of Kano. When they were mentioning Kano on the television, they were clapping. I think our members should start talking about merger of states. If you have over one million people, why are you a state? I don’t know why our members are quiet on these issues. We have so many things to do, including some governors in the north behaving like our own almajiri. You know a leper in the North, they will not go and say may Almighty Allah give me health, give me money, give me job, he

     

  • Nigeria at 52: Yet another  birthday without a party

    Nigeria at 52: Yet another birthday without a party

    Eminent Nigerians  reminisce on early days

    Since the British national flag, the Union Jack, was lowered on October 1, 1960, heralding the hoisting of Nigeria’s green and white flag, the historic date has remained engraved in the psyche of every Nigerian born before and after the momentous era.

    Famously christened October 1, Independence Day, the date has become a ritual of some sort. Like other countries, Nigerians have never failed to reckon with the date and have devotedly kept faith with the annual ceremony, celebrating it with great zeal and festive passion.

    Between 1960 and early 1980s, the anniversary assumed the scale of a national carnival and was anticipated and observed with unparalleled nationalistic devotion throughout the country. It was then something of a birthday, highlighted loudly by sumptuous parties.

    Until recently, Independence Day celebration was a colourful event marked across the country with great enthusiasm and commitment. The expectations were palpable and infectious. From states capitals to the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja, a kaleidoscope of lively parades mounted by the military and paramilitary outfits were on display.

    At the Eagles Square, Abuja and elsewhere, the parades constituted the canvass on which rhetoric and vapid speeches were freely rendered. In this emptiness of speeches emanated some form of false hope to despairing citizenry. It was with such impatience, blighted loyalty and misappropriated patriotism that Nigerians eagerly looked ahead to the annual ritual. It was a national birthday celebrated with festivities.

    But lately, the celebration is beginning to fade into a distant memory with commemoration drums receding progressively into a dead silence and dancing feet of the hitherto enthusiastic Nigerians suddenly going insipidly numb and cold with a craving sense of nostalgia.

    Reasons for celebration

    In his acceptance speech as Prime Minister of the independent nation state called Nigeria, Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa had offered reasons for the celebration: “This is a wonderful day, and it is all the more wonderful because we have awaited it with increasing impatience, compelled to watch one country after another overtaking us on the road when we had so nearly reached our goal. But now, we have acquired our rightful status, and I feel sure that history will show that the building of our nation proceeded at the wisest pace: it has been thorough, and Nigeria now stands well-built upon firm foundations.”

    Birthed into nationhood without any bloodletting or destruction, there was absolutely nothing to reconstruct in the post-independent Nigeria. Nigerians began an uninterrupted six years of celebration from 1960 to 1966.

    But soon after, it would appear glaringly to the founding fathers and generations to come that independence implied a great deal more than self-government. The very firm foundation that the Prime Minister had bragged about was already showing signs of wooziness. Tafawa Balewa had this to say: “This great country, which has now emerged without bitterness or bloodshed, finds that she must at once be ready to deal with grave local and international issues.”

    Punctuated celebration

    Gravest local issues occasioned by leadership challenges were lurking in the corner. Before long, a federated nation found itself being tested to its utmost. It was tottering on the brink. A brand new Nigeria, barely six years in its infancy, was waiting to implode. And for nearly four years, there was a hiatus as the annual celebration was temporarily put on hold, no thanks to the military overthrow of the embryonic civilian leadership and the attendant civil war from July 6th, 1967 to January15th, 1970.

    By 1970 when the civil war dust finally settled, Nigerians were again in party mood, and on October 1, 1970, the annual ritual was back in full swing. A lot of water had passed through the bridge. But the storm was soon over and there has been no interruption since then as virtually every Nigerian, students, old and young, upper and middle classes leave nothing to chance to be part of the independence anniversary.

    Question mark on celebration

    For many Nigerians, the import of the Independence Day celebration had laid in the fact that it bound all within and outside the country to a single umbilical cord. That was then. But it remains doubtful whether the same claim is still plausible today.

    While many still reminisce with a high sense of nostalgia and wish to reenact the good old days of independence anniversary celebration because it reminds them of the uniqueness of the occasion, for many a Nigerian, they wish rather that there was no such gesture as independence from the colonialists because Nigeria has become worse than the British left it. Squandered opportunities, blighted vision and leaden footedness of the leadership were some of the indicators that the journey was far from started. There was an admixture of cynicism and veiled hope.

    It was pessimism derived from the dreadful and depressing scenes of Nigeria’s contemporary adversities. Before independence, the question had always been: When would the inequity, tyranny, injustice and inhumanity of colonial overlords end?

    But today, 52 years down the line, Nigeria can best be described as a beleaguered nation, with the questions: When would the trying times and pangs of post-independence Nigeria be over? When are we going to reap the much-talked about dividends of democracy? And can the hands of the time be turned back? Can the middle class be reinvented? These and many more questions confront us as a people.

    With less than 48 hours to another Independence Day anniversary, it is apparent that like last year’s, it is going to be yet another birthday without a party for Nigeria at 52.

    Feelers to this had emerged when the Minister of Interior, Mr. Abba Moro, earlier this month announced that the 52nd Independence anniversary would be low-key. Rolling out the activities lined up for 2012 Independence Day, Moro said the low-key nature of the celebration was a reflection of the mood of the country.

    He said the decision was in tandem with President Goodluck Jonathan’s transformation agenda.

    Moro said: “The transformation agenda is like an athletic race; you do not begin to celebrate until you have touched the tape. The world is troubled and the economy is on the downward trend, especially in Europe. We are not excluded from this, as we have critical challenges in almost every sphere of our daily lives. For a responsive government, it will not be a glamorous anniversary at the expense of the need of its people.

    “In tune with the national mood on reflection of our national life to correct the anomalies, rather than committing huge resources to the celebration, we want to commit that to Nigerians deserving of peace, security and stable means to livelihood,” he said.

    For the second year running, the Federal Government is declaring a low-key Independence Day anniversary. As if the challenges identified by the Minister were not in existence in 2010, the Federal Government, in sharp contradiction, had set aside a humongous N10 billion for Nigeria’s golden jubilee. But for public outcry and the National Assembly’s stance on the issue, the memory of that event would have lingered long as the most expensive anywhere in the world.

    Fortuitously, the 2010 event was tragically marred by multiple bomb blasts close to the anniversary venue. Ten people were reportedly blasted to their early graves. The country has since been literally at war with itself with multiple challenges of the Boko Haram menace, dare-devil armed robbery activities and flooding in most parts of the North.

    This development has prompted conclusions that for the first time, the government has for once decided to put its money where its mouth is.

    But while the Federal Government’s austere position appears laudable, there are concerns that the FG’s new position may have been informed by the intractable security quagmire which it has found increasingly insurmountable.

    The FG’s informed position is a worthwhile and non-negotiable price to pay, if anything, to manage the nation’s security which has thoroughly frayed at the seams. But there is no denying the fact that the thrills and frills of the anniversary will be missed as Nigerians continue to ponder over the fast fading glory of the October 1, Independence Day celebration.

    Reminiscences on yesteryears

    We were excited and hopeful

    –Balarabe Musa, CNPP Chairman

    Independence Day anniversary, during my time, was very exciting. I was already mature, having been born in 1936. That means I was 36 years old at the time of Nigerian independence. I was also politically conscious as a member of the Northern Element Progressive Union (NEPU), even though I was a civil servant.

    I was aware of the meaning of Nigeria’s Independence. We were excited and hopeful. We believed then in the leaders, even though they were conservative. The leaders were credible and that gave us hope. Despite that there were diverse political groupings, there was still cohesion among the politicians and we knew that there would be progress for Nigeria. There was no doubt that our expectations of a better Nigeria were met by at least 50 per cent.

    The early period of Nigeria’s independence placed more emphasis on achievement than political party activities. We had political leaders we could identify with. Political leaders like the late Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, Aminu Kano, Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, Obafemi Awolowo, Osadebe. The credibility of these great leaders could not be challenged.

    The mood and spirit of October 1 Independence celebration was very high. Everybody including school children and civil servants was always upbeat ahead of the festivity. We all participated in the anniversary.

    The reason for the high was that Nigerians had confidence in the government and leadership. I might not have participated directly, but I was always at the venue to watch proceedings. It was like a carnival and very colourful. It was exciting to behold. Participation then used to be selective.

    What is missing today is the lack of participation by Nigerians because they have lost confidence in both the system and the leadership. What we have now is limited to the civil servants who, even when they participate, do so half-heartedly. The usual mass participation is gone with the bygone days of the First Republic and Second Republic.

    We were treated to good lunch

    –Chief Ebenezer Babatope, PDP Chieftain

    During my time as a student, we used to take it very seriously and we attended all activities marking the celebration of the event. I was a student at Ifaki Grammar School, Ekiti, now Ekiti State. We used to go for a march-past at Ido-Ekiti, which was the headquarters of the local government where my secondary school was situated. We were smartly and impeccably dressed. The mood was celebratory and at the end of the march-past, we were treated to sumptuous lunch. We felt happy that we were finally free from the vice grips of the colonial rule.

    But when I got into the university, I felt very dejected that we were not able to translate the meaning of the independence into tangible development. And this is very sad that we are still struggling as a nation.

    What we are missing today is the company of the founders of this great country called Nigeria. Great men like the late Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, Alhaji Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, among others. They did not siphon the resources of the country for their own gains. They believed more in the common good of the country than the leadership that succeeded them. Patriotism was very high in their time. They did not think first of themselves, but of the greater Nigerian state.

    It was like another Christmas

    –Chief Chekwas Okorie, ex-Chairman of APGA

    Very soon, I will be 60 and that means that I am older than independent Nigeria. Frankly speaking, during my time, it was like another Christmas. The mood was comparable to Christmas. Children had their parents buy things for them as if it was Christmas. That was when Independent anniversary was at its best.

    Since we were students, we all looked forward to it and our parents ensured that our uniforms were new. Otherwise, we would not attend because you would not be considered to participate in the parade. It was one of the conditions of being selected for the parade. It was a thing of joy.

    It is interesting to note that the government of the time acted within its means. Nigerians took pride in the colours of the Nigerian flag and Nigerians felt protected by their government. Today, the government cannot even protect itself from the terrorists called Boko Haram, much less protecting the people. That is why it is hiding under the canopy of low-key celebration. The government has accepted the fact that it has failed to provide security for the people and itself. And they would rather cocoon themselves in the barricaded walls of Aso Rock.

    The government is also afraid of the people seizing the opportunity of the celebration to tell them their feelings about the non-delivery of the dividends of democracy. I do not think that the low-key is aimed at doing a reflection of the fractious economy. Our government is carrying on as if ours is the most buoyant of economies. There is no need to hide under the pretext of being frugal with expenditure.

     

    New uniforms were sown

    –Chief Victor Umeh, APGA Chairman

    When I was younger, we looked forward to the celebration with great interest. Despite our level of development, Nigerians had faith then in the country called Nigeria. Sadly, it has today turned into a non-event because of poverty and mismanagement. That is why Nigerians no longer look forward to the event with renewed interest and vigour. There is so much despondency and abjection in the land. This feeling is derived from the poor leadership which has plagued Nigeria in the last 25 years. There are many Nigerians including myself who feel that there is nothing worth celebrating anymore.

    In those days, school children looked forward to the date and uniforms were specially sown for the occasion. Virtually every student was anxious about the date and their participation in the march-past. The expectation was infectious and palpable. It was a great moment to showcase their spirit of being proud Nigerians.

    This same atmosphere has since taken leave of us. Nigerians have lost faith in their leaders and in their own country. The youths do not see any future in the country call Nigeria any longer. There is no valve in anticipating the October 1, to roll by. It is a matter of regret that most of our young people do not have confidence in the leadership they have been bequeathed with. In the last twenty-something years, there is no hope that it will get better soon. Today, Nigerians are in sober mood, wondering where their future lies!

    What Nigerians are missing today is a modest country which once brought happiness to those before them with very little income. There was dignity in labour. As a teacher, you could live comfortably and still see your children through school. These values have been eroded or distorted. Corruption and greed have taken hold of the Nigerian state.

    There is also the disappearance of the middle class. What obtain today are the extreme rich group and the extreme poor group. This kind of classification cannot encourage the Nigerian spirit of patriotism. There is a sense of abandonment by the Nigerian state. So, even if the government had not declared a low-key celebration, there is nothing to engender a followership spirit in Nigerians anymore.

    It was a happy day for young men and women

    —Chief Reuben Fasoranti, Afenifere leader

    Independence Day was always something beautiful to look forward to. It was a happy day for young men and women of my time. As a matter of fact, we would look forward to it and prepare as if it was a special festival. School children would be gaily-dressed, while the national flag would be made available to us. The truth is that those days were truly beautiful.

    But that is no longer the case today. There is nothing to rejoice about. Unfortunately, the day may even come and go without you noticing it. That was not the case in those days. There is corruption and nobody seems to care about government property. In those days, everybody regarded government property as his or her own, and will take care of the property like they would do to their own. But unfortunately, that is no longer the case.

    It is a pity there is no hope for a better future. I really sympathise with the younger generation.

    As pupils, we got gifts of bread and sardines

    —Onyeka Onwenu (MFR)

    In my days as a school girl in the 60s, in Port Harcourt, everybody got a food gift such as bread and sardines. We enjoyed that very much. Before 1960, it was called Empire Day and there were parades and sporting competition for schools.

    For my generation, Independence was an exciting prospect. The future was promising. I guess we were naïve. We were happy to rid ourselves of our colonial masters. Proud Nigerians we were. We didn’t know our leaders were not quite prepared to run the country.

    I think these days, the excitement is gone. With our schools not teaching Nigerian history, the feeling of nationhood is rather weak. Do school children really understand what they are celebrating on October 1? I have my doubt.

     

  • Flood of fury

    Flood of fury

    Kogi residents groan under the burden of   flood

    These are not the best of times for many Nigerian communities ravaged by floods. This is particularly true of communities on the banks of Rivers Niger and Benue, particularly Lokoja. In the last couple of days, the Kogi State capital has had to pay a huge price for its status as the nation’s confluence town—the meeting point of two of Africa’s largest rivers.

    In Kogi State, no fewer than 20 communities have been sacked as River Niger on which they had depended for fishing activities bares its fangs after overflowing its bank. Properties that run into billions of naira are believed to have been destroyed while hundreds of families in the state are believed to have been rendered homeless.

    In Lokoja alone, more than 10,000 people were reckoned to have been displaced by the flood. The areas mostly affected include Adankolo, Gadumo, Kabawa, Ganaja and Sarkin Noma. Other villages at the bank of River Niger bank were totally submerged.

    At Okumi and Banda, two villages located on the Lokoja-Abuja highway, it is difficult now to believe that people once lived in the area. In Koton Karfe Local Government Area, more than seven thousand people were rendered homeless. The most affected communities in the local government include Kpareke, Irenedu, Okofi, Gbangede, Osuku Ugwo, udumose and edegaki. The residents have all moved to neighbouring Adangere where the state government has created 18 camps to accommodate the victims.

    Ibaji Local Government Area in the eastern part of the state was not left out. The entire residents of the local government were sent parking by the flood. The people have since moved to the neighbouring Idah Local Government Area. Other local government areas like Bassa, Omala and Ajaokuta hardly fared better.

    All together, the state government has created more than 60 camps to resettle the affected people.

    The plights of residents were shared by travellers on the ever busy Lokoja-Abuja Road. Many of them had to abandon their vehicles and cross the deluge of water on the road with the aid of canoes to Banda village where a new motor park has suddenly sprung up to continue their journey.

    On Monday, the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) announced the closure of the Abuja/Lokoja highway and directed motorists to other routes through which they can get to Abuja. A traveler, Musa Hassan, told our correspondent that he had spent a whole day in Lokoja because the trailer in which he travelled form Enugu could not cross the flooded road. He had heard about the flood and had deliberately travelled in a trailer, thinking that it would be able to weather the flood.

    “I never knew the situation was that bad. I thought the highly suspended trailer I entered would easily pass through the flood, not knowing that the flood is capable of swallowing even a caterpillar,” he said.

    Hassan added that he had to pay the canoe men who was making brisk business from the situation as much money as he had paid the trailer for Enugu to Kaduna, including the payment for his luggage, just to cross the deluge of water.

    Commercial boat operators and okada (commercial motorcycle) riders abandoned their routes on the River Niger and the township roads to the flooded area to do brisk business. An okada rider, Akoji Samuel, told The Nation that he had made much more money from the flooded road than he had ever done before, charging between N200 and N500 for rides that might not last for more than two minutes.

    A canoe paddler, who would not disclose his name, said he charged between N500 and N1000 per passenger. His canoe was capable of taking about nine passengers at once.

    Meanwhile, flood victims are enjoying some succour from a rehabilitation centre the stte government has set up at Adankolo area of Lokoja. The refugees also appealed to the Federal Government to assist the state government in cushioning the pains of their losses.

    The refugees, mostly youths, said although the state government was doing it best, there was more that needed to be done. One of them, Ismaila Isah, said he had to go to a nearby bush to answer the call of nature because there were no toilet facilities at the camp.

    But the state’s Commissioner for Environment, Abdulrahaman Wuya, dismissed the claim as false, saying a primary school was being used for the camp and the government had rehabilitated all the toilets.

    “You would agree with me that all primary schools have toilets for its pupils, and all the toilets have been rehabilitated,” Wuya added.

    Several Federal Government delegations and agencies have visited the state to assess the extent of the damage done by the floods. Senate President, David Mark, who visited the state governor, Idris Wada, promised to discuss with the relevant Federal agencies to quickly intervene in the matter.

    Mark said while a notice had been served by weather experts on the flooding, the huge devastation wasnot expected. He promised to discuss the matter with the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) and other relevant agencies to come to the aid of the flood victims.

    He also charged Governor Wada to act fast in order to prevent an epidemic of water borne diseases the state.

    Other top government officials who had visited the state at press time include Senator Smart Adeyemi and Hon. Umar Buba Jibrin. A presidential delegation led by the Minister of Environment, Hajiya Hadiza Mai Lafiya, also visited.

    Lives lost, vehicles and houses submerged at Ojukwu’s birth place, other Niger communities

    For communities located along the plain of Rivers Niger and Kaduna in Niger State, especially those at the downstream part of the nation’s three hydro-electric power stations at Jebba, Kanji and Shiroro, flooding is an annual occurrence. This informed the age long agitation by the Niger State Government as well as Kebbi, Kogi and Kwara states for the establishment of a Hydro-Electric Power producing Area Development Commission (HYPPADEC).

    This year, however, the floods are not ravaging only the communities along these predisposed areas, they have also overwhelmed more than half of the state. It has spread to other parts of the state which hitherto were free from floods, wrecking havocs on individuals and communities as well as animals, farmlands and property. At the last count, no fewer than 47 lives had been lost to the floods, with over 1,000 families rendered homeless.

    Public facilities and hectares of farmlands in 500 communities in the state have been submerged by flood or washed away by both the excess water released from the three hydro-electricity generating dams and from the heavy downpour in the last two weeks. The Niger State Emergency Management Agency (NISEMA) put the total cost of properties lost to the floods, which include farmlands and houses, at over N1 billion. Farm produce lost to the floods are also estimated at almost N2 billion.

    Many communities are now cut off from the rest of the world, while others can only be accessed with canoe as most access roads are washed off, especially in the rural areas. Many communities in Bosso, Munya, Chanchaga, Shiroro, Borgu, Mokwa, Wushishi, Bida, Edati, Lapai and Lavun local government areas have been sacked by flood. Worst hit communities include Aza, Egagi, Zdagu, Kpashafu, Ketso, Gbogifu Lenfakuso, Egbagi and Muregi, all in Mokwa Local Government Area. The people of Wuya, Kanti, Dokokpan, Tama and Emimam are yet to come to term with the reality of the devastating effects of the floods as their houses, schools, places of worship and farmlands now remain inaccessible.

    In Borgu and Shiroro local government areas, flood victims are counting their losses. Their houses and business centres are either submerged or washed away. The state capital, Minna, was not spared of the disaster. A family lost two children to the flash floods in Minna. Ten-year-old Mustapha and his 12-year-old elder brother, Bashir, both children of a man named Mohammed Kudu, met their untimely and death after slipping into a flowing drainage during one of the heavy downpours.

    Penultimate Saturday was a sad day for the Gwaibaita family of Gungel village in Bosso Local Government Area of the state. The family was thrown into mourning as two of its members were washed away by the flood that ravaged the village. The bodies of Abubakar and Abdullahi were found several kilometres away from their village the following day.

    Alhaji Usman Adamu lost his car wash centre, his family’s only source of livelihood, located on the Eastern Bye-pass of Minna. The centre was submerged and four cars brought to the centre to be washed were buried in the flood. The flood, which came suddenly, gave Adamu no chance to rescue anything from his car wash centre.

    Lamenting his plight, Adamu said: “I lost everything in the centre to the flood. I will need a lot of money to repair and fix the four cars. The flood that greeted the rain that fell last Friday caught us hands down. My boys had to run for their lives. The stream at our back overran its bank and within five minutes, my car wash centre was totally submerged and the four cars in my care were buried in the flood.

    “I am now left with the burden of fixing the engines and brain boxes of the four cars and repairing the interior of the cars in my care. I have not been able to quantify the cost of these engines, brain boxes and the repairs of the interiors of the flooded cars. These are aside from my two car wash pumps – one electrically operated and the other gasoline propelled, that were washed away.”

    In Zungeru, the birth place of the late warlord, Dim Odumegu Ojukwu, two Fulani herdsmen fell victim to the flood and paid the ultimate price as they were washed away along their grazing route. Many Rice farmlands in the area were also submerged.

    Disturbed by the height of devastation, the flood issue occupied a prime place in the order of the day on Tuesday when the State House of Assembly resumed from its four-week recess. Hon. Bashiru Lokogoma, representing Wushishi Constituency, drew the attention of his colleagues to the destruction wrought by the flood as well as the hardship faced by victims. He regretted that peasant farmers and fishermen in many villages were now living in camps as refuges in their own land. “The victims required urgent attention,” he said.

    The Director-General of Niger State Emergency Management Agency (NISEMA), Alhaji Mohammed Sabba, said 14 of the 25 local government areas in the state were affected by the floods, forcing the state to establish six relief camps for displaced persons across the state.

    At Nambe relief camp, most of the displaced persons, especially vulnerable women and children, are under intense threat of epidemic as the unending number of displaced persons has overwhelmed the basic facilities provided by the state government.

    Relief however came the way of the victims on Tuesday when Hon. Mohammed Sani Kutigi, a member of the House of Representatives Committee on Emergency Management facilitated the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) to bring a million naira worth of relief materials to alleviate the sufferings of the victims.

    Fury of flooding in Cross River

    If children in Cross River State tweaked the popular nursery rhyme a bit to sing, “Row, row, row your boat gently down the street/Merrily, merrily, merrily life is not a treat” it would definitely not be out of place, especially in most parts of the state where streams, rivers and dry land have all but become one massive body of water, following constant incidents of flooding.

    Moving from house to house in most parts of affected communities now necessitates the use of canoes. The consequent hardship on the affected people is enormous.

    Though the Nigerian Meteorological Agency had predicted heavy rains and flooding in most part of of the country, Cross River included, the fury with which the disaster is ravaging communities has been unprecedented. Information gotten from the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) indicates that over 42, 000 people across the state have been displaced by the flood this year.

    Eleven deaths have been recorded this year alone according to the agency. In Adim in Biase a nine month old baby, Godswill Echu Okon, was been killed by the rubbles of a collapsed residential building caused by flooding. In Agwagwune, in the same Biase two twelve year olds were swept away. So far about 49 have been hospitalized from injuries caused by the flood across the state.

    Over 4000 farmers have also been affected with about 106, 000 hectares of farmland washed away destroying produces as yams, cassava, cocoyam, melon, rice, vegetables among others.

    Information also made available to The Nation shows that about 1059 houses have been destroyed, especially in the rural areas where they are built with mud bricks.

    Local government areas worst hit by flooding caused by heavy rains include Obubra, Ogoja, Yala, Ikom, Abi, Biase, Odukpani, Boki, Obudu and Obanliku.

    An entire village in Yala Local Government Area, Okpandin, was sacked. Mr Cyprian Idim an inhabitant of the area said, “We have no access to that village again and the people in that village had to be evacuated to other villages. There is no access to that village again. Water has surrounded the village.

    He expressed regret that their farmland had been washed away. “We have no other occupation than farming,” he lamented.

    The recent release of water from the Lagdo dam in Cameroon has compounded the situation by swelling rivers in some communities. Local government areas affected by this include Yala, Ogoja, Ikom, Obubra, Abi, Biase and Odukpani.

    A community Relations Officer in Biase, Uno Ilem, lamented loss of accommodation, food, access to road and other necessities of life.

    Director General of SEMA, Mr. Vincent Aquah expressed fears that the magnitude and severity of damage to lives and property would increase as the level of flood rises.

    According to him, apart from extreme famine that would visit the agrarian communities as a result of the destruction of their farms by the flood housing would be a problem as many are already relocating to make shift shelters.

    “These conditions are far below human standard particularly living in a slum such as this thatch house. Children and women are suffering and there is an urgent need to address the situation before it gets out of hand,” he said.

    He appealed to the Federal Government and international organizations to come to the aid of the state government as it apparently has no financial capacity to effectively manage the situation alone.

    Mr. Aquah said sensitization campaigns have already begun in all the communities along the coastline being affected by the flood said that relocation to higher grounds was the only options for the vulnerable villages.

     

  • Our gains, our pains —Models

    Our gains, our pains —Models

    The world of models is a world of beauty. To be a model, your beauty must be widely recognised and acknowledged. That means with models, beauty is not just in the eyes of the beholder. Her general outlook must convince all about her exceptional beauty.
     Welcome to the world of models; a world of beautiful faces, tender skins, straight legs, fabulous outfits, guided meals, exquisite accommodation, endless catwalks on the most fabulous stages around the world, the klieg lights and the paparazzi.
    But beneath the facade of the extremely good life is the burden that comes with being a model; a burden that does not discriminate between male and female models. While the issues may vary from one individual model to another, there is but a thin line between the burdens carried by models of different class and clime.
    That much is demonstrated by the words credited to world acclaimed model, Naomi Campbell, who recently lamented that the colour of her skin undermines her earnings. “As a black woman,” she said, “I am still an exception in this (modelling) business. I always have to work harder to be treated equally.
    “I may be considered one of the top models in the world, but in no way do I make the same amount of money as any of them… There is prejudice. It is a problem and I can’t go along anymore with brushing it under the carpet.
    “This business is about selling, and blonde and blue-eyed girls are what sell.”
     But while the journey up the ladder of modelling may be tasking, pretty young ladies still choose this path. One of such models is Jennifer Chukwurah. According to her, “As a model, I have big dreams. I wish to become an international super model one day.”
    It is an ambition shared by her counterpart, Dianabasi Edo, who said “it is the dream of every model to go international. That is my dream too. That is, to get higher every second. I want to hit every top television station screen and local and international magazine cover.”
    Tall as this ambition may seem, young models like these don’t look back, especially if they have achieved some elements of success like Gladys John, who said “for me, the journey to modelling has been fruitful though also exhausting due to the need to participate in events and interact with people from all walks of life.
    “I have worked with different kinds of professionals like fashion designers like Kiki Kamanu, Modella Couture, Feron Designs, Zhalima and so on, and appeared in several top magazines and newspapers”.
    Models do not only believe in the fame they gain from their works, they also believe it is a good job which brings in the money as quickly as it can come. But first, models believe in themselves. They believe and accept their beauty and actually get ready to use it confidently.
    Seun Ajayi said it all when she thumped her chest and declared: “I think my beauty is a gift from God and I am thankful to Him. Yes, I know I am beautiful, though I don’t believe that anyone is ugly because we are all created in the image and likeness of God. But I also know that being beautiful gives me some kind of power over men, women and my environment. Yes, in a way, it does.”
    Still, Seun admits that modelling is a tasking job. She said: “Yes, people accept me when I tell them that I am a model, although a lot of people too find it hard to accept me as a professional model.”
    Gladys John gave a better insight when she revealed another perspective of the profession.
    She said: “I would say that modelling gives an advantage to my self-esteem. It is also a bonus to me wherever I go. I blend and adapt easily. However, it has never been a profession to me. It is simply an avenue to build my dreams on.
    “The profession has its good and bad sides, and as a model, the challenges I face include persistent advances from the opposite sex. I also have to regularly put my diet in check. Then every now and then, I suffer pitiful glances from people, perhaps because of the belief that we models starve or are culture rebels.
    “However, like I said, it has been passion-driven for me, and I realise that it is a job that everyone involved in it should approach with wisdom and care. Otherwise, he or she won’t be living an exemplary life.”
    Speaking about the pains and gains of being a model in Nigeria, designer Segun Adetunji of House of Style says: “Modelling is a frustrating business in Nigeria. It is a business in which prophets are not honoured in their own town. Models are not appreciated here, even successful ones like Agbani Darego, who had to go abroad to be noticed. It was only designer Frank Oshodi that noticed and appreciated her here. She didn’t even have to pay him.
    “Here, a model has to struggle to survive and they are paid peanuts. The story can only change if a model gets a lucky break. I don’t blame anybody who struggles to become a model despite the pains, because we are not all the same. There are people who believe in fame. So, they go all out to get it. Even I am guilty of this because I was once a model.
    “Modelling is a mirage. It is colourful. It offers you the moon, but you must remember that you can never hold the moon in your hands.”
    Analysing the lifestyle of models, style writer, Signor Cerruti Osagie, said: “I have the most part of the life of models. I have reported models from Nigeria to South Africa and then Europe. I knew Agbani Darego before she hit fame. There is also Oluchi Onweagba and the likes of Oji who later got married to a millionaire’s son and left the country. I related closely to the organisers of Mnet Face of Africa.”
    Osagie added: “I must confess, it is a tough work being a model. But when you get recognised, you make money faster because of your popularity and the new friends you acquire.
    “But just as you make the money, you spend it too. Models spend money on the vanities of life: clothes, accessories, perfumes, shoes and the good life. I know a model who was paid N1.5m and she spent it within four days. The first night, we were at a night club. We drank heavily. She changed her wardrobe and the money was gone.
    “But then, the following week, she cried to one of her admirers who had given her an SUV months earlier, and he gave her another half a million naira, which also kept her going for a few more days.”
    “Modeling is a mirage. The glamour life is always ahead of you and as a model, you keep going after it. The higher you go, the more of the glamour you want. It is showbiz, and showbiz is about make-believe. You keep chasing, if you find luck, then you are lucky. And if you don’t, then too bad!”
    On the issue of love, relationship and marriage, some models hinted on the mindset of models with regard to these issues. To Jennifer Chukwurah, “marriage is a blessed union between a man and a woman. It is a good thing. But I just hope that I get married when I find my soul mate.”
    Asked if she feels scared that modelling may not allow men to desire her for marriage, her reply was simply “I do not think so.”
    Miss Edo on her part had this to say: “Marriage is cool. I will model till I leave this earth. I so much love what I do and no man can stop me in the name of marriage. When the time is right, I will say ‘I do.’
    “Scared about a man not marrying me because of my profession? Hell no. I am not! If you can’t marry me because of my career, that’s good for you. Marriage is not a do-or-die affair.”
    Faith, an upcoming model, however believes that modelling has made some girls rich but “it’s just that most people feel that models are wayward. That doesn’t bother me because I know I am not wayward.”
    Designer Segun Adetunji did not mince words in his blunt reaction. According to him, “models live a one night stand. Most of the men they come across are rich but already married. They have their wives and probably their homes at the water fronts, and only need fanciful young ladies to share lustful passion with. And this they find easily with models.”
    With pockets of bias here and there about the profession, we asked Ubong Ekanem who runs a modelling agency if the Nigerian climate is really ripe for the profession, considering our culture, tradition and prejudice, and he said: “Models are real people. They have body, soul and spirit. They are creative people who do creative things that add value to the society; from product endorsements, TV adverts, print adverts, exhibitions and brand representation to a lot of other marketing communication solutions.
    “Models ensure that economics is in the works. The world is now a global village and everyone must represent his or her self under that paradigm. The more we begin to see models as creative people, the better for our immediate society.
    “My happiest moment working with models has been, when a total ‘Plain Jane’ graduates into a Cinderella. There is nothing like that moment when a girl you just found on the street is walking the ramp and making photography more picturesque. From being a green horn in the fashion plain, she gets groomed and becomes a supermodel. You see them do their thing and you say to yourself, ‘I made that happen.’ “
    Although harsh the path of models may be to the top, Osagie has a piece of advice: “The most successful models in Nigeria are those that were smart, made money and used it to face their education. Modelling is for a while. You may not be able to keep the beauty forever. So, you get the money, get education, do business. That way, your reputation stays on the rise and you can be made a brand ambassador.
    “Nike Oshinowo, for instance, is a brand ambassador. She was able to succeed in making a name and she invested in her image and education and then business. So, it is either you go to school or you enter into hard core business or you drift into prostitution.
    “Modelling business is that of razzmatazz. There is only one hope, and that is to go to school. Some of them work while going to school, but after they’ve laboured to become recognised models, they suddenly finish school and let the ambition die maybe because of the pursuit of other factors, such as emotional needs.
    “Only a few models who are real professionals get married. The profession caters little for models who are married, though it is not like married ones don’t or can’t survive. It depends on the model. She has to put in more effort and work every day on her beauty and physique. Models don’t get married because most of the time, it is all about business. There is little space for true love, which is ever demanding.
    “Models get to meet so many millionaires who are already married but need them to be mistresses with all the promises and benefits that money can command. Most often, in such situations, real love is on the back burner. It’s about need, desire and survival. Though I know of top models abroad who are married to movie stars or footballers and still keep a successful marriage.
    “Most models, however, have to choose between two options, that is the ‘FF option,’ which is to choose between fame or family. And in the showbiz world which modelling belongs, fame is usually more interestingly opted for than marriage.
    “In showbiz, it is either you show up yourself or you show off. One usually has to choose between the two.”
    Gift Osarobo, another model, admits that there is an ugly side to the profession of modelling. “For instance, I am told to come and do a photo shoot for a magazine and I get there only to realise that it’s a sex movie that they want to shoot. If I don’t want to do it, I tell them so. And if I want to do it, I just do it. It’s a matter of choice. They won’t force you to do what you don’t want to do. So, models should be able to ask questions a lot about the job before getting involved.
    “Then again, a lot of people in the industry are not truthful to the contracts they sign. They don’t keep to the rules. They tell a model, we’ll give you this, and they end up not doing so. Most of the time, the job has already been done. Personally, the job could be stressful when moving in traffic around the city. If I’m having a late night job, I get a place there to sleep or the management provides a way to take me home.
    “I know most models have a different idea of what modelling should be or do for them. The people I work with are lovely people. But is every management like that? No! And that could be because they face pressure. Working with different people means that you expect different kinds of things from them. A model has to take her stance on matters!”
    Ejiro on her part believes that “modelling could be frustrating because you get a call from a designer for a job and you get there and the designer says, ‘oh sorry, we actually needed somebody who is a little fair complexioned.’ That could be terrible because you wasted time, money and convenience. Sometimes, you are paid peanuts as far as I’m concerned. But then, this is the business.”
    Many models are also into night life and prostitution. But Gift Osarobo believes that “when it comes to prostitution, it is a matter of choice. But modelling is a job. They are two different things. If a model mixes up the two, it becomes a matter of choice. And it is always best for a model to be registered with a good agency. No agency will allow its model to go off with a man late at night after work. They stress professionalism.”
    Cases of models going out for modelling jobs only to be declared missing are also heard in the industry.
    “I’m so sorry about such a thing,” commented Gift. “But it still boils down to getting registered. Many go into modelling jobs without being registered.
    “Basically, undue publicity is a pain to models. Another thing is having to avoid foods and trying to shed fat and weight. It is also time consuming shooting and going to locations. Also, being asked to wear what ordinarily you would not want to wear, being asked to go nude or topless for a job, as well as other such job hazards.
    “The standard in Africa is, however, that you don’t go nude. As for me, I’ll want to be married someday, so I won’t want to do that. There’s also sexual harassment, though it is a general thing.”
    Just like Osagie, model and fashion designer Modella has a last word for models in Nigeria: “Models should have more than pretty faces. It is a business, so they must treat it so. The lifestyle of models I don’t like is that they get carried away with the glamour and glitz of show business, too many parties, too many good looking men and pretty faces, and much money! There are too many trips and no time for other things! It is a life of vanity.
    “So, models must plan a life outside the job. Good enough, the job opens doors”.
  • Furore over death of 44-year-old gambling business man allegedly killed by okada riders

    Furore over death of 44-year-old gambling business man allegedly killed by okada riders

    The dust raised by the death of a 44-year-old man in gambling business is   yet to settle five weeks after he was allegedly killed by some okada (commercial motorcycle) operators. Kunle Adewole a.k.a Computer, was allegedly beaten to death by okada riders in Ijaiye-Ojokoro, Lagos State.
    His wife and associates insist his killers were loyalists of a chieftain of the Motorcycle Operators Association of Lagos State (MOALS), one Comrade. But comrade has in turn accused one of his colleagues, one Muraina, of being responsible for Adewole’s death.
    As the story goes, Adewole, who had been conducting his business at the park of the motorcycle operators for some time, was said to have been approached on August 2 by a 16-year-old boy who ended up gambling with N8, 000. It was said that when the scale fell off the teenager’s eyes, he demanded for a refund of his money while the deceased reluctantly returned the sum of N2,000 to him.
    Not satisfied with the sum returned to him, the boy approached some okada riders in the park to intervene in the matter. The deceased was allegedly summoned by Comrade and was ordered to refund the N8,000 he had collected from the boy. When he would not comply, he was allegedly beaten by some of the okada riders on the orders of Comrade and locked up in one of the MOALS’ offices where he started vomiting uncontrollably.
    He was also said to have collapsed several times before he was taken to a nearby private hospital, which referred him to the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH) where he died on August 3.
    Adewole’s business partner, Gbenga Bankole, who witnessed the incident, explained that the deceased had complied with the okada riders’ directive and had returned the money he collected from the teenager before he was beaten to death.
    He said: “We were together at a corner of the park doing our business when a 16-year-old boy came to gamble with some money. Unfortunately for the boy, he staked the sum of N8,000 and lost. Then he started begging for a refund of his money and, out of compassion, the deceased, who was my senior partner, gave him N2,000, but he was not satisfied.
    “We later learnt that the boy had approached the top officials of the MOALS branch at the park. A few minutes later, Computer (Adewole) was summoned by Comrade and he went to see him. After a few hours, he returned with his clothe torn and looked rough. I asked him what happened and he told me that he was asked to refund the boy’s money and that he was beaten mercilessly.
    “He had barely finished speaking when he collapsed. After we had revived him, he said he wanted to visit the toilet. He had only taken a few steps when he fell down again. We rushed him to a nearby hospital where he was again revived.
    “From there, he was referred to LASUTH where doctors said he would need to undergo surgery because he had suffered internal bleeding as a result of the beating he received in the hands of his attackers. We were asked to raise the sum of N100, 000, but we were still running around to raise the money when he died.
    “The matter was reported at the Ojokoro Police Station and some of those who perpetrated the act were arrested but later released. The question is: why should Comrade order his men to beat the deceased when they are not law enforcement operatives? They took the law into their own hands and their action culminated in the death of my partner.”
    A source, who asked not to be named, described the incident as shocking, adding that he encouraged the deceased to honour the invitation by the leadership of the okada riders, not knowing that it was “a death warrant.”
    He said: “On that day, a teenager went to a stand where the deceased was carrying out his gambling business and he was said to have staked some money and lost. He allegedly asked for a refund of his money and the deceased told me he actually refunded the sum of N2,000 to him but he was not satisfied.
    “While the deceased was chatting with me, some members of the okada riders association at the park told him Comrade wanted to see him. He was initially afraid to honour the invitation and even sought my advice. I encouraged him to honour the invitation, and I left to attend to some other things.
    “A few minutes later, I learnt that the deceased had been brutally beaten and that he had vomited several times before he was rushed to a private hospital. He was later transferred to Ikeja General Hospital (LASUTH) where h died the following day.
    “One of the deceased’s partners called Shadrack reported the incident at the Ojokoro Police Station while he was being beaten at the park but police intervention proved insignificant.”
    Speaking with our correspondent, Adewole’s widow, Abosede, said: “My husband was an employee of the Nigerian Bottling Company (NBC). He was one of those temporarily relieved of their appointments recently, after which he took to private business.
    “On August 2, 2012, he left home for work and when he did not return on time, I decided to call some of his partners only to be confronted with the news that he was involved in an accident. I quickly rushed to the scene when he was about to be moved to Ikeja General Hospital.
    “There were a lot of people around, and I was told that he was beaten by some boys at the park. Doctors told us that he sustained internal injuries and that the sum of N100, 000 was needed to carry out a surgical operation on him. He, however, died before we could raise the money for his treatment.
    “But I became suspicious when the man alleged to have ordered his beating gave us some money while my husband was on hospital bed. His family said they would not press charges against his suspected killers because they do not have the money to file a law suit. He has just been recalled from work and he was due to resume duty before he was killed. He was nicknamed Computer because he was such an intelligent person.”
    Responding on the telephone, Comrade  denied any complicity in the matter.
    He said: “I don’t know who must have told you that I was responsible for the incident. If you must know, I was not around when the incident occurred, and I don’t have a hand in his death. I was told that some boys from an okada park under the control of one Muraina were the ones who allegedly chased the deceased to our park and ran back when some of my members rescued him.
    “The same Muraina has been spreading false information about my complicity in the death of Adewole and even wrote a petition to the Zone 2 Police Command, Lagos. I know that his motive is to implicate me so that he can seize the opportunity of my absence to take over my park.
    “I have just been released from detention after about five days in police cell. For your information, the matter was reported as a case of assault at the Ojokoro Police Station.”
    Asked why he gave the family of the deceased money during some visits he made to him in the hospital, he declined comments. “Why would you ask me such a question? I will not answer your question and I’ll suggest you ask those who gave you the information that I had a hand in Adewole’s death. Besides, I don’t talk to journalists on the phone. I’ll rather see you in person than engage you in phone conversation,” he said.
    In an interview with our correspondent, Muraina absolved himself of complicity in Adewole’s death, saying: “I don’t have anything to do with the incident at all. The story is being peddled by Comrade to implicate me because my presence and large followership unsettles him. I have stated my own side of the matter in my explanation to men of the Zone 2 Police Command.
    “The deceased couldn’t have been chased to the okada park under Comrade’s control. This is because the deceased had been operating from the park for some time and he was said to have carried out some transactions on the day he was allegedly killed by Comrade’s boys. And what actually compelled me to react was that Comrade, in a bid to exonerate himself, told family members of the deceased and other people in the community that my boys were the ones responsible for Adewole’s death.
    “My park is in Ajala area of Ojokoro Local Council Development Area while comrade’s park is the one at Ijaiye where the incident occurred.”
    The spokesperson of the Lagos State Police Command, Ms. Ngosi Braide, was yet to respond to enquiries by our correspondent at the time of filing this report.
  • Panic in Anambra community as landslide, erosion ruin 50 buildings

    Panic in Anambra community as landslide, erosion ruin 50 buildings

    •Residents flee in droves, send SOS to govt
    The inhabitants of Oko,  Local Government Area, Anambra State, are living in fear following a continuous landslide which has been ravaging a part of the community since February 18 this year. Already, many indigenes of the town whose houses have been ‘swallowed’ in the landslide have abandoned their ancestral homes to seek refuge elsewhere.
    When our reporter visited the area on Wednesday, many of the residents were busy moving out of the area for fear of being consumed in another landslide that may occur at any time. Some of them told our reporter that they needed to leave the community because it had experienced the ugly development about five times since it first occurred in February, adding that no fewer than 50 houses had been consumed already.
    The villagers, some of who embarked on a peaceful demonstration with placards bearing various inscriptions, appealed to the state and federal governments to come to their aid.  One of the victims, Ezeokeke Josiah, said he lost money and property worth more than N7.5 million to landslide, calling on the authorities to come to the community’s aid.
    The Chairman, Erosion Ecological Committee in the town, Mr. Barnabas Nwafor, described the situation as hopeless, saying there appeared to be no help in sight. He recalled that the first landslide which took place on February 18, 2012 had jolted everyone. He recalled that as at that time, residents of the area believed it was a one-off incident that would not occur again. But in six months, more than 800 metres of land had been consumed by landslide.
    He attributed the phenomenon to the washing away by erosion of a big water channel constructed by the Shehu Shagari administration, which resulted in heavy flooding of the gully in the area. Nwafor also blamed sand excavation around the local government for the gully erosion that has ravaged the community for a long time.
    He said: “We have written the government to send a task force to stop further excavation of sand, especially from the base around Amaokpala and Awgbu communities, but nothing has been done as sand excavators still operate between 11 pm and 4 am.”
    He noted that the most ravaged part of the community was his Ezioko village, which has tried to no avail to contain the menace by forming several groups whose mission was to stop further encroachment of erosion before the last landslide occurred.
    He said: “Every last Saturday of the month, the group plants trees along the erosion areas. Every family has been mandated to dig catchment pits around their compounds to trap rain water (flood). When we noticed that the water channel was being cut off by erosion, we bought about 200 bags of cement to salvage it. But our efforts yielded little or no result as the water channel was eventually cut off. Since then, the landslide has been occurring.”
    He lamented that apart from the now cut off water channel constructed by the Shagari/Ekwueme regime, no other government has tried to contain the erosion menace, adding that even when the first landslide occurred, there was no government presence apart from the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) which brought in some relief materials like blankets, bags of rice and beans, among others.
    He, therefore, appealed to the governments to come to the community’s aid. “What we want the government to do now is just a palliative measure to stop the flood from entering the gully by channelling it elsewhere. After the first landslide, the state government came and made promises of awarding the contract. But up till now, nothing has been seen,” he said.
    Nwafor recalled also that the member representing the area in the House of Representatives, Hon. Ben Nwankwo, who visited after the first landslide, expressed sympathy and promised to take it up on the floors of the House, but nothing had been heard from him.
    “We have no option but to turn to the media to, at least, make our plights known to the world, especially the Federal Government and the World Bank. We feel the menace is beyond the state government, though the state can still do something to prevent further encroachment,” he stated.
    Another leader in the village, Hon. Martin Ezeofor, said his prayer was for the government to come to their aid. Ezeofor added: “As things stand, our houses have been swallowed by landslide. We are sending a save-our-soul signal to the government. We have been turned into refugees in our land. Some of my kids have stopped schooling.”
    He commended NEMA for the relief materials it gave to landslide victims in February. But he said that such materials were not really needed, adding that what the community needed most was the control of the flood that has caused them pains.
    In his own contribution, the secretary of the village and member of the community’s Erosion Vanguard Committee, Paulinus Ezenwizube, said: “I want to appeal to the Federal Government via the state government to come to our rescue. The inhabitants of this area have become refugees in their ancestral homes. Erosion has overtaken their residence. About 50 buildings have been consumed by both erosion and landslide and many more are endangered.
    “Many people have come here in the past promising that the situation would be controlled in no distant time, but nothing has been done. We are appealing through this medium for government’s intervention. We need positive action from the government.
    “The village has tried on its own. Even our brothers overseas have sent in some money for more catchment pits around the area. The Federal Government should intervene. The menace is beyond the ability of the community and the state government.”
    It will be recalled that the traditional ruler of Oko, Prof. Laz Ekwueme, while calling for assistance from the Federal Government and the World Bank after the first landslide in February, warned that if nothing was done before the rainy season, the problem would get worse.
    He had also disclosed that the contract for the control of the erosion that probably triggered the landslide had been awarded for a long time but was abandoned for no known reasons. He decried a situation where government played politics with such an important project that affects the lives of the people directly.
    He had warned that if the menace was not checked before the rainy season, many buildings would be eroded, including his ancestral home, because the abandoned drainage project that had been checking the erosion had been cut off by the landslide. The monarch’s palace sits only a few metres away from the site of the landslide.
     In a related development, the Federal Polytechnic Oko, Anambra State, called for the intervention of the Federal Government to tackle the menace of erosion, which it said was threatening to wash away its extension site. The Rector, Prof. Godwin Onu, who made the appeal when Hon. Ben Nwankwo, who represents the area in the House of Representatives undertook a tour of the area, said the polytechnic did not have the wherewithal to tackle the menace.
    He said the menace of erosion, which was rocking the host community, was gradually ravaging the extension site of the polytechnic. He called for government’s assistance in tackling it. Nwankwo said he would raise the issue at the House of Representatives. He commended the Rector for the judicious use of resources and his ingenuity in turning the polytechnic around.