Category: Review

  • How to make your prayers effective

    How to make your prayers effective

    Title: Make Your Work A Prayer
    Author: Olusola Adeyegbe
    Publisher: Lulu.com
    Reviewer: Raymond Mordi
    Pagination: 54

    If there is any voluntary activity that Nigerians are preoccupied with daily, it is prayer. Everyone across the various religious spectrums believes he knows how to pray and spends a considerable part of his daily life praying. However, a new pocketbook by Olusola Adeyegbe, “Make Your Work A Prayer: Spiritualise the Work of Your Hands,” asserts that the notions and forms of prayer held by many, which often centre around personal desires, are wrong.

    The book offers a unique insight into what true and effective prayer is and how one may and should set about it with the certainty of it being granted. The author admonishes the reader to approach the book with an open heart, “ready to learn and grow” because it offers a different perspective of prayer. “One that views prayer as the expression of what truly moves us, reflected through our actions. It is not about imposing our desires on the Almighty but rather aligning our thoughts, words and deeds with Divine wisdom,” he adds in the book’s introductory part.

    According to the author, prayer must not be a ritual or obligation to satisfy societal convention. He says if one must pray, it should be deeply felt within to carry the necessary fervour to link it with the streams of Light from above from where help could be attracted. Otherwise, man should ideally pray with the totality of his being in thoughts, words and deeds through his daily activities. The author states: “In his performance, every task should become a reverential worship of God, in gratitude that God has given you the chance to accomplish something extraordinary among all the creatures of this Subsequent Creation, of only you so wish.”

    The subtle idea recurring in the book is that humans are born equipped to tap into the Creator’s storehouse of plenty and be successful and happy if they understand how to pray aright. The book is inspired by thework, In the Light of Truth: The Grail Message” by Abdruschin. A quotation from The Grail Message encapsulates the essence of prayer.

    It reads: “If you begin your day with truly heartfelt gratitude to God, and if you also finish it with equally heartfelt gratitude — be it only gratitude for the lesson you have learned on this day through experiencing — you will live well! Through diligence and care, let everything you do arise as a prayer of gratitude! Let each word you speak reflect the love which God grants you! Then life on this earth will soon become a joy for everyone who is allowed to live upon it.”

    Read Also: Rivers: The many uses of an emergency

    Make Your Work A Prayer is a book of seven chapters in just 54 pages. In Chapter 1, titled “First Recognize God”, the author explains the nature of God, as far as man can perceive Him, through His laws that govern the entire universe and how the interplay of these laws and man’s conduct shapes his fate. Chapter 2, with the title “What Does it Mean to Pray?” deals with the concept of prayer and it is based on the author’s grasp of the Grail Message.

    For instance, Adeyegbe states on page 6: “Coming before the Lord Almighty in prayer requires a humble spirit and pure thoughts. To approach His Sublimity, one must do so with reverence, casting aside distractions, and entering a state of quietness and purity. As expressed in the Grail Message, true prayer calls for a quiet, and pure inward sensing, which is far more potent than thousands of spoken words. This inner perception, filled with sincerity and devoid of hypocrisy, is what shapes a prayer that reaches the Luminous Heights.

    “In moments of joy or distress, a single, heartfelt intuitive perception – even if it lasts only a fraction of a second – holds far more power than prolonged spoken prayers. Such deep, genuine prayers ascend to realms where help can be found. When a prayer is pure and free of selfish motives, it attracts the fulfilment that is most beneficial, leading to true advancement of the individual’s entire being.”

    In Chapter 3, the author states some things to avoid in prayer. For instance, he states: “Prayer should never be a mere routine or obligation. If you do not feel an inner urge to pray, then it is best not to force it. Prayer that does not resonate deeply within your heart and soul holds no real value and will have no effect. Genuine prayer must arise from an authentic, inner impulse; otherwise, it becomes empty words.”

    The author also admonishes against the habit of reciting prayers at set times hurriedly and mechanically. He states: “This approach misuses God’s Name and borders on blasphemy. Formulated prayers, especially when they are lengthy, often become mere recitations without any genuine inner response. Such actions are an affront to the Holiness and Greatness of God. As stated in Matthew 6:7-8, “And when you pray, do not heap up empty phrases as the Gentiles do, for they think that they will be heard for their many words. Do not be like them, for your Father knows what you need before you ask Him.”

    In Chapter 4, “How Prayer Works in the Life of Man on Earth”, Adeyegbe explores how prayer interacts with the basic Laws of Creation in shaping the life of man. For instance, he states on page 19: “Just like seeds planted in fertile soil, prayers that are positive and pure will yield a harvest. When you ‘sow’ a prayer in this way, you may reap calmness, strength, healing, sudden insights or solutions to seemingly impossible problems. Something good will always emerge, whether it is an increased sense of composure or balance of mind. This newfound inner peace often paves the way for a solution or an escape from the difficulty you face.

    “Moreover, prayers sent out into the world can, through the Law of Attraction, find their way to others who might provide the help needed to fulfil the prayer. In this way, prayers act as bridges, connecting the person who prays with the right people, circumstances or possibilities that will bring about the desired outcome.”

    Chapter 5 centres on the promise of the Son of Man who will come for the judgment and the greatest prayer of intercession ever spoken by the Son of God, Jesus of Nazareth: “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do!” Adeyegbe states on page 26: “Before His agonising crucifixion, Jesus addressed an intercessory prayer to His Father, requesting the sending of the Spirit of Truth. The Spirit of Truth would proclaim the Word of Truth once more to the faithless, providing salvation to those still willing to listen. In the Garden of Gethsemane, Jesus prayed fervently for His followers, ‘Father, I pray for them: let them not be lost! Sustain them in Thy Truth, in Thy Word, and in Thy Light until the day when the Son of Man will come for the Judgment. Then I will entrust them to Him, that they may serve Him too…’.”

    Chapters 6 and 7 are devoted to “The Teachings of Christ and Other Spiritual Teachers on Prayer” and “How Can We Spiritualise the Work of Our Hands”.

    The pocketbook has a visually appealing cover design. Each chapter is well illustrated with a relevant photo on the opening page. Written in simple, everyday English that will appeal to the various categories of readers, Make Your Work a Prayer is an easy book to read. The author uses practical illustrations and analogies from everyday life to drive home his points. Though he drew his knowledge mainly from the Grail Message, he also used relevant quotations from other spiritual teachers, particularly the Son of God, Jesus Christ, to validate his assertions.

    The book, which rolled out of the press in the last quarter of 2024, challenges the prevailing societal notions about prayer. It is recommended for those open to learning in their spiritual journey. It can be described as a beautiful Christmas present from Adeyegbe, a lawyer.

  • A peep into minister’s stewardship

    A peep into minister’s stewardship

    Title: Alake on rescue mission

    Reviewer: Reviewer: Tunde Rahman

    Pagination: 46

    Alake on Rescue Mission is much more than a photo book of activities, events and work of the Minister of Solid Minerals Development, Dr. Oladele Henry Alake, in one year in office. It’s a serious-minded and exciting piece of writing on the minister’s stewardship.

    If you see it as the official book on the Minister’s achievements in one year in office, you will hit the nail on the head. Appointed on August 15, 2023, Dr. Alake has spent around 14 months as Minister of Solid Minerals, meaning one year has actually passed on his watch of the ministry.

    The book’s release was also planned to coincide with the minister’s 68th birthday on Sunday, October 6. However, the organisers of this book launch missed this date by a few days. Perhaps this was deliberate.

    Because the book is on Alake’s stewardship, hard as one may try, it will be difficult to separate its contents from Alake’s scorecards. Both are mutually inclusive and as such, a review of the book also means an evaluation of the minister’s one year in office.

    The 46-page book, which includes 24 articles, 34 pictures, and two appendixes, gives an account of all that has happened under Alake’s watch of the ministry. It presents a holistic idea of the changes that have been brought to bear on the mining sector in just one year.

    Read Also: Sanwo-Olu, Anyaoku, religious leaders hail Iwuanyanwu’s legacy 

    In the first article, written by Mr. Kehinde Bamigbetan, the minister’s special adviser, we were taken through Dr Alake’s seven-point agenda for the ministry. Fashioning out a seven-point agenda within the Solid Mineral Development component of President Bola Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda underscored the seriousness with which Minister Alake had approached his assignment.

    Many of us here recall the shock and trepidation that greeted the appointment of Dr. Alake, a media and communication expert and brilliant strategist, as Minister of Solid Mineral Development on August 15, 2023. Naysayers had predicted that Alake would find it difficult to find his feet in the technical field of mining, where geologists and mining engineers hold sway.

    Indeed, the strategic importance of the mining sector to the country can hardly be over-emphasized.

    According to official data, Nigeria is said to be endowed with over 40 types of minerals including gold, silica, lead, marble, tin ore, zinc, coal, iron ore, granite, laterite, manganese and limestone.

    Nigeria sits on mining reserves worth $750billion following a preliminary report on assessment of the mining potentials by a German firm, GeoScan.

    But the sector remains under developed, accounting for only 0.3% of Nigeria’s GDP.

    So given the mining sector’s strategic place in the nation’s development goals and its potential to be a significant revenue earner for the country, President Tinubu might have decided to put in charge of the sector a trusted ally, a patriot,and an incorruptible man who he knew would make the difference.

    Bamigbetan writes that Alake’s forte is strategy. It can be argued, and rightly, too, that one can conquer any ground with planning and strategy. Has Minister Alake mastered and conquered the mining sector? I will soon return to this vital question.

    In the following three articles in the book, namely Working with Dr. Dele Alake, Celebrating Dr. Henry Oladele Alake, and Driving us to Aim Higher, three top public officers working with Dr. Alake, including the Permanent Secretary in the ministry, Dr. Mary Ogbe; Director-General, Mining Cadastral Office, an agency under the ministry, Engineer Simon Nkom; and the Head of Solid Minerals Development Fund respectively narrated their experience working with the minister, while also highlighting their roles and responsibilities within the ministry.

     The trio seemed to be unanimous in their verdict. Permit me, however, to quote the Perm Sec: “Dr Alake’s unwavering dedication to Nigeria and excellence is something that we all strive to emulate as we work together to realise the full potential of our nation’s solid mineral sector.” 

    Writing on the topic Dele Alake and the Power of Positive Influence, Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, Temitope Ajayi, in his contribution to the book, harped on the close relationship between President Tinubu and Dr. Alake. He surmised that “for many aides, associates, cabinet colleagues and friends of the President who have suggestions and advice for the President and cannot immediately reach him, Dr Alake is the go-to, knowing he has the ears of the President and will never shy from offering sound advice to him.”

    It is noteworthy to mention a couple of other articles like the Investment Report, which gives an update on the situation with respect to foreign investment within the mining sector.  There is also a plethora of other articles, spotlighting the media and its relationship with the ministry like Alake in the Eyes of the Media, Broadcasting Mining and Boosting Mining with Digital Media among others.

    What they all signpost is a good relationship with the ministry and a promise of more support.

    Perhaps, a more interesting and instructive feature of the book is the addition of two articles written in those dark days of the military by Alake in his columns in the defunct National Concord. In “Civility in Public Appointments published on November 23, 1987 and Needed, a Cautious Economic Policy, penned on March 13, 1989, the readers confront the firebrand and irrepressible activist who spared no word in condemning military regimes and their policies. If hitherto, many of those gathered here witnessed the sharp tongue of Mr. Alake against political opponents particularly during the campaign for the election of President Tinubu, now they would encounter his sharp pen as well.

    In all, the leading article, bearing the title of the book Alake on Rescue Mission gives us a helicopter view of Dr. Alake’s watch in the ministry and impact in one year, and thus offers us room for interrogation.

    The minister drew up a seven-point agenda. The first component, and perhaps the most important of the 7-point agenda, is the formation of the Nigerian Solid Minerals Corporation (NSMC). Realizing that attracting big investors is a major challenge of the sector, Bamigbetan tells readers that the NSMC “is the face of the Nigerian Mining Sector in the global business space, the go-to company for transactions and the deals to deepen the capital formation that will keep investors coming.”

     The book reveals that the minister had sought to avoid the pitfalls of the defunct Nigerian Mining Corporation in coming up with the structure by comparing the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation with the Nigerian Liquefied Natural Gas, NLNG, company. Bamigbetan writes that “Leaning towards the latter, the minister is proposing a NSMC with 25 percent shares held by the Federal Government of Nigeria, 25 percent by Nigerians through a public offer, and 50 percent by private corporate placement with the condition that no private placement exceeds 10 percent.”

    It is important to note, however, that more than one year down the line, the NSMC is still in the works.

     The question can be asked also as to whether foreign investments have rolled in into the mining sector. Following the Investment Report on Pages 11 to 14, there is cheering news. Under Alake’s watch,Nigeria has seen a steady rise in companies establishing mineral processing plants in the country. For example, in April 2024, the minister attended the commissioning of the Asba Group’s lithium processing plants, which is said to worth $50m and in a follow-up letter to the minister, further investments in a tin/tantalite processing plant worth $146m and a Tin/Columbite processing plant in Bauchi State worth $67m are underway to bring the group’s investment to approximately $263m.

     There is also the $5m, which is already in Nigeria Lithium pegmatite belt of Kwara, Niger and FCT Abuja, by Canada-based Orosur Mining through its UK subsidiary Lithium West Limited as well as the commitment of Woodcross Resources to establish a tin refinery in the country, which will be the first of its kind.

     However, it does appear that some of the factors that will attract investors to the sector may not be solely within the realm of the ministry. The government’s fiscal policies, business environment and economic situation in the country must mesh with the arrangements put in place by the ministry to attract more genuine investors.

     With respect to the second component of the agenda, the countrywide geological exploration of key minerals, to de-risk the investment and ensure the government acquires the precise geological data, the ministry had proposed N70 billion to the National Assembly in its budget. This important project is still being hampered by funds. As we say in this country, Nigeria may have happened to the ministry.

     The minister has, however, recorded remarkable success in the area of the establishment of the Mining Marshals and introduction of satellite technology to monitor mining operations among others. On March 20, Alake inaugurated the Mining Marshals, drawn from the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps, in conjunction with the Ministry of Interior. With 60 officers per unit per the Federal Capital Territory and each of the 36 federation states, the Mining Marshals took off with 2,220 units. About a month later, the NSCDC boosted the Marshals with 350 additional 350 officers.

     Given his commitment towards the resurgence and full development of the mining sector in Nigeria and Africa, Alake was also elected as the pioneer Chairman of the African Minerals Strategy Group, whose formation he spearheaded. Alake’s appointment to lead the group is a testament to his excellent leadership in the sector.

     Putting the book Alake on Rescue Mission together, in the final analysis, is commendable. The book will be an invaluable resource for students, scholars, administrators, miners, and investors seeking knowledge and information about the ministry, its activities, and its offerings.

    The content is rich, while the quality is high. Save for some identifiable typos, each article is a piece of good, clear, well-structured and easy-to-read writing. Its high aesthetic quality is also typical of the man the book is arranged to honour.

    The jury is out on the minister’s performance in office. But has Minister Alake discharged himself creditably thus far? I think so. Alake has lived up to the billing. He has worked the path trodden by seasoned journalists like Dr. Nnamdi Azikwe, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, Chief Bisi Onabanjo and Alhaji Lateef Jakande, all of blessed memory and, of course, Dr. Christopher Kolade and our own Aremo Olusegun Osoba who all made the difference in public office. Looking at my crystal eyeball, even at 68, the future is still ahead of Dr. Alake.

    On this note, I would also like to wish him many more years and robust health so he can continue offering our country more valuable services.

  • Guide to public affairs reporting

    Guide to public affairs reporting

    Title: The essentials of public affairs reporting

    Authors: Hassan Biodun Suleiman and Mukaila Olabamiji Sanusi

    Reviewer: Mohammed Shosanya

    Pages: 96

    Publishers: LASU Press

    The essentials of Public Affairs Reporting by Hassan Biodun Suleiman, PhD and Mukaila Olabamiji Sanusi, is an insightful guide aimed at equipping journalists with necessary skills and knowledge to effectively cover public affairs. This review covers the book’s key elements, structure and contributions to the field of journalism.

    The book provides a detailed exploration of Public Affairs reporting, focusing on the critical aspects of covering government activities, political events and public policies. It emphasises the importance of accuracy, objectivity and ethical considerations in reporting. Suleiman and Sanusi draw on their extensive experience in academics and journalism to present a guide that is both informative and practical.

    The book also explores the dynamic interplay between media and government, highlighting the journalist’s role in promoting transparency and informed masses.

    Endorsed by Rotimi Williams Olatunji, a professor at Lagos State University, the book is recommended as essential reading for students in C ommunication and Media Studies Programme. This endorsement, along with the authors’ extensive experience, adds credibility to the book’s content and its potential impact on journalism education in Nigeria and beyond.

    Read Also: Nigeria’s money-making practices

    In summary, it is a well-rounded guide that combines theoretical insights with practical advice. It focuses on ethics, detailed examination of Public Affairs and the importance of a journalist’s role in democracy. This makes it a must read for journalism students and professionals, dedicated to enhancing their craft while contributing to an informed society.

    The book is structured into seven chapters, each focusing on different aspects essential for public affairs reporting. The first chapter, ‘Public Affairs’, provides an overview of the field, explaining the importance and scope of public affairs journalism. It highlights the role of journalists in informing the public about government activities, policies and issues affecting the community. The second chapter, ‘Nature and Scope of Public Affairs Reporting’, includes coverage of local, state and federal government activities, legislative processes, elections, political parties and policy decisions.

    Meanwhile the third chapter, ‘Sources of Public Affairs Reporting’, delves into the methods of sourcing and researching information for public affairs stories. It covers techniques for gathering reliable data, conducting interviews and verifying facts. The fourth chapter, ‘Media and Promotion of Government Policies’, explains how the media serves as a crucial channel for disseminating information about government policies to the public by providing comprehensive coverage of policy announcements, objectives and potential impacts.

    The fifth chapter, ‘Ethical Considerations In Public Affairs Reporting’, highlights the importance of maintaining impartiality and objectivity. Journalists must present information without bias, providing balanced perspectives and avoiding favouritism or undue influence from political or corporate interests. This chapter expatiates more on transparency and accountability as well as how transparency in the reporting process is crucial for building trust with the audience.

    The authors advocate for journalists to be clear about their sources and methodologies, explaining how information was obtained and why certain editorial decisions were made. However the sixth chapter ‘Public Affairs and National Interest’ delves into how public affairs reporting can enhance public awareness through comprehensive and accurate reporting.

    It also states how the community can be actively engaged through outreach programs, investigative reporting on local concerns and initiatives that fosters a deeper understanding of the issues affecting the public mood. By incorporating these practices into their work, journalists can demonstrate a genuine respect for the mood of the public, fostering trust and transparency in their reporting and contributing to a more informed and engaged society. However the seventh chapter, ‘Freedom Of Information Act (2011)’ the Act which was signed into law by former President Goodluck Jonathan in May 2011 is designed to make public information freely available,  ensuring transparency and accountability in government and public institutions. The book outlines a clear procedure of making information requests, including written applications.

    The book is characterised by clear, concise language that is accessible to both beginners and experienced journalists. The authors used precise diction appropriate for academic and professional contexts which enhances the books readability. The logical structure, with well organised chapters and practical examples aids in comprehending complex concepts. This blend of straightforward language and practical application makes the book highly readable and useful for mastering public affairs reporting.

  • Public hospitals evict patients in Niger over unpaid bills

    Public hospitals evict patients in Niger over unpaid bills

    Patients, especially pregnant women and people in need of urgent operation at the Minna General Hospital, particularly the extension, Jumai Babangida Aliyu Maternal Hospital, are now being referred to private hospitals as the Abuja Electricity Distribution Company (AEDC) disconnects government owned hospitals, ministries, departments and agencies from public grid the eighth day running.

    The disconnection exercise makes it the third time the AEDC would disconnect government hospitals and offices in 2022.

    The disconnection was done on account of the inability of the state government to keep its part of the agreement reached towards the payment its outstanding debts. AEDC had first disconnected government facilities on the 20th of April before it was disconnected for the second time on the 26th of August this year.

    The government facilities affected include general hospitals, IBB Specialist Hospital, the state’s water works, Niger State Government House, the state House of Assembly, the state secretariat, the Office of the Secretary to the State Government, all the state ministries that are not domiciled in the state secretariat, the SDG offices and other Agencies and Departments of the state government.

    Officials of the AEDC were seen with ladders going around the aforementioned offices to cut electricity cables. AEDC claimed that the government had failed to keep up with an agreement reached that it should pay its outstanding debts worth over N1.8 billion before the electricity was reconnected in August.

    For the patients at Minna General Hospital, it has not been a painful experience as they have had to stay without electricity or water while pregnant women who are slated to give birth via caesarean section are being referred to private hospitals to give birth as there is no electricity to power the equipment in the theatre for such operation.

    The patients inside the emergency ward were in pains when The Nation visited the hospital. Several of them had their family members blowing them with hand fans to cool the heat as the fans were not working and the weather was very hot.

    The Jumai Babangida Aliyu maternal hospital is an extension of the Minna General Hospital meant for pregnant women and was one time termed to be one of the best neonatal hospitals in the north.

    The Nation learnt that the management of the hospital rarely switches on the generator, and if it is switched on, it is usually between 10 am and 2 pm, and once it is off, it would not be switched on again even if there was any emergency. This is the reason why several of the women who require caesarean sections are referred to private hospitals, but most often, the referral comes very late.

    One of the pregnant women referred to a private hospital, Hajara Musa, said she lost her baby because of the delay in being taken to the private hospital where she was referred to.

    She said: “They were supposed to carry out a CS on me but there was no electricity. I was referred to a private hospital, but when I got there, they examined me and said that the baby was no more alive in my stomach. I lost my baby and it is so sad that the baby died just when I was about to deliver her.

    “The reason why I was referred was because there was no light (electricity, and since it was CS, there was no way they could work without electricity. But the delay made me to lose my baby.”

    A relative of another victim, Hussain Jamilu, said that his twin sister also lost her baby due to a referral. He said his sister was slated for operations but the operations could not be carried out at the Jumai Babangida Aliyu neonatal hospital because there was no electricity.

    “My twin sister has been in that facility for almost three months and on Thursday, they took the final decision to operate on her and remove the baby due to some complications. But to my greatest surprise, they could not carry out the operations due to lack of electricity, which has affected all the activities in that hospital.

    “Worst of all, there is no security in the facility. Anyone can walk into the hospital in the night and can easily commit any atrocity. My sister was later referred to another hospital for quick attention.

    “We were charged outrageously and we later lost the baby because she had suffered a lot before considering operations.”

    A parent whose son was admitted in the children’s ward of the general hospital told the reporter that he had counted about five children who died since the hospital’s electricity was disconnected by the AEDC.

    Apart from patients being referred, several of the relatives of patients admitted into the general hospital have to go into the Kateren Gwari and Kwangila neighbourhood where the general hospital is located to get water for the patients as the hospital’s taps are longer running because the Niger State Water Board, which supplies water to the hospital, is one of the agencies whose electricity has been cut off, hence no water supply.

    “It has not been easy for us because we have to go outside the hospital premises to get water. Water has not been rushing since the electricity was disconnected.

    “We plead with the government to settle with AEDC so that there would be light in the hospital or AEDC should look at the plight of the patients and consider reconnecting even if it is just the hospital,” Ahmed Mariga said.

    Several of the patients who spoke with The Nation said that since the hospital’s electricity was disconnected, life has not been the same as several of them do not have the resources to move into private hospitals because they are expensive.

    The patients are also unable to use the toilets which have been messed up due to non-availability of water to flush the toilets after use. Patients have to go outside the hospital to use the toilets of residents around the hospital while others spend between N20 to N30 to ease themselves or excrete in a public toilet close to the hospital.

    Calls made by our correspondent to the Managing Director of Jumai Babangida Aliyu Maternal and Newborn Hospital, Dr Magaji Aminu, went unanswered as he asked the reporter to send a text. However, the text messages sent to his phone had not been replied to at the time of filing this report.

    Some workers at the hospital, who spoke to The Nation on the basis of anonymity, said the reason given by the management for not switching on the generator was lack of funds to buy diesel, especially as the price of diesel has gone very high.

    As for water supply, for the past eight days, reticulated residents across Minna have not been able to get water because the disconnection also affected the Niger State water board.

    Read Also: DisCo disconnects Niger Govt House, hospitals over N1.3bn debt

    Several residents who spoke to The Nation in Tunga, Chanchanga and Mobil area of Minna said that they were not feeling the unsavoury impact of non-availability of water much because the rains were still falling and some of the wells still had water.

    However, for drinking water, several of them have resorted to buying sachet water popularly called ‘pure water’ which is now sold at N170 per bag while others buy water at boreholes close to them.

    The Public Relations Officer of the Niger State Water and Sewage Corporation, Zainab Yunusa, said the disconnection has affected the production of water and had made them unable to supply water to people.

    According to her, if the corporation would use diesel to pump water for the people, it would need about N1 million daily, which she said was not currently available.

    “However, we operate for two to three hours on Saturdays and this costs us about N300,000 on diesel to lift water for the private tankers because the corporation does not have any tanker as all its tankers are grounded.

    “So we spent N300,000 for two hours production. That is how this disconnection of electricity is affecting us.”

    Yunusa disclosed that the corporation tried to look for means of supplying water to the general hospital, IBB Specialist Hospital and the Jumai Babangida Aliyu Maternal and Newborn Hospital as they were updated on the difficulty faced by the patients with regards to water. But she said their hands were tied because it is not their responsibility.

    “We are looking at how we can get these trucks to supply water to the hospitals. We have heard of the difficulties they are facing and we are looking at how we can help in reducing such suffering. If we can do it, we will do it,” she said.

    The Public Relations Officer of AEDC Niger Region, Mohammed Adamu, had disclosed that the state government owed N1.8 billion as electricity debts, adding that the disconnection was a directive from the headquarters as a letter was sent to the government before disconnection.

    He said: “N1.8 billion is owed to AEDC by the Niger State Government over eight years since the former administration was in power.

    “The Governor Mu’azu Babangida Aliyu administration left a debt of N350 million while additional debt was accrued by this administration.”

    In the notice sent to the government before the disconnection in August, the AEDC had said that the government had agreed that they would pay the debt bit by bit so that the state would be able to get electricity supply the way they are supposed to.

    “On the 25th of August, we carried out our disconnection duty to remove all the state government facilities except the Niger State House of Assembly until government does the needful and pays us our money,” the notice had stated.

    On August 30, the state government stated that it had paid N274 million out of its N1.3 billion electricity debt to the Abuja Electricity Distribution Company (AEDC).

    The AEDC Niger Regional Manager, Alhaji Mahmud Ndadama, said that the state government had agreed to pay N100 million monthly to settle its debt.

    “We have collected the sum of N200 million outstanding debts of N1.3 billion unpaid bills that accumulated before now and N74 monthly current bill for August.”

    Calls made to the phone of the Secretary to the Niger State Government Alhaji Ahmed Matane and the Commissioner for Health Dr Muhammad Makunsidi went unanswered.

    However, in a meeting with the officials of the Abuja Electricity Distribution Company (AEDC) during the week, the Niger State Government declared said that it will no longer tolerate the conduct of the AEDC in disconnecting the power supply of its critical infrastructure as the government has made over N13 billion investment in the power sector across the state which should have been considered by the AEDC.

    The State Deputy Governor and Chairman of the Constant Power Supply Committee in the state, Alhaji Ahmed Mohammed Ketso made this declaration during an emergency meeting with the management of AEDC as he described the conduct of AEDC in disconnecting critical infrastructure of the state as unacceptable adding that the AEDC was taking the magnanimity of the government for granted and the government would be forced to show its other side.

    Reacting to the sufferings faced by patients in the hospitals across the state due to lack of electricity, the Deputy Governor said that even in a war suituation, facilities such as Health and water are usually spared.

    He lamented that the AEDC action was tantamount to inciting the public against the government saying that government has made a commitment to pay its current charge each month and N100 million monthly to gradually offset the legacy debt the government was owing the AEDC.

    The Deputy Governor observed that the delay in the commencement of payment of the legacy debt does not mean that the government will not pay while giving the assurances of the state government that its ministry of finance was working on a template on how to clear the legacy debt.

    Reacting to this, the AEDC Minna Regional Manager, Mahmud Keni Ndadama apologized to the state government saying they were acting on the directive of their headquarters.

    After the meeting, the general hospital alongside IBB Specialist Hospital was reconnected while the other government MDAs have not been reconnected.

  • Expectations as Aladesuyi is crowned Onijan Ekiti

    Expectations as Aladesuyi is crowned Onijan Ekiti

    Ijan Ekiti, an ancient town in Ekiti State is set to open a new chapter as a senior Manager at the Cambridge University Press, Prince Oyebanji Lawrence Aladesuyi, ascends the Onijan throne, reports Assistant Editor, ‘Dare Odufowokan.

    Exactly a year ago, it was sunset, albeit unexpectedly, in Ijan Ekiti, Gbonyin Local Government of Ekiti State, when the community’s traditional ruler, Oba Samuel Oyewole Fadahunsi, bid the world a goodbye. Since then, the atmosphere in the slippery town has been quite and lull because of the vacuum created by the exit of the monarch.  Few weeks ago, excitement suddenly rent the air following the news that another another illustrious son of the town, Prince Oyebanji Lawrence Aladesuyi, has been chosen as the next Onijan. Conveying the state government’s approval for the appointment of the new king, the Executive Governor of the state, Dr. John Kayode Fayemi, in a letter addressed to the Onijan-in-Council said “I wish to inform you that the Ekiti state Executive Council has approved the appointment of Prince Adebanji Lawrence Aladesuyi as the new Onijan of Ijan-Ekiti.’’

    A son of the soil, Bukola Ajayi, captured the mood when she spoke to our correspondent. “I think God loves Ijan Ekiti and He doesn’t want us to remain without a leader that would give us direction for a long time. Beyond the timeliness of the selection, we are equally happy and excited that the person coming in is one of our best. Prince Aladesuyi is not only a good man for the job, he’s an intellectual and a progressive-minded individual that stands a better chance of taking our community to another level. Since September last year, all the sons and daughters of Ijan have been on the lookout for the lucky Prince who will wear the crown. To this end, all eyes were on the kingmakers and various royal houses, whose responsibility it was to give the community the best of the Princes that will fit the exalted royal stool,’’

    The last occupier of the stool, Late Oba Fadahunsi, a culture enthusiast came from the United States of America to ascend the throne on September 22, 2002 and ruled for 19 years before his death at age 70. His tenure was a mixed bag of blessings to the community.

    Like other towns in Ekiti, for their new king, the Ijan Ekiti people were not only looking for just an educated King but an acceptable leader with track records that would appeal to all. Though subtle, the race was competitive amongst the princes from the different ruling houses, who all paraded robust profiles, laced with impressive experience in private and public service. According to Kayode Oluwadare, a youth leader from the town, the attributes and quality of Obas in many Ekiti towns, has spurred other communities waiting to select their kings to always look far and further for the best. “With this background, everybody can now understand why Ijan Ekiti has suddenly worn a new look with the emergence of Prince Aladesuyi Adebanji Lawrence, one of our shining stars, as the next Onijan. With him as our king, we are not in doubt that Ijan Ekiti will assume a new height,” Oluwadare said.

    Prince Aladesuyi was said to be the 1st, male child of Omo-Oba Aladesuyi Joel (former Olori Odo of Ijan-Ekiti). According to available record sighted by this reporter, Aladesuyi Joel is a direct son of Alabi Fagbamigbe, while Alabi Fagbamigbe is the son of Fatube, a direct son of Ayelugbehin the father of Olajiga, Tinuade and Fatube. Ayelugbehin is a direct son of Oba Afayagbekun. A man of many roles and accolades, the new Onijan of Ijan-Ekiti, HRM Aladesuyi is currently the Country Manager with Cambridge University Press. An astute strategist and lover of community development, he has been at the forefront, in conjunction with other prominent Ijan sons and daughters, especially his late brother, Engr. James Yemi Aladesuyi, to pursue developments in Ogbon-Omo and Ijan-Ekiti as a whole.

    The new royal father graduated from the University of Lagos in 1983 with Bachelor of Science degree in Pharmacology and followed it later from the same University with a Postgraduate Diploma in Mass Communication. In 2001, Prince Aladesuyi was back on campus, this time to arm himself with a Master in Business Administration (MBA) from the prestigious Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile Ife. Meanwhile, between 1990 and 1994, the well-traveled Prince acquired certificates in some short courses in management at the University of Jos.

    As part of his moves to lay a strong foundation for his professional career, Aladesuyi, in October, 1990, attended many management courses at the Farmitalia Training School in Milan. This was followed with African Publishers training in Zimbabwe in August 2003 and Frankfurt Publishing training from 1998 – 2018. In 2014, this versatile Ekiti prince caused a stir at a global event when he delivered a paper at the International Publishers Association Conference in Bangkok, Thailand. Besides, he has been delivering papers at the Sharjah (Dubai) International Conference from 2018 – 2021 every year.

    An administrator per excellence, Prince Aladesuyi was appointed Managing Director Literamed Publications Ghana Ltd in 1989 and made a huge success of it having led the leading publications group in Nigeria in similar position. For several years, he has been a familiar face at international conferences in South Africa, Nigeria and the UK. Among other associations and leadership positions occupied, this Ijan Ekiti Prince is a Council Member, Nigeria Publishers Association since 2006 to date, Chair, Anti – Piracy committee, Nigerian Publishers Association and member (Representing Africa), International Publishers Association, Geneva, Switzerland.

    At Cambridge University Press, where he currently occupies the position of Country Manager, Aladesuyi has, at different times, served as Pupil Publishing Editor (Lagos 1985), Representative North East (Jos 1987 –1994), Manager Benin (1995), Publications Officer (FIIRO, Lagos 1996), and Publishing Manager – Managing Director (Lagos 2007). Others are; Deputy Managing Director, Onitsha 2010 – 2014 and Executive Secretary NPA, 2014 – 2015.

     

  • ICYMI: Concern in Gombe over scarcity of husbands for single women

    ICYMI: Concern in Gombe over scarcity of husbands for single women

    By Sola Shittu, Gombe

    In September 2013, hundreds of single women led by Suwaiba Isa stormed the streets of Gusau, the capital of Zamfara State, protesting scarcity of husbands for more than 8,000 of them. A similar protest earlier planned by Hajiya Altine Abdullahi for widows and unmarried Kano women in August 2009 was averted by Kano State Government which quickly arranged mass wedding for 1,000 women in the state.

    It had looked as if the trend was restricted to the Northwest part of the country and the Muslim population until a pastor in one of the churches in Gombe State raised concern over their unmarried ladies’ choice of men from outside the region, especially the Southwest part of the country who came to take their women away.

    Reports say that 60 per cent of the non-indigene population in Gombe State is made of people from the Southwest part of the country, who the Oba of Yoruba in Gombe, Abdulrahim Alao Yusuf, said have been living in the area for more than 150 years.

    At 35, Godiya Adamu is yet to find a husband; a situation she blamed on her inability to find a man who is serious about marriage.

    “What would I do? I can’t force myself on men if they do not come,” she said, revealing that she had been in about five relationships without meaningful results before she eventually gave up. “As far as I am concerned, life continues with or without a husband,” she said.

    On her part, Abigail, a mother of two, said she deliberately chose to be a single mother so that she might have peace of mind. “I live in my own house in this Gombe with my children. I am their mother and their father,” she said.

    Abigail said she chose to be single because she could not play the second fiddle in a marriage.

    She said: “I have friends who prefer that the man should not make their existence known to the wife at home and they are comfortable with it.

    “What I want to say is that one should go for whatever will make one happy. There is nothing new again under the sun.

    Esther, a 45-year-old single lady, said the new trend now is for ladies to go out of their state and culture to marry. “I was in a wedding where a pastor here in the North complained bitterly that Yoruba men are taking their girls away. He said when they marry them, they don’t stay in Gombe but take them to their part of the country.

    “So I said why will this not be so because some of the young men that you see out there are into drug addiction, and who wants to marry a drug addict?

    “The truth is many of them are not serious. It is not only men that are looking for decent and serious ladies, ladies too are also seeking decent men to marry, and that to me is scarce right now in this generation.”

    For Amina, a Fulani woman, her problem was that she had education. She said she had discovered that many men in the North are reluctant to marry educated women. “Probably because they felt it might not be easy for them to have control over such a woman. So to me, the option is of course to remain single and be both the mother and father to my children.”

    Rev. Adamu Dauda of ECWA Gospel Church Gombe said when he noticed that the situation was becoming alarming, he called for a meeting with all the youths in the church.

    He said: “I lead a congregation of over 1,500 members out of which we have over 800 youths. During the meeting, we discovered that out of the 800 youths, 487 were not married, so I began to take the initiative to talk to them one on one.

    “The shocking discovery is that some of the ladies told me that nobody had proposed to them. Then I asked, did you not see anyone that you liked? Some said yes, but they could not go to the man because it is against African culture. That is the area we are now looking into.

    “If a lady likes a man, why not go to the man herself? If that will give you better results, why not? Because I can tell you for sure that the church is already getting overwhelmed.”

    Rev. Dauda also blamed the situation on the inability of many young men to use their hands to make ends meet because they are thinking of white collar jobs and other privileges that will come through the government.

    He said: “You would believe me that the economy of our country is in serious problem. Many people are struggling. People would tell you that they have spent two or three days without cooking in their homes. In other words, they are looking for what to eat.

    “They would come to the church and plead, and because we are one family, the church encourages giving and supporting one another.

    “Today, most of our children, especially the boys, graduated and have nothing to do. When you ask them, they would say they are looking for government jobs. Many of them have failed to use their hands to make ends meet. They are thinking of white collar jobs and other privileges that will come through government but these are not forthcoming.

    “Since they have no job, they have no means of taking care of wives. Many of them you can see walking on the streets with their files instead of taking vocational jobs where they can earn money and make themselves employers of labour.”

    He said another reason for the delay in marriage for many men and women is modernization, which he said has led to trial marriage, which he said is directly opposite to African culture.

    He said: “In those days, because you could not touch a woman before you married her, it encouraged a man to desire to marry. But what is happening today is not good for the ears at all.

    “If they could try marriage before they get married then what would prompt them to want to marry again? Because what they are looking for in marriage, they can get it outside marriage.”

    He also blamed some of the women for living care-free life. “Some of the women do not have self control, and if you do not have self control, somebody will come and get what he wants to get from you and find his way out. Then another person will come and it goes on like that in a vicious circle. At the end of the day you find out that nobody wants to marry you.

    “Hardly will such a lady find a man to marry her, because even if a man is not decent and not faithful, he is looking for a faithful woman to marry. Once a man hears so much about you concerning indecency and other things, they will go away and not want to stay with such a woman.

    “Another factor is on the side of the parents. Most parents do not want their daughter to marry until she attains a certain level of education. In those days, after secondary school, a girl can get married and then both husband and wife can go and struggle together and they will be whatever they want to be together. But today, the parents will say she will not marry until she obtains first degree.

    “Another thing is that some parents also do select for their children, saying they should wait for a well established family with the hope that marriage with their daughter will get them out of poverty, and the lady will keep on waiting. Parents’ intervention in issues of marriage is causing a lot of problems.”

    The Chief Imam of Government House Mosque in Gombe, Sheik Dr. Zakariya Hajiya, blamed the scarcity of husbands for women in the state on poverty. According to him, the huge expenses of marriage for men with regard to the bride, her family, mosques and churches have become a huge burden on them. He said the biting economic situation occasioned by the COVID-19 pandemic and the security challenges in the Northeast region have further worsened the situation.

    He said: “The expenses on those things like dowry, clothes, necklaces, kitchen appliances, bed, television, refrigerator and other household appliances, which a would-be husband would provide for both the bride, her family and faith houses, are so huge for him.

    “Another problem is the death of many men due to insurgency which have turned many women into widows and with children to cater for. The situation is further compounded by the huge number of widows of soldiers and policemen who died in the fight against insurgency in the Northeast.

    “These women are also part of the society. Most of the time, men are victims of insurgency attacks, banditry, kidnapping and the rest. In fact, recently, men have become vulnerable and endangered species in our society as a result of these crises in different parts of the country.

    “So, scarcity of husband, which leads to delay in marriages for women, is not limited to the Northeast; it is all over. And it is also not limited to women in Islam; it also affects Christians too.”

    Another factor raised by Zakariya is the fact that most women of nowadays do not want to play the second fiddle or allow their husbands to marry another woman after them.

    “This is another big problem, especially for polygamists. Some women even killed their husbands for marrying or trying to marry another woman. Yes, it is as bad as that, but it is a deviation from the teachings of Islam.

    “Islam allows a man to marry as many as four wives. But these days, once you marry a woman, they hardly agreed for another woman to be married after them. Except you have a very strong hold on a woman, it could be very frustrating to put two or more of them under the same roof.

    “Some, apart from trying to kill their husbands, even take him to court for divorce. It is as bad as that.”

    He said the society is facing a huge problem in this regard now because the scarcity of husband is forcing many women into fornication, adultery and even prostitution in order to survive.

    “Some of these women are even the ones approaching men now because they are looking for means of survival.”

    He explained further that most women who prevent their husbands from marrying another woman have forgotten that they also have female children.

    “Some of them even have as many as four, five or more daughters at home. If you marry one off and that one did not allow her husband to marry another woman, who will marry her sisters?” he asked.

    This, according to him, is what many women who are against polygamy do not understand.

    He said: “I am a teacher, and I know that girls in schools outnumber boys. It also means that the population of girls is more than boys.”

    But the Statistician General of the Gombe State Bureau of Statistics, Hammed Gidado, would not agree with Sheik Zakariya. Gidado said there is no empirical statistics on ground to support the notion that there are more women than men and that is why there is scarcity of husbands or delayed marriage for women.

    To him, available statistics showed that male children still outnumber fema le children, according to latest population statistics.

    He said: “There is no empirical statistics on ground to support the notion that there are more single ladies than single men in Gombe State for now. However this could be true on assumption.

    “There are five factors which could be responsible for this. First is the spiritual cost of marriage. If you are doing it according to Islamic marriage, it will not go through without cost. The same also applies to church wedding. The pastor and the Mallam will get something.

    “Secondly, the parents will do K’aya hauri or lepe in Hausa, and this will involve buying clothes, boxes, jewellery, etc. The minimum you have to spend on this is nothing less than N200,000. Those are on the side of the person getting married.

    “But the cost is even more on the side of the parents who have to buy bed, refrigerator, television, carpet, furniture, cooking utensils and other domestic tools to use at home. So the expenses are even more on the side of the parents.

    “These are extreme costs which can run into not less than N600,000 or more than a million naira.

    “Another is the cost of reception for invited guests at the wedding. You have to provide food for people. If you are popular, you will expect not less than 100 guests. The cost of what they will eat and drink is more than the dowry.

    “In Islamic law, dowry is now pegged at a minimum of N25,000. If you put all these costs together, you will discover that it is one of the things deterring people from getting married.

    “Another aspect that is neither cultural or religious is the issue of courtship or trial marriage, where a would-be husband and wife will live together and do everything that is expected in marriage. By the time they eventually get married in a matter of three to six months, they go for divorce.

    “Another thing is the issue of death among men. When a husband dies, the wife becomes a widow and the number of single women increases. However, these are assumptions; there are no empirical statistics to back it up.”

    Gidado however said the upsurge in single women occurs more in the urban areas than rural areas and it is not restricted to Gombe State. He added that in rural areas, a lady could marry up to three or four times.

    “But if it is in urban areas, like Ibadan or Lagos, or Kano, Kaduna, Port Harcourt and Abuja, who will marry her? In those urban areas, a lady could live up to 50 years without having a husband. Whenever it comes to the issue of marriage, what will be going on in the mind of the man is where would I get money? Especially now that everyone is looking for white kola job and government cannot provide job for everybody.

    “Even when you get the job, the minimum wage is N30,000. Can you manage a home on N30,000 per month? There are also contemporary issues which are not religious, cultural or traditional.”

    Gidado concluded that “this issue, sadly, appears to have no solution. Because even when government intervened and carried out mass weddings, many of the women ended up marrying another woman’s husband and the marriage may not last more than six months.”

    He said the worrisome aspect is the rate of divorce which is borne out of contemporary issues and is now a common phenomenon all over the country.

    “In the South-south and Southeast, ladies now stay away completely from marriage for life. If it is children, they can get their own children and remain single parents. This however is not according to our culture and religion in the North.”

  • Celebrities, VIPs who departed in 2020

    Celebrities, VIPs who departed in 2020

    The outgoing year is reputed as one of the most deadly in the history of humanity considering the high number of deaths recorded on account of the COVID-19 pandemic that shook the entire world to its foundation. In the US, Britain, Spain, Germany, China, Italy and other countries of the world, deaths were recorded in thousands on account of the deadly virus. Nigeria was no exception even though the country is lucky that its casualty figure from the virus has so far not been as high as it was initially feared. Yet the country has had its fair share of the tragedy as many prominent individuals were lost to the pandemic. GBENGA ADERANTI recalls some celebrities and other prominent Nigerians who lost their lives via the pandemic and other causes during the year.

    Abba Kyari

    The entire landscape was in shock on April 17 with the official announcement of the death of the Chief of Staff to President Muhammadu Buhari, Abba Kyari.

    His death reportedly from COVID-19 infection had jolted the entire populace to the grim reality of the deadly Coronavirus pandemic.

    He was believed to have contracted the virus while he was away in Germany on official assignment.

    He was aged 67.

    Abba-Kyari
    •Late Lawyer, journalist, technocrat, chief of staff

    Tolulope Arotile

    The entire nation was thrown into mourning on July 14, 2020 with the news of the death of Tolulope Arotile, a 25-year-old flying officer reputed as Nigeria’s first female combat helicopter pilot in the 55 years existence of the Nigerian Air Force (NAF).

    A native of Iffe in Ijumu Local Government Area, Kogi State, her brilliant career was halted when she was inadvertently hit by the reversing vehicle of an excited former Air Force Secondary School classmate while trying to greet her in Kaduna, according to a release by the NAF.

    An official release by the NAF says as at October 2019, the late Tolulope had acquired 460 hours of flight within her 14 months of flying a helicopter.

    Tolulope Arotile
    Nigeria’s first female combatant pilot

    Ismaila Isa Funtua

    Mallam Ismaila Isa Funtua, a former president of Newspapers Proprietors Association of Nigeria died on July 20 after a brief illness. Born in January 1942, the Second Republic Minister of Water Resources and member of the Constitutional Conference convened during the regime of the late Gen. Sani Abacha, was said to have driven himself to the hospital before he gave up the ghost.

    Until his death, he was reputed as one of the most influential politicians and businessmen in the country. He founded The Democrat, a Kaduna based authoritative newspaper on political matters, and also owned a construction firm renowned for building the magnificent office of the Civil Service of the federation.

    Mallam Ismaila Isa Funtua
    Mallam Ismaila Isa Funtua

    Abiola Ajimobi

    Former governor of Oyo State, Senator Abiola Ajimobi departed the world on June 25 after weeks of his rumoured battle with COVID-19.

    Aged 70, he was said to have died from multiple organs failure following complications from coronavirus infection.

    He was on the verge of assuming office as the interim national chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) at the time he died.

    Abiola Ajimobi
    Late Abiola Ajimobi

    Richard Akinjide

    Second Republic Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Chief Richard Akinjide was among the prominent Nigerians who succumbed to the cold hands of death in the outgoing year. He was 89, died April 21.

    The spokesperson of the family, Abayomi Akinjide, said the former AG was buried in line with COVID-19 protocols.

    Chief Richard Akinjide

    Tunde Buraimoh

    Hon. Tunde Buraimoh, who until his death on July 10 was the Chairman of the Lagos State House of Assembly Committee on Information and Strategy, was one of the prominent politicians the state and the rest of Nigeria had to mourn during the year.

    He was said to have died in a hospital around Ikorodu. Details of the cause of his death were sketchy, but reports said he had been absent from plenary for about two weeks before he passed on.

    The representative of Kosofe 2 Constituency was reputed as an active and eloquent member of the House.

     

     

    Tunde Buraimoh
    Late Tunde Buraimoh

    Ibidun Ighodalo

    Ibidun Ighodalo, wife of the flamboyant pastor of Trinity House church Itua Ighodalo, died in the early hours of Sunday, June 14.

    The family, however, was not forthcoming on the cause of her death, saying that they would appreciate some privacy as they mourned her death.

    She was the founder of Ibidunni Ighodalo Foundation (IIF), non-profit making organization she started to raise awareness about infertility and provide grants for couples requiring fertility treatments.

     

    Ibidun Ighodalo
    Late Ibidun Ighodalo

    Buruji Kashamu

    Billionaire businessman and member of the 8th Senate representing Ogun East, Chief Esho Kashamu popularly called Buruji Kashamu, is among the prominent Nigerians who have died of complications from COVID-19 infection.

    Breaking the news of his death on twitter on August 8, Senator Ben Murray-Bruce said Kashamu died at First Cardiology Consultants, Lagos at the age of 62.

    Buruji Kashamu
    Buruji Kashamu

    Sikiru Osinowo

    A day after Ibidun Ighodalo’s death, the news also broke of the death  of the senator representing Lagos East, Senator Sikiru Osinowo.

    Osinowo was said to have died on June 15 at First Cardiology Consultants after battling with an ailment associated with coronavirus.

    He was aged 64.

    Lagos East senatorial seat
    Late Senator Bayo Osinowo

    Majek Fashek

    The entertainment world was thrown into mourning in early June with the death of Nigerian reggae star, Majekodunmi Fasheke popularly known as Majek Fashek.

    According to his manager, Omenka Uzoma, the  ‘Rain Maker’ died in his sleep in New York, USA.

     

    Majek Fashek
    Majek Fashek

    Emir of Zazzau

    The Emir of Zazzau, Alhaji Shehu Idris, passed on September 20.

    He was until his death one of Nigeria’s most influential traditional rulers.

    He was aged 84.

    Emir of Zazzau
    Emir of Zazzau

    Amaka Ndoma-Egba

    All things considered, it has been a very tough year for former Cross River senator, Victor Ndoma-Egba, with the death of his wife in a multiple accident in Ondo State on November 20 weeks after his house was looted by hoodlums who took advantage of the EndSARS protests.

    Amaka Ndoma-Egba was said to have died alongside six others in the deadly auto crash involving a truck, a commercial Toyota Avensis bus, a Honda car and a Toyota Coaster bus.

    Eight others were said to have sustained varying degrees of injuries in the accident.

     

    Amaka Ndoma-Egba
    Amaka Ndoma-Egba

    Sam Nda-Isaiah

    The media industry was thrown into mourning on December 11 with the death of the publisher of Leadership newspaper and one of the presidential aspirants of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in 2015, Sam Nda-Isaiah.

    A report in Leadership newspaper quoted his family as saying that the serial entrepreneur and politician died after a brief illness

    Sam Nda-Isaiah
    Sam Nda-Isaiah

    Chioma Madubuko

    In early June, the news broke of the death of former secretary of the Dangote Group, Chioma Madubuko.

    The woman of substance died at Reddington Hospital, Lagos after a long battle with multiple sclerosis.

    She served the Dangote group for 12 years.

     

    Chioma Madubuko
    Chioma Madubuko

    Aminu Logun

    Industrialist and elder statesman, Aminu Adisa Logun was until his death in July the Chief of Staff to Kwara State governor, Abdulrahman Abdulrazak.

    A statement issued by the Chief Press secretary to the governor, Rafiu Ajakaiye said the late Logun died of complications from COVID-19 infection, only a few hours after the result of a test carried out on him turned out to be positive.

    He was aged 73.

    Aminu Logun
    Aminu Logun

    Gen. Sam Momah

    Former Minister of Science and Technology, Maj-Gen. Sam Momah was one of the celebrities who passed on during the year.

    Gen. Momah died on July 29 from what was believed to be complications from diabetic issues.

    He was aged 77.

     

    Gen. Sam Momah
    Gen. Sam Momah

    Kayode Odumosu

    Veteran Nollywood actor, Kayode Odumosu popularly known as Pa Kasumu died on March 1 after a brief illness.

    Before his death, he was said to have battled ill health for a while.

    His health had become a cause for concern for members of the public when a video of his frail state surfaced online last year.

    He had previously admitted battling a partial stroke that affected his left side and his sight.

    Pa Kasumu
    Pa Kasumu

    Ayo Fasanmi

    Chief Ayo Fasanmi, a prominent leader of the Yoruba socio-cultural group, Afenifere, died on July 29.

    The nonagenarian was said to have died in Osogbo, Osun State capital, after a brief illness.

    He was aged 94.

    Ayorinde Fasanmi
    Ayorinde Fasanmi

    Dan Foster

    Popular on air personality, Dan Foster a.k.a. the Big Dawg succumbed to death on June 17 after he reportedly contracted COVID-19.

    He was until his death was one of the most prominent online personalities in the country.

    He was said to have died after respiratory complications from COVID-19.

    Dan Foster

    Gen. Domkat Bali

    Former Minister of Defence and member of the Supreme Military Council (SMC) between 1984 and 1985, and the Armed Forces Ruling Council (AFRC) of 1985 to 1990, General Domkat Bali, passed on December 4.

    Bali reportedly died at the age of 80.

    He will be remembered as the chairman of the military panel that sentenced Gen. Maman Vatsa and others who were said to have participated in an attempted coup against the Babangida administration in 1986.

  • Farewell to year like no other

    Farewell to year like no other

    By Olatunji Ololade

    The year, 2020, unfurled like the desert end of Nigeria’s green pasture as the cheerful ‘Happy New Year’ rattled along with tragic undertones from door to door, rural to metro areas.

    On the third day of the new year, January 3 to be precise, 19 people were killed by unidentified gunmen in a nighttime raid in Tawari, Kogi State, about 100km (60 miles) south of Nigeria’s capital, Abuja.

    The culprits torched homes and other buildings, killing dreams and heartfelt hope.

    Three days later, 30 people were killed and 35 injured in a bomb blast that tore through Gamboru, Borno State. No thanks to the Boko Haram terrorist sect, the stranglers of mirth and romance in affected homesteads.

    Thus the New Year dawned dewy with lava, scorching the sharp green waking in young shoots at the base of trees; the year 2020 pronounced Nigeria as scorched earth, a country where neither hope nor humaneness may grow again.

    The citizenry mourned in concert. Families wailed and wallowed, knowing the meaning of grief by blood-sodden earth. Yet some dreamed of relief. Like surprised travellers, light walkers on dark lawns, they stole through interstices of grief in search of recourse, their minds breaking into moulds into which had fallen, the beauty beyond grief.

    February 28, death unspooled in dark toxins, instilling fear into the young and old, the rich and poor alike; the Federal Ministry of Health disclosed that an Italian citizen had been confirmed as the first case of the coronavirus in Lagos, Nigeria.

    The raunch and squalor of the plague broke cultural and religious taboo. Wherever it struck, human tissues cowered, viral cells bloomed and split their capsules, spitting pips in the red tide of the victim’s blood.

    The coronavirus a.k.a. COVID-19 incited a fable of ugliness in the human experience. By reducing persons to bodies, it cast personality as a totem of renewal and disintegration. It prefigured Nigeria’s struggle with Ebola and its stern, maleficent ghost. COVID-19 could be deadlier, if not well managed; Nigeria cringed.

    The virus claimed preeminent and ordinary folk, drawing hot tears from the bereaved’s worn glands, ushering them into phases of grief in queer mazes.

    At the backdrop of the pandemic’s death knell, the Emir of Kano, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, was dethroned on March 9, for “disrespect to lawful instructions.”

    In the second quarter of the year, gravediggers in Kano reported a mysterious escalation of death tally on April 28, amid speculations that the deaths may be linked to the COVID-19 pandemic. On April 30, COVID-19 cases in Kano tripled from 77 at the beginning of the week to 219 as health authorities ramped up “verbal autopsies.” State officials insisted most of the fatalities were due to other diseases rather than COVID-19.

    On June 9, Nigeria stirred to horrendous news of the Gubio massacre as Boko Haram terrorists reportedly killed at least 80 villagers in Borno. And through the swell of gory incidents, the nation welcomed in July, the cheery news of the World Trade Organization (WTO)’s acceptance of the nomination of two-time Nigerian minister, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, as a contender for its advertised post of Director-General (DG).

    Nigeria pulsed with controversy in the third quarter of the year as

    Yahaya Sharif-Aminu, 22, was sentenced to death by hanging on August 10, in Kano, for alleged blasphemy against Muslim Prophet Muhammad (SAW).

    The last quarter of 2020 equally dawned with a dark pall as young Nigerians took to the streets to protest the perceived excesses of the Nigeria Police’s Special Anti-robbery Squad (SARS). The protests surged across the South-south, Southeast and Southwest regions, and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja.

    Nigeria will never forget Tuesday, October 20, 2020, when police officers launched a hapless defensive against the army of angry youths. Police and protesters, EndSARS and ProSARS, violent and peaceful, a baleful lyric succeeded the conflict.

    The highlight of the movement, however, was the botched October 20 protest as armed security personnel dispersed protesters laying siege to the Lekki Toll Gate; the protests snowballed into violence across the country, in Lagos especially, forcing the state governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, to declare a 24-hour curfew.

    Consciousness, the youth would find, is a slippery slope; #EndSARS mutated to #Endbadgovernance, #Reducepublicofficerssalaries, street carnivals, violence, and looting. In their jazzy rage, the youths forgot how resonantly their threat pitched, and how contradictorily their actions boomed in the deathly sanctums of gun-made spoils.

    EndSARS

    The Inspector-General of Police, Mohammed Adamu, disclosed that 102 people died, including 37 policemen who were ‘gruesomely murdered’ in the resultant violence from the #EndSARS protests.

    Adamu blamed purveyors of fake news for the death of civilians and police personnel and the destruction of police and other public assets.

    There is no gainsaying fake news contributed in no small measure to the carnage that rocked the nation in the heat of the #EndSARS protests; for instance, touted victims of the Lekki shooting have come out to refute alleged news of their demise.

    On November 28, Nigeria startled to more frightening news of the massacre of about 78 rice farmers in their fields around Zabarmari, about 25 kilometres from Maiduguri, Borno’s capital by Boko Haram.

    Abubakar Shekau, leader of the terror group, in a three-minute video, stated that his group killed 78 farmers because “the farmers arrested and handed one of its brothers to the Nigerian Army.”

    Friday, December 14, a combined force of Boko Haram and armed bandits laid siege to Kankara in President Muhammadu Buhari’s home state, Katsina, hours after he landed in the state for a week-long visit. The invaders abducted 344 boys from the Government Science Secondary (GSS) school. Although the students were released four days later, the recent abduction has ignited worry over the country’s security situation. If the terrorists could so brazenly operate in President Buhari’s backyard, kidnapping over 300 boys right under his nose, then Nigeria has great reason to worry.

    There is no gainsaying the year 2020 tangled one and all in odd rhythms, several people lost their lives; Chukwuemeka Ike, writer; Toyosi Arigbabuwo, actor; Victor Olaiya, highlife trumpeter; Majek Fashek, reggae singer; Abiola Ajimobi, former Governor of Oyo State; Ismaila Isa Funtua, politician. Lest we forget Buruji Kashamu, politician, former Senator; Jimoh Aliu, actor; J. P. Clark, 85, poet; Sam Nda-Isaiah, political columnist, entrepreneur, and journalist, and founder of Leadership Newspapers.

    Some lost their jobs but are still very grateful for the rare gift of life; they relish the priceless hours they have yet to dream to the curve of this or that song.

    As this dark year peters out, they cherish the privilege of surviving its ravage; a little wearing away, and a little wearing out perhaps. But they are wiser and unfettered by loss.

  • Sports stars who made 2020 tick

    Sports stars who made 2020 tick

    In a year that will be better known for the global Coronavirus pandemic and locally, for the EndSARS protest, some sports personalities stood out to make 2020 headlines. TAIWO ALIMI examines the iconic sports people of 2020.

    Anthony Joshua (Heavyweight boxer)

    2020 is the year of Anthony Joshua (AJ), world heavyweight boxing champion. The boxer born to Nigerian father and Irish mother in Watford-U.K, had produced a brilliant display against Andy Ruiz Jr in Saudi Arabia on December 7, 2019 to reclaim the WBA, IBF, WBO and IBO straps he’d lost to the Mexican-American in June.

    AJ, however, chose this year to cement his greatness in the minds of boxing followers around the world.

    If 2019 and the shocking loss to Ruiz Jr had created doubt about the Sagamu lad, 2020 erased any iota of hesitation that AJ can hold his own in the heavyweight class. It has also brought to the fore the unification bout about to happen between AJ and Tyson Fury. The ultimate megabuck and epoch fight is expected to happen in 2021.

    This is made possible by AJ after dominating Kubrat Pulev in a ninth-round shut-out in which he dropped the Bulgarian four times on December 12, 2020.

    In the presence of only 1000 ringside viewers inside SSE Arena, Wembley, AJ pummelled Pulev, who had no answer to the tirade of upper-cuts and jabs that rained on him all night.

    Joshua was patient, methodical, and when openings presented themselves, he did not hold back. He pounded from ends to ends, making Pulev to commit boxing errors –like turning his backs- on at least two occasions.

    Boxing buffs in Nigeria were especially grateful for the night that brought out again the resilience of Nigerians-don’t mind the fact that he was born and bred and taught the fine art of boxing abroad.

    It is gratifying to note that AJ also made a massive homecoming campaign this year February. His Nigeria visit took him to the slums of Makoko, Afrikan Shrine where he joined Femi Kuti on stage during a performance and his ancestral home Sagamu where he sparred on the sandy streets with local kid boxers, reminiscent of 1974 Muhammad Ali’s Rumble in the Jungle promotion in Kinshasha-Zaire.

    All is set for Joshua vs Fury showdown which will determine the undisputed champion in boxing glamour division. Expected to happen in 2021, it will generate hundreds of millions of dollars. Guaranteed, AJ will stay in the news come 2021.

     

    Anthony Joshua

    Israel Adesanya (UFC fighter)

    The year 2020 has thrown up a new champion in the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) middleweight division and he is a Nigerian by the name Israel Adesanya.

    Kicking off his professional career in 2018, Adesanya was only on the lips of UFC diehards until his convincing dismantling of top contender Paulo Costa, on 27th of September, 2020.

    Within two years he has fought 20 times and emerged winner in all.

    Adesanya made his debut in UFC in February 2018 and quickly amassed an enviable record to become the UFC middleweight champion on the world in 2020.

    The 31-year-old silenced his critics with a comprehensive second-round win over rival Costa, a formerly undefeated Brazilian, to keep his record clean at 20-0-0. He has never been beaten.

    In-fact the story of the teenager from Lagos-Nigeria who refused to give up his fighting ambition from Nigeria to Kiwi country New Zealand, has become an inspiration among youths the world over.

    Adesanya think himself a fighting machine from when he was able to run and jump.  In a recent interview, he said of his consummate ambition to become a professional fighter: “I was not afraid to tell them (his parents) that I won’t do any other thing but to fight. I’m obsessed with performing and tried my luck in dancing by joining a dance group. I switched to karate and joined a karate gym and started attending competitions.”

    He went on to stockpile a terrific amateur kickboxing record. He went unbeaten over 32 fights before moving to China to reside and fight.

     

    Israel Adesanya
    Israel Adesanya

    Efe Ajagba (heavyweight champion)

    While AJ and Israel Adesanya are becoming champions of the world, another Nigerian, Efe Ajagba, also made the big headlines in the heavyweight boxing division.

    The Ugheli, Delta State born heavyweight boxer is only 26, but has done enough to get heads turning and tongues wagging about him as a leading contender and a potential champion.

    The hard-hitter has scored big in 2020 twice outpunching his opponents to climb up the world title contender’s ladder and attract the attention of WBC heavyweight champion Tyson Fury.

    Tyson, in September, listed him among heavy punchers he would like to engage before retiring.

    Ajagba knocked out Razvan Cojanu on 7th March 2020 in the 9th round at Barclays Center, New York, United States and won a unanimous decision over Jonathan Rice in Nevada, United States on 19th September, 2020.

    He currently stands at 14 wins, 0 losses and 0 draws. Of those 14 wins, he has stopped 11 of his opponents, so his current knock-out ratio is 79%.  He’s boxed a total of 50 rounds, meaning his professional fights last 3.6 rounds on average and currently ranks 11th by the WBC in the heavyweight division.

    The Africa games gold medallist and 2016 Olympics quarter-finalist is both tough and ambitious. “I want to get into the Top Five of world heavyweight boxing. I’m not scared. I respect boxers like Tyson Fury, Anthony Joshua and (Deontay) Wilder. AJ is successful but I’m the best heavyweight right now,” Ajagba said of himself. Boxing world will definitely hear more of Ajagba in the coming years.

     

    Efe Ajagba
    Efe Ajagba

    Victor Osimhen (footballer)

    The Nigerian football star rising profile hit a crescendo in 2020. His phenomenon rise began unfolding in June, 2020 when the Lille’s forward was named the Marc-Vivien Foé RFI-France 24 Prize for best African player in the French Ligue 1, the French football championship for the 2019-2020 season.

    The former Nigeria U17 star was chosen by a jury of sport journalists specialising in French and African Football. He garnered a clear 284 points ahead of Ilam Slimani of Algeria and Monaco and Yunis Abdelhamid of Morocco and Stade de Reims, who got 95 and 89 points respectively.

    The Nigerian international ended the Ligue 1 season with 18 goals and six assists in 38 appearances- a feat that earned him Lille’s player of the season award.

    By July, 2020, his name was ringing louder than church bell and the media were   awash with genuine and fake transfer news for the Nigerian international. He was linked to nearly all the biggest clubs in Europe from Liverpool to Manchester United to Barcelona.

    On 31st of July, Serie A club Napoli announced the signing of Osimhen for a club-record fee of 70 million Euros with add-ons, making him the most expensive African transfer to date. The five-year deal is about $94m with personal earnings to the tune of about $4.5m per season.

    In his first major interview in Italy, Osimhen said; “my goal is to do very well and win trophies for Napoli and this is the most important thing for me.

    “I have been settling down well here and it is important for me to continue from where I stopped at Lille.

    “I am very happy to be in a great and big club like Napoli; and the fans, my teammates and the whole staffs at the club have been wonderful, which is important for a young player coming into a great team like Napoli.”

    On October 17, 2020, Osimhen scored his first goal for Napoli in a 4-1 win over Atalanta and he celebrated by holding up a shirt calling for the ending of police brutality in his country-Nigeria.

     

    Osimhen
    Osimhen

     

     

    Odunayo Adekuoroye (wrestling)

    After years of consistent showing at the World and Africa championships, Nigeria top wrestler Odunayo Adekuoroye hit jackpot in 2020. The African title holder, who is repeating the feat for the sixth time, was rated world number 1 in the women’s 57kg category.

    The title fetched her 18 points for her gold in Algeria plus 43 she has amassed to overthrow closest rival Risako Kawai of Japan, according to the United World Wrestling (UWW), in February 2000.

    Adekuoroye, 27, started the year ranked third in the category before overthrowing Kawai and Rong Ningning of China after emerging winners again at the African championship.

    The 2014 Commonwealth games gold medallist, who emerged Nigeria’s first ever silver medallist at the World Championship last year, is by this feat ranked among the world’s best.

    Adekuoroye said of her record feat: “I feel so excited and happy I won my sixth and African title. This will only make me sit up for the Tokyo Olympic Games. It will make me train harder because every eye will be on me now as the number one wrestler in the 57kg.”

    Odunayo Adekuroye
    Odunayo Adekuroye

    Diego Maradona

    The world was jolted with the death notice of Argentine soccer legend Diego Armando Maradona on November 25, 2020. His demise at 60 was put at the doorstep of heart attack at the age of 60, though his fiery personality and excesses were of public knowledge. Notwithstanding, it sparked a global outpouring of grief and police enquiry. For days after his death leading on to his burial, thousands of fans and cult-hero worshippers stormed Buenos Aires to bid their hero farewell, while world leaders mourn the loss of a legend.

    The 1986 World Cup winner for Argentina famous for his ‘hand of god’ genius goal against England en-route winning the Mundial, was by far the most popular footballer in the world, a flawed hero who stands in contrast to the athletes who often define the modern game.

    Diego Maradona
    Late Diego Maradona

     

     

    Paolo Rossi

    While the world was mourning Maradona, the obituary of Italian footballer Paolo Rossi filtered in. He died of lung cancer at 64 on December 9, 2020.

    Rossi became a national hero in Italy after scoring six times in the 1982 World Cup in Spain, including a crucial first goal in the 3-1 victory over West Germany in the final.

    Many fans shared pictures of Rossi alongside Maradona, who passed away about two weeks ago. The pair played against each other during the 1982 World Cup and Italy faced Argentina again during the following tournament’s group stage.

    Italian newspaper, La Gazetta dello Sport described Rossi as “the one who beat Zico’s Brazil, Maradona’s Argentina and Boniek’s Poland, and in the final, the Germany of Rummenigge.”

     

    Paolo Rossi
    Paolo Rossi

    Kobe Bryant

    Of the sports personality deaths that characterised the outgoing year 2020, that of NBA legend Kobe Bryant touched the heart of the world more. 2020 was just breaking like an early morning fog when news of the demise of the basketball great came in on January 26, 2020.

    Kobe’s death shocked the world in that he died alongside his favourite, Gianna, 13, and eight others in a helicopter crash in the city of Calabasas, California.

    The death of the NBA five-time champions sent shivers down the spine of many who sent their condolences through the social media in the wake of the announcement.

    Lakers legend Kareem Abdul-Jabbar posted a video to share his condolences via his twitter by saying “he will always remember him as a man who was much more than an athlete.”

    Top athletes: Novak Djokovic, Christian Ronaldo, Lionel Messi, Paul Pogba, Lewis Hamilton and Neymah also paid glowing tribute to him.

     

  • Insecurity: Why Nigeria is under Siege

    Insecurity: Why Nigeria is under Siege

    The omens are not good with the increasing rate of insecurity nationwide. In this analysis, YUSUF ALLI, MANAGING EDITOR, NORTHERN OPERATION examines why Nigeria is on the edge – contending with Boko Haram insurgents in the Northeast, bandits in the Northwest, kidnappers and sundry criminals everywhere else. Additional reports form BISI OLANIYI (South-south Bureau Chief); RASAQ IBRAHIM (Ado-Ekiti); MIKE ODIEGWU (Port Harcourt) and OSAGIE OTABOR (Akure).

    In the beginning

    Smarting from the abduction of 276 school girls by Boko Haram from Government Secondary School in Chibok, Borno State, on the night of 14-15 April 2014, it was easier for Nigerians to buy into the security agenda of Muhammadu Buhari, who was presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) at the 2015 presidential election.

    Buhari overstretched himself to reassure a depressed nation that he will secure the country. In his inaugural speech, he said: “Boko Haram is not only the security issue bedeviling our country. The spate of kidnappings, armed robberies, herdsmen/farmers clashes, cattle rustlings all help to add to the general air of insecurity in our land.

    “We are going to erect and maintain an efficient, disciplined people – friendly and well – compensated security forces within overall security architecture.”

    The APC campaign machinery had branded former President Goodluck Jonathan a ‘clueless’ leader to underscore his inability to tackle the myriad of challenges confronting Nigeria – especially insecurity.

    The situation today

    After being in the saddle for five years, it is becoming crystal clear to the president and his team that managing the security architecture of a nation is not a tea-party. Armed with his experience as the General Officer Commanding (GOC) in 1982 when he overran some Maitatsine fundamentalists and chased them to Chad, Buhari was optimistic of easily tackling Nigeria’s security problems.

    But the paradigm has changed. Tactics have become more sophisticated and criminals more hi-tech than the military, the police and other security agencies.

    Capturing the mood of the country, the Sultan of Sokoto and President of the Nigerian Supreme Council of Islamic Affairs (NSCIA), Alhaji Muhammad Sa’ad Abubakar III, said: “We have security problems in the country. Bandits now go into people’s houses to kidnap and not on the highway anymore. In the last couple of days, they are going into institutions. In Zaria, they went to ABU and the polytechnic and took away people,” he said.

    The Sultan said that in the Northwest, in particular, people can’t sleep with their eyes closed and lamented that even on Wednesday, a village was razed down in Sokoto but people don’t hear about such incidents.

    “The insecurity in the North is so high that people are afraid of travelling from Funtua (Katsina State) to Zaria (Kaduna State); a journey of about 48 or 50 miles. This is not to talk of from Sokoto to Abuja or Kano,” he said.

    The Buhari administration has had more than a fair share of security problems with the frontiers now extended to farmers-herders conflicts and banditry in states like Zamfara, Katsina, Sokoto, Nasarawa, Benue, Kaduna, Plateau, Ekiti, and others. No state is immune to security stress but the magnitude differs from state to state.

    According to data compiled from the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project (ACLED), a Washington D.C-based non-profit organization, there have been 47,000 deaths from ‘all’ actors, (Boko Haram, armed ‘bandits’ and ‘criminals’) from 2015 up to 31 January 2020).

    But killings by the insurgents have assumed more dangerous proportion than any security threat. On February 19, 2018 at 5:30 pm, 110 schoolgirls aged 11–19 years old were kidnapped by Boko Haram insurgents from Government Girls’ Science and Technical College (GGSTC) in Dapchi.

    Research by BBC Monitoring claimed that at least 967 people were killed by Boko Haram attacks in 2017, while 910 deaths were recorded in the previous year (2016). In its 2019 report, Amnesty International reported that Boko Haram carried out 31 attacks that resulted in at least 378 civilian deaths.

    The group also killed at least 16 abducted civilians. It also reported that at least 96 people were killed in violent clashes between farmers’ and herders’ communities while not less than 570 people lost their lives, probably to banditry, in five states in the Northwest Nigeria during the same period.

    Kidnapping has also become the norm with the nation recording a leap from a skeletal rate in 2003 to a jumbo level. ENACT, which is funded by the European Union, stated: “Niger Delta states – notably Delta, Edo and Abia – have long been the epicentre of kidnapping in the country. In the past three years, Kaduna has also become a hotspot.

    According to a Nigeria-based security company Bulwark Intelligence, based on incidents reported in the local media from January 2018 to September 2018, states that recorded the highest numbers of incidents include Kaduna, Rivers, Akwa Ibom, Zamfara, and Katsina.

    “According to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), using data from law enforcement agencies of member states, 277 kidnappings were reported in Nigeria in 2007; 309 in 2008; 703 in 2009; 738 in 2010; 600 in 2012; and 574 in 2013. No data were provided for 2011. In 2015, the Nigeria Police Force reported 886 kidnappings. About 630 people were reportedly abducted between May 2016 and May 2017.

    A report by Quartz Africa said: “Nigeria has one of the world’s highest rates of kidnap-for-ransom cases. Other countries high up on the list included Venezuela, Mexico, Yemen, Syria, the Philippines, Iraq, Afghanistan and Somalia.”

    Also, a recent investigation by Daily Trust indicated that 1,570 people were abducted in 11 months in this year alone. The kidnappers were said to have demanded N6.9billion but the victims could only pay N311million.

    The worst violence was the massacre by Boko Haram of 48 rice farmers in Zabarmari, a few kilometres away from Maiduguri, Borno State capital.

    Problems hindering fight against insecurity

    A major setback is low or poor defence budget. Over the years, Nigeria had failed to prioritize funding of its defence because of its stable democracy. A World Bank report claimed that between 1999 and 2007, the nation’s defence budget was between $0.49b and $0.97billion. It was the same challenge Nigeria faced between 1985 and 1999 during the administrations of ex-President Ibrahim Babangida, Chief Ernest Shonekan, Gen. Sani Abacha and Gen. Abubakar Abdulsalami. From $1.09b in 1985, defence budget shrunk as low as $0,1b in some years,

    According to findings, there had been a steady increase in challenges without corresponding funding.  The World Bank report gave a breakdown of the nation’s defence budget in recent years as follow

    • 2018 ($2.04b) a 26.02% increase from 2017;
    • 2017 was $1.62B, a 5.92% decline from 2016.
    • 2016 was $1.72B, a 16.57% decline from 2015.
    • 2015 was $2.07B, a 12.39% decline from 2014.

    A military source said: “With low defence budget, it means we have been experiencing depletion of armaments, coping with overused hardware and we became bare-handed over a long period.

    “By the time multiple security challenges confronted the country, recession has made us vulnerable and we could no longer replenish our stock. Also, some hardware we ought to have acquired over the years became expensive and hard to get at the press of a button. And because of the crises at hand, we spend more on logistics than the equipment we need.”

    Recourse to ad-hoc/ stop-gap operations

    To tackle the security problems, over 40 operations were launched by the Army, Air Force and Navy. But the ad-hoc or stop-gap operations have overstretched all formations and affected coordination. A source said the measures had proved more costly than expected.

    Although it was gathered that the stop-gap tactics were designed to get all the armed forces involved, the success rate has been low because of constant change of guards. Some of these operations include the oldest launched in July 2015 called Operation LAFIYA DOLE, Operation RATTLE SNAKE, Operation RUWAN WUTA I,II,III, Operation LAST HOLD(North-East);  Operations SHARAN DAJI,  HADARIN DAJI, HARBIN KUNAMA, DOKAJI,KARAMIN GORO and ACCORD(North-West); Operations HARBIN KUNAMA, SAFE HAVEN, NUTCRACKER, CAT RACE and WHIRL STROKE in North-Central, Operations PYTHON DANCE I, ATILOGWU, EGWU EKE(Python Dance II)in the South-East;  DELTA SAFE, IBAKA among others in the South-South. For the South West, there were Operation Python Dance III and Operation 777.

    President Muhammadu Buhari
    President Muhammadu Buhari

    But during a weekly briefing, the Coordinator Defence Media Operations, Major General John Enenche, said the Armed Forces of Nigeria and other security agencies “have continued their major operations across the country with dynamism”.

    He said:  “The gallant troops made contact with the terrorists and effectively engaged and dominated them with According to him, in the North West, troops of Operation HADARIN DAJI and other subsidiary operations have sustained their operations progressively.”

    Lack of continuity

    In 2014, the administration of ex-President Goodluck Jonathan floated some counter-terrorism policies including ,a multi-layer communication structure for implementing National Counter-Terrorism Strategy (NACTEST), which were later abandoned. Also, towards the tail end of his government, Jonathan engaged some foreign mercenaries to assist in curtailing Boko Haram. Despite the success of the mercenaries, the Buhari administration discontinued the policy and disengaged the foreign fighters.

    PR Nigeria, which was an undercover propaganda machinery of the military during the Jonathan era gave some insights into how the mercenaries came about. It said: “During the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan, Nigeria had covertly brought in ‘military-technical advisers’ suspected to be mercenaries from South Africa and the former Soviet Union to take on Boko Haram ahead of the national election in 2015.

    “Several regional security, defence and diplomatic sources were aware of the development at the time – including a tacit confirmation by President Jonathan that two companies were providing “trainers and technicians” to help Nigerian forces.

    “Speaking to PRNigeria under the condition of anonymity, one of the facilitators of the “soldiers of fortune” bemoaned the humiliation, persecution and prosecution of foreign mercenaries along with their Nigerian counterparts who participated in the operation after the emergence of the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari.

    He said: “Some of our covert operations and activities of operatives in Nigeria including incurred casualties were exposed as working for mercenaries. Imagine that even highly classified and coded transactions for operational purposes were exposed as corruption.”

    While noting that some of their payments for operations executed are still outstanding, he said, “It’s easier to confirm what we did because we were able to recover dozens of towns from Boko Haram from at least three states in Northeast at the time. This is an open secret.”

    Rivalry among military chiefs

    There has been suppressed intra and inter-agency feuds within the nation’s armed forces which at a point affected the consolidation of the gains against Boko Haram and other criminal elements. The rivalry bordered on refusal to share intelligence, solo military manoeuvres, each head of the defence arms seeking the attention of the President and Commander-In-Chief, ambition to become Chief of Defence Staff and taking credit for any successful operation.

    But President Buhari and the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), General Abayomi Gabriel Olonisakin succeeded in addressing the cold war to a large extent. In February, Olonisakin was more forthcoming when he said: “There is no doubt that our security forces require synergy and effective collaboration to succeed in the discharge of the onerous task of securing the nation.

    “The required synergy transcends the three services of the armed forces to the paramilitary and even NGOs and other stakeholders in our various theatre of operation. This synergy is essential and vital to achieving our common objective of securing Nigeria.

    “It will also help in formulating policies and assist the armed forces in its operations. Therefore, you must all display maturity and jettison all the hindrances to synergy and cooperation, such as ego and rivalry.”

    Lack of cooperation from neighbouring countries

    Nigeria and its neighbours have been part of a strong Multi-National Joint Task Force to “checkmate banditry activities and to facilitate free movement”. The reality is that the neighbours have been patching their military collaboration with each nation striving to defend its sovereignty. In a blog post, Ambassador John Campbell of the Council on Foreign Relations in the United States wrote: “Further, the report finds that participating countries are reluctant to cede command over their own troops to the MNJTF, planning is poorly coordinated, and there is a shortage of funding.

    “Participating countries often have different political goals. For example, Crisis Group suggests that the Nigerian government sees the MNJTF as a fig leaf to cover the Chadian military’s operations within Nigerian territory.

    “Further, civilian oversight is weak and poorly funded. To that end, Crisis Group recommends enhanced intelligence coordination, establishing clearer lines of authority, and improving the human rights posture. Those participating in the MNJTF should approach the AU and the EU for increased funding.”

    What next?

    The Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF) still believes the solution to Boko Haram insurgency and other security challenges is collaborating with neighbouring countries and state police.  Only the Southwest has introduced a pseudo-security apparatchik without the support of the Federal Government. But with the surge in insecurity, Nigeria may soon decentralize its security network.

    Chairman of the NGF, Dr. Kayode Fayemi said: “I personally, as a security scholar, can see that our military is overwhelmed. Our military is no longer in a position to single-handedly tackle this menace effectively.

    “It is not a criticism of our military, there can even be a coalition that will include our neighbouring countries who are probably more experienced in fighting an asymmetrical war. It will not be a loss of our pride as a country if that were to happen. This is certainly something that we, as your colleagues and brothers, will put before Mr. President.”

    If things were tough battling insurgents who invade from outside Nigerian territory, the challenge is even worse now in the aftermath of the EndSARS protests that witnessed the killing of policemen and destruction of over 200 police stations across the country.

    Today, police presence across the country is a pale shadow of what obtained in the recent past. In interviews with officers and rank and file, there has been a dramatic collapse in morale.

    To make matter worse, in a state like Edo close to 2,000 convicts were freed in jailbreaks that occurred during the protests. Many of the inmates are still at large, wreaking havoc on hapless members of the public.

    There is also the issue of the centralised control of the police which has resulted in growing frustration on the part of state governors who are ostensibly are chief security officers of their states.

    Explaining the situation, Kaduna State Governor Nasir el-Rufai recently said: “We (governors) are all frustrated. I am frustrated in my state; many governors are frustrated in their states; we are called chief security officers only in name; we have no control over the army and the police. We are almost helpless. We don’t have a say in police operations, yet we fund some of their operations in our states.

    “Some of us have more influence than others, but to a large extent, you ask the commissioner of police to do something and he has to clear with the Inspector-General of Police; this is the reality.

    “We are not in control of the police, I don’t determine who gets posted to my state as Commissioner of Police and if I give him directives, he can decide to flout the directives. So, we are all frustrated.”

    How politics, criminality heighten insecurity in Edo

    Edo, a hitherto relatively-peaceful state, has been in the eye of the storm in the last few months over insecurity, leading to loss of lives of many innocent persons and destruction of valuable property.

    Politics and criminality have heightened insecurity in the South-south state, with sophisticated arms and ammunition now in the hands of hoodlums, who are currently terrorising residents across the 18 local government areas, with Benin, the state capital, and its environs, being the worst hit.

    During the campaigns and the September 19 Governorship Election in Edo State, it was an open secret that politicians gave guns to thugs to assist them to dominate the electioneering and have upper hands during the poll, which was “won” by Governor Godwin Obaseki of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    While the campaigns and the bloody election were ongoing, guns from political thugs were booming across the state, thereby heightening tension, with panicky residents running for cover, to avoid being hit by stray bullets.

    With the crucial election over and the winner announced by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), politicians found it extremely difficult to withdraw the arms, ammunition and other dangerous weapons from the thugs, which they later started using for armed robbery, kidnapping and cultism, with members of rival cult groups openly brandishing guns in Edo, in supremacy battles.

    Shortly after the September 19 election in Edo State came the nationwide peaceful #EndSARS protests, which were later hijacked by violent hoodlums, who shot guns sporadically into the air, without being confronted by security operatives, leading to lawlessness.

    On October 19, the hoodlums that hijacked the peaceful #EndSARS protests opted for criminality by looting and razing seven police stations in Edo State, carting away large cache of arms, ammunition, police uniforms and other valuables, while also burning vehicles, including police patrol vans, parked at the police stations, thereby leading to total breakdown of law and order.

    The AK-47 rifles, other weapons and ammunition stolen from the invaded and burnt police stations were mostly used by the hoodlums to attack the Maximum Correctional Centre (White House) on Sapele Road and Oko Medium Correctional Centre on Airport Road, both in Benin, freeing 1,993 inmates, including many condemned/hardened criminals, who immediately returned to crime.

    While speaking on the increase in criminal activities in Edo, the state’s Commissioner of Police, Babatunde Kokumo, said that officers and men of the command were working within existing limitations to restore normalcy to the state, while assuring that all the criminals would soon be arrested and prosecuted, to serve as a deterrent to others.

    Kokumo said: “Is there any magic that we can do without vehicles, without arms and ammunition? How do you expect things to be normal where almost 2,000 inmates escaped?

    “Just imagine what it means that three police stations along Sokponba Road, Benin were destroyed and burnt, patrol vehicles were destroyed in many other parts of Edo State. All the Divisional Police Officers (DPOs) and other police officers and men in the seven burnt police stations now operate from the state police headquarters (in GRA, Benin).

    “The peaceful #EndSARS protests were hijacked by hoodlums. The protests took a violent turn in Edo State, with inmates of the two correctional centres in Benin City set free. So, what do you expect?

    “Some of the escapees have been sending threat messages to policemen, who investigated and prosecuted them. One of the escapees, who was convicted for murder, went that same day (October 19 this year) and he killed the prosecution witness in his village, but he was immediately rearrested.

    “Everybody must be part of the restoration of sanity to Edo State. People who know the escapees should avail us information about them. I am assuring you that we are not sleeping, but with what has happened to the police in Edo State, some of these hitches are expected, but we are not sleeping and we will continue to work.”

    Edo Police Commissioner also urged residents of the South-south state not to panic, but to go about their lawful businesses, while assuring them of adequate protection of lives and property.

    Kokumo stressed that police officers and men of the command were trying their best, in spite of the challenges.

    The Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Mohammed Adamu, later during his working visit to Edo State, while addressing police officers and men at the state headquarters in Benin, after inspecting the seven looted and razed police stations in the state, asked policemen not to leave the public space open for criminals to take charge, while directing them to occupy everywhere.

    In order to restore the confidence of Edo residents in the security agencies, members of the Joint Security Taskforce in the state are now storming the notorious Upper Sokponba axis of Benin and other hot spots in Edo, leading to the arrest of suspected kidnappers, cultists,  armed robbers and other criminals terrorising the state. The General Officer Commanding (GOC), 2 Division, Nigerian Army, Maj.-Gen. Anthony Omozoje, who is leading the Special Joint Security Taskforce in Edo, assured the state’s governor, Godwin Obaseki, that the South-south state would soon be rid of criminals, for the residents to sleep with their two eyes closed.

    He also gave an assurance that he and the personnel of the taskforce would halt the sudden rise in criminal activities in Edo State and support the efforts to re-arrest the 1,993 fleeing inmates of the two correctional centres in Benin.

    Sultan of Sokoto Muhammad Sa'ad Abubaka
    Sultan of Sokoto Muhammad Sa’ad Abubaka

    The GOC, who also met with heads of security agencies in Edo, stated that there was the need for synergy among them, so as to bring down the crime rate in the state.

    Maj.-Gen. Omozoje said: “Troops of the 4 Brigade, Nigerian Army, are on clearance operation at the hideouts of suspected kidnappers, cultists, armed robbers and other criminal elements. The taskforce is focused on ensuring a reduction in crime in Edo State.”

    The GOC, who is closely working with the Assistant Inspector-General (AIG), Zone 5, Benin, Sholla David, and the Commander, 4 Brigade in the Edo State capital, Brig.-Gen. U.M. Bello, urged Edo residents to provide the taskforce with useful information on criminals in their midst, while assuring that identities of the informants would be adequately protected.

    The security agencies and their personnel need to be alive to their responsibilities, especially with Christmas and New Year celebrations fast approaching, thereby ensuring the safety of lives and property of residents.

    Rivers battles pirates, cultism, kidnapping, others

    Prior to the EndSARS protest, security agencies and the Rivers State Government had intensified their efforts to tackle common security challenges, such as kidnapping, cultism, armed robbery, rape, murder, among others.

    But the violence, which occurred following the hijack of the protest by hoodlums identified by security agencies as members of the Indigeneous Peoples of Biafra introduced a different dimension to the security issues in Rivers.

    The hoodlums destroyed all the police stations, including an Area Command in Oyigbo Local Government Area of the state. They burnt over 50 vehicles, including an Armoured Personnel Carrier (APC), killed four policemen and six soldiers. They also burnt courts and privately owned hospitals in the area.

    Fear gripped most residents in the state when the government confirmed that the hoodlums looted 50 AK47 rifles from the soldiers and the police. Though the military commenced an operation to recover the rifles and arrest the hoodlums, there have been pockets of criminal activities across the state.

    Security agencies have been battling with the menace of pirates along some major waterways in the state. Major operating routes of the hoodlums are the Port-Harcourt-Bonny waterways, Bile in Degema and some waterways in Andoni Local Government Area of the state.

    Recently, pirates killed one person and abducted two others during an attack on a passenger boat along the Bonny waterways. A source, who narrated the frequent attacks on commercial boats by sea robbers, said: ” A new boat with new engine was hijacked at Isaka area, that is the latest mode of crime on waterways, when they see new boats with new engine, they attack it and offload the passengers at the creek; so as usual, the passengers were dropped at the creek while the hoodlums whisked away two people believed to be rich among them.

    “The reoccurrence of pirates attack has been a source of concern; we are no longer safe and the saddest thing is that nothing is being done by relevant authorities to stop this menace.

    “On Sunday, November 29, 2020, pirates also attacked passengers at Owokiri/Opopo Riser, and whisked away one person. These hoodlums are known. They are highly connected with top contractors working with multinational oil companies in the state but nobody seems to care.”

    The source said one of the suspects had been arrested and urges security agencies to intensify surveillance in the coastal communities.

    But the Police Public Relations Officer, Nnamdi Omoni, said the police were taking drastic actions to contain the wave of attacks on waterways.

    Omoni: “We have only five gunboats in the state to cover the coastal communities. We are utilizing them judiciously to cover such areas but we need the cooperation of the communities to achieve optimum security.

    “We need information from them and the earlier they share the information with the police, the better for us, security of the waterways should not be a one-way traffic; it needs adequate collaboration between the police and the communities to fight such menace.”

    Rivers has also been dealing with its fair share of cultism. The police in partnership with local vigilant group have been confronting cultists, who often engage in supremacy battles, causing panic in some suburbs of the capital city such as Mile 1, Mile 3, Diobu, Borokiri, popularly called Town and other areas.

    Rivers State Governor, Nyesom Wike, recently imposed a 24-hour two-week curfew around the Okoro-Nu-Odu flyover in Rumuokoro, Obio-Akpor Local Government Area following upsurge cult violence.

    The governor also warned that government would deal appropriately with anyone disturbing the peace and security of the state

    Wike explained that the Rivers State Government was seriously disturbed by the recent upsurge of cult activities, related violence and killings around the affected areas.

    He said: “Again, we wish to warn that community leaders that allow cultism and related activities to thrive unabated in their communities would be treated as collaborators to the resulting crimes and dealt with accordingly.

    “We urge all citizens to be part of the efforts to curb cultism in the state by reporting any suspicious cult activity, including gatherings and initiations in or around their neighbourhoods to the security agencies for immediate action.”

    Kidnapping and murder have also posed serious challenge to security agencies in the state. Though there has been decrease in the number of kidnap cases in the state, that cannot be said of gunmen’s killings in suspected cases of assassination.

    Unknown gunmen recently shot and killed an engineer from Agana in Andoni Local Government Area of Rivers State, Michael Ebirien-Agana.

    Edo Correctional Centre

    The police also recently launched a manhunt for the gunmen, who kidnapped and murdered a former Rivers State Chairman of the Nigeria Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG), Ebenezer Kalabo Amah. Amah was whisked away by unknown gunmen, who laid ambush at his residence on Precious Chukwu Street in Woji, Obio/Akpor Local Government Area, and was found dead the next day.

    There has also been an ongoing war between security agencies and IPOB members. The police recently linked the attack on the Christian Universal Church International belonging to the father of Rivers State Governor, Nyesom Wike, to IPOB. But IPOB has denied involvement in the incident.

    Hoodlums numbering about five sneaked into the Christian Universal Church International on 25 Azikiwe Street Mile 3 Diobu, on a Saturday night and detonated explosives suspected to be dynamites.

    How insecurity worsen in Ondo

    The aftermath of the ENDSARS protest brought another nightmare to residents of Akure and environs as armed robbery, kidnapping and other crimes assumed a sickening dimension. Absence of policemen in the street worsened the situation as the carnage caused during the ENDSARS protest led to the burning and looting of over eight police divisions across the state.

    Towns where Police Divisions and stations were attacked were Okitipupa, Akure, Ondo town and Ore. Two policemen were killed in Ore, Odigbo Local Government Area and Ondo town, Ondo West Local Government Area. One of the policemen was mobbed while the other one was burnt alive inside his car.

    Absence of police patrol in the street and highways in Ondo led to series of kidnappings, armed robbery and outright killing in Akure and other parts of the state. Several persons, including traders, have been abducted along the Akure-Owo-Bénin highway and the Akoko area. Traders and local government workers abducted last month were made to part with N5m.

    Within Akure metropolis, three persons were shot dead while others lost valuables to various armed robbery attacks.

    Among the many robbery and kidnap victims were Deputy Publicity Secretary of the All Progressives Congress, Ayodele Oladimeji, Speaker of Ondo State Youth Parliament, Smith Ikumapayi, HRH Oba Isreal Adeusi, who was shot dead; wife of the Chief of Staff to Governor Oluwarotimi Akeredolu, Sade Ale, amongst others.

    Worried by the spate of incessant robbery attacks, Governor Oluwarotimi Akeredolu announced restriction in the operation of commercial motorcycle riders also known as Okada within the hours of 6am and 6pm.

    Akeredolu warned that the motorcycle of any Okada rider found flouting his directive would be impounded.

    He also placed a ban on all vehicles with unauthorised tinted glasses from plying the roads. He said any of such vehicles without a duly certified permit issued by a relevant security agency would be impounded.

    Akeredolu also promised to provide all necessary support in terms of both human and logistics aids to security agencies to ensure the safety of residents. He also urged all security agencies to come out and confront what he described as abhorrent development, saying security reports at his disposal deserved serious attention.

    At a meeting with leaders of the Okada riders, Special Adviser to Governor Akeredolu on Special Duties, Dr. Doyin Odebowale, urged them to obey the directives as it would help government fish out the criminals among them.

    Odebowale stated that many of the robbery incidences were linked to motorcycle riders.

    Ondo Commissioner of Police, Salami Bolaji, said the meeting was organised to seek the cooperation because of rise in crime rates, especially the use of Okada.

    “We want them to assist us on information to help us to arrest those using Okada to rob or kidnap. We believe the criminals are not Okada riders. It is for the peace and tranquility in Ondo.

    The killing of Oba Adeusi however jolted security agencies to action, including the Ondo State Security Network, known as the Amotekun Corps, to increase patrol on the highway and take the fight to the criminals’ den.

    Ondo Commandant of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps, Eweka Edenabu, said the state of insecurity in the state would not be unconnected to the #ENDSARS protest and the recently held governorship election.

    “Those two factors contributed to the insecurity but we have put in place lots of measure. We have beefed up security around national assets across the state. We also deploy our men for intelligence gathering.

    “All our operational vehicles have been deployed to all parts of the state. Security has been beefed up on the highway. We are doing constant patrolling of the highway. All the black spots in the state are being raided. We will ensure a crime-free Yuletide celebration in Ondo State.”

    The Ondo Amotekun Corps, which launched the Operation Clean Up last Tuesday, said over 20 suspects were arrested within two days. Commander of the Amotekun Corps, Adetunji Adeleye, said the Operation Clean Up was meant to rid all nooks and crannies of the state of all criminal elements.

    Ekiti caught in the throes of insecurity

    For the people of Ekiti State, the last six months have been tough as crimes of different dimensions, such as killings, armed robbery and kidnapping, have become a reoccurring decimal in the state.

    The state, which was hitherto known for its peaceful atmosphere, with maximum protection of lives and property, is now a hellhole for travellers and residents alike, many of whom have suffered in the hands of bandits, killers, kidnappers and perpetrators of other forms of crimes.

    kidnappers

    The deteriorating situation of security in the state has instilled palpable fear in the residents with both the rich and the poor now finding it difficult to sleep with two eyes closed.

    The spate of kidnapping in the state has made people to become security conscious and mindful about where when, and how to travel, as highways have become den of kidnappers and killers. Igbara Odo- Ikere, Aramoko-Erio-Efon, Efon-Iwaraja, Akure-Ikere, Ado-Ijan, Ise-Ikere routes are now firestorms for kidnappers.

    The growing crime wave in the state has become a thing of concern not only to the residents of the state but to visitors and even those using the state as transit route to their various destinations. Ekiti State shares boundary with four states, namely; Osun, Ondo, Kogi and Kwara.

    In the last few months, no fewer than 10 people have been gruesomely murdered in the state while many were kidnapped by suspected herdsmen.

    On January 4, a retired principal, Mr. Femi Ayeni, was gunned down by some gunmen in Emure-Ekiti, the headquarters of Emure Local Government Area of Ekiti State. The incident occurred at about 10:30pm at his residence located along Ise-Ekiti road in the community.

    On April 27, between Governor Kayode Fayemi’s hometown, Isan-Ekiti and Iludun Ekiti, herdsmen killed a councillor with Ilejemeje Council Area and abducted the Ekiti State Commissioner for Agriculture, Mr. Folorunso Olabode, with a woman, Mrs. Taiwo Bosede on their way to Iye-Ekiti.

    The abductees were later released somewhere in Kwara after spending nine days in kidnappers’ den after paying an undisclosed sum of money as ransom.

    On September 15, unknown gunmen shot dead a Director in Ekiti State Local Government Commission, Mr. David Jejelowo, in his house at Igirigiri area of Ado Ekiti, the Ekiti State capital.

    Barely two days after, a retired United States of America’s Major Jide Ijadare, was kidnapped in his palm oil-producing factory located along Ijan Ekiti-Ise-Ekiti road in Ijan-Ekiti, Gbonyin Council Area of Ekiti State. In the process, one person was shot dead.

    On October 3, a pastor working for All Christian, Mr. Kayode Ogunleye, was gunned down in a forest along Aramoko-Ijero Road in Ekiti State. Ogunleye, who was also a farmer, had gone to his farm to harvest plantain when the incident happened.

    Two weeks later, a 62 -year -old security guard with the Federal University of Oye Ekiti, Mr. Matthew Malik, went to his farm and never returned. He was murdered by some hired assassins on his farm at Oye Ekiti in the Oye Local Government Area of Ekiti State.

    On November 4, tragedy struck Dalimore area of Ado Ekiti, the state capital, when a young trader, Mr. Olanrewaju Oladapo, was shot dead by unknown gunmen. The incident occurred around 9.45pm when the assailants trailed the deceased to his house behind Jone-Jane Hospital in Ado metropolis where he was ambushed and killed at the main entrance.

    On November 27, gunmen kidnapped a Chinese expatriate working with the Civil Engineering Construction Company of Nigeria Ltd handling the construction of the new Ado-Iyin road. The victim’s police orderly was shot dead in the ensuing fracas.

    The expatriate, who spent four days in the kidnappers’ den, was later released along Ado-Ilawe road after a whopping sum of N100m was paid as ransom.

    A day earlier, the Presiding Pastor of Solution Baptist Church, Ikere-Ekiti, Rev’d Johnson Oladimeji, was shot dead in his car along Igbara Odo-Ikere road on his way from Osun State to Ekiti State.

    To stem the tide of insecurity, Governor Fayemi has inaugurated a joint patrol comprising operatives of the military, Police and the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps. The taskforce operates on 24hrs, moving across the 16 local government areas of the state; patrolling not just for visibility policing but to also raid black spots.