Category: Saturday Interview

  • I feel good finding love again — Prophet Abiara

    I feel good finding love again — Prophet Abiara

    Prophet Samuel Kayode Abiara is a retired General Evangelist Worldwide of the Christ Apostolic Church (CAC). He is also the founder of the Christ Apostolic Church, Agbala Itura, with headquarters in Lagos and Ibadan. In this interview with GBENGA ADERANTI, the 77-year-old clergyman, who took a new wife about two years ago, talks about his new love, the 5G communication network controversy, why many female pastors don’t remarry after losing their husbands, and plans to reopen churches after the shutdown impelled by the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic.

    We are told that the coronavirus pandemic will be around for a long time. How does that sound to you?

    Prophet Samuel Kayode AbiaraCovid-19 is not a new thing. Epidemics had happened many times in the past. Even before the birth of Jesus Christ, there were epidemics. It is not a new thing. History tells us that when the smallpox epidemic broke out, it killed millions of people. Cholera, Lassa fever, Ebola, malaria all killed many.

    It is a signal to all the people of the world. Christ Jesus talks about the end of this age in Matthew 24. At the second coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, you will hear rumours of wars and many incidents will continue to happen. Epidemics will break out. There will be fake prophecies and fake prophets. It is the word of Jesus Christ manifesting.

    It is one of the signs of the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. It is not something we should fret about.

    You say we should not worry but scientists have said we should be ready to live with it. What is the way out? What should be the roles of clerics in this critical time?

    The Bible does not put us in darkness concerning this. In Isaiah 45:7, God says I form the light and create darkness; I make peace and create evil. I the Lord do all these things. I’m still the same God. If that is the case, we must still go back to that same God and pray to Him; appeal to Him to deliver us from this pandemic. God will surely answer our prayer.

    He said call upon me in the day of trouble and I will answer you (Psalm 50:14-15). At a time like this, we need to gather together and pray unto God and God will answer our prayer. When the enemies wrote a letter to Jehoshaphat, the king of Judah, that they were coming to fight him, Jehoshaphat called all the people, the men, the women and the children, they all prayed unto God and God fought for them.

    We need to pray to God Almighty. Only God can solve the problem. Scientists have tried, doctors have tried, they did not find a solution to the problem. It is a manifestation that God has absolute power over everything, so we have to return to Him.

    Christian leaders are divided over the reopening of churches. What do you think is responsible for this?

    You can’t blame anybody for the position taken on this issue. Everybody has their own opinion. In my own opinion, which is biblical, Roman 13 says we must obey the authority. God put our political leaders there to guide the people; to rule. God rules through people. He put them in positions. You know in government, you have experts in different fields; in hygiene, health matters, medicine and science.

    I think the people in government are looking at Covid-19 pandemic from the angle of health; that if they embark on lockdown, it would curb the spread of the disease. That is their own field. I think we all have to obey and comply with the rules and regulations of government.

    Besides, the lockdown is for a while; it is not something that will last for a long time. If government asks us to do something, let us comply and obey. Let us continue to pray for God to give us peace because He has power over nature.

    Some allege that some of the Christian leaders who are advocating for immediate reopening of churches are driven by pecuniary gains. How do you react to that?

    That is their own opinion. It is not true. Government is aware that by opening churches, the disease could spread further. No responsible government would allow its citizens to die. They must find one way or the other to curb this epidemic. It is normal for people to criticise the policies of government no matter how noble they are.

    I want to believe that it is a thing God laid unto their hearts. Remember it is not the first time the world will be having such epidemic. The lockdown has a history behind it. When it happened in the past, the governments of that time put up the same measure to arrest the spread.

    I am particular about clerics, not government…

    That is their own view. You know in a situation like this, churches normally have financial challenges. It is only when some people come to church that they perform their obligations.

    But that notwithstanding, when they don’t open churches, God knows how to take care of His people. I don’t think churches must because of money lose people. It is not right. It is good to abide by the rules and regulations of government.

    There is this argument too that faith-based institutions are expensive and beyond the reach of an average person. The argument is that missionaries made education free and in most cases, affordable to all but reverse is the case now. What is your take on this?

    If you want quality, you will pay more, and if you want inferior, you will go for it. Nobody forces anybody to attend a particular school.

    If you like it, you enroll in their school. There are many schools. If you cannot afford to go to a private school, you go to a public school. If you want quality education for your wards and you can afford it, you choose private.

    I wonder why people criticise the fees being charged in private institutions. In private institutions, the owners employ versatile and competent professionals and teachers.

    The owners of these private schools pay heavily to engage these professionals and teachers. I don’t think it is fair to criticise the owners of private schools.

    Nobody is forcing anybody to go to private schools. If you like you come, if you don’t like, you take your children to public schools.

    Of late, killing of young virgins has been on the rise. What do you think is responsible for this?

    That was what Jesus Christ was talking about when he talked about signs and end of this age and signs that our Lord Jesus Christ is coming.

    Because He said in Matthew 24:12 that sins will be rampant. I just finished a sermon online. The present world is worse than Sodom and Gomorrah. It is sad that people no longer fear God.

    They kill at will and do so many bad things. They cut and sell human parts at very ridiculous prices. It is a sign of the end of times. That is why people must be careful and move closer to God.

    People now rape. Fathers are raping their daughters. That is an abomination. That was what they did in Sodom and Gomorrah.

    To stem this tide, we need to pray more and government needs to do something about this. My advice to government is that the judicial process must be hastened. Cases drag for too long in courts. That should not be.

    Aside that, some of the criminals get light sentences and this tends to encourage others to commit crime. Imagine the case of a kidnapping suspect dragging for four or five years and government continues to spend money on these suspects.  In 1984, the capital punishment that was in place discouraged many of these criminals from committing crimes.

    For many years CAC was factionalised with members belonging to different camps. Recently, efforts were made to bring the church under one umbrella. When is the process going to be concluded and what should we expect?

    We thank God that church is making efforts and the president, Pastor Abraham Olukunle Akinosun, is making efforts to bring the church together. I believe everything is settled. Very soon, you will hear officially from the church that everything is settled.

    Now that you are retired as the General Evangelist Worldwide, what roles do you play in church?

    Many. If they have retired me in the office, I’m not tired. Like every organisation, there are rules and regulations. According to the rules and regulations of the CAC, when you clock 75, you are expected to vacate the seat and allow younger elements to come to the saddle.

    Even before the time, I had informed the CAC that I would be clocking 75, and when the time came, I vacated the position.

    Prophet Samuel Kayode Abiara

    The church does not stop me from ministering. I just finished ministering to millions of people via Facebook. The grace of God is with me.

    How does it feel to find love again?

    I feel so good. You can see me. The woman takes good care of me. She is a woman God gave me. She is a good woman. She takes care of me. She has respect for me; she has respect for all my children.

    All my children love her so much and they take care of her. I enjoy her company. She is like my former wife. I thank God Almighty for giving me a woman like her.

    Most female pastors do not remarry after losing their partners. But that is not the case with male pastors…

    It is their choice. I think many female pastors prefer not to marry because they want to take care of their children, and you cannot blame them.

    But if they decide to marry, it is not a bad thing, because it is in the Bible. Those who want to marry among them get married; it is their own choice. And those who do not want to marry, it is their choice.

    Are we expecting babies from you very soon?

    (Prolonged laughter) Will you help me to take care of them? But if God gives me two or three sets of twins because of this lady who is taking good care of me, I will praise God and the whole world will rejoice with me, and you journalists will join me in celebrating. It will be news all over the world that I have twins again. I dey kampe.

    Some of your colleagues said it was the 5G network technology that caused the coronavirus pandemic and that Christians should resist the technology. What is your take on this?

    That is their own opinion. The Bible did not say so. Even before Christ Jesus, there were pandemics. According to Psalm 91, those who are in the place of the Almighty, will be under the shadow of Almighty and He will protect us from the pandemic.

    The Bible does not say there will be no corona. The argument that G5 caused coronavirus is not biblical. God made the technology in the world for our comfort.

    They are not dangerous. They are not to harm us. Look at television, look at phone, will you say if you use the phone now, you will have sickness?

    Don’t get me wrong, I’m not blaming them for holding their views. But the Bible does not say that. What I’m saying is that epidemics had been in existence before Jesus, and God said He will deliver us.

    When we move closer to Him; when we are with Him, God will continue to make us have more knowledge to make life very easy for us.

    God even said knowledge will continue to increase and our comfort will increase. That is why I tell people that it is dangerous to enjoy this comfort without accepting Him.

    Talking about palliatives, you distributed materials to some people through the Abiara Foundation. Considering that you are retired, what is the source of your funds?

    You see, I had to do this because of the current challenges many church members are facing. There is no pretence about it; things are hard for so many people, even Christians.

    I decided to give out food and other materials as my own contribution towards lifting those who are in need.

    On the source of my fund, I used part of the money meant for my allowance to do this. You know we can’t sit down and watch people suffer, because the little you do will go a long way.

    If others who are a bit comfortable a bit do their own part, everybody will be happy. There is no wisdom in eating while others are hungry.

  • How we killed, buried 55-yr-old widow in septic tank in Abuja — Brothers

    How we killed, buried 55-yr-old widow in septic tank in Abuja — Brothers

    By Nicholas Kalu, Abuja 

    It took a little while, but karma caught up with 38-year-old Johnson Emmanuel who allegedly killed and buried a 55-year old woman in his backyard at Wumba Community in Apo area of the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja.

    Police operatives attached to the Intelligence Response Unit of the Nigeria Police Force arrested him, earlier this week, alongside his two younger brothers, Gideon, 31, and Success, 27, for the kidnap and murder of one Mrs Janet Nnenna Ogbonnaya on Thursday May 14, 2020.

    She had lost her husband last year.

    Johnson, though admitting to killing the woman, said they were not kidnappers.

    The suspects, all born of same parents, and natives of Isiekenesi, Ideato Local Government Area, Imo State, were arrested by the police in their home town this week where they had taken refuge after the crime was committed in Abuja. The police said they fled Abuja to evade arrest.

    The police said they began investigation into the matter when a son of the deceased, Chinedu, reported that their mother had been kidnapped and a five million naira ransom placed on her head by unknown persons.

    According to Johnson, the woman had been a friend of his for two years and they had met through FaceBook, a popular social media platform.

    But another son of the deceased, Jonathan, who spoke with The Nation yesterday, said it was not true.

    Johnson admitted that he laced the woman’s drink with drugs, which killed her that Thursday night.

    According to him, she had visited him that day in his house located around Second Transformer, Wumba in Apo area of Abuja.

    He said that she had told him that she wanted to leave, but he insisted that she stayed the night in his house.

    He said because he did not want to struggle, he had gone to a nearby chemist shop and asked them to give him some sleeping drugs so he could put it in her drink so she could sleep off till the next morning in his house as he wanted.

    According to him, after she took the drink, she slept off and did not wake up again. Panicking, he called his younger brother Gideon, to help him deal with the situation, and they eventually ended up burying her in a septic tank in his backyard.

    Johnson said the compound belonged to him and he had sold it off at a giveaway price, so he could get the matter behind him.

    He said they decided to talk to the woman’s family about ransome, so they would think she had been kidnapped by unknown persons, and would not be traced back to him. A Toyota Highlander Jeep, which belonged to the deceased, was also recovered by the police operatives at a mechanic workshop in Apo where it had been repainted into a different colour, vehicle documents fraudulently changed and ownership of the stolen vehicle criminally transferred.

    Johnson said: “This this thing happened on the 14th of last month. I have known her for two years now. We have been dating. Each time she came to my house, she always went back. So, on that day, she came to my house and wanted to go back, but I did not want her to go. So I went and bought her sleeping medicine for her to sleep with me.

    “I went to the pharmacy to buy the sleeping medicine. It was a powdery substance. I put it in a juice and she slept and did not wake up again. When she did not wake up, I called my younger brother, Gideon, between 9.30 and 10. I told him I wanted to see him.

    “Gideon came and I told him that my friend had died in my house. I explained everything to him. I suggested that I wanted to bury him in my backyard and he said no. He advised me to put her inside the car and dump her by the roadside.

    “I did not agree. I was afraid people would see us and report us and it would be a murder case. That was how he helped me and we buried her in the soak-away in the compound.”

    According to him, the last brother was not involved in what happened.

    On why he called the woman’s family for ransom, he said: “I told my brother that I wanted to make it seem like she was kidnapped so nobody would suspect that it was me. That was why I called. I called and told them to pay a ransom, and after two days, I broke my SIM card and hers, so there would be no communication anymore.

    “I knew that definitely they would trace the call. They might know I was the one that killed him. I called my brother and told him I was confused. I was afraid the police might trace her to my house, so I sold my house at an auction price.

    “My house is located at Bakassi Market, Wumba, Apo. I thought by then nobody would suspect me but they would think it was kidnappers.

    “When I put her SIM card in her phone, one number called but I didn’t know the person. The person said his name was Mr Igwe and he was looking for the woman. I gave my brother the phone.

    “My brother was afraid. I told him this is what we would do for us to get out of this mess. If we say it is kidnappers, they would not trace it to us. Since that day, I did not call again, and I broke our SIM cards.

    ‘How we became friends’

    “I met her on FaceBook two years ago. I came to Abuja in 2018 and met her. Before then, we were communicating on Facebook. And then we started the relationship. I drugged her because I wanted her to pass the night and go the next morning. I don’t know why I did that.

    “I don’t even know the name of the drug. I just asked for medicine to make someone sleep at the chemist. It was in a sachet. I am not a kidnapper. I only did that to take suspicion away from me. I have never killed before. I am a welder by profession, but I also repair CCTV (cameras).”

    Expressing regrets for his actions, Johnson advised men not to be lacing women’s drinks with drugs, saying it is dangerous.

    Johnson said he had a girlfriend, Charity, who he met in church and they started dating in January.

    Gideon, who he claims he called, said he could not report the matter to the police because it involved his brother.

    He confessed that he suggested that they take the body in the vehicle she brought and dump her somewhere.

    Gideon said: “I am not happy that I had to cover his sin. I asked him why it must be me that he called. I told him to take the lady out, maybe in the morning people would be able to identify her.

    “He argued with me that very night. He said he wanted to put the lady in the soak-away at the backyard.

    “When I came there, he had opened the soak-away already and I ran out. Since that day, I never went back to the house again until we went with the police to get the corpse on Thursday.

    “I did not go to the police immediately, and that was a mistake I did. I was doing it because he is my blood brother and I would not be the one to call the police for him. I told him not to involve me. It was not until I was arrested that I told the police what happened.” The deceased’s son, Jonathan, said Johnson was not telling the truth.

    “That is his own side of the story. From my own knowledge of people, anybody can say anything to sell their story. I don’t buy into that.

    “Why would a woman want to throw away her marriage of 35 years. For who? A nobody? What does he have to offer? Is it not the same house we went to excavate the body from the back? So what exactly does he have to offer?

    “Anyway, this is a matter I should not be talking about, especially with you guys. As a matter of fact, I know what you guys want is a good story,” he said.

    He said his mother never went out except on business, to church, town-meetings, and the market.

    Jonathan, who said his father died and was buried in May last year, said there was no way his mother would date Johnson.

    Narrating their traumatic experience when their mother went missing, he said: “I didn’t live with my mother. I live in Kubwa, but my family house is in Gwagwalada. So the last time we spoke was on Monday 10 May.

    “I visited the family house that weekend and I left on Monday morning and I told her I was heading back to my base in Kubwa. That was the last time we spoke face to face, and when I got back to my base, I called to tell them I was home.

    “Fast forward to Friday the 15th, at about 8.30 to 9 am my younger one called me that she left the house on Thursday and that was then last they heard from her. So I did the needful; I reported to the police. I filled the form for missing persons. I did that at Gwagwalada.

    “I did my own personal search with my friends. We traced the road from Gwagwalada to town, trying to see if we could figure out one or two things. Maybe there was an accident or something, but we could not pinpoint anything. That was on Friday.

    “Throughout this period her line was down. So Saturday morning, as a lot of people had been trying her number, because we informed as many friends of the family as we could just to find out if she could be reached.

    “There was a storm that night so we thought maybe she had difficulty getting to Gwagwalada that night and decided to stay over somewhere. She is not someone who goes out frequently. She only goes out on business, church and towns meeting and, of course, the market.

    “These are the things that take her out of the house. So, that Saturday, we kept trying and it connected. It was the voice of a man that answered. It was actually a deep voice at that time. We asked to speak to the owner of the phone and the person informed us that he was a kidnapper and was with my mum and they would be needing us to pay the sum of five million naira to facilitate her release.

    “So it was surprising, to say the least. We tried rallying around to get the money. We spoke to them that Saturday and Sunday and they stopped calling. But as at Saturday when we realized what happened, we knew it was a kidnap case and we reported the case again.

    “It was no longer the case of missing person but a kidnap case. We did not hear from them again. So in our own little effort, we were still searching until we heard the people that were behind the disappearance of my mother had been apprehended.

    “The police called me on Tuesday. We were told to come around on Thursday.”

    According to the police, further findings had revealed that the victim, a widow, had been a Facebook friend of the principal suspect – Johnson Emmanuel, and was lured from her home in Gwagwalada to visit the suspect. The suspect thereafter took advantage of the visit, served her yoghurt laced with drugs and subsequently had her murdered.

    “The suspect, having killed the victim and buried her remains in a septic tank, went ahead to reach out to the family of the victim using her phone and demanded N5 million ransom as pre-condition for her release,” a statement by the Force Public Relations Officer, DCP, Frank Mba, read on Thursday.

    The police said the suspects led a team of investigators, on Thursday, alongside pathologists to a residence at Wumba District, Lokogoma, Abuja where the victim’s decomposing body was exhumed from a septic tank.

    The exhumed body had been taken to the University Teaching Hospital, Gwagwalada, Abuja for forensic examination.

    The Police said investigations also revealed that the house where the deceased was killed and buried originally belonged to one of the suspects but was hurriedly sold off to a third party apparently to obliterate evidence.

  • No past Imo governor has ever visited me — Victoria Mbakwe

    No past Imo governor has ever visited me — Victoria Mbakwe

    It has been 17 years since the First Lady of the first civilian governor of Old Imo State, Chief (Mrs) Victoria Ahukpeyi Mbakwe, lost her husband and former governor of the state, Chief Sam Mbakwe. In an interview with our correspondent CHRIS NJOKU, the former first lady sensationally revealed that no former governor of the state had deemed it necessary to pay her a visit. She also spoke on a variety of other issues, including her endorsement of the current governor of the state, Hope Uzodinma and why she believes that the governor needs the support of Imo people.

    The administration of Governor Hope Uzodinma is less than five months old in office. What are your feelings about it?

    As far as I am concerned, any government is God’s gift to the people. It is God that puts people in any position at any particular time. Therefore, my opinion is that it is the doing of the Lord. People should support Hope Uzodinma.

    Like people have said, I have the feeling also that the governor has started well. And I heard the governor said he started work from where my husband stopped. He said he is my husband’s incarnate. So, my opinion is that since he is my husband’s incarnate, he will act like my husband. So, I believe the governor will do good work just like my husband did in his time. He will do good work that will help Imo people; do something that will make the people happy.

    And if what he said is the truth, then my husband loved the people of Imo. Everywhere he was, he loved them. What I am telling the current governor is that since he has made that statement, he should act like my husband by loving his people, do whatever that will make them happy and comfortable. So far, he has started well and I hope he will continue.

    Can you tell us one or two things you have heard about Governor Uzodinma?

    As I said, he has said he is Mbakwe’s incarnate. That is good. Another thing is that he has started doing some work, repairing what my husband had started. Again, he has shown great difference between him and other past governors. This makes me believe his statement that he is my husband’s incarnate. I will also give him applause having sent his team ahead to come and see me. It is a good start. None of the past governors has come here to see me. So, this is a very good sign and I like that.

    Your husband had ruled Imo State as governor between 1979 and 83. He is also the one regarded as the best Imo State governor. Are you worried that his record is yet to be broken?

    Nobody wants his child to remain static without growing. So I am very annoyed and very much worried about it. Whenever I hear that nobody has surpassed my husband’s record, I feel sad. I want Imo to grow.

    Recently, Governor Uzodinma abolished pension and gratuities for former governors and deputy governors. What is your opinion on this?

    I don’t know much about that. But all the same, it is the right thing to do, because if a governor finishes his term and goes to the Senate or House of Representatives and he is earning money here and there, I don’t think it is fair. So, I think I like that action the governor has taken. I like it very much.

    The truth is this: if one finishes as a governor and goes to the Senate, I don’t think it is fair for the person to earn salary or pension as governor and at the same time take salary as a senator. He should take one. That is where I am worried. If he as former governor goes to the Senate to earn salary and at the same time earns pension or gratuities, this is not fair.

    You must think about the masses. We have a lot of poor people around us, and part of the money should be used to solve some other problems. It is good if somebody finishes and he is given pension, provided he is not going from there to the Senate and earns money there. I don’t think it is right to earn here and there while some people are suffering.

    When your husband was the governor, he established some industries and today, the industries are moribund. How do you feel when you learn that these industries are going down?

    I was a part of the works done in those days, because they say behind every successful man, there is a successful woman. Then, I was helping my husband. I must tell you I am not happy to see all those factories going down. It doesn’t give anybody happiness at all. It doesn’t give me happiness because I know the efforts my husband made to put the industries in place. I think people should continue from where others stopped. And with that, there will be progress. But without continuity, there will be a problem. That is why we are having the problems we are having today as if everywhere is at a standstill. I am not happy about this development.

    As a former First Lady, if you were to advise Governor Uzodinma as your husband’s incarnate, what areas would you want him improve upon?

    I won’t say others before him did not do anything. I’m sure they did something. There is nobody that came without doing one thing or the other. But what I am against is when a governor starts a good project, it should be continued. However, I want Governor Uzodinma to continue with roads, water and electricity. These are very important to the people.

    Of course, let the governor continue with anything that is good for the people. He should work with love as my husband did to Imo people. Let him carry everybody along in love. If he does it, I’m sure everything will be alright.

    What is your advice to the people who go about vandalizing government projects such as happened recently at the Otamiri Water Works where some hoodlums damaged government property worth millions of naira?

    In the first place, it is wrong for anybody to destroy public property or vandalise the good work of the government which is for the good and benefit of the people. Whoever vandalises such projects is not a friend of Imo people. So, I am against such vandalisation. I say they should stop it.

    Recently, Governor Uzodinma resuscitated Adapalm Plantation. Are you happy hearing some of these good news coming from the government?

    I am absolutely happy. I want such good work to continue. I want my people, as my husband used to call Imo people, to be happy. Therefore, anything that will make them happy, I will support.

    What is your message to Imo people?

    My message to Imo people now is they should know that every government is sent by God, and any person who comes to the throne at a particular time is the Lord’s wish, because without God’s wish, that person will not be there.

    Therefore, I will ask the people to support the government of Uzodinma so that he will do better. If you support somebody, he will be happy to do more. But if you don’t support him, that is when the person relaxes and may not feel the urge to bring out his best.

    So, I will urge Imo people to support Hope Uzodinma because right now, he is the person on the seat.

  • My life in ruins — Retired DSP laments as his only two children burn to death in okada accident

    My life in ruins — Retired DSP laments as his only two children burn to death in okada accident

    The joy of 64-year-old retired Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), Abdul Alkali, knew no bounds when his wife was delivered of their first baby 19 years ago after many years in marriage without an issue. But it all turned into ashes in his mouth on April 26 when the only two children the marriage produced were burnt to death after their motorcycle was involved in an accident. LINUS OOTA writes on the ugly incident and the furore it has generated between the bereaved family and the authorities of Nasarawa State Youth Empowerment Scheme (NAYES).

    The tragedy that befell him is a reminder of the ugly fate of the biblical Job. Abdul Alkali, a retired Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), woke up on April 26 the proud father of two grown up children, but by sunset he had become childless.

    His only two children, Patience (13) and Destiny (19), allegedly burnt to death after an accident impelled by some men of the Nasarawa State Youth Empowerment Scheme (NAYES), leaving the 64-year-old man to reel in the shock of an irreparable loss.

    “God has inflicted a permanent wound on my entire life,” he said as he fought back tears in an interview with our correspondent at his Tundun Gwandara residence in Lafia, the state capital, threatening to take his own life.

    “There is absolutely no point keeping me alive. I think I should just commit suicide and die too.

    “God is not fair to me, and I don’t know my offence.

    “Why my children? Why not me? Why now?

    “How can God take away my only two children at once in their youthful age?”

    He was particularly irked that more than one month after the tragic incident occurred on Doma Road in Lafia, no one was being held accountable.

    In an emotion laden voice, the distraught father recalled the accident that culminated in the tragic end of his teenage children.

    Quoting the last words that Destiny told him before he gave up the ghost at Dalhatu Arab Specialist Hospital (DASH) in Lafia, Alkali said the two children were riding on a motorcycle when they ran into some officials of NAYES.

    Read Also: Mum from hell! Burns stepson’s two hands

    He said: “When I got to the hospital, I asked Destiny, who was still alive, what actually happened, because his body was burnt.

    “He said he was riding with his sister on a bike when two NAYES officers on the road side tried to hit them with a stick.

    “He said that out of fear, he tried to dodge the stick but fell down on the highway.

    “The motorcycle immediately caught fire and burnt the two of them while the NAYES officers took to their heels.

    “They were admitted at DASH the same day where they both gave up after explaining in details what happened to them.

    “I am appealing to the authorities concerned to ensure that all the people involved in the death

    of my children are prosecuted to serve as a deterrent to others.

    64-year-old retired Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), Abdul Alkali

    “As a retired police DSP, I will pursue this case to its logical end.

    “God! What have I done to deserve this type of punishment?

    “How can I forget my two children? It is just not possible because they were amazing to me.

    “I will forever miss them with everything within me.”

    Also speaking, Alkali’s younger brother, Promise, expressed sadness over the incident that claimed the lives of the two “adorable” teenagers, calling for justice as no efforts was made to save their lives.

    He said: “Cutting them short at the prime of their age is disheartening and disturbing.

    “I feel that if justice is not done, correction will not be made.

    “If they are left to go scot-free, it will still repeat itself. So it is not just for us but for others too.

    “If justice is not done, the truth of the matter is it will still repeat itself, because they will feel that they can do it again and get away with it.

    “I was in the hospital with them. The level of negligence from the medical personnel is alarming.

    “For more than three hours around midnight, there was no single doctor, nurse or attendant in the hospital.

    “The patients were just left to cater for themselves.

    “Destiny started jerking up and gasping for breath at about 3:30 am. There was no one to attend to them.

    “I had to move round the hospital. And when I got one nurse, he was there so helpless; not even knowing what to do. And that was where Destiny gave up.”

    But speaking with our correspondent, an eyewitness, Mr Mohammed Abu, who runs a pharmacy within the area where the incident occurred, said the unfortunate development occurred around Doma Road, near Diamond/Access Bank.

    He noted that the deceased were on a motorcycle while a state proclamation prohibits private or commercial motorcycles from moving round the town as part of the measures to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in the state.

    He said that the two siblings met their deaths when the personnel of NAYES chased them with the aim of arresting them for violating the state government’s order.

    He said: “This was how the two children died: as they were conveying fuel on the bike, their crashing down ignited fire and they were burnt.”

    The General Manager of NAYES in the state, Labaran Maina, denied the allegation that his men were responsible for the death of the two young siblings.

    He said: “I was undertaking an assignment at Keana over the plans to evacuate Al-Majiris when the news got to me.

    “In fact, I can lead you to the scene where the accident happened and also show you where my men were standing, which is about 40 meters away from where these young people crashed on the bike and got burnt.

    “On my findings, I was reliably told that nobody chased them. The police and the Civil Defence operatives also confirmed this.

    “And to add to it, since the lockdown order and we are listed among those to complement the efforts of the conventional securities, I instructed my men not to carry sticks or whips against any person, but to be strict in ensuring that enforcement was not compromised.”

    The Nasarawa State Commissioner of Police, Bola Longe, said the command was already investigating the death of the two siblings.

  • A vanishing generation: How older Nigerians are dying out in UK

    A vanishing generation: How older Nigerians are dying out in UK

    By Olatunji Ololade, Associate Editor

    • Migrants recount perils of ageing through the COVID-19 pandemic
    • Lament rising body-count among elderly health workers

    Nobody presents as a fine corpse. Ask Olumide Ojo. The 19-year-old “will never get over” the image of his “very handsome grandpa” and roommate, Pa David, shrivelled and strapped to a stretcher en route the hospital. The 78-year-old wheezed for breath as he was wheeled into an ambulance, redolent of antiseptic, soon after it backed up their driveway in Brent, the United Kingdom (UK).

    Grandpa David, a retired mental health worker, showed no symptom of the coronavirus a.k.a. COVID-19 until “it was too late.” He presented atypically: he was occasionally delirious, which was earlier diagnosed as a consequence of infection of unknown source and acute kidney injury.

    However, two days before he died, he suffered diarrhoea and manifested acute respiratory symptoms and fever typical of COVID-19. His family called emergency health services.

    “Nobody could go with him. We had to follow the rules, stay back and self-isolate,” said his grandson, Olumide.

    Just before the ambulance drove off, Olumide caught a forlorn glimpse of his grandpa; his head flailed to the left, drooped over his torso, pale and shrunken. The 19-year-old took a hard stare, accepting everything, forgetting nothing.

    “He was my best friend. I wished he would stand up and walk,” he said. But Grandpa David didn’t. He was declared dead en route the hospital. Olumide was denied access to the funeral. The teenager and his two siblings, Maggie, 13, and Lola, 10, stayed at home while their parents attended the “rushed, dreary affair,” according to their mother, Shola, the only surviving daughter of the deceased.

    “People are dying every day. It is startling. I fear if solution is not found quickly, the nation (UK) will be in mourning for too long. It is gloomy. I am within the age range of the vulnerable and I fear for myself and others in my age group,” said Victoria Akinkugbe.

    Akinkugbe, 72, is wary of her fate. According to her, news of the elderly’s vulnerability to COVID-19 is quite worrisome. Corroborating her, Florence Magbagbeola, a retired hospice nurse, stated that she had never been “this scared” in her life. The 74-year-old lamented the death of a childhood friend, with whom she operated an unregistered nursing home and crèche for unregistered (illegal) immigrant families in Peckham and Kent.

    “Coronavirus killed Derin. She just turned 70 last week. I couldn’t even attend her funeral. She was my best friend. The virus is cruel. One minute you are here, the next you are gone. It’s becoming very scary. I have never seen anything like this,” she said.

    “Many of us older folk can’t even venture out of our homes. The pandemic has wrecked life as we knew it. The older you are, the more dangerous it becomes for you to move around. These are hard times.

    “You stand the risk of catching the virus anywhere, even in the presumed comfort of your home. It’s riskier for the elderly who are health workers. They go out to fight the disease and save lives and many of them end up losing their lives.

    “Recently, we heard about Eyitolami. She was just one of many Nigerian medical personnel that we have lost to COVID-19,” she said.

    Until her death, Eyitolami Olaolorun, 60, worked at Wellington Hospital in St John’s Wood, a private hospital, where she cared for terminally ill children. However, she started displaying symptoms of COVID-19 in late March and died on April 16.

    In a statement, her children said: “She was an excellent paediatric nurse. She was caring and compassionate towards all her patients and their families, so much so that some of them have become part of our extended family.

    “Our mother meant the world to us, having sacrificed her best years raising four children on her own. She worked tirelessly to ensure we were loved, nurtured and educated.”

    They added that the loss of their mother had left them “heartbroken.” Many more Nigerian families have been torn by grief at the demise of their loved ones.

    A death toll of nearly 50,000 underlined Britain’s status as one of the worst-hit countries in a pandemic that has killed at least 345,400 worldwide; UK’s death toll presents a dire human cost that could define the premiership of Prime Minister Boris Johnson and also the fate of several Nigerians living in the UK.

    Of the casualties are several Nigerians, some of whom are health workers and of the elderly age bracket, like Olaolorun. For instance, Dr. Alfa Saadu, 68, a locum (part-time) physician and retired medical director at the Princess Alexandra hospital, died on March 31, at the Whittington Hospital in north London, of COVID-19 complications.

    He had nearly 40 years’ experience working with the Ealing NHS trust and other hospitals in London, and at his demise, his son, Dani, said of him: “He was a very passionate man who cared about saving people.

    “As soon as you spoke to him about medicine or what was happening with the NHS, his eyes would light up – he was very passionate. He was working part-time as a locum as he just could not fully retire. He just loved medicine so much. He worked for the NHS for nearly 40 years in different hospitals across London and he loved to lecture people in the world of medicine; he did so in the UK and Africa.”

    Edmond Adedeji, 62, was a doctor at Great Western Hospital until his death, after testing positive for COVID-19. Adedeji was being cared for in the hospital’s intensive care unit at the time of his death.

    Then there was Carol Jamabo, 56, a caregiver and mother of two, who reportedly died from COVID-19 complications. Jamabo, who worked as a caregiver at the Cherish Elderly Care in Bury, Greater Manchester, died in April after testing positive for COVID-19. Jamabo became ill at her home and was taken to hospital where she passed away.

    Jamabo moved to the UK from Nigeria in the early 1990s and served as a healthcare worker for over 25 years, working for the prison service and as a National Health Service (NHS) administrator at Guy’s and St Thomas’ Hospital, NHS Foundation Trust in London.

    Adekunle Enitan, 55, was an intensive care nurse at the William Harvey Hospital, Ashford, Kent, until his death on April 24. Enitan worked as an agency nurse for five years. The father of two, known to his colleagues as Ade, has been remembered by East Kent Hospitals foundation trust as a “kind and caring nurse, and a much-respected colleague.”

    Onyenachi Obasi, 51, died on May 6 after spending five weeks on a ventilator. Until her demise, she worked as a nurse for 20 years and told her family it was her duty to help.

    “In death, Obasi is fondly remembered as the ‘angel nurse’ who died from coronavirus while caring for patients afflicted by the disease. Her niece Ijeoma Uzoukwu, 30, said she had previously warned about a lack of personal protective equipment.

    She said: “She was on the frontline, and from what we know, she wasn’t protected. I don’t know too much about it, but she did mention to my mum that she wasn’t protected properly. That’s all I know at the moment.’

    Obasi, 51, is the latest healthcare hero to be named as the death toll of Britain’s health workers surpassed the 200 tally. She died five weeks after being placed on a ventilator at Queen’s Hospital, Romford. The mum-of-one, who had been living in Barking and Dagenham, had been working as a health visitor and nurse in Newham, east London, when she contracted the virus.

    Living through the lockdown

    There is no gainsaying more Nigerians, living in the UK, have become cautious of the virus. Speaking to The Nation, Femi Olapade, a resident of Birmingham, west Midlands, which is one of the largest cities in the UK afflicted by the disease, lamented the hardship foisted on them by the pandemic.

    “At the moment, the casualties are on the increase with a reported death of a frontline health worker. My fear at the moment is the rate of increase in the number of associated deaths as a result of complications from the virus. There are various challenges at the moment which includes the inability of the government to carry out full testing of people to ascertain carriers, and the shortage of PPE and also test locations,” he said.

    At least 2,321 patients have died with the virus in Birmingham hospitals, while about 527 more people have died in care homes – a fraction of the 11,600 deaths so far recorded from coronavirus in care homes across the UK, figures suggest.

    Communities from black and religious minority backgrounds, which make up around 26 per cent of Birmingham’s 842,000 residents, have been disproportionally affected by the virus, prompting a government investigation into the cause.

    A study by N.H.S. England found that 16 per cent of coronavirus victims who died up to the week of April 17 came from ethnic minority backgrounds. And out of more than 100 health workers who have died from the virus, 63 per cent have been identified as from those backgrounds.

    The official UK Government death toll increases daily thus fuelling speculation that nearly 50,000 people have died of COVID-19 across the country.

    Through the dismal atmosphere, however, the Olapades seek to make the best of a stern situation. To “stay alive and kill boredom,” they have developed a routine “that works” for the family.

    “We have lived in the UK for 16 years, and we are blessed with four boys aged 15, 12, 10 and 5 years. My wife works in the healthcare sector so she still goes to work. But because of the self isolation, my boys aren’t allowed out except the back garden. They are also given 30 minutes to ride their bicycles around our street, once a day.

    “They usually spend the morning doing house chores and school work. The evening is spent on their Xbox or Play Station console games. Then we have our movie night with popcorn and juice from 8pm,” said Olapade.

    “We try not to yield to the dreariness,” said Bola Odunbaku, a resident of Kent and single mother of three. “It’s an uphill task but we do what we can to live a normal life,” she said. A typical day for Odunbaku starts and ends in her kitchen. “I wake up and bake. Before COVID-19, I yearned for some time. Being an illegal immigrant, I got laid off even before the virus bit deep into the economy. Now, with so much time on my hands, I couldn’t just sit at home,” she said.

    So, she started baking. “I got this cook book with confectionery menu. I am trying my hands at everything. Some, I get right. Some, I don’t. But me and my kids eat it all the same,” she said, adding that if she’s not cooking, she would be on her sofa watching movies,” she said.

    For Seyi Akinsola, his greatest challenge is keeping his kids entertained. He said, “I have two teenage children. We know teenagers are very restless. But we have been devising all kind of ways to entertain ourselves. I have thought my youngest to play chess. We play monopoly, scrabble and my wife sometimes insists that we play Ludo, which the kids don’t find funny.”

    For Akinsola, a typical day starts with a 40-minute walk with his wife through their Gloucester neighbourhood. “Then we settle to work. We have converted our sitting room to our office. We get the kids to join us as they are still going through online schooling,” he said.

    A roadmap to ‘new normal’

    The British government has issued a roadmap to ease COVID-19 restrictions in five phases. These phases were issued on a three-week review process through the following dates: Phase 1 – May 18; Phase 2 – June 8; Phase 3 – June 29; Phase 4 – July 20; Phase 5 – August 10. If coronavirus cases begin to increase, the government will revert to the restrictions set out in the previous stage. But that is in the long-run, in the short-run, charities highlight more crucial problems for the government to resolve.

    They alleged, for instance, that older people are being “airbrushed” (edited) out of coronavirus figures in the UK. Work and Pensions Secretary Therese Coffey told a news medium recently that the daily figure was based on hospital deaths because “it’s accurate and quick.” Coffey’s claim lends credence to criticism that the UK’s official death toll only covers hospital casualties but not those in care homes, private residences and unregistered immigrant communities.

    The figures prompted the charity Age UK to claim coronavirus is “running wild” in care homes for elderly people. “The current figures are airbrushing older people out like they don’t matter,” said Caroline Abrahams, director of the charity, Age UK

    “In London, everywhere is quiet. People go out but we observe strictly social distancing rules. The buses are no longer full. It is common to see only three passengers in a bus that normally carries 36 to 38 passengers.

    “Bus entrances have been reduced to one because no one is allowed to enter through the driver’s side. The other entrances are totally cordoned off for safety purposes. To keep drivers safe, passengers are disallowed to pay for transport fare too. Journey to any distance is free at this time,” said Akinkugbe.

    On another note, Akinsola said: “If the UK with perhaps one of the best healthcare systems in the world is struggling, you can imagine the calamity if the virus gets a grip in Nigeria.”

    Akinsola’s fears aren’t far-fetched perhaps. As of June 3, about 11,166 cases had been confirmed, 3,329 cases had been discharged and 315 deaths had been recorded in 35 states and the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja.

    Just recently, the Nigerian government sounded the alarm over fake COVID-19 test kits in circulation. But that is simply one of a slew of impediments to Nigeria’s battle against COVID-19.

    President of the National Association of Nigeria Nurses and Midwives (NANNM), Abdurafiu Alanis Adeniji, lamented that over 2,000 Nigerian health care professionals, especially nurses and doctors, have tested positive for COVID-19 while about 15 health care professionals have lost their lives.

    Even more worrisome is the fate of the Nigerian elderly exposed to the disease. Taiwo Ajiun, a nursing matron, argued that a large number of senior citizens are left out of intervention efforts.

    “Many old people lack access to appropriate health facilities and palliatives. Many of them living in coastal communities, for instance, are totally ignored. More focus is accorded the cities, where bed space is limited to the privileged. Our senior citizens must be accommodated in health intervention too. Many of them are sorely disadvantaged and uncared for. They are more vulnerable to the disease,” she said.

    But that’s one way to look at the situation. The flipside presents a conundrum. Just recently, an 82-year-old widow, who is also hypertensive, recovered from COVID-19 after receiving a nine-day treatment at the Isolation and Treatment Centre, Asubiaro, Osogbo, in Osun State. The octogenarian’s recovery from the virus beats the odds as elderly people with chronic diseases are the highest risk group, because most of the time, they are unable to recover from COVID-19, according to health experts.

    From London to New York, Paris, and Moscow, the coronavirus has crippled economies and laid metropolises to waste. Worst hit are the elderly and indigent whose impoverishment and untimely deaths by COVID-19 cast shadows on large, dense cities. There are hopes, however, that the pandemic would thaw and weaken in ravage as the government and global health community intensify measures to curtail its spread.

    Until then, the world, and UK-based Nigerians in particular, would continue to live in fear of the pandemic.

  • ‘Tears kept flowing from our daughter’s eyes even in coma’

    ‘Tears kept flowing from our daughter’s eyes even in coma’

    The world woke up penultimate Wednesday to the shocking story of a 23-year-old University of Benin undergraduate gang-raped and murdered by some heartless men who invaded the parish of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG) in Benin City where she had gone to read. Southsouth Bureau Chief BISI OLANIYI reports on how the parents of the deceased student received the shocking news of her gruesome death.

    When she departed her family’s residence at No. 3, Michael Avenue, Ohovbe Quarters, Ikpoba Hill, Benin, Edo State penultimate Wednesday, 23-year-old Uwaila Vera Omozuwa had no inkling of the ugly fate that awaited her.

    Since going to the nearby Miracle Sanctuary Mega Parish of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG) at Amadasun Street, in the same Ohovbe Quarters to study had become a routine for her, she had no reason to suspect that death, of all things, could be lurking in the corner.

    After all, it is the church that she and other members of the Omozuwa family had attended for more than 10 years.

    Uwaila was said to have been a regular face at the church while she was preparing for both her Senior School Certificate Examinations (SSCE) and the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) through which she secured admission into the University of Benin (UNIBEN).

    On arriving the church in the morning of May 27, she collected the keys to the main auditorium from a nearby house, where they were always kept. The holder of the keys had no problem releasing the keys to her as a familiar, God-fearing member of the church.

    She quickly settled down and was studying alone inside the church’s main auditorium. A few hours later, some men found their way into the sacred chamber, gang-raping her after they had thoroughly beaten her and later smashed her head with the cylinder of the fire extinguisher kept inside the church.

    While the choir member’s struggle with the criminals lasted, nobody in the neighbourhood heard her scream or cry for help, hence none came to her rescue until she was left unconscious near the altar, after the agents of darkness had fled, forgetting that their fingerprints were on the blood-stained cylinder.

    Uwaila Vera Omozuwa

    When the church’s security man arrived around 6 pm to resume duty, as usual, he could not find the keys to the church’s auditorium at the neighbour’s place. He asked for the keys but was told that Uwaila had come to collect them and was studying in the church’s main auditorium. The guard then moved to the church auditorium only to be confronted by the horrible sight of Uwaila’s smashed head and near lifeless body in a pool of blood!

    The security man immediately raised the alarm, drawing the attention of the pastor, some senior members of the church and neighbours. Uwaila mother’s, Mrs. Joy Omozuwa, was also contacted immediately. The victim was immediately rushed to nearby Enoma Hospital, Ogbeson Quarters, Ikpoba Hill, Benin, from where she was moved to the University of Benin Teaching Hospital (UBTH) where she was given special attention at the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) of the hospital.

    In spite of her critical condition, the innocent young woman was said to have managed to tell the medical doctors and nurses what actually happened to her and the brains behind the dastardly act before she gave up the ghost last Saturday.

    Uwaila’s distraught father, Elder Johnson Omozuwa, later relayed the efforts made by him, his wife and others to keep Uwaila alive, describing the undergraduate as a well-behaved daughter who kept her virginity.

    Elder Omozuwa said his biggest pains were provoked by the tears that kept pouring from Uwaila’s eyes in the four days she remained in coma at the intensive care unit (ICU) of the UBTH.

    The 49-year-old mother of Uwaila, Mrs. Joy Omozuwa, also spoke about her lovely daughter, whom she fondly called Uwa, and her last days.

    The mother of five, who spoke in Pidgin English, said: “What happened to my daughter pains me a lot, because I did not expect that she would die in that horrible manner.

    “We left home together on that fateful day (May 27). She was very vibrant and she loved reading. She had been going to the same church to read for the past five years.

    “She had also been reading inside the RCCG’s main auditorium since the outbreak of COVID-19 pandemic and lockdown. She said she did not want to have a carry-over in her examinations, to avoid the extra expenses that it would bring.

    “She used to come back home early. At times, she would return around 2 pm to eat and at times, she would read till about 5 p.m. Moreover, she had sight problem. So, she was not keeping late night.

    “She would always tell me not to panic if she did not come back home on time and that she would be fine. On May 27, a friend from our church (the RCCG) came to visit me. While my friend was with me, I tried to call Uwa around 5 pm, but her line did not connect. When I returned home, after seeing off my friend, I saw in my phone three missed calls from a friend, Mrs. Osula.

    “When I called back, Mrs. Osula told me to come immediately, that my daughter (Uwaila) had been rushed to the nearby hospital. As I was running to the place, my husband was asking where I was going, but I told him it was Uwa and I kept running.

    “When I reached the hospital, I was told that they met Uwa in the church, her mouth was gagged with a piece of cloth, her eyes were blind-folded and her hands were tied to her back.

    “My friend said when she untied her hands, she thought Uwa had died, but when she saw that Uwa was moving her fingers, she realised that she was still alive. So, she rushed her to the private hospital in the neighbourhood.

    “When I arrived at the hospital, the sight of my daughter was quite pathetic. She was bleeding from her ears and nose. Her eyes were swollen with blood and there was a big cut on her head. They also raped Uwa. I could not with stand the sight. So, I stepped out of the hospital.

    “On that May 27, Uwa wore a jean skirt with a white top, but the white top was soaked with blood and it turned red. I cried bitterly. The beating on Uwa was so much. The cylinder of the fire extinguisher that was in the church was used to smash my daughter’s head.

    “When I finally summoned courage, I took a bucket with water and a napkin and I began to clean Uwa. Her breathing was faint. She was infused to revive her, but she struggled in agony at intervals.

    “When my devastated husband arrived at the private hospital, he said the main auditorium of RCCG where Uwa was attacked, looked like a place where a cow had just been slaughtered, while insisting that Uwa must quickly be moved to UBTH for better treatment. On arrival at UBTH, the doctors tried their best.

    “I later confronted one of the doctors, who frankly told me, that the injuries were deep and that Uwa had lost so much blood, while declaring that her case was 50-50, but assured me that they would do their utmost. They really tried their best, but Uwa died on May 30.”

    The pained mother disclosed that Uwaila, her second daughter, was not troublesome and she was the most gentle of her five children, who was always reading her books.

    Mrs. Joy Omozuwa noted that the previous week, Uwaila’s elder brother teased her by requesting to know her boyfriend, but she responded that it was time to study and not to love, while stating that her husband would come at the appropriate time, unknown to her that the assailants would not allow her to get married.

    Uwaila’s shattered mother revealed that her daughter also had male friends, but they were not lovers.

    The Public Relations Officer of the Edo State Police Command, Chidi Nwabuzor, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), assured that justice would be served for the gang-raped and murdered undergraduate.

    The command commiserated with members of the family of Elder Omozuwa on the death of the brilliant and intelligent undergraduate, while praying to God to give them the fortitude to bear the loss.

  • How we were initiated into cult as junior secondary school pupils

    How we were initiated into cult as junior secondary school pupils

    By Ebele Boniface

    Four robbery suspects who operate by disguising as taxi drivers are now in the net of the operatives of the inspector General of Police Intelligence Response Team (IGP IRT).

    Nemesis allegedly caught up with Didi Jolly, Chisom Unegbu, Micheal Matthew and George Ala when the commander of the IGP IRT, Abba Kyari, a Deputy Commissioner of Police (DCP), decided to lead a special team to smash the gang, following public outcry against their menace.

    They were said to be in the habit of not only robbing their victims of money and valuable items like phones and ATM cards in Port Harcourt and its environs, but also subjecting them to serious torture as they often throw their victims off the moving vehicle.

    A manhunt launched for the gang resulted in the arrest of Jolly, who was said to have led the IRT detectives to pick the three other members of the gang.

    “They also detain their victims while they take their time to withdraw money from their accounts,” a police source said, adding that three of the suspects were all initiates of a cult group known as Icelanders while they were in junior secondary school.

    In his confession, Jolly, a native of Obugbasa Local Government Area, Cross River State, said his parents were living in Port Harcourt where he and his siblings were born and bred.

    He said: “I was a student of Maris Comprehensive Secondary School before I dropped out of school in my second year.

    “It was very common among students to belong to one cult group or the other. The senior student that I took as my college father was the one who initiated me. I was 14 years at that time.

    “During break time, he took me to an uncompleted building behind our school with the excuse that we were going to buy snacks.

    “When we got there, he sent me to buy a bottle of Squadron, an alcoholic drink. When I came back, there were so many boys, especially our seniors.

    “The next thing, they pulled my shirt and started beating me. After that, they forced me to drink from the alcohol.

    “They then said I had become a member and failure to abide by their rules would result in death.

    “I was afraid and wanted to tell my parents but they warned me against it.

    “My mum is a religious woman and did her best to train us well. “In the streets, almost every boy child was a cultist, and my mother warned us that she would not tolerate it.

    “I kept it as a secret till months later when about 50 boys who are members of our cult group visited my house at night.

    “I was supposed to be on duty on that day, but because I was still living with my parents, there was no way I could sneak out.

    “Normally, we take turns to watch over our area in case another rival cult decided to attack.

    “They came and forced me to follow them and threatened to deal with my family members if they don’t allow me to work for them.

    “I can remember so well how my mother wept the night they dragged me away.

    “When I returned in the morning, she told me that they had decided to relocate to Cross River State, and that I should come along. I refused and everyone left, including my father and my twin brother.

    “I managed to hang around school for a year before I dropped out, because I was homeless and was only struggling to survive.

    “I became active, and it is normal for cult members to go and snatch bags and phones.

    “I normally attend meetings at Okirika town till we were scattered in 2009 when the Federal Government offered amnesty.

    “I was not lucky and we all scattered and only met in secret.

    Things were tough for me till I met one Gbongbon who allowed me to live in his room. He was the one who introduced me to robbery.

    “Lately, we have concentrated on using cars to rob people. One of us will carry the car, pretend to be a taxi driver and pick one or two persons.

    “We will also board the same car and rob them. We would sell their phones at Yam Zone at Creek Road in Port Harcourt.

    “We do not collect I phone because it has an iCloud. We sell the most expensive one for about N10,000 or at most N15,000.”

    Jolly, however, denied being a kidnapper, saying: “We only snatch bags and rob people.

    “It is only if we pick someone who has money in his account; we will keep him till we withdraw enough money from his account.

    “I wish at this point that I had listened to my mother who kept calling and begging me to relocate to Calabar. If police release me, I will trek to Calabar if that is my only option.”

    The second suspect, George Ala, said: “I am from Bonny Island in Rivers State. I was a student of Comprehensive High School on New Road, Borokiri, but I dropped out of school in JSS3 when my mother died.

    “My father died and a year later my mother was poisoned. After the death of my father,  I  started learning carpentry after school, and it was one of the apprentices who was also a student in my school that took me to the bush after work and  I was forced to join them.

    “My mother, who was sick then, pleaded with me to stop; that my life would be ruined, and I promised her that I would stop. But I just said so, so that her health would not get worse if she got to know that I am a cultist.

    “Unfortunately, she died and our neighbours took her to the cemetery for burial.

    “My mother never took me and my brother to her people or my father’s side. We were alone, and two months later, the landlord asked us to move out. We started sleeping under the bridge or any place that homeless boys used to converge.

    “In the morning, we would go and beg for money in the streets or do any casual job we could get. Luckily, one woman who heard our story decided to take my brother home as a house boy.

    “I stayed back and was mixing with the boys when one popular guy known as Gbongbon, who normally gave me N500 every other day, asked me to follow him out.

    That day, we snatched several bags and I was given N5,000. This was how I started till Gbongbon also started the ‘one chance’ business.

    “I am one of those that would enter the car as soon as our target is in the car.

    “It is Gbongbon who is the expert that makes arrangement for all the guns that we use during operations.

    “We just use the gun to scare people, it does not even have a single bullet. I have sinned against God and man, please forgive me.

    The third suspect,t Chisom Unaegbu, said: ” I am from Ehite Mbaise in Imo State, but I grew up in Rivers State.

    “I am not a cultist, but my father abandoned me for reasons best known to him.

    “We suffered a lot because the money my mother made as an auxiliary nurse was not enough to take care of three children.

    “She asked me and my sister to drop out of school so that our elder brother could further his education. I learnt how to drive and gradually became a taxi driver.

    “I was able to get a car on hire purchase and we agreed that I would be paying N5,000 a day.

    “I was struggling to meet up with target when my friend Michael suggested a fast way out. He told me that my own role was to use my car and be the driver.

    “We normally operate around Rummokuta between 8pm and 9.30pm, and even if we don’t make enough money, the agreement is that they must give me N5,000 so that I can pay my daily contribution.

    “This was the only assurance that the car, which is a Toyota Camry, would be available. A lot of people enter private cars at that Rummokuta and they pay at least N150 per drop.

    “Since I joined them in January, I have lost count of the number of people that we robbed. But I can assure you that we did not kill anyone.

    “The gun is just meant to scare them to submit everything they have.

    “I blame my father for my situation, because if he was not alive, it would be better than to watch me suffer and turn into a criminal.”

    The fourth suspect, Micheal Matthew, said:” We went for a birthday party and on our way back, we met a lot of young boys known to me and they were making mockery of me that I am not a member of any cult.

    “I then decided to join them, and when I came home late, my mother checked my body and saw marks.

    “It was common in our area so she knew what it was. She reported me to the community head and I joined others and ran away.

    “That was how I ended up in the streets and had to survive.”

  • ‘Solid minerals way out of post-COVID-19 economic crisis’

    ‘Solid minerals way out of post-COVID-19 economic crisis’

    As the Chairman of the Solid Minerals and Allied Services Group of the Lagos State Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) and member of the Ministerial Committee on the Optimization of Revenue from Mineral Resources by the Ministry of Mines and Steel Development in Nigeria, Otunba Babatunde Alatise is very concerned about the state of Nigeria’s solid mineral sector, which he says is being trivialized. He told GBENGA ADERANTI what Nigeria must now do to save the sector, particularly now that foreigners are being arrested for illegal mining in some parts of the country and the price of crude oil, Nigeria’s mainstay, is collapsing.

    How do you react to the upsurge in illegal mining activities in Nigeria?

    I am deeply worried but not surprised. It must be a cause for great concern for any reasonable Nigerian, especially now that crude oil is almost hovering between zero dollar and the cost price.

    Obviously, the diversification drive of the Federal Government is geared towards agriculture and solid minerals, and the recent upsurge in illegal mining activities is a threat to the N20 billion GDP target set by the Minister of Mines and Steel Development, who is taking the bull by the horn.

    This worry must stem from the recent arrest of foreigners in Osun and Zamfara states, engaging in mining illegally?

    Exactly so. The positive side from the recent arrests is that state governments are waking up to protecting their natural resources.

    The Hon. Minister of Mines, Arch. Lekan Adegbite, has given the organised private sector a significant boost in investor confidence and we encourage his bold actions as a deterrent to other criminals and villains.

    As a major player in the solid mineral industry, what do you think that government has not done?

    Nigeria and Nigerians have not really taken the solid mineral sector seriously. The finance and investments sector needs to pay more attention to mining.

    Many banks still do not have mining/solid minerals desks as of today. CBN has created NIRSAL to de-risk agriculture but mining is still waiting for its intervention funds locked up at BOI (Bank of Industries).

    Banks are quick to fund real estate projects but still cannot see that industrial/construction minerals like sand, granite, cement, iron rods, etc are part of real estate. Banks and finance houses desperately need to build more capacity in this sector.

    Non-oil goods accounted for 22% export, says NPA (Nigerian Ports Authority). So the ministry is doing something right. But we need export processing zones with well-equipped laboratories for geochemical, geological, geophysical tests to be carried out to further increase these numbers.

    We still do not have a digital/physical market place for solid minerals. We need a mineral exchange where off-takers and miners can meet, network and negotiate metal and non-metal commodities.

    I guess there is also much lack of information or misinformation. The discovery of crude oil has not helped Nigeria in this regard. The average Nigerian could tell you so much about oil subsidy, but when you say solid minerals and mining, he is tongue-tied.

    Yet Nigeria is richly blessed in every state and region. For instance, Lagos is blessed with so much sand and laterite. Many people do not even know that sand is solid mineral. It is from sand you get silica for making glass and bottles. It is from a mixture of sand, granite and cement that you get concrete.

    Just imagine the amount of gold in Zamfara and Osun states. The coal in Enugu, the iron ore in Kogi, the manganese in Cross River, the baryte in Benue, the phosphate in Ogun and so much more. What do you think FG should do about this?

    The world is speedily moving towards renewable energy which is generated from solid minerals, and Nigeria is richly blessed.

    FG must immediately review and streamline the solid mineral export policies and other outdated laws of the country like Explosives Act of 1967 to make room for immediate progress in the solid mineral sector as the price of crude oil has fallen drastically worldwide.

    Mining solid minerals should be given priority and reclassified as essential service, as it is a major part of the diversification drive.

    Port of exit officials like the Nigeria Customs Service, aviation, security and so on need training for easier scanning and identification of smuggled solid minerals.

    What is your reaction to the illegal miners including foreigners recently arrested in Osun and Zamfara states?

    As earlier mentioned, I am happy the Hon. Minister of Mines and Steel Development is leading this prosecution. Collaboration with the Ministry of Internal Affairs via the office of the Comptroller General of the Nigerian Immigration Service would be great, because it involves illegal aliens.

    It is only the immediate prosecution of such mineral bandits that will check the rampant spate of illegal mining activities going on across Nigeria, perpetrated by both Nigerians and other nefarious foreigners.

    It is very wrong to allow illegal miners, especially foreigners, to roam Nigeria free in search of our natural resources; an act that is unlawful in their country.

    These foreigners know the penalty for illegally removing their country’s natural resources, yet they come to Nigeria and do whatever pleases them.

    In most countries, I know there are rules to the excavation of solid minerals. I wonder why it is not the case in Nigeria where there has been a complete neglect of the sector.

    It is economic sabotage to steal solid minerals, natural resources and our collective wealth as a nation, and we must learn from other mining jurisdictions in Africa where banditry and rebels control mining concessions, like the DRC.

    I must say that it is time Nigeria started taking seriously the solid mineral sector and emulate mining countries like Canada, Australia and South Africa, because it is the only way to enjoy the benefits of the many solid minerals the country has been blessed with.

    The diversification of our mono product economy is paramount to the alleviation of the suffering of the common man. From fixing unemployment to solving energy concerns and increased GDP, solid minerals development is the only way out of post-COVID-19 economy.

    How best do you think illegal mining can be checked?

    Today, checking illegal mining activities can be done via structural geology 3D forward and reverse kinematic modeling software.

    This predicts unseen structures and reduces uncertainty about how much mining has been done in any location. So ministry officials will simply issue a mining demand notice/bill and degradation of environment penalty to all found mining illegally to deter future culprits.

    Other ways are aerial surveillance of notorious illegal mining sites via unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) commonly known as drones.

    These issues and more will take the front burner during the proposed 2020 Mining Business Development Summit of the Solid Mineral and Allied Group of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

    What is the summit all about?

    The first summit was organised at the chamber last year (2019). At the summit, we deliberate on many problems confronting mining and solid minerals and try to proffer solutions.

    We all know that information is power. People do not know what to do with these solid minerals or even where to get them.

    You are young and passionate about your industry. Since when have you been involved in mining?

    I learnt under the tutelage of my late father, Alhaji (Otunba) Sikiru Olatunji Alatise, the Alagbala Adinni of Lagos and Otutubiosun of Ijebuland, Ogun State, who started his mining business in 1989.

    Since 2007 when I joined him, I have learnt much more about the industry. I tell everyone that I am incredibly lucky to have been well exposed by my father who worked for several multinational companies like General Motors, UACN and Unilever.

    I studied Mechanical Engineering at the Lagos State University and Computer Science in London Metropolitan University. I am registered with both COMEG & COREN and I am one of the youngest dealers in explosives in the country as at today.

    I am also a second generation explosive dealer in Nigeria. You cannot enter the soil without excavating and sometimes exploding it. I am a member of the technical sub-committee on the export of explosives to African countries set up by the office of the National Security Adviser and the Export Committee at the LCCI.

  • Yesterday stars: Where are they now?(1)

    Yesterday stars: Where are they now?(1)

    By Kehinde Oluleye

    Some superstars never fade away. They always appear like a permanent part of the show biz firmament. These include celebrity artistes who endowed the ’70s, ’80s, ’90s and the turn of this century with the glitter of celebrity and stagecraft. Many of them retain their dazzle even as they age.

    This pantheon of renown includes A-listers like Olu Jacobs, Taiwo Ajayi-Lycett, Pete Edochie, King Sunny Ade, Commander Ebenezer Obey, Adebayo Salami, and Richard Mofe- Damijo among others.

    There is no gainsaying their past and current exploits command the resonant tribute of applause every time their faces and work grace the covers of digital and mainstream media.

    Far away from the limelight, however, there are several contemporaries of these men and women whose acclaim, though recognizable through past efforts, isn’t as intense as it used to be.

    While some have withdrawn entirely from showbiz, others are still trying to reignite their old glories by competing with the younger generation of artistes. Others have ventured into different callings; these include Revd. Ebenezer Obey, Pastor Chris Okotie, scholar and university teacher, Sola Sofudo, and US-based nurse, Regina Askia.

    Thus we help you re-enact old memories by the exploits of your favourite show biz and celebrity idols.

    Evi Edna Ogholi

    Evi Edna Ogholi is a Nigerian female reggae musician, popular for her track, “Happy Birthday.” After the release of her debut album, “My Kind of Music” in 1987, Ogholi attained instant acclaim as a sensational reggae star.

    Evi Edna Ogholi
    Evi Edna Ogholi

    This placed her among the best reggae performers of that time in Nigeria. “Happy Birthday” is one of the evergreen songs of the ’90s and undoubtedly, the most popular song released by the artiste.

    It enjoyed airplay at most birthday parties. Ogholi was married to her producer and manager, Emma Ogosi, and the marriage was blessed with two children. The marriage eventually crashed and she moved to Paris, France, where she currently lives.

    Mike Okri

    Just like Evi Edna Ogholi, Mike Okri was one of the musicians who achieved mainstream success in the late ’80s following the successful release of his debut album, “Concert Fever.”

    mike Okri
    mike Okri

    The “Time Na Money” crooner is one of the biggest artistes of the ’80s and ’90s. He “disappeared” from the limelight at the prime of his career and it was later discovered that he relocated to America.

    Felix Liberty aka Lover Boy

    Felix Aigbe Liberty aka Lover boy was one of Nigeria’s greatest pop sensations at a point. His love song, “Ifeoma” became the love anthem of a generation of teens and youthful lovers of his era.

    Felix liberty
    Felix liberty

    Liberty attained renown at his release of “Ifeoma” and the song ruled the waves for a long time. He later became a born-again Christian in the late ’90s. He is now a pastor.

    Kunle Falola aka Dizzy K Falola

    Kunle Falola aka Dizzy K Falola was also a superstar in the ’80s. He is now a London-based gospel singer. His racy ’80s hit “Baby Kilode” enjoyed endless radio time and made him the crush of many teenage girls.

    Dizzy K Falola
    Dizzy K Falola

    After his first album, he also did “Sweet Music” and “Excuse Me, Baby.” One of his songs, “African Jamboree,” also did well. Dizzy K became born again in 1989 and reportedly turned down an offer by music company EMI to concentrate on gospel music.

    Alex Zitto

    Alex Zitto started out as a guitarist and played as a bass guitarist for juju legend, Ebenezer Obey. But he is better known for his reggae and pop hits. Although Zitto had been doing his thing quietly for years, he attained fame after winning a music contest and released his hit track, “Tickle Me.”

    alex zito
    alex zito

    Polygram Records, one of the biggest music labels at the time, subsequently signed him on its platform. While at the label, he released another hit song titled, ‘Walakolombo’ in 1991. Zitto is based in the US.

    Alex O

    Alex Okoroigwe aka Alex O, is a man of many parts. He is a pop artiste, producer, and songwriter. His biggest hit, ‘Celebrate,” took the market by storm. He was a member of the musical ensemble of late music maestro, Steve Rhodes.

    alex
    alex

    When he left Rhodes, he joined the company of famous producer, Lemmy Jackson (real name Otu Odufa) and worked as a production assistant and songwriter.

    By the ’90s, he was signed on by Polygram Records. He is married to Oby Edozie, a Nigerian film actress and producer. He owns a company which operates on the technical side of show biz.

    Segun Adewale

    Segun Adewale was one of the young juju artistes of the ’70s and ’80s. He was so good that fans and music buffs labelled him a worthy successor to legendary juju maestros, King Sunny Ade and Chief Ebenezer Obey.

    The Osogbo, Osun State prince experimented with elements of jazz, pop, funk, reggae in his juju music. Adewale and another juju artiste, Sir Shina Peters, worked with Prince Adekunle, a superstar of the ’70s but they later left to start their own band, Shina Adewale and the Superstars International.

    segun adewale
    segun adewale

    They released nine albums but ended their partnership after disagreements.

    Adewale then launched his personal version of juju, which he called Yo-Pop. Adewale is still active in the Nigerian music scene.

    Mandy Brown Ojugbana

    Mandy Brown Ojugbana ruled the airwaves as one of the few screen divas before the so-called “video vixens” and “sexy prima donnas” became regular features of Nigerian TV screens.

    Ojugbana was a very talented musician and radio presenter. Her debut album titled “Breakthrough,” which included hits like a reworked version of Bobby Benson’s “Taxi Driver” was very successful. Ojugbana’s journey into music started in the church.

    After her successful debut, she relocated to the United Kingdom (UK), where she worked as a presenter. She is currently in Nigeria working on radio. She presents “Smooth Breakfast with Mandy” on Smooth 98.1 FM.

    Ene Oloja

    Ene Oloja was one of the pioneer actresses of the Nigerian movie industry. A seasoned and well-read actress, Oloja was one of the stars in one of Nigeria’s most successful soap operas, ‘Cock-Crow At Dawn’ and “Behind The Clouds.”

    The programme aired continuously for eight years on the National Television Authority (NTA). She studied Theatre Arts at the University of Ibadan and International Relations and Strategic Studies at the University of Jos. The actress and mom of one moved to the United States, in 1991.

    Sandra Achums

    Sandra was a popular actress of the ’90s. She is an actress, producer and philanthropist.

    sandra achums
    sandra achums

    Achums relocated from Nigeria to Germany in 2006 and currently lives there with her husband and children. She was in “Deadly Affair,” “Domitilla,” “Gone Forever” and other Nollywood movies.

  • Why I set up committee  to review Amosun’s   policies – Dapo Abiodun

    Why I set up committee to review Amosun’s policies – Dapo Abiodun

    On the occasion of his 60th birthday one year in office, Ogun State governor, Prince Dapo Abiodun speaks about the journey so far, explaining why many of the policies of his immediate predecessor, Senator Ibikunle Amosun are being reviewed. He also speaks about his plans for local government election and his relationship with Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, former President Olusegun Obasanjo and All Progressives Congress (APC) national leader, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, among other issues.

     

    ON assuming office as Ogun State governor, you set up some committees to look into some policies and actions of your predecessor. But one year in the saddle, people are still expecting White Papers on the findings of these committees. Why the delay?

    When we came in, we found that many of the issues we met on ground required further explanations, because the hand-over notes we got were rather hazy and we needed to hit the ground running. Yet we have so many uncompleted projects from the previous administration, so we needed to take stock and be sure we prevent future occurrences of such.

    For instance, about a week after I came into office, I paid a visit to the state-owned tertiary healthcare facility at Sagamu—the Olabisi Onabanjo University Teaching Hospital— based on information received at an earlier meeting with the hospital’s management.

    I was shocked at the level of rot in the hospital. The Teaching Hospital used to be one of the best medical facilities in the country, but it had become a shadow of itself.

    Most of the medical equipment were obsolete and others dysfunctional. The mortuary and the entire vicinity was filled with bad odour due to lack of maintenance and non-availability of needed equipment to make it functional.

    I had to set up a nine-man committee headed by the Chief Medical Director of Reddington Hospital, Dr. Yemi Onabowale.

    The committee’s specific terms of reference include: To assess the current operations of the hospital in line with expectations as a teaching/tertiary  institution; determine the state of facilities of the various units and departments and make recommendations to the state on the steps necessary to ensure sustainable operations in the institution.

    The committee was also to determine quick wins and palliative actions to stem further degeneration of the institution and facilities and review all third party arrangements in the institution, including the Private-Public Partnership (PPP) and other services provisioning arrangement and determine their level of compliance at the time of their engagement and with the efficacy.

    We had an administrative panel on the Moshood Abiola Polytechnic and the Moshood Abiola University of Science and Technology. Moshood Abiola Polytechnic (MAPOLY) which the ex-governor purportedly converted to Moshood Abiola University of Science and Technology (MAUTECH) without the wherewithal to nurture the new institution.

    It is instructive to note that while the institution was being converted on paper from MAPOLY to MAUTECH, the staff of Tai Solarin College of Education were being owed 24 months’ salaries.

    When you consider the fact that MAPOLY had produced many leading lights in this country and was probably the most flourishing institution, being able to substantially generate and pay its staff’s salaries as and when due, the disruption caused should give any right-thinking administrator some concern. It was most galling misadventure. These institutions were not functioning.

    What about the committee you set up on the review of appointments and promotions in the state civil service and enterprises?

    The committee was meant to give us an informed assessment of employments and promotions between February 1 and May 29, 2019. Yet, another one was set up to review the appointments, installations and promotions of 75 traditional rulers in the state in the twilight of the previous administration.

    Of course, we set up one to investigate the propriety of the last minutes contracts and projects. None of these was set up to witch-hunt.

    They were set up to provide the right type of leadership to enable the state to perform optimally. All the people brought in have the requisite training, exposure, experience and integrity to drive the sectors where we called them to serve.

    To review the appointment of 75 coronet Obas, we had a paramount ruler, the Olu of Ilaro, Oba Kehinde Olugbenle and other traditional rulers and others drawn from that institution. To head the projects, we brought in the President of the Nigerian Society of Engineers, Engr Adekunle Mokunolu as Chairman.

    You’ll see that in ensuring that we provide focused and qualitative governance, we didn’t politicise these important assignments. Luckily, the state is renowned for its professionalism, commitment and dedication, and I’m happy to report that all these committees delivered.

    They were thorough and we have started implementing their reports. They were set up to bolster participatory democracy, to promote or highlight the features of a solution, product, or service.

    OOUTH is gradually returning to its pride of place. You can see what they have been doing in the fight against COVID-19.

    Dapo Abiodun
    Dapo Abiodun

    That is where the first state-funded molecular laboratory is located. MAPOLY is running seamlessly. TASCE now has a Governing Council; it held its first graduation ceremony in 11 years as a result of the panel’s activities. We didn’t set up any frivolous committee.

    These panels tried to perform the dual role of presenting firm government policies while at the same time inviting opinions upon them. These are the essence of white paper in government as first used in Britain under Winston Churchill in 1922.

     

    We have also been able to mainstream almost 2000 workers into the workforce and none of the 18 Permanent Secretaries lost their jobs, even when we spotted grey areas in the manners of their promotions and appointments.

     

    Of course, we set aside the appointment and promotion of Obas because they didn’t conform to laid-down statutes. So, we have started implementing the reports and that should put to rest any fears and establish that we set these committees up to be seen as an ethical, fair and firm administration.

     

     

     

    The immediate past governor said that his administration had paid all the contractors handling road and other infrastructural projects in full, yet, several uncompleted roads and projects litter the state. What is your take on this?

    The Kunle Mokunolu committee is peopled by professionals – structural engineers, architect, quantity surveyors, civil engineers, and lawyers, etc, to give us a balanced idea in ascertaining if or not there was budgetary provision for the projects in the budget estimates for the year.

    They were also to identify all outstanding significant construction/projects in the state, ascertain the process of award of contracts in line with the established procedures and necessary regulations; determine the level of execution and quality of output of the projects; assess the disbursement pattern in line with the established process and procedure, and to recommend any viable pathways for the completion of project, or in alternative, determine other actions, including but not limited to reversal or cancellation of the contract that best align with the intent of the state government.

    I am sorry to say that most of these projects fall short of the demands of international best practices. But we are determined to ensure that projects met on ground are completed since taxpayers’ money is involved and the welfare of the people is our priority.

    Yes, most of them were fully paid for before these projects were executed and most without certificates, but now contractors are still asking for variations. We had to intervene before the Judicial Complex could become functional.

    We have moved into the supposed 250-bed specialist hospital now and we shall ensure that no project is turned into the people’s nightmare, no matter the nature of its conceptualization. You have seen that some hitherto White Elephant projects have been tweaked to become relevant today.

    For example, the Tech Hub on Kobape Road on the outskirts of Abeokuta was one of the supposed model schools that was moribund for 8 years. Ditto for the one in Ikenne. We have turned that into a 128-bed Isolation and Treatment Centre for COVID-19. No project will be allowed to waste. We will creatively put all of them into purpose-driven ventures.

    The process for the preparation of Year 2020 budget started with a sensitisation programme on the vision and mission of government. It was followed with town hall meetings in the three senatorial districts. We discovered the centrality of roads and so we started rehabilitating roads by bringing the Ogun State Public Works Agency.

    Cognisance has been taken to eliminate white elephant projects or any such projects that would boost the public perception of any political actor in the state. We have realised the futility of channelling efforts towards the routine patterns for the use of public resources for those in power.

    We therefore devised a system of strategic allocation of resources, which ensure politics is secondary and that projects and programmes of the government in the first full budget have impact on the people who are the real essence of government.

    Apart from venturing into rehabilitation of public primary schools across the 236 wards of the state, what other steps have you taken to revamp the state’s education sector?

    I have no illusion as to the position of education and the enormous challenges in the sector. As an Omo Teacher, I know education is the best legacy that can be given to the leaders of tomorrow.

    At my inauguration as Governor, I declared a state of emergency on the sector with a firm pledge of ensuring that the pride we used to have in education will be completely restored.

    So far, we have walked our talks by increasing budgetary allocation to 20% this year, and we will continue to do that on yearly basis till the United Nation Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) benchmark is achieved.

    We are implementing the Universal Basic Education Act, as well as ensuring free education for all children in Primary and Junior Secondary Schools. The welfare of teachers is being given utmost priority in order to ensure that best brains are attracted and retrained in the system.

    Our government approved and implemented career elongation of degree holders in Public Primary Schools for teachers who had been stagnated on Grade level 14 for years.

    We promoted 10,000 teachers whose elevation had been delayed since 2016, employed 1,500 basic school teachers, and the Teaching Service Commission has also advertised to recruit about a thousand others.

    We facilitated the release of 2014-2017 UBE Matching grant to the tune of N10 billion, which translates into 952 education projects. These projects have two special features including Yellow roof and terrazzo floor in our public primary and secondary schools.

    We donated free teaching aids. We keep expanding the capacity of our teachers. We sponsored ANCOPSS representatives to leadership training in Dubai to enhance their performance and service delivery on the job.

    We also reinstated Oluwole Olusanjo Majekodunmi, the Deputy Director in the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology who was sacked by the previous administration.

    The former Chairman of the Nigeria Union of Teachers, NUT, Ogun State Chapter, Dare Ilekoya, who was compulsorily retired was also re-instated. This special act was displayed to show the government’s resolve in addressing all sorts of injustice.

    Procurement and Installation of Education Management Information System (EMIS) equipment and gadgets is meant to aid data collection, collation and analysis in the headquarters and all the 20 LGEAs in line with the technology-driven education mantra of the present administration, and to fast track processing and management of data and other educational information. We have hosted Ogun SUBEB Website www.ogunsubeb.com.

    Of course, the introduction of virtual learning via the Ogundigiclass, a Digital Classroom for Primary and Secondary Schools learners on OGBC, OGTV, DSTV 260 or GoTV 100 holding on Mondays to Fridays between 9:00am and 2:00pm has achieved tremendous success, which attests to our innovativeness in the face of the coronavirus pandemic which has paralysed formal classroom learning and teaching. All teaching videos can be viewed on www.ogundigiclass.ng.

    In education, we are simply unstoppable and we have awards by our students and teachers to show for our investment in that sector.

    Having signed a timely memorandum of understanding with the organised labour on the implementation of new minimum wage, reports indicate that your administration had yet to commence payment of the minimum wage. Why the delay?

    Let me say that I am committed to a “social contract” with the workers of Ogun State. We have always paid promptly since I came into office and never owed any worker.

    Our administration provides a ‘people-centred’ governance that identifies with their yearnings and, not the one that glorifies the welfare of cronies and family members. Our administration will continue to take the welfare of the civil servants as priority to guarantee industrial harmony.

    We shall continue prompt payment of salaries, leave bonuses and other allowances. That is why the agreement of Wednesday, February 5, 2020 on the payment of the new minimum wage, with effect from January 1, 2020 remains.

    We have considered its affordability and sustainability. I can only appeal to the Joint Negotiating Council (JNC), Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress (TUC), that they should trust us to pay.

    If in spite of the economic challenges on COVID-19, we are still paying regularly and not owing, we’ll not only pay the promised minimum wage, which in our case is higher than the national minimum wage, we will pay the Consequential Adjustment of 27 per cent for Grade Levels 07 and 08 (20%), Grade Level 09 (19%), Grade Levels 10 to 14 (15%) and Grade Levels 15 to 17 (14%) as well. We shall not renege. We are adjusting the budget to accommodate these.

    What are you doing to clear the backlog of arrears, deductions and gratuities?

    Like the minimum wage and consequential adjustment, no person will be owed. The conditions of the workers are germane for good governance. Even the organised labour has applauded us for attaching much importance to the welfare of the workers of the state.

    So, their deductions and arrears, they trust that we will not take this goodwill for granted. Check offs deducted are being remitted and of course, it is a moral obligation to pay our senior citizens who spend their youths to develop the rest of us.

    Your administration has made some huge investments in the area of security. At a time, you set up Security Trust Fund and procured patrol vans, motorbikes and communication gadgets for police and other security agencies which are quite commendable. Would you say these have had the desired impact on security situation of the state?

    On assumption of office on May 29 this year, as the Chief Security Officer of the state, I decided to take some immediate steps, the first of which was to call a meeting of all our security chiefs and I was amazed to find out that a security meeting of that nature had not been held three years before that day, which was May 30th.

    And at that meeting, a lot things unfolded. It was a meeting held to establish the needs of security agencies and also carry out a security assessment of the state.

    Subsequent to that, the security reports were submitted to me by all our security chiefs, and the report enumerated all that was required to keep our state secure, including how we can look after our investors and also those that have chosen our state to be their home.

    We realised the fact that our law enforcement agencies did not have a communication system or equipment in place in Ogun State, meaning that the commissioner of police could not speak with his counterpart in the military or in the Department of State Service, DSS, or even worst still, he could not speak with his Area Commanders or the DPO in any of the police stations across the state.

    There was hardly any functional vehicle. There were no tracking devices. There was hardly enough finance to look after the welfare of the personnel and obviously, there was hardly anything available to maintain those vehicles.

    So, we decided that we would do everything possible to give the needed support to the security agencies. As you will no doubt agree, we cannot do it alone.

    And in line with our vision, which is to provide focused and qualitative governance while creating an enabling environment for a Public Private Sector Partnership, which we believe is fundamental to the economic growth of the state and the individual prosperity of our people, we decided to look towards the private sector for the needed partnership.

    We appreciate that to do that, it will be important for us to instill in the private sector, the level of confidence that will allow it to partner with us. So, we said what do we have in place? On assumption, we had the Security Trust Fund.

    Why hasn’t it worked? We looked at it, we reviewed it, and we ensured that it had all the necessary ingredients to make it function, particularly corporate governance. We sent it back to the House of Assembly and it has since been passed into law.

    Following that, I consulted with my brother, the chairman of the STF in Lagos and consulted also with the captain of the bankers as I call him and we all agreed we should head hunt Mr. Bolaji Balogun to be the chairman of the STF.

    Mr. Bolaji Balogun graciously accepted and after we found him, we now began to talk to our other colleagues in other banks. Let me on this note state that the board position is not closed. Because I am sure that other bankers will be wondering how come I am not on that board? So let me state that the door is very much open.

    We have Mr. Balogun; we have Mr. Opeyemi Agbaje who has a lot of institutional experience, coming from almost eight years of working on the same fund in Lagos State. And we have EDs from different banks, and a former AIG.

    Having done that, we now said, what is the next thing? While we were doing that, our resolve was tested. We had a couple of cases of kidnapping in the state and I realised the fact that this underscores some basic things like emergency response.

    I immediately reached out to the President, because the kidnapping incident happened while we were having a retreat in Abuja.

    And I said to Mr. President, my state is perhaps one of the most important states in this country, and if people cannot travel between Lagos and Ogun and the rest of the country without fear of being kidnapped along the Lagos- Ibadan Expressway, the entire economy of Ogun State and the rest of this country is actually under threat.

    And Mr. President asked me what do I need and I said I will need to have a helicopter so that we can respond swiftly in this kind of cases.

    I want to appreciate Mr. President again because that afternoon, a helicopter was dispatched to the Ogun State Police Command and has been with us since that time.

    Through the helicopter, we were able to immediately track the kidnappers; we were able to liberate the victims, and we were also able to send a clear signal and message to all those that intended to make criminality their occupation in Ogun State that we have zero tolerance for crime and criminality.

    We went further and decided to support the STF initiative by showing commitment. We purchased 100 vehicles and 200 motorcycles and we got the Inspector General of Police to launch the equipment, further demonstrating our resolve to fight crime and zero tolerance to criminality. Since then, we have had an unusually low incident of criminality in the state.

    Also, the five southwest states have agreed to set up a joint patrol team that will be called “AMOTEKUN.” Each of the states is required to donate at least 20 patrol vehicles, communication equipment and personnel to that joint patrol task force. It will consist of men from the police, army, vigilantes and hunters.

    As we speak, we still need quite a lot more. We need communication equipment, we need monitoring and tracking devices to monitor and track criminals.

    The vehicles need to be maintained, the officers need to be look after and in this regard, we have appealed to the private sector for assistance so that we can ensure that we only have the funding, but that it is sustained.

    Local government areas in your state are manned by transition or caretaker committees, which have been described in some quarters as unconstitutional. When is your administration planning to conduct elections into these local governments?

    The tenure of the elected chairmen of the councils ended in October last year, necessitating the need to set up the transition committees to temporarily run the councils’ affairs. Like the name implies, what we have now is a stop-gap arrangement.

    We recently sought permission of the House to extend the tenure for three more months, ostensibly because of the pandemic that has distorted everything in the world. But we are committed to hold free, fair and credible election into all our local councils as soon as peace returns to the world.

    You have always attributed your emergence as governor to God. But notwithstanding, many people believe certain political bigwigs, including Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, Chief Olusegun Osoba and Otunba Gbenga Daniel, among others, helped your ascension to power. Do you still have cordial relationship with these personalities?

    Very cordial. They have been the pillars behind our emergence and have been supportive all the way.