Category: Life and Style

  • Diran Odeyemi’s new job

    Diran Odeyemi’s new job

    Those who are familiar with the goings on in Osun politics would easily recall that one of the political actors in the state, Diran Odeyemi, once paraded himself as the next best thing that would happen to the state as the sure successor to the former governor, Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola. And when it turned out that a Court of Appeal judgment abbreviated Oyinlola’s tenure and installed Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola as the authentic governor of the state, Odeyemi again went about boasting that he would become Aregbesola’s successor.

    It, therefore, came as a rude shock to many when the news filtered out recently that the would-be governor had pitched his tent with the governorship ambition of Senator Iyiola Omisore and had settled for Omisore’s Director of Media and Strategy.

    Odeyemi had claimed in a recent interview that he spent N8.5 million pursuing his governorship ambition in 2011. Sources say an unlikely victory for the Ife-born senator could afford Diran an opportunity to become a commissioner. Whichever way, man must survive.

  • Behind Toke, Maje’s secret wedding

    Behind Toke, Maje’s secret wedding

    Different meanings are being read to the secret wedding that took place between Toke Makinwa and Maje Ayida recently. This, of course, is understandable, given the fact that it was only a few days ago when Toke went to town to announce her separation from Maje, who in turn took to his social media platform to drive a nail into the coffin of their relationship.

    Emerging information from the abode of the secretly wedded lovers indicate that it was Maje who made the first move to revive and cement the relationship, as he was deeply affected by the brief break-up. A source close to the couple said that Maje had feared Toke would not be coming back to him, given the tone of finality with which she announced the break-up. Toke was, in fact, said to be considering one of her suitors who had persisted in spite of Toke’s insistence that she was not in a hurry to go into another relationship.

    Toke was said to have rejected Maje’s calls after the December 2013 incident, forcing him (Maje) to swallow his pride and took the path of humility. He went straight to Toke and appealed to her to come back. Toke reportedly told him that she would only return on the condition that they would get married immediately. Maje obliged and the rest, as they say, is history.

  • Gbenga Ademulegun retires from Skye Bank

    Gbenga Ademulegun retires from Skye Bank

    Gbenga Ademulegun has drawn the curtains on a career that saw him become a colossus in the banking sector. He had risen through the ranks to become an executive director at Skye Bank before his retirement. He threw in the towel after serving for eight years as a pioneer director in Skye Bank.

    According to a statement issued by the management of the bank and signed by the Group Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Kehinde Durosinmi-Etti, under Ademulegun’s watch, the public sector portfolio of the bank witnessed substantial growth. Ademulegun, who bagged a bachelor’s degree in Economics from the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria and a master’s degree in the same discipline from the University of Jos, had worked with Coopers and Lybrand (an accounting firm) before joining the now comatose Savannah Bank of Nigeria.

    His inputs were also felt at one time or the other in various other banks, including First Bank of Nigeria Plc, Equatorial Trust Bank and Gulf Bank, where he held senior management positions. He was once appointed an executive director in Eko International Bank, a position he held even after the bank’s consolidation exercise in 2006.

    He is an Associate member of the Nigerian Institute of Management, a holder of treasury dealership certificate, a member of the Institute of Directors and an alumnus of Lagos Business School, INSEAD and Harvard University.

    The Ondo-born technocrat and accomplished banker is married to Remi, and the union is blessed with children.

  • Wole Arisekola fetes youths

    The gangly publisher of Street Journal magazine, Bowale Wole Arisekola, hosted a soiree at his Iyaganku, Ibadan home recently. The get-together for his Wole Street Journal Forum (WSJF) group had professional youths from the media, entertainment, politics and other sectors in attendance. They all came to wine and dine and to dance to the delight of the convener of the meeting.

    The Wole Street Journal Forum, a non-political group formed some years ago to fight unemployment and chart a course for the youth, has not only grown in status, it has also won various awards. Wole, who is also the Chairman of Allied Properties and Okebadan Oil and Gas, said he had formed the WSJF to create a forum of like-minds, not knowing that it would become the voice and strength of the Nigerian youth.

    Present at the party were the likes of Femi Akinruntan, Alhaji Beshy Kuti, Alhaji Tunde Ologburo, Alhaji Allahu Lateef, Alhaji Sharafa Alli and some notable members of the forum.

  • Hooked up by facebook – Tale of  marriages through social media

    Hooked up by facebook – Tale of marriages through social media

    Relationship experts urge caution

    THE advent of social media sites such as Facebook and some others have brought a new dimension to the world of romance, love and relationships in the past few years. New friendships and burgeoning relationships are being conducted on these sites with varying results.

    For the unlucky ones, it’s tales of sorrow, disappointment and anguish. Stories abound of how some ladies fall victims of fraud, rape and other forms of violence through dates they met via the internet. In some tragic cases, death occurs, like that of the late Cynthia Osokogu, a 24-year-old post-graduate student who was murdered by friends she reportedly met on Facebook.

    In the midst of all these sordid, depressing tales, however, are heart-warming stories of couples who met on Facebook and began relationships that blossomed into love and marriage.

    From Facebook reunion to the altar

    Joseph Jibueze, a journalist, first met his wife of a few months nearly 10 years ago. She was a young, shy teenager in secondary school, while he was an undergraduate.

    “We knew ourselves when I was in school in Port-Harcourt, Rivers State. That was around 2003. We were in the same Christian congregation of the Jehovah’s Witnesses in PH. Though I found her attractive, we were like family friends and there was nothing between us. Besides, she was very young then, still in secondary school,” he disclosed.

    After his graduation, he stated that he lost contact with her until they were reunited via Facebook. Said he: “When I left Port-Harcourt after graduation, I did not see her again for several years. But early this year, I was going through the Facebook page of my brother-in-law when I saw an attractive face on his wall. The face looked familiar but I was not sure who she was.” It turned out to be his old friend and church member in Port-Harcourt, the young school girl, Esther that he used to admire. She was now grown up, had graduated and was even working in PH.

    “I confirmed she was the same girl I used to know and something in me told me she was the one I had been waiting for,” Joseph added. He promptly sent her a request on Facebook but he did not hear from her for some days. “She did not immediately accept and I was a bit scared that she could be involved with someone else. Days passed before she accepted and we started talking. We spoke on phone too. We discovered we were really attracted to each other. She was not in a serious relationship then; so I moved in quickly,” he said.

    In early October last year, the lovebirds got married in a well attended ceremony at the Kingdom Hall of the Jehovah’s Witnesses in Port-Harcourt.

     

    The reluctant matchmaker

    Another couple who Facebook played a big role in their love story is James and Loretta. They got married about three years ago after meeting on Facebook and becoming friends. As James, 32, a marketing sales representative told The Nation: “I first saw my wife on my friend’s wall. We were chatting one day when I saw the picture of this lady. I became interested in her but when I told my friend about my interest, he discouraged me. He said she was already engaged and I should not bother about her,” he said. Later, he found out it was not true, it was just his friend’s way of protecting the girl, who was his cousin. “You see, my friend used to consider me a ‘player’ back then, he thought I was only after her for ‘fun and games’. But I was able to convince him about my sincerity towards the girl and he grudgingly gave me her contact.”

    Another obstacle cropped up after he called Loretta. As he stated: “When I contacted Loretta and told her I liked her, she was not too keen on going out with me. I think she just split up with her boyfriend then and she wanted time to recover. She was not interested in going into another relationship so soon after the break-up with her ex. But I didn’t give up. I kept calling her and I think I pestered her so much that she finally accepted me!”

    They courted for a year, then in 2010, they tied the knot. “My friend who gave me Loretta’s number did not believe I would marry her right up to the day of our wedding. He still believed I was not serious. He was my best man at the wedding and he gave a toast, telling the guests the story of how I met my wife on Facebook. We now have a daughter who is a year old.”

     

    Student romance

    Ronke Aremu (nee Ojo) first got connected to her husband via Facebook. She narrated her story to The Nation: “One of my flatemates, Tunde, posted a comment on Facebook (I can’t really remember vividly what the comment is about now ), but it was about him saying something about being depressed. Knowing he is a very lively person, I just replied his comment, ‘You of all people, why are you down?’.

    “My husband, Lekan who is his friend on Facebook, also commented on the post. My husband later told me that he was in the cyber cafe with one of his friends when he saw my comment on Tunde’s post and he was fascinated by my name-Ronke Ojo. He told his friend, ‘omo yi de fine o’ (‘This girl is beautiful’). He said throughout that day, my name was just ringing in his head.

    “He called Tunde and asked him about me. Tunde told him that I was his neighbour and he said he was interested in me and the guy said, ‘No, the girl is an SU!’ He sent a friend’s request which I did accept. He was sending me messages on Facebook, asking for my phone number. Tunde later came to talk to me on his behalf. He started calling me and later came down to my school, Ekiti State University in February, 2011 when I was about writing my final exams. We actually started talking in October. I told him that I was not interested and he left, saying he would come back after my exams. We were friends, we started talking on phone. We started dating officially in July 2011 and got married in November, 2013. I was convinced by his consistency.”

     

    From America with love

    The classy wedding of US-based engineer, Ikenna Nwaneri and Onome Edegware, on November 16, 2013, at Our Lady of Apostle’s Catholic Church, Kaduna, was the culmination of a romance that began on Facebook. It all started in January 2012 when they became Facebook friends. Through constant contact on the social media, love blossomed between the two. But there was an obstacle: distance. It was a long-distance relationship with the groom working in the US, while Onome was in London studying for a Masters degree.

    With time, they finally met and they felt an instant connection. “The connection was instant. We were friends and soul mates at the same time. It all just felt right,” Onome enthused.

    Ikenna proposed to her on a trip to Paris in 2012. As she disclosed: “He proposed to me in a most romantic way. It was Boxing Day in 2012 and our last night in Paris. We had dinner on the River Seine. I thought it was the moment but nothing happened. We left with two fortune cookies. We went to the Eiffel Tower and it was there I reached for my fortune cookie and broke it. The note inside read: “When you realise you want to spend the rest of your life with somebody, you want the rest of your life to start as soon as possible. Onome baby, will you marry me?” With that, Ikenna went on his knees, attracting the attention of tourists nearby who began taking pictures of the happy couple.

    On their relationship, Ikenna had this to say: “Even with the rigours of a long distance relationship, we kept strong. That we were domiciled in different time zones did not deter us from our commitment. We were always in touch through the various social media.”

     

    Caution is the key

    To marriage experts, however, caution should be the key in such relationships connected by social media, especially Facebook. As Julie Ngozi Okeke of the Moms Club International said: “Facebook marriages must be done with great caution. As a matter of fact, I do not outrightly support it; there are issues involved in it that call for great caution. I know that there have been one of two case like that where one heard that a Facebook couple has emerged and you may even say that there has been one or so that has lasted one or two years.

    “But you see, the truth is that marriage goes beyond one or two years of living together or of being a couple. It is more than that. What happens after two years? Also it is not as if one of such marriages may not stand the test of time, there is a ‘but’ clause to it. Most of them do not work out in the long run. Most Facebook people are not real. Girls or the young men should therefore be cautious. Unfortunately too, in these climes, when things come over here, new meanings and new interpretations are always attached to usage. So the way we use Facebook here is also important and must be considered. Just as there are real people on Facebook, there are fake people too.”

    Also speaking on the issue, Dr. Leonard Okonkwo, stated: “Most Facebook marriages will not work because the people involved would not have got to know themselves. Most often, everybody who uses the social media of which Facebook is one, ensure that they come out there at their best. They do not show their weaknesses or shortcomings, they come showing their best. Thus, when you go into marriages based on what you have seen on Facebook, sooner or later, you may find out that it is not really so. The person you were dealing with was only showing you their best side.”

    Another relationship expert and youth counsellor, F. Diepreye, also cautions on relationships developed via social media. As he stated: “Facebook, just like other social media, is an avenue for communication with friends, colleagues as well as strangers, people you don’t know very well. Even those you know physically can sometimes act ‘funny’ and be unreliable and untrustworthy, much less the ones you just met via Facebook. So, people need to be careful when using these sites, especially when it comes to serious relationships and even marriage. Friendships can develop through Facebook but be wise.

    “Do not rush into marriage until after a period of courtship so both parties can get to know each other well. Marriage is a serious, life long commitment, not something you jump into just because you saw a pretty girl on Facebook. Most of the pictures have been photoshopped anyway, so the person might look different in real life from his photograph. The bottom line is, young people and the adults as well should exercise caution on these sites. They should not get married based on what they see on Facebook but the reality on the ground, the real world and not the Internet world which most times is a fake, unreal world where people pretend a lot and are not true to themselves.”

    Okeke supports this view, stating: “If you must contract marriage on Facebook at all, make sure that you know such people as real people. Even then, people you met and knew years ago and you suddenly meet again on Facebook may have changed in character and other ways. So a lot of caution is advised for people who hope to get married on Facebook. The use of social media should be done with caution.”

    Said Okonkwo on this: “The danger in Facebook marriages is also that Facebook is open to deception. It is actually a platform where people get duped. So it is not a platform to exhibit you in totality. Moreso, when you can only read but cannot hear on Facebook, you cannot get to know the person that you want to marry in totality. What I am saying is that love that leads to marriage should not be based on Facebook connection. But Facebook could be used as a starting point. When you meet each other, you could then ensure that you date properly, get to meet and know. Afterwards, you can let other things follow. I however, do not see how marriage contracted only via Facebook without an initial meeting, can work. If it works out, then it will be one or two cases, which so happened by chance. But generally, a larger percentage will crash or lead to disaster.”

    Diepreye on his part advises people generally on the use of social media, especially when it comes to friendship. “Sometimes I hear people boasting that they have such and such numbers of ‘friends’ on Facebook and I wonder, what do you need 2,000 friends for, especially when you don’t even know a majority of them and cannot vouch for them? Of what importance are they to you? I suggest you keep those you know physically and know their character. Don’t keep so many Facebook ‘friends’ just to prove that you are popular. Do they give award to those with many friends on these sites? No! So, people should be careful in acquiring too many strangers as ‘friends’ on Facebook to avoid being duped.”

  • My husband prepared well for death—Late Kaduna Governor’s widow Amina Yakowa

    My husband prepared well for death—Late Kaduna Governor’s widow Amina Yakowa

    Dame Amina Patrick Yakowa is the wife of the late Kaduna State governor, Sir Patrick Ibrahim Yakowa, who died in a helicopter crash in Bayelsa State on December 15 last year along with the former National Security Adviser, Gen. Andrew Owoye Azazi. She is a retired Deputy Director with the Federal Civil Service. A mother of four and a grandmother, she granted an interview with Kaduna-based Liberty Radio, in which she spoke about life without her late husband and how she received the news of his death. The following are excerpts of the interview monitored by our Kaduna State Correspondent, TONY AKOWE.

    How has it been mourning your husband in the last 12 months?

    (Heaves a deep sigh) It has been a very challenging year and a very new life for me without my husband. But I thank God because as you can see, we are coping. But definitely, it is not an easy road to lose a husband. I thank God that He has been very graceful and merciful to me.

    Going down memory lane, how did you get to know about your husband’s death in the helicopter crash and what followed?

    I will say the day was full of drama because that morning, I saw him off when he was leaving for Bayelsa. That day, I had a very serious cold and he insisted that I needed to rest because he knew that I had too many activities that particular week. He insisted that I should switch off my phones and rest so that I would have the strength to meet him in Abuja for the First Lady’s thanksgiving service.

    While he was on his way to the airport, he kept calling and insisting that I should switch off my phones. I assured him that immediately I had my bath and used my drugs, I would switch them off. So, around 11 am, I switched off the phones, after which I took my drugs and slept off. At exactly 1 pm, it was as if somebody tapped me and I woke up. I then saw a lady that came from his town to thank me for something I had done for her. I sat with her in my sitting room, waiting to hear what had brought her. She was talking when her phone rang because I did not take any phone with me.

    The television in the sitting room was not on. Immediately the phone rang and she picked it, I saw that her countenance changed. I did not ask her what was wrong because I did not know who she was talking to. The calls came about four, five times and I noticed that each time the call came, there was confusion on her face. So, I asked her, ‘My sister, is there any problem in Kaduna?’I just assumed that there was a problem in Kaduna which is normal. I told her, ‘You said you wanted to talk to me, but now you have abandoned me and have been talking to people on your phone. As you can see, I am not feeling fine. It is because you came that I decided to see you. So, tell me what the problem is so that I see how I can help.’ She said there was nothing. I asked who was calling her and she said she did not know the person. I asked what the person told her and she said nothing. We kept on like that until I heard her saying that she was in the Government House and with me.

    The television in the sitting room was not on. Immediately the phone rang and she picked it, I saw that her countenance changed. I did not ask her what was wrong because I did not know who she was talking to. The calls came about four, five times and I noticed that each time the call came, there was confusion on her face. So, I asked her, ‘My sister, is there any problem in Kaduna?’

    I just assumed that there was a problem in Kaduna which is normal. I told her, ‘You said you wanted to talk to me, but now you have abandoned me and have been talking to people on your phone. As you can see, I am not feeling fine. It is because you came that I decided to see you. So, tell me what the problem is so that I see how I can help.’ She said there was nothing. I asked who was calling her and she said she did not know the person. I asked what the person told her and she said nothing. We kept on like that until I heard her saying that she was in the Government House and with me.

    I kept asking her what the problem was, but she could not tell me. I think the person calling must have told her that there was something like that in the news. At a stage, I became angry with her, saying she could not be telling me that all was well when she had even forgotten what brought her and was discussing with other people on the phone. I told her, ‘I have been asking who is calling and what the person is saying, but you would not tell me.’ The next question she asked me was, ‘Where is your husband?’ I ask her if the call had anything to do with my husband and she said no. Then I asked her, ‘Why then are you asking about my husband?’

    Immediately I finished that statement, I saw the Chief of Staff with others climbing up the stairs which is very unusual, especially on a Saturday, in my private session and without any appointment. I was in my private sitting room, and here were about 10 men coming there without any invitation. I knew immediately that something was wrong. As soon as they came into the sitting room, the woman quietly left me with them. I could see it on their faces that there was a problem, and I remembered her last statement, asking about my husband.

    “I looked at the Chief of Staff and told him, ‘You know we have come a long way. If there is a problem, the only favour I will ask of you is that you should not take me round. Just tell me as it is and I know that God will take control. He looked at me and said, ‘Yes, my sister. There was a helicopter crash and Daddy was inside. I asked if there were survivors and he said that they were yet to establish that fact.’ But definitely, he was in that helicopter.

    From there, nobody could answer me anymore. I quickly left them, went back to my room to seek the face of God for whatever I was about to go into. I prayed and before I opened the door, they were trying to open it because they thought I had gone inside to do something funny because I locked the door. When I opened the door, I saw that the whole of Kaduna was already in the Government House, and I knew there and then that my husband had died in the crash. I started praying to God to give me his grace.

    Was there any premonition that it was going to be a black day?

    Definitely no because a day before, we were together. We went to J.B. Daudu’s house for Christmas carol. He told me that it was one of his best days. He went round there greeting everybody. Right from the Government House to J.B. Daudu’s house, he was talking about the 2014 budget.

    Would you say that was usual of him?

    He was very excited because he had so many activities that week. We did the Christmas carol and came back, and because I had cold, he said I should rest, saying that for him, it was like day break. So, he left me and went to his office downstairs to work until he came to sleep. He woke up that morning, prepared and left.

    It was later that I thought about how he was doing things and I said maybe it was this thing that was pushing him. I thought about the fact that he went round all projects and told me that he really wanted to do that before Christmas. He wanted to start commissioning the projects. It is not something that somebody would sit down and know whether it would happen or not. It is only when it has happened that you begin to see the activities of that person and you say maybe he had a premonition.

    As a family, all we could do was to pray for him so that God would give him the strength to achieve all that. But you would never attach it to imminent death.

    How did the two of you meet?

    I actually met him at his friend’s wedding. It was at the wedding of Bulus James that I met him. The wife of Bulus James, who is now late, was my very good friend and I was the chief bridesmaid at the wedding. We had to go round making preparations for the wedding, and it was during that time that I met my husband.

    Of course, with the influence of Bulus and his wife, he came to me to say he had seen his wife. He did not propose friendship. He said he was waiting for me to say yes. But as a lady, I had my fears and reservations, especially because I never knew him and I needed to know him a little before saying yes. After that day, he kept coming, and there was pressure on me to say yes. So, I had no choice, but to say yes, I would marry him.

    How long did it take you to say yes?

    It didn’t take quite long. We met around 1974 or 1975, and we got married in 1978.

    What were the qualities you needed in a man that you noticed in him?

    His simplicity and love. I thought that it was just something that he wanted to demonstrate to me at that time, but the truth was that the man was very simple, down to earth and very frank. Like I told you, when he first saw me, he said I was his wife, and he never went back on it. If it was someone else, he would first play some pranks. He was really very sincere about whatever he did, and he was the type of man I was really looking for; the kind of man who would love me. Because in my family. I had never seen someone with broken marriage, and I didn’t want to be the first person. So, I needed somebody I could stay with for life. I also needed somebody who would love me and love my family because of the background that I came from. I think he also came from a difficult background and needed same qualities in me.

    What do you mean by difficult background?

    I lost my father at the age of three in 1966, and I grew up to see how my mother suffered. I grew up struggling through school and praying to get a job and one day leave my mother who was a cook in a school after my father’s death, and that was how she trained us. My sincere prayer was to grow up and do something to take care of my mother who suffered to look after us. So, I never wanted to make any mistake about marriage that would not let me take care of my mother.

    That took me some time because most of my contemporaries in the village had got married. But it was like I was scared to get into a relationship because I did not want to make any mistake. Thank God for my uncle, Mallam Musa Haruna, who took care of us. You know that in the past, you discussed and sought the input of your parents, even in marriage. I loved my uncle so much that I told him anything that concerned me. The day I took my husband to him, he told me immediately that he was my husband. He blessed him, and they were very good friends until my uncle died.

    I did not know that God was preparing me to be the eye and the iroko of my own family. We were seven children, and I am the second to the last. On his (Yakowa’s) part, he lost his mother at a tender age. I think he was 14 when he lost his mother and his father in 1967. He was from a polygamous family because his father had four wives, and he was the only person that everyone looked up to. So, he also wanted a wife that would come and take responsibility in that family. So, we had so many things in common.

    Let us look back at the political career of your husband from the time he was appointed as the Chairman of the Caretaker Committee of the National Republican Convention in 1992 to the time of his death in 2012. How did you support him in his political activities, especially as a governor?

    I don’t really think that I am the one to give that scorecard. But since you have asked, I will try. When I married him, I took an oath to be with him and support him till death would do us part, and I think we did that to each other. I met him when he was just rising in his career, and I did everything to support him up to the time he got to the peak of his career. We tried to avoid anything we would do to compromise his career and we prayed for him to succeed. His career is not hidden to anybody in Kaduna and in the country, and as a wife, all I needed to do was to create a conducive atmosphere for him to succeed.

    When he became the deputy governor and then governor, I was working in Abuja. I worked with the Kaduna State Government, and in 1998, I joined the federal service, and rose to the position of Deputy Director with the Ministry of Defence. I retired in 2011. He encouraged me to work and grow in my career, so that we could complement each other.

    At the initial stage, I was against him joining politics. After his ministerial appointment and eventual retirement by the Obasanjo government, he wasn’t doing anything for three years. It was at that time that his friends came and convinced him to join politics. I was seriously against it because I looked at this man and what politics was in Nigeria and I said I didn’t think he would make a good politician. But at the end of the day, some of his friends came and explained to me why I should give my blessings so that he could join the train. I had no choice, but to give my blessing and continue to pray for him.

    When he became the deputy governor, I had to leave my job, even though I was on posting to One Division of the Nigerian Army here, doing my job and supporting him. At least, I did my best, especially on the home front. Because when everything is okay at home, you can go to the office in peace. When he returned from office and there were things he could share with me, he would, and I would give him my opinion. My own was to kneel down every day to pray for him because I know that ruling Kaduna State is not an easy task.

    Why do you think it is difficult to rule Kaduna?

    Everybody that matters in Nigeria is represented here in Kaduna. And you know that for the first time, history was made that somebody from Southern Kaduna and a Christian became the governor. The challenges were there. But thank God for his style of leadership which nobody could deny. He tried as much as possible to bring the two religions in Kaduna together and unite the people. That was why the motto of his administration was peace, unity and development. That is why I said that Kaduna is a bit complex because he is the first man in history and a Christian from the southern part of the state to become a governor in the state.

    Can you recall any incident that really gave you a cause for concern in the course of his career?

    The first few months after he was sworn in as governor was of great concern for me because of the insecurity in the state. He was trying to put his administration together, but the security challenges were too many and enormous enough to distract anybody. With the security challenges in the country, I was really scared and concerned. But I tabled everything before God in prayers, and I believe that for the period he was there, it was God that helped him.

    It was a period that I know I was not sleeping. I was not eating well and everything was wrong with me. I asked myself, ‘If this man is governing this state in a peaceful atmosphere, you can imagine what would have happened, if all the money put into security is channelled into development.’

    Yakowa became the first Christian to be elected as governor of the state with over 1.3 million votes. What was the secret of his wide acceptance?

    My husband was easily loved by people because of his simplicity, education and experience in governance. If you look at his CV, there was virtually nowhere he did not work. There are only few people in Nigeria, either Muslim or Christian, who have not come in contact with Yakowa. He had that personal closeness with people and knew how to operate at different times. That helped to attract people to him. There was something in him that people saw. When he said he was a governor for everybody in Kaduna, he meant every word of it.

    You recall that became an issue in some parts of the state?

    Yes, it became an issue. Our people can be forgiven because this was the first time and they thought this was our own. But he had to explain to them that he could not be governor over the Christians only. But that did not mean he was not a Christian. He was governor over everybody, including those who didn’t have a religion, and he really demonstrated that.

    In the course of his career, he met with so many of these Muslim brothers and sisters and had already established a relationship with many of them, including those who were not in the same party with him. That was the reason why he was able to get that kind of support, even in the northern part of the state. So, I think it was because of how he related with people and also because people already knew his worth.

    Would you say that he really enjoyed the support of all the people from Southern Kaduna in view of the tribal politics that prevailed?

    Yes, I will say he got their support. But then, even in a family, you find this kind of problem. So, I think it is normal. At the end of the day, particularly during election, they knew he was from Southern Kaduna and had to rally round him. Such division happens, but at the end of the day when the reality is on the ground, people will come together. They really didn’t have any choice, but they needed to give him some time and study his style of leadership to understand where he was going. You know that some people have no patience. But generally, I think they supported him.

    You are a strong advocate of women empowerment. Will you continue with your NGO, Kauna Intervention Initiative?

    By the grace of God, I want to continue with it because I know that its impact was beginning to be felt in Kaduna. Unfortunately, I was to launch the NGO sometime in March 2013, but my husband died in December 2012. So, we never had the opportunity to launch it. But it is still there, and I am sure there are many communities in the 23 local government areas that have benefited from this initiative because we have actually intervened and the records are there.

    The NGO is still working, but low-key. As soon as I finish my mourning period, God will raise men and women who understand what I am doing in this NGO, and they will come and support me so that it will continue.

    Why the special focus on women and children?

    My focus on women is because once you are able to take care of the issues of women anywhere, you have solved half of your problems, and if you are able to take care of the youths anywhere you find yourself, you will go a long way in solving some of our major problems because these youths are out there doing nothing, and they are the same people being used to carry out these vices.

    So, the NGO focuses on women, youths and children. I was very much involved in maternal mortality, working to save the lives of mothers. Most importantly, we did empowerment for youths and women, and I took time to study why empowerment has been going on in Kaduna for several years and we are still on the same spot. I had to sit down with the team I raised to find out what went wrong? Every day, government was bringing out money for empowerment and yet there was no progress. We discovered that the issue of empowerment was not being approached in a holistic manner, and Kaduna decided to take some pilot projects and approached them in a holistic manner.

    So, what we did was to take some women and youths and trained them. For example, many of them trained in ICT. And if you take a laptop and give somebody to go and open a business centre, it won’t work because he cannot perform a miracle and open a business centre with only one laptop. So, what they do is sell the computer and go back to the labour market. So, if you are a beneficiary, we give you every single thing that you need to start your own business, such as computer, printer and generator because we know that light is an issue.

    If you trained in catering, we will buy everything you need to start something. We don’t care whether we do it in little quantity; just let us do it right. Once you ask somebody to start like that, you discover that they cannot work alone. They will have one or two people working with them, and you are also empowering them. So, we approached the issue of empowerment in a holistic manner.

  • A parade of STYLE

    A parade of STYLE

    One of man’s great pleasures and obsessions is developing a sense of class that is far beyond the ordinary. Some call it style. Others simply say it is individuality. Depending on the side of the divide you may choose to pitch, style is simply doing things your way. Style defines a man. It is a badge by which he or she is recognized.  So, being stylish is purely being individualistic. Over the years, men have consciously cultivated dressing culture that tends to define their style. In the parade of Nigeria’s stylish men, KAYODE ALFRED x-rays Nigerians of various strata and standing who have carved a niche for themselves as men of style.

    PRESIDENT GOODLUCK JONATHAN’S ‘Resource Control’

    There have been Nigerian leaders, past and present who emerged, at one period or the other, and whose eras were largely defined by their dress culture. From the late Sir Tafawa Balewa, Dr. Nnmamdi Azikiwe, former Presidents Shehu Shagari and Olusegun Obasanjo to serving President Goodluck Jonathan, there was and there is still a consistency in their dress culture which reflected the geography of their birth.

    However, with President Jonathan’s ascendancy to power he brought with him, wittingly or unwittingly, a tsunami-like ‘fashion-buzz in Nigeria called ‘Resource Control.’ In the history of Nigeria, never has a president’s dress culture captivated his subjects’ fancy like that of President Jonathan’s traditional Ijaw cultural attire. President Jonathan’s Niger-Delta attire with a bowler hat has become his trademark. While this dress code has drawn admiration from across board, the President can also be described as a marketer of his culture with his attached love of his native Ijaw attire. No wonder, it has become a fad among big boys across the country’s socio-economic and political firmament.

    MIKE ADENUGA’S love for kaftan

    Dr. Mike Adenuga might be perceived in many quarters as the least visible billionaire to be sighted in high octane events. And as such, assessing his dress culture could prove a bit of a task. Adenuga’s rise to fame and fortune began at the young age of 26 in the 1970s when he was involved in the distribution of lace and other textile materials.

    Perhaps this might have accounted for his penchant for kaftans of lace derivatives. Not known for adorning European three-piece suits, style for Adenuga, appears to mean freedom. With a frame described in urban language as ‘Plus Size,’ Adenuga loves to be free, as such, his love for flowing robes and kaftans is legendary.

     

    IBIKUNLE AMOSUN and his ‘sky-scrapper’ cap

    Only on rare occasions is Ogun State governor, Senator Ibikunle Amosun seen in suits. But when he is in his traditional attire, he hardly does so without complementing it with his sky-scrapper cap. At every occasion he graces, his cap dwarfs even the giant among the crowd.

    Right from his days in the upper chamber of the National Assembly, “SIA” (Senator Ibikunle Amosun) has evolved the ‘onilegogoro’ cap style which is fast becoming a fad in and around Ogun State. Many believe he has only continued to promote a style created by the first Executive President of Nigeria, Alhaji Shehu Aliyu Usman Shagari, and the late Chief Solomon Lar of Plateau State both of whom wore the tallest trademark cap in Nigeria’s history.

    FEMI OTEDOLA’S love for ‘immaculate white’

    Femi Otedola is famous for his sparkling white traditional attire. Additionally, Otedola adorns foot wears that could be said to be a collector’s item. To Femi, looking stylish comes at a cost.

     

    ROTIMI AMAECHI

    A confident but youthful swagger driven by a trendy fashion sense, is one of the things that define the Rivers State governor, Rotimi Amaechi. He shares the same fashion style with President Jonathan. They have both made the Niger-Delta attire an object of national fondness. Rotimi is not complete without adding his walking stick to make a statement that he is rooted in the Ijaw culture.

    KOJO ANTHONY WILLIAMS

    The name of Kojo Williams will receive perennial mentions every time list of Nigeria’s most stylish men is compiled. This sport loving former NFA chairman knows his onions when it comes to style. Being stylish is not as simple and the same as spending vast amounts of money on designer brands and keeping up with trends. In fact, inexpensive clothes can be worn with style as long as you know how to make the most of it. Kofi knows this and practices it to details. Kofi creates his own unique style. He is popular with suits and bow tie. Kojo feels comfortable and confident in them.

    JOHN OBAYUWANA

    John Obayuwana is the Managing Director of Polo, the exclusive outfit that vends some of the finest Swiss watch and jewellery brands such as Vacheron Constantin, Piaget, Chopard, Baume and Mercier, Montblanc, Rado, Technomarine and Balmain. John is like a preacher who makes the Bible his companion. One of the most visible apparels you are likely to spot on Obayuwana when you see him is his expensive wrist watches of different designs.

     

    TONY ELUMELU

    Bankers have a reputation for smartness and neatness. Tony Elumelu, who managed Standard Trust Bank and later, United Bank for Africa, for ages, epitomises smartness, for which bankers world-wide are known, all because of his fondness for suits.

     

    SEGUN OSOBA

    Everything about Aremo Segun Osoba, as far as dress code is traditional. Aremo never sheds off the toga of a traditionally stylish person. He never compromises on his traditional regalia. And he has continued to gracefully in the native outfits.

    LANRE OGUNLESI

    Lanre Ogunlesi’s style is summed up in the following narration he gave in one his numerous interviews: “My son has asked me repeatedly what separates the well dressed from the very well dressed. And I never fail to reiterate that ‘neatness’, being very neat from head to toe is the first rule. Not how expensive or stylish your duds are. Not how fashionable and appropriate your apparels pass. No matter what you adorn, once you fail the ‘cleanliness’ test, you can’t get anywhere.” Lanre wears them neat and smooth.

    DEOLU ADEBOYE

    Deolu, son of General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God, preaches better style sermon with what he wears. He did not only open ‘Wisemen Apparel’ to sell top of the range men’s wear, he wears what he sells. You must be extremely anti-social to keep mute without asking Deolu where he gets the stuff he wears.

    EYIMOFE ATAKE

    As a learned profession in the legal world, not a few expect Eyimofe to be conservative. His profession calls for it, but not so for this very successful Lagos-based lawyer. With a physique that belies his age at 53 years, Eyimofe looks good in whatever he wears.

    OBARO IBRU

    Colour combination is a tricky aspect of style which Obaro has mastered effortlessly. Obaro does not only know how to mix and match, but his collection of designer jeans makes bold fashion statement any day and anywhere.

    AIGBOJE IMOKHUEDE

    Aigboje Imokhuede is not a man of many words. But the outgoing Managing Director of Access Bank plc makes for this with his dressing. Smartness is Aigboje’s watchword. Neatly tailored suits are Aig’s signature tune. He is said to have a wardrobe endowed with top names in suit making.

    SANI DANGOTE

    Cool, calm and collected are words that define Sani Dangote’s mien. For Sani, expensive clothes will look completely unstylish if they are not right for you. He has a good eye for details. That is why you would always find him unruffled even after a hard day job. For him, it is comfort and confidence

    TUNDE FOLAWIYO

    Tunde’s gait stands him out from the crowd any day. Self-conscious and meticulous in nature, the scion of the Folawiyo dynasty, comes to the scene with an impeccable carriage and knack for simple but refined attire.

    SUBOMI BALOGUN

    Otunba Subomi Balogun is a veteran socialite whose style should be a case study for stylists. For someone whose sheer industry has thrown up a global financial institution with rock-solid financial base, one wonders how he finds time to look as trendy as he does in his full regalia of white apparels as his trademark.

    ALEX AKINYELE

    Chief Alex Akinyele likes enjoying life to the fullest and he makes no pretence about this. To the Ondo-born High Chief, age is just a number. His age should not deter him from looking good. With his well shaved moustache, he is always resplendent in his grandly embroidered robes made of Aso-Oke.

     

    LEKAN OSIFESO

    The scion of the Osifeso clan in Ijebu-Ode, Ogun State and Chairman of LEKAI Nigeria Limited, a construction company, Lekan Osifeso is known for his customised crested jackets. He mixes colours with elegance and aplomb. A quintessential dazzler on the social scene, he looks very comfortable in the most luxurious suits and traditional pieces. He is an all-rounder with a peculiar style difficult to imitate.

     

    OBA FREDRICK AKINRUNTAN

    Royalty aptly describes Oba Fredrick Akinruntan’s style. With his beaded fly whisk (Irukere), the Olugbo of Ugbo displays his emblems of power with an individuality that cannot be ascribed to any other king. The founder of Obat oil and gas is a flamboyant character in the mould of kings. He is one of the most stylish monarchs in Nigeria.

     

    PAUL ADEFARASIN

    Paul Adefarasin is one of Nigeria’s trendiest pastors. He is the Senior Pastor of House on the Rock Churches Worldwide,. Pastor Adefarasin has a penchant for crispy, elegant suits. Adefarasin once said that one’s outward appearance should be a reflection of one’s heart. In recognition of this statement, he often makes a fashion statement. He once won an award as a style icon.

     

    CHRIS OKOTIE

    With a relatively successful career in pop music before venturing into evangelism, Pastor Okotie never leaves anybody in doubt about his passion for looking trendy. Okotie is unapologetic about his trademark long jackets. He is also a freak for shoes of different colours and designs.

  • I went into MENOPAUSE with the shock of my husband’s death in  plane crash

    I went into MENOPAUSE with the shock of my husband’s death in plane crash

    DR. STELLA CHIJIOKE did a jig when she retired from her top flight job at the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) last year. Celebrating 60, she danced like she had never done before. Many at the occasion could not help wondering why she was in such an ecstatic mood, but no one was in doubt as to the fact that she had been blessed with a privileged life. Born to a father who had a master’s degree in Education from the Edinburgh University at a time that one could count the cars on Nigerian roads on one’s finger tips, Stella studied Medicine at the University of Nigeria Nsukka. A year later, she stepped into the NNPC and rose through the ranks to the top.

    But the charming Abuja-based health/wellness consultant would never forget the pains of the Bellview plane crash that took her husband’s life, as well as others that made her to retire into caring for people and touching lives.

    “I used to be an active young girl,” she said, reliving her growing up days. “I was an athlete and I represented my schools. I come from a disciplined family, because my parents were primarily teachers. As you would know, the teachers of old were really strict. But if I were not brought up by the type of parents that I had, I am not sure that I would be where I am today.

    “I have seen contemporaries who had it easy when we were young. I actually used to envy them in those days. But today, I thank God because there is no basis for comparison. I was really lucky that God planted me in my parent’s family.”

    “My father retired as a Zonal Education Inspector in Imo State. My mom was originally a school mistress. She then went through more courses in the University of Nigeria, Usukka, using the proximity of the university and ending up as an Administrative Officer there.

    “When my father retired, we had to move from Nsukka to Imo State. It was the period when Chief Sam Mbakwe was the governor. So, my mother worked in the office of the governor until she also retired.”

    Stella Chijioke’s memory of childhood was that of mixed feeling. “Like I said, I used to envy some of my mates then, because they were free. They could go anywhere. Whenever they came to visit me at home, I was always busy doing one thing or another. I was not allowed the frivolity of moving around visiting people. My father would ask you what is happening there that you want to see. He would ask you next about your home work. As a teacher, he drilled the six of us and today we are the better for it.”

    So what did that teach the young Stella?

    “That taught me that you don’t take life for granted; that it is what you sow that you reap. That if you really prepare for life and you have good help, that is, someone or people who lead you in the right path, there is no way your life will not be good, even more that you imagine. With the help of God, any little effort you make yields good result. So, hard work pays. That is the summary of what my early years taught me.

    “And in life, you must have integrity. You may get away with some bad things, but someday, the real you will show up and people who didn’t figure out who you are will find out. But a clean transparent life is better any day.”

    With parents who were constantly on the move, Stella’s education started in Government School, Uyo, where her father was the principal of the Government Teachers Training College.

    “That is the school that was later turned into the University of Uyo. From there, we came on transfer to Nsukka,” she said.

    On a scholarship from the government of Eastern Nigeria, Stella left for Rivers State, to an elite missionary school in those days.

    “I later gained admission into the University of Nigeria, Nsukka to study Medicine and was also privileged to gain scholarship. I had my post graduate degree at the University of Aberdeen, Scotland, in Occupation and Environmental Medicine under the umbrella of the NNPC. After I graduated for my first degree in 1978, the youth service year followed. Then I got a job at NNPC. But the employment actually came one year later.

    I had spent that year working at the Port Harcourt Nursing Home. The irony of it all is that when the job came, we didn’t know it was a privileged job,” she said.

    Stella is proud to have moved around Nigeria. “I used to speak Ibibio,” she said proudly. “Of course, there is nothing a person from Nsukka would say that I would not understand. So, I was able to speak some more languages. I did one year housemanship at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital in Lagos too before my youth service year in Rivers State.”

    For Stella, Rivers State remains a place she would not forget in a hurry. That was where she met her husband; the man who turned out to be everything to her. And even after he died in the ill fated Bellview plane crash on October 22, 2005, Stella refused to let go of his memory.

    It is many years ago, but her voice still betrays emotion when she talks about it.

    She said: “Rivers State was where I met my husband and that was where I got my NNPC job. Even when my husband got a transfer to Lagos for two years, we were still living in Port Harcourt where I had all my children. And that was because I was working at the refinery, the Eleme Petro-chemical, the town clinic which was called the zonal headquarters.

    “I was rising along the line. Before long, I was made Manager, Medical Services and posted to Benin to head the zone before I was later appointed a General Manager (Occupation and Environmental Health Dept) and transferred to Abuja. That was the position I retired from.”

    “Though I lost my mum, the loss of my husband in the Bellview plane crash was a turning point for me! It was too much for me. I went into menopause by shock. It just stopped, till today, it has not flowed!”

    “My husband was a petroleum engineer. He was working with Elf Petroleum, which is now called Total Nigeria Limited. He was one of the general managers. He was actually coming from Port Harcourt. He was an avid golfer. He had gone there for an occasion held by the golf club. He was supposed to have come back with Sosoliso or Chanchangi, which had Abuja-Port Harcourt flights then. Bur because he was a golfer, he said Port Harcourt golf club was having an event, so he went.

    “After 4 pm, he called to say he was still coming to Abuja. I told him that he must have missed the two direct flights. He replied that there would be a flight in Lagos to Abuja. He assured me that he would catch a flight to Abuja that evening from Lagos; that there was a Bellview flight for 7.45 pm, which he could catch that night. And he did.”

    Recalling her late husband’s last moments, she said: “My husband had bought books for my daughter who came from Ghana where she was studying Medicine at the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology. They had just finished one of the crucial examinations in Medical School. After that, they were to go into the clinical year.

    “She had sent a list of the books she needed and Daddy had said he would buy them. I had asked her how she was going to get them, and she told me that her dad could send them to her in Ghana by courier. So I asked him about the books and he said he would bring them to Abuja. That was when I told him that he had missed the two flights and he told me that he would get a flight from Lagos.

    “When he got to Lagos, he called me to tell me. And when he boarded too, he called. When we spoke on the phone, he asked what I was doing and I told him I was cooking soup. He asked what soup and I told him okro. He asked me to make it green as usual. He told me to freeze it so that he could take it with him on Monday morning when he would be going back. That was our normal routine anyway.”

    “He also told me to send the driver to the airport. It was the driver who called from the airport and told us to on the television. I asked why and asked asked if the plane had landed. He insisted that I switch on the television.

    “I told my daughter what the driver had said, so she said we should on the television. When we did, we saw breaking news on the screen and then the voice came that the Bellview plane was missing. I was dazed. I got up, sat down, got up, sat down.

    “I again called the driver to tell me what was happening at the airport. He told me that they had been called to the tarmac. What followed was the longest 20 minutes of my life, as I waited for him to call me. He didn’t call me after that time. I had to call him again.

    “By the time I called him, he was crying. By this time, the scrolling bar on the television screen was already updating us regarding the news about the missing plane. Sooner, the information came that the Bellview plane got missing from the radar seven minutes after take-off and all efforts to locate it had proved abortive. For me, it was the beginning of the end.”

    “I stuck to myself. The kind of work that I was doing also encouraged me to become a recluse. After my husband died, I went into depression. I lost interest in life. I was asking myself why I was still here. Okay the children are here and I have a job to keep, I kept reminding myself.

    “I lost interest in people. I was not going to parties or any other social event. My routine became from my desk at work, to the house and then to the church. I was such a triangular person. I had no extra activity. I didn’t have anyone who came around to visit! I was not going out to see anyone too.

    “Half of the time when I was alone in the office, I had tears as my companion. I was locked up all to myself. I had only myself to share my pains with. I was not even going to the market. I did not really want to see anybody. I was only seeing the patients who I had to see officially. And that routine is not good for anybody. It was not good for me too.

    My level of activity dropped tremendously. When my husband was alive, we used to socialise a lot. We were good dancers. But all that stopped.”

    As if that was not enough bad news, Stella Chijioke became challenged healthwise. And it was not the kind commonly heard of. “What happened was that my spinal cord collapsed! I had to be evacuated in 2008 from this country to India. My spine had to be operated upon and re-done. Right now, there are so many things that I cannot do.”

    But what could have led to this unusual kind of health challenge?.

    “That is why I am preaching that people should rectify their lifestyles. What led to it is what I am today preaching against as a wellness consultant. We should not take our good health for granted. What happened was that the level of my normal activity went down. From being an active girl, an athlete representing institutions, I was suddenly sitting behind the desk to work for years?

    “Also, I went through four quick pregnancies. I delivered four children within three years and five months. My mum shouted when I had the fourth one. She told me, ‘you are a doctor, why are you doing this to yourself?’ I told her that was how the children came. She said, ‘I don’t expect you to say that. It is not how it should be done. You will pay for it.’ Eventually, I paid for it.”

    “After each pregnancy, the hormones did not go down before I took in again. I was building up hormones again for another pregnancy. So I was returning from each maternity leave, with a new pregnancy. I did that four times. One baby is like ten months older than the next one. And it was unbelievable, but it happened.

    In later years, I met people who knew us in Port Harcourt, who asked me if the children survived. I told them that they all survived. Many of them said they survived because I am a doctor. But my abdominal muscles got weaker and weaker.”

    “My abdominal muscles got weak and they are the things that support the spine. They had been stretched beyond the elastic limit. When my second daughter was going for her master’s programme in Birmingham in the UK, I think I dragged some of the heavy boxes. That was when my spinal cord snapped.

    “I didn’t even feel it that day. It was after I had come back. I stayed two days with her in London, went again with her to Birmingham and stayed another two days. Those days were days of dragging boxes up and down. That happened between September and October.

    “When I got back, by December, the pain came. That was when I did an MIR, which was when it was seen to have collapsed. I had to travel to the East for a wedding. Sitting through that long journey started the pain. I was evacuated to India where I had a major operation. Now I am not allowed to take a flight longer than two hours, and I must be lying down.”

    If Dr. Stella Chijioke thought that those two episodes were enough, the icing on the cake was just ahead.

    She said: “Six weeks after I came back from my spinal cord operation in India, I was kidnapped from my father’s house in Imo State. I was with my younger sister. We went for my mum’s memorial service. I had become all of a sudden a kidnap victim. The ransom was an outrageous amount.

    “My driver managed to call my colleagues at work to alert them on what had happened. It was a sad time for my organisation and they did not take it lightly. The management immediately went into a rescue plan with the Federal Government in an operation which involved the highest security network in the country as at then.”

    “After few days, we were traced to a location between the borders of Akwa Ibom and Abia State, in an uncompleted building. I later heard that the Federal Government gave only two options. And that was, ‘find her or find her!’

    By Saturday of that same week, the government task force had already penetrated the village where we were located. The kidnappers were guarding the house where we were kept. There were no windows. There was a roof but not completely done. It was at the fringe of a forest. The village itself was not developed. You can only go in there through a track. By the second day, they threw in bread and two bags of pure water to us. We hurriedly gobbled it because we were hungry. That was Thursday morning.”

    “By Monday, the government task force under disguise had zeroed down to where we were held captive, through information networking. By Tuesday morning, we were rescued after a shoot-out. After that, I had to leave the country for a while. It was a nasty experience that made me to fear for this country.

    “As to whether they got money from us, they couldn’t get any ransom. But they took some money which was with us when they kidnapped us from the house. That day, they were shooting everywhere.

    “Abroad, I had to go and see a psychotherapist. He took me to those that handled the prisoners of war for America. When two of them saw me, they asked, ‘Madam, how did you survive mentally?’ I answered that I did not know. They said, ‘your husband died suddenly, your children are not with you. All of them are in school. You just got through a major surgery, and then a kidnap trauma. Did you see a psychotherapist when each of these happened?’ I said no.

    “Then they said, ‘after all these, you are still mentally balanced. You are defying the textbooks!’ They said that this kind of thing does not happen to an individual all at once or one after the other; that one or two of them is enough to derail any human being. So they asked me why I did not see a psychotherapist and I told them that in Nigeria, we do not see a psychotherapist; we either have the everyday doctors or psychiatrists. So, if the everyday doctors can’t handle your case, you end up in the asylum. So they laughed and said that I even still had a sense of humour. Well, I told them that I didn’t mean it as humour, but that it is the truth.’

    So, when Stella retired, she had already made up her mind on what she would do. “Though initially I wondered what I would do at retirement, I knew that I did not want to set up a full clinic. I didn’t have the time for that. I knew it would entail a lot. Setting up a full clinic would mean being there 24 hours for the patients, and at 60, with my health challenges, I knew I shouldn’t do it. I know that there is no need biting more than I can chew.

    “Most of the clinics in Abuja are owned by people who are younger, in practice and in age, so I wouldn’t want to be competing with them. What prompted me into caring for people’s wellness was also because I had aged parents. I believed that charity should begin at home.”

    So, Stella Chijioke put together Ultimate Wellness Ltd, an outfit that creates awareness, guides and cares for members of the public, advising them on how to spend money when they are not ill.

    “We are not treating people when they are ill per se. We want to let you know the vital information that where you live, what you eat and what you do contribute a lot to the disease, sickness or illness that you have now or would have later in life. We are not your primary physician but we tell you that there are things you must do to change the pattern of things around you, that will make you healthy, and this is doable.

    “I take people through a wellness plan. Everybody can be managed better, notwithstanding the illness such as diabetes, hypertension, stroke, obesity and so on. Somebody can still have a fulfilling life despite having all these sickness. For instance, acute diabetes can be reversed and the blood sugar brought down and lifestyle changed. This has been proven.”

    To prove it further, Dr. Chijioke sets a good example of a healthy lifestyle. “In time past, I did not use to take breakfast. I thought that was a good way of managing my weight. But now, I know that it is not the best way. I got to know at NNPC when I was putting this together. Breakfast is the most important meal of the day. If there is any meal not to be missed, it is breakfast.

    “The actual meal to be missed for me is dinner. When you eat heavy meal and carry it to bed, that is when the body does all the storing, which you don’t need. I have late lunch at 4pm or 5pm. It you are between the age of 45 and 60, you have to reduce the quantity of your food intake. You eat smaller quantities of food. Don’t overload food in your tummy.

    “I drink lots of water. As women, we are all expected to have eight to ten glasses of water every day. For men, it is ten glasses of water every day. That is the minimum. In hot Africa, we are expected to drink even more because we are always expending. Water helps us to detoxify from the environmental, natural toxins and even those we get from food and drinks.

    “For drinks, I take fresh fruits which must not be stored in the refrigerator for long. For exercise, which is very important, I get it from dancing. These days, I do that in the church. People do not know why I dance that much in church, but the truth is, it is a form of exercise for me. It is a form of activity, which my body needs so much. Of course, I also dance in church to glorify God.

    “Now I am involved. I am beginning to go out, to socialise. I used to be a dancer. My husband and I attended parties together a lot. And any party we went, we were the life of the party. We used to do floor ‘dance’ shows at parties, with people surrounding us and clapping.

    “I have been to parties lately. Even at wedding these days, I have started dancing again. Right now, I cannot go to night parties because I don’t have a companion. But I have resumed my dancing.”

    As a woman who has gone through these life traumas, what is her advice to people who may be facing challenges? “My answer is that they must have faith in God who makes the difference. You have to have God as pillar to hold you at such times when all fails. Hold on to Him, because He is already holding unto you.”

  • Leah Abiara’s changing lifestyle

    Leah Abiara’s changing lifestyle

    It would appear that the lifestyle of the girl-about-town, Leah Abiara, has been reshaped by marriage. The controversial daughter of Pastor S. K. Abiara of the Christ Apostolic Church got married late in 2011 to Ibadan big boy, Omotunde Nero, much to the relief of family and friends.

    The claim that marriage imposes a lot of responsibility on people appears to have found complete expression with Leah. She has not only adopted a quiet lifestyle since she got married, there are also speculations that she may turn fully to God and follow in the footsteps of her father in no distant future.

    Before she got married, Leah was always in the news for the wrong reasons. It was so bad that her father appeared to have given up on her fast-paced lifestyle. Now happily married, the leggy Ibadan socialite has been keeping it so low that she is getting off the social scene.

  • Prof Peller’s son floats  multi-milion naira club

    Prof Peller’s son floats multi-milion naira club

    Not a few would agree that Shina Peller’s grip on the social scene in Nigeria has more to do with his very deep pocket than his family background. Shina is the son of the late Prof. Abiola Peller. That the former, who has been resident in the United Kingdom for many years, is extremely wealthy is like stating the obvious. His flamboyant lifestyle is more than enough proof of his vast means.

    A favourite of many musicians who have sung his praises, Peller further entrenched himself in the social circle when he acquired a part of De Luxe, a famed retreat established by Abiola Adegoke.

    Celeb Watch gathered that Shina, who is also the Chairman of Aquilla Oil and Gas, is currently working on a night club intended to be the biggest in Lagos. The new fun spot, Quilox Restaurant and Bar, is sited on Ozumba Mbadiwe Street, Victoria Island, Lagos. Informed sources told Celeb Watch that the new fun spot would be commissioned before the Yuletide period.