Category: Weekend Treat

  • Grace Egbagbe  slows down

    Grace Egbagbe slows down

    Time was in the social space when no function within and outside Lagos and Abuja would be tagged ‘A-list’ without the presence of popular socialite, Grace Egbagbe. As one of the most stylish women around, the one time lover of Lagos big boy, Lanre Nzeribe, added colour and class to events.

    But lately, the Director of Marketing at Nigerian Television Authority (NTA) has cut down drastically on the number of events she attends. An inside source hinted that she has gone to the extent of screening the invitation cards she gets from friends. This the source attributed to the fact that she is getting older and already preparing for her retirement, hence the need to leave the social scene for up and coming socialites.

    The Okpekpe, Etsako East Local Government Area, Edo State indigene is also said to be fast fading from the social scene because of her foreign engagements.

  • Where is  Faysal Harb?

    Where is Faysal Harb?

    Close watchers of the social scene in Ilorin, Kwara State would know that one of the rockers of the social space, Faysal Harb, has been missing in action for some time. The Chairman of Bulletine Construction Company once bestrode the social and economic firmaments of Kwara State like a colossus. Not only did he enjoy a cult following among the youths who have been major beneficiaries of his enterprise and benevolence, being friends with him was always the desire of everyone, including the powers that be in the state.

    His footprints could be seen in every nook and cranny of the state as well as the neighbouring states courtesy his chain of businesses. But the billionaire businessman has been missing from social functions since his business suffered a downturn. The husband of notable Ilorin socialite, Jumoke, was also said to have taken a break from the social radar as a result of a health challenge he suffered some time ago. While he has since recovered from the health challenge, he has been living a very quiet life since then.

    However, Jumoke has kept the social flag flying in his absence. She runs the biggest private school and salon in Ilorin

  • For Alaba  Shonibare, it’s  a new life

    For Alaba Shonibare, it’s a new life

    For popular Lagos businessman, Alaba Shonibare, the storm is over two years after he lost his beautiful wife, Adenike Shonibare, to cancer. He is back to another refreshing time of marital bliss.

    Things appear to have been looking up for him since he remarried a few months ago to Lagos big girl, Unuigbe. Shonibare, the scion of the illustrious Shonibare family whose patriarch made remarkable leaps in the corporate world and public service, went through some sad times when his late wife was diagnosed of cancer. He was everywhere with Adenike to ensure that she lived. Series of medical options were explored to get the terminal disease out of her system but death came knocking after assurances that she would live after a successful operation.

    After the sad incident, Shonibare, the chairman of Shonny Investment Property Company, withdrew completely from the social circle and his world literally came to a halt until a year ago when his path and that of Unuigbe crossed in Lagos. The lady brought renewing shine into Alaba life and he regained his groove, attending events hand-in-hand with Unuigbe.

  • Fola Adeola turns 60

    Fola Adeola turns 60

    With a life that boasts of sterling feats, including being a frontline banker and taking a shot at the nation’s number two position in the 2011 general election, Fola Adeola has every reason to be thankful. This is more so as he will be attaining the landmark age of 60 in a few weeks.

    The co-founder and pioneer Managing Director of Guaranty Trust Bank’s birthday will come up in January. But information scooped by CelebWatch indicates that friends and family members of the fair-complexioned banker turned politician are already putting heads together to make his 60th birthday grand and exceptional.

    A planning committee is said to have been constituted with a mandate to ensure a memorable celebration. But it was also learnt that the occasion may not be devoid of political colouration with the rumour that the Chairman of FATE Foundation is nursing a governorship ambition, even though he came out to deny any such ambition when his posters flooded the streets of Abeokuta a few months ago.

  • Crisis rocks Dino Melaiye’s marriage

    Crisis rocks Dino Melaiye’s marriage

    Efforts to salvage whatever is left of the marital life of Dino Melaye seems not to be making any headway if reports coming from his his home front is anything to go by. That Melaiye’s marriage to his ex-banker wife, Tokunbo, is in crisis has gone beyond the realm of speculation. As a matter of fact, the marriage is said to have been in crisis for long only that the lady decided to endure it.

    However, events took a new turn a few days back when the lady decided she has had enough. The lady, it was gathered, felt disappointed that Dino perpetrated violence against her in spite of the fact that she stood by when he was surrounded by series of crises. Dino had sent her packing as they both were becoming intolerable of each other after about a decade of living together. After she was sent packing, she allegedly went to report her estranged husband at the FCT office of the Federation of International Women Lawyers, from where a lawyer was detailed to take up her case. The body was said to have has started making contacts with her husband to see if he was keen on taking his wife back.

    Melaiye has been embroiled in one controversy after the other since he became a prominent player on the political field. Apart from his inability to make it back to the House of Representatives after falling out with some powerful forces in PDP, he was also enmeshed in a scandal with Nollywood actress, Bisi Ibidapo-Obe, who told the world that Dino was responsible for her pregnancy; an allegation the ex-lawmaker denied.

  • Cozy ideas to make couples have a merry and romantic Christmas

    It’s Christmas again and apart from thanking God for making us see another yuletide season, we should sped the long holiday snoozing, smudging and setting some magical milestones. Waoh! Check out these tried-and-true tips from experts, celebrities and happy couples from around the world. You would be glad you did!

    •Hit the road: “Right after a family party, my husband and I head for the beach, where we and six other couples have tents reserved for the whole weekend. Part of the time it’s just me and my hubby of 27 years, but a lot of the time we spend with the crew – playing games, telling stories and having a blast. By the time I go back to work on Monday, I am rejuvenated and ready to get in the Christmas spirit.” Patti Beecroft.

    •Focus on food: “We’re planning our Christmas around my husband’s roasting goat in his charcoal smoker, with friends and family on hand to sample his handiwork.” Tamilore.

    •Express thanks: “On that special day, thank each other for the gifts (material and nonmaterial) you have given each other over the past year.” –Dr. Patti Britton, iVillage’s Sex Coach.

    •Dance by candlelight: “I’ll be staying home and celebrating with my husband and children this holiday and in the New Year. We’ll pop some popcorn and watch a family movie, and then, when the kids go to bed, we’ll put on some music and dance by candlelight.” Aisha Hamisu.

    •Dream: “Give yourself a gift as a couple. Take five minutes each to tell each other your dreams, hopes and desires. Then do a third round, making up some fun and wonderful new dreams to do as a couple. Then schedule some of them. –Marcia Wieder, America’s Dream Coach and author of Making Your Dream Come True

    •Strip down: “My husband and I are moving just a few days before Christmas, which definitely puts a damper on any plans for big parties with lots of friends. But we both decided that will be fine. It’s our first New Year’s Eve as a married couple, and I can’t think of any better way to ring in the new year than with a plate of shrimp, a glass of champagne and my sweetheart in his boxers.” Kristy Alonge.

    •Change the celebration date: “In order to enable our adult children to spend time with their spouses’ families, we let them go to their in-laws’ on Thanksgiving, and then we celebrate as a family a week later. Meanwhile, my husband and I take a mini vacation to some faraway place – time alone we really enjoy. Works great!” Alhaja Zainab OgoOlorun.

    •Get a baby-sitter: “My mother is watching my baby boy for three days so that my boyfriend and I can spend a little time alone. We’re going to Obudu Cattle Ranch for this coming chirtmas and New Year. There is nothing more romantic than standing at the top of Obudu and looking at the cable cars as they move slowly to and fro. Peju Aborisade.

    •Steal away: “If you and your partner will be attending lots of parties, create a subtle signal and use it mid-party when you want to steal a few minutes of time for just the two of you. Duck into the kitchen or a quiet corner and … connect.” –Sherry Amatenstein, iVillage’s Dating Doyenne

    •Pretend you’re in Hollywood: “I’m going to enjoy a formal, private, candlelit dinner at home with my fiancé, then have a champagne toast in the bathtub at midnight.” –iVillager Jeannie

    •Make your house more romantic: “Go away to a bed and breakfast or turn your home into one — make your environment cozy, homey and romantic with candles, potpourri, breakfast in bed and so on.” –Robin Gorman Newman, author of How to Meet a Mensch in New York.

    •Unplug: “My plan for a pleasant New Year’s Eve with my honey is to build a fire in the fireplace, open a bottle of wine, enjoy homemade food, disconnect the telephone and turn off the pagers and cell phones.” Liz Mensa.

    •Fall in love again: “Approach each day during the holidays as if it’s the first day of your relationship. Many times we take our partners for granted; we forget to pay attention to our partner’s thoughts, ideas and moves. If you look at your partner the way you did when you first fell in love, it will keep the relationship fresh and alive, and will also create more interest.” –Susan Taylor, Ph.D., author of Sexual Radiance: A 21-Day Program of Breathwork, Nutrition and Exercise for Vitality and Sensuality

    •Have sex: “Sex is a wonderful way to reduce stress and build togetherness. But don’t force it; making sex a ‘have to’ will only increase your stress level.” –Dr. Patti Britton, iVillage’s Sex Coach.

    •Overcome obstacles: “My husband is the security chief of a shopping mall, so he has to work on New Year’s. I am planning to put on my best dress, pack a picnic dinner and spend the night with him and his staff.” –iVillager cocacolagal.

    •Be grateful: “My husband and I are just coming to the end of a very difficult phase in our relationship. I think the best thing we can do this holiday season is to surround ourselves with the people we love the most and be grateful that it’s a new year.” Jody Allen.

    •Shop for sexy stuff: “Fill each other’s stockings with sex-related gifts, such as IOUs for sexual favors. You can even buy books filled with them.” –Dr. Patti Britton, iVillage’s Sex Coach.

    •Keep it simple: “My husband and I like screaming, ‘Happy New Year!’ in our pajamas, and then being able to quickly go to bed.” –Mary Daniyan.

    •Throw a family fete: “The best holiday party we ever had was when we invited over a few couples with kids the same ages as ours, rented movies, played card and board games, ate pork roast, hot dogs, sauerkraut and dumplings and drank sparkling cider. Everyone slept over, and the next morning, we all had breakfast together. Everyone pitched in. It was like a big slumber party.” Shelley Okon.

    •Enjoy nature: “My boyfriend and I are big nature lovers. The best thing we’ll do this holiday season is to get bundled up and go for a long walk in the night. The harmattan breeze is more romantic than most people have cared to discover. It’s just perfect to make you cuddle each other. Sefiya Dantata.

    •Celebrate early: “Open a few of your smaller presents to each other a day or two before Christmas — it can really help to put you in the holiday spirit.” Mrs. Ambi Owanbe.

    • Grab and kiss your guy: “As long as I am with the man I love over the holidays, whatever we do will be all right, so I grab him at every opportunity and give him sweet kisses.” Tinu Ayegbayo.

    •Decorate a deux: “To celebrate Christmas, my significant other and I go to any of those big stores and buy decorations, play Christmas music, drink whatever is cool by us and snuggle by the light of the tree. It’s a great feeling.” Jennifer Falode.

    •Skip the gifts: “Holidays are for loving, not gifts. They’re about spending time with the ones you love.” Gloria Ssilas-Anuobe.

    •Be a secret Santa: “Every year, I send my husband anonymous presents in the mail. He’s pretty sure it’s me, but he’s never caught me in the act and until he does, it’s my little secret. It totally cracks me up!” Ngozi Anozie.

    •Give yourself: “As often as I can around Christmas, I set time aside to go and just be with someone I love. Sometimes it’s to help them with a chore, but just as often I spend the time totally focused on them, with no goal in mind. It’s astonishing the feeling of closeness this brings.” Amaka N.

    •Skip overspending: “I have found that my best New Year’s Eve celebrations have been staying home with my honey and keeping my money.” Rita Bassey.

    •Kill two birds with one stone: “My husband and I are combining a family reunion in Florida with a well-deserved and much-needed vacation.” –iVillager Jane.

    •Toast each other: “Once all the shopping, wrapping, decorating, cooking and running around is done, I can’t wait to sit back in my own home with my husband and toast us.” –iVillager Leslie.

    •Keep it light: “The holidays can be pretty stressful, so I do everything I can to make things fun for my boyfriend – tickle him, say silly things, basically find the humor in every situation.” Jane Mark-Adu.

  • A love to hold (3)

    After Lenny’s Mum and sister left, I picked up my bag and prepared to leave as well.

    He was against my going and begged me to stay.

    “You can’t just leave like that, Rosa. You are supposed to spend the weekend with me, remember?” he stated.

    I shook my head.

    “My plans have changed. I need to go home and do some washing and…” I started to say when he said:

    “Is it because of what my Mum said? Ah, sweetheart, you should not take her words too seriously. She’s just being a typical possessive mother; she’s scared you will take me away from her, that since you are now in my life, she can’t have me to herself as before.”

    “Well, it’s obvious she dislikes me. I don’t feel comfortable with the situation; maybe we should just call this thing off, stop seeing each other…” I stated. But Lenny would not hear of it.

    “How can you say that? What do you think will happen to me if you leave me? My life will just be empty without you!” he declared. He told me not to take any rash decision, assuring me that with time, his mother and other family members would accept me.

    “Be patient, please. I will continue to do my best to change her mind,” he said, drawing me close to him and kissing me. Though sceptical, I decided to listen to him. You see, I love Lenny. He had become such an important part of my life that breaking up with him would be heartbreaking. So, I prayed that his people would let us be and not try to separate us.

    But it was not to be as events turned out.

    War zone

    Whatever efforts Lenny made to make his family soften up to me did not seem to work as things became more difficult for us. It was like they had declared war on me and did everything to make my life unbearable. The mother and his two younger sisters kept bombarding me with calls, calling me names and threatening to deal with me both physically and spiritually if I did not leave Lenny.

    “Go and look for another guy to bewitch! Leave our brother alone! Jezebel! Agent of the devil!… his sisters would rant at me, calling me all kinds of unprintable names. For Lenny’s sake, I refrained from exchanging words with them and held my peace. At a point, the harassment got so bad that I had to change my number so they could no longer reach me.

    But that did not stop them. One day, I was at work when I was told I had visitors. Downstairs at the reception, I saw Lenny’s mother with one of her daughters. There was another lady with them that I had never seen before.

    Thinking they had come to make peace, I welcomed them warmly. How wrong I was!

    As soon as I greeted Lenny’s mother and the others, she flared up.

    “Who are you greeting? Don’t you ever greet me in your life again! I’ve come to deliver the last warning to you since you have refused to listen to my previous warnings. My son is not for you, so let him be and go and look for your husband elsewhere. If I ever see you with him again, I will not be held responsible for my actions. I’m warning you…” she continued to rave and shout at me. Soon the others joined in, abusing me and issuing all kinds of threats. I pleaded with her to stop, that we were in an office environment and we could go somewhere else and talk. But they were not ready to listen so when their noise grew so bad, I had to call in the security to throw them out.

    I felt they had carried their hatred of me too far by coming to my office to embarrass me in that manner.

    When Lenny heard what happened, he immediately came over to my house to see me later that day. He apologised on behalf of his mother, promising to have a strong word with her.

    “I’ll make sure this never repeats itself. How could my Mum do that to you! In your office of all places!” he said angrily.

    I did not say anything but simply listened to what he had to say. When he finished, I said:

    “There won’t be a repeat as there would no longer be any reason for her harassment,” I said quietly. I then told him that I was calling off the relationship as I could no long cope with all the intimidations and embarrassment from his family.

    “I love you but I can’t continue like this. All this stress is killing me! My life has become a war zone because of your people. I need my peace, Lenny, so I think it’s best we end this relationship. Just go. Leave me alone!” I said.

    He pleaded and begged but I refused to listen. He looked so miserable and at a point was almost crying that my heart softened.

    So I gave him another chance with the condition that he had to come up with a solution else it would be over with us. After he left, I sat gloomily staring into space, feeling very depressed. I did not see any hope for us with all the opposition to our relationship. The thought of losing Lenny kept me awake at night, made me miserable, sad…

    Epilogue

    Later, Lenny came up with a solution to our problem. He suggested we should relocate to the States and start our lives afresh. I was initially reluctant to leave the country because of my family and my job. But his love for me which I felt was worth holding onto made me change my mind. We quickly made our plans, ensuring we kept everything from his family.

    On the morning we were to travel, we were getting set to go to the airport, when Lenny’s mother showed up.

    “Where are you going, my son with all this luggage?” she enquired, eyeing the bags and suitcases we were loading into the car.

    “Abroad. Where we can have peace since you won’t allow us rest here!” he retorted.

    “What? You mean you are traveling and you didn’t tell me? How could you, Lenny? How can you do that to your own mother?”

    Anyway, she started crying and pleading with Lenny not to go, that she needed him around now as she was getting old and who would take care of her in her old age? If accepting me was the only way to stop him from relocating, then she was ready to do that…

    So based on that, our plans changed. We cancelled our trip and Lenny and I are now free to be together. It’s like a miracle! We are both very happy over the turn of events and I pray his mother’s newfound love for me would last forever, that the days of threats and intimidations were truly over…

    •Concluded

    •Names have been changed to protect the identity of the narrator and other individuals in the story.

    •Send comments/suggestions to 08023201831(sms only), psaduwa@yahoo.com or psaduwa007@gmail.com

  • 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.

  • Revamping Nigeria’s manufacturing sector

    Revamping Nigeria’s manufacturing sector

    The Nigerian manufacturing sector has begun to experience statistical growth. It is an important point to make, in spite of the cynicism towards statistical expression of performances of economic indicators in Nigeria.

    But part of the economic transformation that is taking place in the country is that public and private sector institutions are now producing analytics for better understanding of what is going on in the economy. More systematic approaches to data-gathering are helping to provide reliable information which guide economic and investment decisions, in line with the trend in the advanced and emerging markets, where regional, national and sectoral data are crucial in understanding the state of the economies and the performance of their industries.

    According to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), the performance of the manufacturing sector has been strengthening. The sector grew by 8.41 per cent in Q1 2013. It was a performance that even bettered the impressive growth of 7.70 per cent in the last quarter of 2012. This upswing in the performance of one of the sectors that hold the ace for Nigeria’s economic transformation was corroborated by researchers at FBN Capital, one of the leading investment banking and financial advisory groups in Nigeria.

    FBN Capital’s Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) has maintained a reading above 50 points since the “headline reading” of 59.6 per cent at its launch in April 2013. The PMI methodology indicates 50 points as flat performance; a reading above it is growth, while lower reading indicates contraction.

    Although far from glory days, the Nigerian manufacturing sector currently constitutes 10 per cent of our GDP.

    This is significant for a frontier market, and at this stage of Nigeria’s development. The sector accounts for about 12 per cent of employment in the formal sector. In spite of the decline in the sector a few years ago, the consumer goods sub sector has always been vibrate. After decades of domination by multinational food and beverage franchises, recent growth in manufacturing has seen strong contribution by indigenous manufacturers, who have come into fortune because of the policy support under the Transformation Agenda of President Goodluck Jonathan, and the fillip provided by his predecessors.

    A manufacturing hub Nigeria has been a sort of manufacturing hub for West Africa for decades. A huge percentage of the trade in manufactured products that linked the sub region is informal. Pharmaceutical products and other consumer manufactured goods had fuelled Nigerian exports to Ghana, Sierra Leone, Gambia, Liberia and a swath of Francophone West African countries, until China took aim at the sub region to dump inferior quality items from the 1990s.

    But Nigeria is set to regain its status as the central nervous system for manufacturing and distribution on the West coast of Africa, for a number of reasons.

    Unlike in the 1970s through to the last decade, China now cares much more than economic growth that is achieved through foul trade practices such as dumping. Now the second-largest world economy – one that aims to be more influential in global diplomacy – China has begun to reform its industrial practices, and is aiming to shift from manufacturing of inferior quality products to leveraging hi-tech. Moreover, China is transitioning from a low-wage economy as domestic consumption has been identified to be a major support for economic growth for the country, moving forward.

    The status of Nigeria in manufacturing in West Africa can hardly be challenged. A domestic consumer base of over 170 million people ensures that local demands are strong and supportive of investment in manufacturing. This is particularly so as a result of the growing middle class in Nigeria that is boosting consumption. Thus, it is reasonable that foreign investors in the region look at setting up in Nigeria and then export excess capacity to other countries in the region.

    A reverse strategy is a nonstarter. While infrastructural support for trade of manufactured goods in the country has been inadequate (but improving), more serious logistical, nontariff barriers will thwart any effort to serve Nigeria’s needs from a manufacturing base elsewhere in West Africa. Not surprisingly therefore, some of the manufacturing companies that moved out of Nigeria a few years ago are now returning.

    A number of reforms are reshaping the manufacturing sector in Nigeria. The NBS has more recently attributed the growth in the sector to implementation of the power sector reforms. The full effect of the reforms is a promise than what we currently experience. It is therefore expected that the era of more stable grid-electricity power s supply, which Nigeria now has on the horizon, would ensure that products manufactured in Nigeria move towards price-competitiveness. It will also drive other efficiency factors. As I had mentioned, this Administration has pressed on with addressing infrastructural deficiencies. As a first step in the rail transportation, some of the old rail lines have been revamped and are now operational. This and some proposals for new tracks will support establishment of an agricultural corridor to connect agricultural produce to agro-processing industries.

    A number of policy supports, including fiscal incentives and establishment of free trade zones, have underlined government’s efforts to lift the manufacturing sector. General Electric is one of the global manufacturers that have taken advantage of this in recent times. Its $1 billion investment in a service and manufacturing facility in Calabar, Cross River State, Nigeria adds to the high profile nonoil foreign direct investment in the country.

    Of bigger scale is the $9 billion investment of Dangote Group in petroleum refining, petrochemical and fertiliser plant in the Olokola Free Trade Zone.

    SME manufacturing is not overlooked. Part of the credit goes to the strong advocacy of the very vibrant trade association for the sector: Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN). Its leadership has been persistent in calling for more favourable fiscal environment and removal of barriers to the growth of the sector. Where MAN has been helpless (although not altogether without assistance), is the area of high interest rate charged by the commercial banks.

    A number of financing initiatives including an SME fund sponsored by Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) have been addressed to the special funding needs of manufacturers of smaller scale. That we have need of more low-cost finance solution is well acknowledged by policymakers, although macroeconomic goals that impact interests rates are much more difficult to achieve at the current level of success with diversification of the economy.

    Nexim Bank in the

    solution mix

    The Nigerian Export – Import Bank has been working closely with some manufacturers in Nigeria since we formulated our “MASS Agenda.” We thought that the manufacturing, agro-processing, solid minerals and services sectors were very important frontiers of job-rich growth that the country needed to give welfarist meaning to the impressive GDP growth Nigeria has experienced since much of the last decade. Specifically, since 2010, NEXIM Bank has been assisting some manufacturers to retool. We have funded complete overhaul of facilities for some manufacturer clients. Manufacturing evolves with technology. Therefore, our interventions usually assist manufacturers to adopt new technology in the form of new equipment and machinery.

    As a development finance institution (DFI), NEXIM Bank’s facilities, including for manufacturers, are priced below the exorbitant market rate of the commercial banks. For a number of our loan beneficiaries, our facilities have been critical to their ability to take advantage of opportunities that require them to expand their capacity, or acquire more cost-efficient facilities to improve the quality of their products. In either scenario, jobs are on the line. We look to create and sustain jobs in the manufacturing sector.

    We hope to scale up our impacts. By 2015, Nexim Bank aims to provide about N42 billion in short and long-term financing to the manufacturing sector. This will represent about 6 per cent of total funding needs of the sector. With this, we hope to directly mediate about 4 per cent of total production value in manufacturing, and create and support over 70,000 jobs. Our specific view of the sector is to identify key areas of growth dynamics.

    As a result of local consumption capacity and local sourcing of raw materials, Nexim Bank will focus significant parts of its intervention on these subsectors: food and beverage, wood products, domestic and industrial plastic/rubber products, steel and alloy products.

    An up-to-date view of the sector is not that it is comatose; it is revamping. The growth potentials in the manufacturing sector are huge. Manufacturing is one of the sectors that will contribute to the long-term economic growth in Nigeria. When we factor in the value chain, we see even brighter economic prospects. Nexim Bank will continue to innovate on how to support, in particular, export-manufacturers in fulfilment of its mandate. We are taking another major step in this direction with our buyer credit facility which is in the offing and will be launched by 2015.

    – Roberts Orya is Managing Director / Chief Executive Officer, Nigerian Export – Import Bank

     

  • Subomi Balogun opensFCMB ‘s  multi-million naira headquarters

    Subomi Balogun opensFCMB ‘s multi-million naira headquarters

    Otunba Subomi Balogun, the Chairman of First City Monument Bank (FCMB), is not resting on his oars as far as making FCMB an enduring legacy is concerned. That much he demonstrated when he opened the bank’s new office on Kakawa Street, Lagos, last week.

    Declaring the architectural masterpiece open, the Ijebu high chief reminded guests that the edifice should not be seen as the handiwork of a man consumed with passion but a faithful fulfillment of God’s promises to him and his life.

    As it has become the practice with the master of modern banking in Nigeria, he ascribed his achievements in banking to God’s doing, describing FCMB as “a financial monument built by God.”

    The latest addition to FCMB’s assets was one of the events aimed at marking FCMB’s 30 years of banking within the shores of Nigeria and beyond.