Category: Weekend Treat

  • ‘Rugged’ to the grave

    ‘Rugged’ to the grave

    An expose on the dangerous,  deadly world of Nigerian  campus confraternities

    Guns don’t kill people, people kill people, noted Earl Simmons (a.k.a DMX), American artiste, in a 2000 box office hit, Romeo Must Die. The artiste was preaching the futility of unnecessary gang violence to rival gangsters before a gunfight in his club. You could be forgiven for thinking Simmons had Nigeria in mind when he made the statement. As you read, violence through the gun barrel has escalated, precipitated by regional and ethnic conflicts, campus cult violence and political disorder. OLATUNJI OLOLADE, Assistant Editor, reports the situation and the effects on the society as ECOWAS moves to stem the proliferation of arms in the West African region.

    SOMETIME in the twilight of 2001, Dare Alayinde became the bullies’ favourite. At 27, he was in his second year in the university and he was being picked upon by gangsters otherwise known as secret cult boys. That had to be frustrating because he was also a cult boy.

    Alayinde belonged to the Supreme Eiye Confraternity (SEC). In fact, he joined in order to guarantee his freedom and stop paying ‘security dues’ to the ruling confraternity on campus, like his rivals did. Alayinde was a photographer with a five-month old child and Ireti, his wife, who attended the same school with him.

    After joining SEC, Alayinde stopped paying ‘security due’ like his rival photographers but then he was forced to pay a different kind of due. He had to pay the N2, 000 annual due imposed upon every member of his cult group. Although he joined SEC to avoid paying the N5, 000 security due collected from every photographer working on his school’s ‘motion ground’ (photo avenue), Alayinde had to contend with all manners of demand and financial levies which made being a ‘strong man’ (cultist) not quite attractive as it seemed from a distance.

    “He was always complaining that he wasn’t enjoying the benefits of joining the cult…One day he came home badly bruised and without the zoom lens to his camera. He said they had seized it because he refused to pay his annual cult dues. I told him to take heart that God would provide him money to get a new one but he said that he didn’t need a new one. He claimed God won’t come to his aid because God expected him to liberate himself,” said Ireti.

    Hence at the advice of a friend, he purchased a 9mm semi-automatic pistol assuring his wife that it would garner him the respect he deserved. Expectedly, he stopped paying his dues. He got the respect he sought and ascended the rank of his cult gang.

    “Suddenly, he (Alayinde) became erratic and threatened to ‘light’ (shoot) people up at the slightest provocation. He tendered and polished his gun every night calling it his baby. He told me he was being considered for office (executive post) and when my plea that he backed out fell on deaf ears, I decided to leave him,” said Ireti.

    But just before she did so, a fracas broke out between her husband’s group and the Buccaneers, a rival cult; in the melee, Alayinde was shot and butchered in a reprisal attack. Although he was able to kill two of his assailants, his “baby” couldn’t save him.

    “He made me a widow at the age of 21. I warned him against joining the cult but he refused to listen to me. He said once he becomes an officer, life will become rosy for us. He said he would be placed on a monthly salary that would augment his income from his photography business. I feared he would die before his time and he did,” said Ireti with a painful sigh.

    More pathetic was the case of Damilola Olaniyan Ibraheem a.k.a Damoche; the fast rising hip hop artiste and undergraduate of Lagos State University (LASU) was brutally hacked down in March by rival confraternity, Black Axe members. Damoche, a 400 level Banking and Finance undergraduate and suspected SEC member was shot twice in the head and on the left hand with what appeared to be a high caliber weapon. He lay dead for several hours before policemen arrived to take his body away in a pick-up van. Even though the police have been unable to resolve his murder, no fewer than three students have been killed in reprisal attacks over the death of the late artiste.

  • A love to hold (1)

    A friend of mine used to say something that I often found puzzling. “You can’t control who you fall in love with,” she said with the wisdom of an elderly person whereas she was just a young, precocious school girl of 16.

    My present situation brings to mind those words succinctly. I never planned to fall for Lenny. It just happened and now I have to face so much heartache and uncertainty over my future because of my heart’s desires. Lenny and I love each other very much and we want to be together. But so many obstacles have sprung up against us that sometimes I wonder if we can ever make it as a couple, something we so much want.

    As I write this, I’m full of despair, wondering what will happen to Lenny and I, to our love. My present mood is in sharp contrast to my state of mind at the period I first met him. It was like this. I had just been promoted in my office to a senior position with a higher salary, an official car and other perks.

    Feeling euphoric, I had contacted a couple of my friends for a celebratory dinner. Two of them, Neenah, a very good friend who is like a sister to me and another named Maria turned up. It was just the three of us and we had a swell time at a nice, upscale restaurant I had picked for our outing.

    It was at the end of the evening that Neenah told me about her cousin, Lenny. He was an IT specialist, she said who had trained in the U.S and returned to set up his own consultancy firm the year before.

    “He’s very good. Since he’s been handling the systems in our office, we’ve not been having much problems with our computers and network. I’m not saying this because he’s my cousin. You need to recommend him to your company,” she said.

    I told her I would consider it and promptly forgot about the matter. I remembered her words though, about two weeks later. We had been having major problems with our systems and my immediate boss was considering bringing in someone to overhaul them. It was then I remembered Neenah’s cousin.

    I called her and she arranged a meeting for the following day. She arrived with him at my office shortly before noon.

    “This is Lenny, my cousin. Please give him all the assistance you can,” she said.

    “Alright, Neenah. I’ll do my best,” I assured her as I looked over her relative. He was of average height, with a quiet, serious mien and looked to be in his late 20s.

    Later, after Neenah had left to go back to her work, Lenny and I sat in my office for a while to review the proposal he had made on our systems overhaul and maintenance. I showed it to my boss and he seemed to like it.

    “Bring the young man to me after the departmental meeting later,” he said.

     

    Blossoming romance

    Lenny got the job and he immediately set to work. It was a long term job which involved him and a couple of his staff coming to our company nearly everyday. He was very appreciative of the help I had given him in winning the IT contract and one day, he invited me out for dinner, ‘just to say thank you,’ as he put it. I declined at first, thinking it was not necessary.

    “Neenah is like a sister to me and I will do anything for her,” I told him that afternoon. But he persisted and I graciously gave in.

    We went to a new place that had just opened on Victoria Island. That evening I saw the other side of Lenny, his fun relaxed side which was not noticeable at work. He told so many jokes especially about his school days in the States that I laughed nearly throughout the evening.

    “That was so much fun,” I stated sincerely as he took me home later.

    “Yes, I had a swell time too,” he said. Then he added: “Perhaps, we can do this again, some other time?”

    I looked at closely before saying in a slightly amused tone of voice:

    “Are you asking me out on a date?”

    He shrugged.

    “If you put it that way; yes,” he replied, taking his eyes briefly from the wheel to glance keenly at me.

    “Well, thanks for the invite but sorry, it’s a no,” I said lightly.

    “Why? Is it that you don’t like me?” he asked.

    I laughed briefly before saying:

    “My dear, this has got nothing to do with liking you or not. In case you’ve forgotten, I’m Neenah’s (whom by the way you call ‘Sister Neenah’) close friend and age mate. That should give you a clue.”

    “So, it’s because of the age gap then,” he finally stated.

    “Now you are talking! I should be like 7 years or so older than you,” I pointed out.

    “But you don’t look it. You could pass for someone my age or even younger,” he stated, looking at me again. Even in the dimness of the car, I could see the admiration in his eyes.

    “Thanks for the compliment. But that does not change the fact we are not mates. So, let’s drop this, shall we?” I said, and taking my phone from my bag, I checked my mixed calls and messages.

    I thought I had heard the last of the matter, but to my surprise Lenny kept on pestering me to go out with him. His persistence amused me at first but when it became too much, I had to put my foot down.

    “Lenny,” I said one evening in my office, “This must stop! There can never be anything between us. Don’t you get it? I’m not for you!” I said in an exasperated tone. He had just invited me to attend the birthday party of a friend in Surulere.

    “What will your friends say when they see you with someone like me, your elder sister’s mate?” I queried.

    “Seeing me with a beauty like you, they will call me a lucky guy and will be envious of me too,” he stated, smiling at me.

    I was not amused.

    “Well, good luck to them. But the fact remains that, I see you more like a younger brother not…” I began saying when he butted in:

    “As a man,” he said. Then he added: “Look, I’m a man and I know what I want. And I’ve liked you from the first day I saw you. You are on my mind all the time. Even at night, my sleep is haunted by thoughts of you. Agreed, there are a few years’ gap between us but why should that be a problem when it comes to love? I think you don’t like me, that’s the real problem,” he concluded sounding gloomy.

    He was not quite correct on that. Truth was, I was beginning to like him. He was intelligent, hardworking and also good-looking too. Besides, he was mature and focused for his age. He knew what he wanted out of life and he always worked hard towards his goals. He was my type, the kind of guy I liked and if things were different, I would have accepted him as I was not in a serious relationship then. Six months before, I had broken up with my boyfriend when he kept insisting on my having a baby before our marriage. When I pointed out to him that it should be the other way round, marriage before babies, he had got angry and walked out. Out of my life for good. I was not in love with him anyway, so his leaving was no big loss to me. Infact, I felt more of relief than heartbreak after that break-up.

    Since then though, I had been praying for a decent man to come my way, someone who will love me for myself and not as a potential baby making factory. So far, my prayers seemed to have gone unanswered.

    Lenny was still speaking.

    “Please, Rosa, don’t let such an inconsequential thing as age difference stop us. Give me a chance and I know you will grow to like me with time. Stop pushing me away. Please,” he pleaded earnestly.

    I studied him for a while, noting the sincerity in his voice, his dark eyes.

    I made up my mind then.

    “Alright, let’s do it like this then…” And I began to speak of a way out…

     

    •What did Rosa say to Lenny? Details next week!

     

    •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

     

  • Iyabo Obasanjo lies low

    Iyabo Obasanjo lies low

    That Senator Iyabo Obasanjo lost her bid to return to the upper chamber of the National Assembly in 2011 is no longer news. What seems to be of concern to her admirers is the rate at which the once ubiquitous former Ogun State commissioner for health has rolled back into political oblivion.

    Since the embarrassing loss of her seat in the Senate in 2011, she has been absent from the political and social scenes.

    The veterinary doctor turned politician and eldest daughter of former President Olusegun Obasanjo was once a recurring feature on the social scene when her father held sway as President. By virtue of her father’s position, she became a well sought after acquaintance of many. Not only was she appointed a commissioner by the Otunba Gbenga Daniel administration in Ogun State, she was always on the road attending one inauguration ceremony after the other.

    The ex-senator whose marriage to Jimi Bello crashed many years ago, could not secure a ministerial appointment under President Goodluck Jonathan as earlier rumoured. She then relocated abroad for further studies, hoping to get from academics the certificate she could not get from INEC.

    As 2015 draws closer, it is not yet clear which direction Iyabo Obasanjo will go.

  • Akeem Shodeinde reopens Movida Night Club

    Akeem Shodeinde reopens Movida Night Club

    Now that the recuperation period of the self-acclaimed king of nightclub, Akeem Shodeinde, is over, it is time to get Movida Night Club back on its feet. Akeem who went through a life-threatening renal failure reopened the once hippy club penultimate Friday with a ‘welcome back’ party with friends and fans who have been itching for the resuscitation of the club.

    The ‘General of night clubs’ in Nigeria hosted a lot of happening guys to a swell time and took them down the memory lane. He took time to remind the attendants about how he put all his resources into the night club business at a time it was the most difficult business to do.

    Akeem’s passion for night club business is legendary as he has seen the ups and downs of the industry. The club was shut down when the people appointed to handle it while he was away allegedly messed up its finances. The closure took the pressure off him as he fully concentrated on his deteriorating health.

    Movida’s new bar area has now been redesigned and it is wearing a new look. A new cigar bar has also been added. The cigar bar is now managed by Carline, the ex-Caribbean model who supplies cigar lovers in Lagos, Abuja & Accra.

  • Deji of Akure’s  last outing

    Deji of Akure’s last outing

    There is the belief in certain parts of Africa that when an individual is rumoured dead while he is still alive, it is a sign that the individual will live very long. So, when in August the Deji of Akure, Oba Adebiyi Adegboyega Adesida, was rumoured dead, his family members and well wishers paraded the streets of Akure to dispel his death rumour, his subjects heaved a sigh of relief believing that their king would live very long. The king was carried shoulder-high by palace guards in a show of happiness that he was hale and hearty.

    It came as a rude shock therefore when the news of his death hit the airwaves a few days ago. It was even more shocking that his death occurred barely a week after his son’s high profile wedding. His only son, Prince Adetunji Oluwagbemiga Adesida, got married to Frankella Kasope, the daughter of Chief Frank Kargbo-Reffell penultimate Saturday at Yard 158, Oregun, Lagos. The deceased monarch was full of life at the event, as he was seen throwing banters with many of his friends.

    Indeed, there was nothing to suspect that his exit from this mundane world was imminent. It was one fulfilling moment for the king who witnessed the conjugal vows of his only son and heir apparent.

  • Ayo Adedoyin not in a hurry

    Prince Ayo Adedoyin, son of Prince Samuel Adedoyin of the Doyin Group fame, is a guy known for his cheerful disposition even in situations that would rattle others. After the crash of his marriage with Ogogwo Asemota a few years ago, Ayo has been living like a bachelor who is not in a hurry to tie up with any woman emotionally.

    Prior to the celebrated break-up between him and Ogogwo, Ayo was rumoured to have been a toast of a few ladies. But months have grown into years and Ayo remains single.

    But the Chairman of Peacegate Group has not allowed any troubling season to put a sour taste on his mouth. Even when his businesses were besieged with inclement economic weather, the ebullient scion of the Adedoyin dynasty found a way to stay afloat.

  • What’s up with Monalisa  Chinda, Lanre Nzeribe?

    What’s up with Monalisa Chinda, Lanre Nzeribe?

    Popular Lagos socialite, Lanre Nzeribe, was sighted at the launch of Monalisa Chinda’s all-gloss magazine at Intercontinental Hotel & Resort, Victoria Island, Lagos on November 22, raising doubts about the rumour that he has severed relationship with his lover, Monalisa Chinda.

    The handsome man, who once dated society lady, Grace Egbagbe, was reported to have parted ways with Chinda, one of Nollywood’s leading actresses, whose earlier divorcee from her former husband, Dejo Richards, was the object of media frenzy.

    Initially, Nzeribe and Chinda were said to be so serious that a permanent union was on the cards. But recently, tales of incompatibility rent the air. With Nzeribe’s presence at the launch of the new magazine, however, it became unclear whether they are back together as lovers or just as friends.

  • Walter Wagbatsama bounces back

    Wherever you come across Walter Wagbatsama these days, chances are you would find him in gay mood. With the way he is living life to the fullest, no one would suspect that he is being haunted with a court case that borders on alleged fuel subsidy scam.

    Not a few concluded that he was heading into oblivion when he was questioned by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission last year in the aftermath of the oil subsidy saga that rocked the oil industry to its very foundation.

    While the case is still being pursued, it will not be a surprise if the oil magnate has secured assurance from his lawyers that he would be freed of the allegations at the end of the day. He simply does not cut the picture of one whose world is being rocked by a storm.

  • Waziri  Mohammed’s  widow remarries  after eight years

    Waziri Mohammed’s widow remarries after eight years

    Zainab, widow of the late former chairman of the Nigeria Railway Corporation and close ally of former President Olusegun Obasanjo, Waziri Mohammed, has finally shaken off the trauma of her late husband’s death.

    Waziri Mohammed was one of the passengers on board of Bellview Airline flight that crashed about eight years ago and suddenly turned Zainab into a widow. But now, her eight-year mourning of her former soul-mate is over with her decision to settle into a new matrimonial union with a member of the House of Representatives from Jigawa State, Hon. Sabo Mohammed Nakudu.

    But for death, the love life of Zainab would not have taken the new turn. The delectable woman was so deeply in love with her late husband that some said their love life would make a classic for the Mill and Boon series. But that was until October 22, 2005 when the unfortunate crash occurred at Lisa, a remote village in Ogun State.

    Zainab was simply inconsolable after the incident, unwilling to embrace life once again. Many even feared she might never survive a year without Waziri. But all that is now in the past as she has got married to Hon. Nakudu.

    The 63-year-old winsome lawmaker chairs the House Committee on Customs and Excise.

  • D’Banj, Jennifer Obayuwana part ways

    D’Banj, Jennifer Obayuwana part ways

    It is the end of another highly celebrated ‘union’ of two lovebirds who love to live life to the fullest. Jennifer Obayuwana, daughter of John Obayuwana, Lagos socialite and MD/CEO of Polo Limited, and her close friend and poster boy of the Nigerian music industry, Dapo Oyebanji, popularly known as D’Banj, are no longer an item.

    Jennifer, a director in her father’s luxury company, was known to be very close to D’banj until recently. D’banj is a regular caller at Polo Limited on Ozumba Mbadiwe Street, Victoria Island, Lagos. But after only a few months of the alleged whirlwind romance, the steam in their relationship seems to have evaporated.

    According to information, the very busy schedule of the duo is primarily responsible for the crack in the seemingly cemented relationship. Until recently, Jennifer was reported to cope well with D’Banj’s absence when she needed him most. But things were said to have taken a new turn with Jennifer’s deeper involvement in her father’s business, which lives her with less time for D’Banj.

    It was also rumoured that she got hold of a piece of information to the effect that D’banj was involved with a daughter of a wealthy politician whose identity is known only to a tiny clique in the entertainment industry. And rather than make an issue of it, Jennifer decided to call it quits.