Category: Weekend Treat

  • Abayomi  Akinruntan’s  latest moves

    Abayomi Akinruntan’s latest moves

    The last few years have witnessed tremendous progress in the hospitality industry. But only forward-looking individuals and organisations can cash in on this rapidly developing market. De’Ark Beach Bar &Resort is one of the relaxation outfits that have distinguished themselves in terms of their contributions to this evolution.

    Prince Abayomi Akinruntan, son of the Olugbo of Ugbo Kingdom, Ondo State and chairman of Obat Oil, Oba Fredrick Obateru Akinruntan, leveraged on this to create this platform about a year ago. De’Ark Beach Bar &Resort, fondly referred to as De’Lounge, is a fun temple that exceeds the usual combination of shacks and furniture. It is tastefully built and fortified with state of the art facilities and relaxation props.

    With a bar that stocks the best of drinks to wash down the different delicacies on offer, it enjoys the reputation of detailed attention clients in the VVIP, VIP, standard and regular categories.

  • A governor’s craving for Saheed Osupa

    When you walk into the office of Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, the Executive Governor of the State of Osun (as he loves to be addressed), chances are that you would meet him attending one meeting or the other with stakeholders in the state; or his head buried in a mountain of files that are jostling for his attention; or his bespectacled eyes fixed on his personal computer; or he is listening to the fuji music of Saheed Osupa after a hard-day’s job.

    While Ogbeni Aregbesola is known to admire a broad spectrum of music, the governor’s love for Saheed Osupa is said to be legendary; so much so that he sings along whenever he hears the music of the fuji artiste. If the information coming from the fuji music circle is anything to go by, the former Commissioner for Works in Lagos State during the Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu tenure as governor, will have much more of the talented musician’s songs to sing in the coming days.

    A reliable source close to the award-winning musician says he is in the studio waxing an album in celebration of the Ogbeni’s exploits as governor of the Living Spring. Reminiscent of the album he did for Governor Babatunde Fashola in the run up to the 2011 governorship elections, in which he eulogised the governor’s achievements in his first term and also campaigned for his second term,

    Osupa is reportedly set to release a full album for Aregbesola’s re-election bid, while he will also be dropping a promotional tape on ‘Opon Imo’ (tablet of knowledge); Aregbesola’s recent initiative geared towards improving the educational standard of Osun State and promoting computer literacy among students and teachers in the state.

  • Omasan Buwa not in a hurry

    That Omasan Buwa, ex-beauty queen and former London-based BEN TV presenter, is doing well is like stating the obvious. Since she was appointed as a special adviser to Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan of Delta State, things have been going on well for her. The position has afforded the England-trained lawyer to access some perks of office.

    Yet, people who are really in the know say her happiness has nothing to do with the perks of her new office. It also does not have to do with being single again after divorcing her husband of 13 years. Rather, her cheery posture has got to do with the fulfillment she is deriving from putting smiles on the faces of the less-privileged who form the central focus of her official appointment and in whom she has found unusual companionship.

    The mother of three came into national consciousness after winning the second edition of the much coveted Most Beautiful Girl in Nigeria crown in 1987. She later represented Nigeria at the Miss Universe, Miss World and Miss Intercontinental competitions.

    Apart from starring in the short-lived soap opera, Memories, presenting a segment on the television show, Morning Ride, and becoming a tabloid favourite, Omasan briefly owned a restaurant named Jazz Bar in Lagos. She is single now and does not seem to see herself living under the same roof with any man at the moment.

  • ‘Our leaders have lost moral authority’

    ‘Our leaders have lost moral authority’

    Philip Asiodu has held different positions at various times in the country but not many are aware of his dexterity in cracking jokes. Before the commencement of this interview with INNOCENT DURU, he showed his skill in cracking jokes and spoke about his wish for Nigeria before he exits to the world beyond. Excerpts:

     

    You will be 80 years old in a few months time but you really look agile and far younger than your age. What is the magic behind this?

    I am glad to hear that I look younger than my age. Thank you very much. First you thank God if you are not born with some genetic disease that might worry you. Next is to acquire early enough good habits like eating moderately, if you drink, drink moderately. Then obey the rules of hygiene. Keep as clean as you can and exercise yourself so that you don’t become too fat because the body must maintain a balance. When you become too obese you over task your heart. For every extra pound of kilogramme more capillaries, your heart has to work harder to push blood to all those parts of the body. There used to be this American doctor who tried to counsel people that were a bit over fat. He would ask them ‘would you imagine putting the engine of a Volkswagen beetle to drag a nine-seater Cadillac? Try to avoid needless obesity, work hard enough, play well, take exercises but learn to sleep enough. If one may add, because these days with our processed food which is not as good as the natural food which our elders used to eat, people sometimes look at suggestions by dieticians and doctors about taking vitamin supplements especially anti-oxidants like vitamin A. People think you have to be a very old man before you can use it but quite early in the middle age, you supplement dieting with recommended supplements. I think it is simply all about doing things moderately.

    How has life been after your retirement from public service; how do relax and do you socialise?

    I told you that we were brought up in this tradition where games and athletics were as important as or even more important than academic work. While in school, I played and represented the school in cricket, tennis, squash, and hockey. After leaving school, one played a little of cricket in clubs but, after sometime, became too busy to participate in sports and games involving so many people. You can’t hold 21 people waiting because you couldn’t finish your meeting in the office and of course you grow older. So gradually, one played no more cricket, one played no more hockey but one kept to playing tennis and squash and when because of developing arthritis, one couldn’t play squash and tennis anymore, I moved on to golf. I started my public service career in a foreign office. If you are a games’ man and you go to the cricket club or squash club, you make friends easily. Even after retirement I kept playing tennis and occasional squash but now I play golf. I was a member of Island Club, Ikoyi Club, one goes there occasionally and we have Kings’ College Old Boys Association, I associate with them. We also have the Oxford and Cambridge Club here in Lagos and London. I belong to both. I have been able to keep socially meeting people that you like and that has been extremely useful.

    Your profile shows you are a man of many achievements but given the opportunity to turn back the hand of time, is there any part of your life you would want to amend?

    Strictly looking at it, I have been fairly lucky and fortunate in the decisions I took. There is no part of my life that I really regret. It is true when I was in school; I thought I might engage more actively in political matters. Therefore I chose that I would try to become a lawyer because as a lawyer you could still have time for politics. If I became a doctor, I thought it may not give me time. So when I first went to Oxford to study Philosophy, Politics and Economics I was expecting that at the end of that I would do Law, come back as a lawyer and be able to practise the profession of law and also have time to engage in politics. But as I drew nearer to the time of graduation and saw the way politics was developing, it was no longer of much interest to me. Although when I left Oxford I went to London with the intention to study Law but when the British were leaving, Nigeria had to have a diplomatic service and they advertised for people to come in as trainees for the foreign service. I applied, I was interviewed and accepted and I gave up the idea of reading Law and came back as one of the 12 pioneers of the Nigerian Foreign Service. It is possible that if my father had not died when I was 16 years, he might have influenced me to be a lawyer. If I were a lawyer, I probably would have gone to the root of private practice and politics but he died just about when I was about to take school certificate and he was the only person who could have influenced my decision. Looking back really, there is nothing to regret about myself. Thoroughly, I enjoyed myself as a young boy born in Lagos in February 1934. Before I became conscious, my father who was a Customs Officer was transferred to Calabar. Calabar was where I became conscious, started schooling, learnt to read and write Efik as my first language and ten years later he was transferred back to Lagos.

    At what point did you find love, especially getting married to somebody outside your tribe at a time inter tribal marriage was not common?

    (Cuts in) Not so uncommon. I married in 1964 December. Asaba people have been pioneer civil servants if you like. Even in the census of 1961, the two towns with the greatest numbers of pensioners were Abeokuta and Asaba. Throughout the Warri province, Asaba people were the first teachers. Being literate people they were among the first civil servants. They were found everywhere; you would find them in the Customs, in the P & T . It was one Nigerian civil service and you could be transferred from Lagos to Calabar. My father served in Lagos, he served in Burutu and Calabar. Asaba people, because they were posted to all these places, many of them had wives from there. If you go to Asaba today, there is no language that you speak that somebody would not answer you. Inter marriage was not so unusual especially in the south but in our own case, you grow up somewhere, you go to school, you socialise with people around, your father was literate, so you grow up in a sort of cosmopolitan atmosphere where people visiting you were not confined to tribes. In a place where you grow up, you may pick up an association that may lead to marriage later. In short, there was in the background, approach to life, I am a Roman Catholic same with my parents, my wife also came from a Catholic family so in terms of religion there was an affinity. Although I speak Asaba because my parents came from there, I have never really lived in Asaba so the chances of finding a damsel there when it came to marriage, geographically, was not that easy.

    You took a shot at the presidency in 1999. Why have you become so inactive politically?

    Well one is 79 years old and who am I going to appeal to? The younger ones will say ‘this old man should go and sit down his time has passed’ or they may say that we created problems for them. But more importantly what are the conditions of politicking today? Unfortunately the 1999 constitution insists that you cannot be a candidate except a political party sponsors you. There is no provision for independent candidacy and as far as I am concerned there is no proper political party in Nigeria today. Properly defined, a political party has a manifesto. It says this is what I want the country to be. It cannot tell you that I am going to power to loot the state or to enrich myself. It has to say I am going to power because when we implement our policies, the nation will develop and the people will be happier. There is no party today with that; they are not issues oriented. They are simply cabals for selecting people for office. That system must be changed. What are their demands for you to be their candidate; to come and take a form for N50million. Even in my days trying to campaign, I fixed a meeting in Asaba, Delta State for 11 o’clock in the morning. There’s no point from Delta in those days you would not reach Asaba if you left your house by 8o’clock that you would not reach there before 11 and I made sure the meeting would end before 3 o’clock so that they could go home on time. Even the man in Igbuzor that is 20 minutes from the meeting would say I should send money for transport and money for hotel accommodation. You see what we have become? In my days as a student, I used my pocket money to go to Glover Memorial Hall to listen to Zik. Now we are saying that a man coming 10 minutes away from the venue of a meeting is saying send me money for hotel. The cost of seeking political office is too high and compounds corruption; we would have to address it. Secondly, parties must become issues oriented. Planning, like I said earlier, is important. We abandoned planning effectively after the coup of 1975. Never mind jokes we cracked about holding plans which were never respected.

    Now we are again trying to say we believe in planning but like I showed recently in a comparison of statistics of budget allocation in 2010 to 2012 compared with the planned provision of the planning estimate, you will find that the allocation in vital sectors like education, infrastructure, productive sector hovered around 36 percent. The allocation to the assembly was about 647 percent. That just shows we have not accepted the discipline of planning. If we could have a situation now on which parties could build their manifestoes on the desire for Nigeria to become what we said it should be in 2020, and let the partisan competition be which party can deliver it quicker, then you are back to issues. I am disappointed that we are talking about forming APC to challenge the PDP, but on what basis.? Some people want to replace some people. I have not seen a party that comes out to say Nigeria’s approach to governance must change; we believe in good governance. First we believe in re- arranging allocation of resources so that capital projects led by education, health and infrastructure take the majority and they get 60 percent. We now believe that the cost of governance must be reduced, therefore these are the salaries which would apply to party officials, apply to party members in executive ministers and apply to the legislatures. We establish career long training pattern but merit and productivity would be the yard stick of promotion. If we can do this and remove this question that you can only be a candidate if you are sponsored by a political party, remove this question of paying money from public purse to political parties automatically and if we must, go to the German model whereby a party has to win a minimum percentage of votes to qualify for any public support so that you are limiting the number of people who can say I am a party. If we do these things, we must encourage people of talents, of good pedigree, people who have gone through a good educational system which emphasises honesty and integrity, people who are not hungry, people who are not looking for public office in order to survive, we must then encourage them to participate in politics. It would be too late for me but I will be happy to see that situation because it will then give me the comfort of knowing that Nigeria will be on the mend so that my children and more particularly, my grandchildren do not have to be sentenced to a life of being economic fugitives.

    How do you wish to be remembered?

    Me? Well, how do I want to be remembered? We are not the type of people Nigeria remembers a lot. As I said, one has enjoyed a reasonably good life. I was able to come to a Nigeria which could give you good education, I was able to go to the best educational institutions, I have enjoyed my career. I will just like to be remembered as a Nigerian who had hoped that before he disappears Nigeria would have helped to restore the respect for the black man which we lost with the introduction of the Atlantic slave trade in the 16th century. Unfortunately, we thought we could have done that by the end of the 20th century but we have not. I hope that before I go, the basis would be laid and good governance will return to Nigeria so that at least latest by 2050 we would have been able to do for the black man what the Japanese did for the yellow man in 19th century. They restored them to international respect. Then I will be remembered as one of those little public servants who tried to contribute to creating the basis for this renaissance

    You worked with many leaders in the country from the pre independence era to the post- independence era. Which of these leaders would you want to work with again if given the opportunity and why would you?

    Well that would be a negative way of putting it. I would rather be more positive and say that while in school, we used to take our pocket money to go and listen to late Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe talking about freedom, and African renaissance and Nigeria being a vanguard of African renaissance. He was a leader who considered himself as a citizen of the world, preaching that Africa must resume the respect that it had before. I am still inspired by that kind of idea and when you met somebody like Dr Azikiwe, he was urbane, friendly and at home with you. When I became permanent secretary in 1965, it was before him I swore an oath of allegiance. Later on, I had the opportunity in the time of General Gowon when eventually politicians were brought into the cabinet after the military coup because after the January military coup when Ironsi became the supreme commander, the army did not want politicians in the cabinet. In fact, they wanted perm secs to assume that title but we said no. No ministers were appointed, so permanent secretaries played their old roles of coordinating inputs for policy, preparing council memoranda for policies which the ministers under the civilian regime then took to cabinet and when decisions were taken the permanent secretary was responsible for coordinating the resources of men, material and money in the ministries to implement decisions of government. That was quite fulfilling. Now with no ministers, permanent secretaries presented the memoranda themselves to the supreme military council and when decisions were taken, unlike when there were ministers to explain to the public the decisions of government. The permanent secretaries had to play this role and that gave us an unusual exposure to the media and the public.

    One was happy working under Prime Minister Balewa who was the leader of the federal government. Later on briefly, Ironsi was in power for about six months. He left the civil service intact and we were able to play our roles. After him General Gowon came along; very fair minded, genuinely patriotic, wishing to do his best for Nigeria. Of course his first years were difficult with the rejection of his succession to Ironsi by Ojukwu, the attempted succession, the civil war and the attempt to have reconciliation, rehabilitation and reconstruction after the civil war then unfortunately for him, he delayed handing over and was removed by a military coup. He was genuinely patriotic, he respected civil service, he genuinely listened, and took decisions to move the country forward. I was quite happy to work with him. Of course when he was removed in 1975, quite soon around September of the same year, I was asked to retire, of course with full benefits. I was asked to retire in public interest. But before they went public, I must say, the chief of staff supreme headquarters, the secretary to the government and I think the IGP, three leading members of the supreme military council, called me and said ‘you have to retire because you can’t fit in into the new image of the permanent secretary that we want’. May be they were correct because I was brought up in a tradition where you spoke the truth on the basis of objective data you could gather; you did not doctor your recommendations to suit any whims or caprices. You honestly told government what the options were. You made suggestions but it was left to them to take the decisions and once the decisions were taken, it was my duty to implement it faithfully and that I did. I would not have liked the situation in which civil servants were not allowed to say clearly, objectively and fearlessly what they thought was correct. They were correct because I couldn’t fit into that image, so I retired with the pension of the time.

    After my retirement, I was able to go into private sector, do one or two investments and on the basis of my reputation in service I was invited to serve on the boards of a number of multinational companies. So in terms of personal comfort, probably I was better off, but in terms of satisfaction as a Nigerian and in terms of satisfaction as an instrument for positive change, of course my career was truncated. I believe that if we had continued on that path of development and if the abrupt coup of 1975 did not end the Gowon regime, I think we might have been able to influence the general to go through an orderly handover to the civilians more or less on the Brazilian pattern. With the destruction of the public service which happened after I was removed when 10, 000 people were retired even from states which didn’t have enough civil servants. Newly created states were even forced to even bring people for retirement. They retired people who were obeying rules correctly. I didn’t mind if I as permanent secretary and few others associated with top policy suggestions and implementation were asked to go. But for them to go below us and retire deputy perm sec, senior assistant perm sec; people who were obeying lawful orders, some of whom were being recommended on the basis of excellent performance, that demoralisation, that injustice has impacted so badly on subsequent development in Nigeria.

    In essence, you are saying that there is none of the leaders you worked with that you cannot work with again?

    As a civil servant as I said, I worked quite happily under Balewa, under Ironsi, under Gowon and then I retired. Subsequently, briefly in 1983 I now came back not as a civil servant but as an economic adviser under President Shehu Shagari. Shagari had good intention but unfortunately a bit too lenient to some errant ministers in his first term. In fact as a private adviser, I know that we made some presentations to him to remove some of them but he didn’t. He waited until the second administration and in his second administration, in selecting the people, the guidelines he gave for the functions of government were quite clear that he was determined to give us an excellent administration. Under the 1979 constitution the president was entitled to seven special advisers, two for the vice president and two for him. In selecting those seven only two were from the north. He wasn’t going to play the politics of just taking anybody putting him there. Every memo under his new guideline had to indicate that the ministry of economic planning had contributed to it. In short he was going back to planning and observing the discipline of planning. The abandonment of two principles has left Nigeria in the unfortunate situation we have found ourselves today. I was quite happy to work with President Shagari but it was very brief. Then later on in 1992 -1993, when things were so bad and the people were crying out, General Babangida was obliged to form the transitional council under Chief Ernest Shonekan and selected quite a number of people based on past technocratic records to be part of that transitional council. I went in as secretary for petroleum and mineral resources. I thought we were meant to serve for at least 18 months. My understanding was that we were supposed to be the people to organise election for a succeeding civilian administration but we would not be candidates so that there would not be question of conflict of interests. If we were able to do 18 months of implementing more or less civilian administration and were seen to supervise genuine free election, then the take-off into democracy would have been smoother. That did not happen and it was unfortunate.

    In your early days and some few years ago this country was never like this. Where in your opinion did we get it wrong?

    If we come to the latest situation, that destruction of the public service in 1975, the mass purge of people that needed not to be purged as it was established later when Monsignor Pedro Matins was asked to look into it he found out that more than 95 percent of those that were retired should not have retired if due process was well followed. That destroyed the morale and the fearlessness of the public servants.

    A good number of these people that were prematurely retired had no resources anywhere. They thereby enthroned the principle of make hay while the sun shines which is a euphemism for corruption. Once civil service lost its prestige and fearlessness and could not keep telling ministers, sir these are the financial instructions, this is possible this is not possible; it would destroy checks and balances. That was terrible for Nigeria. Unfortunately for us, even though Gen Murtala Muhammed and Gen Olusegun Obasanjo were members of Gowon’s cabinet which approved the 1975-1980 plan which stressed that oil is a wasting asset and in the meantime we must use the resources of oil to diversify the Nigerian economy and develop it and proceeded to identify a number of capital goods and intermediate good industries, metallurgy from iron ore to steel, oil and gas to petrochemical, fertilizers, all these plans were there but unfortunately in the process of denigrating what happened under Gowon, were abandoned. But most seriously abandoning the discipline which planning imposes; where you before hand identify priorities for national development and when resources come, you will apply them to that. What has then happened is that having abandoned the plan, money came and was spent but where is it? What can we show for it? I keep emphasizing this point and you media people should please take it up because we must be saved from the present waste of resources and excessive self-seeking by people in leadership positions.

    Insecurity has almost become a way of life in Nigeria. What is the way out of this?

    What is at the bottom of insecurity and why are we not effectively anticipating incidents of terrorism? The answer, I believe are twofold. First, the signals coming from the top down are not signals which will enforce the core values of integrity, honesty and transparency. The cost of seeking political office is too high. The behaviour in office of then seeking to cover that money leads to massive corruption. So when the signal coming from the top is that anybody can take as much as possible as he likes from the coffers of the state and flaunt it, it doesn’t give you the moral authority to tell the people to be patient. Because of that resources have been shifting from what we should be spending in order to enable Nigeria go to higher levels of development into private pockets. The self -seeking is too much.

    What is your view about sanctioning of corrupt officers?

    What do we do about sanctioning people who have been found guilty of corruption? You saw the terrible case in which somebody who misappropriated N26 billion was fined N760, 000 and somebody who stole a goat is sentenced two years. What signal do such send? Those are part of the underlining factors. Now because of corruption there is a situation in which we are often as a country, am sorry for the government, operating as if we are blind and do not have the data to anticipate problems. In the old days, money for security votes trickled down the ladder even to the position of the police inspector, making and rejoicing with people in the market square in the village pubs. Here was a situation of having little money to entertain and whosoever stranger that came into the village within 24 hours the residents knew. Now is there the resources for intelligence gathering at the bottom for us to be able to do that? This is another terrible situation. When you have a situation in which the citizens because of the massive self -seeking and self -appropriation of resources by the people at the top are not caring for the public good, the citizens become, if you like distanced from the leadership; the willingness to obey is not there and even the willingness to exert sanctions for corruption is not be there, the resources at the bottom to gather intelligence data is not there, then this terrible cocktail results in the situation in which we find ourselves.

    We must communicate good values from the top. We must re-instate the situation in which the leadership has the authority and that can only come from exemplary behaviour; behaving according to precepts, making sure that there is discipline, making sure that what you are doing is in the interest of the public good and not of private interest.

    What is your take on the state of emergency declared in three states in the north?

    I am happy and in support of the state of emergency. I am in support of trying to find the people who have declared war on the state but that is the first step. The next big step is for the president to proclaim an ethical revolution to bring us back to the core values of discipline, transparency, honesty, integrity, respect for the public good, pursuit of the public interest and the utilization of resources maximally to improve the possibility of Nigeria resuming rapid economic progress, diversification, and wealth creation for the people.

    The hope of the common man seems to have been dashed. What is the way out?

    We must try to be constructive. I do not believe in extreme pessimism. I believe that people ruling today should please look again at where the country is going and if it is sustainable. What we are doing now is not sustainable and it is time now for us to say from the top down enough is enough and to go back to things which would enable this country to resume growth, development and to know peace. First thing is this we must drastically reapportion the allocation of the resources available. We cannot continue with the amount of money being paid to the legislatures and the executives. We can’t! Whatever anybody is able to earn legitimately in the private sector is okay. At independence the salary of a minister, a permanent secretary and a professor is about equal. The difference was about N2, 000 to N3, 000 or thereabout. What is it today? It is terrible. The executive too would have to look at it. If you look at our economy, by the time you pay the chief executive of Nigeria, the President N30 million per annum that is salary and allowance, of course he would live in presidential house, he would entertain with public votes, I think that is okay. We need to reach the situation again where we can devote may be for a start 60 percent and little more later to public expenditure and a great deal of this public expenditure to education because education is the route to escape from poverty; it is the route to upward mobility. Many of us who look okay today and many of them in government it is the education they had that made them to get to that position. It is the primary duty of any religious leader to try to ensure that the broad masses of Nigeria are enabled again to get good, quality public education. America is a land of capitalism by excellence but there is no American who doesn’t have access to quality public education and that is what we must do here. We must also put in place good health care and infrastructure. If we had enough power (electricity) available today, a lot of the people who are going into crime because of joblessness would be employed. A tailor who can only manage one machine now will have four and four apprentices. The poor woman who comes home to grind pepper for two hours on stone, in five minutes would do it and have more time for other things.

  • Where is Rosemary Osula?

    Edo State-born socialite, Rosemary Osula, is not a stranger to controversy. The well-heeled businesswoman is believed to have made her money during the regime of the late Gen. Sani Abacha. Although she tried to lie low after the death of the general, her travails, which set in at about that time, made it impossible to do so. Osula became a regular face in the courtroom where she tried fervently to salvage her properties which some banks had swooped on following her alleged failure to repay some loans that were granted to her.

    Her travails peaked when she got entangled in a messy battle with her former partner, Buruj Kashamu. The aftermath of the distressed union was revelations that topped social discourse for a very long time. Smarting from its effects, Osula veered off the social scene while Kashamu continued to have a ball in the limelight.

    The million-dollar question on the lips of many in the social space now is, where is Rosemary Osula?

     

  • T. B. Joshua shuns celebration as he hits 50

    Many followers of the founder of the Synagogue Church of All Nations, Prophet Temitope Joshua, were shocked to learn penultimate Wednesday that he had turned 50. Contrary to wide speculations of a high-octane celebration, the prophet chose to isolate himself to pray on the mountain.

    While worshipers, friends and family members organised a reception in honour of their leader, the prophet was conspicuously absent at the event. They had come together to give the celebrant a surprise birthday bash but were shocked to learn that he had opted for a three-day prayer on the mountain top in response to a divine directive. Those who should know told Celeb Watch that Prohet T. B Joshua sent a message to his followers, friends and family members, saying that while he was grateful to God for clocking 50, the golden age would be meaningful only to the extent that he was able to impact positively on the society.

  • Catholic women honour Jemibewon’s wife Modupe today

    Mrs Modupe Jemibewon has every cause to be happy. That her graph has been on steady rise is no longer a secret. Apart from establishing an upscale beauty shop in the highbrow Toyin Street, Ikeja, Lagos, the widely travelled business woman only recently floated a mega school in Kogi State. This woman of substance will today be honoured as the Patroness of Catholic Women Organisation of Ekiti Diocese in recognition of her immense contributions to the growth of the Catholic faith and female members of the church. Gist merchants say she is among the third generation of Catholics in the state. The ceremony, according to highly placed sources, will attract the crème de la crème of the society and public office holders to the state which prides itself as Fountain of Knowledge.

  • How I made fortune  from packing waste

    How I made fortune from packing waste

    Controversy has since been trailing Hon. Chief (Mrs.) Hajia Oluremi Aminat Dangaji since she emerged three months ago as the new president of the music body in Nigeria known as the Performing Musicians Employers Association of Nigeria (PMAN). But the astute society lady and woman of many parts says she is ready to weather the storm come what may. A Yoruba woman with lineage in Edo State, Hajia Aminat Dangaji speaks Ibibio and Igbo languages and is married to a northerner, which also makes her speak Hausa language fluently. Though she is not new to the politics of PMAN having been an executive member of the Lagos State chapter of the organisation, Hajia confesses that she didn’t know that the problem in PMAN is this enormous. However, in recent times, she has emerged as a rallying point of sort for young artistes and even the old ones like Majek Fashek. The truth is that she’s presently being looked at as the messiah that may save the once vibrant organisation and recover it’s lost glory. But how will she combine that with running her numerous businesses which include a motor transport company across the country and a football academy, among others? She spoke to PAUL UKPABIO. Can you describe yourself? I am a restless woman; I live a-woman-of-the-people lifestyle. Once I sit down somewhere and people know that I am there, they just start coming. I work mostly through my management staff. The football academy is there to expose our football talents. My boys travel out regularly for trials home and abroad to get into football clubs. For me, it is not about the money, but I am after the boys’ future.

    How did business start for you?

    As a young officer’s wife, my husband’s salary was not enough. We were living in Kaduna then; my mom told me not to run to her again for money, that I have a husband and I should go and manage whatever he has. She pursued me; she said I should go and pray for my husband to have more money. I did that, and my husband received one promotion after another, but the money was still not enough. That was when I started a waste-clean-up business. I liked being free. It was that same reason that made me not to go out seeking to be employed. I didn’t want somebody to tie me down. We were living in a decent neighbourhood where the challenge was disposal of waste. I looked for a place to rent wheel barrows for N200 a day. I got boys to do the job and that was it. I personally moved around to publicise it.

    I began making money. Soon I was able to buy my own wheelbarrows. From there, I bought land at the Mammy Market and opened a big bar. On week days, I made N30,000 and on weekends, I made N50,000. People used to come to the bar all the way from Abuja and neighbouring towns. When I left that place, I was told that the popularity of the Mammy Market went down. I soon started a travel agency. From there, I started packaging shows for artistes. I found out that it was very easy for me to do this because I am a show person. When we moved to Lagos, the artiste packaging business led me into floating a record label.

    How easy is it to marry and live with a man in the military?

    Ha, I’m used to it. I am a barrack girl! But on a more serious note, no marriage is easy, there will be up and down; you must quarrel, you must fight with your husband. But more importantly, you have to maintain love and understanding. What we have done is that; when I have issues with my husband, third parties must not come in. Anything I want is what my husband wants. But what he keeps saying is that I should be careful and always watch my back. The world is also full of wicked people. He tells me that I am too free, people easily get my attention because I am too accommodating. If you are my enemy, if you apologise, I forgive you immediately.

    Your social life?

    Yes, I party but I prefer clubbing to just going to parties. As a record label owner, I go to clubs a lot to listen to music, hear sound and analyse. Artistes invite me over to clubs to listen to their music. They know I know the industry and I know music. The one that I cannot analyse, I call in experts. Now, I know much about sounds. I love being in-doors too. I like the kitchen. Sometimes, I just love being in-doors in the kitchen cooking (laughs).

    I can see that you love accessories, they are all over you…

    Yes, I love accessories. Right from childhood, I love gold, I wear gold a lot it is an asset. When you are tired of it, you sell it off. I love gold. I use other accessories, I love costumes too, but gold is my favourite.

    You once said that left for you, the embassies will close shop because you’ll never ask them for visa. Why did you say that?

    I have been travelling overseas since childhood. I have travelled to several countries. I find out that the more I do so, the more I love my country Nigeria. I like Nigerian foods, fresh foods, not frozen things. I enjoy Nigeria, I don’t travel much these days.

    What is your other attraction to the music industry?

    I love crazy artistes because if you are not crazy, you will not be able to attract the market. I love all the music genres but it needs someone to be crazy to do it, except gospel music. Even gospel music these days are going over board into the crazy realm. It has been modernised, if you don’t have swag, forget it. Swag is now the answer for artistes. Stage performance matters a lot. We have a lady in our stable who is into gospel music. When she gets on stage, wow, she’s a totally different person. So I ask her, but is it not gospel that you are singing? She replies, ‘Mama, it’s gospel music, but you have to swag, even pastors like swagging!’ I have a high life musician called Begitto. When Senator Adolphus Wabara, an ex-Senate President hosted us recently, Begitto caused a musical uproar with his music. The Senator did not know when he jumped up to dance. There is a vacuum in Ibo high life. This guy has come up to close that vacuum.

    Your childhood memories?

    I used to be a tough girl o. Even when I was beaten at home, I still got round to doing what was on my mind. I was stubborn. It was even better when I wasn’t beaten. I preferred people to talk to me instead of punishment. When my parents discovered that, they changed their tactics. That is what I do now to my children and artistes. I talk. I tell them, ‘You have an image, people are watching you, don’t mess up.’ As a child, I wanted to grow up and be an air-hostess but destiny has its own ways.

    Now, let’s talk about your new role as President of the Performing Musicians Employers Association of Nigeria popularly known as PMAN. Did you at any time in your life have a vision that you would one day head the association?

    Of course no. I will start by saying that I am a wife with children. I am the CEO Football Club Dangaji Academy. I also run a company known as Nigerian Model, a recording company known as A-plus, and I am into transportation business and general contracts. I was before now the First Vice in Lagos State chapter for three years. I paid my dues as far as PMAN is concerned. When election commenced and people started buying form, I didn’t give it a thought because as usual, I was busy with other things.

    It was Lucky Okri, the younger brother to Mike Okri, that came to me in the office urging me to contest the PMAN Presidency in order that I could save PMAN and set things well. But I asked him, ‘How do I save PMAN?’ I told him that I am not God, that only God can save PMAN. I told him that I had been at the state level but at the national level, I do not know my left from my right. I told him that I didn’t have the interest because the national body is different from that of the state. He was with me for five hours and also calling other people on the phone to convince me to contest for the position.

    Was that how you bought the form?

    No, that only made me curious. I asked him about the outgoing President, Ras Murphy Van Anthony. His reply was that I should not worry about that. He told me further that he was impressed that I was the first female he knew that owns a record label, the third female that owns a football academy, a woman who holds many titles and awards, that I should be challenged to get into the position because Late Christiana Igbokwe’s legacy still remains proudly, indicating that a woman president works for PMAN. He also said many things to encourage me. Among them was that the problem we are facing in PMAN is the men. He concluded by adding that he would like me to help PMAN.

    Those were good words in my ears but I was still skeptical. I told him that the problem of that office is too big for me. It is like when somebody wants to carry a heavy load. He called several people who spoke to me through his phone and urged me to contest. When he left, I called my team at the record company and my manager was angry with Lucky and called him to ask why he was advising me to contest after they had scattered PMAN as an organisation. Did he want me to use my head now to carry the problem? At the end, both of them quarrelled but Lucky kept asking me if I like the way the union is presently. He told me that he would give me two days to think about it.

    Four days to the election, former PMAN President, Dele Abiodun, called me. He said that he was with the PMAN lawyer and that they wanted to see me. I didn’t know why, but he insisted that I come over. I drove down there. I met three of them there and they started by saying that I should agree to contest the election. I told them that I would not, that I actually didn’t like people putting me in a tight corner. They knelt down and I had to tell them that I would leave if they didn’t stand up because they are older than me. They told me that they had studied the situation and decided that I was the one that can rescue the organisation at this point because I am so accommodating, tolerant and I have the influence and capacity. Of course, I replied that I would not contest. I was there when Murphy called and they spoke. He too urged me to contest that he knew that I was capable. Finally, I agreed to contest.

    So if the outgoing president was in support that you contest, why did the election held in Port Harcourt end up in break down of law and order?

    (Laughs) Three days to the election, I bought my form. I spent over N400,000 because I bought forms for other people too. But none of them accepted to take it. From there, we went to Port Harcourt for the election. In Port harcourt, I lodged at the Presidential Hotel, the venue where the election was expected to take place, along with my supporters. However, the outgoing president changed the venue of the election from there to another place. They were changing the venue because they wanted to hold the election without my knowledge. Fortunately for me, I run a transportation business, so I used my buses to take my supporters to Port harcourt and also moved around the city easily. We were searching for them all over the place.

    Later, Murphy called me and that was when I told him that he was the one that encouraged me to buy form to contest for the presidency, that he even told me that he was not going to contest for the position. I reminded him that he told me that he would be stepping down. I also accused him that if he wanted to step down, why then was he changing venues? I told him I had been in Port harcourt for days with a large number of people, paying hotel bills for over a 100 people, without any election taking place. I told him to conduct the election so that I can return to Lagos with my supporters. Eventually, we traced where they were. When I saw them, I told them that the election was not a do or die thing. That they should hold the election, if I lose I’ll accept my fate. Finally, election was held. We were given 10 minutes to speak. I told them that as a mother, if they give me a chance to win by voting me in, I would rebrand PMAN. That as a mother, I know what my children want, that I would strap my children on my back with my oja (loin cloth). That if I could get Majek Fashek back on stage, a mission which many had concluded was impossible, then I would do the same for PMAN. That they should give me a chance.

    The election then took place. It was an open election which started 1.30am. But in the middle of it, boys from nowhere flooded in to queue behind Murphy. Trouble started when the Borno delegates kicked against the new infiltration of strange faces at the election point. They started to ask for the verification of the new faces, and insisted that the election would be a kangaroo election unless those people were removed. That was how the chaos started. The election ended in disaster. The people told me that he had been disqualified because he brought unknown people to vote for him. They were ready to declare me the winner based on that, but I declined, that it was not a general consensus, that the election had to be repeated. I was angry because it was the same Murphy that encouraged me to buy a form, the same Murphy told me that he was stepping down for me because he wanted to establish in America and because he had seen what I did in the state.

    The election was postponed after that. We all left and the election was later fixed for March. The National Executive Council and the state chapters decided on a venue where accommodation for delegates and hall of election venue would be together. Lagos was chosen and the venue was a place in Yaba, the Ordinance Mess, where Lagos PMAN Chapter performs every weekend. On March 20, everyone was on ground and campaign started till the next day when election was held and I emerged the PMAN President. Finally, a woman has been given a chance again.

    Now that you are the president, what are your immediate challenges?

    I’m sorry to say, the complaint at the election was that the men borrow money to contest election and when they win, they don’t think of other people. For instance, the secretariat of PMAN is presently under lock as there is complaint of a backlog of rent arrears: Workers were not being paid, so we are presently using my office as base. I have called for files and the constitution. We have to sit down as a body and decide on a new secretariat or whether to continue with the former. I didn’t know that PMAN was this ruined. PMAN, to me, has already gone but to the glory of God, I came in. Already The National Executive Council is happy with the few steps that I have taken because I am doing my best to see that PMAN comes back to its past glory and more. Thank God, they are all supporting me.

    How do you intend to bring the diverse oriented musicians together again?

    I am a mother who backs her children with Gele or Oja. If you come to my house, you will think I run a mini-barrack. The commander is always asking me, ‘do you have a barrack in your house?’ I am a giver, I am a helper. I have a listening ear and I rub mind with my colleagues. I go to the club a lot; I believe in the youths. I contested the election because of the youths, older musicians should give the youths a chance to come in and not discourage them. The youths are complaining that PMAN has too many old men and I reply them that it has to be so because, any place that there is no old man, it’s likely the place will not last. So we should use them as our fathers. All we need to do is to retire them in the long run with benefits to keep them busy. We tell the government to help us empower them.

    When we have older musicians who want to retire from music, we should be able to empower them so that they can retire. Not to allow them to become haggard. During my election, they came; some of them could not even see well again, while some couldn’t come. Though my election was tough but it has been the best. People were free to come and vote. People said they have not witnessed that kind of crowd. I travelled round Nigeria to convince them that if Late Christiana Essien could do well, I can do better. I feel bad that I did not meet her alive, but we will be paying a courtesy visit to her husband when I’m settled.

    The clamour presently by artistes is for a better lifestyle; one of the issues you will have to face as the PMAN president is COSON, the new collecting body for musicians. Do you think COSON can deliver?

    Hmm, Tony Okoroji was once a PMAN President, I want to believe that he knows what is happening in the industry. I am happy with what he is presently doing. Though some people are grumbling that he is collecting much and giving artistes smaller money. Well, I know that it is not easy to even collect the monies in the first place. As a matter of fact, I challenge anybody who feels that it is easy to also try and get money for artistes. So I will urge all musicians to show understanding at this present time because I know that there are a lot among us who, if given the opportunity to collect such monies, will not even give artistes any money at all. They could even collect money and tell artistes to perform free to exhibit talent. I can see that Tony Okoroji understands the younger artistes; he can feel them and knows what they want. People should not eat alone, share round. I have my personal businesses away from PMAN so it’s interest that has brought me here.

    Let’s talk about your role in the new Majek Fashek

    Yeah, he ought to be here with me for this interview. I thank God, his album is out now. I presently have an office and showroom at Alaba International Market for product sales and the promotion of artistes which is under A-plus Records. We will soon start the Majek Fashek album promotion. His music is now something else, it is a good work. It seems like he came out with annoyance to prove his worth. He was like that person who had been long forgotten but who God has restored once again. The world had denied him because they had concluded that he didn’t have anything to offer again, but God has restored him. Now he is coming out bigger, with a bang.

    How did you get him back?

    You know I am a muslim, when things go beyond us, we have muslim brothers who come out once a year. They live in seclusion in devotion to God. So that period when he was not okay, on the advice of my in-laws, I brought them down to Lagos from Katsina. Meanwhile before then, I had spent too much money here without result, until I decided on my in-laws’ advice. They came by midnight, did their prayers and left. By 4am, they were already long gone. When they come to you like that, you are told to ask for only one thing. You don’t ask for many things. They prayed for him; we have our Arabic write-ups, they gave it to him which he drank and God heard our voice. He is okay now. If you see him controlling the instruments, you will marvel. God loves him, not my power or that of any person.

    Apart from Majek, do you have other artistes in your stable?

    Yes, I have them from different parts of Nigeria, young talented people singing different genres of music.

    As the president of PMAN, are you musically talented, what music pedigree do you have?

    I am musically talented. I sing, I have my songs, not copyright. I sing ‘Alatika hip hop.’ My mom used to sing, so I met it in the family. Though I do not have an album and that is because each time I wanted to do that, something else comes up. Recently, I was almost in the studio, but when Majek Fashek came on board, I had to put it aside again. If I didn’t do that, Majek Fashek would have died by now. I was so involved with his matter that my husband became so annoyed that I did not have time for him and the children. Thank God, he is okay and I have been able to reconcile him back with Rita Majek, his wife. She flew into the country and has now gone back. Rita is Benin, in Nigeria.

  • Femi Adeleye loses mother

    Because of his low lifestyle, the name Femi Adeleye may not readily ring a bell. This is in spite of the successes he has recorded in all he has chosen to put his hands in. Ibefun, Ogun State-born Prince Adeleye lived in the United Kingdom for about 36 years and has distinguished himself as a chartered accountant and brains behind Gateroyale Properties. Besides, he runs an event centre in Imowo area of Ijebu Ode, Ogun State.

    Although he is presently bereaved, he is full of praises to God for seeing the passing on to glory of his mother at age 74. Adeleye, who is the Chairman of Blueberry Records and Promotion in the United Kingdom, plans to give his late mother a befitting burial, given the status of the deceased and her children in the society.

    A service of songs is billed to take place in honour of the deceased on July 12, followed by a service at Holy Trinity Anglican Church on July 13, all at Ibefun. Reception for guests will, however, take place at Gateroyale Event Centre in Ijebu Ode.

  • Elohor Aisien gets rolling

    For Elohor Aisien, the leggy beauty behind Elite Model fashion outfit, who a year ago was appointed Creative Director by Daily Times Nigeria and African Times Network, the franchise owners of Miss Nigeria pageant, is set to organise a beauty pageant.

    The position had been held by Nike Oshinowo from 2009 to 2011, during which she injected elegance and splendour to the brand. But Elohor is very busy at the moment trying to change the face of the pageant in Nigeria.

    The stage is, therefore, set for the 38th edition of the Miss Nigeria beauty pageant. The event is fixed for Saturday, July 6, 2013 at Intercontinental Hotel, Kofo Abayomi Street, Victoria Island, Lagos.

    We gathered that the 36 contestants who made it to the camp will for two weeks undergo another round of screening during which the number will be pruned to 21 for the grand finale.