Category: Weekend Treat

  • Atiku’s son,  Muazu’s daughter  in jaw-dropping  wedding

    Atiku’s son, Muazu’s daughter in jaw-dropping wedding

    The eaves of Bauchi creaked with excitement and merriment as Mohammed, son former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, walked down the aisle with his sweetheart, Malama Badariya, daughter of former Bauchi State Governor, Adamu Muazu. Gales of gaiety enveloped the reception hall of the Emir of Bauchi’s palace where the ceremony took place. That also was where they had their wedding reception with the creme of Nigeria society in attendance.

    Mohammed paid N1 million and gave the bride’s family a brand new car as bride price, setting a new record in bride price payment. The jaw-dropping wedding was attended by the National Chairman of the People’s Democratic party (PDP), Alhaji Bamanga Tukur; the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Hon. Aminu Waziri Tambuwal; Niger State Governor, Alhaji Babangida Aliyu; Gombe State Governor, Alhaji Ibrahim Dankwambo; former Taraba State Governor, Rev. Jolly Nyame and Kano State Governor, Musa Kwankwaso.

    Also at the wedding were former heads of state, Gen. Abdulsalam Abubakar and Gen. Muhammad Buhari, as well as many other prominent Nigerians. Mohammed and Malama couldn’t have had a better wedding. They have since taken off on their honey moon.

  • Maryam Abacha  hits her stride

    Maryam Abacha hits her stride

    Away from the glare of power, Mrs. Maryam Abacha, whose late husband, Gen. Sani Abacha, ruled with iron fist before he died as head of state 15 years ago still has the dash that endears her to friends and associates. The former first lady has reappeared on the social scene after taking what seemed like a sabbatical leave. No longer is she on the obscure end of the totem pole of Nigeria’s high society.

    As you read this, she is back in town, attending social events. She looks resplendent in her dazzling attire and expensive jewellery, making nonsense of the speculations that made the rounds sometime ago that she was under the weather.

  • Lateef Jiddah bereaved

    These are not the best of times for Ilorin-based lawyer, Lateef Jiddah. Penultimate Tuesday, the city of Ilorin, Kwara State capital, was thrown into mourning as the news of the death of his father and foremost Ilorin politician, Alhaji Amosa Jiddah, spread like wild fire.

    The late Amosa Jidda was one of the close associates of late Dr. Olusola Saraki, and he enjoyed the privilege of being one of the few that enjoyed the listening ears of the late Waziri of Ilorin. He also cultivated a network of friends across the country during his days in the Nigeria Customs Service.

    The retired customs officer enjoyed very close rapport with former Vice President Atiku Abubakar and the PDP National Chairman, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, who he served as state coordinator during his presidential campaign in 1992.

    Jidda died at Saint Nicholas Hospital, Lagos, last week.

  • ‘Why I abandoned law practice for show design’

    Lawyer-turn-shoe maker, Monalisa Abimbola Azeh, prides herself as one of Nigeria’s finest shoe designers. That’s because, for over a decade, she has kept a culture of churning out choice designer shoes and bags that regularly stand out at social scenes. Though people talk about her creativity, Monalisa says shoe designing was never her dream. As a matter of fact, she insists that, “I didn’t have a childhood dream.” For one who had a close knit relationship with her parents, went through the rigours of studying and practising law for 15 years before going into shoe making, Monalisa is not drab! Instead, she promotes artistes, love music, dances and loves art related matters. She shares her lifestyle in this interview with PAUL UKPABIO.

    You certainly were not doing badly as a practising lawyer. What led you into shoe designing?

    What led me into shoe designing was a simple matter as not finding my shoe size in the market. I couldn’t find my shoe size in the market. The shoes that were coming into the country were coming in from China. But prior to that time, we were used to getting quality shoes from Italy. The period coincided with when people started going to Dubai, China to bring things, it was becoming more and more difficult to get the kind of shoes that I like, especially my size. So that motivated me to start thinking of how to make my own shoes; the type that I like and the type that would fit me.

    I studied law and before then, I had worked as a lawyer for more than 15 years before I decided to go into business. It was gradual; I actually started making the shoes for myself. I started experimenting. I knew some people who were making shoes for men and I noticed that they were using real leather. Of course, I looked around to see if there was someone who could make for me. Eventually, I did get somebody. And got my shoes made.

    When I wore them, people were asking me where I made my shoes. I told them that I designed them and had them made for me. People commended it and from there, I picked up interest in it and that was my first outing. Gradually, it led me to establishing the shoe stylish outfit called ‘Mona Mathew.’

    Did you have this as your childhood dream?

    I opened shop January 2002 and it wasn’t a childhood dream. I didn’t have any childhood dreams. Growing up, I was told I was going to be a lawyer. So I grew up preparing to study law. When it was time to go into the university, I went to study law.

    I don’t know if it was a childhood dream. But I will not call it a childhood dream because a dream is far-fetched. A dream is something that you visualise and work towards. Law was not my childhood dream. I liked watching legal matters on television; I liked watching courtroom drama. Till date, I enjoy watching criminal investigations and stuff like that. But that was not my childhood dream. I did not have a childhood dream, nothing particular.

    Did you do all the work by yourself?

    I started out by working with very skilled shoe makers who knew and know what they are doing. ‘Mona Mathew’ is about craftsmen who make designer shoes. You can give the same materials to two people, but one will turn out a masterpiece, while the other will turn out junk. Our works have been standing out.

    What happens to your law degree and your verse knowledge of the legal profession?

    After Law School, I practised law; I had my own chambers along with clients. But I had to stop when the business idea came. However, I have recently started doing legal matters. I’ve found a niche in the legal profession that I am able to combine with what I am doing now. I stopped the law practice because I found out that I am an artistic person, I wanted an opportunity to express my creativity as it were and ‘Mona Mathew’ gave me that opportunity.

    How did your parents influence your life?

    My parents were the kind that admire, want and seek excellence. They were organised people, they were natural administrators. They were the type that insisted on things being done properly. The other thing is that I grew up with a lot of books in the house. My parents encouraged me to read and I love reading. That also helped me with what I studied initially because as a lawyer, one had to read a lot. I love reading, I love picking up information, getting to know new things.

    I also grew up with music. We slept and woke up with music. My father organised the house in such a way that, loud speakers were all over the place. On a Sunday morning, we woke up and music will be playing. We used to go to watch films too at the theatre or go to watch life performances, drama presentations and things like that. I guess what all that did for me was to help me see creativity at different levels, it nurtured creativity in me.

    I grew up in Ibadan where I spent my early years until my parents came down to Lagos; even then, while they were in Lagos, I schooled outside Lagos until I was admitted into University of Lagos. My parents were administrators. My father worked in the university community but later on, worked with Adeola Odutola Group of Companies. My parents were basically administrators.

    Tell us about some of your memories

    I went to UNILAG in its glorious days. I can remember that there were just two of us in the hostel; we had cleaners who came around to clean the hostel and washed our bedspread. Most of us didn’t eat in the school cafeteria. I was a sports person. I used to play hockey for the school. On Sundays when we were in camp, we were normally served Chicken, ice-cream, jollof rice and fruits in just one meal. That was our Sunday lunch.

    Those were wonderful times as far as I’m concerned, we had 24 hours of electricity. I do not remember reading with candle or anything like that. Our lecturers were very good. Most of the books that were used by my generation of lawyers were standard law books written by our lecturers. We had first hand experience of people who were masters in their profession. My university days were a beautiful time and a beautiful place for me. Throughout my stay in school, the university campus was never closed down. So I spent only three years studying law because I did A-level.

    What kind of person were you then?

    I was an active person. Even now, I still am. I like people a lot. I like activities, I like projects, I like to do things that I will be participating. I don’t like to do things that I will just be an observer. I enjoy sports. I represented Kwara State in school sports; I represented UNILAG in two university games known as NUGA. I represented Amina Hall where I stayed in the university in hockey. I received the school colours, a honour given to people in UNILAG as a sports personalities.

    Do you still do sports now?

    No, I don’t (laughs) but what I do now is exercise, I walk a lot. I still believe in a healthy lifestyle. It is about being fit. I can trek from Maryland to Ojuelegba. When you go abroad, you walk a lot. It is in Nigeria that people enter cars a lot.

    What kind of social life do you have?

    My work and church take a lot of my time. What is left of that, I use for music. I like to work with gospel artistes. Right now, I’m working with ‘Oba’ a gospel artiste who is very versatile. She has a fantastic band with her husband. So we do shows in Bogobiri in Ikoyi once every month and another on the Mainland. I do social life with friends and family too.

    As a shoe maker, tell us about your fashion sense…

    My grandmother was a fashionable person. My mother is 77 years old and still fashionable. So goes for my aunties. They are real beautiful women, who are stylish and dress well. I grew up in that kind of environment.

    My mother in the morning dresses up and takes time to make up her face. I normally ask her where she is going to but she would normally reply, that she’s going no where. Sometimes I ask her, ‘Who is looking at you?’ But she replies that she is looking at herself. So at 77 she still wears big ear rings, paints her toe nails, and ensures that her clothes are clean. She coordinates herself, her colours, jewelry and applies her make up.

    If you see her, you won’t believe her age. I am actually the one who tells people her age. That is the home and background I come from. I guess fashion is innate in me. I recall that since I was in secondary school, I’ve always enjoyed dressing people up. I’ve always enjoyed making people look their best. When I see someone in an outfit, I always know instinctively what you can add or take away that will make that outfit a wow one. I’ve always had that kind of interest. My friends are tired of me. If we are going out, I’ll tell them, comb your hair like this or change the lipstick. I always say something that will enhance their looks. It comes naturally to me.

    When I started making shoes, I found out that it was a great outlet for me. We actually make customised shoes and bags for women and shoes for men too. I set down and consult with them. If a bride comes, I have to ask her first what her outfit will be. I ask questions about the headgear, and where she comes from because all those will reflect on what she will wear on the wedding day. At the end of the day, by the time we design the shoe and bag for her, it will complement the outfit. I enjoy doing that; it gives me a lot of joy.

    How expensive are your shoes? Are they only for the high society?

    The shoes are not cheap because they are hand-made. They take a lot of time and energy to make. But they are good quality; we use 100% leather, the best gum, the best glue and good designs. It’s not really about whether we cater for high society alone or low society, it’s about if the person wants quality and appreciates it when he or she sees it.

    How long does it take to get a pair of shoes done?

    If you order from us, we ask for three weeks. You may want a particular shade of leather, so we go all out to get it. We also get the right ornament and so on that will make the shoe really outstanding. There is also the possibility that there were other orders before yours, so that’s why we ask for three weeks so that we can give you our best.

    You dress up lovers of fashion and style, how do you dress yourself up?

    (Laughs) That’s a funny one, I like dressing people up, it’s not that I don’t love dressing up too, but I like comfort. My style is simple, elegant but always comfortable. I don’t believe in wearing tight shoes because I want people to admire me. I like my shoes free. The truth, however, about shoes is that people have different types of feet. That determines what kind of shoes that they are comfortable in.

    There are some very lucky people who can wear any type of shoes. It may be difficult to believe, but there are some people who cannot wear flat shoes. Their shoes must have at least one inch heel. Such people are even more comfortable in two or three inches of heel. There are people whose casual shoes must have some particular inch of heel.

    What I have discovered is that people wear what they are most comfortable in. But then of course, there are people who just want to show off, but those are not many.

    In making our shoes, we are very particular about customer’s comfort. My mother is 77, she wears my shoes. She still wears heels. When she goes out, she doesn’t put slippers in the car. She wears them everywhere she goes and removes them only when she gets home. Our belief is that our shoes must make you elegant and comfortable.

    Regarding my personal style, I like colours, real bright colours. I like and enjoy playing around with colours but I am not a fashionista. I do follow fashion trends easily since it concerns my work. I pay attention to details.

    Some women have 600 shoes, others less, others more…

    Oh, yes, that is a woman’s thing!

    What number of shoes should a woman have?

    A woman should have as much number of shoes as makes her happy (laughs). What I tell people is that when it comes to shoes for women, the truth is that women have hormonal cycle, so women have times when they don’t want to wear particular things. At particular times, you want to wear particular things that make your body easy. Then another day, you want a shoe colour that goes exactly with your outfit or that contrasts with it in such an outstanding way.

    If a woman has blue shoes for instance, you must remember that there is nothing like blue shoes for women, instead, there are varieties of blue. There is turquoise blue, royal blue, sky blue, that is three; the next thing is that a woman may want turquoise blue high heel, turquoise blue slippers, turquoise blue shoe, then turquoise blue shoe and bag. That is just turquoise blue alone, already four. So even the blue is not complete but she already has seven shoes.

    A woman is entitled to have as many shoes as make her happy because if a woman wakes up and looks at her wardrobe and realises that she doesn’t have what to wear, it can make her depressed and unhappy.

    When is a woman fashionable and stylish?

    It is when she wears things that enhance her looks. Style and fashion should be subject to you. You shouldn’t be a slave to them. Style should come from inside of you. It must bring out the best in you. By the time you are following fashion and you are looking funny, then you are the one that is a slave to fashion. So it is not every fashion trend that everybody can follow. There are some fashion trends that are not for you and you just have to let it go.

    The truth is that, the older you get, the more you know what fashion works for you. At that time, you ought to know the colours that work for you too, and the style of shoes that fits you too. So you just stick to it and generally play around with a few other things. You don’t start doing new things because they are new, like being 50 and wearing one funny shoe that doesn’t fit you just because it is the latest craze. No, you shouldn’t be a slave to fashion. Whatever comes out, if it works for you, you wear it, if it doesn’t, you let it go.

    How expensive should fashion and style be for an individual?

    It doesn’t have to be expensive, that is the truth. It is about you being creative and innovative. I remember when I first started my business, I really didn’t have a lot of money then, so I had this outfit, it was a friend that made it for me. There were three or four colours in it. I found out that I could wear it with a head tie, or with a hat. I could dress up in it and make it look like an English outfit and at the same time, I could dress up and make it look like a traditional outfit. I could wear it along with aso oke.

    So it is more about how the individual interprets fashion and plays around with colours. If you are someone who does colours and accessories along with your outfit, then you can get away with a lot of things. If you are not comfortable, look out for a friend of yours who is good at it and ask for advice. There is nothing wrong with that. The important thing is that when you step out, you look like a million dollars even if you didn’t have to spend much.

    What accessories do you not do without?

    I love my rings, I love my bracelets, and I love my earrings. You are not likely to find me without those things. Oh, I love wearing them.

    When are you most happy?

    I’m someone who likes projects, that’s how my mind works, even my relationship with my friends, I treat them like projects; at the end of a project, when the thing is settled and done, and nicely put away, I am happy. That’s when I have this sense of fulfillment that I have accomplished something, especially when I set my heart to do something that seems impossible. It gets to the point where I take it to God prayerfully and He gives me an insight to how to go about it, and then I do it, accomplish it. I look back and then give God the glory. That makes me happy.

    Do you dance?

    I love to dance, I love dancing.

    Do you find time for leisure?

    My work is very interesting, it is not stressful, I am a people-person, and I love meeting people. Interacting with my customers is very refreshing. I make friends with my customers, so it doesn’t look to me like it is work. In addition to that, I love reading, I still read. I do that online a lot. It is very relaxing. I do social media; I use it to promote my business and my faith. I keep up to date with local and international news. I like being aware of what goes on around me in terms of current affairs.

    I like television but I do not spend that much time watching though. I love good films and I do watch whenever I have the time. I go to Silverbird to watch films whenever there is one that is being popularly talked about. I love live music, so I go to concerts. I love musical concerts, I attend art shows and at church too, there are drama presentations and concerts. These are creative things that keep someone like me happy and going.

    Your greatest possession

    That is my salvation, I cherish it. I hold it very dear. I am someone who believes in Nigeria, I believe that we are an extremely blessed country. I believe in the future of this country, that there are immense opportunities here. I encourage people to see the good and the myriads of opportunities.

  • Lekan Alabi gears up for 35th wedding anniversary

    The Ikolaba Olubadan of Ibadanland, Oloye ‘Lekan Alabi, and his wife, Chief (Mrs) Adetokunbo Alabi (nee Laditan), are getting ready to celebrate their 35th wedding anniversary in Ibadan, Oyo State and London, United Kingdom between August 9 and 12, this year.

    Towards this end, the Ibadan high chief travelled to London last month to hold a meeting with the anniversary’s planning committee members. The celebration will feature a thanksgiving service at the London Central Mosque and Saint John’s Wood Anglican Church, Lords Roundabout, London NW8, where the couple were joined in holy wedlock on Saturday 12 August, 1978.

    A wedding anniversary dinner will hold thereafter at a Bayswater restaurant, London, while the honeymoon will be spent at Lalupon, Ibadan, where the couple were conferred with their first chieftaincy titles of Akogun and Yeyemeso of Lalupon respectively in 1991.

    The officiating minister, who conducted the Alabis’ wedding service in 1978 and their 30th wedding anniversary thanksgiving service in 2008, Rev. John Ranking, is billed to conduct the forthcoming 35th anniversary at the same church in London.

  • Ekiti First Lady clocks 50 without fanfare

    The likeable First Lady of Ekiti State, Erelu Bisi Fayemi, joined the league of golden age on Tuesday without pomp or ceremony. The kind-hearted wife of Governor Kayode Fayemi shelved many programmes that had been lined up to celebrate her 50th birthday.

    Those who should know told Celeb Watch that the postponement had to do with the passing on of the former deputy governor of the state, Mrs Funmi Olayinka, on April 6, 2013. An insider said the First Lady’s 50th birthday shindig had been shifted to October. She only had a thanksgiving service at the Government House Chapel in Ado-Ekiti.

    Born in Liverpool, England on June 11, 1963, Erelu Fayemi is a product of both Nigerian and UK universities. She has acquired professional experience as a gender activist, social change crusader and journalist.

  • Akpabio ‘s wife marks 42 in style

    Akpabio ‘s wife marks 42 in style

    The age of 42 usually passes without much of fanfare. But when the super rich decide to celebrate, it is bound to generate interest. That was the case with dark and lovely Ekaete Unoma Akpabio who turned 42 on Monday.

    It was pay-back time for the beautiful wife of Governor Godswill Akpabio of Akwa Ibom State, as family members and friends rallied round her to make her 42nd birthday a memorable one. But her disposition on the day pointed to the fact that she is not given to celebrating her birthdays in a very loud manner. Rather, she sees it as no more than another day in her life.

    While her birthday was meant to be a low-key celebration, the presence of top dignitaries showed she is a gold fish which has no hiding place. Top-of-the-range drinks and assorted meals were served at the occasion.

    The First Lady of Akwa Ibom State was simply full of excitement on that day.

  • ‘I sewed 45 agbada for MKO before I met him’

    ‘I sewed 45 agbada for MKO before I met him’

    Popular fashion designer, Otunba Wasiu Taiwo, is also the owner of Continental Suites, a hotel in Abeokuta, Ogun State. In this interview with OKORIE UGURU, the product of London College of Fashion talks about his humble beginning as a tailor and how he became an elite tailor for top personalities, including the late politician and business mogul Chief M.K.O. Abiola. Excerpts:

    How did start fashion designing business?

    I will start by saying that whatever you do, put all your interest in it. It is very important. At times, when I sit down and look at myself, I look my children and then cast my mind back to a period in the past when I was just a local designer. I look at my colleagues with whom I started and I thank God. The reason is that while I was very busy, trying to work 24 hours, I worked alone for three to four hours in the night. That was when I drew most of my inspirations. Everywhere would be quiet.

    With my 20 years experience, when I finish a product, I still find fault. This tells me that there is room for improvement. But the first thing is to have interest, believe in God and be honest in whatever you do.

    Maybe I should actually ask how you got into tailoring business…

    My father was a local designer. That is a long story. I started by sewing jackon, that is the embroidery on agbada. I tell people that I became self employed or self sufficient at the age of 12. He used to give me the agbada to give to somebody to do the embroidery for him. All the time, immediately he finished the agbada, he would call me and instruct me to take it to the man that would put the design. They called it jackon.

    Each time I got there, I would be wondering how somebody could be putting designs on agbada. If I had the time, I would stay and observe how he was doing it. I was there one day to deliver an agbada to him. He was not in the shop but I was hearing his voice. I shouted to him that I was around. The design he was working on, he had left it on the table. I sat down, took the material, lapped it the way he used to do and continued from where he stopped. He came in and shouted: ‘You want to spoil this material?’ He then looked at what I had done and was baffled.

    He asked me where I had learnt the trade before and I told him I learnt it from him; that I watched him to see how he was doing it. He said I did it perfectly, as he could not distinguish where he had stopped from where I had started. He told me that since I had the interest, any time I was around, he would give me the opportunity to learn.

    One day, my father gave me an agbada to take to the man. I decided to go to the market, buy the thread and took my time to do it little by little, hiding it from my father. I completed it the third day and took it to my father. He gave me money to take to the designer, but I told him that I did it myself. He did not believe me. I repeated what I had said and he went to the man to confirm it. Then, they were sewing agbada for N50 and another N50 for the embroidery. So, if the complete set of buba, agbada and sokoto was N50, and the embroidery too was N50, my father looked at it and said I was in business. He said: ‘Henceforth, do it and I will be giving you 10 per cent of the money.’

    How old were you then?

    I was 13 years old, and as a small boy, he did not want to spoil me with money. So, I could put hand in my pocket and do whatever I wanted to do. I could give money to my friends. That was how I picked interest in tailoring.

    After some time, the 31 battalion of the Nigerian Army wanted to award their school uniform to contractors and we were the tailors around. My father did not even bother. Then, I had started buying ready-made clothes, loosening them and trying to sew them back. I tried teaching myself how to sew. So, immediately they called for contractors for the uniform, I went there to represented my father and myself. I took a job for my father and myself and bought a sewing machine with the money I made form that job. I was given a room and I had the machine in the room. So, I could do anything I liked with it. That was how I developed the habit of working at night.

    To God be the glory, I was at the London College of Fashion. I returned to Abeokuta and decided to stay here because I believed I had some idea about the business and I wanted to share it with my people first, because I know that if I had stayed back in London, I would excel. That is how it has been till date. That is the system I have put into the hotel business, because if you have eye for sewing, you have eye to see how things should be put in their proper place.

    How did you attract big names to your tailoring business?

    It was not me but my products. When I sew for you, people will look at it. The only major one that I had to struggle to get was that of the late Chief MKO Abiola. When I looked at the newspapers and saw what he was wearing, I believed I could sew better clothes for him.

    I was in his house for three days. I had a friend called Kujima then, who worked with the wife. I told him that I wanted to sew for MKO Abiola. I told him he could see that I had better collections than the man was wearing. I told him I would do something that the man would appreciate much more than the clothes he was wearing. He said, ‘Okay, let us go.’ I took my bag and we went to Lagos. That was in 1990.

    On the first day, we were in Abiola’s house from morning till night. I could not believe what I saw.

    What did you see?

    I saw people from the North, East and every part of the country in his house. All these people wanted to see him and they were killing cows everyday to feed them. I looked at myself and said, ‘Everybody here wants to see this man; I don’t think I can see him.’ I said if I went to them and said I wanted to introduce myself to him as a tailor, who would take me there? Some people had been waiting for two weeks to see him. I believed it was being arranged state by state. Sometimes, they would just arrange envelopes for all of them and they would go. Before you know it, another set would come.

    I said maybe this man would think I was coming to beg for money. I asked myself how I would introduce myself to him. Then suddenly, my mind just told me…okay, he was in Abeokuta when he wanted to declare for SDP (Social Democratic Party). So, just struggle to get closer to him, just to have his measurement.

    After that, I just went straight to the market. I bought five sets of complete agbada (flowing gown) piece; the best material in the market. My mind told me that I didn’t have to wait for the man; that I should buy the material, sew it and take it to him. I started dropping five sets of Agbada piece. I would do so again the following week. I would go to the market, buy the materials and drop it in his house. I was dropping five sets of material every week without waiting to see him. So, when I looked at the newspapers, I would see him wearing my dress.

    Then, he was just preparing to go into politics. When I looked at the paper and saw that it was my dress he was wearing, I said this man, I have got him. I sewed the first, second, third, fourth, fifth; about 45 sets of agbada without even seeing him. I used a style that God put in my mind that I should put my cards in all the pockets. Five cards went with one piece. So, as I was delivering the five pieces, there were 25 cards going at the same time. So, anywhere he went, if he put his hand in his pocket, he would see my card.

    When I went to deliver a particular set, one of his aides told me he was going to be in Abeokuta at so and so time to see Chief Segun Osoba who was the governor of Ogun State, and that he would try and call me. I gave him my land phone number, because there was no GSM then. When he called me, I rushed to the place and luckily, he was wearing my dress. He was coming out with the governor, Ebenezer Obey and others. I beat all the protocol and faced him. I said: ‘Are o! My name is Wessy, the designer of your outfit. The man just opened his mouth and could not close it. He embraced me and held me so tight that I could not breathe.

    He said, ‘Iwo ni Wessy? Ori e pe (you mean you are Wessy? You are superb).’ He was so happy that he told the personal assistant that wherever he would be the next day, I should come and see him. I can’t forget that. He said I should bring my receipts. He said: ‘Whenever I looked at your card and saw that you are from Abeokuta, I would be very happy that it is coming from home.’ So, I went to Lagos the next day and he paid me three times the bill I had issued him. He told me that I should not be buying materials for him.

    He took me to one room that was filled with leather. Immediately you approached the lobby, you will be smelling leather. Another one, a very big room, was filled with all kinds of materials. When he opened the door and I entered, there was a wall-to-wall wardrobe filled up with clothes that the doors could not be closed. You would be moving one leg, pushing clothes before you could take another step. I have the picture of the room in my mind. I said this was a man I was looking for and spent three days without seeing. That was the person that anytime I came, he would hold my hands and we would go into his room. Each time I think about that, I thank God.

    There is no profession that cannot take you anywhere if you are good in it. So, this was the man that I sat with in his private sitting room upstairs anytime I came. He told me on the first day: ‘Wessy, remove all these cards from my bedroom. I saw my cards in his wardrobe, in the bedroom, everywhere. I was trembling. I was inside MKO’s bedroom? Me? I could not sleep that day when I got back to Abuja with his cheque. So, MKO became somebody I was talking with on the phone. So, whatever you are doing, do it well. And the most important is to be honest, because that was what lifted me up finally.

    Were the measurements of the clothes you had sewn for him correct?

     

  • Joko Oni hits 60

    Joko Oni hits 60

    One of the pillars of high society, Joko Oni, will clock 60 in the next couple of days. But you would hardly notice it because of the sophisticated nature of the boss of Gold Rush whose life is guided by the philosophy that only good deeds last.

    With a smile that hardly vanishes from her lips, she enjoys a pretty physique that has improved with age. As usual, she would be all smiles as the high and mighty in the nation’s socio-political milieu gather in a few days to honour her. Little wonder preparations for the big day are in full throttle in her house.

    With friends in high places, nothing short of a grand 60th birthday is expected.

  • ‘State of emergency timely, but not sweeping enough’

    ‘State of emergency timely, but not sweeping enough’

    Professor Jubril Aminu was Minister of Education and Minister of Petroleum and Mineral Resources respectively, from 1989 to 1999. A professor of Cardiology and one-time Vice-Chancellor of the University of Maiduguri, Aminu was elected, senator of the Federal Republic, representing Adamawa Central between 2003 and 2011. He was also Nigerian Ambassador to the USA from 1999 to 2003.  In this bare – knuckle interview with LINUS OBOGO, Assistant Editor, Aminu speaks on the political crisis in his home state, Adamawa, his regrets, the state of emergency in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa States, and sundry issues.   

    President Goodluck Jonathan has declared a state of emergency in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa States. How far reaching is the measure in putting down the violent activities of Boko Haram sect in those states and particularly in the North?

    It was an expected action, and therefore, one was not surprised. As a matter of fact, I think someone in the Aso Rock Villa appeared to have spilled the beans. And in the broadcast by the President, he appeared to have been very angry and disturbed and he wanted to make sure that the step taken, if it would be effective, would largely contain the security that appeared to have gone haywire.

    It also appeared that it was widely accepted, because usually, the problem presidents are likely to have in declaring a state of emergency is to have a two thirds majority of the National Assembly to endorse it and for it to be effective in law. It also looked to me like an extensive consultation was done.

    Now, the question will be what will be the reaction of the political parties and the people from those localities where emergency law has been declared? I think that apart from the political jiggery-pokery associated with measures such as this, the measure will be accepted, pending what effect it will have. There is no doubt that the affected states and people will give the state of emergency the benefit of the doubt.

    I could understand why the President has not gone far enough. It is very simple to appreciate and it is simply politics. Ordinarily, it would have been expected that the two tiers of government would be suspended and military administrators be put in place. This was not done and so, I fear that the current measure will affect the effectiveness of the state of emergency in the affected state. As I said, it is all politics. This is 2013 and very soon, it will be 2014, with the general elections coming on the heels in 2015. You know, we are in a country where political parties suspect each other very much. The opposition will suspect that the President will want to take advantage of any declaration of a state of emergency to remove the governors. Do not forget that two of the affected states do not belong to the PDP. The PDP would have been happier if things were done more thoroughly. Like Adamawa, for instance, where the sitting governor lost the local government election very woefully and obviously, does not enjoy the confidence of the people, removing such a governor from office would appear to go down well with those who have lost confidence in him. If a leader no longer enjoys the confidence of his people, how can they cooperate with him in making the law effective? They will rather want to depend on the federally controlled authority.

    We may just have to wait and see. But I would have preferred the emergency declaration to be more thorough so that the effect will be on the insurgents and maybe on the politicians. Like now, it looks to me that it is only the security agencies that have been gingered up and their heavy might will ultimately fall on the ordinary people. Of course, they will want to do their job by controlling the people and controlling the movement of the people in the affected states.

    I wish that we will not see some of the things we used to see in the past. However, I still think that unless care is taken, once more, the people who will feel the effect most, apart from the insurgents that they are looking for, will be the ordinarily law-abiding citizens.

    In summary, I think the emergency law will be accepted by the people, but then, let us wait and see.

    By allowing the political status quo to remain, what implications will this have on the effectiveness of the emergency law in the affected states?

    The measure is not sweeping enough with the governors, legislators, and local government chairmen in place, the measure cannot be said to be sweeping. But again, politics is involved. The President did not want to create room for suspicion that the opposition states were the target, just as he also wants to enjoy the goodwill of the PDP state.

    How timely or belated was the President’s declaration of the state of emergency?

    This is the kind of question you should be asking those in opposition and not a member of the PDP like me. I am sure you want me to make an editorial on the President’s action. In my opinion, there is no problem in the timing. Rather, there is a problem with the extent or scope of the emergency.

    Your state, Adamawa has been enmeshed in political crisis for some time now, with the governor pitched against the PDP National Chairman, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur. And now, more salt has been added to the injury with the imposition of state of emergency.  What collateral damage has this on the politics of the state?

    You are asking me to comment on what you already know what my position is. It cannot be any worse than it is already. The latest development can only make things better for the people. As for the political implications of the crisis between the governor and the PDP National Chairman on the state, the people of Mayo Balwa Local Government Area, where the governor hails from, have demonstrated their unhappiness with the state of affairs in their area by voting massively against the governor’s candidate in the last local government election.

    What that means is that thank God, the PDP in Adamawa is no longer in the governor’s hands. You may not agree with me, but the governor went and hired a candidate from an obscure party called Kowa Party, which in Hausa, means ‘Everybody’, but which I will prefer to call ‘Bakowa’ Party, meaning ‘Nobody’s’ party. He was squarely routed or defeated in the election despite all that went on before and during the election.

    That, in itself, was a massive plus for the people of Adamawa. I feel that if this type of restorative measure is continued, there will be light at the end of the tunnel.

    As one of the key political gladiators and stakeholders in the Adamawa State, what have done in your capacity to bring about amity in the simmering political crisis?

    Why do you refer to me as a gladiator? I thought we were already two thousand years since the Roman Empire. There is really no gladiator in all of the crises in Adamawa State. The governor just took his sword and has been shoving it in the face of everyone. All we have been trying to do is to ensure that Adamawa is okay while the governor has been doing what he likes.

    You asked me what I have been doing. Call us whatever you like, elders or stakeholders, the important thing is that we are working together for our national chairman, Bamanga Tukur. We have been working hard and with the cooperation of the National Working Committee of the PDP, we have elected a new executive for the state and also carried out new registration for members.

    Unfortunately, one of the state House of Assembly members died. But this provided a sad opportunity for us to show who enjoys the support of the people. And we had an election in the governor’s local government, which was an opportunity to show his standing in the state, unfortunately he lost scandalously, despite going out to rent a candidate from another party. It was obvious he had no viable candidate to foist on the people and he had to go and rent one who was roundly defeated in the election. The election was monitored by INEC and observers from other states.

    The emergence of Governor Murtala Nyako on the state’s political firmament was through your instrumentality. Any regrets for propping him up?

    I am full of regrets for my action and I have since apologised many times to the people of Adamawa State. I came to realise that I did not know Nyako very well. He is a brother. That is fine. But as a politician and a leader on whom the trust of the people has been placed, I did not know him very well. A lot of people were surprised that he could do the kind of things he has been doing. He was a military governor once and one-time Chief of Naval of Staff and now governor again, but he has not justified the trust and confidence of the people of Adamawa State.

    How exactly do you mean by people were surprised that he did the kind of things he did?

    It’s been all over in the papers. I do not think I can capture all of them now for you. I cannot say it eloquently like the Adamawa people will. You represent a great paper like The Nation, so, I expect that you should go there and take a look at the situation for your paper. There is nothing I will tell you here that will make much sense to you without being accused of bias. You just go to Adamawa and see things for yourself. Ask anybody in the state and they will paint a picture of the deplorable situations in the state for you. Suffice it to say that Adamawa is today the worst administered state in Nigeria. They have not received anything by way value for the money, votes and trust invested by the government and the people.

    If you say you did know him, was the first four years not enough to have done a checklist on him to ensure that he was not returned to leadership position in the state?

    After his first term, he contested and won, following which the court annulled his election. So, as faithful party members, we were all with him when a fresh election was ordered by the court. We supported him and ensured that he won his rerun election. But things soon began to change and the man started showing his colour, much to the surprise of everyone. He was no longer doing what we elected him to do. And we parted ways because I could not go on deceiving myself that all was well with the way the state was being run.

    Do you feel betrayed by Governor Murtala Nyako?

    I felt I had made a serious mistake by pushing him into the heart of the people of Adamawa State and I have severally apologised.

    Do you imagine former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar having the last and best laugh?

    Do you think we have finished laughing? We have not finished laughing yet. And as for Atiku, I have no reason to apologise to him, because he was the one who transgressed against me. I was just sitting down in Abuja doing my job as a senator when he decided to use his vice presidential powers to remove me. Fortunately, the Constitution of Nigeria was there to make recourse to and I escaped being removed by whatever means Atiku wanted. That was long ago. There are really no differences between us to settle. He is my younger brother and he will always be my younger brother.  We are back and working together. What is going on in Adamawa is not a matter of who is going to have the last and best laugh. I never, in my wildest imagination, thought that Nyako would do the sort of things he is doing in the state.

    There are insinuations that the festering crisis between Nyako and Tukur in Adamawa State is as a result of the struggle to install or impose their sons on the state as governor, come 2015. Is this truly the undercurrent?

    I do not exactly think so. But it might as well be so. But I doubt strongly if that is Bamanga’s problem. Do you know what Bamanga’s problem is? He is a national chairman who was elected in a very hostile atmosphere. Everything under the sun was done to stop him being made chairman. I do not know what they had against him.

    But with regards to his son wanting to be governor of the state, the young man has been a politician for a very long time now. He was a member of the House of Representatives in 1999. He was acting minister for a brief period at a time. He was Chief of Staff before Nyako’s election was annulled. So, he has been a politician in active politics all the while. He does not come across as one who is being prepared to be governor by somebody.

    But in contrast to Governor Nyako’s son who was in the Navy and who, up till now, we cannot say whether or not he has left the service or not. But he relocated from Lagos to the Government House in Yola. We saw that as very odd. He was always seen in uniform. I do not know if he has retired. But today, they say he is the chief and leader of all youths in Adamawa State, appointed by a certain chief. He goes around as if he has already been elected governor with siren and security escorts. Up till now, no one can say what kind of job he has in government. Absolutely, there is no comparison between Tukur’s son and that of Governor Nyako’s. But the trust is no one knows who will win the governorship election in the state when the two come head to head against each other in 2015.

    Is there any prospect of the crisis in the state chapter of the PDP ending anytime soon?

    As far as I can say, we have virtually resolved the crisis in the party in the state. The party is supreme and it has won the election to constitute the state executive. And what is more, it has won the local government election in a key council area. So, we are on the way to resolving the crisis. By 2015, when the PDP wins the governorship in the state, the party would have finally resolved its differences.

    And it would not matter whether it is Tukur’s or Nyako’s son who wins the election and…

    (Cuts in) You are trying to be mischievous now. If you have any more questions ask me, or else, we call it a day.

    Another seething issue in the polity today is 2015, with the North menacingly poised for a showdown with President Goodluck Jonathan. What is your understanding of the unfolding power game?

    The problem with politicians and ditto, Nigerians, is that they do nothing other than to speculate and take position on the next general elections. Now we are talking about 2015, it will amaze you to know that there are already people who’re jostling for 2019. That is what Nigeria has become. People take a job but they are not ready to do the work. They use the current job to look for the next one without bothering about what they were first and foremost elected to do.  Nigeria is gradually turning to a country where electioneering is a permanent preoccupation. That is not good for democracy. Democracy is not all about electing people to show that you have a democracy, but to ensure that they work for the electorate. But this is not happening.

    Are you in sync with those who insist that President Jonathan cannot vie for second term?

    The Constitution is very clear on the qualifications for the office of the President of Nigeria. It is not the prerogative of anyone to ascribe. Of course, I know that President Jonathan is going to stand for 2015. I have always said this, but that is not the understanding of many other people from the North who alleged that they had a talk with him with regards to 2015. But I know that nothing is going to stop him. Asking the President not to run in 2015 has no legal provision in the Constitution. Even if you decide to pursue the matter up to the Supreme Court, there is no provision for him not to run in 2015. The only thing is that there will be a lot of bad blood. Everybody should be free to stand for elections, so long as you are constitutionally qualified. The outcome of the election is what matters at the end of the day. It is not everybody who stands for an election that gets elected in the end. The outcome of the election will resolve whatever issues that may exist. And I want to seriously warn that we must bear in mind that most of the crises we have had in this country were occasioned by election outcomes. That is why we must be guided by what we say in the run up to elections.

    Pressure is also being cranked up in the polity by the body of governors, under the aegis of Nigerian Governors’ Forum. They have carried on literally, like pressure group and constituting a formidable force against the Presidency.  How politically healthy is the development?

    I have maintained that the governors cannot constitute themselves into a parallel government to the one at the centre. There is no constitutional basis for that. They have been behaving like an opposition government or a tier of government. But of recent, they have tried to behave themselves. However, the ongoing rift between the Rivers State governor and the Presidency is not good. It leaves a sour taste in the mouth. The two are sister-states. I cannot see how our governor can mobilise opinions and press against the Presidency just to create a situation of tyranny or to paint the Presidency as a tyrant. That is not good enough. You cannot find this elsewhere, not even in our neighbouring countries. Outside Nigeria, nobody knows anyone as leader of the governors’ forum. In effect, he is challenging the President all in the name of the leadership of the Nigerian Governors’ Forum. What is governors’ forum and which section of the constitution is it found? Why would they take a mere consultative body and make it look like a statutory body? After all, we have the National Assembly, which is a body to check the President and not the governors’ forum.

    As a former Minister of Education, you enunciated the Nomadic Education policy. Years after your stewardship, how alive is the scheme and how would you rate its success or otherwise?

    It was successful and is still very much alive. There are children of the cattle Fulani herdsmen who are students of the scheme. What has pleased me with the programme is that the children of the herdsmen are the ones who are defending it today. If you start anything new, make sure that the beneficiaries are the ones who would want it to continue. I am not saying that there were no problems with the nomadic education policy. There were bound to be and there are still bound to be. I am not happy with some of the things going on with the policy. But nomadic education was established under the law and you cannot wake up one morning and want to abolish it. The policy is still on but not like a wild fire that I would have liked. There are always appropriations for it in the budget and approved by the Senate Committee on Education.

    Do you know any of the graduates of the policy or school that you can point at and say yes, these are the graduates?

    Of course, yes. There is one who comes to my house and there are many others who are graduates of the policy.

    You mean cattle Fulani beneficiary graduates come to your house and you happen to know them as beneficiaries of…?

    (Cuts in amid laughter) Do you want them to come to my house with herds of cattle for me to recognise them as beneficiaries?

    Critics of the policy insisted then that it was introduced apparently to benefit your fellow Fulani kinsmen. Would you say that was a fair criticism?

    It was an unfair criticism because I could not have introduced nomadic education to favour the Igbo. There were no nomads and there are still no nomads among the Igbo.

    What about the Ijaw fishermen, were they beneficiaries as well?

    Of course, they were also targeted. They have their secretariat somewhere in Aba. Did you expect me to have gone to your state (Cross River) to introduce nomadic education when you do not have nomads among you?

    There was a revelation in the Senate recently that the North controls 83 per cent of Nigeria’s oil blocs. How many of these did you award to your Northern brothers and sisters during your spell as Minister of Petroleum?

    How many did I award to myself? How many did I award to myself? You should have asked me how many I awarded to myself. Go and find out how many I awarded to myself before you ask me that rubbish question.

    You described my question as rubbish?

    Yes, it is absolute rubbish.

    But you awarded oil blocs during you time as minister, didn’t you?

    I awarded to everywhere, not only the North.

    But with the majority to the North?

    It is not true. If that was the case, I would be feeling very bad about it. But it wasn’t the case. Definitely, not during my time as minister. Maybe it was after my time and under what circumstances, I wouldn’t know. So the revelation from the Senate may be true, but I doubt it.