Category: Society

  • JayBleeng wins hearts with resounding voice

    JayBleeng wins hearts with resounding voice

    Olushola Victor

     

    Born Jibril Anifowoshe, JayBleeng is eyeing the zenith in the music industry and there is nothing that can stop him from achieving his dream.

    His new album, ‘Bed of Roses,’ has been attracting attention since its release. For instance, a track, ‘Begging for Your Love,’ has won the heart of many music lovers.

    He told Social Circuit that his latest single explained what it meant to be madly in love.

    The singer said: “The reviews from ‘Begging for Your Love’ have been absolutely phenomenal as the song speaks for itself. I believe in quality music, which is good for entertainment purposes. However, I intend to inspire people, raise issues people don’t want to talk about, take people’s mind away from the regular day to day struggle and try to put smile on the faces of people with music.

    “The stage is my playground. Performing in shows is beautiful because it brings out the energetic aspect of me. I connect with the fans with my charisma. I just love entertaining in general.”

    Although he is based in America, JayBleeng is not far from Nigerian and African music. He has performed in Ogun State, Lagos Island, Ibadan, Ghana and Cameroun.

    He has a Bachelor’s degree in Economics and Cyber Security from the University of Missouri, St Louis, United States.

  • Yeye Daniel’s reaction to ‘fake bride’

    Yeye Daniel’s reaction to ‘fake bride’

    Olushola Victor

     

    Last week was all about the marriage ceremony of first son of former Ogun State Governor, Otunba Gbenga Daniel. The classy introduction/engagement took place on Thursday, March 5, while the grand reception took place on Saturday, March 6, at Queens Park Event Centre, Victoria Island, Lagos.

    When a ‘fake bride’ was presented to Daniel’s wife, Yeye Olufunke Daniel, during the engagement ceremony, she didn’t think twice before she knew. Without unveiling the ‘fake bride’, she replied that it was not her daughter-in-law.

    The former Ogun State First Lady couldn’t hide her joy seeing her son, Olurotimi, taking the bold step to spend forever with Nafisat Mahmud.

  • Sunday Dare’s  noble gesture

    Sunday Dare’s noble gesture

    Olushola Victor

     

    Fortune has smiled on a five-year-old boxing prodigy, Ayomide Adeyemo, and his family.

    Minister of Youth and Sports Development, Sunday Dare, seems to understand that the best way to harness talents is to catch them young. Hence, he has taken it upon himself to sponsor Ayomide Adeyemo.

    This happened after a documentary on Adeyemo went viral on social media.

    The minister said: “Sequel to the viral video of a talented baby boy boxer on social media pages, I will be putting the baby in a boxing academy for further growth and also sponsor his education. Some financial stipends will be given for the upkeep of the lad as well.”

    Currently, Adeyemo is being trained by his father after school hours at their residence in Paruwa area of Lagos.

    In the viral video, Adeyemo’s father, mother and teacher explained how the little boy had shown undying interest in boxing. According to his father, who trains boxers for a living, he will go to any length to ensure his child achieves his dream of becoming a great boxer.

  • Aremu Oniru holds low-key birthday celebration amidst monarchy tussle

    Aremu Oniru holds low-key birthday celebration amidst monarchy tussle

    Olushola Victor

     

    Although there is still no clear picture as to who will succeed the late Oba Idowu Oniru of Iruland, who joined his ancestors last year, Aremu Adesegun Oniru fancies his chances. The only person in his way is Chief Security Officer to the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Chief Superintendent of Police (CSP) Hakeem Ajasa, who also has many supporters.

    Last year, the former Commissioner for Waterfront Infrastructure Development in Lagos State had a big all-white birthday celebration at Ilashe Beach, Lagos. D’banj, Mayegun Wasiu Ayinde, CDQ, Skales, M Real were some of the celebrities at the party.

    But it was a different case this year. In celebration of his 54th birthday few days ago, Adesegun held a low-key celebration at Timeless, Victoria Island, Lagos. It was attended by family and close friends.

    Social Circuit gathered the kingship tussle could be a major reason Adesegun opted for a quiet celebration as his mind has been preoccupied with the desire to be the next Oba of Iruland.

    Adesegun is the first son of the late Oba Idowu Oniru. He was also one of the most active members in former Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola’s cabinet.

  • Ooni of Ife absent at sister’s wedding

    Ooni of Ife absent at sister’s wedding

    Olushola Victor

     

    On Sunday, March 8, Princess Adesola Ogunwusi, immediate elder sister of the Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Enitan Ogunwusi, married her sweetheart, Prince Ayoola Shoremekun.

    Although it was a royal wedding, Ooni of Ife was conspicuously missing at the party. Social Circuit learnt that the Ooni would have loved to witness the glorious day of his favourite sister but the tradition didn’t allow him.

    Meanwhile, Ooni’s wife, Queen Naomi Ogunwusi, was fully present to carry out some of her husband’s responsibilities and make the day remarkable for Adesola.

    Tagged ‘Royal Wedding,’ the ceremony was held at an event center inside Victoria Garden City in Ajah, Lagos.

    Princess Adesola’s first marriage to Pastor Yinka Olojede, which produced a child hit the rocks some years ago. But she found love again and decided to give marriage a second chance.

  • Poet Odia Ofeimun turns 70

    Poet Odia Ofeimun turns 70

    Olushola Victor

     

    Regardless of life challenges, a birthday comes with a feeling of excitement. It is a day to cherish, rejoice and be thankful for the gift of life.

    For 70th birthday celebration of a foremost Nigerian poet, journalist, dance-drama producer and critic, Odia Ofeimun, activities have been lined up to celebrate him in a big way.

    The two-day event will kick off with a conference tomorrow at the Julius Berger Hall of the University of Lagos (UNILAG) and end on Tuesday with a dinner at UNILAG’s Guest House.

    The Odia Ofeimun at 70 Conference will be a gathering of intellectuals, scholars and academics in Nigeria, Africa, North America and Europe. The keynote lecture will be given by Professor Biodun Jeyifo, a reputed literary scholar and globally-recognised cultural theorist.

    Dignitaries expected to grace the conference include Minister of Interior, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, Olisa Agbakoba (SAN), among others.

    Ofeimun once served as Private Secretary to Chief Obafemi Awolowo, the late Nigerian nationalist, member of the Editorial Board of The Guardian from 1983 to 1988, Chairman of the Editorial Board of The News, Tempo and AM News from 1993 to 1999, and President of the Association of Nigerian Authors (ANA) from 1993 to 1997.

  • ‘Why I’m hosting gospel boot camp’

    ‘Why I’m hosting gospel boot camp’

    By Adeniyi Adewoyin

     

    THE Voice Coach UK and founder of The Ultimate Gospel Singers Boot Camp, Uncle Ade, has highlighted the importance of his latest music project.

    According to the US based coach, ‘the Boot Camp is a one week intensive training program designed to improve the singing technique and singing IQ of artistes at a very affordable rate.’

    Speaking on the programme, he said, “Essentially, the GSBC is an intensive program designed to give singers a detailed insight into the essential technical and practical elements that must be present, to help a singer achieve excellence in their craft.

    “Unlike the kind of information that students typically learn at university and college, my teaching approach, and therefore content, have been developed to ensure that my students experience ‘career defining training,” he stated.

    The event which is slated for March 30 till April 3, 2020 at Surulere, Lagos, is targeted at beginners, Intermediates and Advanced gospel music artistes.

    “The program is structured in a manner that will give all levels greater insight, understanding and a solid foundation on which to develop their voice. We do also welcome non-Christian singers, because technically exactly the same principles apply. But be warned this space will be filled with the holy spirit, all week.

    Those who attend will take-away a wealth of knowledge and insight into the business practices, and thought processes of some of the most successful practitioners in the African music industry. ”

    He added, ”I do have to point out thought, that it would be next to impossible to stage these camps, without the generosity of RCCG and TTC, in accommodating us. We are extremely blessed, and extremely grateful! RCCG are also sponsoring some of their choir members for the camp. I am hoping we can get more churches to do the same.”

  • Africa in the global resurgence of nationalisms

    Africa in the global resurgence of nationalisms

    By Tunji Olaopa

     

    Two issues inspired this essay. The first is the upcoming 2020 African Conference of the University of Texas at Austin which Prof. Toyin Falola convenes annually, and that will address the theme ‘Nationalism’ on the one hand. The other issue is the election of Rwandan president by the African Union (AU), to drive Africa 2063 Agenda which, to me, presents a veritable, albeit arguable opportunity, for African scholars to set in motion a thinking process to arm this star African leader to fully take the advantage presented to at least do the best he can in the midst of the known and complex dynamics.  One interesting thing about our world today therefore, is the most interesting rate at which significant events and incidences affect the shape of our lives. With the capabilities made possible by the telecommunication revolution, and its different technologies, the burdens and the benefits of global relationships are shared at the speed of light. One of the global events that shaped the perception of politics, especially in 2019, was the growing resurgence of populist-nationalist sentiments and actions all across the globe. From the United States to Brazil, and from India to South Africa, governments across the world are strenuously rethinking their border policies and relations to those they regard as “strangers” within the complex dynamics of nationalism.

    The watershed in the populist-nationalist resurgence was the emergence of Donald Trump as the 45th president of the United State. However, before he became president, North America and especially Europe have been groaning under the moral and political weight of the global refugee crisis. From Greece to Germany, and from the United Kingdom to Belgium, governments are confronted with waves and waves of humanity fleeing all manner of political, religious and humanitarian oppressions and deprivation, especially from Asia, the Middle East and Africa. And the crux of the discourse is to what extent a state has the moral and legal right to take in thousands of immigrants and refugees in ways that increase the infrastructural burdens on their own citizens. In other words: how do we juxtapose between the moral responsibility to outsiders in trouble, and their civic responsibilities to their own citizens? And all this in the face of scarce resources. Even though global outcries greeted every state’s attempt at turning back the refugees that appear at the borders, the governments of such states must always consider their own citizens and their welfare and well-being.

    Donald Trump’s electoral victory was carried on the global news wave as a “whitelash” against the American popular opinion that seemed to prefer Hilary Clinton. Yet, Trump rode on a popular civic resentment of the immigrants and the outsiders. And this nationalist sentiment has been replicated from Bolsonaro’s Brazil to the tragic xenophobic attacks in South Africa. The Brexit saga in the UK has become a part of our global political consciousness of what it means to politically realign the borders in ways that foregrounds the interest of the citizens over those who have genuine reason to come in from the cold.

    The fundamental effect of the populist remodeling of nationalism across the globe is the terrible rethinking of the multilateral logic that binds states together in cordial relationships. Multilateralism in international relations is founded on the equality of all sovereign states around the world to relate with one another on the basis of their sovereignty. More than this, however, multilateralism is grounded on the principles of collective security on the one hand and reciprocity on the other. In a world where criminality, terrorism. diseases and climate change have become critical phenomena that affect all states equally, the significance of multilateralism becomes all the more accentuated. Unfortunately, populist nationalism of the Trumpian and Brexit kind undermines the fundamental significance of multilateral relations and agreement. One of the first rhetoric of Trump after his assumption of office was against the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. And Brexit has finally taken the United Kingdom away from the European Union and its regional and multilateral dynamics.

    The worst effects of populism and nationalism affect Africa. Since Trump became president, not only has the visa regime of the United States embassy in Nigeria changed, Nigeria has entered US travel ban list. Nationalism is conditioned by a state’s perception of her benefits and burdens in her relationship with other states. Let us concede: nationalism is founded on a binary logic that separate the citizens from the non-citizens, and seeks to better the lots of the citizens through a governance framework that attends to them alone. The best of this ideological orientation embedded in populism is found in Singapore where Lee Kwan Yew mobilized the citizens around a development paradigm that single-handedly transformed the status of Singapore in the comity of states. Even the worst type of populism that led to fascism is ideologically grounded, however false such an ideology may be. The ideological finesse that gives birth to populism and nationalism has fizzled out since the end of the anticolonial struggles. Since political independence in the 1960s, African states have been held suspended within the global developmental framework fashioned by Western ideologies. The Washington Consensus has reigned supreme in the governance and development “reflections” of most African states. When the Bretton Woods institutions scream “liberalize and privatize!” African states jump and comply.

    The paradox of the development impasse is that the development pills prescribed by the World Bank and the IMF have only aggravated the infrastructural and institutional decay, and the immense suffering that the African citizens have had to go through, even if their barometer as measure of national economic health cannot be disregarded. The terrible combination of wrong development prescription and large-scale governmental corruption complicate the development equation in ways that pauperize Africans. And this is the singular explanation for the tragic migration of mostly Africans across the horrible rage of the Mediterranean Sea and the sizzling Sahara Desert. Africa has become a continent that development happens to – an arid place where governance ideas die within the acidity of bad government. Globalization has compounded Africa’s unwilling insertion into the global capitalist economy that began with colonialism. Since independence, many African states have had to struggle with bad leadership and lack of an ideological orientation around which the reformation of the postcolonies could be organized.

    Ideology, says Louis Althusser, “is indispensable in any society if men are to be formed, transformed and equipped to respond to the demands of their conditions of existence.” In this sense, ideology constitutes a framework for leadership awareness and strategy that are directed at unraveling governance failure and foisting well-being. A nationalist is not significant because s/he operates an exclusionary logic that separates between citizens and non-citizens. On the contrary, nationalism is founded on a state’s socioeconomic capacity to transform the well-being of the citizens, while also becoming a beacon of hope for non-citizens. The United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, Belgium, Switzerland, Canada, and many of these Western states have become the destination for those fleeing persecution because their leaders were ideologically determined to make life meaningful for their citizens. And whether we like it or not, any good governance policy architecture already implicates the state’s foreign policy; a state’s relationship with other states and the calculus of trade and investments involved in such relations. In other words, every state is looking out for the interests of her citizens, and this conditions what is bought or sold, and at what rates.

    Most African countries are still beholden to the West for essential commodities. Export promotion seems to be the economic strategy which African countries favor. Nigeria, for instance, has maintained a monocultural economy that focuses largely on exporting crude oil and other primary commodities to other countries. It does not require significant reflection to see how this strategy undermines the capacity to local industries to serve as the mainstay of economic growth. Unfortunately, most economically aware states of the world are conscientiously foregoing their dependence on critical foreign goods in search for self-sustenance. In 2014, the United States ceased being Nigeria’s number one importer of crude oil because of her discovery of shale oil in large quantity. Since 2015, India has taken over from the US as the number one importer of oil. The critical question is how long will this last. This extraverted logic of the African economic dynamics simply implies that such economies are left at the mercies of populist-nationalist ideologies that fluctuate according to the imperatives of the state and their economic logic.

    African states need a nationalist ideology that will have the citizens as the focus of development effort. A good starting point is a continental reflection on the development dynamics of Africa vis-à-vis the dominance of the Washington Consensus in the economic and developmental calculations of African states. This is where the African Union becomes a significant element in jumpstarting the discourse on the economic future of the continent. Is it impossible to commence the crafting of an ideologically grounded “African Consensus” which should serve as the basis for the regeneration of the development of Africa? The African Consensus can become an ideological framework around which the development future of the African continent can revolve. There can, for instance, be a renewed interest in import substitution strategy that will undermine the extraverted economic logic that make Africa subservient to the West. With the emergence of the African Consensus, African states can start being assertive about their economic dignity and self-esteem, rather than running helter-skelter whenever Europe or North America calls for an economic summit.

     

    • Prof. Olaopa is a retired Federal Permanent Secretary

    tolaopa2003@gmail.com

  • Ibrahim Dende’s golden celebration

    Ibrahim Dende’s golden celebration

    By Oladapo Sofowora

     

    Birthdays are a time to reflect on redolent memories. It also gives room to thank one’s creator for the gift of life. In this age and time where the average life expectancy is low, it won’t be out of place to celebrate the golden age of 50.

    For seasoned businessman and hospitality guru, Ibrahim Dende Egungbohun, hitting the age of 50, is a clear reason to testify to the goodness of God.

    The Ilaro-born businessman, socialite, and philanthropist left no stone unturned for his 50th birthday bash. He spared no cost to giving himself that luxury treat in a celebratory mood.

    His delectable wife Lara, under the umbrella of the IBD Dende Foundation, visited the school of special needs and the correctional center facility, located in Ilaro, Ogun State to donate edible items, toiletries among other gifts.

    Read Also: Juliet Ibrahim: writing my memoir was therapeutic

     

    To wrap up the birthday celebration, Dende hosted friends, royal fathers, and socialites to a glamorous well attended birthday party at the Yewa Frontier Hotel, Ilaro, Ogun state.

    Mayegun of Yoruba land, KWAM 1 was on the bandstand to serenade guests alongside other music acts and Nigerian entertainers.

    The celebrant flanked by his wife, well fitted in an all-black tuxedo suit looking dapper, sauntered into the black and gold decorated hall to cut his gigantic birthday cake.

    He welcomed guests with a warm smile on his face as he was in a good mood all through the celebration.

    Those who attended were treated lavishly to an array for mouthwatering meals and expensive drinks. Everything in circulation was in abundance. It’s a shindig that will never be forgotten in a hurry.

  • Justice Monica Mensem’s touching story

    Justice Monica Mensem’s touching story

    By Oladapo Sofowora

     

    Hon Justice Monica Bolna’an Dongban-Mensem, the current President Justice of the Court of Appeal is a round peg in a round hole.

    To many, her appointment as the president of the appeal court is a great progression to strengthen the judicial system in Nigeria.

    Justice Monica did not just stumble on the legal profession, she followed the footstep of her father; Justice M.B. Douglas Mensem, a retired Court of Appeal judge.

    This shows it’s a family trait to succeed in legal practice. Justice Dongban-Mensem is an authority in Criminal and Civil Procedure Law, Taxation and International Public Finance, Public International Law, Legislative Drafting, Constitutional and Administrative Law and International Commercial Transactions.

    The LL.B and LL.M graduate of Ahmadu Bello University (ABU) Zaria-Nigeria bagged a Post Graduate Diploma from the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, University of London, Russel Square.

    Those close to her will attest to the fact that she detests reckless driving. She is an advocate for safe roads devoid of casualties and humanly-caused accidents.

    Read Also: Netflix to increase investment in Nigerian storytelling

     

    Outside the courtroom, the Plateau State-born legal luminary finds time to control traffic anywhere she finds herself.

    Many of her admirers will wonder why she devotes such time rather than attending to other issues that might be demanding her attention.

    A few years ago, she lost her first son, Prince Samson Kwapda’as Dongban, a 32-year-old law graduate to an accident.

    Ever since that moment, she has vowed to create a CSR arm that will enlighten road users and control traffic to reduce road accidents and casualties.

    According to a source, the death of Kwapda’as came as a big shock as Justice Monica, who is yet to get over it. “The son was a bright young man who would make a fine lawyer but his lofty dreams were cut short by an accident that could be prevented.

    To further curb the excesses of road users, she founded a road safety organisation called Kwapda’as Road Safety Demand (KRSD) which has become the most efficient and popular road safety NGO in Nigeria.”