Category: Southwest

  • ADC mere distractions, says APC southwest

    ADC mere distractions, says APC southwest

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in the Southwest has described the orchestrated efforts by some politicians to unseat President Bola Tinubu in 2027 as mere distractions and comedy shows aimed at derailing the ongoing Nigerian Project codenamed the Renewed Hope Agenda.

    It will be recalled that, recently, some politicians made public their readiness to forge a common front in their desire to dislodge the APC government at the centre in a manner similar to how the same APC sent the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) government led by Dr. Goodluck Jonathan away from power in 2015 after winning that year’s presidential election in what was said be an unprecedented political development.

    Read Also: Osun 2026: APC chieftain vows to deliver 100,000 votes

    In a statement issued at the weekend and made available to journalists by the Publicity Secretary in the Southwest, Mr. Ayobami Afolabi, APC said the current crop of anti-Tinubu crusaders have nothing to offer Nigeria and Nigerians as they are failed politicians who lack ideas on how to add value having contributed to the augean stables which the present administration is cleansing.

  • Ex-Ondo First Lady backs CDS call for self-defence training

    Ex-Ondo First Lady backs CDS call for self-defence training

    Former First Lady of Ondo State, Mrs. Betty Anyanwu-Akeredolu, has thrown her weight behind the Chief of Defence Staff, Gen. Christopher Musa, on his call for Nigerians to learn self-defence and combat skills. 

    In a post on her X account (Twitter), Mrs. Akeredolu emphasized the importance of self-defence training in today’s society.

    “I stand with the Chief of Defence Staff, Gen. Christopher Musa, on his call for Nigerians to learn self-defence and combat skills,” she said. 

    Akeredolu noted that her organization, BEMORE Empowered Girls Foundation, had introduced taekwondo training at their annual summer boot camp years ago, recognizing the need for self-defence skills.

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    “At BEMORE Empowered Girls Foundation, we saw this need years ago. Rising cases of rape & gender-based violence pushed us to introduce taekwondo training at our annual BEMORE Summer Bootcamp. Our girls have gained not just physical strength, but confidence, courage, and resilience,” she added.

     Akeredolu urged the government and stakeholders to institutionalize self-defence training nationwide, starting with schools and the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC).

     “I urge government & stakeholders to institutionalize self-defence training nationwide, starting with schools and NYSC. A safer Nigeria begins with an empowered citizenry,” she emphasized.

     The call for self-defence training comes amid rising concerns about security in Nigeria. Many Nigerians have been advocating for measures to improve safety and security, and the CDS’s call is seen as a step in the right direction.

  • Oluwo excited as Appeal Court upholds enthronment

    Oluwo excited as Appeal Court upholds enthronment

    The Oluwo of Iwo, Oba Abdulrosheed Akanbi, on Friday expressed excitement after the Court of Appeal upheld his enthronement as king of the ancient town. 

    Oluwo, in a statement on Friday challenged his contenders to go to Supreme Court if they are not satisfied, noting they are perpetual failures.

    According to him: “Again and as usual, Olodumare (God) has won for me same way I won at High Court. My enthronement was divine and cannot be thwarted by human. 

    “I’m almost 10 years on the throne as the Paramount Ruler of Iwoland. Interestingly, Iwo is moving progressively. While I commit myself to the improvement of Iwo, defend her heritage, Traditions and Culture with no criminality and barbarism, I have cleaned the dirtiest part of this great Yoruba tradition and culture to make it an envy of the world and people have understood the difference.

    “I have facilitated federal presence within ten years, I’m not surprised that some are still chasing shadow. My contenders are perpetual failures.”

    Read Also: ASUP gives FG 21-day strike notice, lists demands 

    He added: “They are made to waste their resources in pursuing shadow.I can’t help them.l because they are purposeful for my promotion. They should continue their litigation while I continue to reign (Awon nse ejo, emi nse ijoba). Please, go to Supreme Court.”

    “You won’t be alright should you resign to faith at this eleventh hour. You are my son but I can’t help your ministry since you have resigned to be lost.

    “I specially appreciate Olodumare for the rare privilege to always match my enemies. I love battles. When the enemy brings one, I welcome it because Olodumare has always used every battle as a promotional step to my greatness.

    “My legal team is acknowledged for their sacrifice and commitment to safeguard a pure throne. You shall continue to rise from top to top and apex to apex. My Ekarun, you are equally commended.

    “To the true blue blood, reasonable sons and daughter of Iwo who trust my progressive monarchical movement, I appreciate you all. I am optimistic you are feeling the impact. Iwo has grown beyond yesterday. We are greater, we shall be the greatest soon.”

  • BINATECH honours Oyo Speaker, OYSIPA DG, Library Board Chair, others

    BINATECH honours Oyo Speaker, OYSIPA DG, Library Board Chair, others

    The Binatech Group of Companies has recognised distinguished personalities with awards for their contributions to the company’s growth and support for its vision.

    The awardees include Oyo Speaker Debo Ogundoyin; the Director-General of Oyo State Investment and Public-Private Partnership Agency (OYSIPA), Hon. Olatilewa Folami; and the Chairman of the Oyo State Library Board, Hon. Yemi Taiwo.

    Other awardees are Hon. Ademola Ojo, Commissioner for Local Governments; Hon. Elias Adeojo, Chairman, Oyo State Water Corporation; Hon. Engr. Nureni Adisa, Chairman, Wemabod Limited; Mr. Yusuf Adeojo, MD, Kolomoni Microfinance Bank; Prince Bayo Olaniyan, Chief of Staff to the Oyo State Speaker; Engr. Salaudeen Abiola, Senior Manager, TCN Ayede, Ibadan; Engr. Abu J. Idakwo, MD, Linear Engineering; as well as entrepreneurs, professionals, and community leaders

    The award ceremony, held at Waterfield Luxury Hotel, Ibadan, attracted dignitaries from across Oyo State and beyond.

    Read Also: Blue economy key to Nigeria’s growth, potential, says Adeyeye

    Managing Director of Binatech, Engr. Abiodun Adeola, traced the company’s journey from inception, acknowledging the support of stakeholders, staff, and family members. 

    He described the event as a historic moment to appreciate individuals who have stood by the company.

    He said: “Today is historic in that it is a day to show appreciation and thank Almighty God for taking us this far. I cannot forget how we started when the journey was rough, but with the support of people around me, and especially my wife, we have been able to reach this milestone.”

    Speaking after receiving his award, Hon. Yemi Taiwo commended Governor Seyi Makinde for creating an enabling environment that has encouraged private sector participation in infrastructure development. 

    He noted that Oyo State is now witnessing rapid growth in housing and property development comparable to Lagos State, adding that Binatech has distinguished itself through quality service delivery.

    Binatech Group is a conglomerate with interests in civil and mechanical engineering, properties and resorts, and a foundation established to give back to society.

  • “Establishment of Drug-Free Clubs in Nigerian Secondary Schools: Dr. Tolulope Olagoke Kolawole’s Blueprint for a Healthier Future”

    “Establishment of Drug-Free Clubs in Nigerian Secondary Schools: Dr. Tolulope Olagoke Kolawole’s Blueprint for a Healthier Future”

    By Abiola Adeniyi

    In the bustling classrooms of secondary schools in Nigeria, where the chatter of teenagers often masks a storm of unseen struggles, a troubling trend has taken root. Psychoactive substances from marijuana to prescription opioids are weaving their way into adolescent lives, reshaping futures long before they have even begun. A recent study published in the South African Journal of Psychiatry by Dr. Tolulope Olagoke Kolawole reveals that 13.9 percent of surveyed secondary school students in Lagos, Nigeria have tried addictive substances. But perhaps the most alarming statistic is this: almost 40 percent of respondents could not name a single long-term complication of substance use. For Dr. Kolawole, a Nigerian public health scholar and advocate, this gap in knowledge is more than a data point. It is a ticking time bomb. “We cannot continue with one-off campaigns or awareness talks that are easily forgotten the moment the microphone is switched off,” he insists. Instead, he has charted out an intensive, community-rooted, youth-led and expert-supported solution: The Establishment of Drug-Free Clubs in every Nigerian secondary school.

    This is not a perfunctory extracurricular activity. In Kolawole’s vision, these clubs would become mini-institutions of resilience within the schools: student-led but rigorously supervised, powered by peer mentorship, professional counselling, and expert lectures from doctors, pharmacists, and behavioral scientists. Unlike the sporadic sensitization programs that barely scratch the surface, Drug-Free Clubs, he argues, would provide continuity, structure, and ownership, arming students with not just knowledge but also practical coping strategies in the face of peer pressure. The premise is simple but revolutionary: use the same peer influence that drives adolescents toward risky behaviors to instead drive them toward healthier, drug-free lifestyles.

    One of the most potent drivers of adolescent drug use is peer influence. In the corridors of secondary schools, choices are often dictated less by parental wisdom and more by the nod of a friend or the taunt of a classmate. Dr. Kolawole believes that this same force, often harnessed for destruction, can be redirected towards resilience. “Peer groups are not inherently negative,” he explains. “They are powerful engines of influence. The challenge is what direction they are steered.” Drug-Free Clubs, as he envisions them, would transform peer groups into safe havens of accountability, where students learn to shape one another’s choices positively. The model borrows from successful youth-led initiatives around the world, from the “peer educator” movement in HIV prevention campaigns in East Africa to student-driven anti-bullying clubs in the United States. The difference is that Kolawole’s proposal goes further, embedding counselling, mentorship, and consistent expert-led training directly into the fabric of school life.

    Each club he proposes would operate like a living curriculum. Weekly meetings would become spaces for frank conversations, brainstorming outreach projects, and staging creative interventions: debates, plays, essay competitions, even short films all designed by students, for students. The result would not just be awareness, but a culture of prevention that grows stronger with each graduating class. But these clubs would not be left to teenage enthusiasm alone. At the helm, each group would have a faculty advisor, a teacher trained specifically in substance use prevention and intervention. This teacher would not be a passive overseer, but an active mentor ensuring the accuracy of information, the safety of discussions, and the integration of evidence-based strategies.

    To deepen the knowledge base, Kolawole proposes that schools regularly bring in external experts: doctors, pharmacists, addiction researchers, and behavioral scientists who can unpack complex topics in age-appropriate language. These experts, often drawn from nearby teaching hospitals, state ministries of health, and international NGOs, would expose students to a wide spectrum of issues: from the neurobiology of addiction to the legal and social costs of drug abuse. Such continuity and seriousness of approach would, in Kolawole’s words, “bridge the gulf between what our students know and what they desperately need to understand.”

    If the Drug-Free Clubs are the visible face of Dr. Kolawole’s proposal, then counselling is its backbone. Beneath the debates, performances, and awareness drives lies an often-silenced reality: many teenagers experimenting with drugs are already battling dependency, shame, or peer pressure they cannot speak about openly. Kolawole insists that every club must offer private, evidence-based counselling sessions delivered weekly by trained psychologists specializing in adolescent mental health and substance use. These sessions would be strictly confidential, providing a safe refuge for students to express fears, ask questions, and seek help without the looming threat of punishment or exposure.

    In a society where substance use is often treated as a moral failing rather than a health issue, the emphasis on discretion is groundbreaking. “We must end the culture of shame and silence,” Kolawole says. “If a student cannot trust the system, they will retreat further into the cycle of use. Confidential counselling is not optional; it is essential.” The counselling sessions, he proposes, would be rooted in globally recognized therapeutic methods such as Motivational Interviewing and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), strategies proven to help young people resist relapse, manage cravings, and reframe harmful thinking patterns. But the clubs would not stop at therapy alone. When students require more intensive support, counsellors would act as gateways to treatment, linking them with specialized drug rehabilitation centers, mental health clinics, or teaching hospitals. For Kolawole, this referral system ensures that schools do not simply identify problems, they actively connect students with the care they need. At the policy level, he recommends that state ministries of health assign dedicated psychologists to clusters of schools, ensuring that each club has consistent professional oversight. Such a system, he argues, would take counselling from being a sporadic luxury to an institutionalized part of the education sector.

    “The Drug-Free Club is not just an extracurricular activity,” Kolawole emphasizes. “It is a frontline defense against addiction, depression, and wasted potential.” For Dr. Kolawole, the success of Drug-Free Clubs lies not in sterile lectures, but in vibrant, student-driven creativity. “Adolescents are natural innovators,” he observes. “Give them ownership, and they will take prevention beyond the classroom walls.” In practice, this means that Drug-Free Clubs would double as laboratories of expression. Students could stage dramas dramatizing the descent into addiction, host debates on the social cost of substance abuse, or produce school-wide newsletters and podcasts featuring survivor stories. Inter-school quiz competitions would test knowledge on drug use and its dangers, while essay contests would reward thoughtful reflection on the future of a drug-free Nigeria. Even more ambitious are the outreach campaigns. Kolawole envisions students stepping beyond their gates, leading community health talks, peer mentoring drives, and media advocacy projects that challenge the myths glamorizing drugs in popular culture. In this way, schools would become not just centers of prevention but incubators of youth leadership, where young Nigerians learn that advocacy is as powerful a weapon as resistance.

    But vision alone is not enough. Kolawole is pragmatic: sustaining such clubs requires robust alliances with national, international, and community-based organizations. He calls on heavyweight partners like the World Health Organization (WHO) and the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) to provide technical expertise, evidence-based materials, and global best practices. At the national level, agencies such as the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) and the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) would play pivotal roles, offering guest lectures, supplying resources on emerging drug threats, and embedding prevention within Nigeria’s broader anti-drug framework. Meanwhile, the Federal and State Ministries of Health and Education would ensure that clubs are formally recognized, integrated into school programs, and monitored for effectiveness. Perhaps most critical are local NGOs and community organizations, who bring grassroots credibility and a direct line to the realities students face outside school walls. By weaving these partnerships together, Kolawole argues, Drug-Free Clubs would avoid the fate of many well-intentioned school initiatives that fade with donor fatigue or policy neglect.

    There is precedent for such collaborations. Iceland, for example, dramatically reduced adolescent drug use through a coordinated system of curfews, parental engagement, and after-school programs, all supported by government and community stakeholders. Nigeria, Kolawole insists, can craft its own version, rooted in its cultural and educational realities. “We do not need to copy and paste solutions,” he stresses. “We need to adapt them, ensuring that Nigerian youths are not only the beneficiaries but also the drivers of change.”

     Grand visions rise or fall on the strength of accountability. Dr. Kolawole is keenly aware that without measurable results, Drug-Free Clubs could risk becoming just another well-meaning idea lost in Nigeria’s crowded education landscape. His solution: rigorous monitoring and evaluation systems embedded into every school program. Each club, he argues, should set clear annual objectives. Metrics might include the number of active members and their retention rates, the frequency and quality of outreach events, and most critical changes in students’ knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors toward substance use. These indicators, collected through regular surveys and reports, would allow educators and policymakers to track progress, identify best practices, and replicate success across the nation. This data-driven approach, rare in Nigerian school interventions, is meant to reassure skeptics that Drug-Free Clubs are more than feel-good experiments. They are evidence-based models of prevention, tested and fine-tuned for maximum impact.

    Yet Kolawole also understands the psychology of teenagers: recognition is often as powerful a motivator as information. To that end, he proposes a system of awards and competitions to celebrate excellence among clubs and their student leaders. At the school level, outstanding members could be recognized with certificates, trophies, or leadership badges. At the state and national level, annual contests from essay competitions to innovation challenges would spotlight the most creative and impactful projects. Winners might receive scholarships, mentorship opportunities, or even media coverage showcasing their achievements. By embedding a culture of recognition, Kolawole believes, schools can transform drug prevention from a burdensome message into a badge of pride, inspiring students not only to stay drug-free but to lead the fight against substance abuse with enthusiasm and creativity.

    When combined, measurable goals, structured evaluation, and meaningful incentives; Drug-Free Clubs become more than extracurricular activities. They become sustainable ecosystems, capable of surviving political shifts, funding droughts, or changes in school leadership. In Kolawole’s words, they would “grow roots deep enough that they can withstand the storms of bureaucracy and neglect.” At its heart, Dr. Kolawole’s proposal is about far more than keeping teenagers away from psychoactive substances. It is about shaping the next generation of Nigerians into healthier, more resilient, and more productive citizens. The ripple effects, he argues, would be profound.

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    For the individual student, membership in a Drug-Free Club would not just mean awareness of substance risks. It would mean practical life skills: leadership, teamwork, public speaking, problem-solving, and resilience in the face of peer pressure. These are assets that extend beyond adolescence, preparing young Nigerians for higher education, employment, and civic engagement. For families, the benefits would be equally tangible. Fewer children caught in cycles of drug dependency means fewer households devastated by fractured relationships, financial burdens of treatment, or the heartbreak of seeing a promising child derailed. Parents who once feared what might happen outside the school gates could find reassurance in a system that actively supports their children’s choices. At the societal level, the dividends multiply. Lower rates of adolescent substance use translate into reduced healthcare costs, lessened demand on already strained mental health facilities, and a future workforce that is healthier, more reliable, and more innovative. Crime rates, often intertwined with substance use, could fall. Community cohesion could strengthen. National productivity could rise.

    “It is not just about keeping drugs out of schools,” Kolawole reflects. “It is about rewriting the trajectory of our nation. A drug-free generation is a foundation for a stronger Nigeria.” His argument is not only moral but economic. Studies across the world have shown that prevention is vastly cheaper than rehabilitation. For every naira spent on school-based drug prevention, societies save multiples in healthcare, criminal justice, and lost productivity. In Nigeria, where public health budgets are already stretched thin, this cost-effectiveness could make Drug-Free Clubs one of the most strategically important investments in the nation’s future. Still, Kolawole is careful to emphasize that this cannot be the work of schools alone. Teachers, health professionals, law enforcement, parents, NGOs, and international partners all have roles to play. “Prevention is not the task of one sector,” he notes. “It is the responsibility of a society that refuses to sacrifice its youth to addiction.”

    In the end, what Dr. Tolulope Olagoke Kolawole offers is not simply a proposal for secondary schools, it is a blueprint for national renewal. His study in the South African Journal of Psychiatry provided the data: 13.9 percent of students in Lagos have experimented with substances, nearly 7 percent are current users, and close to 40 percent cannot name a single long-term consequence of drug use. But data, as Kolawole knows, is powerless without action. The establishment of Drug-Free Clubs across Nigeria’s secondary schools is, in his telling, not a luxury but a necessity. The clubs would fuse youth-led enthusiasm with adult-guided expertise, combining the vibrancy of peer influence with the authority of science. They would normalize conversations once buried under stigma, offering teenagers safe spaces, confidential counselling, and a steady stream of mentorship. They would give schools the tools to measure progress and reward excellence. And above all, they would prepare a generation to face the temptations and pressures of adulthood armed with resilience and knowledge.

    Kolawole’s words carry both urgency and hope: “If we are serious about a drug-free Nigeria, then the time to act is now. Every year we delay, more young lives slip through the cracks, and the price grows heavier. But if we invest today in prevention, tomorrow’s Nigeria will reap the rewards: healthier, stronger, and more united.” Viewed from the broader context of Nigeria’s development struggles, Kolawole’s advocacy is more than an academic exercise. It is a challenge to policymakers, a plea to parents, and a roadmap for communities. It calls for courage to admit that traditional awareness campaigns have failed, to shift resources from punitive enforcement to preventive care, and to treat adolescents not as passive recipients of lectures but as active agents of change.

    Around the world, nations that have dared to innovate in prevention have seen dramatic results. Nigeria now stands at a similar crossroads. The choice is stark: ignore the warning signs and risk a generation scarred by addiction or seize the opportunity to build a network of Drug-Free Clubs that could stand as a model for the continent. The stakes are high. As Nigeria battles with economic uncertainty, security challenges, and demographic pressures, its youth remain its greatest asset but also its greatest vulnerability. Protecting them from the scourge of drugs is not merely a health initiative; it is an investment in national survival and prosperity.

    In Dr. Kolawole’s proposal there lies a rare combination of clarity, practicality, and vision. What remains is the political will, societal buy-in, and sustained commitment to make it a reality. The question is no longer whether Nigeria can afford to establish Drug-Free Clubs in its schools. The question, as Kolawole frames it, is whether the nation can afford not to. The time to act is NOW!

    (Reference: Kolawole TO, Ogunyemi AO, Lucas AR. Prevalence of substance use and knowledge of its effects among secondary school students in Lagos, Nigeria. S Afr J Psychiat. 2025;31(0), a2370. https://doi.org/10.4102/sajpsychiatry. v31i0.2370)

  • Ekiti 2026: Oyebanji cautions aides against fraternising with opponents, threatens sanctions

    Ekiti 2026: Oyebanji cautions aides against fraternising with opponents, threatens sanctions

    Ekiti State Governor, Mr Biodun Oyebanji, has issued a stern warning to his cabinet members and other aides, directing them to avoid any secret meetings with his opponents in the 2026 gubernatorial election. 

    The governor stated that anyone caught collaborating with his opponents would be removed from office, saying he would not tolerate any form of disloyalty or sabotage.

    Governor Oyebanji gave the warning on Thursday when the Ekiti State University, Ado-Ekiti (EKSU) Alumni Solidarity Group for BAO, presented the All Progressives Congress nomination form purchased for him.

    Oyebanji also criticized Kayode Ojo, a gubernatorial aspirant, describing him as a “desperado” who hasn’t contributed to the party’s growth or Ekiti’s development.

    The governor accused Ojo of trying to disrupt the existing state’s harmony for personal gain and warned APC ward chairmen and members not to receive him in their vicinities.

     “They have been giving money to some people to collect form so that after their defeat, they will go to Court but God who did it then, would do it again.

    “The people following the person (Kayode Ojo) are not APC members, he has not contributed anything to the development of the party, he has never added to the welfare of the party.

    “Can you work in Glo and take salary in MTN? I’m still waiting to see any party members, chairman, to open his door to these people. I’m still waiting.

    “I want to see the local government chairman and ward chairman that will open their door for such a person. I’m waiting.

    “Those of you that are on the platform and collecting money from the government but still supporting oppositions because of the money you are collecting from them, we are coming for you. We are not tolerating any nonsense again in this party, it is what you do you will eat from, no more sentiments.

    Read Also: Why I was sacked, by Oyebanji’s ex-Ekiti agency boss

    “These desperados are not interested in Government, they are not interested in you, they are only interested in their pockets. If they are popular, they should go to another party and contest. I live in peace but I’m not going to allow anyone to take this platform for granted”, he added. 

    The Director General of EKSU Alumni Solidarity Group for BAO, Mr Dipo Bamisaye, described the event as a fulfilment of the vision of the creation of the Alma Mater.

    He attributed the decision of the alumni to purchase the form for the Governor as a result of his giant strides in his political performances which transcend across education, health, agriculture, infrastructure, among others.

    Bamisaye stressed that his vision has enhanced the healthcare, making his commitment to the development of the state to stand out among others, adding that he has rewritten the script of leadership with empathy and sympathy for the advancement of Ekiti.

  • 22 shops, others gone in Kwara market fire

    22 shops, others gone in Kwara market fire

    An early morning fire yesterday gutted the popular Kara Market in Ajase-Ipo, Irepodun Local Government Area of Kwara State.

    The inferno consumed 22 plank shops and six containers.

    The incident was said to have emanated from an improperly extinguished fire used for cooking.

    Spokesperson of the state Fire Service, Hassan Adekunle, who confirmed the incident, said the incident happened about 1:35 am.

    “On arrival at the scene, firefighters discovered that out of a total of 323 shops in the market, comprising 22 plank shops and seven kiosks, the fire affected 22 plank shops and six container shops.

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    “Preliminary investigation revealed that the incident was caused by negligence, as one of the occupants of the plank shops failed to properly extinguish fire used for cooking.

    “The fire later reignited, spreading rapidly to nearby shops.

    “The timely intervention by the state firemen helped prevent further escalation and safeguarded hundreds of other shops and properties from destruction.”

    He urged the public to ensure proper handling of fire and to take safety measures seriously, especially in marketplaces where combustible materials are in abundance.

  • Training for Oyo State residents

    Training for Oyo State residents

    Seyi Adisa Development Initiative (SADI), in collaboration with Oguntoyinbo Foundation, has launched vocational skill training – tailoring, nail technology and website design, among others, to shape creative and digital economy in Awe, Afijio Local Government of Oyo State.

    The programme was attended by over a hundred trainees, community stakeholders, alumni and instructors.

    As part of the launch, three outstanding alumni from 2024 cohort were empowered to deepen their journey into entrepreneurship, with each receiving start-up support equipment.

    Programme Manager, Miss Adelayo Adeyemo, reiterated the pseudo-internship structure for vocational skill acquisition at SADI, to ensure sustainability.

    Read Also: Edun: Fed Govt attracting foreign investments

    She urged graduates to remain in contact with their instructors, show progress on the online community platforms and contribute value by working on real-life projects, such as making bags for clients or family, doing wigs, cakes for clients at home and abroad, or continuing to build websites for small businesses.

    The new participants were introduced to the monitoring and evaluation plan, where their training is tracked.

    Equipment and facilities are made available at SADI Vocational Skill Centre for those who do not yet own tools, ensuring no one is left behind due to financial limitations.

    The new alumni thanked the foundation and SADI Nigeria for choosing them as examples of transformation, promising to make use of the opportunity and their skills.

  • Oyo fixes Ladoja’s coronation as 44th Olubadan for Sept 26

    Oyo fixes Ladoja’s coronation as 44th Olubadan for Sept 26

    Oyo State Governor Seyi Makinde yesterday approved the nomination of Oba Rashidi Ladoja as the 44th Olubadan of Ibadanland.

    The approval follows the nomination of the former governor by the members of the Olubadan-in-Council.

    The governor has fixed September 26th for the coronation, a day after Ladoja’s 81st birthday.

    The conclusion was reached at a meeting held during Governor Makinde’s visit to Oba Ladoja at his Ondo Street, Bodija, Ibadan, home.

    The visit was Makinde’s first since the return of the former governor to the state, having been away before the death of Oba Owolabi Olakulehin.

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    The development is coming as a confirmation of the words of Oba Ladoja, who had told his guests on Monday that with his return to the state, he would meet relevant stakeholders to get a date for the coronation.

    Addressing the family members, associates and residents, Oba Ladoja had said he would also meet relevant stakeholders, including the governor, traditionalists: Oluwo and Araba, to facilitate his installation process, which, according to him, is coincidental.

    The Nation reports that Oba Ladoja, who was born in 1944, will be enthroned as the 44th Olubadan on September 26, a day after his 81st birthday.

    At the meeting, a former President General of Central Council of Ibadan Indigenes (CCII), Chief Bayo Oyero, was picked to chair the Coronation Committee.

    Names of other members were yet to be made public at press time.

    The Nation, however, gathered that there are indications that the coronation may not hold at the historic Mapo Hall, Ibadan, due to the many guests and individuals  expected to show up at the event.

    A source said some individuals are likely to push for the use of either Lekan Salami Sports Complex, Adamasingba, Ibadan or Obafemi Awolowo Stadium (formerly Liberty Stadium), Liberty Road, Oke Ado, Ibadan.

    But, it remains uncertain if the move will see the light of the day or be pushed forward by the members of the Coronation Committee.

  • Why I was sacked, by Oyebanji’s ex-Ekiti agency boss

    Why I was sacked, by Oyebanji’s ex-Ekiti agency boss

    The former Chairman, Ekiti State Microcredit and Enterprise Development Agency, Akogun Abayomi Olumide, who was recently sacked by Governor Biodun Oyebanji, has alleged that he was removed for supporting a governorship aspirant, Kayode Ojo, ahead of the 2026 Ekiti State governorship election.

    Last Saturday, Governor Oyebanji announced Olumide’s sack as the chairman of the agency “for gross misconduct and dereliction of duty.”

    But Olumide in a statement yesterday in Lagos said his removal was politically-motivated and hinged it on “refusal to align with Oyebanji” for the 2026 election.

    He urged Ekiti residents to ignore the claims of the governor that he was sacked over corruption, saying he remained committed to his political conviction.

    He added that Ojo’s candidacy represents hope for Ekiti people.

    Olumide further spoke on the corruption allegation against him: “The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) said the agency should recover funds amounting to N1.6 billion. But along the line, we met bottlenecks. Politicians were interfering, saying the money was not disbursed by us. Because of these obstacles, we decided to stop and recommended that those who issued the money should be responsible for the recovery.

    “So, in view of that, we continued with our own mandate. Later, we read in the newspapers that the state government released N500 million to a microfinance company that had just opened in Ekiti. We wanted to understand the modus operandi and how they intended to disburse the funds.

    “We discovered it was meant to be a counterpart arrangement. But the Lagos microfinance company’s contribution was not forthcoming. Our board even held a virtual meeting with them, but they told us the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signed with the state did not include our agency.

    “That means we were completely sidelined. People outside were asking me, as the chairman of Ekiti microfinance agency, about the disbursement. I told them we had no hand in it. That was the beginning of the loggerheads.

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    “At that point, I even considered resigning, but board members persuaded me to be patient. We wanted to see the governor and report the situation, but there was no access.

    “So, I concluded there were shady dealings within the agency which were not known to me as chairman. The public was not benefiting from the disbursement. That’s why I stopped going to office and made my intention to resign clear. I even prepared my resignation letter.

    “However, on Saturday night, I heard on the radio that I had been relieved of my position for “gross misconduct and dereliction of duty.” They asked me to hand over property in my care. But I had no office property, I didn’t sign cheques, I didn’t disburse money, and no funds were allocated to the agency. So, I don’t know what I was supposed to surrender, my personal vehicle, my house, or my wife’s car?

    “I believe politics is a matter of choice, not force. As a citizen, I have the right to support anyone I choose. But because I supported Kayode Ojo, I was victimised.

    “I am supporting Kayode Ojo because I no longer have confidence in Oyebanji’s leadership. Kayode Ojo is a man of impeccable character, who has managed businesses and created jobs for many people.”