Category: Southwest

  • Adedibu: In the  mould of Adelakun?

    Adedibu: In the mould of Adelakun?

    Like a lion, Chief Lamidi Adedibu roared till death in the Oyo State, Southwest and the Nigerian political climate. A member of the Alhaji Busari Oloyede Adelakun political family, Adedibu, had a firm grip on players of the game in his own time, reflecting the dominion of his political leader, Adelakun.

    Adelakun, affectionately called Eruobodo or fearless by political supporters, friends and foes alike, hailed from Ejioku, a less city in Ibadan.

    He was a formidable politician whose support was almost enough to win elections, at least in Ibadan in the Second Republic. He was a strong pillar of support for Second Republic governor of old Oyo State, late Chief Bola Ige in their days together in the defunct Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN).He served in the government of Ige as a commissioner, before political differences in the run up to the 1983 general elections led to his defection to the opposition National Party of Nigeria (NPN). He remained a political juggernaut even in NPN where his influence helped the party to topple Bola Ige and UPN in the 1983 gubernatorial election.

    Adelakun left the legacy of deep, victorious political practice to Adedibu who hailed from the main city Ibadan. His grip of politics in the old Oyo State, particularly Ibadan, in the Second Republic was unique.

    Just like Adedibu, his competence and leadership acumen traversed the entire state at the period. His opposition to the then Governor Bola Ige, following their dispute, revealed his political strength across the state.

    Adelakun’s movement to the then opposition party in the state, the National Party of Nigeria (NPN), largely led to the victory of the party over Bola Ige’s Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN). Mathematician Dr Omololu Olunloyo emerged the successor to Bola Ige.

    His political exploits earned him the alias: “Eruobodo” (River fears no one -a description of Adelakun as a valiant man).

    Reflecting on Eruobodo, the current Baale of Ejioku, Chief Yekini Adelakun, described him as a great, courageous and valiant politician. The Baale is the immediate younger brother of Eruobodo.

    The 70-year- old Baale recalled that Eruobodo used his political influence to bring development to the Ejioku community.

    According to him, Eruobodo was a peaceful man who was loved by, particularly every member of the Ejioku community.

    He said: “When he was alive, this town was lively and progressed. It witnessed development – he helped in getting employment for indigenes in the civil service, helped in bringing electricity, uninterrupted power supply, to the town and also provided pipe-borne water. He also established the Ejioku Community High School and a technical college. But since his demise, the technical college and other projects were abandoned. I had to covert the technical college to St Anthony Primary School II when there was no hope again.”

    He identified some of his followers as Adedibu, Dr Busari Adebisi, Chief Ayo Eniade, Supo Akinwale and Elder Wole Oyelese.

    One of his political sons, Chief Ahmed Oladosu, also reflected on Adelakun’s activities and praised his exploits.

    According to him, Adelakun had a dispute with Chief Obafemi Awolowo and Chief Bola Ige which led to his removal as the Commissioner for Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs. He was later made the Commissioner for Health. But he resigned after a while to join the NPN.

    He said Adelakun was feared as a tough politician due to the controversial death of his two successors in the two ministries he headed. While his successor in the Ministry of Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs was beheaded by his own brother, his successor in Health Ministry where he resigned suffered stroke.

    According to Oladosu, people believed that Adelakun’s vowed that no one would be able to occupy any seat he vacated in anger, and that made them to believe that he was behind the death of the two commissioners.

    A major difference between Adelakun and Adedibu’s style, according to Oladosu, is that while the latter sat at home to control how elections went on elections days, the former used to visit polling centres with his lieutenants on the election day. He added that Adelakun used to monitor election in the domain of the opposition, pointing out that with his presence, voting often went in favour of his party and candidate.

    However, not a few would be quick to point at the violence that rocked old Oyo State in the run up to the 1983 polls and the role played by Adelakun and his group which had Adedibu as a prominent player. The series of violence that also erupted in the state when Adedibu held sway as the undisputed leader , some would argue were indicative of the kind of politics the two played in their time.

    The names of the two politicians, no doubt, would continue to occupy a huge space in the annals of Oyo State and Southwest at large.

    In Adelakun’s epitaph was inscribed: “A philanthropist, businessman, politician, Bada Balogun of Ibadanland, Basorun Musunlumi of Oyo State, Defender of the rights of the masses. (Eruobodo).

     

  • Day of pains, agony as  ritualists storm Ekiti hospital

    Day of pains, agony as ritualists storm Ekiti hospital

    The storming of a Basic Health Centre in Ado-Ekiti by supposed ritualists who demanded
    day-old babies last week has raised fresh issues about the limits of criminality among the underclass, writes Sulaiman Salawudeen

    A five-man masked gang in the early hours of Friday last week, besieged a basic health centre in Irona Quartres of Ado-Ekiti the Ekiti State capital, demanding day-old babies.

    They forced their way into the hospital through burglar-free windows and ransacked every room in just 15 minutes, to ascertain the presence or absence of a new born baby.

    Finding none eventually, they visited their anger on the medical officers and other officers on duty that early morning.

    Opening a litany of lacks in the clinic which might have aided the attack, some of the victims who recounted their ordeals disclosed it was not the first time hoodlums would be preying on the hospital, but, according to them, it was the first time they demanded day-old babies rather than the usual money or handsets.

    Said one of the victims who spoke under anonymity: “When they came that night, we thought they had come to collect money again as they did about two or three times previously.

    “They always gained entry through the windows because they (the windows) have no iron barricades.

    “But, it was strange to discover that their interest was totally different that day. I must confess that my head immediately swelled. What is this new dimension of attack, I wondered within me. They (the criminals) kept asking ‘where is the baby delivered yesterday, where is the child delivered yesterday’.

    “In fear, we told them that all the babies delivered in the last one week had been discharged with their mothers. Angered by this statement, they started beating us.We kept pleading and they continued beating us until they were satisfied and left.”

    She spoke further: “Many of us sustained injuries including me as you can see. We have been in our various houses since then. Some injuries were so serious that the victims had to be referred to the state hospital. I have not gone to the office since that day as I am still in shock over the encounter.”

    On whether anyone of the attackers could be identified, another victim said they could not as all were in mask throughout.

    She said: “Even if they were not masked, would anyone attempt to look into the faces of such hoodlums who smelt of liquor and brandished all manner of dangerous weapons in the dead of the night? We complied with their directives throughout.”

    During his visit to the centre, Chairman, Ado Ekiti Local Government Area, owners of the health centre, Hon Tope Olanipekun, expressed shock at a development he described as “the height of callousness.”

    Olanipekun said: “The incident actually happened and we are taking steps to forestall further occurrence. We are now planning to fence all the health centres and beef up security”.

    He added: “I have also instructed that night duties be suspended for now pending the time adequate security measures would be put in place.

    “We have also advised that all expectant mothers in labour should be referred to Okeyinmi Health Centre”, Olanipekun said.

    But, what could have caused or aided these attacks? Yet, another victim spoke about the general condition of the hospital which she said would continue to bait criminals if left unattended to.

    Her words: “You know this is a community where all sorts of elements reside. Irona itself is notorious as the habitation of those I consider dangerous.

    “But this place is not again far from Atikankan where hoodlums still gather till today despite the cleaning and renewal programme by the state government, to smoke hemp and drink liquor. Go there any time of the day, especially in the night, you will see them.

    “Aside that, just opposite the clinic is an uncompleted building which is overgrown with weeds and which is serving the community as an unofficial dump site. The smell from and condition of that place has remained a longstanding threat to our general health at the clinic.

    “Even criminals can use the building as a rook or a hide away. Perhaps those criminals had been lurking there since early evening of that Thursday before storming around 12:30, early Friday morning.

    “I should also add that the clinic itself has no burglar proofs on any of the windows, and to allow fresh air for mothers just out of labour and their newborns, you cannot always lock the windows. Without a burglar proof, the robbers or anyone who nurses any bad intention would come in freely. They only need to shake the sliding windows and they (windows) will come out. The last time they came like that, they made away with N85,000.

    “You yourself can look at the windows and see if it does not attract attack. Whoever nurses bad intention has an attraction in the lax security system of the environment. But, if there are burglar proofs, whoever wants to attack would find some level of difficulties before gaining access.”, she said.

    But, again, according to another worker in the hospital who was not fated to be on duty that Thursday, ”This clinic does not have water. Those who come here to deliver babies bring their own water in 25 litre containers. So if government wants to help us, it should consider the issue of water”, she said.

    She explained that electricity supply especially in the evenings was one of the challenges they faced, adding that once the public source goes off, the clinic’s lack is immediately exposed. But we take delivery of new babies here and also take care of patients. We need to have better facilities”, she concluded.

    The renovation of the hospital has however begun, according to findings by The Nation. As at last Tuesday, cement blocks have been brought in and few renovation efforts noticed here and there regarding the planned raising of the perimetre fencing of the centre.

    Dr. Fashina Ademola, the Medical Officer, Ado Ekiti Local Government Area , who noted that the renovation of the centre would be “general and total”, added “the renovation would include raising the perimetre fence, securing the windows with burglar proofs, mounting a new gate for the hospital and other general renovation which would secure the place better.”

    Said Fashina: “The renovation has started based on the recommendation I proposed, including raising the fence, adding burglar proofs to the windows, getting day and night guards and renovating the deserted uncompleted building opposite the centre for temporary occupation by our workers.

    “You will notice that place (the uncompleted building) is already serving as a dump site for the residents. We will also renovate and occupy it temporarily. We expect the owners to come when we do that. For years, it has been like that, not renovated, not occupied or used in any way”, Fashina said.

    On whether the incident has been reported to the police, Dr. Fashina said: “I remember that Friday, the caretaker chairman of Ado Ekiti Local Government Area directed me to write a report which I did immediately. I am sure not sure however if same has been done with the police.”

    Meanwhile, more concerns have been raised in respect of a development which seems unprecedented according to the findings. So far, based on reports and opinions of the people, the incident at the Basic Health Centre, opens a fresh chapter in criminality.

    According to Mr. Seun Kolade, a resident of the area, the state government and the police would have to mount serious surveillance of all health institutions in the state to forestall future occurrences.

    According to him, the incident was a reflection of the general security situation and the new dimensions which insecurity could go anytime.

    Said he:”We cannot be entirely taken aback by that incident. It is a reflection of the depravity which has overtaken us all in the rush for worldly wealth.

    “But our governments and security agencies in Ekiti State and across the country must use this as an excuse to overhaul security situation of all our health institutions from the primary to secondary and tertiary.

    “If you notice, no health institution in this state, like it is in others, has a standing police station. If government cannot afford to give them substantive police stations, more police officers should be deployed around locations where we have hospitals.

    “No one would imagine losing his or her new born to ritualists in any way, not to talk of being forcibly taken away by ritualists. The police must see the development as a challenge”, Kolade said.

  • Osemawe deposes monarch over petition

    Osemawe deposes monarch over petition

    The Osemawe of Ondo Kingdom, Oba  Victor Kiladejo, has ordered the removal of the traditional ruler of Laosho, one of the communities in his domain, Chief Kola Fadoju, following allegations of high handedness levelled against him by his people.

    The Laosho community in Ondo West Local Government Area of Ondo State has been at daggers drawn with Fadoju for some time. There is tension among members of the community.

    The deposition order on the embattled monarch was contained in a letter dated September 10, 2013, which was signed by the Secretary to the Osemawe-in-council and Adaja of Ondo Kingdom, High Chief Solafuboye Ayodeji.

    According to the letter, the action was hinged on the earlier protest letter written by the people of Laosho community to the Osemawe-in-council requesting him to approve the deposition of the Baale. It added that there were several allegations leveled against the monarch by his subjects.

    The letter entitled: “Removal as Baale of Laosho,” reminded Chief Fadoju “of the petition written against you by members of Laosho community for your removal as Baale of the community.

    “After the receipt of the petition, Oba Kiladejo  set up a committee to look into the various allegations leveled against you, and all the allegations were found to be true.

    “Having found you liable to the allegations by the entire Laosho community, coupled with your previous wrong doings and by the power conferred on the Osemawe and paramount ruler of Ondo Kingdom, and the custodian of chieftaincy titles, traditions and customs, I regret to inform you that the Osemawe-in-council decided, at their meeting, that you should be removed as the Baale of Laosho village.

    “You are therefore removed accordingly after the report of the panel has been received. This is to ensure proper administration of justice and to prevent breakdown of law and order in the community.”

    It would be recalled that the genesis of the crisis which culminated in the community demanding the deposition of the traditional ruler began shortly after members of the community embarked on a peaceful demonstration on July 17, 2012 to the palace of Osemawe in Ondo town, calling for the removal of the  Baale over certain offences allegedly committed by Chief Fadoju which the people felt brought disgrace to the community.

    The protest was followed by a letter dated August 3, 2012  signed by various representatives of the community and addressed  to Osemawe-in-council,   which stated that their action was  predicated on the need to save the name of the community from disrepute.

    Other offences brought against the community leader include alleged connivance with one Henry Ayodeji, who is said to be the secretary of the community, to work against the residents interest of the village.

    Besides, the Baale was also accused of nepotism by allowing his wife, Sikirat Fadoju, to represent the community on many occasions. In addition, the Baale was accused of refusing to conduct traditional meetings at designated place in the community.

    When contacted, the embattled Baale confirmed the receipt of his letter of removal, but noted that since a new Baale has not been installed, he remains the head of the community.

     

  • Scenes from the countryside

    Scenes from the countryside

    EVERY visit fascinates me. The flashback to my days as a kid growing up in the town.

    We used to come here to pluck cherry mangoes. We carefully chose our timing. We would go when it rained. Then, the big men and their domestic workers would be nestling in their beds, away from the biting cold that was usually reinforced by the wind from the hills. The caged dogs would bark and bark, apparently angered at their inability to pounce on the intruders. We would climb the mango trees, big red ants tearing away at our skin to create some painful reddish wounds – the tell-tale signs of our youthful exuberance. We would endure it all to get our prize, the cherry mango with its unique honey-like taste.

    But the visit this time to Okebareke in Ado-Ekiti is not to pluck mangoes. There are no barking dogs; nobody screaming to drive away intruders and no mango trees with those alluring yellowish fruits. There are still some teak, shedding their large leaves, but the big stream, Isinla, is no more visible, having been forced to recede by forces of modernity. Gone also is the massive prison yard. It has been pulled down. From its ruins a cultural centre is set to rise.

    Between the hills overlooking the colonial District’s Officer’s office and the old prison yard sits Osuntokun Lodge, the modest bungalow that is the Government House. I have an appointment to see Dr John Kayode Fayemi, former alter boy, activist, scholar and politician whose guiding principle is integrity; integrity as a tool to rescue a society plunged into a murky well of reptiles by the very people who swore to care for her. The governor of Ekiti State has asked me to join him on a trip to Isan, his hometown for the Isan Day ceremony and another social engagement involving a professional colleague of mine.

    Besides, history is in the making in nearby Iye-Ekiti where a king is taking the staff of office.

    The four-car convoy rolls out of the Government House quietly onto the major road that leads to Iworoko. The road is a work- in- progress, lying there as a vivid testimony to the profligacy – wickedness and foolishness, many insist – of the recent past. It was abandoned after the contractor had collected more than N1billion to turn it into a four-lane broad way befitting a state capital. He returned to the job after threats from the government, which stated clearly that it was not going to be business-as-usual. Now, the work is 70 per cent done. A long stretch of it is lit at night. It is bright and colourful – and romantic – making night driving a pleasant experience.

    It is all dusty. A rock has been blasted. A long line of drainage has been dug and red earth excavated. A narrow bridge that used to be the nemesis of careless drivers has been replaced by a wide one.

    But this, as I later found out, is one of the numerous roads that have been either smoothened or rebuilt and expanded – walkways, flower beds and all that – by the Fayemi Administration. Besides, the construction sites are not limited to the state capital. In every town and village, earth moving machines are roaring.

    From one town to the other, there are buildings wearing fire – red roofs and light yellow paints that captivate the eyes. They are the newly renovated schools over which old and current students as well as residents are excited. As of the last count, 180 of such schools that suffered years of neglect had been revived; the first phase of a massive programme to make the environment conducive to learning. New paints. New furniture. New flooring. And students exposed to the use of computers. But teachers are kicking against an aptitude test with which the government would like to prove that education is not all about infrastructure, that the human element is also important.

    As we move on from the heart of Iworoko to the outskirts, one is confronted by the majesty of nature. Thick, green forests and exotic birds flapping their fluffy wings, flying across the road. On both sides of the road are forests of big trees that will surely make a timber dealer’s day. The trees stand erect on rows and rows of undulating hills. Vehicles go slowly here, rocking from one side to the other to avoid the holes dug by the road builder’s caterpillars. Besides, there are risky bends that test a driver’s patience and skill.

    In every town and village, youths storm the roadside, raising their hands and hailing: Baba o! The old ones, many of them beneficiaries of the novel Social Security scheme under which they are paid N5,000 monthly, simply wave and smile.

    There is the picture of a governor who craves no attention – no siren, no long convoy, and no motorcycle outriders as we had in those days – yet his presence is gripping, going by this open show of deep affection.

    Iye-Ekiti, home of elder statesman Ayo Fasanmi, is a small agrarian town in Ilejemeje Local Government Area. But there is no farming on this day. Residents have dropped all other things to witness history – the presentation of the staff of office to Oba Jonathan Agboola Adeleye-Oni, the Oniye, by Dr Fayemi.

    The applause that greets the governor’s arrival seems a profound expression of gratitude – for the approval of the would-be king to mount the throne and the infrastructural development of the area. Coronation Committee chair J.W. Ogunyemi speaks of “the good road from Oye through Iye to Otun and the beautification of our grammar school as well as the construction of a very standard and modern bridge of Ero along Iye/Ewu/Ayetoro road”. The crowd applauds.

    Oba Adeleye-Oni, who graduated from the Lagos State University in 2008, studied Public Administration. He was in the United States from where he was recalled for the royal office.

    Fayemi delivers a short speech, acknowledging the people’s support for his administration and promising to do more for them. As the king takes the staff, the symbol of his kingship and authority, the crowd yells: Kabiyesi o! Thus ends a long and tedious process of selecting a king.

    A few minutes away in Isan, Fayemi’s hometown, the town’s day is in full swing. Youths are dancing. Women are singing songs that highlight the culture of the town, the home of clay pots. Many of such pots depicting the rich artistic history – and industry – of the people are on display.

    Bade Gboyega, a chief and president of the Isan-Ekiti Progressive Union, delivers his address, praising the people for the peace that exists in the town and recommending dialogue to resolve all issues. The youth, he urges, should be patient. “The governor is one of you, but he alone can’t do it,” he says and lists some of the desires of the town. Tarred roads linking some neighbouring towns, a university, a farm settlement, street lamps, a skill acquisition centre and a microfinance bank.

    Fayemi reels off his administration’s achievements, thanks the people for their support and promises to do more. His audience, including the traditional ruler, Oba Sunday Owolabi Ajiboye, local government chiefs and senior government officials, seem to agree. They applaud.

    Some women hail as he speaks. They round off the speech with a song: “E ma hale mo Kayode o; e ma hale mo Kayode o. Ki lenikan teni kan o se ri, e mo hale mo Kayode o.” “Don’t brag at Kayode o. What strange thing has somebody done, that nobody has ever done. Don’t brag at Kayode o.”

    They clap and shout: “Four plus four? Eight!”

    The group of women sing the praise of the governor’s wife, Erelu Bisi Fayemi, who is decked out in a smart traditional attire of iro and buba, her dreadlocks covered with a cap of beads – the symbol of her traditional title. She is all smiles.

    A political meeting is set to begin. Off goes Fayemi and this reporter is left with Erelu and a woman visitor.

    “For how long have you had your dreadlocks?” the woman asks Mrs Fayemi. “For five years,” she replies. “They look so good and natural; well tended.” “Thank you ma.”

    “But, why did you do it? Were you tired of visiting the salon?” Mrs Fayemi smiles. “Not really. I just felt that the attempt by many women to make their hair look European is just not right. I like my natural hair.”

    The discussion moves from hair care to serious issues, such as women’s rights, poverty alleviation and governance. A woman and her child show up at the gate. She comes all the way from Ikere-Ekiti to see the Erelu for financial assistance to tackle her diabetes. “These are the things we see every time,” says Erelu, a rights activist and compassionate woman, who seems to be happy that awareness of gender issues and human rights is rising.

    But, to her, it is surprising that she is seen as the unseen hand behind every attempt to get justice for victims of abuses, such as rape and battery. “This is not true; it’s just that people are getting more interested in rights issues,” she says.

    All is quiet on the way back to Ado-Ekiti. Fayemi speaks of his dream to lighten up the road – all the way from the capital. He is obviously impressed by the beauty of the skyline and the new road as the street lamps beam from their long poles, creating a glimmering effect on the dark asphalt.

    In the morning, a short ride around the capital unveils a town in a hurry to cast off the remaining vestiges of its rustic apparel for full modernity. A group of Chinese men are sweating it out at the Civic Centre to which the old prison yard – its eerie air of morbidity and hopelessness – has finally yielded ground. Now, residents and visitors will soon come here for revelries and academic exertions – as the case may be. There is a library. A museum is there, perhaps to house the relics of the old prison yard. In the plan is a shopping arcade. A big hall that can accommodate 1000 people will be part of the centre. There will be others in which between 100 and 250 guests can sit.

    The pavilion will free the Oluyemi Kayode Stadium, which is named after the late Ado-Ekiti born frontline sprinter, from other activities, such as the Independent Day and NYSC Passing Out parades. It has a capacity for 20,000 people, sitting comfortably in covered areas.

    But the Civic Centre and the pavilion are just two of a group the Fayemi Administration has christened the Legacy Projects. Right there atop the hill that used to house the colonial District Officer (DO) will sit the new Government House, which is designed to be a beautiful edifice that will be a vivid exhibition of some architectural expertise. The builders are leaving nothing to chance in a desperate attempt to meet the December deadline. Some of the surrounding buildings are already up, seducing the eyes of passersby on the major road down below. The new structure, which will be overlooking the town from its imperial height, I am told, will be, arguably, the best of its type in the country.

    Fayemi smiles and asks the contractor: “Are we still okay for the December deadline?” “O yes; we’ll meet up,” the man replies, adding: “These are the difficult parts. Setting the blocks is easy: it’ll be fast.”

    The builder explains it all, stating how functional the rising edifice will be, why a pillar must come up here and a beam must be forged there. But the new Government House is not just another building. It is a striking parody of the state of the state. Ekiti is restless in its determination to become a fully developed modern state with a functional transportation system, good roads, huge water works, well-equipped hospitals, security and all. As a corollary of these, the state will become a seductive bride to the private sector, which will come in to set up factories. The economy will develop and there will be jobs for the youth.

  • Why poverty persists in Nigeria,by Archbishop

    The Archbishop of the Ondo  Ecclesiastical Province, Church of Nigeria (Anglican) Communion, Most. Rev. Gabriel Latunji Lasebikan, has attributed the prevailing poverty in Nigeria to the inability of the country’s leadership to effectively  harness  its abundant  human  and natural resources  for the overall   benefit of the citizens.

    Rev. Lasebikan made the observation in during his sermon at St. Stephen’s Cathedral Ondo as part of the activities marking the installation of Chief Johnson Adeduro as the Sasere of Ondo Kingdom by the Osemawe of Ondo, Oba  Victor Kiladejo.

    The cleric,  who expressed serious concern on the  state of the country’s economy and rising  trend of insecurity, criminal activities, as well as high rate of  unemployment, noted that except necessary steps were taken by  government to address the challenges, the country may  be heading towards doom.

    He identified some of the causes of the problem as insincerity, lack of patriotism, greed, selfishness, craze for material wealth and fall in societal norms and values.

    The religious leader, however, called for a change in peoples’ orientation  on wealth accumulation, stressing that government should be more interested in  improving the welfare of the less-privileged in the society by  using the resources placed at its disposal judiciously instead of diverting them into private pockets.

    He said: “Look at Nigeria and the way people steal money they do not spend. It is very sad to see that our people are made to experience poverty  in the midst of plenty.

    “Our youths have no jobs while government always says that people should go and create jobs for themselves. This, perhaps, may be the reason we now have increasing cases of kidnapping, robbery and other social vices.

    “That is our problem in Nigeria. However, I want to advise those who are lavishing the wealth of the country to have a change of attitude because failing to do so could have adverse effects on generations to come, as they may not have anything left for them to inherit.”

    Rev. Lasebikan, therefore, urged Nigerians, irrespective of social status and religious affiliations, to seek the face of God constantly and embrace right attitudes in their different homes and places of work.

    He congratulated the new Ondo Senior Chief and admonished him to use his new status for the benefit of the people and his community.

    The cleric, who cited various portions of the Bible advised High Chief Adeduro to always be conscious of his position as a leader, adding that his emergence from the list of other contestants was made possible by God.

    He advised him to avoid mistakes and pitfalls which could affect his reputation and that of the Church. He urged him to remain good ambassador of Christ and a shining light among his contemporaries.

    The ceremony was attended by eminent personalities from all walks of life including the Provost of Adeyemi College of Education (ACE), Ondo, Prof. Adeyemi Idowu  who was accompanied to the occasion  by other principal officers of the college; former Minister of Information and one-time Chairman National Sports Commission, Chief Alex Akinyele; a chieftain of Afenifere, Chief Segun Adegoke, traditional rulers and other top government officials.

     

  • Tinubu, Ajimobi, Aregbesola,others celebrate Great Lam

    Tinubu, Ajimobi, Aregbesola,others celebrate Great Lam

    Top politicians within and outside the All Progressives Congress (APC) gathered to remember former governor of Oyo State, Alhaji Lam Adesina, in Ibadan on Monday. TAYO JOHNSON reports that Great Lam was celebrated in death as much as he was in his lifetime.

     

    It was a bright and beautiful Monday. The sun shone gently out of the azure sky. It shone brightly so much so that it was able to brighten the day for everyone. Perhaps, the clement weather was in aggreement with man for a memorable remembrance of Alhaji Lam Adesina, the former governor of Oyo State and Leader of the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) in the state until his death last year.

    Great Lam, as he was fondly called by his admirers and followers, died on November 11, 2012.

    The state government and the family had made big preparation for the first-year remembrance which began with the launch of Lam Care Foundation at his Felele, Ibadan home. The state slated its own ceremony for the popular Lekan Salami Stadium, Adamasingba.

    The programme was kicked off with an Islamic prayer session at his Felele residence.

    Renowned Muslim cleric, Alhaji Muideen Bello, in his exhortation, urged guests to be God-fearing, dedicate their lives to God and service to humanity just as Adesina did. He described Lam Adesina as a God-fearing man who lived his life to serve God and humanity. He further said that Lam was a good administrator who did not indulge in fraudulent activities.

    His words: “Baba Adesina was very reliable. It was in this stadium, some years ago that I asked Baba Adedibu why he was calling Lam a bastard. He told me that it was political and that Lam was a good person.”

    The cleric praised Governor Ajimobi for transforming the state within a short period. He acknowledged his various projects that have changed the face of Ibadan and other towns in the state.

    Thousands of members of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and a few from other parties gathered at the stadium to honour the memory of the late politician. They were led by top leaders of the party from across the state.

    As early as 8:00 a.m., the APC members, clad in Ankara uniform (Aso Ebi), trickled into the stadium in groups. They sang songs in praise of Lam as they danced to the rhythm of the drums.

    Oyo State Governor, Abiola Ajimobi was at the event accompanied by his newly sworn-in commissioners. Former governor of Lagos State and a national leader of the APC, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu; accompanied by the interim National Publicity Secretary of the party, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, flew into the venue in a helicopter .

    Also present at the stadium were the interim National Chairman of All Progressives Congress (APC), Chief Bisi Akande; the Osun State Governor; Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola; a former governor of old Oyo State, Dr Omololu Olunloyo; Speaker of the Oyo State House of Assembly, Alhaja Monsurat Sunmonu and Senator Ayo Adeseun.

    Others included former Minister of Power, Elder Wole Oyelese; Gen. Oladayo Popoola; former Secretary to the State Government, Chief Michael Koleosho; Iyalode of Ibadanland, Aminat Abiodun; former Deputy Governor of the state, Alhaji Hazeem Gbolarunmi; Alhaji Lateef Oyelade and Alhaji Lamidi Ajadi.

    Describing the late Lam Adesina as his teacher, father and political leader, Governor Ajimobi said Lam meant so much to him.

    “Some people are calling themselves Lamists to the core. They do not even know that I am one of the core followers of Lam Adesina. When I was vying for this governorship seat, Asiwaju Tinubu and some other leaders of the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), took me to him and he blessed me among several candidates as the governor of this state.

    “If I have offended anybody here today, you should all forgive me. Let us all work together for the peace and progress of this state and our party,” he said.

    Ajimobi then appealed to all members of the APC and other warring factions to sheathe their sword and allow peace to reign for the progress of the party and state and to honour the memory of Lam Adesina.

    In his comment, former Secretary to the State Government, Chief Michael Koleosho who served under Lam Adesina, said: “There is no crisis between the governor and anybody in Lam Adesina’s family. Ajimobi is a wise man who does not keep malice with anybody.”

    For the Osun State governor, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola who spoke on behalf of the APC governors, the large crowd present at the stadium was an indication that the late Lam Adesina was a good administrator who always stood for the truth.

    “Baba Lam Adesina lived an exemplary lifestyle and that is the basis for celebrating him. We should always ask ourselves what will be said of us when we are no more on earth,” he stated.

    The Chief Imam of Ibadanland, Sheik Suara Haruna, also prayed for the repose of the dead, urging all to emulate Lam’s character.

    At the prayer session organised earlier at Lam’s residence, two former governors of the state, Senator Rashidi Ladoja and Otunba Adebayo Alao-Akala were present. They supported the Lam Care Foundation launched in the memory of the late politician.

    In his remarks, Ladoja described Lam Adesina as a God-fearing man who lived all his life to serve Allah. He promised a regular donation to the foundation.

    “There is need to donate to this wonderful foundation to help the needy in order to continue to honour the memory of the late Lam Adesina,” Ladoja said.

    Alao-Akala described Adesina as a great man who was selfless and who loved everyone. He also pledged a donation to the foundation.

    Earlier in his welcome address, Adesina’s first son, Dr Ayo Adesina, said the Lam Care Foundation was launched to immortalise his father.

    He said his father was a philanthropist till death, even as he pointed out that he would ensure that his selfless legacies continue to live on.

    Dr Adesina said that the foundation was established early this year and has since donated different materials to charity homes, among others.

    He urged eminent personalities at the programme to support the foundation to help the project succeed.

    Other eminent personalities at the programme included Senator. Olufemi Lanlehin, the Aare Musulumi of Ibadanland, Abdul-Azeez Arisekola Alao, Engineer Femi Babalola and Chairman, Odu’a Investments Limited, Barrister  Sharafadeen Ali.

     

  • ASUU strike beyond welfare package, says JABU VC

    ASUU strike beyond welfare package, says JABU VC

    ASUU has been on strike for about five months now, what is your impression about the development?

    The ASUU strike comes up because the government pays a lip service to proper funding of education generally. Until we get to the point of having 26 per cent commitment ratio, which is UNESCO’s minimum recommended allocation to education, we would be getting nowhere; I believe private universities can also get some crumbs from the table.

    ASUU’s grouse is not for salaries, but about the survival of the university system; how do we get equipment for the classrooms? How do we get laboratories properly equipped? As we speak, in some universities, lecturers are subsidizing teaching.

    In the classrooms lecturers still buy stationeries from their own pockets to serve their own students because the authority will not allow you to dish out handouts for students and you cannot run some of these classes without some form of stationeries, So, the lecturers use their own funds to do such things. Therefore, even if the salaries are a bit respectable, what goes home at the end of the day is still small.

    You don’t want to go to a classroom and you are using straw as pipette in your laboratories or you are using stove to heat when it is even dangerous to use kerosene or gas stove in the laboratory environment. What is prescribed for safety is the gas cylinder and you are using kerosene, so how do you then compare what you are exposing your students to with what happens abroad?

    Besides, what ASUU is asking for is not beyond what we can afford as a nation; if only we put our priorities right. So, ASUU is on strike for a legitimate cause, but I still believe that may be at the end of the strike, when we do a postmortem and re-appraise the strategies we are currently employing to get recognition of the government, we can begin to address the issues more squarely.

    Then there is need for a summit for the entire education system because, right now, I know that the union might not have done certain things the way it should but this is probably not the best time to make comments whether or not the strike should still be desirable or not.

    Why the name JABU?

    The name, Joseph Ayo Babalola University reflects the recognition for that foremost patriarch of the Pentecostal movement in Nigeria, the late Apostle Joseph Ayo Babalola. Having recorded huge success in his ministry of evangelism and spiritual development for Nigeria, and as the progenitor of what now serves as the proprietor, the Christ Apostolic Church (CAC) worldwide, thought it fit to honour the patriarch by naming the university after him, As a matter of fact, this university is located at the place where Apostle Babalola received his call in the 1930s,

    What has been the development in the University?

    In 2011, we were ranked the fifth among the private universities in Nigeria. By 2012, we were placed in third position, and to God be the glory, in 2013, ‘we have further climbed to the number one position. This actually is primarily because God is in this project.

    Secondly, because we have recognised that the successes you showcase on your website is a function of the traffic. When I came on board in 2011, 1 discovered that the university invested hugely in infrastructure, equipment and personnel, and this is relatively’ unknown to the rest of the world, That year, we posted the profile of all our professors on the website and a lot of the people within the academic community started visiting the website, they wanted to see what is actually happening in JABU. That was because of the large number of professors we have in our employ. As a matter of fact, we have the best teacher-student ratio in Nigeria and that is because of the huge investment in personnel.

    So having redesigned our website that way, people were visiting the site and wondering what was happening in JABU. That accounted for the traffic on the website. Thus, we were able to climb to our present status. I believe that with more work and with the Grace of God on our side, we should be able to even do better.

    What is JABU selling point in terms of academic programmes?

    Our academic programmes are designed in a way to reflect the criticality of enterprise. We are an entrepreneurial university to the extent that every degree programmes in JABU has a large dose of entrepreneurship. We believe that irrespective of your degree programme, you should be given enough skill to enable you stand on your own when you eventually graduate, that is the reason why entrepreneurship is the flagship here.

    Apart from this, our academic programmes are driven by the latest technology in terms of pedagogy. We are able to meet and even surpass the NUC benchmark’, we have the technology to drive our delivery in terms of multi-media projection in terms of huge internet facilities, committed, dedicated lecturers who will not go for the least. They want the best for the students> Apart from this, we realised that we are a university that wants the best, we have to inculcate moral upbringing in the students we are nurturing here.

    In terms of academic and spirituality, I think JABU is on track. The vision of the founding fathers of this university is that we will be able to produce graduates that will be self-sufficient, in the sense that upon graduation, they will not be roaming the streets for paid employment, but rather, they will be employers themselves, So, JABU right from the beginning, even before the NUC made entrepreneurship a general course for degree programmes in Nigeria has often obtained the approval of the NUC to run a degree programme in entrepreneurship, which means that we are not taking that as a general course but as a degree discipline. So, we are the very first university to be licensed by the NUC to run a degree in entrepreneurship.

    Our skilsl acquisition centre is second to none. Many universities have come here to see what we have in that centre with a view to adapting. To the Glory of God, that has continued to be a reference point for those who are just setting up their own (skills) acquisition centres and we are making our impact.

    What about the other academic programmes?

    We have an MBA programme now which is a part of the Postgraduate College; we are among the very few private universities to be licensed to conduct the MBA programme in Nigeria today. All our programmes are accredited by the National Universities Commission (NUC). None of the programmes in JABU has a denial status. Out of the 34 degree programmes at the undergraduate level, 26 have full accreditation status and the others that have interim are on the spot, not because the infrastructure is not there, but because of packaging or other reasons.

    Because when you look at a programme that has 70 percent scores and it is yet on an interim basis, it means the NUC is telling us to go and tidy one or two things and then get your full accreditation. As we speak we have just commenced the construction of the facilities for the College of Law and I believe this is another important contribution that JABU wants to make to the development of the university system.

    Also, we have been able to accommodate all our students; the university is fully residential, there are no students living outside the campus. This consumes a lot of money which the proprietor continues to shoulder. We have had three sets of graduates, we have released three sets of robustly prepared young men and women into the Nigerian society and they are making their impact.

    What are the challenges facing your office in the face of these tasks?

    Private universities in Nigeria came on board because government thought they could not handle the demand for education from the huge population of young people desiring to be future leaders. Government realised that the private sector has a big role to play in alleviating the problem but the challenge now is mostly that private employer-organisations, missions etc have invested monumental funds in education and the patronage coming from candidates is not enough to contain the capacities of the universities. In other words, from the revenue coming from school fees, we are not able to run the university; we have to rely on grants. This is a big challenge because most candidates do not want to opt for education in a place where they pay school fees but rather tuition-free-institutions.

    Any similarities between private and public Universities especially in terms of academics?

    Our academic programmes are like those you will find in any conventional university. We have a bit of the Arts and Sciences; we have five colleges here, which include: College of Agricultural Sciences, Natural Sciences, Humanities, Social and Management Sciences, as well as Environmental Sciences. These are the programmes we have in our colleges. Hopefully we believe that the College of Law will join by the time we get the nod of the NUC and the Council for Legal Education. We do not have medical and engineering courses for now, but may in the future. We will get there.

    Taking a look at the Education sector in Nigeria what are the major loopholes?

    The educational system in Nigeria is well designed, very much effectively regulated by the regulatory agencies, and comparable to what we have anywhere in the world in terms of curriculum for the different disciplines. Even in terms of the delivery, I think we often meet up with the standards. The problem with education in Nigeria today is majorly because of the poor funding on the part of government because education is a social issue and government should have the ultimate responsibility to fund the sector.

    Even as we speak, the government is having difficulties funding its own universities, both in the federal and state categories. Government has made it clear and it is very unfortunate that they will not even touch private universities; that no form of assistance whatsoever will come to private universities. Some government functionaries even go to the point of saying that the proprietors ask for a license, make promises that they would provide grant and support, as nothing is going to come to them. This is quite unfortunate because education is a social growth, government should have the ultimate responsibility. The government is not funding private universities. That is antithetical to what we used to have in the colonial period where we have grants and grant-in-aid given to mission schools. Even the funds that come to TETfund is contributed by companies in the private sector and yet universities established by private owners could not benefit from the funds that came from that sector. These are irreconcilable contradictions.

  • Many palaces, one throne

    Many palaces, one throne

    Unlike in other Yoruba towns, palaces are scattered across Ibadan, the Oyo State capital. They are artefacts that emanated from former great men who ruled the city across times and ages.

    There is the Oba Ogundipe Palace. There is the Asanke Palace. There is the Adeyemo Palace and there is also the palace of the current Olubadan of Ibadan land, Oba Samuel Odulana Odugade 1, among others. They are visible, reminding indigenes and particularly, younger generations in the family, of their great ancestry.

    Yet, sitting atop the Mapo Hill is the official palace for the throne. Located a few metres away from the historical Mapo Hall, the palace, was however, only used by Oba Yesufu Oloyede Asanike during whose reign it was built in the 1980s. Before and after Oba Asanike, monarchs in the city ruled their people from the comfort of their homes which they turned to the palace at coronation.

    All affairs of the city are discussed there with all members of the Olubadan-in-Council shifting their attendance to the new palaces.

    Most palaces are located in the remote communities within the city. They are common around Oja’ba, Oranyan, Irefin, Oke Are, Eleta and Agbadagbudu. But current palaces are shifting location to new areas as the current palace is located at Monatan, a modern and fairly elitist community. This is due largely to the elitist nature of the current monarch. Oba Odulana was a Minister of Labour in the First Republic.

    A member of the Olubadan-in-Council, High Chief Lekan Balogun, said the idea of ruling from one’s personal palace has no negative significance in Ibadan land. According to him, it only makes the job convenient for the reigning king.

    But the situation is set to give way as elite indigenes of the city are about to launch a multi-billion Naira palace for their king.

    The elite, under the auspices of the Central Council of Ibadan Indigenes (CCII), would, before the end of the year, launch the project.

    The council’s National President, Chief Bayo Oyero, disclosed this in an interview with The Nation.

    Oyero explained that the palace would sit on a large expanse of land on the Agala Hill at the centre of the city. A total of six acres of land has been set aside for the complex. The hill is adjacent to the University College Hospital (UCH) in the city.

    According to the CCII president, the proposed modern palace will be a cluster of structures which will be part of what he called the “Olubadan Palace Complex.” The complex will consist of social facilities including a clinic, guest house, museum and a library, among others.

    Oyero said the complex would be built in phases, stressing that the first phase which is expected to take off next year, would cost at least N2 billion.

    He said: “It has been a major concern and major focus for CCII for a long time. Ibadan House, which serves as CCII office, was built on part of the piece of land earmarked for the Olubadan Complex. We already have the design. A committee for the construction of the Olubadan Palace is already in place. They have been meeting. The cost runs into billions and we will build in phases. The first phase will cost about N2 billion. We have other facilities such as a church, a mosque, a swimming pool, police station and all conveniences – all within the palace complex.”

    When completed, the palace will offer a clear and good view of the city as the hill is centrally located. It will also border a modern residential estate which grew on the hill in the early 1990s. The combination of all these features will make the palace perhaps the most modern in Nigeria.

    THE OLUBADAN THRONE

    The accession to the throne of the Olubadan is as unique as the city. Unlike in other Yoruba towns where only few, specific ruling houses produce the king, the Olubadan throne is open to all Ibadan indigenes who are able to rise across the traditional ladder.

    In the unique system, every compound nominates a distinguished son for the Mogaji chieftaincy title. Hence all compounds have at least, a Mogaji. Then, the Olubadan-in-Council, which is made up of the monarch and the high chiefs, can promote any Mogaji to Jagun. This promotion puts the man on the ladder to the Olubadan throne. Promotion to higher cadres occurs only when an occupant of any of the positions dies.

    From the Jagun, candidates climb 21 steps before emerging as the Olubadan on the Otun Olubadan line while candidates climb 22 other steps on the Balogun line.

    This system accounts for the reason the throne is open to all indigenes and prevents unhealthy contest for the throne as the next Olubadan is already well known by virtue of their chieftaincy titles. Accession is rotated between the two lines.

    But it also leaves the throne occupied by old men, most times, octogenarians and older candidates, unlike in other Yoruba towns where young men stand a chance.

    There are two lines to the throne: the Otun Olubadan chieftaincy line and the Balogun chieftaincy line. Each compound historically belongs to either of the lines to ultimately produce the Olubadan.

    Accession to the throne is rotated between the two lines. For instance, the current Olubadan is from the Otun line.

    Interestingly, some top partisan politicians are currently close to the throne. They are the current  Osi Olubadan of Ibadan, High Chief Lekan Balogun and Ashipa Olubadan, High Chief Rashidi Ladoja.

    While Balogun is a former senator and a chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Ladoja is a former governor of the state and Leader of the Accord Party (AP).

    Analysts are raising concern that politicians who eventually emerge as the Olubadan may experience crisis of partiality among their subjects.

     

  • Mace of shame in Ogun Assembly

    Mace of shame in Ogun Assembly

    The Mace, the symbol of legislative authority in a democracy, has suffered so much humiliation in the Ogun State House of Assembly. ERNEST Nwokolo reports that the instrument damaged during a rowdy session earlier in the year is yet to be replaced.

     

    Nine months after the gold- plated Mace of the Ogun State House of Assembly was smashed against a wooden object inside the hallowed chambers of the legislature during a rowdy session early this year, this symbol of authority and legality of every plenary is yet to be either repaired or replaced.

    House plenary sessions under the leadership of Speaker Suraj Adekunbi are still being conducted with the damaged instrument to the consternation and embarrassment of not a few Ogun people. This is because of the ugly spectacle it constitutes as well as the memory it evokes in people’s minds.

    In the past four years, particularly during the last two or three years of former Governor Gbenga Daniel’s tenure, the sixth session of the Assembly was buffeted by unabated crises as the then Speaker, Samson Tunji Egbetokun and a group of 14 lawmakers found themselves pitched in battles with Governor Daniel after the former governor’s loyalist Mrs Titi Oseni was impeached as Speaker.

    While the legislative and executive feud lasted, 11 other members of the then sixth legislature-a faction sympathetic to Daniel and headed by Mr Yemi Coker, in a pre- dawn operation, allegedly broke into the Assembly Chamber, sat illegally and took many unpopular decisions. Such decisions included suspending Egbetokun and his group, using a Mace believed to belong to the Councillors of the Abeokuta South Local Government Area as a symbol of authority since the House’s Mace was in the custody of Egbetokun.

    The illegal sitting of Coker and his group led to the forcible closure of the Assembly Complex with armed policemen taking over the premises for over six months. The House was to reconvene later under the leadership of Egbetokun shortly after the swearing-in of Governor Ibikunle Amosun. The Assembly held a valedictory sitting where all the decisions earlier taken by Coker and his group were reversed.

    But the seventh legislative Assembly headed by Speaker Suraj Adekunbi which began on peaceful note in May 2011, was jolted on March 5 2013 when a simmering crisis among the 26 legislators that comprises people from the All Progressives Congress (APC), the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and Peoples Party of Nigeria (PPN), engaged in violence. Fourteen lawmakers led by Hon. Remmy Hassan suspended indefinitely the Speaker, Prince Suraj Adekunbi, his Deputy, Mr Tola Banjo, the House Majority Leader, Mr Israel Jolaoso and Mr Kunle Oluomo representing Ifo 1 State Constituency.

    The 14 lawmakers who were reacting to the suspension of Hassan and three others by the House, also appointed Hassan as the Pro tempore Speaker and then adjourned sitting sine die. The Ogun State Police Command was mandated to lock the Assembly Chamber until there is an assurance of safety around the area.

    The state legislators had commenced plenary on that fateful morning few minutes after 10 in the morning for its legislative function when Suraj Adekunbi called on the Majority Leader, Hon. Israel Jolaoso, to move  a motion for the suspension of Remmy Hassan, Job Akintan, Motunrayo Adijat Adeleye and John Obafemi for what the Speaker called behaviours unbecoming of parliamentarians.

    The motion was said to have been passed by the Speaker hastily by  hitting the gavel on the table when nobody had seconded it.

    The action infuriated some of the lawmakers in the polarised House. In the ensuing confusion and anger, they made for the Mace and smashed it on the wooden object, even as the Sergeant-at-Arms and security guards around laboured in vain to save it.

    Governor Ibikunle Amosun, who at the time, had joined other dignitaries at the nearby Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library (OOPL), to felicitate with Chief Olusegun Obasanjo on his 76th birthday celebration, had to hurriedly leave the event by 12: 19 p.m. to curtail the simmering crisis and prevent a throwback to the Daniel era of parliamentary anomie.

    When the dust finally settled, the Mace lost both its elegance, shape as well as its symmetry. Today, its head bearing the Coat of Arms is bent while the inscriptions ‘Unity and Faith’ and ‘Ogun State House of Assembly’ were written in longhand on a masking tape and pasted on it with transparent cello tape.

    In other places, the Mace caved in to almost a breaking point following impact from the smashing, thus exposing the rusting metal or silver material it is made of. The butt is equally mangled.

    According to analysts, the Mace of Ogun Assembly is the symbol not only of the House but also of the authority of the Speaker.

    While it is generally agreed that the House is not properly constituted unless the Mace is present on the table in the Chamber, the presence of a damaged or defaced Mace on the floor of the House called for concern.

    Last Tuesday when the lawmakers met in respect of the presentation of the 2014 budget proposal by Governor Ibikunle Amosun, the Sergeant-At-Arms,Mr Okanlanwon Alani, who  is the custodian of the instrument, bore it upon his right shoulder with caution; moving in methodic footsteps as he led the Speaker into the Chamber lest the weak Mace fall apart.

    When the Speaker took his  chair, Okanlanwon placed the Mace on the table, with the butt pointing to the Governor’s Office in Oke- Mosan while the head pointed to the Speaker’s right.

    Many who saw the dented Mace would have concluded that a replacement was necessary, but the Assembly, it does seem, is not in a hurry to do so.

    Hon. Yinka Mafe, representing Sagamu State Constituency, told our correspondent that the fact that the House’s Mace was defaced does not demean the Ogun Assembly or rob it of its authority, adding that the reason it has not been replaced was that the cost was not accommodated in the Assembly’s 2013 budget.

    Mafe said the 2014 budget proposal of the House would accommodate the replacement of the mace, stressing that as soon as that was done, it would be replaced.

    “First of all, I would say that the Mace was not incorporated into the budget proposal of 2013 and I’m sure it is going to be proposed in the 2014 budget and as soon as that is done, it would be replaced.

    “The fact that it is badly damaged does not mean it cannot be used or the authority of the House is being demeaned. The House of Assembly has a budget. The matter of the Mace would reflect in the 2014 Assembly budget,” Mafe said.

    Speaker Adekunbi admitted that a replacement would be made at the appropriate time, even as he said that its sight with all its dent would help to put the lawmakers in check against slipping again into conducts that led to the damaging of the Mace.

    Adekunbi  said: “Let me tell you this. As members of the state House of Assembly, we believe that we have our standing order and that at any given time, we can call for a replacement. This is an institution. We cannot just say that because we had an issue that resulted in the smashing of the Mace we should just call for a replacement.

    “I just want you to be reminded of the fact that any day we see the damaged Mace, something strikes our minds to see what we have done to the very good and well-branded Mace. That would sort of check us. I want to believe everybody would be conscious of the fact that we cannot just continue to act in a way that brought about the damage. Definitelym, by God’s grace, it will be replaced very soon.”

  • Boko Haram chased me out of Kano – Akure onions seller

    Boko Haram chased me out of Kano – Akure onions seller

    The Boko Haram insurgency in the northern part of the country has put paid to the marriage plans of a 27-year-old apprentice spare parts trader in Kano. He ran away from the terrorists, leaving behind his 21-year old fiancée.

     

    Sabiu Garba is living a world of nostalgia. All his life, until the Boko Haram insurgency, he had lived in Kano. He never believed that any situation could make him leave his beloved town. He had even proposed to marry his heart throb, Asibi soon. He was just a few months away from being married to the love of his life Asibi when he hurriedly fled Kano one night and headed for the southern part of the country early last year.

    The Kano-born young man said: “I never thought I would leave my beloved city and state Kano for any state in the country because I was doing well as a trainee in the vehicle spare parts business.”

    But leave, he had to. Garba was afraid that the several bombings unleashed on some parts of the North, particularly the city of Kano by the Boko Haram terrorists could endanger his life. With no particular destination in mind, Garba boarded a goods truck heading to Lagos without telling Asibi or any of her relations. He later found himself in Akure, Ondo State capital where he has been living ever since.

    The attacks by the dreaded Islamic militant group have led to the death of many innocent people, particularly southerners who reside in northern states, even as many, like Garba, have also been displaced from their homes after properties had been destroyed.

    Garba, who currently sells onions in wheel barrow in Akure said: “For many weeks before I fled Kano in 2012, I could not go out because of fear of Boko Haram’s attacks.” He lamented that the situation prevented him from getting married to Asibi, his proposed wife.

    Garba is popularly known in Akure as “Garba Jeki.” This depicts the name on his wheel barrow which indicates his name and the town he hails from.

    On why he chose to sojourn in Akure, the young man said: “Ondo State, particularly Akure, is one of the most peaceful places in Nigeria.”

    According to him, he has been able to move round the city to sell his wares, which he gladly said is thriving.

    He said that on a good day, he makes as much as N4,000.

    Our correspondent sought to know whether Garba knew anybody in Akure before settling in the town, he said: ”I didn’t know anybody before and when I came to Akure. I used to sleep inside the market until I met an Hausa man, to whom I narrated my plight. He later took me to where he was residing.”

    Continuing, he said: “Initially when Boko Haram started their operation in Kano State, I thought security operatives would be able to curb their activities. But, all proved abortive as they continued to bomb and kill innocent people. I quickly escaped from them and ran to Akure.

    “The most painful part of this attack is that my wedding ceremony to Asibi was just few months ahead, and due to the continuous bombing, I didn’t have a choice than to run for my life because it is only the living that can marry.

    ”I don’t know if Asibi would have married another man because I could not inform her when I was leaving Kano because I left with a tomatoes-laden night truck that was going to Lagos.”