Category: Special Edition 2021

  • A beacon of hope for orphaned children

    A beacon of hope for orphaned children

    Last weekend, the Sisters in the Deen Foundation Orphanage (SIDF) shone as a beacon of compassion, illuminating the hearts at its Third Annual Ramadan Lecture and Fundraising event. Dignitaries and fervent supporters gathered, not merely to offer material aid, but also to ignite the flame of community uplift. The path forged by the Sisters in the Deen Foundation, marked by three years of unwavering dedication, transcends mere charity; it epitomises the transformative power of empathy and the limitless potential of collective benevolence. Associate Editor ADEKUNLE YUSUF reports

    Amid the ceaseless cacophony of daily life in Lagos, a group of young women found themselves drawn to a cause greater than themselves. They were beckoned by a cause larger than their aspirations and resolved to embark on a purposeful journey, one dedicated to addressing pressing societal concerns. What sparked this noble effort? It was a potent blend of passion, compassion, love and an unwavering belief in the potential of rescued destinies.

    United by their desire to make a tangible difference in the lives of the less privileged, some selfless Muslim women pooled their resources and established the Sisters in Deen Foundation Orphanage. The Sisters in Deen Foundation (SIDF) consists of a group of well-meaning pragmatic Muslim women desiring to make a difference in society by supporting vulnerable youths, especially orphans. Its mission was twofold: to provide a nurturing environment for vulnerable children and inspire affluent Muslim community members to invest in their future. SIDF operates by mobilising volunteers and raising funds to support orphaned children through initiatives like monthly food supplies and festive events, ensuring holistic care and upliftment within the community.

    Over the past three years, the organisation has served as more than just a shelter. The selfless sisters have become mothers, caregivers, role models and destiny helpers to the children under their care – their commitment to the cause has been unwavering, and their impact on the lives of these vulnerable children has been profound. For those who have witnessed their dedication firsthand, it is evident that being one’s brother’s keeper is not just a moral obligation but a pathway to collective progress. By nurturing the underprivileged, including orphans and vulnerable children, Sisters in the Deen Foundation is nurturing the leaders of tomorrow.

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    Last Saturday, March 16th, dignitaries and supporters gathered at the Ifako-Ijaye Local Government Headquarters in Lagos for a momentous occasion. A lecture was held, illuminating the importance of humanitarian efforts, followed by a fundraising event with a staggering goal of N200 million. Among the revered attendees were luminaries such as Prof. Fatima AbdulKareem, the Chairman of the Board of Trustees, and Dr. Nurat Akinlabi-Babalola, the President of the foundation. Their presence, alongside other dedicated members and supporters, underscored the collective commitment to uplifting the lives of the less fortunate, and their journey, fueled by passion and compassion, continues to illuminate the path towards a brighter future for all.

    In his address, Alhaji Ismail Adebola Akindele, the Chairman of the Occasion and Group Managing Director of Courteville Business Solutions Plc, Lagos, conveyed his profound satisfaction with the organisation’s initiatives. He pledged his unwavering support to their noble cause. Speaking through his representative, Alhaji AbulAzeez Adewale Abdullahi, the Chief Strategist and Head of Risk Management at Courteville Business Solutions Plc, the Chairman said, “Today, we stand united in our commitment to bolster the efforts of Sisters in the Deen as they endeavour to uplift the vulnerable members of our community, nurturing them into valuable contributors to society. This ongoing programme exemplifies our dedication to this cause.”

    On the perceived challenges in the official adoption process, he said, “There exists a common misconception surrounding the intricacies of child adoption, often perceived as arduous and daunting. This misconception dissuades many from engaging in the process, fearing potential complications. We believe that by streamlining and simplifying adoption procedures, organisations like Sisters in the Deen can empower more capable individuals within the Muslim community to adopt children, alleviating their burdens while simultaneously enriching society with their contributions.” According to him, Islamic organisations focused on orphanage homes and child adoption are scarce, except for Bab-Salam in Ikeja GRA. He commended Sisters in the Deen for their efforts and urged them to enhance their visibility to attract more support from the Muslim community.

    It all began with the yearly visits to orphanages during Ramadan, a tradition rooted in compassion and empathy, said Dr. Adebola Nurat Akinlabi-Babalola, President of SIDF, while recounting the genesis of the NGO. As she spoke, memories of the foundation’s inception stirred emotions among the audience. “For every child we clothe, every stomach we fill, and every soul we uplift, we witness the transformative power of compassion in action. Let us remember that the future of these children, our future, lies in your hands as you grace us with your generosity today. For in your benevolence, we sow the seeds of hope and promise, shaping not only individual destinies but the very future of Nigeria as a nation. With every pledge made and every contribution given, you become architects of dreams, builders of tomorrows yet unseen. You hold within your hands the power to transform lives, ignite hope, and sculpt a future where every child’s potential blossoms like a garden in full bloom.

    “Our vision of expansion transcends the mere augmentation of physical space; it embodies the extension of our compassion, the enrichment of our offerings, and the empowerment of our children to soar to new heights and to contribute their unique gifts to society. Today, as we sit on the threshold of possibility, let our intention water the seeds of change; let our voices echo with unwavering determination, and let our hearts overflow with love for those we serve. Together, let us embark on a journey of expansion, not just in numbers but in the depth of our empathy, the breadth of our impact, and the height of our dreams.”

    Characterising SITD as a foundation established to provide care for orphans and vulnerable children in society, Hajia Fatimah Monguno, secretary of SIDF, explained the motivation behind setting up the orphanage, citing a lack of such facilities, particularly within the Muslim community. She highlighted the necessity for additional Muslim orphanages, which led to the establishment of Baytu Sakeenah. Reflecting on the foundation’s origins, Hajia Fatimah recounted, “Sisters in the Deen originated from a WhatsApp group where we initially engaged in activities like visiting orphanages, notably Bab-Salam in Ikeja GRA, the sole Muslim orphanage we frequented for Ramadan visits. However, we noticed that Bab-Salam often faced overcrowding issues, leading to instances where they had to take back children due to lack of space. Recognising this need gap, we decided to come together and establish our orphanage to address the pressing need.”

    “It was about 11 ladies from different walks of life who came together and it was put together by our monthly contributions. Then we registered the foundation and we went through all the rigours of getting all the documentation from Alausa. Now we are in Ogba (Ikeja) and we run the foundation with our funds. Now we need support and it will go a long way.”

    Hajia Basirat Oladosu, SIDF Welfare Secretary, provided a comprehensive update on the orphanage’s status, shedding light on the imperative behind its expansion drive. She underscored the pressing need to accommodate more vulnerable children, citing a surge in requests for additional admissions. With current space limitations and the presence of older children, aged 13 or 14, SIDF aims to expand to offer separate accommodations for boys and girls as they mature. Abisola Aminat Dina, Treasurer of SIDF, also addressed the financial challenges, emphasising the substantial costs of educating the beneficiaries, staff maintenance and essential services like caretaking and security. Also, staffing remains paramount, alongside the foundation’s responsibility for the children’s schooling expenses. This financial reality underscores the significance of SIDF’s N200 million fundraising initiative.

    In a compelling address, Sheikh Taofeek Akeugbagold, who hails from Oyo State, underscored the critical need for unity among the Muslim Ummah, cautioning against divisive tendencies and discord among brethren. Speaking on the theme “Establishing a Peaceful Society: A Compulsory Duty of All Muslims,” at the event titled “Expansion for Greater Positive Impact,” Sheikh Akeugbagold stressed the paramount importance of caring for orphans and vulnerable children, a cause championed by the SIDF. He elucidated that while humanity’s essence lies in using intellect for societal advancement, animals and jinn perpetuate chaos and malevolence, respectively.

    The renowned cleric delved into the profound accountability humans bear before Allah, both in the present life and in the hereafter. He affirmed the inherent capability within humanity to cultivate peace and harmony on earth, yet cautioned against the misuse of this divine endowment for personal gain, whether for political, economic, or religious purposes, warning of the ultimate divine reckoning. Underlining the vital need for unity among Muslims and their non-Muslim counterparts, Sheikh Akeugbagold referenced historical examples of external interference exacerbating internal conflicts, such as the tragic case of Rwanda. He condemned the manipulation of ethnic identities by external actors, which has perpetuated prolonged instability.

    Expressing deep concern over the dearth of effective leadership among Muslim clerics in Yorubaland, he mourned the resulting challenges confronting Islam in the region. Drawing from the teachings of the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him), he stressed the imperative of fostering goodwill towards non-Muslims and cautioned against religious practices that fuel conflict. Sheikh Akeugbagold expounded on the defensive nature of wars fought by the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him), clarifying that they were solely responses to aggression. He highlighted the Prophet’s holistic approach to conflict resolution, leveraging his comprehensive understanding spanning sciences, technology, spirituality, and ethics to promote peace and reconciliation. Furthermore, he stressed the Prophet Muhammad’s utilisation of exemplary character to attract people to Islam. He delineated four pillars crucial to societal peace: love, forgiveness, justice, and respect for human dignity. Encouraging Nigerian Muslims to unite and strive for the promised peace and greatness, he commended the SIDF for shouldering orphanage duties often overlooked by many Muslims, urging the affluent to invest in uplifting the less privileged.

  • PERSON OF THE YEAR 2021: NOBODY

    PERSON OF THE YEAR 2021: NOBODY

    Normally, crisis throws up heroes. As the year unfolded, we looked for all the ingredients of a man or woman, or a coalescence of distinction. We peered for one to stand up and stand out, to bob a head over the ruins, to stride ahead of the pack, and to ride the storm. This newspaper searched, and there were many episodes. Storms without heroes. We sought the man of action, the selfless avatar, the David against a Goliath of evil, the imagination overturning a riddle. It was a fruitless search.

    Big events tended to be about fear and trembling. The nation, as we exit the year, is still in the grips of fear and trembling.

    Was it the firestorm of bandits? We saw the roads becoming more of rides to Golgotha than jolly rides. It was a year of many roads being commissioned across the country, from the Southwest, to the Southeast to the Northwest. Yet the year ends with so many aches in Sokoto, tears in the Plateau and blood spills in the Southeast. Ritual bloodshed in the Southwest.

    Where men of no virtue made a virtue of rampage and rapine, deaths and broken peace skulking a people on the farm and bucolic quiet.

    But it was across the country, and so bad was it that we wanted to define banditry into tranquility, barbarism into solemnity. If we gave it a name, we could make it a grave. But because the deaths still crawled, we had no sepulchre for the crime.

    The bandits came to mosques, came to churches, came to schools. They boasted and they damned, and they took the weak to the bushes. Teachers and pupils groping in arboreal glades like Hades. Their parents pined at home. Governments issued statements. The goons enlisted a cleric as public relations maven. They scandalised governors, immiserated markets, demobilised the military.

    In this, we saw no governor who cowed them. They sterilised the peace first. Then the governors sterilised the networks. But then, they sterilised their states instead, while the network of asinine men of the dark connected for monstrous consequences. So, the governors failed. The soldiers stumbled.

    The many planes, the Tucano, the many soldiers, the bales of cash to buy arms and uniforms gave birth to a breed of soldiers somewhat rejigged. The renaissance of the Nigerian foot solider did not obliterate the soldiers as zealots.

    But we went into dreary territories. Where did the bandits begin? Where did the militant end? There was a fear that one was retiring into the other. Where the militant fagged out, he became a bandit. Goodbye cant, farewell bigotry. Welcome abductions. They started by preferring God to mammon. When God failed them, they moved over to an infidel’s favourite joy: filthy lucre. In their own lights, they were raggedy soldiers of fortune.

    They had names, but no ideas. They had guns, but no enemies. They had aims but not conscience. They had a target, and nothing could stop them from getting it. Not the word of the Almighty or the order of the commander-in-chief. Just as King David said, that victory does not depend on the size of an army, so the Nigerian Army continued to seem puny in the hands of a ragtag glory of bandits.

    So, we cannot do the bandit the pleasure of giving them the endorsement of a supremo – in a year when to be one was to be monster. But we could not escape the reality, too, that while the herdsmen got a deserved tag as the profession of deathly renegades, they became also a bogeyman of another sort of monster for trade: the ritual killer.

    Tales described them in skeins of brutal magnificence. The captured. They gave five-star treatments to those who could pay ransoms, and set the poor apart for butchery: the body parts were sold for money. It was a diabolical affirmation of Marxian class discrimination, a capitalism of blood and body parts. In his novel, The Chronicles of the Happiest People on Earth, now getting increasing attention around the world, Wole Soyinka lent his satiric eye for scatological details. Body parts from Boko Haram to make kilishi and in the Southwest for money, and cults were built around them.

    In the Southeast, no hero rose to delegitimise a group that earned a charisma without a constitution. People obeyed without a law, without a formalised institution. The formalised one failed to persuade. The people’s fear triumphed over law. Even when an election took place, it was at their mercy. Chukwuma Soludo won but not because of grudging berth of law and order. It was the benighted grace of the tyrant.

    We wanted to see, too, if the economy would bounce its way to happiness for the greatest number of people. But this year was no utilitarian haven or heaven. Many young could not get jobs. Many could not stay in their country. A cabinet minister wondered aloud if the economic woes and largescale graft would not corral the feathered class in an Abuja where the poor could ambush them in a national scale of revolutionary banditry. That is no testimony to a failure to put food on many tables. The banks and oil firms and tech giants preened in superfine profits. The poor watched in impotence. The politician flourished in Agbada and babaringa, et al, and half-baked rhetoric.

    So, the pandemic that soared all over the world continued to ravage in quiet at home. No story about progress in sorting out a solution. No Nigerian vaccine, even as the western top shots continued to call the shots, and the main tragedy was that our people were not getting the shots.

    A report was released after a group of lawyers and activists looked at a moment in history. They revealed a generational lack of rigour and they affirmed a culture of superstitions. They failed in math because they could not arrive at a number, in English because they did not know a word, and in government because they failed the process, as though they were students in a high school exam.

    There were cultural moments as well. Some of them often cheering, as in when Davido “conned” fans to get him money and he turned it into charity. Not so for another fellow who turned his mother’s burial into a bazaar of sorts and money became an extravaganza of vanity instead of a sombre homage to maternity.

    But we had books, too. The years tailed off with a book of the year, a memoir about a generation of politics written by a man unlikely to write and unlikely to deliver the bombshells. And former APC chairman and governor of Osun State, Bisi Akande, did it without apology, unveiling the hypocrisy, chicanery and sleaze of an age. His book, My Participations, is not only the book of the year, it will soldier on for many years as a testament on how to throw bombs with a political memoir.

    German playwright Bertolt Brecht mused in his play Galileo, that “unhappy is a land that breeds no heroes.”

    This is such a land. This is such a year. In search of stars, we saw a firmament of starlets. It is a year of also-rans. In the Milky Way, no shot of a lodestar.

    So, in this year, no man or woman scaled above. Instead of being a year of heroes and heroines, we have seen no one rising to catch the trophy.

    In 2021, when a group could not define a word, keep a building from falling, or highways from a bandit or a currency from a nosedive, or even plead guilty to a book of revelations, our person of the year is NOBODY

  • BOOK OF THE YEAR: A FRONT ROW PARTICIPANT’S ACCOUNT

    BOOK OF THE YEAR: A FRONT ROW PARTICIPANT’S ACCOUNT

    It is a series of words as pinprick. It began as a book presentation, and the bigwigs of the Nigerian political firmament gathered, especially of the APC hue. The president, Muhammadu Buhari, in his full light-blue babaringa and loosed-limbed with humour, was accompanied by a raft of governors. That day drew praise for the book, from all sides. Asiwaju Bola Tinubu called him a hero. The president draped him as a rare specimen of integrity. Ogbonnaya Onu, Minister for Science, Technology and Innovation, regarded him as a political icon. The book reviewer and this newspaper’s Editor-at-Large, Segun Ayobolu, pronounced what was to come. He called it a bomb.

    So it has been, a work of barely over 500 pages has been a detonation from denotations. Titled My Participations, former governor of Osun State and former chairman of unprecedented four political parties, Chief Bisi Akande, weaves a skein of his life, but in a larger context it is the political yarn of his generation.

    But he trades tackles with his bare but direct style. There have been quite a few persons uncomfortable with his narratives. Some have so far been quiet, especially former President Olusegun Obasanjo. The retired general and a perennial figure in Nigeria’s contemporary history, comes out of Akande’s telling as a crafty subvert. He is always on the malevolent side of the narrative and Nigeria’s history.

    Another person he overwhelmed with his ire was his deputy as governor of Osun State. He tracked how he fell for the deceptions of a wily man. He became a major stud and matador of retrogression. He eventually became the one who lost his job rather than Akande who was first marked for eviction from the State House. The Ife titan has remained mum.

    But others have squalled in protest. One of them is a chieftain of Yoruba politics, Ayo Adebanjo, who emerges as an undercutting work horse for the obstructions of the Yoruba march forward. He is a follower of Awo who even in Awo’s lifetime was painted in unflattering light with his friend and fellow traveller Olaniwun Ajayi during the fraught era of military overthrow when Akande, Bola Ige and others spent years in Buhari’s gaol. What he has been loud about though is Akande’s reporting that he obtained a certificate of occupancy for a plot at Lekki Phase one from former Lagos State Governor Tinubu who also helped build the house in which he currently lives.

    Also, in an outburst is the former army officer and Akande’s successor as governor, Olagunsoye Oyinlola, who railed about his reporting of graft and lack of faith concerning the construction and siting of a government house.

    Both Oyinlola and Adebanjo belong to countervailing signposts in Southwest politics. Many do not expect them to look at the world from the same lens.

    It has drawn flak from the Presidency about how the vice president was nominated. The vice president who has said his bit long ago has been quiet but others have taken the bait. A newspaper supposedly quoting sources close to the president claimed there was no agreement between the then candidate Buhari and Tinubu to pair the former governor as his running mate. They claimed it was a partnership, and they implied that both agreed on vague terms of engagement.

    The book is not just about these men. Chief Akande reflected a political atmosphere that was marked by shysters as heroes. He took Awolowo for his hero and ensign, and the track light for the west.

    No book has generated thus far this sort of flap since one of his targets, Obasanjo, penned a war memoir that he alone seems to be participant and witness to.

    Akande’s My Participations will shake and echo in the political world for a long time. It is courage in penmanship. For telling a story that has spun a spool stories, My Participations is our book of the year.

  • TRAGEDY OF THE YEAR: IKOYI FOURSCORE TOWER COLLAPSE

    TRAGEDY OF THE YEAR: IKOYI FOURSCORE TOWER COLLAPSE

    Tragically, this was a many-sided tragedy.  It was a tragedy not only because a spectacular high-rise under construction in a highbrow neighbourhood was reduced to a lowly status. The 21-storey giant on Gerrard Road, Ikoyi, Lagos, had a great fall on November 1.

    It was a tragedy not only because many people who were at the site, for one reason or another, died.  The number of fatalities was 46.  Each death was a tragedy in its own right. Luckily, 15 others were pulled out alive from the rubble.

    It was a tragedy not only because the dead included the ambitious builder of the ambitious residential tower and CEO of Fourscore Homes, Femi Osibona. He was aged 55.

    He had a grand architectural dream. The fallen tower was one of three towers, collectively known as 360 Degrees Towers.  He painted a picture of the project in an interview three months before the tragedy.  “We are actually building a seven-star hotel,” he explained.

    “They are flats, but we make it feel like you are living in a seven-star hotel. Everything that is in a seven-star hotel, you will have there. But the only difference is that you own the property. We have not advertised and we have sold more than 50 per cent…Here in 360, we have security, exceptional view, offices, clubhouse, and open recreation area. Practically everything you have in a seven-star hotel.”

    It was a tragedy not only because the building collapse raised questions about structural integrity and the builder’s integrity. The project and the builder attracted attention in 2020 when it was reported that Osibona had tried to prevent officials of the Lagos State Building Control Agency (LASBCA) from sealing off the building in question. The agency was said to have observed some “anomalies.”

    The agency’s general manager, Gbolahan Oki, was quoted as saying Osibona “got an approval for a 15-storey building and he exceeded his limit…and the materials he used are so inferior and terrible. The materials he used, the reinforcement, are so terrible. He got approval for 15 floors but built 21.”

    There was a controversy over the number of floors he got approval to build. It was confusing that some high-level state officials claimed the builder got approval for 21 floors.

    The tragedy was heightened following the release of the outcome of a “preliminary investigation” by the Nigerian Institution of Structural Engineers (NIStructE).   Significantly, the body said what it found out would “give a general indication of what likely led to the unfortunate incident.”

    “The building that collapsed was initially designed for just six floors, and later to 12 floors, before this was further changed to 15 floors,” according to NIStructE president Kehinde Osifala.

    He said in a statement: “It could not yet be established the adequacy of any properly designed and documented further revision to the eventual (and tragically, final) 21 floors that was being implemented and which collapsed.”

    The professional body said the preliminary investigation “also revealed some evidence of structural inadequacy in the construction and that signs of some structural distress had already started to show within certain elements of the building.”

    Whatever measures the builders took to address the observed defects were futile, the body noted, because “the method of implementation of this was not in accordance with sound structural engineering practices.”

    This picture suggested that disregard for building standards, poor workmanship and materials, and a lack of official oversight were to blame.

    It is incomprehensible how a building allegedly designed to have six floors became a 21-storey tower.  Nobody needs building engineering expertise to know that such a building, without appropriate intervention, was a disaster waiting to happen.

    It was a tragedy not only because the disaster was avoidable. It was a tragedy not only because the crumbled tower was said to lack insurance cover.  After the tragedy, the Nigerian Insurers Association (NIA) highlighted the importance of respecting building rules, and having insurance to minimise losses.

    Perhaps predictably, the Lagos State government set up a panel to investigate the tragedy.  The public awaits the result of the probe. It remains to be seen whether the outcome of the probe will help prevent avoidable building collapse, which has become tragically familiar.

  • JUDGEMENT OF THE YEAR: A VERDICT LIKE NO OTHER

    JUDGEMENT OF THE YEAR: A VERDICT LIKE NO OTHER

    Self-determination is a fundamental right…that cannot be subjugated – Justice Akintola

    Agitations for self-determination are not new. They started long ago as people who speak the same language and perhaps share the same faith and boundary resolve to come together as one. Their common affinity is the sole determinant of their struggle for a common entity. The struggle is usually long and tortuous wherever this set of people seeks to quit a nation state. In some cases, the state labels them as rebels and go all out to kill their struggle. At times, the agitators too pay with their lives. Is there anything wrong in agitations for self-determination? No, says Justice Ladiran Akintola of the Ibadan High Court, in his verdict on the case of Yoruba Nation agitator Chief Sunday Adeyemo popularly known as Sunday Igboho against the Federal Government.

    Nigeria was virtually drowned in the wave of such agitations in the outgoing year. Groups and people rose in some parts of the country, demanding that they be allowed to go. The agitations were pronounced in the Southwest and Southeast. That of the Southeast, however, took a different bent. The arrowhead of the campaign, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, wanted secession. Having travelled that road between 1967 and 1970, the elders, who witnessed the three-year civil war during which a million people were killed, did not want the region to go that way again. Yet, Kanu, who is in custody facing treasonable felony trial, found support in the youths, who have been holding the region down, with a weekly sit-at-home order enforced every Monday.

    Are self-determination and secession the same thing? A thin line runs through them. Self-determination is a peaceful agitation to leave a country, while secession is forceful separation from an entity. People resort to secession where they are oppressed or the government is illegitimate. This is where Kanu and Igboho are different. Igboho hit the limelight with his exploits in Igangan, a community in Oyo State, in the heat of the herders and farmers skirmishes. He took sides with the farmers to chase out herders said to be wreaking havoc on the community. Igboho, who is battling for his release from custody in Cotonou, Benin Republic, ran into trouble with the government, which saw him as an existential threat.

    His home in Soka, Ibadan, the Oyo State capital, was invaded by security operatives in the wee hours of July 1. Some of his properties, including vehicles, were destroyed. One of his cats was also taken away by the security agents who believed that it was Igboho who turned into a cat! Igboho fled the country, but he was arrested in Cotonou on his way to Germany. His arrest and detention over there did not stop him from challenging the legality of the invasion of his home. He also sought the determination of the propriety of the Yoruba’s struggle for self-determination. He won on both counts. Justice Akintola declared the agitation for self-determination as legitimate.

    According to him, ‘’Chief Sunday Adeyemo and his group have a right to self-determination and are free to hold their rallies as long as they are peaceful. Self-determination is one of the fundamental human rights of the citizens that cannot be subjugated’’. His finding was premised on Igboho’s request for:

     

    • A declaration that he and his Yoruba indigenous people have unquestionable and/or inalienable fundamental right to peacefully campaign and seek self-determination of Yoruba tribe in Nigeria and lobby the legislature to amend the 1999 Constitution as guaranteed by Article 20 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples Right (Ratification and Enforcement) Act, Laws of the Federation 2010, and Articles 3, 4, 7 & 18 of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of the Indigenous People, thereby insulating campaign for self-determination from criminal culpability.

     

    • A declaration that the respondents’ resolve to prevent the applicant from propagating his belief in association with other like-minds in creating a Yoruba Nation and/or Oduduwa Republic for his Indigenous Yoruba People and hunting him with gun with a view to arresting him dead or alive when he has not called for war in achieving same is against his fundamental rights to freedom of thought, conscience and association since campaign for self-determination is recognised by law and international treaties of organisations to which Nigeria belongs.

    It is a landmark decision on a vexed issue which has been threatening the fabric of society.

  • CONTROVERSY OF THE YEAR: THE WAR OVER VAT

    CONTROVERSY OF THE YEAR: THE WAR OVER VAT

    One controversy that Nigerians will not forget in a hurry when reviewing 2021 is the Value Added Tax over which the Federal Government and State Governments literally fought over who should collect and how it should be shared among the tiers of government. The heated debate was not a straight one between the federal and sub-national governments, the Organised Private Sector, lawyers, Civil Society Organisations, the academia and many others joined in the spar. Yet, it is one controversy that has refused to go away as it is yet before the judiciary for adjudication.

    The governor of Rivers State, Mr. Nyesom Wike, took the bull by the horn by approaching a Federal High Court in Port Harcourt to resolve who, under the law, has the right to collect and expend the Tax that is basically a consumption tax. He contended that consumption tax is a residual responsibility over which the federal government has no control and that the Federal Inland Revenue Service that has been performing the function is merely an interloper acting ultra vires.The Rivers State governor equally argued powerfully that the constitution that is the grundnorm in the country does not list the tax among those that the federal government whether exclusively or concurrently with states could collect and share.

    The state was later joined by Lagos that generates the largest amount given its population, relative prosperity and strategic location. The states won at the High Court, but the battle still rages. The Federal Government has since decided to take the matter to the Court of Appeal, with Oyo State joining the fray.

    Where would this lead? Is the federal government being greedy in seeking to have the FIRS take charge? This may not be exactly so. Under the existing formula by which proceeds of the Tax is shared, the federal government only retains 15 per cent, while the states share 50 per cent, and the local governments are allowed to use 35 per cent. But, the issue is deeper than the amount actually retained by the central government. At stake is control and proprietary right. Also, the states think the federal government is already controlling so much of the national wealth through its share of the Federation Account, mining of solid minerals aviation, railways and waterways, among so many others. The states believe that the national government has its knees on their necks and they are unable to breathe. It took a similar grim fight for the Lagos State government to win control over sales tax from the hotels. Until 2019 when the court awarded control to the state government, the federal government had controlled proceeds from the sector.

    The major difference in the current dispute is that the states are not unanimous. States that generate very little in terms of Value Added Tax are in support of the Federal Government. Many of them have argued that the relatively richer states should be their “brothers’ keepers”. The inequity and injustice in distributing the proceeds is at the heart of the judicial contest. While, in the first eight months of this year, Lagos State raked in N429 billion, it received N139 billion. Rivers generated N90 billion, but was allocatedN47 billion, behind Kano that generated N24 billion and got allocated N47 billion. Oyo State was allocated N18 billion, despite bringing 64 billion into the coffers.

    More stupefying, perhaps, is the case of Zamfara that got an allocation of N59 billion despite generating less than one billion Naira. This has been described as grossly unfair and the basis for demanding that states should take full charge of the process. Contrary to the contention of some, it is not a geo-political contest. The South East States collectively generated about N22 billion, while Kano, as earlier indicated generates N24 billion.

    Over the years, the VAT that was first introduced under the Babangida administration has grown to become a major funding source for state governments. In the past four years, about N10 trillion was generated as VAT and shared. It has therefore been argued that withdrawing the feeding bottle could lead to asphyxiation of some states. The contest has become intractable, essentially because at the heart of it is inequity, injustice, opaqueness and suspicion of the federal government. There are tributaries of the central contention such as who controls import duties. In 2020, this accounted for 22.7 per cent of the VAT, while foreign non-import VAT amounted to 27.4 per cent. That is another battle ahead.

    As the country looks forward to 2022, it is in the interest of the stakeholders to resolve the matter amicably to protect all. But, in all, unless equity and justice prevails, there will be no resolution.

  • SCANDALS OF THE YEAR: TIWA SAVAGE AND DCP ABBA KYARI

    SCANDALS OF THE YEAR: TIWA SAVAGE AND DCP ABBA KYARI

    Nigerians will not forget in a hurry, the scandals involving music diva, Tiwa Savage, and widely acclaimed ‘super cop’ DCP Abba Kyari. Both of them are celebrities in their own right but they were in the news for the wrong reasons. First was music diva, Tiwa Savage, whose sex tape set cyberspace agog. Social media pulsed with outrage as fans of the music artiste and her critics went to war soon before and after the release of a sex video featuring Savage.

    The artiste hinted in an interview with American radio host, Angie Martinez, of Power 105.1 that she was being blackmailed with the sex tape and would rather release it than succumb to the designs of her blackmailer. The prior warning by the Afrobeats singer, predictably, set tongues wagging.

    At the heel of her disclosure during the interview, the divorced mother of one revealed that the video features her and her current partner and that her blackmailer commenced his threats immediately after it was mistakenly uploaded online by her partner.

    Savage claimed that although the latter promptly deleted the video soon after he accidentally posted it on Snapchat, in error, it was too late.

    She said, “Yesterday, I was leaving a radio station and I was in my car when my road manager sent me a message. She said I should check my phone. I checked it and there was a video, and I was just like ‘Wow!’,” she told Martinez.

    “I asked him where he got it from and he said he received it about 20 minutes earlier. The video was sent to him and it is a tape of me and the person I am dating right now. The first thing I did after I got off the phone was that I sent it to my manager and asked what we should do.

    “The person is asking for money now. The person I am dating is going crazy too. My manager asked how much the person is asking for.”

    But the singer said she had decided not to pay the blackmailer because blackmailers usually come for more.

    “I decided I was not going to pay the person because if I do, two months from now, three months down the line, or even two years later, you are going to come back again. Who knows, if I send the money, the person will probably release it. I am not going to let anyone blackmail me for doing something natural.”

    The singer further stressed that she will not give a dime to her blackmailers. Savage stated that she could release the video herself because she is ‘that crazy’.

    The news caught the attention of her fans in Nigeria and across the world. When the video was later leaked online it sparked conversation both online and offline.

    Just before Savage’s sex debacle, Nigerians stirred to the shocking news of popular supercop and head of the Nigerian Police Intelligence Response Team (IRT), Abba Kyari’s alleged complicity in fraudulent transactions involving suspected internet fraudster, Abbas Ramon, aka Hushpuppi.

    The United States (US) crime fighter, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in investigations made the declaration indicting Kyari in a $1.1m fraud case alongside five others, including United Arab Emirates (UAE)-based Abbas.

    The FBI had reportedly filed a criminal complaint at the United States District Court in California listing Abbas Ramon, aka Hushpuppi; and Kyari among others indicted in the $1.1m international fraud conspiracy.

    Other suspects include AbdulRahman Juma (Abdul); Vincent Kelly Chibuzo (Kelly); Rukayat Motunrayo Fashola

    (Morayo); and Bolatito Tawakalitu Agbabiaka (Bolamide).”

    Until his indictment, Kyari was seen as a fearless crime fighter and outstanding officer presumably honest and committed to his work.

    He was particularly notable for arresting the dreaded billionaire kidnap kingpin, Chukwudumeme Onwuamadike aka Evans, and ending the reign of terror of armed robbers and kidnappers in the southeast, among other numerous heroic exploits.

    At his indictment, Kyari’s critics emerged from the woodwork claiming that he had always been a suspicious cop whose association with questionable characters were red flags that ought to have been taken cognizance of.

    Kyari, according to an FBI affidavit is “alleged to have arranged for Vincent, Abbas’ rival in crime to be arrested and jailed at Abbas’ behest, and then sent Abbas photographs of Vincent after his arrest.

    “Kyari also allegedly sent Abbas bank account details for an account into which Abbas could deposit payment for Vincent’s arrest and imprisonment.”

    But in a swift rebuttal on Facebook, Abba Kyari denied the allegations claiming the only monetary transaction between him and Abbas was the N300,000 sent by the latter to him for onward payment to his cloth vendor. Kyari said he introduced the tailor to Abbas after the latter expressed the desire to buy some native attires he (Kyari) shared on his Facebook page.

    Further allegations held that Kyari abandoned his official duty post in September 2019, and flew to the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to frolic with the most wanted internet conman,s according to the FBI.

  • ENTERTAINER OF THE YEAR: DAVIDO

    ENTERTAINER OF THE YEAR: DAVIDO

    At just 29-years-old, David Adedeji Adeleke aka Davido has inked his name in gold as not only a successful Nigerian-American singer but one with an uncommon and unusual heart of gold. After registering himself as one of Africa’s most prominent artists over the last decade and the African artist with the highest number of followers on Instagram, Davido sealed his status as an entertainment idol in the minds of his fans.

    Three days before his 29th birthday on November 21, 2021, Davido stunned the world by raising a staggering $600,000 (N200 million) from Nigerian entertainers, sportsmen, nightclubs, lounges, and friends.

    It all began with a tweet seeking colleagues to send him funds to clear his recently acquired Rolls Royce Cullinan valued at $330,000.

    “If u know I’ve given you a hit song .. send me money,” Davido tweeted in what has become a historic point in his life.

    Davido went further to post his bank details online and requested for the funds to raise 100 million Naira ($243,000) to clear his Rolls-Royce from a port.

    The response from friends, colleagues, and institutions produced a total of N200 million in less than 48 hours. The rush to credit Davido’s account became a race with almost all the Nigerian celebrities donated generously aside Wizkid, Burna Boy, and a few others.

    A day before his birthday, Davido announced the full amount he received from fans and celebrity friends totaled over $485,000 and would be used for charitable purposes.

    “In my usual playful manner, I requested a few days ago that my friends and colleagues send money in celebration of my birthday,” Davido wrote in a statement. “The response and outcome exceeded my expectations.”

    Davido returned to his social media accounts to express how emotional he got after over N100 million were donated in less than 32 hours. “I’m actually crying. I really love you guys man.”

    So much was the hype around the donation that a Nigerian Bank, Alat – an arm of Wema bank, had to sign an undisclosed fee as an endorsement deal between the budding banking arm and the established music act.

    In his official statement after the sum of N200 million was deposited into his account, Davido said, henceforth, he aims to raise funds annually to celebrate his birthday and give back to people in need.

    In his usual style, Davido also made a personal donation of N50 million and named a disbursement committee that will identify orphanages that need funding, and distribute the funds accordingly.

    This gesture not only wowed his colleagues but the entire world. However, it’s public knowledge that Davido’s benevolence is in the same measure as his love for a luxurious lifestyle.

    Not that friends, colleagues, and others didn’t know of his generosity, he took it a notch higher after the feat he pulled off just before his 29th birthday. From going on a shopping spree for his crew to bettering the lives of his immediate staff, Davido has continued to be in the news for all the right reasons.

    It’s almost impossible to hinge appreciation of his gesture on the N250 million giveaway because that would appear either being deliberately unfair to him or exhibiting very poor knowledge of his rather mysterious nature. Born into sweeping wealth and affluence, Davido has never for a fleeting second experienced poverty or suffering. Yet, he gives with compassionate empathy. For one, who has given so much without expecting in return, it is believed that he stands tall among his peers, who might try to come close to him in terms of giving.

    Though his third studio album, A Better Time, which was released in November 2020 didn’t win him an award in 2021, one of his biggest hits, ‘If’ attained an enviable height when it was certified Gold in the United States by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA).

    The father of three has continued to wow fans, showbiz practitioners across the world after making impeccable feats winning awards – national and international.

  • SPORTS PERSONALITY OF THE YEAR: OSIMHEN

    SPORTS PERSONALITY OF THE YEAR: OSIMHEN

    His name is Victor osimhen, the 22-year-old Nigeria International striker  who currently  plies his trade in the Italian Serie A, is essentially  not an ordinary   football player ; and even  more so  in this out-going  Year 2021 following  his virtuoso performances  for both club and country. Indeed , this lad plays  his football with an uncommon  gusto  because he justifiably  gives his all  on the pitch  just  to ensure   victory  for his side. But  what else do you expect  when  Victor  wears his surname, Osimhen , like an amulets?

    Some onomastician explained  that  the name  Osimhen  represents :‘intuition, enlightenment, dreams, incoherence, anxiety, charisma and a timid persona.’

    Perhaps  such description  is not   farfetched   especially for anyone that has followed  the trajectory of this particular player. Victor , is  certainly an embodiment  of  Osimhen , having had  to fight his way  from  grass to grace;  from obscurity  to stardom  and even more so from the dusty streets of Lagos where he eked a living  hawking satchet  water in traffic to the hallowed turf of the Stadio Diego Armando Maradona-the home of Italian Serie A side, Napoli where he’s now turning the eyes  with  his scoring feats.

    After a difficult start at Wolfburg, Osimhen would soon bloosomed at Belgian club Charleroi as well as Lille in France.

    Now in his second season with Napoli, Osimhen joined the Blue Azzuris  for a club-record fee of $96 million USD from French Ligue 1 side Lille which currently makes him the costliest  African player in history.

    In his first season , Osimhen  scored just  10 goals  in 24 appearances  in  all competitions  for the then  Gennaro Gattuso-led Napoli as he was hampered  by a shoulder  injury  and COVID-19 restrictions  following that infamous  birthday party in Lagos.

    But he has been on the bounce  since his return to action in January  when he  made a cameo  appearance as  Napoli  won the  Coppa Italia  for  what  was the side’s first major trophy since 2014.

    In  the on-going 2021/2022 campaign,  Osimhen has shown  his  typical adventurousness  in front  of the goal post  very much so to the delight  of new manager Luciano Spalletti, who consequently  likened the former  starlet  from  Lagos-based Ultimate Strikers Academy to football greats George Weah and Marco van Basten.

    “He is similar to Weah, probably not as strong technically, but with the same quality. He also reminds me of Van Basten. Osimhen is young and he can reach those levels,” Spalletti said.

    There is no disputing such  positive comments  about  Osimhen as he has  allowed his  puritanical  approach  on the pitch  do the talking  for  him.  With nine goals  in 14 matches  across  the Serie A  and  Europa League , Osimhen  is  certainly  heading for the skies.

    Undoubtedly,  he   is  arguably  at the head of Nigerian strikers that  have massively hogged the headlines across  the major leagues of Europe including  the English Premier League, Spanish La Liga, German Bundesliga, French Ligue 1 as well as Italy.

    While the likes of Union Berlin’s Taiwo Awoniyi, Nantes’ Moses Simon, RC Genk’s Paul Onuachu shared the spotlight with Osimhen in the European football circuit, the record-setting  FIFA  U-17 World Cup top scorer left no one in doubt as the man of the moment with a  far better scoring tally  with the Super Eagles.

    In 2021, the Super  Eagles embattled  German coach Gernot Rohr  played  eight international  matches  including  two  Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) qualifiers  and six  Qatar 2022 World Cup qualifiers  with an impressive 13 goals  with the ‘gangling’ Osimhen contributing a healthy five goals of the lots.  And was  2021 AFCON  qualifying tournament’s joint top scorers with Zambia and Leicester City’s striker Patson Daka with five goals.

    Yet tragedy  struck Osimhen  on November 21 when he  fractured  his cheekbone during a clash of heads with Inter defender Milan Skriniar as Napoli suffered a first league loss going down 3-2  against The Black and Blues at the Guiseppe Meazza.

    He would later  missed  four Serie A matches including Napoli’s 3-2 home defeat to Atalanta last weekend.

    The outpouring of  sympathies across all divides  partly underlined  the  impact  of Osimhen’s  goals  for both  club and country. While Napoli  without their talismanic Osimhen  lost their summit position  in the Italian league , Nigeria  in the meantime, are sweating  on his availability  for the forthcoming  delayed   2021 AFCON to be held in Cameroon in January.

    “ He (Osimhen) is strong mentally,” Rohr told The Nation after  initial news that the player might even  miss the AFCON following a successful  operation  on his fractured cheekbone.

    Rohr’s sentiment was equally echoed  by Spalletti ahead  of Thursday’s crucial 3-2 win against  Leicester City  saying inter alia: “We will urge him every day and see what answers he gives. Recovery times will be defined on the basis of his reaction,” the former Inter Milan  manager reportedly said.  “Knowing him well, we are confident that recovery can take place as soon as possible.

    “ It is clear that the situation will need to be protected, but we will try to do it anyway and shorten the times as much as possible.”

    Yet in Osimhen’s footballing lexicon , impossibility is nothing ; no wonder his  quick recovery rate  after what was  described as a ‘nasty injury’  did  not come as a surprise to his keen  followers.

    Emmanuel Amuneke  who discovered  and nurtured Osimhen  to world acclaim  as a youngster  with the Golden Eaglets  once  described his metee as a fighter  with extraordinary  courage.

    Such outstanding quality has seen him won  individual accolades including  the  2015 FIFA U-17 World Cup Golden Boot as top scorer with a record 10 goals; 2015 FIFA U-17 World Cup Silver Ball winner as the second Most Valuable Player ; the  2015 CAF Youth Player of the Year; the Ligue 1 Player of the Month of  September 2019; the  2020  Prix Marc-Vivien Foé: 2020 and the  Lille Player of the Season:  for the 2019/20 season  en route  to Napoli.

  • BUSINESS BATTLE OF THE YEAR: WHO OWNS NIGERIA’S OLDEST BANK?

    BUSINESS BATTLE OF THE YEAR: WHO OWNS NIGERIA’S OLDEST BANK?

    The boardroom tussle, board and management changes and reinstatement, the multi-billion naira shares acquisition and the didactics of largest single individual shareholder and majority or controlling shareholders at Nigeria’s oldest financial services group-FBN Holdings (FBNH) Plc, were some of the highpoints of corporate governance issues in 2021.

    FBN Holdings, the holding company for First Bank of Nigeria Limited (FirstBank) and its former subsidiaries, is not only Nigeria’s oldest financial services group, it also holds strategic socio-economic and political importance. It is privately-owned publicly quoted company with strategic national importance. Although it has lost considerable influence in the aftermath of its epoch elephant-strolling public offer, FBNH remained a reference financial group. Categorised euphemistically as “too big to fail”, first tier or national interest, FBNH’s historic and current implications have continued to shape discussions around the group.

    So when billionaire businessman,  Mr Femi Otedola, through his professional agent, announced that he has acquired material stake in FBNH, the news swiveled beyond the financial markets to the socio-political decision corners. Otedola initially acquired 5.07 per cent equity stake in the holding group and while the market was still expecting a formal pronouncement on the statutory regulatory review of such investment, he increased his equity stake to 7.57 per cent.

    Otedola acquired additional 2.5 per cent equity stake to increase his previous 5.07 per cent stake to 7.57 per cent. He now has about 2.72 billion shares in FBNH including direct personal shareholding and indirect interests in five other firms. These represent 7.57 per cent of FBNH’s total issued share capital of 35.895 billion ordinary shares of 50 kobo each.

    With this, Otedola is ahead of the declared 5.36 per cent equity stake held by Mr Tunde Hassan-Odukale. However, the final confirmation of the current shareholding structure of the group will be determined after the filing of statutory notification by the board of directors.

    In what signposted the dogged nature of the boardroom struggle, technicalities of secondary market transactions and the uncertainties still around the contentious implication of Otedola’s holding, the board of FBNH only reported acquisition of 200 million ordinary shares by Otedola to the Nigerian Exchange (NGX), contrary to the more than 900 million shares indicated under the additional 2.52 per cent equity stake.

    But it is also the first formal acceptance of Otedola as a major shareholder. According to the regulatory filing, the insider disclosure was filed because Otedola was as a “significant shareholder”. Material or significant shareholding, under the Nigerian capital market rules implies five per cent or above. Such material or significant shareholding must be declared to the company and the relevant regulatory authorities.

    Trading rules at the NGX also consider such significant shareholders as insider whose trading activities on the company’s shares must be publicly declared. It was in compliance with the rule on insider trading disclosure that Otedola’s recent acquisition was formally reported. According to the regulatory filing, Otedola bought 200 million shares at an average price of N11.52 per share between December 6 and 8, 2021.

    In another twist, Otedola last week reportedly dispelled insinuations that he was angling for chairmanship of the board of FBNH. Then, is he building up portfolio as a passive secondary-market investor or it is in response to the intrigues and the challenges of external takeover of a long-entrenched group like FBNH?

    In what was apparently not an ordinary coincidence, an existing director and chairman of First Bank of Nigeria (FBN), Mr. Tunde Hassan-Odukale had in the wake of the Otedola’s acquisition increased his shareholdings to 5.36 per cent. Odukale is a long-standing, generational insider in FBNH. A financier and recognised operator in the financial services sector and as such, he and other directors have been profiled and cleared.

    On the other hand, Otedola’s initial acquisition had triggered a regulatory review of his shareholding by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN). Rule 4.1 of the Guidelines for Licensing and Regulation of Financial Holding Companies in Nigeria stipulates that where shares amounting to five per cent of a holding company are acquired through the secondary market, such holding company shall apply for approval from the CBN within seven days of the acquisition. The apex bank has not made public any formal report on its approval review of Otedola’s acquisition. However, weighing in on the contention around ‘majority shareholder’ and ‘largest shareholder’, CBN Governor, Godwin Emefiele stylishly said First Bank is too big to be owned by a person.

    With about 1.2 million shareholders, FBNH has been ran by a longstanding, time-tested traditional alliance of several shareholders with major shareholdings, who traditionally pool their holdings through proxies to sway major decisions including board and management appointments. That alliance was tested recently during a boardroom squabble and it fended off what was described as “undue” influence.

    The latest audit of the group, released two weeks ago, showed that 42 shareholders hold 36.01 per cent equity stake. When extended upward, 239 shareholders own 51.74 per cent while the 440 shareholders hold the critical mass of 77.44 per cent equity stake. But according to the audit dated September 31, 2021, no shareholder held more than 5.0 per cent. This underlined the alliances needed to make major changes in FBNH and the collective, democratic nature of its corporate governance, arguably the most unique in the financial services sector.

    FBNH is still the most-traded stock at the NGX, underlining the continuing contest for the control of the group. FBNH closed weekend as the most active stock for the week with a turnover of 185.09 million shares worth N2.23 billion in 1,069 deals. So, FBNH is not only a defining business issue of 2021, but the ramifications may be more pronounced in the next few months.