Tag: Abibatu Mogaji

  • Abibatu Mogaji: Ode to a legendary amazon

    Abibatu Mogaji: Ode to a legendary amazon

    It was a homecoming feast penultimate Sunday at the Glover Memorial Hall, Lagos, when Abibatu Mogaji, was performed after a successful premiere in Abuja recently. The evening was not only historic, but also a hallmark of creative performance laced with theatrical dissipation of the cultural prowess of Nigerian artistes.

    Abibatu Mogaji, written by prolific dramatist and former Artistic Director, National Troupe of Nigeria, Prof. Ahmed Yerima, and produced by Ola Awakan, is a play in honour of the late legendary Iyaloja General Alhaja Abibatu Asabi Mogaji, the mother of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu. It had in attendance Governor of Lagos State, Mr. Babajide Olusola Sanwo-Olu, the granddaughter of Abibatu Mogaji and current Iyaloja-General of Nigeria, Mrs. Folashade Tinubu-Ojo, Commissioner for Tourism Toke Benson; the Special Adviser to the Governor on Tourism, Arts and Culture, Idris Aregbe, the grandson and Lagos Assembly member, Damola Kasunmu, the APC Southwest zonal women leader, Hon. Yetunde Adesanya, traditional rulers and market men/women, among others.

    The play, which is packed full of dancing and singing is a tapestry of the life and times of the great amazon who steered the affairs of most markets in her time, particularly Lagos. It also highlights not only her forthrightness and philanthropic nature, but also the great influence of mentorship and motherly care she had on President Tinubu growing up as a child.

    Opening with a bubbling market scene, the play which lasted for about two hours, takes the audience into the many situations that influenced the growing up of little Abibatu acted by Nwanevu Sharon into a business mogul and a strong pillar in Lagos market having found a mentor in one of the famous Akara sellers in Lagos.

    Read Also: Abibatu Mogaji: 10 years after

    “I am very happy, by Allah’s grace, I know I will be like Iyaloja,” she said, while convincing her parents on why she chose the second school to attend in order to learn trading, particularly Akara selling.

    Expectedly, the emergence of Abibatu acted by Seyisola Ogbonna as Iyaloja General was greeted with fanfare by all especially the market men and women who thronged her home to celebrate the appointment. In appreciation of the peoples’ supports, she prayed: “This market shall progress, and our success shall shine like sun. The world will hear of it”. 

    The performance wasn’t all about the positive side of the prominent businesswoman, Abibatu. Some of the thorny issues such as litigation, which she faced in the hands of colonial administration, were also highlighted in the play.

    Beyond entertainment, the play is to amplify the potential of the creative economy through the achievement of a legend who contributed to nation building. Among the cast of the play are Olaoluwa Olawale (Chief Egungbayi), Adewale Oleolu (Ibrahim, Iman), Awesome Dure (Lawyer), Olatunde Olamide (Pelewura), Nissi George (Gbadamosi Mogaji), Smart Adejumo (Amusa), Duke Patience (Batile Alake), May Okanigbe (Madam Rabi) Jumai Buba (Saadatu), Damipe Adekoya (Kafaya) and Loto Olaoluwakitan (Chief Odili)

    Executive Producer of the play, Awakan in his opening remark said the greatness of every society lies in its effort to enhance transformation through human capital development and promotion of its diverse history, culture, and economic assets.

    “No denying the incontrovertible truism that Nigeria is blessed with the needed cultural endowment embedded in her rich history of people and places. How best can we then walk this path of rekindling our greatness without telling the stories of our heroes past to inspire our up-and-coming Legends?

    “This is the basis for this tale of legends, which we are kick-starting today with the fascinating story of our great Mama Alhaja Abibatu Asabi Mogaji, the mother of our current president, His Excellency Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu. This platform for cultural preservation lays credence to the indubitable power of the creative industry to help jack up our nation’s GDP.

    “Through this production alone we have directly and indirectly engaged over 2000 youth positively across the theatre, media, hospitality, print, transport, logistics, aviation, fashion and artisans – both skilled and unskilled, added to the over 20,000 that we have betrothed over 10 years. If handled with the utmost sense of responsibility, planning, and implementation of the bounteous ideas that can sprout from the sector, no doubt we will all be on the right path to national advancement. Jobs can be adequately created; our tourism potential can be better appreciated and our value system properly positioned. This is in line with the Renewed Hope mantra of His Excellency President Bola Ahmed Tinubu GCFR,” he added.

    According to Awakan, the production took the team over seven months of planning and ‘today we have this play, well researched, written by our own prolific dramatist, my mentor and literary father, Prof Ahmed Yerima, and what Artswax Communications plans to do with it is to educate, inspire and mentor young women, and Nigerians in general.’

    “We plan to take it on a tour and the Nigerians in the diaspora are salivating already. There is a lot to see and learn from. But it was tough getting here! We needed many to be there for us but very few opened the door when we knocked. However, our resilience has made today a day that will go down in history for good,” he said in an opening remark.

    No doubt, the play is a significant acknowledgment of the sterling contributions of the late matriarch who lived and traded for the good of all. It is a deserving posthumous homage that its time has come.

    The closing section of the play that highlights the appearance of Abibatu  from spirit world to counsel and pray for Ahmed (Bola Tinubu) acted by 

    Prince Ladega Ibrahim Kehinde, did not carry that aura of an encounter with a spirit. However, the dialogue between Tinubu the mother was summed in four words “Never let me down.”

    From the play, it was abundantly clear that the late Alhaja Abibatu was like a mother hen to everyone, particularly the market men and women. Tributes by close associates also revealed that she was a caring mother and dependable partner. “If you are loyal to Alhaja, you will get her heart. I converted to Islam because of Alhaja and she sponsored me to Mecca,” according to one of the women that spoke in the documentary shown before the start of the play at 6.08pm.  Her popular song E ma ba ro bo, which was her catchphrase and sermon for staying on side of truth still resonates among her friends and relations even after death.

  • Abibatu Mogaji: 11 years after

    Abibatu Mogaji: 11 years after

    Eleven years ago, Alhaja Abibatu Ashabi Mogaji, Iyaloja-General of Lagos and Nigeria, and mother of President Bola Tinubu, died. 

    A stage play written by renowned playwright, Prof. Ahmed Yerima, and produced by award-winning journalist Ola Awakan, will be premiered today at the State House Conference Hall, Presidential Villa, Abuja. 

    The Nation’s Deputy Editor EMMANUEL OLADESU writes on the life and times of the Amazon, and her involvement in the Southwest and national politics, and legacies as foremost women leader.

    In the fifties, women participation in politics was limited to attending rallies, campaigns and voting. Only few women-Mrs. Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti and Mrs. Magret Ekpo-were fielded as candidates for elections. The late Mrs. Wuraola Esan, Iyalode of Ibadan, was also appointed as a member of the ceremonial Senate.

    The slots conceded to women were few. The few concessions did not justify their level of involvement and commitment.

    Among prominent women leaders who mobilised for political action, from pre-independence era, was the late Alhaja Abibatu Ashabi Mogaji. Although she passed on 11 years ago in Lagos at 96, her legacies are evergreen.

    Read Also: Lagos enhances civil service capacity in new reform

    Mogaji was a relentless market activist, woman of substance, philanthropist, and promoter of Islam. She knew her onions; very enterprising, discliplined, courageous, hardworking, diligent and highly principled.

    But the deceased President of Market Men and Women Association of Nigeria also made her marks in politics. She was in the class of women politician like the late Mrs. Olayinka Rosiji, the leader of the Action Group (AG) Women Association and illustrious mother of Chief Ayo Rosiji, celebrated secretary of the defunct party, and the late Mrs. Jolubu Kolade, a leader of the Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) women’s wing in Ondo State. 

    The market matriarch was also a close associate of Mrs. Hannah Dideolu Awolowo, the widow of the late sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo. They remained as friends till the end.

    Alhaja Mogaji was a consummate politician. Yet, she played her politics without expecting any exceptional personal reward. Her expectation was a new lease of life for the masses, particularly members of her trading constituency, market women.

    She paid her financial dues to the coffers of the AG and UPN, unlike nowadays when payment of party dues by party members is old-fashioned. She also organised market women into “political cells” across the old local councils, thereby making it easy for the parties to mobilise them under her indisputable leadership. 

    For over 60 years, Mogaji was the voice of women in Lagos. She used her platform, the market association, for interest articulation and aggregation. Even, when she had an opportunity to contribute to the old council management, she stuck to her passion, which was advancing the cause of market men and women.

    Three years before she passed on, the Yeyeoba of Lagos, Ikirun and Kweme, was appointed as the Chairman of Lagos State Market Development Board. The appointment by former Governor Babatunde Fashola (SAN) crowned her involvement and service to the members of the strategic community who accounted for her pre-eminence in the metropolis. On her wheel chair, she spoke as the market ambassador and endowed the office with visibility and honour. Throughout her life, she acted as an effective bridge builder between the government and the masses.

    “All market men and women are important and government should carry them along,” she said during her inauguration by the former Head of Service, Alhaji Yakubu Balogun, who presented her with the certificate of appointment, amid applause by other board members.

    Throughout her market career, Mogaji’s leadership was never disputed by traders who held her in high esteem. Not only has she articulated the views and interests of traders, her name has been synonymous with Lagos market, its pride, beauty and varieties, its challenges and pains, its prospects and pitfalls. 

    It was a no mean feat that she led the organisation without betraying the group’s objectives and without abusing her exalted office. She never personalised the power of the market, but promoted inclusion and fostered a team spirit among market leaders across the local governments.

    During the colonial period, Alhaja Mogaji had shown that promise of leadership as a kid trader and an apprentice learning at the feet of the legendary Madam Pelewura, a successful and influential trader in the metropolis. 

    She was not afraid of the rain and scourging sun, the devastating threat to hawking, and the discomfort associated with buying and selling in the city. She was faithful to her boss to the end, making her to earn her trust and receive her blessing.

    Immediately, she built on that time-tested trading reputation. When she started her own business, she became a household name in Lagos, mentoring young leaders and organising them into associations and societies for interest articulation. 

    In her informal school of commerce, she taught the principles of profitable trading, diversification of commercial ventures and traditional debt recovery. She also exposed many traders to variety trading, the value of hard-work, customers relations and confidence building, lending and borrowing with dignity, and keeping of promise.

    Alhaja Mogaji achieved fame by dint of hardwork, self-sacrifice and commitment to the goals of life. She was a focused trader and employer of labour in the informal setting. Many who came to her as trading apprentices later became so close to her and she treated them like blood relations. She was also a strict disciplinarian. As a parent, she groomed people without sparing the rod to spoil the child.

    But, early in life too, her human face, human heart and milk of human kindness came to the fore. She became a philanthropist, channeling resources to the poor and needy. Her house became the rallying point and refuge for widows, homeless and other artisans and peasants who needed succour. 

    Many youths became graduates on her unsung scholarship. Numerous others were aided to be up and doing in their businesses. Although an advocate of religious harmony, the devoted Muslim was a frontline defender of the faith who sponsored many religious activities in the media.

    However, she was not a religious bigot. The Iyaloja sponsored faithful on pilgrimage to Mecca and Jerusalem.

    Unknown to many, Alhaja Mogaji was also a politician. The Amazon was active in the hey days of party supremacy and hierarchical discipline when party followers paid dues as financial members, when political consensus received majority endorsement, when leaders were credible, and when government was responsible and accountable. 

    She had joined the AG.in the fifties, mobilising support for the leader, Awolowo, during campaigns. She was an active member of the AG Women Association, led by the late Mrs Rosiji, until the split in the party at the Jos Conference in 1962. She printed banners and posters for AG leaders for free and steered women to endorse Awo and other candidates at the polls.

    Paradoxically, Lagos, her main base, was firmly under the control of the defunct National Council of Nigerian Citizens (NCNC), led by the late Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, who had become a parliamentarian in Ibadan. But, when the AG seized the storm, Alhaja Mogaji played a prominent role in securing the bloc vote of women for AG in Lagos. 

    Her mobilisation prowess, despite her lack of formal education, puzzled the NCNCers like Otunba Theophilus Benson, Chief Adeniran Ogunsanya, Alhaji S. A. Adewale (the boy is good) , Dr Ibiyinka Olorunnimbe, Chief Adeleke Adedoyin, and Prince Adeyinka Oyekan, who later became the Oba of Lagos. Through her political activities, she became very close to Mrs. HID Awolowo.

    When the late Alhaji Ganiyu Dawodu wanted to replace Bashorun J. K. Randle as a councilor in the Lagos City council, Mogaji was one of the eminent Lagosians who campaigned for him, despite the stiff opposition by the equally powerful Lagosians in the NCNC, who objected to the ambition of the “political lad.” Dawodu later became the chairman of the council in the First Republic. He succeeded the popular lawyer, Adeyemi Lawson.

    During the military rule, Alhaja Mogaji was a force to reckon with. When the prices of food jumped up in Lagos, the first military Head of State, Gen. Thomas Aguiyi-Ironsi, pleaded with her to appeal to the traders. But, she also demanded for social amenities for the people from the government. 

    Reflecting on the incident, Ironsi’s secretary, Ambassador Hamzat Ahmadu, who paid a condolence visit to the family, said: “The former Head of State sent me to her to appeal to her to reduce the price of foodstuff, which she did. She did not leave it at that. She called me and said, my son, I have done my part. What about the General? I said he will do his part.”

    Her lack of education may have robbed her of cabinet appointments in Lagos State during the long period of military rule and during the Second Republic. Alhaja Mogaji was among top women leaders who rallied women behind Alhaji Lateef Jakande, when he ran for governor of Lagos in 1979. Jakande, son of Oluwo of Lagos, defeated Prince Ladega Adele, son of Oba Musendiku Adeniji-Adele of Lagos, and in1983, he defeated Hakeem Habeeb.

    Alhaja Mogaji’s services to the Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN), even at the centre, was legendary. An Awoist, she played a prominent role in the crisis resolution agenda of the AG and UPN under Awolowo. She accompanied Mrs. Awolowo to Offa, Kwara State, on a historic peace mission mooted by the leaders of the UPN to reconcile the late Chief Josiah Sunday Olawoyin and Senator Cornelius Adebayo, following the crisis that broke out after the 1982 governorship primary. 

    Then, Awo and Jakande supported the governorship ambition of Olawoyin, the Asiwaju of Offa, while former Governor Bola Ige of old Oyo State and Senator Abraham Adesanya backed Adebayo. It was not easy for Olawoyin to let go, especially when there were indications that UPN would ride on the back of the protracted crisis between Senator Olusola Saraki and Governor Adamu Attah to power. 

    Olawoyin felt that he should be the candidate, in view of his past contributions to the progressive fold, his sacrifices and humiliation in the hands of Northern Peoples Congress (NPC) leaders when he was the Leader of Opposition in the old Northern Region. Twice was the shadow election held, and Adebayo won on all counts.

    To prevent the escalation of the intra-party crisis in the Kwara State UPN, the duo of Mrs. Awolowo and Mogaji left Lagos for Offa to pacify Olawoyin. As the Mrs Awolowo, Yeyeoba of Ife, later recalled, “We, women, recorded success where men had failed.”

    Alhaja Mogaji was not lettered, but when the elite deserted Awo in the days of political tribulation in the First Republic, she rejected overtures from Chief Ladoke Akintola, leader of ‘Demo Party’ and controversial Premier of Western Region, to defect from the AG.

     Throughout the period that Awo was in jail, she was always present at Ikenne home of the leader for the yearly birthday celebrations. She was a pillar of support for Mama Awo and other oppressed progressive leaders under the banner of the United Progressive Grand Alliance (UPGA).

    Three years before she passed on, she reviewed her political life during her birthday at her Alausa, Ikeja residence. She said: “I have seen it all. I have interacted with Zik, Balewa, Sardauna, Ironsi and Gowon. I have played my role and served my people. All I have been saying is that market women and the masses should be catered for.” 

    The remarks were reminiscent of her farewell address to former military President Ibrahim Babangida, during the commissioning of the Third Mainland Bridge, Lagos. Mogaji said: “Ibrahim and Moriamo (Maryam), as you are going to Abuja, you should not forget Lagos. You should not forget us because you have been part of us”.

    Mogaji was also a “June 12” crusader. An apostle of justice, she had decried the criminal annulment of the historic election won by the late Chief Moshood Abiola on the platform of the defunctSocialDemocraticParty(SDP). 

    In fact, she went to appeal to Babangida in Abuja to rescind his decision on the cancellation of the results. She was accompanied by her son, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, Third Republic senator and pro-democracy crusader who played a key role in the National Democratic Coalition (NADECO).

    Tinubu is now president, a decade after her demise. Whenever he stormed Sunday Adigun Street, Alausa, Ikeja to cast his votes, he is always seized by emotion and nostalgia. On those occasions, Tinubu used to wheel Alhaja Mogaji to and fro the polling booth.

    Mama Awo and her compatriot, Mama Mogaji, were weighed down by the burden of old age at the twilight of life. They could only dictate the tune on wheel chairs, although their powers of ideas and mental recall remained intact. Reflecting on that inevitable limitation imposed by old age, Mrs. Awolowo, who is ever fond of her friend, said that their early tolls and deep political involvement actually sapped their energy.

    Also, at private level, Alhaja Mogaji bore the vicissitudes of life, including the demise of her promising daughter, Mrs. Kasumu, with philosophical calmness.

    Under the Tinubu Administration, there were allegations that some traders had converted their market shops to residence by sleeping overnight there. Government threatened to deal with the culprits. Drastic measures were proposed to curb their desecration of the markets. It was Mogaji who brokered peace between the government and aggrieved market women.

    In 2011, the women leader also endorsed Fashola for a second term, ahead of the party’s endorsement. During her birthday, which was attended by Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) leaders-Chief Bisi Akande, the late Alhaji Olatunji Hamzat, Prince Tajudeen Olusi, and Prince Abiodun Ogunleye, she raised up the hand of the governor. Turning to former Governor Bola Tinubu, Mogaji, she said in Yoruba: “I was here in this house when you said that you have discovered the best man to take over from you. You have spent eight years. Fashola will also spend eight years.”

    A staunch believer in welfarist programmes, Mogaji was instrumental to the Lagos State government policy of paying the WAEC and NECO of secondary students as a way of sustaining the access of indigent students to quality education.

    Many people used to seek help from her over school fees and WAEC/NECO fees. When she could not cope, she usually sent the long list to Tinubu in the Round House, Alausa seat of government. The former governor now realised that many poor people may not be able pay examination fees. Tinubu administration therefore, took over the payment. Other states started emulating Lagos.

    In appreciation of her contributions to the socio-economic and political development of the country, Mogaji was bestowed with the national honour of “Member of the Order of Federal Republic” (MFR) and Officer of the Order of the Niger (OON) by the Federal Government. In addition, Lagos State University (LASU), Ojo, and Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), Zaria, gave her a honorary doctorate degrees.

  • Abibatu Mogaji lived exemplary life, says Sanwo-Olu

    Lagos State Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu has described the late President-General (Iyaloja) of the Association of Market Women, Alhaja Abibabu Mogaji, as a “fantastic adviser and selfless leader” that used her influence for the common good of the people.

    Sanwo-Olu, who was represented by his deputy, Dr. Obafemi Hamzat, spoke during a thanksgiving at the Chapel of Christ The Light in Alausa to mark the sixth year remembrance of the late Alhaja Mogaji, noted that she was a leader and a social crusader worthy of emulating.

    He urged leaders to emulate the leadership traits of the late Alhaja Mogaji, saying her legacies would only be sustained, if leaders created a society that will work for all citizens.

    During his exhortation, Chairman of the Lagos State chapter of Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Apostle Alexander Bamgbola, urged leaders to dedicate their lives towards building legacies that will outlive them and also to devote time for righteous deeds while alive.

    In his homily sermon titled: “God’s Mercy In The Midst of Adversity”, Apostle Bamgbola noted that God had a conclusion for every human’s life when he said people must always seek direction from God to live a life that would have an exemplary conclusion.

    Read Also: Group urges Sanwo-Olu to instill sanity, security on roads, hospitals

    Reading from 2 Samuel 24:14, the cleric urged believers not to hesitate in seeking God’s mercy, noting that it is only through the mercy of God that a life could end with good memories.

    The cleric, who stressed that Alhaja Mogaji led a life that was worthy of emulation, said the deceased left a memory that posed a challenge to people towards building on the good legacies she left behind.

    He said: “After death, what is left is a memory of the deceased. And this is what people will remember about every one of us after we leave this world.

    “Mama Mogaji is being remembered six years after her demise because of the good memories she left in our mind. It is the only memory that will abide forever. What memory are we leaving behind when we leave?” he said.

    The cleric advised believers to strive to create memories that would make people remember them for their deeds.

    President-General of Association of Market Women Mrs. Folashade Tinubu-Ojo led members of Tinubu’s family and market leaders to the service.

    Others dignitaries at the thanksgiving service include the wife of the Deputy Governor, Mrs. Oluremi Hamzat, Chief of Staff Mr. Tayo Ayinde, Head of Service Mr. Hakeem Muri-Okunola, Deputy Chief of Staff Mr. Gboyega Soyannwo and Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Home Affairs, Mr. Adebunmi Adekanye, among others.

  • One-year Fidau prayer for Mogaji holds today

    The one Year Fidau prayer for the late Iyaloja General and President General of Market Men and Women in Nigeria, Alhaja Abibatu Mogaji, who passed on last year comes up on Sunday at the Tafawa Balewa Square, Lagos.

    A statement by the deceased’s grand-daughter and Iyaloja of Lagos, Chief (Mrs) Folashade Tinubu- Ojo, said the event which will attract well wishers from far and near will commence at 10 am.

    She added that Muslim clerics and scholars will use the occasion to pray for the repose of the soul of the late Iyaloja General.

     

  • Alhaja Abibatu Mogaji

    Alhaja Abibatu Mogaji

    A woman of substance departs at 96

    Few women dominated the public consciousness like the late Alhaja Abibatu Asabi Mogaji,  Iya Oloja of Lagos, President-General, Association of Nigerian Market Women and Men, and mother of former Lagos State governor, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, did for the better part of five decades. As one of the most significant figures in trade and business, her influence on the well-being of the citizenry, especially in Lagos and south-west Nigeria, was profound.

    Born on October 16, 1916, Alhaja Mogaji first came to public prominence as the vocal leader of the powerful market-women’s association in Lagos State. It was in this role that she demonstrated the outspokenness and media savvy that was to endear her to the populace. She did a great deal to change popular perceptions of market-women as exploitative and ignorant by enunciating the challenges and hopes of her constituency with a clarity that was remarkable for the time and even now.

    One of her first successes was the way in which she contributed to ensuring that the lucrative retail trade in Lagos Island, hitherto dominated by Greek and Lebanese merchants, came into Nigerian hands. This she did through the effective mobilisation of indigenous traders and her ability to convince them of the need to ensure that they were not discriminated against in their own country.

    When other issues like high prices, the scarcity of goods, street-trading and struggles for positions arose, the efficacy with which she helped arrive at workable solutions made her indispensable to successive administrations in the state. Working with them, she oversaw a tremendous expansion in the size, quality and sophistication of markets in Lagos. As environmental sanitation became increasingly important, she ensured that traders were properly enlightened on their role in ensuring that the state was kept clean, peaceful and prosperous.

    Alhaja Mogaji’s honesty of purpose and good sense were also put to fruitful use in mitigating the worst excesses of military rule. She developed a good working relationship with General Ibrahim Babangida when he was in office, and was famous for the lack of obsequiousness which she displayed in her public interactions with him. Where more intellectually-sophisticated arguments failed to influence him, it was Alhaja Mogaji’s homely words of wisdom which often swayed the then Head of State.

    In an era when ethical flexibility was the order of the day, Alhaja Mogaji stood out in the bluntness with which she spoke out on public issues. She did not claim to be a politician or a technocrat, and indeed neither sought nor wanted public office, but she always strove to emphasise the distinction between good and bad policies, and did so with a forcefulness that made many people sit up and take notice.

    It is heart-warming that Asiwaju Tinubu represents a worthy continuation of the ideals that distinguished the life of Alhaja Mogaji. He displays the same grassroots instincts, the same populist ethos, and the same forcefulness of speech and personality that characterised his mother. There can be little doubt that if more citizens demonstrated similar traits of public-spiritedness and social concern, the country would be a better place.

    As the nation mourns the passing of Alhaja Mogaji on June 15, it is to be hoped that her qualities of consistency, commitment and honesty percolate more deeply into national life. Her lifelong activism on behalf of those who did business in markets was a model of self-sacrifice that the nation’s politicians in particular would do well to imitate. She did not allow anything to stand in the way of speaking truth to power, nor did she allow her acquaintance with the rich and powerful to cut her off from her roots.

    May her soul rest in perfect peace.

  • Mogaji contributed to societal development – Mark

    Mogaji contributed to societal development – Mark

    Senate President, David Mark, on Sunday commiserated with the former Governor of Lagos State, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, over the death of his mother, Alhaja Abibat Mogaji Tinubu.

    Mark in a condolence message to the government and people of Lagos State, described the late Mogaji as an “ideal mother” who contributed her quota to the peace and development of the society.

    He noted that the late matriarch was a great business woman and leader whose philanthropic gesture cut across ethnic and religious boundaries.

    He added that the late Mogaji would be remembered for her industry and leadership quality, pointing out that she was “a great leader who brought dignity and honour in administration and purposeful management in commerce and industry in Lagos and its environs.

    “We shall miss her wise counsel. We shall miss her care and sense of humour.”

    The Senate President in a statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Paul Mumeh in Abuja also told the government and people of Lagos State especially the bereaved family to take solace in the fact that their late mother lived an “eventful and accomplished life worthy of emulation.”