Tag: Ajayi

  • Ondo 2024: ‘Why PDP chieftains abandoned PDP’s Ajayi’

    Ondo 2024: ‘Why PDP chieftains abandoned PDP’s Ajayi’

    Details have emerged on why some chieftains of the Peoples Democratic Party are abandoning the party in droves ahead of the November 16th, governorship election.

    Three prominent governorship aspirants—Chief Sola Ebiseni, Otunba Bamidele Akingboye, and Hon Kolade Akinjo—who lost the party primary to Agboola Ajayi, have now aligned with other political parties. Otunba Akingboye is now the candidate for the Social Democratic Party (SDP), while Ebiseni is representing the Labour Party (LP).

    Otunba Akingboye emerged candidate of the Social Democratic Party (SDP) while Ebiseni emerged candidate of the Labour Party.

    The structure of Zenith Labour Party (ZLP) led by former Governor Olusegun Mimiko fused into the PDP ahead of last year’s general elections have defected to the PDP.

    Meanwhile, last month, the PDP structure in Ilaje Local Government Area, Governor Lucky Aiyedatiwa’s home base, pledged its support for Aiyedatiwa’s victory.

    Sources within the PDP, speaking on condition of anonymity, suggest that their departure is a form of retribution against Ajayi for his decision to run under the ZLP in the 2020 governorship election.

    They also expressed dissatisfaction with Ajayi’s unexpected emergence as the party’s candidate, arguing that he was not their preferred choice.

    Otunba Akingboye explained his departure by citing a tour of the state, which he claims revealed a strong public preference for him as the next governor.

    He also expressed frustration over his 21-year struggle within the PDP, during which he claims he was never given a fair opportunity to secure the party’s nomination.

    Associates of former Governor Mimiko, in a statement, said they left the PDP to be part of the electoral victory of Aiyedatiwa.

    A former lawmaker, Joseph Akinlaja, said there has been internal sabotage in the PDP since the party suffered defeat in 2016.

    He said the decision not to support Ajayi was a matter of choice.

    Read Also: Paris 2024 Olympics: Nigeria’s Ajayi, Ashe advance into 100m men’s semis 

    Governor of Osun State, Ademola Adeleke, who inaugurated the state campaign council headed by Dr. Eddy Olafeso, said the people would determine who emerged as the next Governor and not defectors.

    An ally of Ajayi, Mr. Ayo Fadaka, said the defectors were majorly from the ZLP under whose Ajayi contested the 2020 governorship election.

    Fadaka said they were economical with the truth.

    He said there were moves by Ajayi and top party leaders to persuade the defectors to remain in the party.

    “They change nomenclature every election season. They are likely to be football players who change clubs for peculiar reasons. They are rolling stones that gather no moss. Even when they charged the party, the party they changed to never win the election. They cannot be a gain to the party they went to or they are lost to us. There is no best for them.”

  • Ajayi: why I will defeat Aiyedatiwa

    Ajayi: why I will defeat Aiyedatiwa

    Governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the November 16 election in Ondo State, Agboola Ajayi, yesterday boasted that he would defeat incumbent Governor Lucky Aiyedatiwa,

    Ajayi said he remained a grassroots politician that understood what was required to revive the state’s economy.

    He said he was in the race to win because of his vision for the state’s economic transformation and inclusive, sustainable growth.

    The former deputy governor spoke in Akure after he was unveiled by leadership of the Ondo PDP ahead of the party’s campaign tour of the 18 local governments.

    Ajayi said residents of the state have become casualty of bad governance under the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Read Also: Behind use of women as suicide bombers

    He said most communities that used to be economically vibrant are no longer so.

    He said: “I am embarking on a journey that will transform Ondo State. A journey that will give us a state to be proud of. We will not give our people fish, but we will teach them how to catch fish.

    “I started politics at a very tender age as a ward chairman. I was one of those who went for Abiola’s convention in Jos. So, you should know that I started long ago. From there, I became secretary of the party, I became a councillor, I was also elected as a supporting chairman.

    “So, the people know us very well, they are going to choose wisely, I can assure you, they have already chosen me to lead the state in the coming election.

    “There is no tractor provided for farmers in Ondo State. So, how do you expect mechanised farming to thrive in such state? I believe Ondo State can feed the entire Southwest states. My government will encourage massive mechanised farming. Farmers will be provided with adequate facilities to aid their businesses.”

    Zonal Liaison Desk Officer of the party in the Southwest, Dr. Eddy Olafeso, said he did not plant any crop this year because the state government could not provide any tractor.

    He said PDP would hold APC accountable for all the money that came to the state from when Akeredolu was elected till this moment.

    “I am a farmer, but I can now say that I was a farmer because I didn’t plant this season. I requested and begged for a tractor, which I’m going to be paying N90,000 in respect per hectare, but I can’t get any till now. This means, there is no agenda for people in the agricultural sector, which means there is no agenda for people in small businesses.

    “The criminality in government must be fought. And you see, you look at our faces and ask why do these old men think they can fight? Yes, we may not be able to make 100 metres in 20 seconds, but the truth is that our head is as clear as when we were 18 years old.”

  • We won’t give up against Angola , says Ajayi

    We won’t give up against Angola , says Ajayi

    Semi Ajayi has said that Super Eagles will do everything to secure victory against Palancas  Negras of Angola in today’s  quarter-finals tie at the Houphouët Boigny Stadium in Abidjan.

    The West Bromwich Albion of England centre back said the team has worked so hard to reach this stage and cannot afford to let it slip away from them.

    With dedication and commitment, the 30-year-old defender believes Super Eagles can beat Angola and progress to the semi-finals of the tournament.

    “We know it won’t be easy because they have a lot to play for. We have to be fully focused on the three points. We have full confidence in this team and we know how important the quarter-finals stages are and we can’t joke with it,” Ajayi said.

    He added: “We need to be ready for everything in the game and definitely we would be. We have worked very hard to reach this stage. So we can’t afford to let it slip away at this stage and we won’t give up on the pitch.

    Read Also: Adeleke issues 24-hour ultimatum to warring communities to submit arms

    “We will give everything to fight for our country and go as far as we can in this tournament. All we asked for is there support and prayers.”

    Nigeria defeated Cameroon in the round of 16 game on Saturday by 2-0, with Atalanta of Italy forward Ademola Lookman scored the two goals.

    Before the Cameroon’s game, the Super Eagles had managed to score three goals in three matches against Equatorial Guinea, Cote D’Ivoire, Guinea Bissau respectively.

    But Ajayi believes that the Super Eagles attacking line are improving game by game.

    “I think our attacking line has improved. We created lots of chances in the last game and we are getting closer and closer and ones it clicks, we will be adding more goals in our games,” he added.

  • Goals will come against Cameroon, Ajayi assures

    Goals will come against Cameroon, Ajayi assures

    Semi Ajayi is optimistic about Nigeria’s chances going beyond round of 16 at the ongoing Africa Cup of Nations in Cote d’Ivoire.

    The center back said the team will approach the knockout phase with different mentality.

    Semi Ajayi is optimistic about Nigeria advancing to the Round of 16.

    “We can’t give up, we are fighting for our country. The aim is to win the tournament and we can only achieve that by beating others,” Ajayi said.

    “We know how important the knock stages are, we can’t joke with it. We need to be ready to fight for everything.”

    Read Also: Enoh seeks sporting alliance between Nigeria, Turkey

    The Super Eagles have laboured for goals, despite parading arguably the best attacking talents.

    With the team scheduled to face Cameroon on Saturday, Ajayi is confident, the goals will come.

    “It is coming, you can see from the number of chances we created in the final third.

    “We getting closer and closer. Once things click, we’ll start adding goals to our game,” he concluded.

  • Ajayi reassures Nigerians ahead of knockout matches

    Ajayi reassures Nigerians ahead of knockout matches

    • Paul Onehi

    Super Eagles defender, Semi Ajayi, is confident that  Nigeria  can go all the way and win  the Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON)  after  over a decade  of  winning the title in 2013.

     Nigeria  and Cameroon will meet on Saturday  in a round of 16 clash which is largely being dubbed as one of the eye-catching fixtures of the knockout round  at Cote d’Ivoire 2023.

    Though  numerous Nigerians have voiced concerns about the Super Eagles’ struggles to find the back of the net during the tournament as Jose Peseiro’s team have managed to score only three goals in as many group matches,  Ajayi  is optimistic that  the Super Eagles will weather  the storm and go all the way. 

    Read Also: SUPER EAGLES TRACKER: Aribo scores for Saints as Aina, Ajayi shine for Nottingham

    “It’s just a matter of time before everything clicks. You can see the chances we are creating. We’re edging closer, and once it all falls into place, we’ll see more goals in our game,” the West Bromwich Albion defender said.

     The    30-year-old  defender  stressed that the primary goal of the team  is to win their matches irrespective  of  the  scoring margin.

    “Whether it’s a five-nil victory or a one-nil win. We can take pride in our defensive strength, and the goals will follow,” he continued. “I have complete confidence in this team. We understand the intensity of the knockout stages. 

    “There’s no room for complacency; we must be prepared right from the beginning of each game, and we certainly will be,” he added.

  • Esuku, Ajayi dominate national taekwondo ranking

    Commonwealth gold medallist, Josephine Esuku and the Most Valuable Player (MVP) at the just concluded 2018 Korean Ambassador Cup, Ifeoluwa Ajayi, have extended their grip at the top of the national ranking released by the Nigeria Taekwondo Federation.

    Esuku and Ajayi were outstanding at the 2018 Korean Ambassador Cup with Ajayi claiming the MVP gong while the performance of Esuku ensured that the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) retained their title at the tournament.

    Ajayi who represented Lagos-based Q-Madi Club displayed exceptional skills and he was adjudged the MVP.

    For claiming two gold and one silver medals; Esuku was outstanding for NSCDC and the team to emerge as the overall best for the sixth consecutive edition.

    A look at the just released national ranking, which is updated after every major ranked competitive event, shows that the top ten taekwondo athletes in the country remain unchanged even though dynamics changed beneath the top position.

    The NTF Ranking System was debuted in 2017 to track the progress and development of both elite and upcoming players.

    Top ranked players would earn an invitation to the National Selection camp for the 2019 All African Games.

    Also the top eight ranked athletes in each weight category would be seeded for the forthcoming National Sports Festival, which would take place on December 6 to 16 in Abuja.

    Gold medalists at the 2018 National Sports Festival would also earn an invitation to the 2019 All African Games selection camp.

  • How I fell out with Fayose – Ex-Ekiti Attorney- General Ajayi

    Mr. Owoseni Ajayi, a former Attorney General and Commissioner of Justice in Ekiti State, was removed by Governor Ayo Fayose in controversial circumstances in 2017. His removal was done a few hours before he faced the panel that interviewed him for the award of Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN). In this interview with ODUNAYO OGUNMOLA, Ajayi relives the embarrassment caused him by Fayose’s action, his other experiences with the outgoing governor as a commissioner for three years and the circumstances that led to the defeat of the Ekiti State Deputy Governor, Prof. Kolapo Olusola, at the just concluded governorship election in the state.

    The Ekiti State governorship election has come and gone. As an active player in the election, what is your assessment of the exercise?

    Let me start by saying that the election was free, fair, transparent and credible. All the insinuations by the losers in that election that it was rigged were contrary to the facts on the ground during the election. And you will discover that when you see the result from all the polling units to the wards, the local government areas and the state level, they were keenly contested. You cannot see any bogus figure reflected in the election. It was a true reflection of the people’s will. It was a reaction to the misrule of Governor Peter Ayodele Fayose.

    I want to state categorically that, that election was not strictly about PDP and APC. It was strictly about Fayose and the people of Ekiti State. Three things were responsible for the downfall of Governor Fayose and his administration. One, he does not seem to believe that anybody else deserves to benefit from his administration because he believes the administration belongs to him alone. His greed was responsible for impoverishing virtually everybody that serves under him. Members of the House of Assembly are so impoverished that they find it difficult to meet their daily needs. He virtually took over the functions of the House of Assembly, running the House of Assembly as if it is a parastatal in the governor’s office. He demonstrated this when he went to the Assembly and said, ‘I am the Speaker here. Pastor Oluwawole is merely acting for me.’

    Our House of Assembly members never attended any seminar to brush up their experience anywhere outside the state. The furniture allowance, which is their constitutional entitlement, they have not been given up till now. Invariably, after securing a loan with their salaries at the inception of his administration, they are virtually left with nothing because their salaries have been consumed by the loan they collected. How do you expect those people to be happy with the administration?

    During an interview I granted earlier, I said about 15 of the Assembly members were already with us in APC, and I said then that it would be a gradual process; that some people would defect before the election and others would defect after the election. About that number is already moving against him. That is why he is now fighting tooth and nail to ensure that he is not impeached.

    How much advice did you give him on these as one of his commissioners?

    He is a kind of person who does not listen to advice. He does not care about people’s feelings or opinions. He behaves like an Emperor of the Manor. People don’t feel free to give him any advice any longer. What is the essence of giving an advice that will not be heeded? And if you give a genuine advice, he is going to see you as an enemy. As as a result of that, he is now surrounded completely by sycophants. These sycophants were the people that made him to pick a wrong person as the governorship candidate. A person whom he told the whole state in the stadium when he was being sworn in, and at all public fora, that as the deputy governor the man was going away with him, barely six months into the administration, he changed gear because he started nursing an ambition to succeed himself and run for third term by proxy. His ambition to run for third term was the beginning of his downfall. All other people who had ambition in the party, like myself, Dayo Adeyeye, Senator Abiodun Olujimi, Ambassador Dare Bejide, he took them as his personal enemies who must be flushed out at all cost. He took all of us as his enemies irrespective of our contributions to his success both in the primary and in the general election, because of his ambition for a third term by proxy.

    Are you saying in essence that Ekiti people rejected his third term by proxy at the last election?

    Yes. The deputy governor is a fine gentleman. He was not ambitious for the governorship. He told me point blank, ‘Attorney General, I am here on God’s assignment to fulfil my destiny as the deputy governor of this state and go back to the university to continue my job as a lecturer.’ It was the governor who saw him (Olusola) as somebody who had no political allies and so would be responsible to him (Fayose) alone, that forced him into the governorship race.

    The second problem that was responsible for Fayose’s failure in that election was arrogance. Fayose does not believe that anybody else has any idea to contribute. He does not believe that anybody is intelligent enough to advise him, including the National Secretariat of his party (PDP) who were rightly advised that if he picked his deputy, there was no how they could win the election. They were advised to pick a candidate that was acceptable to himself, the party members and other aspirants. Senator Abiodun Olujimi specifically mentioned that he should pick his Attorney General, which is my humble self; that what problem would he have with me as his Attorney General, his personal lawyer, and that I would be acceptable to them too because I had been in the party and also from the hometown of Dayo Adeyeye. That because of local interest, Prince Adeyeye would not have an option but to support me. But he refused and said that he would defeat all of them; that it was either the deputy governor or nobody. That was how sheer arrogance led to his defeat.

    Then, the third problem that he had was his inability to manage human resources. Greed and arrogance dovetailed into this. He claimed that he wanted to be like Asiwaju Bola Tinubu. But he has forgotten that he does not have a single attribute of Asiwaju Bola Tinubu. Asiwaju Bola Tinubu was governor for eight years and he too has spent eight years. But Asiwaju Bola Tinubu has developed human beings that he has exported to virtually all segments of the Nigerian society; be it in politics, economy, legal practice and other fields of human endeavour. Bola Tinubu has trained people and brought them up not only in Lagos State but to other Southwest states. One of them is Prof. Yemi Osinbajo. He was a two-term Attorney General like me to Asiwaju Bola Tinubu. He was not a Senior Advocate of Nigeria when he was appointed Attorney General by Asiwaju Bola Tinubu. Asiwaju assisted him to become a Senior Advocate while he was serving him. And when it was time for him to nominate somebody as Vice President, he nominated him. If that opportunity is given to Fayose, he would prefer to give it to nobody that is close to him or he loses the seat.

    Look at the man in charge of the Federal Inland Revenue Service, Mr. Tunde Fowler, he is one of the products of Asiwaju Tinubu. Look at Raji Fashola, he was Chief of Staff when he became Senior Advocate. Do you think it was through his efforts only? Was it the number of cases he won in the courts compared with a two-term Attorney General like me? Then look at Akinwumi Ambode, Lai Mohammed who happens to be an indigene of Kwara State. Look at Aregbesola. Asiwaju exported him from Lagos as his Commissioner for Works to Osun as governor. What about our governor here (Dr. Fayemi)? Look at how he fought tooth and nail to get his mandate for him in the first term. Look at how he fought tooth and nail for Adams Oshiomhole to get his mandate and also Olusegun Mimiko and countless others. But I am asking, can Fayose point to a single person? That of Asiwaju Bola Tinubu is endless, Fayose cannot point to a single person that he has developed whether professionally, economically, socially or anyhow. He believes in using people and destroying them; not just using and dumping them.

    You were his trusted aide, personal lawyer and one of the people he depended on the most during his first and second tenures. At what point did the two of you fall out?

    I will just pray that God forgives him on our relationship because I served him diligently, used my experience as a politician to serve his administration in the first and second terms. I used my experience as a legal practitioner to defend him as his personal lawyer. I cannot be going into details of the two roles because they are repsa locuitous, that is they are facts that speak for themselves.

    There is nobody in this country and this state who is not aware of what I am talking about. Apart from nominating me, I don’t think there is something to show for my relationship with him. To worsen the situation, I was to face the Legal Practitioners Privileges Committee interview for the award of the rank of Senior Advocate of Nigeria on a Monday as his Attorney General, but the Sunday evening preceding it, he dissolved the State Executive Council. When I left Ado Ekiti for the interview in Abuja as his Attorney General with his consent, he called me by 1.30 am on Sunday, raising some unclarified issues. He discovered that we could not be discussing it on the phone. He said, ‘When you come back, we would be discussing it.

    So, the following evening, without waiting for clarification on those issues, he dissolved the exco less than six hours to the interview, and I became a former Attorney General. While other governors were lobbying for their Attorney Generals to become SANs, he stabbed me in the back. His enemies wrote petitions against me over his misdeeds, and while I was battling with that, he too came to stab me in the back like Brutus did to Julius Caesar. What he did to me while I was facing a panel that interviewed me for the award of Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) was a case of what Brutus did to Julius Caesar. The award of SAN, which happens to be the peak of our legal profession, assuming I had succeeded in that, I would say I got something out of this administration and it would have brought glory to Ekiti State and to him. So, if somebody could go to such a ridiculous level, if somebody could be so mean and wicked to somebody that had served him diligently and sincerely, you will see the kind of character he is.

    Despite that, I was managing the relationship that I have put so much into. I was coming to the Government House to see how we could resolve it between us. But each time I left, he would start blackmailing me that I came to beg for money. He would tell people that he had given me some money again and that when I finished that, I would come back to beg for more. Whenever I went there with the hope of resolving issues with him, I also went to his wife to say, ‘Madam, come into this issue between myself and my boss because we have come a long way. We should not be seen as fighting dirty outside.’ And in fairness to the woman, she discussed the issue with him. Do you know what he told the wife? He said, ‘Madam, don’t come into this issue. Do you know where I met Owoseni Ajayi? Did I consult you when I appointed him as Attorney-General twice? That prayer that you are doing at the Government House is what you should continue with; you are not a politician.’ He is so arrogant, pompous and unremorseful. He is very ungrateful to anybody who has assisted him.

    There is nobody who has assisted us to come to power that Fayose has not offended; from Senator Buruji Kashamu to Senator Gbemi Saraki, to House of Reps member, Hon. Sunday Karimi to former PDP National Chairman, Alhaji Adamu Muazu, the list is endless. There is virtually nobody, he has not turned against, so how do you expect such a person to win election? So, it was a battle between the people of Ekiti State and Ayo Fayose; it was not a battle between PDP and APC.

    That takes us to the next election. Your local government origin, Ise/Orun used to be a stronghold of the PDP. But for the first time since 1999, the local government area fell to the progressives. What are other factors that may not be clear to the people outside which made the PDP to lose Ise/Orun?

    Not only that Ise/Orun fell to APC, it was a landslide. The votes in Ise/Orun were used to cancel the little edge he had in Ikere and Ado. The reason was that he underrated and insulted the people of Ise Ekiti. Two of us were governorship aspirants from Ise Ekiti: Dayo Adeyeye who is a former Minister of State for Works and Prince of Ise Ekiti kingdom and myself, his two-term Attorney General, former Chairman of the Nigerian Bar Association and former President of the Students’ Union of University of Ife. He did not see anyone of us as worthy of succeeding him. Not only that, he insulted us. He insulted the people of Ise Ekiti by saying, ‘Who are the voters in Ise/Orun Local Government?’ This was an insult he passed on the people in public; that they don’t vote in Ise/Orun. How many people are there? He insulted everybody, including the Oba of our town. Have you heard his popular song? “Mi o mo gomina Ise, gomina kan ti mo mo, Ikere lo ti wa (I don’t recognise any governor from Ise, the only governor I know comes from Ikere).

    Under his government, there is no development whatsoever he could point to in Ise. The road that Governor Fayemi tarred in Ise, he went to put a roadblock there, saying that he was doing dualisation, causing traffic problems for the community. That is why everybody in Ise/Orun was involved in that election, including our Kabiyesi (monarch) and the chiefs. In fact, the traditional chiefs were agents of APC on the day of the election and were looking for whoever that would come from their wards that would vote for Fayose. It was Fayose’s attitude to the people of Ise/Orun local government that was responsible for the massive votes against him.

    His attitude also extended to his own local government because he lost his local government. It was only in his hometown, Afao, that he won the election. They are claiming that APC rigged the election; was the election rigged in his hometown too? He lost in Iyin. He lost in Igede. He lost in Iworoko. He lost in Are. For people reading this interview, Are and Afao are twin towns; there is no demarcation between them. He lost in Igbemo, his next door neighbours. When you move from Afao to Igbemo, you will see the road there because he could not develop the place. Planks are put on the bridge between Igbemo and Afao. Go and check, it is still there. That was why people voted massively against him.

    Go and check the result from his unit in Afao. APC got 181 in the unit where he voted, and he got a little above 300 in his unit. Whereas in Ise/Orun, the highest PDP got in any unit was 50 against 300, 400. So you can see that it was basically the attitude of this man that was responsible for what happened. You can see that he worsened his personal problem. You know, once you create a problem, you will be jumping from one crisis to another. How can somebody who went to go to a radio station to announce an election result. Will he say he does not know that it was an electoral offence? When they pick him up on that, he will say they are victimising him. After relinquishing his immunity, if they pick him up on that. That is a strict liability offence. They were still doing collation. Even in some units, they had not finished counting. But he went to the radio station and started announcing results as if he was Prof. Mahmood Yakubu of INEC. Who will save him from those self-created embarrassment?

  • Ajayi Poly gets Rector

    The Governing Council of Ajayi Polytechnic, Ikere-Ekiti, Ekiti State, has approved the appointment of Prof. Michael Foluso Alonge as the Acting Rector of the institution. The appointment takes immediate effect.

    Alonge was born at Ire-Ekiti. He had his elementary education at St. Gregory’s  Catholic Primary  School, Ire-Ekiti between 1955-1960. He proceeded to Aquinas College, Akure, Ondo State capital and later went to Notre Dame Grammar School, Usi-Ekiti between 1963 and 1968.

    He attended Adeyemi College of Education, Ondo where he bagged the National Certificate in Education (NCE) in Mathematics and Chemistry in June 1972.

    Alonge attended University of Ife, now Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife where he bagged his  B.Sc Ed (Mathematics) in June 1978. M.A. Ed (Tests & Measurement) in July 1983 and Ph.D (Tests & Measurement) in June 1987.

    Alonge worked briefly as a lecturer III in the Department of Mathematics, College of Education, Ikere-Ekiti between October 1979 and rose to the rank of Lecturer 1 by September 1983.

    At the completion of his master’s at OAU, Alonge was appointed Lecturer II in the Faculty of Education, University of Ife between October 1984  and September 1987.

    He joined the University of Ado-Ekiti, now Ekiti State University, in 1987 as Lecturer 1, rising through the ranks to becoming a professor rose in 1994.

    Before his appointment, he was a part-time lecturer in the Department of Mathematics/Statistics and Director of Academic Programmes at Ajayi Polytechnic, Ikere-Ekiti since last December.

  • Ajayi: Exit of a legal titan

    During my school days at Ilesa Grammar School in the late fifties and early sixties, we students always assemble once a day for morning devotion and our Principal’s address in the school assembly hall. This routine was however broken on one faithful Tuesday early in 1959 when we were summoned by our charismatic principal, the late Canon J A Akinyemi to assemble in the hall by 12 noon on that day. We students were baffled at this unexpected instruction. Many thought that we will be giving an unscheduled holiday for the rest of the day probably as a result of a development in the town. On my part, I was happy for the announcement because it saved me from the boredom of a Latin class coming up at 12noon that day.

    On getting to the assembly hall our principal introduced to us a well-dressed gentleman in a fine and well-tailored English suit with appropriate bowler hat to match. He was introduced to us as Dr.  Festus Adebisi Ajayi, an old student who just came from Britain with ‘the golden fleece’. We were told that he came back recently to Nigeria as a lawyer and he had the best student in his university in London. The announcement by our principal was greeted with an earth shaking applause.  He responded briefly by telling us to work hard in our studies. However, in my juvenile mind, I was confused how a man could be a lawyer at the same time a doctor. At any rate we were all happy that an old student of our school located in the interior of the country could achieve such an academic feat. His introduction on that day went a long way to inspire my generation to aspire to great heights in academics and this was further rekindled later in the year during the silver jubilee celebration of the school when the principal put up a big board with a roll of honour. On this board the names of many old students who had achieved academic excellence were inscribed. Prominent names in this board were those of Hezekiah Oluwasanmi, Olu  Ayoola, Yinka Ayoola, E. C. Araka, C. E. Chidozie, Festus Ajayi,  Kayode Eso, Alfa Belgore and others listed with their degrees. Many of us then determined that one day our names would be inscribed on the board.

    Dr. Festus Adebisi Ajayi was one of the most brilliant Nigerians and to his credit he was very humble about his achievements in academic field. After finishing his secondary school education at Ilesa Grammar school in 1943 with yet to be beaten record, he worked in the colonial Labour Department. From there he left for England in 1949 and there he enrolled at University of London for a degree in Law. It was at the university that he showed his prowess as an academic giant. In 1952 he was the only one placed in First Class honour division in the LLB examination of University of London and in that year he carted away all the scholarship and prizes in the university. His record was unbeaten for many years. The scholarship enabled him to pursue his LLM degree which he bagged in 1954. Dr. Ajayi became an Assistant Lecturer at the London School of Economics in 1955. At this prestigious school, he taught the erudite Professor Ben. Nwabueze and Otunba Michael Subomi Balogun, a notable banker and philanthropist. Dr. Ajayi got his PhD degree in law in 1958 and the title of his PhD thesis was ‘ The Judicial Approach to Customary Law in Southern Nigeria’.

    Just before completing the PhD degree, the late Dr. Ajayi was invited by the legendary Chief S. O. Adebo to join the services of the old Western Nigeria as a Senior Assistant Secretary which was a very senior post for a new comer in the service. He was later offered a higher post as the Deputy Commissioner for Law Revision in the Ministry of Justice. Dr. Ajayi’s career in the civil service was as distinguished and glittering as his sterling academic career. The Western Nigeria public service in Dr. Ajayi’s time was reputed to be the best in Africa under the late Chief Adebo and Dr. Ajayi contributed immensely to this reputation. He worked under the civilian administrations of Chief, Awolowo, Chief Akintola and Dr. Majekodunmi and the military administrations of Colonel Fajuyi, Brigadier Adebayo and Brigadier Rotimi. In his days as a public servant, he was apolitical and gave professional advices to his different heads of governments based on law. He was involved at a very close range in events such as the pre- independence political upheavals in Nigeria, the pre- independence constitutional conferences, the 1962, Federal Emergency Administration in Western Nigeria, the controversial Western Nigeria election of 1965 and the ensuing political crisis that followed, the coup of January 1966 and the counter coup of July 28 1966, the Biafra war and other events that put our country at the brink of disintegration. In his autobiography titled ‘IN OUR DAYS’ he narrated in the most succinct way, the intrigues during the Kampala Peace Meeting to end the Nigerian civil war of 1967 to 1970. He participated in this meeting where a confidential secretary to the Nigerian delegation was abducted and killed.

    The late Dr. Ajayi’s greatest legacy was the revision of colonial laws in Western Nigeria to bring them in line with those required by independent sovereign nation. This aspect of his work was later copied by the federal government, the then other two regions in the country and some African countries. There is no law passed in the old Western Nigeria and Western state between 1959 and 1971 that did not have the input of the late Dr. Ajayi. These laws included those for good governance and those for establishment of institutions such as University of Ife now Obafemi Awolowo University, Western Nigeria Broadcasting and Television services and the creation of Mid-West Region

    The late Dr. Ajayi retired from public service in 1972 as the Attorney General and Permanent Secretary of Ministry of Justice. All in all he worked for 11 different governments. He consistently refused to be made a judge and he was made a Life Bencher and in 1990, after much persuasion, he became a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) an honour he refused to take in 1977. After retirement he was offered the post of Professor of Law at the University of Ife by the late Professor Oluwasanmi, the Vice -Chancellor of that University. He refused this offer and instead he went into private practice.

    The late Dr. Ajayi was a rare Nigerian and despite his prodigious achievements in Law and public service he shunned all forms of publicity and ostentations. 1n 1965 he was awarded Order of the Niger (OON) which to me does not adequately reflect his prodigious contributions to law and constitutional development of our country. His life-long friend and class mate, the late erudite judge of the Supreme Court of Nigeria,  Kayode Eso described him as ‘a special specie of man who beat all known academic records in white man’s world and in one of the white man’s prestigious universities’. Professor Itse Sagay in 2003 described his brilliance and quiet life thus: ‘he was the first student ever to score 12 straight A’s in all the subjects he studied at the University. His first class degree was therefore unprecedented; a perfect one. That a man of such immense attributes has melted quietly into noisy and brash Nigerian environment for nearly three decades, is a sad loss to law and Nigerian polity as a whole’.

    The above sums up the life of this illustrious, erudite and quiet Nigerian, Dr. Festus Adebisi Ajayi. May his soul rest in perfect peace.

     

    • Lucas, a retired professor writes from University of Ibadan.
  • Man arraigned for defiling eight-year-old girl

    Man arraigned for defiling eight-year-old girl

    Ajayi, who resides at 5, Moshalashi St., Somolu, is facing a charge of defilement.

    According to Police Prosecutor Clifford Ogu, the accused committed the offence on Aug. 15 at his residence.

    Ogu said the accused called the girl into his room on the pretext of sending her on an errand before defiling her.

    “The accused shut the door, defiled her and asked her not to tell anybody.

    “She, however, told her mother when she felt pains in her private part,” he told the court.

    The offence contravened Section 137 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the offence carries a penalty of life imprisonment.

    The accused, however, pleaded not guilty to the charge.

    In her ruling, Chief Magistrate Taiwo Akanni granted the accused bail in the sum of N250, 000 with two sureties in like sum and adjourned the case until Sept. 6 for mention.