Tag: Akinadewo

  • 2017: Be positive, Akinadewo charges

    The Prelate of Motailatu Church Cherubim and Seraphim Worldwide (MCCSW), Elder (Dr) Israel Akinadewo (Omoeri), has called for optimism among Nigerians in the New Year.

    Nigerians, he said, should be positive in their thoughts and actions in 2017 despite the ongoing recession.

    The recession, according to him, is a temporary challenge that will soon go away.

    Akinadewo, in his New Year message, said: “There is no achievement that does not have its own associated pains and challenges.

    “We should look at the recession that has faced the nation, as a visitor that will soon evaporate into a thin air.

    “We should see it as one of the challenges that must come our way for the country to be able to attain the position of a developed nation.”

    He called Nigerians to allow God drive the nation in 2017 while also praying for religious and political leaders.

    “On behalf of Motailatu Church Cherubim & Seraphim Worldwide, we pray for President Buhari, Senators, House of Representative members, governors and other political leaders that God should grant them the wisdom, energy and other relative enablement to govern effectively well, for the growth of our beloved country in 2017,” he stated.

     

  • 2017: Be positive, Akinadewo charges

    The Prelate of Motailatu Church Cherubim and Seraphim Worldwide (MCCSW), Elder (Dr) Israel Akinadewo (Omoeri), has called for optimism among Nigerians in the New Year.

    Nigerians, he said, should be positive in their thoughts and actions in 2017 despite the ongoing recession.

    The recession, according to him, is a temporary challenge that will soon go away.

    Akinadewo, in his New Year message, said: “There is no achievement that does not have its own associated pains and challenges.

    “We should look at the recession that has faced the nation, as a visitor that will soon evaporate into a thin air.

    “We should see it as one of the challenges that must come our way for the country to be able to attain the position of a developed nation.”

    He called Nigerians to allow God drive the nation in 2017 while also praying for religious and political leaders.

    “On behalf of Motailatu Church Cherubim & Seraphim Worldwide, we pray for President Buhari, Senators, House of Representative members, governors and other political leaders that God should grant them the wisdom, energy and other relative enablement to govern effectively well, for the growth of our beloved country in 2017,” he stated.

     

  • CAN awards Mimiko, Osemawe, Akinadewo, others

    No fewer than ten illustrious indigenes of Ondo State have bagged awards from the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) Ondo West Local Government chapter.

    The body last week conferred awards of meritorious services on the eminent indigenes for their contributions to Christianity, the state and humanity.

    Among the awardees were Governor Segun Mimiko; Osemawe of Ondo, Oba Victor Kiladejo; Supreme Prelate of Motailatu Church Cherubim and Seraphim Worldwide (MCCSW), Elder Dr Israel Akinadewo; Baba Ijo of St. Matthew’s Catholic Church, Ondo, Chief Olusola Gilbert.

    Others were Bishop of Ondo Diocese, Anglican Communion, Most Revd George Lasebikan; a council member of Wesley University, Ondo, Chief B. F. Adeniji and others.

    At the ceremony, which took place at the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), Power Sanctuary, Ademulegun Road, Mimiko bagged meritorious contribution to the Social Infrastructural Development; Oba Kiladejo got the dynamic royal father of peace and harmony award while Akinadewo, who is also Secretary of Lagos CAN, was conferred with the Grand Commander of Christ Army (GCCA) award.

    Lasebikan, Gilbert and Very Revd Chief B. F. Adeniji, a Council member of Wesley University, Ondo got various other categories of awards.

    Chairman of CAN, Ondo West Local Government, Primate Elijah Salami, said that the ten outstanding awardees were selected based on their individual contributions to Ondo Kingdom at their various capacities.

    After the church service, friends and well- wishers hosted a reception for Akinadewo.

    He received the award on the same day the General Evangelist of the church, Elder Prof. Joseph Otubu was installed vice president of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) in Abuja.

    Otubu is the first white garment cleric to be elected to the elevated post.

  • Feting Akinadewo; the journalist-writer

    Feting Akinadewo; the journalist-writer

    While a columnist may not necessarily be described as a journalist, a writer could transform into one. Such were the submission of AkogunTola Adeniyi last Tuesday at The Sheraton Hotel and Towers, Ikeja, Lagos. And the occasion was the public presentation/launch of a book, Here Come the Commander In Chief, a collection of incisive weekly articles written in the spate of the last four years by Gabriel Akinadewo, satirical columnist and editor of the Nigerian Compass.

    Crammed inside the hall, seasoned politicians and elite journalists, especially of the print media stock, which is Akinadewo’s immediate constituency. And on ground to felicitate with him were senior colleagues in the media. In attendance were editors of the major newspapers as well as veterans in the industry.

    With panegyrics ushering the special guests which included two former governors of Ogun State, Otunba Gbenga Daniel and Abia State, Orji Uzo Kalu, amidst other dignitaries, the event got a spice of Yoruba culture.

    And in the keynote address delivered by Akogun Adeniyi, a consummate journalist who was a former Chairman/Managing Director/Editor-In-Chief of the Daily Times group described Akinadewo as a journalist writer.

    The book whose running theme revolves around changing Nigerians’ negative attitude is a compilation of the author’s incisive articles in the last four years as editor of the Nigerian Compass.

    In his welcome address titled, ‘Why do Nigerians commit crimes per second?’, Akinadewo contended that: “Almost everywhere else, democracy is working except in Nigeria.”

    Arguing that Nigeria’s corruption does not seem from lack of relevant laws, he said; ‘I argued severally that we have enough laws in the land to make Nigeria one of the best countries in the world.’

    According to Akinadewo who looked suave in a dark blue suit; ‘There is no perfect Constitution in the world. Even in Britain, a leading economic and political power on the globe, there is no written Constitution.’

    He could not resist taking a swipe at how the administration of former President Olusegun Obasanjo unilaterally changed Section 188 of the Nigerian Constitution which stipulated ‘that two-thirds of the members of a House of Assembly must vote ‘yes’ before a governor is removed.”

    He went further to say, “Many Nigerians would describe several actions of the Obasanjo administration between 1999 and 2007 as atrocities committed against the Constitution but, pitiably today, Obasanjo is still being referred to, in some quarters, as the father and mother of modern Nigeria.”

    Opining that Nigeria’s problems have little to with its laws or the system of governance in place, Akinadewo said; ‘The major problem has to do with the attitude of Nigerians, leaders and the led. Any country whose citizens have the wrong attitude to achieving an egalitarian society, will continue to grope in the dark.”

    “Nigeria’s problems border on the consistent inconsistencies of Nigerians which have to do with our attitude growth, life, death, development, and our welfare.”

    No doubt, in a lucid and entertaining manner, Akinadewo’s articles analyse issues and problems confronting the country.

    In one of the articles, Akinadewo ensures justice comes the way of the family of three year old Kaosarat who was killed by a policeman’s bullet while her parents were further harassed by the same police.

    Reflecting on that story, Adeniyi said; “Written in prose, Akinadewo nonetheless brings the horrendous tragedy and man’s inhumanity to man to the fore. The power of his prose compels tears.”

    It is not news that Nigeria is going through hard times. Hopefully, the sense captured in Akinadewo’s compendium of articles, Here Comes the Commander In Chief ‘can fix Nigeria.’

  • ‘There is crisis in Nigeria because our leaders don’t read’

    ‘There is crisis in Nigeria because our leaders don’t read’

    Gabriel Folajimi Akinadewo is the Editor of the Nigerian Compass. A former political editor of The Nation, Akinadewo launched his book entitled: Here Comes the Commander-in-Chief, a collection of some of his columns yesterday in Lagos. He speaks on how leaders should cultivate the habit of reading to change the society.

    How did your career in journalism start?

    It is not coincidental that I am a journalist today. Decades ago, my father told me that I was going to be a journalist. In fact, he introduced me to journalism. My father, Archbishop I.M. Akinadewo, is a journalist, publisher, accountant, proprietor of schools, administrator, prophet and community leader. In the 70s, he was publishing four newspapers – Nigerian Monitor, Sekstape, Everybody’s and Sporting News – in Ibadan, the then capital of the defunct Western State. Later, we moved to Ondo and after my secondary school education in the early 80s in Ondo, he started publishing the Nigerian Monitor again and I was heavily involved in the production, editorial content, sales, advert and circulation. It was more or less a state newspaper, covering Ondo, Akure, Okitipupa, Owo, Akoko and some towns in the old Ondo State. There was a time I even edited the newspaper before going to the University of Lagos. So, what I am doing today about production deadline, exclusive stories and others are not new.

    The thrust of your new book is like a crusade against the rot in the society. What informed the direction of your writing?

    As a Christian, I know that Isaiah 58 says: ‘Cry aloud, spare not, lift up your voice like a trumpet and show my people their transgression’. Critics are like the engine room of any society. They must keep the machinery of the state running by pointing out vices in the society.

    So, you are a crusading cleric?

    Well, it runs in the family. My grandfather who died in 1979, Saint B.A. Adekahunsi, was a crusading cleric. He was the Chairman of Spiritual Workers’ Union in the Western Region. If you get to Ondo town today and ask for the house of Baba Oluso (Shepherd father) in Sabo area, you cannot miss your way. Spiritually, God used him mightily to alleviate the suffering of the people and save the society from tormentors. He even took the spiritual battle to as far as Ghana. My father is doing same today in Ondo. We, the children, grew up to know our father as a prophet. So, in my journalism career, I cannot but follow their footsteps.

    How come that despite crusade by columnists and prophets, the society has not changed?

    If we go down the Biblical lane, there were just two persons in the Garden of Eden, a couple named Adam and Eve. They didn’t need to toil or labour. Everything was provided for them. Despite God’s warning, they committed a crime. So, if only two persons could commit a crime in a comfortable place like that, what do you expect of about 170 million people in Nigeria or more than seven billion people in the world? People must commit crimes because God Himself in Genesis 1: 4 separated light from darkness. In today’s world, there are children of light and children of darkness. That is why we have law enforcement agents to maintain law and order but it is even bad now that some of those mandated to maintain law and order take delight in breaching the law. The duty of a critic is to continuously alert those in leadership position on what they are doing wrong or what is going wrong around them. And there is no sentiment about it. You remember that Elijah in the Bible would point to King Ahab and say something like ‘you and your father’s household are the problem of the land’. A crusading columnist must be bold and courageous.

    So, what has been the challenge?

    Well, as a journalist, writing a column is not easy. And for an editor to be writing a column is even more tasking. You can’t just afford to write anything because of your readers and if you don’t satisfy them, you know what that means. There was a time I was really busy and I repeated my previous columns for four weeks. The type of text messages I got from some readers were abusive. I have not deleted them from my phone. Damn abusive text messages. I had to reply them, apologising in the process. Also, all readers want their responses to be published. There are some responses that cannot be published; you understand what I am saying. Some of these responses are libelous, so to say. What I do is to try and appeal to them that such replies cannot be published. Readers will always react the way they feel about how the society is being governed by those elected or selected to rule them.

    Are you saying the readers are wrong in their responses and for that reason you are not publishing them?

    No, that is not the issue. If I get over 200 text messages on a particular column, you don’t expect me to publish all. I will just pick. Then, like I said, some of the responses are libelous. When you are referring to a President or governor as a thief, a responsible columnist or journalist will never publish that. You know in their eagerness to get mentioned, readers will say all sorts of things just to abuse those they suspect are making life miserable for them. It is the duty of an editor, as a gate keeper, so to say, to edit such responses and where they cannot be edited, to just leave out and take the abuses from the readers. I need the readers to continue to enjoy my column and buy the paper, so you have to do what I call a balancing act.

    Have you had any brushes with security agents?

    No. In writing a column, there is a way you can tell somebody to go to hell and he will look forward to the trip. Because columnists want to sanitise the society does not mean that we should be reckless. You can write on vices in the society without touching on national security.

    What informed the title Here Comes the Commander-in-Chief?

    The book has about 115 columns and I picked the title from one of the columns. But that is not to say that it is the best column. I wrote that column in the build up to the 2011 election when former Military President, General Ibrahim Babangida, former Vice President Atiku Abubakar and others were trying to wrest power from President Goodluck Jonathan. I elaborated on the enormous power of the President in a country like Nigeria and why it would be difficult for them, given the reality we know, to remove him from Aso Rock.

    Are you saying that by that column, you supported Jonathan during the election?

    The column was a practical manifestation of the power and resources an incumbent would deploy to retain his seat. When you read it, you will understand where I am coming from.

    Why publish the book now?

    A major tragedy of this society is that our leaders don’t read. Some have attributed it to the coming of the internet and social media. I disagree. Anytime I go to the United States, I go to bookshops and you won’t believe that hundreds of Americans will be seen buying one book or the other. If our leaders can develop the reading culture, I think the society will be better because in this book, there is no aspect of our social, political, economic, spiritual and cultural lives that is not touched. Do you know that in the New York Police Department, there is a laundry section? Do we have that in the Nigeria Police Force (NPF)? How will you have a sane society when those mandated to ensure that sane society are not psychologically balanced? When you get to Ojota, Lagos, you will see some area boys collecting egunje (bribe) for security agents. What is responsible for that? Some churches are not better than night clubs and they will be shouting the name of Jesus Christ. You will find that in the book. This is a country in which some people have perpetual injunction, which means nobody can arraign them. These are societal challenges that our leaders, if they can cultivate the habit of reading, will find solutions to through columns.

    How?

    Columnists go down historical lane to tell the society how such challenges were solved in other climes. That is what you will find in my book. Going through the columns in the book, you will find out that I don’t just criticise, I proffer solutions.

    What is the target audience?

    Everybody. The language is simple, very simple. Even primary school pupils can read it. That is the way a society can be reformed. Start from youths. I started reading newspapers from primary school. By the way, I attended four primary schools. In Ibadan, I attended Ebenezer African Church School and later Ayodele Nursery and Primary School. When my father moved to Ondo, I attended St. Stephen’s Anglican Primary School and later C.A.C. Primary School, Oke-Isegun. My father would buy all newspapers then, Daily Times, Daily Sketch, Nigerian Tribune, Herald etc. I and my siblings would, at times, go to Barracks Road, the distribution point for vendors in Ondo, to get the papers on time. On the road, we would start reading. I remember that while in Form 2 at St. Ambrose Catholic Grammar School, Olorunsola, Ondo, I sent an opinion to Daily Sketch and it was published. There was nobody I didn’t show this paper in Ondo. I was so delighted. Newspapers were sold for 20 kobo then. When I showed it to my Government teacher, he was so happy that he bought two copies and gave me one because the one I was showing people belonged to my father. Today, even graduates don’t read again. Everybody is into yahoo yahoo. No society can develop like that. So, this book can be read by everybody.

    Who are you dedicating the book to?

    My parents of course. My father, Archbishop I.M. Akinadewo and my mother, Superintendent General Apostolic Mother M.A. Akinadewo. She died in 2010.