Tag: Akinyemi

  • Akinyemi: blame the constitution, not past regimes for lack of savings

    Akinyemi: blame the constitution, not past regimes for lack of savings

    I am not in the business of rising to the defence of previous Presidents or regimes especially as most of them are still alive and capable of defending themselves. Besides, those of them who refuse to retire into graceful silence deserve the return brickbats they get.

    My intervention is motivated by the desire to focus attention on the solution. It is thoroughly misleading to isolate and demonise past regimes for the situation where Nigeria has no savings. The fault is in the 1999 Constitution (Section 162) which makes it mandatory for all monies collected by the Federal Government with a few exceptions to be depoisited into a central account and to be distributed among the Federal, State and Local Governments. The exact language is as follows: Section 162. (1) The Federation shall maintain a special account to be called “the Federation Account” into which shall be paid all revenues collected by the Government of the Federation,except the proceeds from the personal income tax of the personnel of the armed forces of the Federation, the Nigeria Police Force, the Ministry or department of government chargedwith responsibility for Foreign Affairs and the residents of the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja.

    (2) The President, upon the receipt of advice from the Revenue Mobilisation Allocation and Fiscal Commission, shall table before the National Assembly proposalsfor revenue allocation from the Federation Account, and in determining the formula, the National Assembly shall take into account, the allocation principlesespecially those of population, equality of States, internal revenue generation, land mass, terrain as well as population density;(3) Any amount standing to the credit of the Federation Account shall be distributed among the Federal and State Governments and the Local Government Councilsin each State on such terms and in such manner as may be prescribed by the National Assembly.”

     No provision was made for savings. This with considerable charity can only be called an unforgivable oversight.

    If we have to lay blame, it should be at the door of those responsible for the 1999 constitution. This does not mean General AbubakarAbdulsalaam alone, or the military regime alone but includes elements of the judiciary and civilians who were all instrumental in midwifing that constitution.

    Serious attempts were made by both the Obasanjoand Jonathan administrations to put in place savings through the backdoor such EXCESS CRUDE ACCOUNTS AND COMMONWEALTH SAVINGS FUNDS. BOTH were frustrated by the states and the judiciary. The irony in Nigerian history is that some of the State Governors who spearheaded the opposition to the attempts to save are now prominent in the Cabinet and the Senate.

    What previous administrations failed to do and which the present Buhari Administration should do is to single-mindedly drive a constitutional amendment that would follow the Norwegian model . The Norwegian experience involves setting up a Government Pension Fund Global into which 100% of the government’s revenue from royalties and dividends are paid. In any one year, no more than 4% is allowed to be drawn from the account. The Nigerian model, given our peculiar Federalism, can include a provision that any withdrawal from the fund must be with a unanimous decision of the members of the National Economic Council.

    This is the way forward and goes beyond name calling and the blame game.

    • Professor Akinyemi is a former Minister of External Affairs
  • Akinyemi, 22, is Miss Oyo

    Akinyemi, 22, is Miss Oyo

    Miss Foyeke Akinyemi from Iseyin Local Government of Oyo State has emerged Miss Oyo 2015, the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports.

    Akinyemi, 22, emerged winner in a beauty contest with 13 others selected across the 14 federal constituencies in the state held at the Premier Hotel in Ibadan on Sunday.

    Governor Abiola Ajimobi said the contest was to encourage the youth, saying the state would produce Miss Nigeria in future.

    Represented by House of Assembly Speaker Michael Adeyemo, the governor praised the organisers, urging them not to relent in promoting such events.

    Some members of the House of Representatives from the state described the occasion as “wonderful”.

    Sunday Adepoju (APC-Ibarapa East/Ido); Abiodun Awoloye (APC-Ibadan North); Saheed Fijabi (APC-Ibadan South West/NorthWest); Temitope Olatoye (APC-Akinyele/Lagelu) and Gbenga Ojoawo (APC-Ibarapa Central/North were at the event.

    Adepoju, who thanked the organisers, said the state could produce a Miss World from the event, urging participants not to shy away from whatever they had passion for.

    Also in Ibadan, no fewer than eight fashion designers put on show designs and the best of African fashion for kids and teenagers at the 2015 African Kids and Teens Fashion Week.

    The event held at Mauve 21 Event Centre, Ibadan, featured various innovations and designs from Nigerians.

    Among the designers at the event were Arambe, Dware outfit, Owambe, Datina Clothings, TJ Clothings, Zuchini, 509 Clothings and Bridal Showers.

    NAN reports that the colourful and expository event was the second edition organised by Smartcode Africa and sponsored by the Bank of Industry in Ibadan.

    The Chief Executive Officer of Smartcode Africa, Ajibola Akande, said the event was to showcase the best of African fashion for kids and teenagers.

    Akande praised the BOI for partnering with the organisation in transforming the industrial sector through the fashion industry.

    “We have provided N1 billion Fashion Fund to support fashion business, provide opportunity to create jobs and add value to the nation’s economy, while promoting our unique fashion sense,” he said.

    Irabor said the fund was to be accessed by fashion business owners and designers as loans to support their businesses.

    Head of Marketing, Smartcode Africa, Mobolaji Abimbola praised the people for the large turnout to celebrate and appreciate Africa innovations

     

  • Akinyemi, Nwachukwu, others for Aelex lecture

    Two former foreign affairs ministers, Prof Bolaji Akinyemi and Senator Ike Nwachukwu are among the guests expected at this year’s annual lecture organised by Aelex Legal Practitioners and Arbitrators.

    They will join other leading experts in policy, law and business to tackle fundamental issues in Nigeria’s political development.

    The event will hold tomorrow at the Agip Recital Hall, Muson Centre, Lagos, by 2pm, with the theme: Politics, democracy and ethnicity.

    Speakers will discuss vital issues on the theme, such as how the aspirations of minority and majority ethnic groups affect the stability of a nation. They will answer questions around political stability and proffer solutions on how to integrate an economy in a multifaceted and pluralistic society.

    Among discussants will be Dr. Sa’idu Ahmad Dukawa of the Department of Political Science, Bayero University, Kano and Mrs. Yemi Adamolekun, a social media activist.

    The Aelex lecture is an annual event to mark the formation of Aelex Legal Practitioners and Arbitrators in 2004; borne out of a merger of four leading law firms with diversified practice areas.

    A leading international law firm based in Nigeria with offices in Lagos, Port Harcourt, Abuja and Accra, Ghana, Aelex was recently named Nigeria’s Law firm of the Year by one of the world’s leading legal referral guides. It was also ranked as a top-tier firm in seven key practice areas in its latest rankings for Nigeria by the IFLR 1000 – a global Guide to the World’s Leading Financial Law Firms. The areas include, Mergers and Acquisition, infrastructure, oil and gas, banking, energy, project finance and capital markets.

    AELEX supports “Child lifeline” a Nigerian charity geared towards taking children from the streets and providing better quality of life as part of its Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR).

    The first of the annual series commenced in 2005 with the theme: “The Regulator in a Deregulated Economy”- (2005). Others were: “Competition Policy as an Engine for Economic Growth” (2006); “Corporate Governance: Who profits?” (2007); “Freedom of information: Balancing the Public’s right to know against the individual’s right to privacy”(2008); “How Ghana Kept the Lights On” (2009), “Taxation without Represen-tation” (2010); “Corruption, the Thief in Broad Daylight” (2011); “This House Must Not Fall: Constitutional Reform and the People’s Will” (2012); “In God’s Name: Politics, Religion and Economic Development” (2013).

     

     

  • Akinyemi: Hurdles Buhari ’ll face in anti-corruption war

    Akinyemi: Hurdles Buhari ’ll face in anti-corruption war

    Former Minister of External Affairs Prof. Bolaji Akinyemi has advised the President-elect, Muhammadu Buhari, to seek a constitutional amendment for his administration to win the war against corruption.

    Delivering an inaugural lecture at the Adeboye Centre for Peace and Good Governance of the Redeemer’s University, Ede, Prof. Akinyemi predicted that fighting and winning the war against corruption would be a herculean task for the Buhari administration.

    The former Deputy Chairman of the 2014 National Conference maintained that fighting corruption was not as easy as the citizens thought.

    “When we talk of government, we tend to think of the Executive branch. Yet the Bar and the Bench have done more to frustrate anti-corruption cases than the Executive. The Economic Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and Independent Corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC) cannot jail corrupt public officials. They can only prosecute.

    “What the new Buhari administration should seek is a constitutional amendment that does four things. First, the amendment should abolish bail in all corruption cases. Secondly, the amendment should abolish option of fine. Thirdly, those with pending criminal cases should not be allowed to run for public office. Fourthly, the prosecution should be allowed to appeal against judges findings of ‘not guilty.’ This step will be a test of the seriousness of the incoming administration,” the former minister said.

    Prof. Akinyemi said apart from the Executive arm, the judiciary, the police and other government agencies should be active in the fight against corruption.

    On how unemployment played a key role in undermining national security, the former minister said the National Conference, in its report on Boko Haram, recommended a Marshall-like economic and social package to tackle unemployment and collapse of industries.

    Advising Buhari to prioritise his programmes, he said the citizens have identified three key issues – security, unemployment and corruption – as flagships of good governance.

    He said: “Factories, which closed down and migrated to other countries would have to be brought back through incentives and tax grace. In times of frustration, despondency and hopelessness, people turn for help and comfort from their spiritual roots. When they find no succour from their spiritual roots, they turn to revolution.

    “A study of the French and Russian revolutions will show that the churches and priesthood had suborned themselves to the establishment, leaving the people to seek inspiration and comfort from revolutionary ideas and movements.

    “In developing countries, where increasing urbanisation has dented the comfort zone provided by tight-night rural community, and where absence of good governance has created despair, religious organisations have stepped into the breach, preaching hope and salvation and directing restless energy and frustrations away from the streets.”

    Prof. Akinyemi said peace and good governance are promoted when religious organisations speak the truth to those in power and encourage faith and hope in a better tomorrow.

    Prof. Jide Osuntokun, who spoke on behalf of the centre, said Nigeria needed diplomats like Prof. Akinyemi and Gen. Ike Nwachukwu for the nation to regain its lost glory.

    Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola, who was represented by the Director-General, Awolowo Centre for Good Governance, Prof. Moses Makinde, described the theme of the lecture as apt, owing to the nation’s transition from civilian government to another.

    Congratulating the university and the organisers of the lecture, he said: “I hope that the stimulus provided by Prof. Akinyemi’s lecture would be matched by the responses from the audience and the university community.”

     

  • Akinyemi to Buhari: you ‘re wrong on your security instructions

    Akinyemi to Buhari: you ‘re wrong on your security instructions

    Former External Affairs Minister Prof. Bolaji Akinyemi yesterday urged the President-elect, Muhammadu Buhari, to take his personal security seriously in the country’s interest.

    Akinyemi was reacting to Buhari’s statement that he has directed his motorcade to obey traffic regulations.

    In an open letter to the president-elect, Akinyemi urged Gen. Buhari to reconsider his decision, reminding him of security threats bedevilling the country.

    The former minister said he was constrained to issue the statement after the bomb explosion in Potiskum, Yobe State and gun attacks on Damaturu-Kano road at the weekend.

    Akinyemi stated that there was nowhere in the world where the motorcade of a President or Prime minister, was subjected to traffic regulation.

    He said: “When you announced on Wednesday, May 6, that you have instructed your security motorcade to obey traffic instructions, my immediate reaction was to write you this letter. I refrained because I did not want to subject myself to the abuse on the social media that passes for criticism…

    “I changed my mind because of the implication for national security of your decision.

    “You would recall the events of 1975/76 in this country. When General Murtala Mohammed became Head of State in 1975 after the overthrow of General Gowon, he abolished the motorcade for himself, governors, and military ministers in reaction against what was perceived as the security excesses of the Gowon regime.

    “You were a military Governor in that regime. You would recall what happened next. General Mohammed was gunned down while his car was waiting at a road junction.

    “Nigeria and the world have become a more dangerous place than in 1976 when General Mohammed was assassinated. You would also recall the attempt on your life just last year when your motorcade was attacked in Kaduna.

    “There is no country in the world where the motorcade of a President, or Prime Minister or Head of State is subject to traffic regulations. I have just watched the motorcade of the British Prime Minister on his way to Buckingham Palace. Traffic was stopped and his outriders ensured that the motorcade was not impeded.`

    “General, it is not about your personal safety. It is about Nigerian national security.

    “You would recall the controversy that followed the ascension to the Presidency of the then Vice-President Goodluck Jonathan following the death of President Musa Yar’Adua because some people felt the ascension breached the principle of rotation.

    “In fact, this was what led the 2014 National Conference to recommend a constitutional provision that in case of vacancy in the President’s seat, a Vice-President from the same zone should serve out the term of the incumbent. This Sir shows the extent of the sensitivity about the seat of the President.

    “We cannot continue to take chances with the peace and stability of Nigeria and depend on God to bail us out. General, Please reconsider your decision, not for your sake, but for the sake of Nigeria.”

  • That letter from Akinyemi to Buhari, Jonathan

    SIR: The open letter by Professor Bolaji Akinyemi, Nigeria’s former Minister of External Affairs and deputy chairman, 2014 National Conference, to the two major contestants in the next year’s presidential election; President Goodluck Jonathan of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and Major-General Muhammadu Buhari (retd) of the All Progressives Congress (APC) will continue to generate mixed reactions in the polity because it touched on issues that border on our corporate existence as a nation.

    Akinyemi, a Professor of Political Science, had written that shortly after the appointment of the late National Security Adviser to the President, General Owoye Azazi, he met with him (NSA), at his own request,  to discuss the state of the nation on the eve of the 2011 general elections. At the said meeting, he allegedly told the General that he was neither worried about the conduct of the elections nor its outcome, which he expected President Jonathan to win. Rather, what really worried him was the management of the purported violence that would ensue after the elections, which he said would be massive. He disclosed that he suggested to Azazi the ways, in which the violence likely to be ensued, could be contained but that his advice was not acted upon and at the end, elections took place, Jonathan won and “all hell broke loose” because the conflict-controlled measures offered to Azazi were not adopted.

    Akinyemi averred that now that the nation was “back at the same crossroads again” and this time, it was likely to be more precarious, dangerous and severe than the 2011 experience due to the

    “very notorious prediction from the United States of America’s semi-official sources that the world is expecting a cataclysmic meltdown of the Nigerian nation come 2015″.

    Akinyemi concluded his letter by offering two ways out of the gloomy situation: That both presidential candidates should meet and sign a Memorandum of Undertaking  (MoU) that would commit them to civil and peaceful campaigns devoid of threats by preaching the imperative of peaceful elections, taming of party supporters, preventing violent protests and holding of a pre-election meeting between the candidates and the assemblage of 10 “council of wisemen” that would assist in managing the envisaged post-election conflicts.

    Despite the stark reality that all is not well with us as a nation, the options propounded by the well-respected Professor may, however, not be too helpful in finding solutions to the identified problems. We should ask: to what extent are the presidential aspirants truly liable for the conduct of their supporters?

    At the root of the identified problems is the current structure of the federation. Over the years, the various geo-political zones have never ceased to complain of one form of marginalisation or the other bordering chiefly on resource allocation, infrastructural and political advantage. That is why every ethnic or tribal group wants to gain power at all cost in a bid to redistribute national resources to regions. These agitations as pointed out by Akinyemi, did not just start now. So, why should the presidential aspirants sign any MoU and be held liable for the perceived injustice in the system?

    The real solution to the nation’s problems include the practice of true federalism, good governance, promotion of the rule of law, conduct of free and credible elections and the smooth functioning of

    our public institutions as opposed to the glorification of individuals, personalities or “council of wisemen”, as recommended by Akinyemi. When public institutions like INEC, the judiciary, police and other law enforcement agencies are made to function efficiently and effectively, most of the problems afflicting us as a nation will be surmounted. This is what is obtainable in other progressive nations around the world. He should join others to ensure that the identified problems facing us as a nation, and the way forward – as highlighted in report of the National Conference, of which he was an active player – are implemented without further delay.

    • Adewale Kupoluyi

    Federal University Of Agriculture, Abeokuta.

  • Post-2015 polls violence looms, Akinyemi warns

    Post-2015 polls violence looms, Akinyemi warns

    A former minister has warned of a looming “horrendous violence” after next February’s general election.

    Prof. Bolaji Akinyemi, a former minister of External Affairs, in a December 16 letter to President Goodluck Jonathan and Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, urged the presidential candidates of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the All Progressives Congress (APC) to sign an undertaking to rein in their supporters after the election.

    Akinyemi, who served during the military regime of Gen. Ibrahim Babangida, was the deputy chairman of the National Conference organised by President Jonathan, whose recommendations are yet to be implemented.

    Akinyemi recalled that he warned the then National Security Adviser (NSA), the late Gen Patrick Aziza, that violence “on a massive scale “would trail the results of the 2011 general elections.”

    But he expressed regrets that his “conflict-controlled” measures were ignored. “We are back at the same crossroads again, except this time is more precarious and dangerous than the last time,” he added.

    For the 2015 polls, Akinyemi said: “The certainty of violence is higher than it was in 2011. If President Jonathan wins, the North will erupt into violence as it did in 2011. If Gen. Buhari wins, the Niger Delta will erupt into violence.” I don’t believe that we need rocket science to make this prediction.”

    The reason he gave for the impending violence is the “illegal massive importation of weapons into the country, which has reached such alarming proportions that I really wonder which is better armed, the militia on one hand or the official armed forces on the other hand”.

    The international affairs expert recalled the “very notorious prediction from the United States semi-official sources that the world is expecting a cataclysmic meltdown of the Nigerian nation come 2015.”

    Besides, he added that: “there are states and movements out there, Africans and non-Africans, which do not mean well for the Nigerian state, which wish Nigeria to dissolve into a theatre of bloodshed, gore and instability”. “They will succeed if we continue the politics of making enemies of ourselves and friends of our enemies.”

    To prevent the disaster he predicted, Akinyemi suggested that frontline traditional rulers – the Sultan of Sokoto, the Emir of Kano, the Lamido of Adamawa from the North, the Ooni of Ife and the Oba of Benin from the South; elder statesman Chief Emeka Anyaoku; religious leaders Pastor Enoch Adeboye and Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor and ex-Heads of State Gen. Yakubu Gowon and Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar – should facilitate a pre-election meeting between the candidates, the preparation of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) and act as a Council of Wisemen to assist in managing the post-election conflicts.

    According to Akinyemi, the recommended MoU should commit the candidates to “a civil and peaceful campaign, devoid of threats; a commitment to control their supporters after the elections; and that supporters of whoever loses should be entitled to peaceful protests but not to violent protests”.

  • Confab: Court joins Kutigi, Akinyemi, Azinge in suit

    Confab: Court joins Kutigi, Akinyemi, Azinge in suit

    Justice Abdulkadir Abdulkafarati of the Federal High Court, Abuja Tuesday included former Chief Justice of Nigeria, Idris Kutigi and two others as parties in a suit challenging the legitimacy of the National Conference inaugurated on Monday by President Goodluck Jonathan.

    The judge’s decision was upon an application by rights activist, Tunji Abayomi.

    Abayomi, who filed the suit, sought the court’s permission Tuesday, to amend his processes to reflect the names of Kutigi (conference chairman), Professor Bolaji Akinyemi (Vice Chairman) and Mrs. Valerie Azinge (Secretary) as defendants in the suit on the ground that they were necessary parties.

    Defendants’ lawyer, Femi Falana (SAN) who is also a participant at the conference, did not oppose Abayomi’s application.

    The judge subsequently included the three as defendants and ordered service of court documents on them. Their inclusion now brings to seven defendants in the suit.

    Others are President Jonathan, the Senate, its President, House of Representatives and its Speaker.

    Abayomi is by the suit, seeking to stop the national conference on the ground that the President lacked the powers to convoke or convene a national conference without a law from the National Assembly empowering him to do so.

    The activist, in the suit marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/ 167/204 asked the court to determine whether a national conference can be convened by the President and/or government of Nigeria without a law made by the National Assembly enabling them to do so.

    In a supporting affidavit, Abayomi stated that the Federal Government has planned to spend billions of public money to fund the conference despite the absence of any law enabling the President to convoke the conference.

    He added that the Federal Government was bent on spending such amount despite the limited power invested in the President to use money to execute law.

     

  • Akinyemi: The unsung hero

    Akinyemi: The unsung hero

    Lest we forget, the soul whose form of incarnation we used to address as Major Akinloye Akinyemi has risen. This needs to be remembered particularly by souls like ours, which are still subject to the physio-and psycho-logical laws of the physical bodies of our embodiments in particular, and to the time and place we find ourselves in general.

    For those still in doubt that the soul which used to be caged in the person of Akinloye has, like a caged bird, been set free, I suggest we pray. We pray fervently that he is enabled soon to attain perfection in Christ Consciousness. So that, like Apostle Paul, Akinloye is able to declare: “For I through the law am dead to the law, that I might live unto God…I live; yet not I but Christ liveth in me” (Galatians 2:19-20).

    In existential life and during his body’s dying experience, the Major was fearless. This is a quality that marked him out from the crowd. It is most likely that the dare-good paratrooper which he was, knew that it is only the biological body that dies. That is, far from there being annihilation, the dying phase is a period of the transition of the soul from temporal existence to eternal life.

    Akin must have known, as Saint Paul did, that death does not touch our true Self. Is this not why Paul taught that death “has no power to sting those who believe in Christ” (1 Corinthians 15:54-55)?

    Whenever Major Akinloye was called for services in the defence and promotion of Justice, Truth and the welfare of the oppressed, he was in relation to many Nigerian leaders, literally like an eagle or lion among goats. But whenever he found himself amongst these leaders being unrighteous, Akinloye became a sheep among wolves.

    Being unafraid of death and, above all, the liberation, God willing, of Akin’s soul to the Boundless Consciousness of Christ, are no mean feats. Thus I took a temporary hiatus from the writing of an intervention in the ongoing Nigeria’s constitutional reforms debate to quickly compose and rush out this eulogy to my very dear comrade.

    The proposed book to which I refer above is on the subject of a political-economic system which Akin and I have, for decades, prayed and acted to build in our country. Akin had often reminded me that restoring Nigeria to true democratic federalism is a task that must be done, as the fake democracy and federalism we are now promoting, will lead us to a fall. This is why the title of the forthcoming book is ‘True Federal Democracy or The Implosion Awaiting Us Nigerians’.

    Major Akinloye Akinyemi was a de-tribalised gentleman who loved humanity in general and Nigeria in particular. This is why I plead for this opportunity to correct any wrong impression any one has about our friend, and put on record the self-sacrifices which Major Akinyemi made for some of the democratic freedoms, and respect for human dignity, which we are beginning to taste in Nigeria.

    There is an urgent need for those who have sincerely sacrificed for us Nigerians to have a better livelihood, to be adequately recognised. A better understanding of the nature of the sacrifices which heroes, like Akinloye, have made is very useful for the well being of our society. This is particularly good for our youths’ upbringing.

    It is equally relevant that the pretentious democrats or statesmen, or the internal colonisers, in our midst, need to be exposed and put to shame for what they are.

    Thus I am reverently seeking the kind permission of both the noble Akinyemi’s family and my comrades in the struggle for a better Nigeria, to make certain disclosures. Some or more correctly a few people might not be happy with what they see in this tribute. I must confess: it is paradoxically speaking, some Boundless Consciousness, a State of Being greater than Tony Nyiam making the revelations. So if anyone has any fight to fight over these revelations they should go and contend with the Holy Ghost Fire, to use a Pentecostalist preferred terminology.

    This book’s list of the names of both those who were for, and against, Abacha’s military regime is far from being an exhaustive recognition of those I have worked with directly or indirectly. I have had to use reliable sources to confirm the roles of those who I did not work directly with. One such reliable source is Kunle Ajibade’s Jailed For Life: A reporter’s Prison Notes.

    As you may find, this writer seems to be like a medium urged on by the transited Major Akinloye Akinyemi to allow himself to be used to speak the truth. After all, this is part of why God has extended the writer’s existential life. This writer, for your information, has been blessed with overcoming well over five close shaves with the death of his biological body.

    These revelations will not include disclosures about the covert agents, and their roles, which underpinned what has become known as the “1990 Major Gideon Orkar action”. As for our internal colonisers and their stooges, I have no apologies to make.

    I am having to do this not because Akin needed the adulation of we humans. He after all, did repeatedly put to practice the understanding of Jesus’ exhortation: “Take heed that ye do not your alms before men,…otherwise ye have no reward of your Father which is in heaven” (Matthew 6:1).

    I am setting the records straight not for Major Akinyemi’s sake but rather for the sake of the living. The reasons why I do not want the contributions which this gallant officer made to our freedom forgotten are manifold. Let me at this juncture briefly comment on one or two of the reasons.

    Major Akinyemi’s consistent struggle against the mis-use of our armed forces for ethnic, or selfish, interests needs to be emulated. The Major would not have allowed his military unit to be used to cover up election rigging or thumb printing of ballot papers in private homes.

    Any unit commanded by Major Akinyemi’s type of army officer would not have stood idly by to see the Federal Police being used to attempt to unseat a duly elected Governor. This is in reference to the paramilitary coup attempt against former Anambra State Governor, Dr. Chris Ngige. These federal government abuses of power were all done under the former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s watch.

    A celebration of life

    Thus we must remember, that we are here to celebrate the physical life of a great soul. A ray of the light of the Holy Spirit which through the being named Akinloye, had many manifestations on earth. First as a son, brother and cousin, next as a brilliant student, an award winner and the best foreign officer cadet at the Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst, UK; very warm friend, boy-friend, husband, and father.

    For a major part of his life, Akinloye served as a regular combatant officer and a signals communication expert. This was followed by service in defense and promotion of democracy in particular and human rights in general. And finally, during the last twelve years, or thereabouts, of his biological life, Akin trained and was ordained a Pastor of the Redeemed Christian Church of God.

    Akinloye Akinyemi was not only a practicing Christian but also a practical exemplifier of the teachings of Jesus. His faith helped him to survive numerous betrayals. Jesus’ exemplary life taught him to forgive and that he had a moral obligation to help others in need.

    Those of us who were inspired by Akin’s uncommon courage, clarity of thought and expression, utmost integrity and honesty in the conduct of official or personal dealings, great loyalty and dedication to friends, fairness and straight forwardness, and so on, can attest to the footprints he left behind on the sands of time. A whole book could be written about this, one unsung hero of Nigeria. It is because of time constraints that we will be limiting this tribute to the following highlights of Major Akinyemi’s life:

    •The consistency of the Major’s courage and integrity.

    •The self sacrifices, including with his body, which Akin made for all seekers of democratic freedom, upholders of the dignity and the honour of an officer and gentleman, and for lovers of humanity, particularly the oppressed.

    •Pastor Akinloye Akinyemi’s example of submission to Christ.

    A man of courage and transparency

    All through my over forty years of keeping in contact with Akin, he was always truthful, dutiful and compassionate. My first encounter with him was towards the end of the 1960s. This was during a military training bush camp in Igbo Ora. Then a slightly built teenager, Akin had attended the camp from Government College, Ibadan (GCI) where he was a secondary school army cadet. I was then a boy soldier, student of the Nigerian Military School (NMS), Zaria.

    Apart from my chest size, I too like the adolescent Akinloye, had, as a youth, the slightest of body frames. I had, in fact, a pair of skinny legs. The slimness of my body came from my slim mum. My legs’ appearance, however, seems to have given rise to my being called names. One of such name calling, by one of my Hausa speaking school peers, was “tsinken tsire”. This caricature of my legs in English meant that my legs were as skinny as the wire like sticks used to hold together minced suya meat.

    My reaction to my legs being described as tsinken tsire was invariably one of shaking with fury. I think the aggressive response stopped for good the name caller and others, from ever uttering the unwelcomed analogy. It might be necessary for you to be informed that as a child I was a stammerer and subsequently as a teenager spoke with a slight stammer.

    The combination of my tendencies of stammering and speaking fast, used to lead to a bottling up of words with the attendant possibility of my being seen with eyes blazing with fury when offended. My aggressive response should also been seen from the context that I was a new arrival to a far-northern Hausa-Fulani city from faraway Lagos. Being called names by some local and native looking lad was not what an Eko for show mentality guy bargained for. This must be considered against the background that we NMS Lagos boys believed we were the pace-setters in the circle of top secondary schools in Kaduna State including the famous Barewa College.

    The happenstance of Akinloye and I first meeting must have come about because of a bridge builder who then connected NMS to GCI. The link was the NMS Commandant / Principal, Major General T. B. Ogundeko, an alumnus of GCI.

    Immediately after my commission into the Corps of Army Engineers, I went to the United Kingdom for my university education, where I occasionally met up with Akin. First, as a Sandhurst officer cadet, then, as a newly commissioned officer and student of the Royal Military College of Engineering, Shrivenham. Since those early encounters, I had no doubt that this first class electronic engineering graduate was going to be an outstanding military officer. This he turned out to be.

    It is indeed, with some nostalgia that I can meaningfully recall Major Akinyemi’s attitude to military work. It was, to say the least, legendary. He always superseded the high standards and targets his Nigerian Army Signal Corps (NASC) and the Armed Forces in general, had set for their personnel.

    The Major was renowned for the maintenance of the military equipment under his care. We all raved about Akin’s professionalism, both as a military officer and an outstanding engineer. Especially when he once elected to move his office outside into a hot tent. This was so as to make room in his air-conditioned (Commanding Officer’s) office for the safe keeping of his unit’s sensitive electronic equipment. Equally remarkable was the Major’s care for officers and soldiers under his command.

    For anyone in doubt of this testimony, I suggest they confirm from Akin’s former bosses. I am sure that the following veterans of the Signal Corps will corroborate this attestation: the Senate President David Mark; General Ishola Williams, a former Chief of Defence Staff, General Alexander Ogomudia; former military administrators-Generals Raji Rasaki and Leo Aborisha; and of course, the Emeritus Professor of Nigerian Signal Communication, General Tanko Ayuba.

    It was, actually, from General Ayuba, the husband of Ronke Ayuba, one of our best newscasters, that I first learnt, as far back as the early 1980s, the difference between the then popular analogue technology and the nouveau-digital technology. What is interesting is that the Senator-General is still passionate about e-technology. Thus General Ayuba remains undoubtedly the doyen of the modern means of communication in Nigeria.

    The admirers of Major Akinyemi’s sense of duty and incorruptibility were not limited to Nigerians. The European, American and Russian suppliers of military hardware to Nigeria were full of praise for the fine young officer. The British suppliers often boasted that it was their training institutions which made him such a first class army officer. Some, in fact, confided in me that Akin would no doubt be a sure candidate for the post of Chief of Army Staff when the time was due.

    I could go on to reveal that even the then Military President, General Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida, had high regards for Major Akinyemi’s consistent first class command performances. This was for both routine and highly dangerous operational duties. Akin was without doubt a role model for other young armed forces officers to emulate.

    The recollection of Akin’s exemplary attitude to duty evoked in me a soul searching disposition. This is consistent with my tendency for enquiring, to ascertain whether or not my intentions or motivations for any action or omission, are virtues. I love indulging in such self-enquiry because it has a capacity for helping me discover and unlock the door into the temple of Christ within me. It is from this Christ-in-us, we must know, that we hear the silent voice of the good conscience.

    It is in this regards that I am humbly posing this question: How can we repay the true Nigerian patriot, Major Akinloye Akinyemi for the ultimate sacrifice he made for us Nigerians? Let us begin by answering the question: what exactly did Akinloye sacrifice?

     

    •Nyiam is a retired Colonel