Tag: amazing

  • Celebrating amazing woman @ 50

    Her willpower and focus to bring out the best in any context she finds herself has tenaciously distinguished her from the rest. She pays attention to details with a primal vision of setting new standards and raising the bar in her humanitarian quests to uplift the mankind.

    She devotes a considerable part of her time, energy and resources on regular basis to advance the cause of the less privileged and champion initiatives that support the needy in our society. Her dream is aimed at empowering and uplifting the disadvantaged people regardless of their age, education status, religious and political affiliations.

    Welcome to the world of Olufunso Amosun, the wife of the Governor of Ogun State.

    Born some 50 years ago on May 2, Mrs. Amosun has joined the elegant circle of Golden Jubilee club. No doubt, 50 is a milestone and clocking the golden age calls for a celebration of some sort.

    Working with Mrs. Amosun since January 2012 as one of her close aides has given me the vista of opportunities to know her better and appreciate her genuine passion to assist, support and empower the less privileged and the needy in our society.

    Beyond her care for the good people of Ogun State, Mrs. Amosun has become a mother figure to many in the government circle in the state, touching their lives with so much compassion outside their official duties.

    Personally, I was somehow agitated and disturbed over a domestic matter and I couldn’t sleep sometime in February 2013. In my state of restlessness, I picked up my Blackberry phone around 2am and began to fiddle with it: played music, changed my BB Display Picture amongst others. Suddenly Mrs. Amosun sent a message to my phone, asking me why I am not sleeping at this time of the day. I was shocked to my bone marrow. I responded by saying I was trying to get some things sorted out. Dissatisfied, she probed further: are you sure? And I said yes. I didn’t really want to bother her about my personal challenge.

    Another touchy encounter I had with Mrs. Amosun was on May 30, 2013. I got a call from Lagos that my wife was in labour and had just been rushed to the hospital. I asked the caller about the condition of my wife but he was not audible enough. I called my wife severally, no response. I called my mother-in-law, no answer. I became worried. I glued to my phone moving from one section to another to check who else I could call. I stumbled on the number of our family doctor; called him but he didn’t pick too. My worries increased. So I resigned to fate, hoping for the best.

    I went to my Blackberry Display Picture (DP) and I wrote: “It’s Well – I Believe, It Will End in Praise.” Immediately, the governor’s wife asked me: “What’s the problem?” Of course, I had no option than to open up that my wife was in labour. She offered some prayers and encouraged me to be calm. About one hour after, I received a call that my wife had just delivered a bouncing baby girl and that my wife and the baby were in good condition. With so much elation, I sent message to the governor’s wife that my family had just been blessed with a baby girl. She congratulated me and sent message to my wife.

    My takeaway: as a caring mother, Mrs. Amosun often feels strongly concerned about the welfare of people around her and she has successfully extended the same kind gesture to the good people of Ogun State.

    Her dexterity and compassion to help others is second to none. I was at lost momentarily the very first day she said she would be climbing the Mountain Kilimanjaro in Tanzania for the sole aim of raising funds for the victims of the insurgency in the North-east who are scattered across various Internally Displaced Person (IDP) camps in Nigeria. While I was still struggling to come to terms over her decision, it dawned on me that indeed Mrs. Amosun has a strong-willed empathy spirit to always support the less privileged.

    No wonder she has been using every single opportunity to call on the individuals, the corporate bodies and any other interested parties to join her in lending a helping hand to the less privileged. This, she often expresses with a Yoruba song: Eni k’eni ti iwo ba ni ipa, l’ati se iranlowo fun ooo, Oun na l’eni keji re, Toju re. This can be literarily translated thus: Endeavour to help the needy you can afford to assist, for such person is your brother or your sister.

    Her ‘communal spirit’ of lending a helping hand to the less privileged made Mrs. Amosun to initiate different programmes to massively complement the efforts of her husband, Senator Ibikunle Amosun in the governor’s overall Mission to Rebuild Ogun State.

    Through her foundation, UPLIFT Development Foundation, the governor’s wife has been focusing on poverty alleviation, using UPLIFT as an acronym for ‘Understanding People’s Limiting and Inhibiting Factors Today.’ The foundation provides intervention programmes to empower the vulnerable and the needy, with basic facilities to achieve the ultimate goal of making them self-sufficient.

    The UPLIFT vision centres on poverty alleviation through the provision of economic empowerment, skill acquisition programmes and access marketable items and loans. Her target groups include the physically challenged, those living with HIV/AIDS, vulnerable aged, unemployed graduates, vulnerable orphans and disadvantaged women and children in general.

    Some of her programmes include: UPLIFTing the Aged; Free Eye Camp; UPLIFTing Women; UPLIFTing Widows; UPLIFTing Unemployed Graduates; Uplift Cancer Awareness Campaign; UPLIFTing the Physically Challenged; UPLIFTing SS3 Students; UPLIFTing Youths through Beatification; UPLIFTing Traders; UPLIFTing the Environment International Conference and Workshop; UPLIFT Aged Welfare Card; UPLIFT Food Outreach; Launch of Green Education for the Youths, Waste to Wealth Initiative; UPLIFT Under-15 Grassroot Football Camp; MITROS Micro Credit Scheme; and De-worming Exercise for School Children.

    Others are: UPLIFTing Women Living with HIV/AIDS; UPLIFT Artificial Limb Camp; UPLIFT Safe Motherhood Initiative; UPLIFTing Rainstorm Victims; UPLIFTing Rural Dwellers; UPLIFTing Orphans and Vulnerable Children; Community Empowerment Programme; 1st National Green Essay Competition; 1st Ogun State National Women Conference in 2014; UPLIFTing Schools; Free Breast Lump Excision Surgery; Climbing Mount Kilimanjaro for IDPs; amongst others.

    Mrs. Amosun has built a strong tie with the vulnerable citizens across the length and breadth of Ogun State through her various initiatives. She has undeniably touched many lives through her UPLIFT Development Foundation.

    The stark reality today is that Mrs. Amosun is 50 and to this I say, Congratulations and Happy Birthday. But the ladyish and glowing look of Mrs. Amosun can make someone to demand for a recount to actually determine if she is 50!

    Happy 50th birthday to a mother, a mentor and a confidant!

     

    • Sowunmi is a Media Aide to the Wife of the Governor of Ogun State.
  • The amazing power of a Spirit-filled  girl (VII)

    The amazing power of a Spirit-filled girl (VII)

    She’s more intelligent than her teachers and is wiser than her ancestors. She never experiences heart-breaks because she is already programmed to wait for God’s choice. She has dominion over her destiny because she has subdued her flesh. She never suffers the pain of disappointment of any form because she knows that “Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man, the things that God hath prepared for them that love him.”

    (Excerpt of a poem-“The Amazing Power of A Spirit-Filled Girl)

    My darling sisters and every wonderful fan of this page-God’s page,

    I am most delighted to be with you again today, believing sincerely with all my heart that some girl’s life somewhere is finally aligning with God’s divine agenda after reading this series in the last few weeks. I welcome you to school on Sunday!

    Last week, I told you that with a massive dose of the presence of the Holy Spirit in your life, you would amongst other things through divine revelation know your examination questions even before they are set and this super power comes from constantly rubbing minds with God by reading the holy bible and living a holy life. No wonder David said

    “I have more understanding than all my teachers: for thy testimonies are my meditation. I understand more than the ancients, because I keep thy precepts.”

    Psalm 119:99-100

    The point is if you are committed to God, He is committed to you, though that doesn’t mean you won’t go through trials. And in any case because you are carrying His presence, more often than not, He would inform you before those trials  begin and  not only tell you how to wade your way through the stormy sea, He would give you power to deal with it all so eventually nothing really takes you by surprise and you are fully armed. I tell you no matter how rough or painful it may be, there will always be one word He has spoken or a revelation He had shown you earlier which would soothe your soul and strengthen you till the end of that precarious situation. Sometimes you see people coming out better even after being badly bruised and battered by life and you begin to wonder how they dealt with the situation- it’s the power of the Holy Spirit.

    A lot of our parents, ignorant of this power, took wrong steps early in life which is affecting a lot of youth today and these steps have derailed too many destinies such that it would only take the mighty power of God to move in the life of the average youth and align him to God’s agenda.

    “With the ancient is wisdom; and in length of days understanding. With Him is wisdom and strength, he hath counsel and understanding.” Job 12:12-13

    While coasting through life, we encounter all sorts at every stage. And if you are a child of destiny; a child destined to do exploits and be very great, your life would certainly be under attack by the enemy. It is normal to seek the counsel of people who have been in this world long before us and experienced similar situations. Truly, they may have answers and the wisdom to counsel, however, do they understand the language of your star as God? Do they know why you are passing through that fire? Do they know the actual path God has designed for your destiny to pass through? I doubt. If care is not taken one could be pushed out of the path of one’s destiny. But with the Holy Spirit, you can never miss it. You have the torch light your life needs and no amount of darkness can dim that light and stop it from illuminating your path except you allow it.

    So many girls are so in love with their boyfriends that they simply act as though they are in the world just to have a guy drooling over them. And when they get their hearts broken, they almost want to commit suicide. Over what? Today’s girls are so badly distracted; even when they can’t speak good English least of all write a good sentence in English and pass their exams, their boyfriends appear to be their priority. These boyfriends eventually steal what should make them great in life. They steal their precious time and energy which should be spent on studying their books, the word of God, laying a proper spiritual foundation for their future. They steal their virginity, pollute their lives, desecrate them and make them unfit for God’s purpose. It is normal for every girl to desire to be loved. However, there’s time for everything. With the power of the Holy Spirit, you are not interested in whatever is not recommended in the bible. You don’t get heart-broken over a guy. You are led by the spirit of God in everything you do. Or have you ever come across boyfriend in the bible? With the presence of the Holy Spirit, your flesh is subdued and under control. Fleshly lust is a spirit and holiness is a spirit as well. Your holiness and the fire of God burning in you suffocate lust of the flesh. It’s easier for you to resist the devil and his wiles, all you concentrate on is your future and how to amass all what God has planned for you which He constantly shows you. Now, without the Holy Spirit and in a highly competitive and evil world as this, how can you even discern and fight for that which belongs to you?

  • The amazing power of a Spirit-filled girl (VI)

    The amazing power of a Spirit-filled girl (VI)

    Because she’s constantly flowing in the super-natural, nothing takes her by surprise. She already knows her examination questions long before the time-table is set. She’s more intelligent than her teachers and is wiser than her ancestors.

    (Excerpt of a poem-“The Amazing Power of A Spirit-Filled Girl)

    Hello Aunty Temilolu,

    Thanks for raising a voice for the Nigerian girl. This page has always been my reason for reading The Nation newspaper on Sundays. Honestly, I believe that this inspirational column of yours would change many young minds including parents who have been misled by the traumatic side of life. I pray God will continue to give you the wisdom to accomplish this great task. May God bless you ma.

    Sarah, Enugu

     

    Dear Aunty Temilolu,

    Please how can I be a devoted woman of God? Love you!

    Anonymous

     

    How to be a devoted woman of God-

    1. Be a friend of God, receive Jesus Christ as your personal Lord and Saviour
    2. Live your life strictly according to His principles as written in the Holy Bible like the only reason you are in the world is to please God.
    3. Ensure you receive the baptism of the Holy Ghost.
    4. Renew your mind and ignite your spirit daily by studying and meditating on the scriptures.
    5. Be determined to live a holy life. Be disciplined. Guard your heart with all diligence.
    6. Do something to promote the kingdom of God. In your church, school, office or anywhere you find yourself – be an ambassador of God, win souls and preach the gospel.
    7. Pray at every given opportunity. Form a habit of constantly communicating with God.
    8. Be the first to get to church, fellowship etc.

    I love you too. May God bless you and make you VERY GREAT. May He make you an unusual weapon in His hands and make all your dreams come true in Jesus name.

    My darling sisters and every wonderful fan of this page – God’s page,

    Last week, I began discussing a weapon of mass destruction which a lot of Christians have at their disposal but just ignore, a shield for our defenceless heads, our power generator, a balm of Gilead which would soothe us and free us from every burden, God’s pronouncements upon our lives which no devil can alter unless we don’t put them to use, the key to unlocking the greatest and darkest mysteries, the solution to the vagaries and vicissitudes of life, the lamp for our feet and the light on our path through life, the wisdom we need to coast through life, our strength, the enemy’s dread, our spiritual sword, sharper than any double-edged sword – the word of God. When last did you study it outside church? How many verses can you recite offhand? I welcome you all to school on Sunday!

    “The entrance of thy words giveth light; it giveth understanding unto the simple.”

    Psalm 119:130 KJV

    The word of God is so powerful that it has the antidote to every difficult situation we may ever find ourselves in life, situations which all the money in the world and even your G.O. cannot solve. When you allow the word of God to saturate your senses, the power of God moves over your life and His light beams upon your life. You instantly become your own prophet because it opens up your understanding and reveals all you need to know about your life and the paths to follow to your promised land while showing you pitfalls to avoid and traps set by the devil. It even reveals to you the mind of others towards you and a lot of things which don’t even concern you because you are already carrying God Himself. Doesn’t He know everything? When you begin to soak yourself in the word, believe me, you will always know the examination questions even before the time-table is out because the Holy Spirit will always act as your spy. Whoa! Now, can you ever fail? You will always cart all the prizes on the prize-giving day. How I wish I knew all of this as a teenager!

    When you are daily loaded with the word of God, you will always be surrounded by the angels of God and they would always bring you super information which all the world’s greatest G.Os put together can never give you. That one information could be all that you need to become that which you are destined to be in life which is why the enemy has fought you tooth and nail and thrown all sorts your way just to ensure you don’t get to your beautiful throne; the reason why your life has been like “hell on earth” so far. God wants you to be what He created you to be. You need to start getting all the information and your weapons and ammunition right away. Time is running out fast. What would make you shine now may never make you shine later in life – in fact, you may never have the energy to pursue it. Pick up your bible and start digging deep. Refuse to be distracted by anything. Forget your friends on face book etc. and concentrate please. By the time your glory arrives, they’ll be the ones to broadcast. Pick up your bible now and draw up a daily reading plan. I pray the mighty power of God rests upon your life and open up your understanding in Jesus name. AMEN!

  • Amazingly magical

    Amazingly magical

    With the theme Magic, Wura-Natasha Ogunji and Ruby Onyinyechi Amanze, two Nigerian female artists who believe in the same approach, style and form, dazzle with their hybrid of works that cut across continents and locations.  Edozie Udeze who was at the opening ceremony in Lagos, reports on how the magical images of their art works held guests spellbound.

    The theme of the exhibition is amazing, so magical are the works that when most visitors and art lovers who turned up for the opening programme saw some of the art works, they were truly convinced that the theme of the installations was right.  The duo of Wura-Natasha Ogunji and Ruby Onyinyechi Amanze had to brainstorm on the theme and in the end came up with magic.

    But what is Magic?  Why chose magic to portray these array of works when the artists are not magicians or pretend to be wizards?  But the word magic is a derivative of the forms and styles exhibited by these artists who although did not grow up in Nigeria but have their ideas fertilized based on their experiences across different worlds and locations.  This is why most of their works look bizarre, away from the everyday routine already known in the local parlance.

    For them both, the art of visual has no limitation and so it is proper to continue to engage in more new forms and ideas.  In an interview, Ogunji said, “yes, my most recent drawings are inspired by the experience of living in Lagos.  I love those moments of unexpected beauty, humour, quiet stillness and connection that occur amidst all of the action.  The wave signals, those lines that move between the DJ and the Ife head, are about those moments.  They are about the profound beauty that is present in everyday contradictions.  The DJ in the drawings sees those connections.”

    For the few years Ogunji has been in Lagos, she has seen and experienced enough to help her zero down her gaze on the issues that make Lagos the heartbeat of the continent of Africa.  “When you see the world from multiple perceptions, then what?,”  Osuji queried.  “Is there a moment when none of that matters?  When we have to choose a perceptive and live within that?  If we don’t, will we be constantly floating, unmoored, wandering?”

    In one of her works titled three birds, done on thread, ink and graphite trace paper, she portrays a classical lady caught between two worlds.  In her local gele (head-tie) there is an admixture of Western and Yoruba fashions.  While the head-tie is local, her other attires depict a woman in the throes of confusion.  Yet, Ogunji depicts her deep sense of artistic excellence for which she has been known across America where she grew up and Nigeria where she has her roots.

    However, the central theme or if you like features that define most of these works  is peace.  The presence of pidgin or dove, a type of bird that conveys peace shows that both artists are ambassadors of sorts; pidgin conveys a message of purity, of the universality of love and concern for human progress.  The white pidgin symbolizes such and these works go deep into the human consciousness to reignite that interest.

    In her own works, Amanze confirms her true recourse to the deep recesses of colour and different forms of styles.  She said, “I think with some of those earlier drawings, I was developing the language for this current body of work.  The work indeed began in Nigeria and the experience of living there was in many ways a visual overload.  I’ve been able to edit some of that initial language, and part of that choice was getting larger in scale- to allow for more open space.”

    Her ideas and conceptions came to fruition more as she enumerates further: “I recently made a drawing with a lot of white space.  A lot.   And when I finished I had to resist the urge to fill it.  To put something there… to say more.  In my head, it was like who do I think I am?  Isn’t minimalism for white artists?  No.  But I needed the drawing to be as it was.  So I silenced the opposition and left it with what I thought was the perfect amount of space, even if it was a lot.  There is a delicate balancing act that happens in the work.  I see this in Wura’s works too.”  Thus, the theme magic was created; created purposely to unmask these hybrids of thorough experimentations.

    But Amanze did not end there.  Her love for natural beauty explains the profundity of colours and juxtaposition in all their works.  “Beauty is not something either of us can or desire to escape from.  I am not ashamed of that word as it relates to my work.  I am also aware of a large and endless historical conversation around it.  It’s loaded.  It gets into craft, design, the decorative… I’ve been accused of using it as a ploy, that the use of green glitter or gold or iridescent pinks is to catch people’s eyes.”

    Now, Amanze grew up hating the pink colour.  But how come it has now come to be the colour she uses most for which critics often pick holes with her.  “Now, thinking that pink means pretty is far too easy.  That’s not how I see it at all.  The green glitter comes from a story I wrote of these girls who were running together in the woods.  Now, none of that ever matters.   What matters now is that it is never a ploy.”

    And so together these two Nigerian female artists, who were trained both in America and the UK have been brought together by their ardent love for magical things.  Magic is one word that binds them together to have fifteen works that are currently showing at the Omenka Gallery, Lagos.  At the opening ceremony last weekend, it was obvious the works exposed a lot about the human society and what the artists have lived with over the years.  Even though Ogunji worried that the works are too beautiful to portray their core originality, but she concurred that this beauty is also the centre-piece of the works.  “Oh, the story ends there.  It is not that I am trying to imply or impugn one…  I have the desire or talent for that.  It just doesn’t come to the page for me.  I like the beauty of the awkward and almost and the not quite expected.”

    This and more explain the innermost poise of a visual artist.  And this is what these two have brought to bear on these experiments that are not only unique but magical in different forms and methods.

  • Eagles’ invitation: It’s an amazing dream, says Edjomariegwe

    Eagles’ invitation: It’s an amazing dream, says Edjomariegwe

    Super Eagles invitee Tony Edjomariegwe has described his invitation to the national team as an amazing dream.

    The Nasarawa United midfielder was included among the 25 players invited for the double header Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) qualifying matches against Congo and South Africa this month.

    The Super Eagles head coach made the release on Friday.

    In an exclusive interview with NationSport, Edjomariegwe believes his time has come to play for the Super Eagles as he said he will use his talent to help Nigeria secure the qualification for the AFCON.

    He thanked God and the technical crew for the invitation adding that he will prove himself to justify the confidence reposed in him by the technical crew.

    “My brother it is an amazing dream and dreams come through. I thank God,  the management and technical crew of the Super Eagles for this opportunity. It is the dream of every player to play for his country and I really appreciate it,” Edjomariegwe told NationSport.

    “I will cherish this opportunity for a very long time because this kind of opportunity didn’t come so easy. I try my best not to disappoint the technical crew and Nigerians in general. I will justify the vote of confidence reposed in me. This invitation is not for play at all.

    “The invitation shows that my time has come to play for the Super Eagles. I believe that if God says it is your time and you are favoured. God will definitely crown your efforts. It is not all about the way you play, I have some of my teammates that have been playing for the national team before. All I can say is that my time has come and my time is now.”

  • Glo dealers return from Brazil with amazing lifetime experiences

    Dealers of National Telecommunications Company, Globacom, who were sponsored to watch the finals of the 2014 World Cup in Brazil returned to Nigeria last weekend with splendid accounts of their trip to the Samba-loving country.

    Globacom said the  trip to Brazil was in appreciation of the massive support it has gotten from the dealers over the years.

    The dealers, who arrived in Brazil two days before the finals, took time off to visit tourist attractions in the city of Rio de Janerio and Sao Paulo. Some of the places visited are Sugar Loaf, Buzios Beach and Angrados Reis as well as Christ the Saviour site.

    After the World Cup finals, the Glo dealers also savoured the city of Rio further for another two days with visits to Museum of the Portuguses Language Luz in Sao Paulo, Jardin District Football Museum, Villa Lobos Park, Sao Paulo and Movies of Imax Jk Iguatemi Cinema.

    The dealers on the trip include the Managing Director, Easy and Quiet Limited, Mohammed Anthony, CEO of Upper Room Limited, Adegbenro Odukoya, Managing Director,  Idem Ultimate Limited, Hon. Unyime Idem Josiah, and Chidi Orjiakor of Correspondence Limited.

    Others are Suraju Bukoye of Easy GSM Global, CEO of Office Devices Limited, James Odili Odogwu and Samuel Adeniyi Owoeye of Hephzibah Communication and Internet Solutions.

    The trip was rounded off with a dinner at the prestigious Figueira Rubaiyat, Rua Haddock Lobo, Paulista, Sao Paulo.

    Commenting on the tour, The CEO of Easy and Quiet Limited, Mohammed Anthony said: “The trip was well planned; we had time to visit different parts of the cities of Rio de Janerio and Sao Paulo and also enjoyed the final match at Maracana, it was a royal treatment from Globacom.”

    The Managing Director of Hephzibah communication and Internet Solutions, Samuel Adeniyi Owoeye described the dealers’ visit to Brazil as unique, adding that it was a thoroughly enjoyed trip which gave the dealers the opportunity to watch not only the World Cup finals at the glamorous Maracana Stadium but also to tour the cities of Rio de Janerio and Sao Paulo which was very educating and refreshing.”

    In his remarks, the CEO of Office Devices, James Odili Odogwu, a football fan stated that it was all fun all the way as the dealers thoroughly enjoyed the final match between Argentina and Germany and the visit to many tourist attractions across the city of Rio de Janerio. He concluded: “It was a first class treatment from Glo and I thank the company for considering me for the trip.”

    The dealers have since returned to Nigeria.

    Globacom has over the years been rewarding its business associates and subscribers; the company in the last four years, has sponsored many of its dealers and business associates to watch Manchester United’s matches at the Old Trafford while some were sponsored to the  2011 UEFA Champions League Cup Final between Barcelona and Manchester United at the famous Wembley Stadium in London.

  • Seun Oni I have an amazing family

    Seun Oni I have an amazing family

    R&B sensation, Seun Oni, with the stage name SAEON, recently signed a mega deal with Baseline Music. The graduate of International Studies and History at Babcock University and International Relations with focus on terrorism and counter terrorism at Warwick University, United Kingdom tells ADETUTU AUDU she has made her parents proud.

    YOUR single, Boogie Down, is a smash hit. What inspired it?

    When you put two talented artistes together in a room, there’s bound to be magic. And that’s what resulted in the hit that is Boogie Down.

    You featured Wizkid. What is your relationship with him?

    Wizkid is an amazing artist and he is one of the industry friends I’ve been privileged to meet and work with.

    You rap and also sing R&B. This is unique. How do you combine the two?

    I think it has to do with experience and the time I spent in nurturing my talents. I started with writing R&B songs and then stumbled on something that wasn’t R&B. I just took it up from there. I guess I am able to ride on anything I come across. I have dabbled into different genres like Afro, Hip Hop but I am originally an R&B artiste and I also rap. I sing about love as well as on any inspiring theme.

    Most female acts have challenges. What are yours?

    Probably the perception that the Nigerian music industry is a male-dominated industry. It’s not so much of a challenge but a misperception, because in actual fact, ratio of males to females is about 10:1. But this is definitely changing as more females are on the come up and it’s only a matter of time before that equilibrium will be the order of the day.

    You studied International Studies and History at Babcock University and have a Masters Degree in International Relations from the University of Warwick in England. What is your parents’ reaction with their huge investment in your education?

    Oh, my family is amazingly supportive. One of our principles is to attain a certain level of education and so when I was done with all of that, I called a meeting with my parents and siblings and told them I was ready to take up music on a professional level. They gave me their blessings because I had made them proud.

    When did you come to the realisation that it would be music?

    I had always known as a child that I would be a musician. I have loved music since I can remember. It has always been my ‘to go’ place whenever I needed to be alone. It was just a matter of time for me; mainly because of the kind of family I come from. I had to be done with my education first before venturing into music full time. Music for me is very interesting and exciting because it makes my blood flow well.

    You did a course on terrorism at postgraduate level, what informed this decision?

    I read International Studies and History at Babcock University. I did my post graduate in International Relations with focus on terrorism and counterterrorism as well as the covert activities of the CIA. I had different modules I could have focused on. Nothing was challenging or new to me, so when I came across terrorism and counterterrorism, I saw it as something that happens in contemporary times so I decided to go for it. I feel guilty because I should actually apply myself into my field of study in the best of ways that I can in Nigeria because it is a country that is actually facing terrorist attacks. I have been looking for ways to link myself up with the NIA, that is the Nigerian Intelligence Agency. Although I want to do it from the background just to contribute in my own little way, as a patriotic citizen who has specialised in this issue

    Apart from Wizkid, which other artiste have you worked with?

    I did a cover of Brymo’s Ara album and it gave me a jumpstart in my music career. I am not planning on releasing an album now but I have a couple of singles.  I am at the stage where I have just come out from a lull. I actually took time out to study the industry. I took time out to really understand it and to know how things are done and how to push my music. I also took time out to rebrand myself and my style of music to suit the Nigerian public. I have done some collabos with some artistes in the past and I’m working on doing some with some established artistes.

    No doubt music is flowing in your vein; can you share some of your experiences as an artiste?

    I once took part in a competition while I was in England; it was an MTV UK Brand New Artiste competition that allowed people to compete with each other and the winner will be pushed by MTV. I had to compete with people from all over the world. I didn’t win it but it was something I was glad to have done. I got to the final stage actually. You never know who is listening to your music. You can’t say you are doing music for just Nigeria. You have to think big because at the end of the day, what determines your stardom is the clout you pull internationally. I performed at the Arise Magazine Fashion Week last year. I was nominated last year at the Nigerian Music Video Awards and I got to perform there. I performed at the Koko Concert. I have performed in Nigeria, Angola and England.

    Howie T discovered P-square. You are the first artiste on the label, how do you intend to use the platform?

    I’m currently one of the artists Baseline Music is focusing on, and this is a huge platform I intend to fully maximise. With Howie T’s expertise, my team, my determination and the grace of God, we’re bound to achieve great things.

    Female acts are seen as sex symbols. What is your take?

    I feel it depends on the mind of the individual.

    Describe your style

     

  • The amazing silent world of the deaf

    The amazing silent world of the deaf

    Seun Akioye, who joined the Deaf Supporters Group (DSG) in its end-of-year party, writes on the peculiar challenges faced by people with hearing impairment, their lives revolving around the sign language.

    Inside the drab, dilapidating buildings of 3/7 Kakawa Street, Lagos Island which housed the Deaf Supporters Group (DSG), an association made up of hearing impaired persons – the excitement had reached the highest pitch. As the uniformed crowd of DSG members continued to pour into the venue, there were hugs, from friends and acquaintances, backslaps and a general shout of excitement.

    The President of the DSG, Afolabi Dahunsi was at the centre of the excitement, dressed in a matching uniform of purple ankara, a flowing agbada and a fitting cap to match, he laughed, pumped hands with the members and obliged the many requests for photographs and to give out his business cards to the guests. The President has a special business card complete with phone numbers and emails. But curiously, a caveat was employed at the end of the telephone, it says “text message only”.

    At the gate, the security agents had a herculean task controlling the crowd; a curious observer might wonder why the organisers could not get a more professional security agency to handle its affairs. But this was no ordinary event; it was one which would only yield to people of its kind. As the guests were all deaf and dumb, only security agents of such inclinations can adequately cater for them.

    Inside, loud music blared from a section of the arena, but it made no difference to the excited crowd of the deaf as diverse conversations went on from one small group to the other. It was silent conversations, one which was accompanied by sight and not sounds. Sometimes the eyes popped up in amazement at some exciting news and then all the emotions which spoke all that was needed would rush into their faces. The members of DSG resided in a world of their own, one which is open to only a few outsiders, a world reduced to grunts, groans and signs.

    How does one empathise with the deaf? How does one understand his emotions and frustrations? Living under a terrifying economic circumstances is bad but being handicapped, unable to hear the sound of the world as it whistles pass and unable to hear one’s own voice surely adds a new dimension to the frustration. The deaf and mute of the DSG have little love for their hearing counterparts, somehow, one gets the impression they feel the hearing society ‘owes’ them and when such debts are not paid, they feel persecuted by the world  and are constantly in conflict with the larger society.

    That is why they have acquired the reputation as possessing fiery temper and ill-manners. It was in order to debunk these stereotypes and prove that the deaf and dumb have brains and can contribute positively to the society that the DSG was founded. And every year, they come together for a few hours to furnish themselves with the universal happiness which has been given to all humans irrespective of their disability.

    Though, it was the beginning of the year, the members of the DSG chose to celebrate their end of the year events.  For some years, this event had unfailingly held at the same venue but the date depended on the charity of “hearing” philanthropists and kind-hearted public servants. This year, the charming philanthropist has been Senator Oluremi Tinubu, wife of Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, a former governor of Lagos State and leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    At 11:00am, the Compere, Wole Ekundayo who had been an interpreter for the deaf for 17 years, breathed heavily into the microphone, an action that signified an end to the loud music.  But the end of the music did not stop the loud chatter coming from the members. Immediately, three interpreters placed themselves at different positions facing the crowd and began a furious spate of interpretations using sign language. One of them, Adeyemo Steven has volunteered for the DSG since 2005. Ekundayo darted round the assembly speaking and furiously using his hands to call for ‘silence’.

    When calm was restored, Ekundayo announced that there would be the singing of the national anthem. A cue was given and the anthem blared from the loudspeakers. All the members stood at attention, some placed their hands across their breasts while others made a sign of the salute. Though they could not hear the words but followed every line from the interpreters who used the signs to communicate the wordings. Though, no words were spoken, the anthem as rendered by the deaf seemed the sweetest and the most genuine ever sang.

    When it ended, Ekundayo made a sign to them to applause.  When the message was understood some merely raised their hands to the heavens while others waved them. The event proceeded in a slow and sluggish manner, understandably so because every word spoken by the compere had to be interpreted jointly by him and the interpreters. But he tried to make the event lively, making fun and jokes, switching from signs to speech.

    The President, Dahunsi was lavish in his praise of those he called “Friends of the Deaf.” He said the organisation has made significant improvements in the lives of its members: providing employment and improving access to education and health. He also said some of their members have gained employment with some local governments while others have been granted financial assistance.

    He then solicited further assistance from the public which include: a generating set, office equipments and training and empowerment of its members. But as much as Dahunsi tried to be optimistic, it was clear all was not well with the deaf in Nigeria. The National Coordinator of the DSG, Okiki Adeyemi was visibly angry when he took the microphone.  He accused many corporate organ-isations of “refusing” their request for help. A flurry of furious sign language followed and there was a general groan of disagreements.

    “Help us to explain to our leaders,” Adeyemi yelled, turning to the journalists. “The deaf wants to contribute positively to the nation but we need help. We need to set up our members in trade so they could stop begging on the streets”.

    Some members from the northern part of the country, who sat differently from the others, rose up when they understood what Adeyemi said and gave him some applause by raising their hands to heaven. But Adeyemi was not done. “We sent letters to some corporate organisations to support our organisation with Christmas presents so we can share to our members. We asked for food items and we got letters sent through the courier saying they cannot help us. If they had sent us the money used to send the letter, we would have bought the bags of rice,” he said.

    Adeyemi said the DSG had sent letters to Shell Petroleum Company, Lekki Concession Company, Dangote Foundation and Julius Berger Construction Company and they all sent letters expressing their regrets at not been able to grant the groups requests. With that, Adeyemi threw down on the table one of the packages used in ferrying the letter.

    More groans, grunts and signs

    Comfort Asare took centre stage afterwards. She was a tall, beautiful woman with penetrating, but charming eyes. She began by establishing that the deaf beg because there are no jobs she said the deaf do not have a dedicated police that understand their plight or medical personnel that can help them. “One of us died in Berger last week on the street, with his begging bowl beside him. We have to fight for our rights, we are special, and for how long will we be begging? The deaf are dying, please fight for us, we are not useless.

    “The deaf in America, they are equal, but here we have graduates but don’t have jobs, we want our own police, we want our own doctors; those who can understand us.”

    Asare was very angry. The crowd yelled. It was again that unusual yell accomplished in groans and grunts. When that seemed insufficient, they clapped. It was the first time they clapped since the event began.

    Kingsley Njoku, who graduated from the University of Ilorin in 2011, said, as soon as potential employers know you are deaf, “they quickly dismiss you”.

    But Alhaji Sulaiman Dagbo, a lecturer at the Federal College of Education (special) tried to encourage his people. He insisted they must not use their disability as an excuse, he said they are better than beggars and they possess one of the best brains in the world. The people listened to him, but few were placated.

    The deaf children

    The children of the deaf are generally referred to as deaf children. Though all of them present at the event could hear, they are also proficient in the sign language. Tayo and Boluwatife Ogunwale followed their deaf mother, Funke to the event, they seemed happy with their mother and declared that they are not ashamed of her. “We learn the sign language and we communicate well. She is our mother and we are not ashamed,” they said. There were others too. In the midst of the silent world their parent’s lives, they serve as the inaudible voice in the world of silence. Life for them is two- faced: One spent in silence and the other spent in hearing.

    Hope in disability

    Senator Tinubu brought a message of hope. Represented by Mrs. Salau Bashua, the wife of Lagos Island East Local Government said, despite the present challenges, they can be useful to themselves. She enjoined them to think higher and have greater goals in life. The compere had his own version of the speech. “Don’t say you can’t do anything, you can do more than those who hear.” The crowd yelled; there was silence.

    Senator Gbenga Ashafa brought more message of hope. For many years he has patronised the group and sent two representatives to the event. “We are here to support you, Senator Ashafa has always supported the deaf and we shared in your aspirations. Next year, we will provide the canopies and all the food that you need,” Otunba Lekan Adebayo, who represented the Senator, told the excited crowd.

    An American, Erica Mcvey said she is in the country to see what assistance she can render to the deaf. “I have made lots of contacts and I hope I can use my experience and resources to help them. I love the people,” she said.

    To show ability in disability, the Refuge Dancers were called up. Four young men took to the floor and choreographed to a gospel music with amazing precision and timeliness.  Though, they did not directly interpret the song, they however made it their own and gave it a new meaning. Their manager, Gbenga Sodehinde said: “We teach them through signs and counting of beats and tempo. We are available to entertain at any function”.

    The music began again. Ekundayo moved to the centre and began to dance; it was a clue to the deaf to join in the show. Many came forward, beautiful young girls, dancing away to the latest dance-hall music. Even though, some danced out of tune, they looked normal. Soon, the dance reached a crescendo and the dancers twisted and turned, performing all manner of erotic maneuvers. Men abandoned their dance to feast their lustful eyes on the deaf dancers.

  • Amazing story of a rich Island  whose people need help

    Amazing story of a rich Island whose people need help

    It is regarded as the richest Island in the country. It hosts the Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) Limited, Mobil Producing Unlimited and Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC). But,OLUKOREDE YISHAU, who has been to the Island three times, writes that the richness of the Island has benefited the government and a few individuals more than the people. It is feared if the community does not get the help it needs, it will pose future threats.

     

    It has a place in global history. Its name rings bell far and wide. It takes some three hours to access it by water. By air, it is slightly more than 20 minutes. Its soils are swarmed by resources that bring money. But they can’t bring money unless technology beyond the reach of the people are deployed, leaving the Island in no position to tap the resources. So blessed is it that it has no rival in the Niger Delta. One of the three companies operating on its soil has paid dividends of no less than $9 billion to the Federal Government since it began operation some years ago. The others have also paid several billions from what they have earned operating there. Other government agencies have also collected billions of dollars as dues, levies and what have you over the years.

    For this regular supply of cash to the federal, state and other purses, its people enjoy uninterrupted power supply at little or no cost. No wonder, the editor of a film ‘Last Flight to Abuja’ chose Bonny Island for the editing of some delicate parts of the movie, which he could not risk with the epileptic power supply in the other areas of the country.It also has access to pipe-borne water.

    Many an indigene of the area from which a popular light crude oil got its name, had also benefited from scholarship schemes. And not a few are working in juicy sectors of the economy largely on account of being from the rich Island.

    On its soil, the Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) has a huge crude oil export terminal known as the Bonny crude oil terminal – the largest of its kind in Africa.

    The facilities have more than doubled the amount of oil it can process and export to 1.25 million barrels a day.

    The fully automated system is one of the most technologically advanced terminals in Africa and gives Nigeria the potential to deliver uninterrupted crude oil exports for the next 25 years.

    But, it appears that is where the good news ends.

    Its traditional ruler, the Amayanabo of Grand Bonny Kingdom, King Edward Dappa Pepple 111, recently spearheaded a pan-Bonny Sustainable Development Conference. At this conference, it was clear to all that the Island could pose a threat to the oil giants operating there and the economy of the country if it does not get the help it needs.

    Its traditional ruler, the Amayanabo of Grand Bonny Kingdom, King Edward Dappa Pepple 111, recently spearheaded a pan-Bonny Sustainable Development Conference. At this conference, it was clear to all that the Island could pose a threat to the oil giants operating there and the economy of the country if it does not get the help it needs.

    A brochure for the conference noted the wealth of the land. It reads:”The presence of big industries has supported the emergence of critical infrastructure that is capable of driving economic and social transformation. Bonny people have worked with industry stakeholders to put in place a Bonny Development Master Plan to guide orderly development of the Kingdom; however the plan implementation requires Government support and income generation activities which is dearly need.

    “Therefore, going forward into the future and the need for next step to achieving sustainable development that can support the speedy growth of the Bonny community, this conference is aimed at providing a platform for all stake holders to rub minds on ways of ensuring that development remains on a sustainable path of growth into the future; inspire the Bonny community to embrace a process for re-orientation and make commitment toward self-reliance for sustainable development in all ramifications.

    “This can happen if Bonny in the face of current realities evolve new enabling conditions for investor partnerships, focus on ways and means towards generating activities that improve development in a manner that ensures that all segments of the community own, drive and actively participate and benefit from its implementation.”

    One area the community must be helped so that its youths do not become threats to both the companies and the elite is education.

    A World Bank consultant, Dr Rosemary Nwangwu, revealed the sorry human capital state of the community.

    Dr. Nwangwu said: “The number of teachers in Bonny primary schools is inadequate. There are no teachers even in the core subject areas: English Language, Mathematics and the Sciences. There are 21 public primary schools in Bonny Local Government Area. These 21 schools have a total of 5,949 pupils (male 3010, female 2939) taught by 139 teachers. This gives a teacher-pupil ratio of 1:44 as against the policy stipulated ratio of 1:35.

    “The secondary schools are no better staffed. There are four public junior and four public senior secondary schools in the Island…The junior secondary schools have 1,949 students… and are taught by 27 teachers. The senior secondary schools have 1,896 students and are taught by 71 teachers. Also at this level, there are no Mathematics, English Language or Science teachers.”

    The result of these, she said, is poor performance in terminal examinations.

    Dr. Nwangwu said in the last 10 years, the oldest school in the Island has recorded only 12 per cent pass with five credits in WAEC.

    She said: “These young people have been processed into nothingness and are not equipped to do anything. A more dangerous reality for the community is that the young people who are unable to make the pass mark are unable still to get into any other system that can enable them acquire skills. They are lost in the education system and lost to their families in terms of income generation and survival skills. These persons who dropped out from the system cannot help themselves or the system.”

    King Pepple said things have to change. He said there is still a long road to travel. He said the time had come to attract more partners to drive its development other than the Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) Limited, Shell and Mobil Producing Unlimited.

    According to him, the Island must be steered to the shores of development and prosperity for the sake of future generation.

    He said: “We raise our voices to governments, the private sector, all international development agencies, all friendly corporate organisations that Bonny is open for business and to work with all well-meaning people to grow a project that we can all be proud of as partners.”

    The Executive Director of the Rivers State Sustainable Development Agency (RSSDA), Mr Nobel Pepple, said the people must look beyond oil and gas for the development of the community. He said alternatives livelihoods could be found in fishing and agriculture.

    This position was also canvassed by the Netherlands Ambassador to Nigeria, Mr Bert Ronhaar, who said with the sea in the Island, it can supply fishes to the rest of the world and make money.

    A communique at the end of the conference said the community must seek new partners to work with existing ones for its development in the areas of human capital and so on. It also agreed to set up and Economic and Social Development Fund to finance and updated Master Plan, service infrastructural and social development.

    SPDC was the first to see the light in Bonny Island. Mobil saw it later. NLNG Limited did not see it until some two decades ago when work started on Africa’s largest LNG plant. They all liked the place and the promise there. The Federal Government, which has interest in all of these ventures, too knows what the country stands to gain from Bonny Island, which hosts the country’s only port of origin.

    The people were happy that the companies came. They had good times at the peak of the construction of the companies. The skilled and the unskilled were employed to get the companies ready. But, much of their expectations have not been met.

    When work on the NLNG seventh train reaches the peak, thousands will be employed too.

    The Federal Government makes billions annually from the area in the form of taxes from the companies operating there. Its joint venture agreement with them ensure dividends pour in in billions of dollars. Its agencies also get taxes.

    From the NLNG alone, in which the country invested through the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), it has since 2004 received $9 billion as dividends from the company. Additional $2.2 billion could be made annually when the seventh train of the NLNG is ready.

    The Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), a Federal Government agency, also recently got $140 million as maritime duties from NLNG.

    June last year, the NLNG ran into stormy waters with the youths. The youths were angry over the absence of Bonny indigenes on the NLNG 2012 Technicians Training and Employment list.

    One of the Bonny youths, Thompson Beresiri, said: “This injustice must stop. Our leaders have continued to look the other way while our rights are infringed upon by these companies.

    “The issue of local content has been flawed because government has demonstrated lack of political will to tackle the matter head on. However, youths are now prepared to do it their own way to ensure they safeguard their future.”

    The Leader of Bonny Youths Federation, Mr. Gift Furo, said: “I don’t want to believe this is true. We have seen the list and have instituted a showdown meeting with the management of NLNG to further know why out of the 33 persons selected no Bonny or Rivers indigene was considered.

    “I think it is the right thing to do as a responsible youth body before going further with other options.

    “It is painful when you compare the level of development, youth empowerment and employment in other areas where Liquidified Gas plants are located and in Bonny.

    “In terms of preserving our environment, NLNG has failed, in terms of helping to cushion the effect of the environmental devastation caused by the emission, it is zero. In terms of employment, training and other empowerment programmes like the present case, they have failed, regrettably this failures are inherent in the face of the fact that Bonny people have sacrificed their health and existence on the alter of dangerous emission.”

    He said for the youths to become useful, they must be gainfully employed or trained to attain their full potential.

    The youth leader said government at all levels have failed to demonstrate the political will to ensure that the local content law is judiciously implemented by the companies in Niger Delta.

    According to him, “companies have been allowed to do things the way they like without recourse to host communities and youths. There is need for government and corporate bodies to ensure that the futures of youths are protected through the assurance of gainful employment after graduation from school.

    “Also, sustainable skills acquisition for those not in the academic area will also go along way in checking the vices in the society. If this is not done, the youths who are ambitious by nature will surely feel discontented unleashing the disastrous consequences on the society.”

    Mobil and Shell have also run into problems with the youths over spills and so on.

    With the right help to develop its land and people, the threats will be mitigated. Without that, there is fire on the mountain. It seems no one is running!

     

     

     

     

     

  • Understanding PDP’s amazing audacity

    Understanding PDP’s amazing audacity

    The battle has been fierce, intense and unrelenting. All kinds of weapons –assault rifles, tear gas canisters, bazookas, hand grenades, cluster bombs and even unmanned drones – have been freely used on both sides. I refer to the raging civil war currently rocking the People’s Democratic Party (PDP). On various occasions, ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo has launched vicious attacks against the Goodluck Jonathan administration accusing the President of utter incompetence in tackling the Boko Haram insurgency. In one instance, Obasanjo recommended his drastic and ruthless handling of the Odi situation to Jonathan suggesting that the latter was soft on Boko Haram. We will recall that President Obasanjo ordered the levelling of the entire Odi community of Bayelsa State following the murder by elements of the community of Nigerian soldiers on official duties. During his last presidential media chat, Dr. Jonathan retorted that when he visited Odi as Deputy Governor of Bayelsa State, all he saw were the corpses of innocent children and old people rather than the militants that perpetrated the crime. Undaunted, Obasanjo has launched further salvos at Jonathan in interviews on both CNN and the New African magazine questioning the incumbent’s competence in effectively discharging his role as the country’s Chief Security Officer.

    A careful observer will note that in this exchange of brickbats, the two PDP leaders have been careful to distance the PDP as a party from their respective administrations. But in reality, what Obasanjo was saying is that the incompetence of the PDP government under Jonathan has been responsible for a precarious security situation that has led to the death of hundreds of people in many parts of Northern Nigeria. In the same vein Jonathan countered that a PDP government under Obasanjo in sanctioning the massacre of children, women and old people in Odi committed a crime that is difficult to dissociate from genocide. This is a severe self-indictment on the part of a party that yet boasts its capacity to cling to power at the centre for the next six decades. What really explains such amazing audacity?

    Launching her own devastating machine propelled rockets from another section of the battlefield, a former Education Minister in the Obasanjo administration and one-time Vice President (Africa) of the World Bank, Dr. Oby Ezekwesili, accused both the late President Musa Yar’Adua and Goodluck Jonathan administrations of wanton financial recklessness. Speaking at the Convocation lecture she delivered at the University of Nigeria (UNN), Nsukka, she alleged that both administration’s had frittered away $67 billion in foreign reserves and Excess Crude Account (ECA) left behind by the Obasanjo administration. This is again another devastating indictment of the PDP.

    In the first place, if the PDP Obasanjo administration realized so much revenue that it could accumulate such huge reserves, why did it leave the country’s infrastructure in virtually all sectors in such a parlous state? Again, is this not an indictment of the PDP’s leadership succession processes? Did the party seriously assess the competence of Yar’Adua and Jonathan before imposing them on Nigerians through incurably flawed elections? Indeed, in his new book “The Accidental Public Servant”, former Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Mallam Nasir el-Rufai, revealed the very cavalier manner decisions are taken in high quarters as regards the leadership of this country. He claimed that Obasanjo, doubting the competence of Jonathan, wanted to back a Buhari/Ngozi Okonjo Iweala ticket for the 2011 election. If Obasanjo was unsure of Jonathan’s competence, how did the latter emerge as Vice-Presidential candidate under the old soldier’s watch? In any case, in his first coming as military Head of State, Buhari ran a highly nationalistic administration that stoutly resisted the policy dictates of the IMF and World Bank. How could he then be expected to work harmoniously with a Vice-President who is a dyed in the wool neo-liberal World Bank economist? Is this the kind of shoddy thinking that led Obasanjo to impose a most inept and mediocre leadership on the country following his exit in 2007?

    In responding to Ezekwesili, the trio of Labaran Maku, Doyin Okupe and Reuben Abati only succeeded in further severely indicting both the Jonathan administration and the PDP. In the first place, they were completely silent on the substance of her allegations. What exactly was the $67 billion in foreign reserves and Excess Crude Account left behind by the Obasanjo administration expended on? With such gargantuan expenditure profile, how can we explain the abysmal level of poverty in which Nigeria is still mired? Rather, Jonathan’s aides insinuated without the slightest scintilla of evidence that Ezekwesili embezzled funds allocated to the Ministry of Education during her tenure. Why, as many analysts have asked, did they wait for Ezekwesili to make her damning disclosures before trying to taint her character and integrity? Are there other allegedly corrupt public officers that the administration is keeping mum over because they are of ‘good behaviour’? Has massive looting of public funds become so routine and normal under the PDP? In the words of Dr. Abati “They managed to leave the country in darkness, with less than 2000 MW; abandoned Independent Power Projects, mismanaged power stations…”. Mind you, the presidential spokesman is here referring to a PDP government! It certainly cannot get more entertaining.

    Yet, despite its glaring non-performance and the washing of its dirty linen in public, the PDP remains supremely confident of its capacity to overwhelmingly win future elections and continue to steer the affairs of the nation. The PDP national Chairman, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, is completely disdainful of the announcement by four political parties – Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) and Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) – to merge into a new party, the All Progressives Congress (APC). Reacting to the news, Alhaji Tukur jokingly told news men “If you go for a football contest, you have the top striker. You know Lionel Messi? PDP is Messi in that contest. They (opposition parties) are no threat at all. It (merger) is better. It inspires the PDP to action. In that contest, tell them (opposition parties) that I said PDP is Lionel Messi”. Unfortunately, the PDP in running the affairs of Nigeria since 1999 has not exhibited the brilliant skills of the diminutive soccer star in tackling the multifarious challenges confronting the country. But the PDP’s audacity as well as Alhaji Tukur’s arrogance and utter contempt for Nigerians is quite logical and understandable.

    The lack of any reasonable linkage between governmental performance and electoral outcomes is clearly the reason for the PDP’s continued amazing self confidence. Even as their existential conditions have worsened steadily under the PDP’s watch since 1999 and Nigeria totters on the brink of state collapse, the PDP has won successive elections in 2003, 2007 and 2011 with the party maintaining a firm hold on the centre and the majority of states. It is thus all too easy for the PDP to conclude that Nigerians are incurably masochistic taking sheer delight in ever increasing misery.

    No matter your perception of the PDP, you must recognise that it is serious minded in its pursuit of its mission of maintaining a strangle hold on power and sharing the bounteous national cake among its members while allowing those at the grassroots to scramble for the crumbs. Unknown to many for instance, the PDP has a training school for its cadres! At a time it was run by my former teacher, the exceptional political scientist, Professor Fred Onyeoziri. Any party that seeks to dislodge the PDP at the centre must aim to be better structured, more efficiently and transparently managed as well as stand on a higher moral pedestal in terms of its vision and mission. And as one of this newspaper’s columnists recently noted, the PDP is unlikely to approach the 2015 election in a fractious state. The contending factions, knowing what is at stake, will most likely resolve their differences at the appropriate time. Despite their current differences, for instance, the picture of ex-President Obasanjo praying fervently for President Goodluck Jonathan at the Aso Villa chapel on Sunday, February 3rd, speaks volumes.

    Let no mistake be made about it. The PDP is a highly focussed party with a clear idea of its mission. It is essentially an elite cartel – a huge umbrella to protect diverse factions of Nigeria’s hegemonic elite from being beaten by the heavy rain of poverty that is the lot of their fellow country men and women. In merging to form the APC, the opposition parties must not seek to become just another mirror image of the PDP. Beyond individual jostling for positions, attention should be paid to the philosophical basis and ideological clarity of the nascent party. If the aim is simply to dislodge the PDP while Nigeria is left structurally and functionally disabled as she currently is, the country will have to seek redemption elsewhere.