Tag: betrayed

  • LP: Mimiko betrayed us at darkest moment

    The Labour Party (LP) yesterday said former Ondo State Governor Olusegun Mimiko will not be welcomed back into the party.

    It accused the former governor of turning his back on the party when it needed him most.

    Addressing reporters at the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) secretariat in Abuja, LP’s National Chairman, Dr Mike Omotosho, who was accompanied by NLC President Ayuba Waba, accused Mimiko of attempting to use the party to regain political relevance once again.

    According to him, the part will not allow him to do so this time.

    Omotosho said: “It has come to our knowledge the moves by the immediate past governor of Ondo State, Dr. Olusegun Mimiko, to return to the Labour Party. Nigerian workers wish to put a disclaimer to this ill-fated adventure.

    “The NLC is fully aware of plans by Dr. Mimiko to destabilise the current gains being made by workers to reclaim and reposition the LP. It is obvious that the sole purpose of Dr. Mimiko’s re-approach to the LP is to use the party to launder his sagging political image.

    “Nigerians would recall that Dr. Mimiko abandoned the Labour Party for the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) a few days to Labour Party’s October 2015 national convention.

    “Such a treachery and betrayal of a party, which gave the former governor succour in the darkest hour of his political career, especially as manifest in his two-term victory on the ticket of Labour Party, is, to say the least, cheap and callous. It also revealed paucity of knowledge of the philosophy of the Labour Party as a people-rooted party and dearth of class consciousness on his part.

    “The Labour Party is an offspring of the working class family and was midwifed by the labour movement. It is the political vehicle for Nigerian workers and the Nigerian poor.

    “It was founded on the cornerstone of ideological clarity and class consciousness to promote and defend the political cum socio-economic interest of the working people. There is no doubt that political journey persons, like the former governor of Ondo State had, in the past, taken advantage of the leadership challenges in the Labour Party to satisfy their fantasies for political opportunism.

    “Well, all that has changed. The labour movement, in alliance with its civil society partners and other patriotic Nigerians, is poised to fully reclaim the Labour Party and restore it as a model political institution that does not only epitomise the values of the working class family but also capable of contesting for power with members of a failed political class, with whom the former governor dines and wines.

    “While the leadership of congress continues to work to rebuild the Labour Party, especially through the instrumentality of our political commission, we urge all workers and, indeed, genuine lovers of popular democracy to ignore the political theatrics of people like the former governor of Ondo State.

    “He has shown Nigerian workers that he cannot be trusted. The Labour Party is no longer a transit bus to strange political destinations particularly under the subterfuge of people like him.”

  • A friendship betrayed

    A friendship betrayed

    Where are our animal rights activists?

    If animals could talk and march, we would by now be contending with a huge protest – and justifiably so. Every evil phenomenon is named after some animal. Animals are carriers of the most terrible of diseases. When we take any action that is meant to reverse a bad situation, we draw from the jungle some imagery to convey our message. When we are angry with a public figure we name our pets after him. The tortoise is notorious for being deceitful in Yoruba folklore.  But animals are supposed to be our cousins; our closest friends. What have they done wrong?

    The other day when the First Lady – sorry; I don’t wish to live in the past – the President’s wife spoke of hyenas and jackals in the corridors of power, many were wondering how those dreaded creatures left their comfortable abode in the woods to invade the hallowed seat of power. She said the lion king was on the way back to  drive them out.

    Mrs Aisha Buhari was only using the symbolism of the animal world to describe the power game that was unknown to those far from the scene of action. Now that the lion is back and roaring, are the hyenas and jackals still at work?  Who are they? Animals in human skin (God bless Fela Anikulapo-Kuti’s soul)?  What is their modus operandi? Who are their backers? What is their aim?

    What is their role in the bickering between Minister of State Ibe Kachikwu and Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) boss Maikanti Baru?

    Kachikwu, by the way, seems to have shot himself in the foot, with that sensational letter. If he couldn’t see the President, why was he sitting tight in office? Are his explosive allegations still valid now that the NNPC has laid bare the facts of the matter, which our dutiful senators are threatening to probe?

    A source close to the Villa confided in me the other day that hyenas and jackals truly exist in the seat of power. The only place they have not infiltrated is the “other room”. Again, who are they?

    This is indeed a failure of reporting, of which this reporter is also guilty.

    When the military felt that  kidnapping, armed robbery and such detestable criminal activities were getting out of hand in the Southeast, it launched Operation Python Dance I. All was quiet – for a while.

    Then came Operation Python Dance II. Despite the army’s strident explanation that the exercise was to rid the Southeast of criminals, the Independent People of Biafra (IPOB), now outlawed, claimed that it was all targeted at it and its leader Nnamdi Kanu – where in the world is he? Soldiers and IPOB activists clashed. It was bloody. Heads were smashed and limbs broken.

    No surprise there. What is to be expected when pythons dance? Even in a circus, a python is not a spectator’s toy. It won’t dance for nothing; its dance is a dance of death.

    Kanu, you may wish to recall, had boasted before the “python” slithered its way to his community: “By the time we finish dealing with the enemies in the zoo, there will be none left to tell the story.”

    Where is the zoo? Who are the animals? The insolence was so much that all that was left was for the python to dance. Since it did, Kanu has not been  seen in public. Except for some tepid statements, IPOB has largely been quiet.

    As part of the exercise, the military launched a series of medical missions to attend to many who lack access to good health care. Then, there was commotion everywhere. Parents stormed schools to fetch their children. The story was that the Federal Government had unleashed soldiers on the people who were to be forcibly injected with the monkey pox virus. All attempts by the government to explain that no evil was intended failed to convince the public.

    By the way, monkey pox is another ailment that broke out in Bayelsa State. One of the three patients in the state has committed suicide, we are told. It all sounded strange and people were wondering: another disease borne by an animal? Bush meat vendors and lovers of such delicacies have again been put in disarray. A replay of the Ebola hoopla.

    Undeterred, the military launched its Operation Crocodile Smile in the Southwest. We are yet to hear of any casualty, not even among those fellows who have found a huge fortune in kidnapping people for ransom and their cousins who rob homes and seize the highways. Now many are asking: “When will this crocodile begin to smile?”

    But the commotion has begun. Parents were withdrawing their kids from schools in Ondo State on Tuesday after it was rumoured that they were going to be vaccinated against some diseases, including monkey pox. The rumour mongers were at work in Kwara State yesterday. There was panic among residents when the false news went round that kids were to be forcibly vaccinated.

    I recall my undergraduate days in Benin City. I woke up one sunny morning after a hangover to get some water from the big drum we all fetched from in the backyard of my friend’s mother’s home. That simple routine suddenly turned into a screaming  and dashing flight back to the bedroom.

    As I dipped a bowl into the drum, a crocodile leapt up from the cubicle that housed the drum. I couldn’t wait to see that its huge mouth had been tightly held together by a thick rope. I flung the bucket and rushed in, panting.

    Roused from sleep in an unusual manner, my friend sat up and said: “Bob, wetin dey pursue you?” After catching my breath, I replied: “Ol’ boy, I found a crocodile in the backyard.” Emma was smiling. Softly, he said: “Oh. My mama wan make Olokun.” The crocodile was to be sacrificed to the river god to ward off evil and bring good fortune. I was stunned.

    In the heat of the ebola palaver, animals were indicted as the carrier of the lethal ailment. Hunters and bush meat vendors were sent out of business. When the noise subsided, we went back to our old ways. Were all the animals in the land vaccinated? Was it just a case of giving a dog a bad name to hang it?

    When the President returned from his medical vacation, he could not work from his office, which was to be renovated after rodents, cockroaches and their ilk had messed up the place.

    Even a presidential office could not command some respect from animals. The joke was all over the place that the man nobody could displace had been stopped by mere rodents.

    Who unleashed the rodents? The jackals and hyenas? I am surprised the Senate has not deemed it fit to probe this glaring executive dereliction. Are they waiting for a replay of George Orwell’s Animal Farm before moving?

    It is a busy season for our distinguished senators, I understand. Some are busy probing Senator Hamma Isah Misau’s  allegations of financial impropriety and concupiscence against police chief Ibrahim Idris. Others are threatening to probe the $25b contracts row.

    Even then, they need to spare a thought for the role of animals in our socio-political development.

    President Putin recently got a puppy as a birthday gift from President Berdymukhamedov of Turkmenistan, who grabbed the poor dog by the scruff and lifted it up. Putin cuddled the animal like a baby. A pro-Kremlin journalist, according to a Times of London report, contrasted the Central Asian dictator’s stern handling of the dog with the Russian leader’s softer approach.

    A radio analyst even saw an allegory before the Russian presidential election in March. He said: “Such a handover of the puppy from Asiatic cruelty to European tenderness can be interpreted as make the right choice and you will receive fatherly care, after all we could do it differently…  .”

    Former Italian Prime Minister Benito Mussolini had a pet lion. President Tito, formerly of Yugoslavia, kept a cheetah, among other animals.

    A friend sent me this last week: “Chicken pox, bird flu, lassa fever, ebola, monkey pox, python dance, crocodile smile; have Nigerians in any way offended the gods of the animal kingdom?”

    I really don’t know if we have betrayed our friendship with animals. But a piece of advice: Let our men of power begin to acquire pets. That way, animals may be kind to us, especially now when the best of our hospitals are broke, lacking cotton wool, syringes, hand gloves, bandages, and all such vital tools of medicine.

  • Victor Banjo’s daughter:  Ojukwu betrayed my father by killing him

    Victor Banjo’s daughter: Ojukwu betrayed my father by killing him

    Fifty years ago, the late Lt. Col Victor Banjo, the 16th Nigerian to be commissioned into the Nigerian Army, was publicly executed reportedly on the orders of the late Ikemba Nnewi, Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, who was then the Military Head of the secessionist Biafra Republic. He was an Ijebu from Ogun State but died fighting on the Biafran side during the Nigerian civil war.
    Banjo was before his death, in detention on allegations that he took part in the January 1966 coup, was released by Ojukwu when the war broke out and convinced to lead part of the Liberation Army, which went on the offensive against the Nigerian Army and got as far as Benin, in present day Edo State. Banjo was to declare another republic upon having Benin under his control.
    In this interview with Dare Odufowokan, Assistant Editor, his daughter, Mrs. Olayinka Omigbodun, a Professor of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at the University of Ibadan, recalls how Banjo’s young family was thrown into disarray upon his arrest and detention. She also lamented what she described as the unjust treatment meted out to her father while explaining why she thinks Ojukwu killed his friend, her father.

    How does it feel remembering the events that led to the reported execution of your father (Lt. Col.  Victor Banjo)?

    First and foremost, I must express gratitude to God for keeping us alive and well all these years. Despite the fact that we lost our father while still so young, God has kept us to see this day. We are four children, two boys, two girls. I am the third. We’ve all been able to go through school and acquire degrees. All of us are alive and healthy.

    I thank God for the kind of parents he gave me. Our father died 50 years ago and our mum 20 years ago. She was a widow for 30 years before she also went to be with the Lord. I am proud of them. It was 30 years of struggle and difficulty, but with our late mother determined to fulfil her promise to our dad, we made it.

    My mum was a Creole from Sierra Leone. She gave us the best possible life any child can ask for. We didn’t have money growing up but we had love and security in abundance. However, I still feel that pain that 50 years after my dad’s death, we do not have any official notification about his death from his employers.

    I also feel pained that my father has been treated very unjustly by the people who arrested him, people who kept him in prison, who took his things and had not returned those things even up till now. And by those who treated his immediate family so unjustly by denying us so much while keeping our father unjustly in prison.

    But I still believe in this nation. I had the choice of staying elsewhere than coming to live and work in Nigeria. I spent years in the United States and the United Kingdom training and schooling. I have had the opportunity to lead international organizations abroad. I’ve been severally offered opportunities to apply for international jobs. But I am a firm believer in Nigeria. And people close to me will tell you that I am passionate about this country. I am actively involved in nation building irrespective of what the country did to my father.

    How easy was it for your mum to train four of you after your father’s incarceration and eventual death?

    It wasn’t in anyway easy. It was rough for her. She bore the brunt of the brutality of this nation. She went through the harrowing experience of living in an unjust society. She got no widow’s pension. She got no help. In fact, all my father’s things were taken away from her. She struggled for help and received none. But God was there for her. She focused on the task of raising her children and God helped her.

    At the end of her sojourn here on earth, she had practically nothing. But she had raised four secured children. And I think that is the greatest legacy anybody could leave behind.

    Many reasons have been given for what Ojukwu did to your father. But as his child, why do you think your father was executed by his erstwhile bosom friend?

    I never had the opportunity to meet one on one with Ojukwu before he died. But from my father’s letters which he wrote to us from prison and from what my mum told us, Ojukwu was my father’s friend. They were one of the very few graduates in the Nigerian army at the time, so they were close. I really don’t know why he decided to kill his friend.

    But from what I gathered like I said from my dad’s letters and the many things I read about the incident, my father was a patriot who meant well for this country. He also meant well for the Igbo. In fact, from some of his letters to my mother back then, he spoke out clearly against the massacre of the Igbo back then. His letter of November 14, 1966, which is on page 128 of the book I published for him, he lamented the killings going on in the east.

    He said he would not change the principles he lived for. He said justice and fairness to all should be the basis on which the country should be based on. He said he cannot fail to condemn what he described as the vindictive and vengeful killings of Easterners. He warned that unless the killing stops, the bloodshed will be prolonged for a longer time. He warned the Yoruba of the West not to keep quiet on the killings saying they must not think that they are temporarily safe.

    So, I will say, just like my brother said in one of his write-ups on the social media, Ojukwu used my father as a scapegoat. That is the only imaginable reason why he wasted such a fine soldier and loving father. In September 1967, the Liberation Army, which my father led, had retreated to Enugu and Ojukwu needed to explain the defeats he was suffering to the people of Biafra.

    Why do you think he did that to his friend?

    He conveniently blamed Banjo and three other men. Lt. Col Ifeajuna, Alele and one other for sabotaging the Biafran efforts. He needed to tell the people who were losing faith in him something new as a reason for the defeats. His fear about the imminent fall of Enugu was also driving him to do something. So, on trumped up charges, my father and three other men were tried by a Kangaroo court and killed by firing squad in 1967.

    The trial did not reveal any evidence linking Banjo with any act of treason against Ojukwu or the Biafran government. In fact, it took a second military tribunal to convict Banjo because the first tribunal stated that the evidence presented to it was insufficient to prove Banjo’s guilt in the case. Unsatisfied and not ready to let my father off the hook, Ojukwu constituted another tribunal speedily.

    Apparently, it was a clear case of sacrificing someone as a scapegoat because while my father was looking forward to assisting Ojukwu further with the Biafran war in spite of the huge risk and sacrifice involved for him as a person, Ojukwu was looking for a way of implicating him for sabotage so as to retain the control of the region. Ojukwu betrayed my father by killing him.

    It was clear from his letters that my father has been assisting Ojukwu even while he did not believe in the secession. His idea, based on the letters he wrote to my mother, was to fight against, and remove the northern domination of other parts of the country and ensure a free, fair and equitable country where no arm is dominating the others.

    And you don’t think his not agreeing in the secession was a reason he got into trouble with Ojukwu?

    Well, they were friends and friends disagree. They probably must have disagreed on that before then because my father never hid his patriotism. But again, I was told that hours after the execution, Enugu fell.  I am a Professor. Human beings are very fickle. We are wont to always look for excuses. For scapegoats; so, my father was simply the sacrifice.

    He knew my father was up for one Nigeria. Even before drafting him into the war on his side, he knew my father was a patriot who wanted one united Nigeria. After the war we left Nigeria for Sierra Leone but my mother brought us back because my father, in his letters, had insisted we must be raised as Nigerians. So, his patriotism was never in doubt. Ojukwu merely executed him to cover up his own failures as a leader of the war.

    What memories do you have of your late father?

    I have very little in terms of direct memory of him. My father was arrested even before I was three. Although we got to meet him when I was four years old when he was under house arrest in Enugu sometimes in March 1967. But my mother spoke a lot about him. And then, one of the greatest legacies my father left behind were his letters to my mum. Through these letters, I got to know who he was. His letters are rich and deep. Some of them are even in French.

    He spoke on many issues in his letters to my mum. He spoke of deep affection; loyalty; adoration to his family and wife’s anguish at the situation in the country etc. He was a very deep and brilliant man. He was a talent wasted. The memories I have are all mixed up. These are memories of what my mother said and the ones I had of him as a child. And then what I have read from his letters. Above all, he is somebody I have grown to be very proud of.

    Was your father really part of a coup for which he was arrested?

    My father was a solid patriot who will not be a coup plotter. He did not know of, and did not participate in the January 1966 coup for which he was arrested and imprisoned. And it is painful that up till now, nothing has been done to exonerate him of this allegation in spite of the fact that those who participated had severally said publicly that Lt. Col. Banjo was not part of them.

    I was travelling and I sat beside a man. And immediately he knew I was Banjo’s daughter, he said I know him. The man who participated in the 1966 coup. My father was not party to the coup. The authorities know this. Ex Head of State Gen Yakubu Gowon knows this. He is still alive and able to say the truth if he cares about saying the truth for posterity’s sake.

    In a letter he wrote to gen Gowon from prison on June 19, 1967, my father said very clearly that it was obvious that the then leadership didn’t want him out of prison so as to contribute his quota to national development. He pointedly accused Gowon and his other colleagues of plotting against him by keeping him in jail even when they were aware of his innocence. Gowon is still around to deny this if I am lying.

    Then there is Major Adewale Ademoyega, one of those who planned the coup, who wrote in his book, Why We Struck, that; “also in detention were Lt. Col. Banjo and Major Aganya, both of whom had not taken part in the revolution.” Those were the exact words of Ademoyega in his book. Gowon and others were aware of this long before Ademoyega wrote.

    But Gowon later became the Head of State. Why didn’t he release your dad?

    After Gowon was installed as Head of State, my father made several overtures to him for his release. But Gen. Gowon refused to release him even though he knew he was not part of the coup. The only concession he gave was that Banjo could be transferred to a prison in Lagos if he so wished. My father rejected the offer.

    Even when my father wrote Ironsi from prison in Ikot Ekpene, on June 1, 1966, he was wondering what on earth he did to warrant being imprisoned. He faulted the way he was being treated and asked for justice, fairness and loyalty from Ironsi as a loyal officer. He saw his detention as a grievous crime against him. He pleaded his innocence and asked to be released. There is really no basis for tagging him as a ‘coupist’. I sincerely think setting the records straight is one of the things Nigeria, and the likes of Gen. Gowon, owe us as his family and children.

    It is very painful for us not knowing how he ended really. Not knowing where his remains are. Not even the exact date of his death. We only read in the book of a foreign journalist who had witnessed his execution of the date and circumstances. Beyond that, there is little or nothing to prove how he ended. This is very sad.

    We need a closure of some sort. You know when someone dies and he is committed to mother earth that is some closure. But for us as young children back then, we were not sure whether he was dead or still coming back. And 50 years after, we still don’t have a closure. That is really very painful and unbearable in a way. It is still bad that there is no notification about his death. I don’t feel that is right

    When Ojukwu released him, why didn’t he leave the country instead of joining the Biafran Army?

    He made effort. But his papers were with gen. Gowon which he refused to give him. And I read somewhere that Ojukwu, who wanted someone that will be counselling him, convinced him to stay. He must have really been in conflict at that time whether to stay or join us abroad. He loved his country, so I am not surprised he chose to stay. Ojukwu was his friend, don’t forget.

    It was tough like I said growing up without him. Though my mother ensured we survived the tough times, there was a big drop in our social standing and our finances. I remember being in school and some children were served milk while we couldn’t afford it. We just watched while others drank the milk. Looking back now, I could imagine what it was like. We had to live on the meagre resources my mum could garner. This is why we are saying the authorities should do the right thing by correcting the impression about our father, we need an official statement on him. He is N16, meaning he was the 16th officer commissioned into the Nigerian Army. He deserved to be better treated.

    All we knew and still know is that he was arrested on Monday, January 17, 1966 when he went to work. My mother and I were sad to watch the heroic reception given Ojukwu, the man who killed my father in 1982 when he returned from exile.  He also got a state burial upon his death in 2011. We couldn’t understand what manner of country this is.

    How did your mother cope with the situation back then?

    My mother died 20 years ago, but before her death, she made some requests and those remains our request even today. These requests are in a letter my mother wrote to Gen Yakubu Gowon on May 31, 1972, two years after the civil war ended. Gen. Gowon was then the Head of State. She requested the return of my father’s safe, removed personally by Gen. Gowon from 21B Cooper Road Ikoyi on Monday, January 17, 1976. In the safe were some vital documents and belongings of my father and his immediate family. We want that back because it will go a long way in helping us catch up on those times.

    She also asked for the return of some land papers and money as well as my father’s cars namely a Mercedez Benz WAL 720 and another car. She wrote the number too. She also asked for the death certificate of my father. So, we call on the authorities to help out with these so we can have these things to cherish about our dear father who was unjustly sacrificed by this country.

    And personally, I have a lot of unanswered questions. Why is my father still being tied up with the January 1966 coup? Why was my father arrested at all? Even when it was clear to the then Head of State, that my father wasn’t part of the coup, why did he choose to leave my father in prison? Gen. Gowon took the steel cabinet from our home, why hasn’t he returned the cabinet? When exactly did my father die? Where are his remains? I seek answers to these questions. And someone like Gen Gowon is still around to help out with answers to these questions and many more.

  • Betrayed by her best friend (II)

    USAYO who was raised by love-struck parents decided at a young age to take her time before dating and marry the best man in the world- just like her father who died too soon and left her mother heart-broken. Not long after her father died, his family sold the only house they had and threw them out not caring about their welfare. Luckily, Busayo’s mother had a kind friend who invited them over to live with her. Her daughter, Funke, who is same age as Busayo naturally, became not only a sister to her but her best friend of all time. They grew up together, went to same schools and virtually shared every aspect of each other’s life. Busayo finally gave her heart to “the best man in the world” at 22 and was usually showered with encomiums by everyone who felt her patience paid off after all. After dating for 2years, Busayo is pregnant for Sunkanmi, so is Funke who we hear is altar-bound with him! Busayo has not heard from Sunkanmi since she informed him. She desperately wants to terminate the pregnancy, while her mother insists she keeps it.

    Dear Temilolu,

    I would advise Busayo to learn to forgive straight away and on spur of the moment. As for the pregnancy, it would be inimical to terminate it. If Busayo does, she will not only have succeeded in killing an innocent child, but would have defaced the entire innocence she always had, radiating all over her. It’s best to accept things as they are. Onions make your breath smell, but they make your heart strong. Would you throw it away because it makes your breath smell? No you won’t. Because it will serve some good purpose for good and satisfactory cooking. Would she kill the child because of one man’s supposed infidelity and insincerity?

    That child might just be the one happy thing that would make her happy for the rest of her life.

    T.Oniks

    Dear Temilolu,

    Busayo should consider herself blessed and highly favoured for two main reasons…her good, loving and godly mother and for God not allowing her end up in marriage with Sunkanmi. I really wish she didn’t get into pre-marital sex! This usually distorts one’s judgment and need to discontinue a relationship even when there are visible or not so obvious signs of incompatibility. Busayo should certainly keep the pregnancy. It is wickedness to terminate a life except for established life-threatening medical reasons. Funke and Sunkanmi certainly deserve each other and truth is they are both “below” what and who Busayo truly should have around!

    She should even wish them well and free herself from the pity and guilt of getting pregnant. Her so called friend, sorry… enemy was sleeping with her fiance! She and Sunkanmi would have continued sleeping with each other even if Busayo married him and so also Sunkanmi would have slept with any of her friends that strayed into his path. Good riddance of them both!

    Busayo should immediately map a plan for her life and her unborn child. She should work on her career, faith and God will forgive her, restore her to her godly life and reward her with a genuine godly gentleman.

    Ayo

    Hello Busayo,

    My candid advice is for you to completely ignore Funke and Sunkanmi (I know it’s tough but sometimes the hard way is the only way).  Consciously act as if you never met them, keep your baby and relocate out of town leaving none with a forwarding address. Make your mum understand, life must go on.

    It’s very clear to me, God will give you a new beginning but I must put you on notice, traitors like Sunkanmi always come around and the only way he won’t meet you on same spot is for you to act fast on these few lines.

    I pray God heals you inside out and prosper your ways. I can’t wait to hear your success story with songs of vindication.

    Kola Olanipekun

    My darling Busayo,

    When we decide to go against God, we give the devil a room to attack us and cause tribulation in our lives. It was wrong of you to engage in sex without being married. I can feel your hurt and the strong feeling of rejection weighing your heart down. Worse still, you are ashamed of some friends and neighbours thinking Sunkanmi rejected you and your pregnancy because of some form of way-wardness. Right now, the number 1 thought on your mind should be what God thinks about the whole situation. Greater trouble lies ahead if you terminate your pregnancy. You have all the support in the world- your mum. If you want to get back at life, Sunkanmi and Funke for kicking you in the teeth, keep the baby, make amends with God and “carry Him on your head!” He’ll guide you, place you on the path of His original plan for your life and exalt you in a wondrous manner. Remember, righteousness exalts while sin demotes.

    Love always,

    Evangelist Temilolu

  • Labour leaders betrayed us, say Ekiti workers

    Labour leaders betrayed us, say Ekiti workers

    •NLC chair: it’s not true

    Workers in Ekiti State have accused Labour leaders of betraying them by agreeing to a one month pay out of the six months salary arrears owed them by the government.

    They described the failure of the union leaders to convince the government to pay at least three months’ salary as a “coup against the long-suffering workers who had endured misery, hunger and hardship in the last six months.”

    A statement yesterday by the Enlightened Workers’ Forum (EWF), an interest group, signed by the Coordinator, Mike Bamidele, said the workers alleged that they had evidence that the Labour leaders received N10 million bribe to end the strike.

    The body faulted the decision of the Labour leaders to suspend the strike and agree to a monthly payment of N10 million to pensioners, which it described as inadequate.

    It doubted the government’s capacity to access another bailout fund, following the stringent conditions attached to it.

    Bamidele said it was a mark of failure for the leaders of the state councils of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Trade Union Congress (TUC) and Joint Negotiating Council (JNC) to suspend the strike after being promised only one month pay by the government.

    He described as “very irresponsible”, a directive to the workers by one of the Labour leaders to resume work and await the payment of one month salary seven days after suspending the strike.

    The EWF boss revealed that the untold story of the saga was that “the Labour leaders only succeeded in negotiating their own welfare, as we have evidence that six of them collected N10 million, which eventually led to the sell-out, which is causing disaffection among other leaders, who were left out.”

    Bamidele said: “One wonders what gave Labour the impression that the Federal Government will again be willing to release another bailout fund to Governor Ayodele Fayose when the first one has not been accounted for.

    “This is a mark of failure on the part of the organised Labour and we in the EWF are not surprised about the development, as we anticipated this failure from the onset.

    “Against this background, therefore, it will be wrong and illegal for any Labour leader to attempt to coerce the workers back to work through the backdoor without achieving anything. Negotiating one month salary on their behalf after about five weeks strike is not only anti-worker, but also criminal.”

    The NLC Chairman, Ade Adesanmi, denied the allegation.

    He challenged anyone with evidence of bribery to prove it.

    Adesanmi: “I didn’t sign the pact with the government culminating in this resumption because I compromised. I signed because of the fear that this allocation might be spent without the payment of workers’ salary.

    “The same workers we fought for came to office during the strike to assist the government in spending the money that could have been kept and added to the present allocation to pay workers. This is the highest level of wickedness and posterity will judge all of us.”

     

     

  • APC: How Jonathan betrayed Niger Delta on amnesty

    APC: How Jonathan betrayed Niger Delta on amnesty

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has said President Goodluck Jonathan betrayed the Niger Delta people by refusing to fully implement the agreement signed by the late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, as part of the amnesty deal to end the Niger Delta crisis.

    It said the choice of Prof. Yemi Osinbajo as the vice presidential candidate was a choice made by God to scuttle the plans of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to use the Muslim/Muslim ticket as a campaign weapon against the APC.

    The Deputy National Publicity Secretary of the party, Comrade Timi Frank, told reporters that the people of the Niger Delta were disappointed that their son failed to fully implement an agreement signed by the Yar’adua government to transform the Niger Delta, but only chose to implement one aspect of the agreement.

    He said the people of the Niger Delta, especially the Ijaw, were impoverished under the Jonathan government than under any northern President.

    His words: “Under the Jonathan government, the Ijaw have become impoverished and undermined than under a northern President. I can tell you how we got the amnesty programme. Some of the things that were agreed upon as part of that programme have not been implemented.

    “It is not just sending people abroad for training that is the amnesty agreement. If you don’t know, I can tell you this because I was involved and I know everything. If you have the time and wants me to say it, I will say it because some of these things are what they are hiding and don’t want the public to know. I’m not scared of anything. I must speak the truth.

    “If they had gone to tell the ex-militants and our people to come out and drop their guns so that they will be trained, none of them would have done that. There were some other bigger agreements that Umaru signed.

    “There is a signed document on that. There were promises that were made by Umaru because he did not just make it as a promise. He made those promises because he wanted to do them for the people of the Niger Delta, as he felt this was his right and was determined to resolve the crisis.

    “But today, as I speak, all of those, under their son from Bayelsa, from the Niger Delta, have been buried. I understand that when they discussed some of these things that Umaru signed with the President, he kicked them away, telling them he wouldn’t do it.

    “Tell me, how can any credible Niger Delta man vote for him?

    “There was an agreement between Umaru and the people of the Southsouth to build mass housing units in the states of the Niger Delta, to compensate them. Today, where is the mass housing units?

    “Today, where is the coastal road Umaru promised our people, assuring that he would award the contract as soon as the militants came out of the creeks? As we speak, the coastal road is not there because the government said they don’t have money to do that.

    “So, if somebody from the North could give us these kind of promises we have never seen before and he was determined and ready to do it and died in the process and an Ijaw took over that office, the first thing the people of the region expect him to do is to hide under those promises and do those things with the excuse that he was not the one that made the promise, but the man before him and that he is only following his footsteps, but not to come and do worse.

    “There is a time bomb in our region because if the local people do not get what belongs to them, there is a problem. I have confidence that if today, Jonathan wins Bayelsa State, it will be by rigging and not by votes.”

  • Aspiring actress betrayed by mentor

    Aspiring actress betrayed by mentor

    THIS is the case of a male Nigerian artiste was asked to help mentor a young aspiring actress, but who ended up having forceful sexual intercourse with her. This is the victim’s story as narrated to the reporter. “I studied Theatre Arts. After I completed my university education, my aunt introduced me to a set of identical twins. They are both men and run an NGO which brings twins, triples and such sets of children from all over the world to attend their annual event in Nigeria. Because of that, these twins are well networked. So, they promised to get me connected to one or two actors. Before long, I was taken to meet this particular artiste. You know, the excitement of meeting someone you’ve always seen on TV was so overwhelming. Anyway, to shorten the lengthy story I met him. He introduced me to others. He took me along to about three auditios; though, I did not take part in any, but I was thrilled nonetheless.

    “However, I was always with him as his protégé most of the times except on Tuesdays and Thursdays. He introduced me to people as his ‘kid sister’ who wants to become like him. It was all fun. At the end of each meeting, I returned to my parents’ home in Abesan, Ipaja, Lagos. A few times, my dad had called to thank him for his efforts on my life. So, I never had any reason to be afraid of being with him.

    “Then, one Friday, we were in his home office, and he said, we had nowhere to go but that he will give me some materials to study. His wife had gone out. Some guests came around and left. It’s not that we were all totally alone. In fact, that will not be the first time I would be with him in such a setting.

    “At some point, he called to ask what I was doing; I told him I was reading the book he asked me to. He then said I should go back to the table. Few minutes later, he called me back and started telling that I was a very pretty and irresistible girl. I was flush with shyness. And before I could talk he started touching and caressing me. I tried to pull back as I asked him “But uncle, why are you doing this?”

    “He just dragged me close to himself, pulled me closer and forced his lips on me. I tried to push him back, but he was too strong for me. He held me so tight I was in tears within a few minutes. The only person that could help me was the gateman downstairs. But I didn’t know if he could hear me.

    “Everything lasted less than ten minutes or so. I was in tears. I felt as if the whole world had crashed in on me. As I got downstairs looking ruffled, it was as if the gateman guessed what had transpired from the way he stared at me. On getting home, I told my parents, who told the twins, and then, we were brought to you (the reporter).”

  • At 52, hope deferred, betrayed or made forlorn

    At 52, hope deferred, betrayed or made forlorn

    In an article published in 1997 by Professor J.F Ade.Ajayi, historian and former vice chancellor, the disconnects suffered by countries which pretend ignorance of their histories were examined. Entitled The Rearview Mirror, he wondered how any society could hope to make progress and confidently face the future when it did not consider where it had been or where it was coming from. He thought it weird that any society could attempt to build something on nothing. The eminent historian’s discursive essay comes to mind today as Nigeria struggles to make meaning of its existence and independence. It has been 52 long years of groggy presence on the world stage, underachieving, wasting and draining its potentials. It is imbued with unquantifiable talents, its children among the world’s best, but in vain it waits for the harnesser to bridge the gulf between its past and present, and bring together in one powerful and mesmerising whole the energies this most vibrant of societies is capable of.

    Alas, instead, the country has trudged forward as if it is only the present that matters, as if both the past and future menace its existence. The lessons of the past seem lost in its history books and dog-eared files of dispirited bureaucrats. Not even its leaders appeal to the past, nor dare hope for a glorious future beyond what they could pay lip service to. Nigeria’s age distribution shows the country is disproportionately young, with most of its elected officials and workers, including civil servants, born after independence. But the courage, stamina and adventurousness associated with the young have either been lacking in the developmental battles the country is waging or are completely misdirected. Indeed, no country has seemed so capable of harbouring virtue and villainy in one exquisite whole as Nigeria. It has produced world-class academicians in the arts and the sciences; but it has also concocted, for want of a more appropriate word, the crassest opportunists and global renegades.

    In spite of making major contributions to the knowledge industry, it periodically fails in its greatest moments of distress to rationally examine its own problems or proffer sensible solutions. It reels from poll parroting alien and inapplicable dogmas to embracing half-baked and sometimes monstrous homegrown theories. Perhaps now is the time for Nigerian leaders to honestly come to terms with their failures and deficiencies, especially seeing what horrendous aftereffects these have imposed on the country and its people. It begins with rejigging its education and returning its schools to world-class status. It won’t be easy, and change won’t come in a hurry. This should, however, be followed by a deliberate effort to harness the intellectual capabilities of experts and applying their ideas to the problems confronting the country.

    Surely, after living in denial for so long, demonstrating appalling lassitude, and fiddling as the country burns, it must be time to put an end to the dithering that has moved the country closer to the precipice. Let the people talk and kick-start the process of re-engineering their country away from its dysfunctional structure; and let them determine whether they want to stay together and if so, work out what they want to give up in order to stay together peacefully. Let them begin to address the fact that this and previous generations have betrayed the country either by their indolence or by their cowardice, and that if the future of coming generations is to be secured, if the coming generations are to remain competitive on the harsh world stage, the sacrifices required to guarantee these advantages must be made now and the price paid in full by those who seem determined to wipe out that future.