Tag: brother

  • How Ooni settled rift with brother

    Unknown to many, the keenest contest for the Ooni’s stool against Oba Adeyeye Enitan Babatunde Ogunwusi (Ojaja 11) last year came from his immediate elder brother, Adetunji. The two brothers have many things in common, being blood brothers from the same father and mother.

    Both of them are big players in the real estate sector, particularly in the Lekki-Ajah axis of Lagos. But while the things they have in common had strengthened their relationship over time, the contest for Ooni’s stool resulted in a family feud, as Prince Adetunji refused to step down for his brother until their father mounted pressure on him to yield the stool to his younger brother.

    And it was not only Prince Adetunji’s father that appealed to him. Other influential, well-meaning Nigerians also had to intervene. It was after the pleas and series of family interventions that Prince Adetunji reluctantly agreed to step down for the then Prince Enitan.

    Indeed, Adetunji had to travel out of the country for months after his younger brother was announced as the Ooni. Family sources said their father had to lead other family members to Lagos to plead with Prince Adetunji to step down. But the two brothers are said to have since settled their differences and are now on very good terms.

  • Psquare on war path with brother, Jude Okoye

    Psquare on war path with brother, Jude Okoye

    Few years back when the Okoye’s got embroiled in an internal feud, many thought the issue was dead and buried. It appears they were wrong, as a fresh round of hostility ensued Tuesday.

    While the initial ‘beef’ bordered on a purported split. This time, Peter, one of the twins, is claiming that he will no longer do business with their elder brother and manager, Jude.

    Peter  noted that although he has issues with Jude, he remains loyal to his singing partner and twin brother, Paul.

    He said via his Twitter handle: “I don’t have a problem with Paul but the management. My loyalty for Psquare and the fans still remains 100%. A manager is been employed by the artiste not the other way round. #truthBeTold,” he explained in a series of tweets.

    The singer also issued a disclaimer stating that whoever does business with North Side Entertainment on behalf of Psquare does so at their own risk, stating that he had nursed the problem for four years and was fed up.

    “Please, who so ever makes any transaction with North Side Entertainment or Jude Okoye on P-square’s behalf does so at their own risk. #warning. Family business can be a pain in the a$$,” he further tweeted.

    Reacting to his younger brother’s rants, Jude Okoye, Wednesday morning, pleaded with fans to pray for Peter as, saying only God could rescue him.

    Apparently irked by Jude’s comment, Peter replied; “You said I need prayers! Bro you need GOD!”

    He also insists that Psquare is not breaking up, while justifying his decision to make it a social media affair.

    “Some ask why on social media. Do I have a choice! Insisting you must remain Psquare’s manager? And that your decision is final? #Psquare4ever,” Peter wrote.

    However, his team mate, Paul, has kept mum on the issue.

  • Arisekola-Alao’s twin brother

    Arisekola-Alao’s twin brother

    Very few people knew that the late Aare Abdul Azeez Arisekola-Alao had a twin brother. Those who knew that fact either took it for granted or did not duly acknowledge it. Like most human beings, the colossus was not born all alone. He was accompanied by another child who twinned with him into this mortal world. That other child was HUMILITY which Aare personified throughout his life.

    In his lifetime, Arisekola-Alao was like the sun. Whenever it bulged out of the orbit with the magnificence of its rays, no star could dare attempt to rise. And when he eventually demised the entire world chorused the lamentations of a rare eclipse.

     

    A colossus

    This article ought to have been entitled ‘In Memory of a Colossus’. But the expediency of the moment would rather prefer a more befitting title as found here. Aare was not the only moneybag in the Southwest while alive. What clearly distinguished him from all others was his second twin (humility) which never parted with him even in his grave. Like a famous actor, Arisekola-Alao left the stage when the ovation was loudest but he did not forget to leave behind a legacy that cannot be inherited by any fair weather charlatan. Anybody may aspire to be like Aare Arisekola-Alao or gain his God’s endowed fame but nobody can ever wear his obviously oversized shoes. He was as great in death as he was alive. At least, his humility ensured that. We pray the Almighty Allah to repose his soul in perfect, eternal bliss.

     

    Tribute

    At his demise, ‘The Message column published a tribute about him that will for long remain a tribute in the memory of his family and those of his associates. It was entitled ‘Sunset @ Noon’. An excerpt from that tribute went thus:

    “…..The echoes of his death reverberated through the length and breadth of the world confirming the fallibility of man… What immediately became shocking in those echoes was not the announced death per se but the consequence of that fortuitous death for hundreds of thousands of beneficiaries of his incessant largess across tribal, religious and ideological divide.

     

    Tripod of fortune

    Before now, there were three great Muslim philanthropists in the Southwest of Nigeria who were jointly called ‘a tripod of fortune’. Each of them had a national tentacle that formed a formidable fortress against the poisonous arrows of poverty in the land. But with time, they started leaving the stage one by one. First to go was Bashorun Moshood Kasimawo Olawale (MKO) Abiola, the Baba Adini of Yoruba land, a man often described as ‘larger than life’. He was followed by the quiet, easy going but kind-hearted Chief (Dr.) Wahab Iyanda Folawiyo, CON, the Baba Adini ‘of Nigeria’. Both of them left behind a very big vacuum that kept most Muslims wondering if there could be any replacement for them.

    But surprisingly, Aare Arisekola-Alao the third but anchor leg of the tripod took up the challenge and courageously combined the vacuums left behind by the duo of Abiola and Folawiyo with that of his own. He extended his philanthropic tentacles to areas hitherto covered by his two former colleagues so much that most people hardly remembered that there was once a tripod.

     

    Philanthropy

    Like Abiola and Folawiyo, Aare was a stupendous philanthropist with an ever open hand that knew no boundaries of tribe, age, gender or creed. His generosity was legendry and unlimited. And he was never tired of giving the same individuals or groups of people repeatedly. At least, his fervent belief in the Hadith of Prophet Muhammad (SAW) which says that “an upper hand is far more reward-able than the lower hand” guaranteed the philanthropy in him. Which area of his largess can one really recount with precision? The story of Arisekola-Alao’s generosity can never be fully told either by individuals, groups or institutions in volumes of books.

     

    Attestation

    A versatile American poet who came up with the following axiomatic poem could not have imagined that his thoughts might germinate in Africa and nurtured to fruition by an African. Here is how he put it:

    “Who shares his life’s pure pleasure and works the honest road; who trades with heaping measure and lifts his brother’s load; who turns the wrong down bluntly and lends the right a hand; he dwells in God’s own country and tills the Holy Land”.  We are all witnesses.

     

    Comment

    Perhaps no contemporary Nigerian is as fitting to the above quoted poem as Alhaji Abdul Azeez Arisekola-Alao, CON, the erstwhile Aare Musulumi of Yoruba land and Deputy President-General of the Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs (NSCIA), who lived like a sun photosynthesising all the ‘living plants’ around and giving all of them the fulfilled dreams of their lives.

    However, like a falcon that suddenly took a flight leaving the surrounding falconers to wonder, this man’s sun fortuitously set at noon when its rays was most needed by the needy. He lived like an era in the epoch of human history and died like an era at the climax of its function.

    The similitude of Aare Arisekola-Alao among the sundry elite and masses of Yoruba people of the Southwest in particular and other people of tribal and religious diversities in general is like that of the Queen in a bee hive. Take it out and the rest of the bees in the hive will automatically become stranded.

     

    A case study

    Aare Arisekola-Alao’s life is a case study for all well-meaning intellectuals and people of wherewithal. He was a unique colossus whose life and death should serve as a lesson from which to learn the conduct of life. He was political without being a politician. He was religious without being a cleric. He was sociable without being a socialist. He was traditional without being a traditionalist. Yet, he fitted perfectly into each of these segments of life like a scepter in the hand of a king. Aare was a man of peculiar lifestyle with a peculiar focus. He lived for service to humanity just as service craved his penchant for philanthropy. It may take Nigeria another century to produce the like of this impeccable colossus.

     

    Zooming into limelight

    As a young man in the early 1970s, this man zoomed into limelight like a crescent of hope despite his limited educational background and subsequently grew into a full blown moon brightening the lives of multitudes that would have remained in rigmarole through the darkness of life. His Midas touch was like an antidote against any potential pecuniary poison.

    Arisekola-Alao’s death reminds us of a potent question which some companions of Prophet Muhammad (SAW) posed to him out of fear of the unknown. They said: “Oh Prophet, the men of wealth seem to have gone with all the virtues; they worshipped as we are now worshipping; they fasted as we are now fasting and they competed actively among themselves in the realm of philanthropy. And in response, the Prophet pointed out to them that Allah had equally endowed them with a variety of philanthropic means saying that glorification of Allah was an act of philanthropy, so was gratification of Allah and the like. That dialogue has since become a credible Hadith due to its entailed spiritual wisdom.

     

    Solace

    There is solace for Muslims in that Hadith which can see them through the ‘Cape of Good Hope’. As a community, they had perennially relied too much on certain endowed individuals in their midst without thinking of what would become of the community should anything happen to those individuals. Now, the reality seems to be dawning on them. Still, the die is not yet cast. Those who have just prominently departed this world amongst us were men of monetary wherewithal. There are still thousands of others whose wealth was not monetary but who need to be studied and emulated in preparation for their possible departure. Some of such people are of wisdom and intellectualism while others are of truthfulness, contentment and integrity. Without adequate preparation for their exit, the shock awaiting the Ummah may be more devastating than that arising from the death of the wealthy few.

     

    Memory Lane

    Nigeria’s first President, Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, did not take cognizance of the lifestyle of Arisekola-Alaos of this world when he alluded to it in the introduction to his autobiography published in 1970 thus:

    “Man comes into the world and while he lives, he embarks upon a series of activities absorbing experience which enables him to formulate a philosophy of life and to chart his causes of action. But then, he dies. Nevertheless his biography remains a guide to those of the living who may need guidance either as a warning on the vanity of human wishes or as encouragement or both”.

     

    Aftermath

    There was similarity in the aftermath situation of the death of the trio of Abiola, Folawiyo and Alao which no era before theirs had witnessed in Nigeria. The funeral of each of these great men was either physically attended by everybody that matters including President, governors, ministers, high caliber legislators, topmost personalities of the judiciary and chief executives of the business world as well as politicians and intellectual gurus.

    In the case of Arisekola-Alao which is the most recent, it is almost impossible to enumerate the caliber of people who were present to say ‘we are here to condole’. Of all the comments notably made, no one was more precinct than that of Senator Abiola Ajimobi, the Governor of Oyo State who described Aare’s death as ‘the end of an era’. But His Eminence, Alhaji Muhammad Sa‘ad Abubakar, the Sultan of Sokoto perfected that comment during his condolence visit to the house of the deceased when he said that “if the title AARE is reversed, it would become ERA”. In other words, Aare simply means an era.

     

    Conclusion

    From all conceivable angles, Aare Arisekola-Alao seemed to have studied and imbibed the thoughtful philosophy of another American of notable fame, William Webster, who once coined the following poem to the benefit of mankind:

    “If we work marble it will perish; if we work upon brass time will efface it. If we rear temples they will crumble into dust. But if we work upon immortal minds and instill in them just principles; we are then engraving that upon a tablet which no time can efface but will brighten into all eternity”.

    As the Deputy President-General of the Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs (NSCIA) and a strong pillar and member of the Muslim Ummah of Southwest Nigeria (MUSWEN) as well as a patron of over 100 Muslim organisations, the entire Nigerian Muslim Community bids you farewell and pray for the repose of your soul in eternal bliss. We also pray Allah to grant your immediate and remote family members as well as your close associates the fortitude to bear the agony of your departure. We shall keep remembering you.

    Rest in peace Aare Arisekola-Alao, as GOD blesses your soul!

  • Man kills brother over fowl

    One Mr Paul Unegu of Hausa quarters in Izzi Unuphu community, Abakaliki Local Government Area of Ebonyi State has been arrested for killing his elder brother, Sunday Unegu.

    Paul, who killed his elder brother in a scuffle, was arrested on Thursday.

    The victim, Sunday, was said to have accused Paul of stealing his fowls and has been warning him to desist from the act.

    The victim’s wife, Ifeoma, told sympathizers that Paul continued to steal the husband’s fowls, which she said led to a fight between the two brothers.

    She said: ’I told my husband not to go to Paul’s house because of the matter, because I know how he behaves, but he did not listen to my advice.

    ‘’Look at what it has resulted to; I am now a widow at this early stage of my life.’

    An eyewitness said the victim confronted Paul with a bottle during the fight, but later went for a cutlass.

    ‘’So, when Sunday came back with the cutlass, Paul confronted him and the two of them started struggling with the cutlass.

    ‘’In the process, the cutlass cut his throat and he fell down, while blood started gushing out seriously.’’

    Police spokesman, ASP George Okafor, who confirmed the incident, said the suspect has been arrested.

    He noted that the state police command received a distress call on the matter, and that by the time policemen arrived the scene, the victim was all ready in a pool of his  blood.

    Okafor said the victim was taken to hospital where he was confirmed dead.

  • Rescue our brother, family begs Police

    Rescue our brother, family begs Police

    The family of an industrialist, Sir James Uduji, at the weekend, expressed worry that more than 20 days after, he is still being held by kidnappers.

    The family urged the Inspector-General of Police, Solomon Arase and the Lagos Commissioner of Police, Fatai Owoseni, to facilitate his freedom.

    Udujim, the Group Executive Officer (CEO) of Cometstar Manufacturing Company in Lagos was kidnapped on his way home on September 7. Chief Uduji’s car was blocked at his 7th avenue residence in Festac Town.

    His driver and another occupant were shot while the gang whisked him away to an unknown destination.

    Family members reported the kidnap at the Area Command in Festac.

    Residents of Festac Town are being terrorised by kidnappers. A week ago, a business man escaped after four his car tyres were riddled with bullets.

  • Police arraign ‘pastor’, brother for fraud

    A fake pastor, Ademola Alade and his brother, Adewumi, have been arraigned at an Ado-Ekiti Magistrate’s Court for alleged N1.7 million fraud.

    The prosecutor, Sgt. Caleb Leranmo, told the court that the accused committed the offence on November 7, last year.

    He said the accused fraudulently obtained the N1.7 million from seven people, who were seeking employment into the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC).

    Leranmo gave the victims’ names as Femi Olowo, Emmanuel Ojo, Ireti Ojo, Gbenga Oluwasuyi, Kayode Dada, Fisayo Olubumo and Ayodele Omosowon.

    The accused, who were arraigned on a four-count charge, pleaded not guilty.

    The defence counsel, Busuyi Ayorinde, urged the court to grant them bail.

    The Magistrate, Doyin Akosile, granted them bail of N50, 000 and two sureties.

    She adjourned the case till July 27.

  • Priest, brother killed

    A Catholic priest and his brother have been killed in a robbery  in Ugbe-Akoko,  Akoko North East Local Government Area of Ondo State.

    Rev Father Onyeka and his younger brother,Obi, were killed when robbers shot at their vehicle.

    Sources said the victims were coming from Lagos, when hoodlums waylaid them between Ose and Oba-Akoko and shot them several times.

    Their vehicle was said to have consequently burst into flames.

    Police spokesman Wole Ogodo said the hoodlums came out of the bush and shot the victims, who were travelling in a Toyota Highlander.

    According to him, bullets hit the fuel tank of the vehicle and it burst into flames.

    He said the driver  was injured and is receiving treatment in an undisclosed hospital.

    Ogodo said: ”Our patrol team went to the scene to rescue the driver and deposit the bodies in a mortuary.”

    Symphatisers besieged Ugbe-Akoko home of the victims’ father, who is a famous baker in the community.

    Several shops belonging to the Igbo were closed as a sign of respect for the victims.

  • Girl stabs brother to death over argument

    A 21-year-old girl, Omasan Ogbe, yesterday stabbed her teenage brother, Laju, to death during an argument over house chores.

    The incident occurred in Ugbuwangue, Warri, Delta State.

    It was learnt that Omasan asked Laju, who was the only son of the family, to do the dishes.

    The boy was said to have resisted, reminding his sister that he had fetched water and was tired.

    The argument was said to have resulted in a fight. Laju reportedly slammed the sister on the floor.

    He was said to have run to the back of their home, his sister wielding a kitchen knife behind him.

    Omasan allegedly stabbed Laju in the chest, when he caught up with him.

    A family source, who spoke in confidence, said: “He fell to the ground and started screaming for help. People rushed to the house to help the boy.”

    Laju was rushed to the Warri Central Hospital but he died because he lost a lot of blood.

    He was buried in front of his father’s house at Ugbuwangue.

    As the reality of her action dawned on her, Omasan was said to have attempted an escape.

    But she was apprehended by neighbours and handed over to the police.

    Attempts to speak with the children’s mother were unsuccessful.

    Their father was said to have died over 10 years ago.

    The woman was still in shock at the time of filing this report.

    Police spokesman Celestina Kalu, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), confirmed the teenager’s death.

    She said investigation had begun into the matter.

  • My brother didn’t lobby for INEC job, says Mimiko

    My brother didn’t lobby for INEC job, says Mimiko

    Ondo State Governor Olusegun Mimiko has denied the rumour that his sibling, Prof Olufemi Mimiko, is eyeing the chairmanship of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    Prof Mimiko recently completed his term as Vice Chancellor of the Adekunle Ajasin University (AAU), Akungba-Akoko.

    There have been speculations over the move by the Presidency to sack the INEC Chairman, Prof Attahiru Jega and replace him with Prof Mimiko.

    Speaking to reporters yesterday in Akure, the state capital, the governor said:”I don’t know where the propaganda came from. It is not true; my brother did not apply for INEC job.

    “Let me tell you, it is just propaganda from the opposition.  If this is true, I should be in the best position to know. I don’t know what they want to gain from the rumour.

    “President Jonathan had also denied that Prof Jega is to be removed from office, so it is a lie. Prof Mimiko did not apply or lobby for INEC job.

    On the statement credited to former President Olusegun Obasanjo that President Goodluck Jonathan deliberately shifted the polls to scuttle democracy, the governor said the evidence on ground could not support the postulation of the former president.

    According to him, INEC was not adequately prepared for the election, especially in the distribution of Permanent Voter Cards.

  • Man kills brother over Owho soup

    A 57-year-old man, Sunday Osam-wekha, has been arrested by the police in Edo State for killing his half brother while arguing over Owho soup.

    The suspect was said to have chopped off the hand of the deceased with a cutlass which led to his death.

    Police said the incident happened at Evboesi village in Orhionmwon Local Government Area.

    Sunday told The Nation during a parade of suspects by the police that his late brother dipped plantain into the Owho soup he was eating and did not show any remorse.

    He said he did not intend to kill his brother but that he bled to death.

    Police sources said Sunday was an ex-convict who had only recently regained his freedom.

    Also, one John Abiodun, aged 27, was paraded for defiling an eight-year-old girl in a church auditorium along Medical Store Road in Benin City.

    The suspect was said to have offered the victim N50 after he called the victim away from the church pastor’s children she was playing with.

    Police statement said the suspect later dragged the victim into one of the rooms in the church and have carnal knowledge of her.

    Others arrested for defilement included 72 years- old Solomon Ugiagbe, who defiled an 11-year old girl at Evbuotubu, 32-years-old Kelvin Ohenhoba who slept with a 12-year-old girl inside a bush, and James H’shagbe who reportedly had carnal knowledge of a four-year-old child.

    A total of 28 suspects were paraded for last month cult killings in the state which claimed over 15 lives.

    State Commissioner of Police, Foluso Adebanjo, in a chat with newsmen, said the suspects have confessed to the crime and would soon be charged to court.