Tag: Chief

  • Obaje completes move to ASO Chief

    Obaje completes move to ASO Chief

    Ex-Black Leopards and Warri Wolves forward, Joshua Obaje, has completed his move to Algeria top division side ASO Chief after the issuance of his International Transfer Certificate(ITC) by his parent club Warri Wolves.

    Obaje agreed a two-year deal with the Algerian outfit a week ago, but the move wasn’t rubber stamp until this week after Warri Wolves gave the green light to the move.

    “Yes he is cleared to join,” Gabriel Obaje, his elder brother told SL10.

    “We will like to thank Warri Wolves for their professionalism and understanding in issuing his ITC and other Nigeria team should borrow a leaf from them on transfers abroad.”

    The player joined the Nigerian side at the start of the season after spending two years in South Africa with Black Leopards.

    The CHAN 2014 bronze medalist joined the team alongside another Nigerian Ikechukwu Francis, an Ex Under-23 forward who moved on a free to ASO Chief from Al-Ahli Shandi of Sudan.

    Both players participated in the team’s pre-season tour of Turkey and played matches as they get set for the Algeria League.

    His move to Algeria brings to six the number of clubs the 24-year-old has played for.

    In the past the Moderate FC product turned out locally for Jigawa FC, Lobi Stars and Heartland before Joining PSL side Black Leopards of South Africa.

    After two years with the side he returned back home after they were relegated to the lower league in South Africa to join Warri Wolves.

    At Warri Wolves he was a part of the team that failed to make it to the group stage of the CAF Confederations Cup at the start of the season and featured regularly before his move to ASO Chief at the commencement of the second stanza of the Nigeria Glo NPFL league.

  • Make your vote count, council chief urges students

    Barely two weeks to the commencement of voters registration exercise slated for 15 August 2014, in Cross River State, chairman of Akamkpa Local Government Area, Hon. Joseph Itotup, has urged students to come out en masse to participate in the exercise. He said it was the only way to exercise their franchise in the 2015 general elections.

    Itotub spoke when students under the aegis of the National Association of Akamkpa Students (NAAS) visited him in his office last week. He said arrangements were on to ensure students in the area gain requisite skills acquisition to be self-employed.

    “We are making arrangements to make sure all youth from this area are trained in various skills and to give indigent students scholarship studying various professional courses in and outside the country. As the Chairman of this council, I would continue to create an enabling environment for you because I know we have prospective governors and law makers here. I assure you that very soon, I would release your bursary which would be increased to N20,000,” he said.

    The president of the association, Enyam Kelvin, said he was working hard for the welfare of the students in the various tertiary institutions in the country.

  • Impeachment: Why chief judges must be cautious

    Impeachment: Why chief judges must be cautious

    Adamawa State Governor Murtala Nyako was impeached a few weeks ago. His Nasarawa State counterpart, Umaru Al-Makura, is on the firing line. Media aide to the Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN) Ahuraka Yusuf Isah, in this article, examines the power of Chief Judges in the process.

    A country can still do well with bad laws but it cannot do well with bad judges. This is because if the judges are upright, they can mitigate the injustice, inhumanness created by people who made bad laws. But when judges are corrupt, even with good laws, development, justice cannot thrive’’ (Justice Akinola Aguda 1923-2004)

    The impeachment of the former governor of Adamawa State, Murtala Nyako, may become a lead to the floodgate of impeachments of state governors and, perhaps, the President and Commander-in-Chief of Armed Forces of Nigeria.

    At the beginning, we heard through the rumour mills that some state governors, including those of Adamawa, Nassarawa, Rivers, and now Edo, Oyo and others yet to be named, would be impeached.

    The rumour of President Goodluck Jonathan’s impeachment also struck the airwaves, but fizzled out; perhaps because of the manner the move was crushed before it was hatched. But the case of Nyako is no longer rumour, he has been impeached, while Governor Al-Makura of Nassarawa State is currently facing the impeachment heat.

    Elections by their nature, serve as the means by which democracy is practised or fired into action. They confer legitimacy on some people to act as leaders or captain of their ship, sailing it through the tide of time.

    In contrast, impeachment or the removal of an official elected by the people is an exercise carried out by just a few, though representing the people. It is either a mark of sunset to crisis or convocation to crisis.

    Though the banished Duke in Shakespeare’s ‘’As you like it’’ opted to say that “there is the good side in every bad situation”, impeachment, in most cases amounts to sowing a whirl-wind or dragon teeth that hatches into bad omen in the society.

    That informed why General Yakubu Gowon and Alhaji Shehu Shagari, at the prompting  of General Ibrahim Babangida, moved in quickly to counsel former Speaker Ghali Na’aba and the former Senate President Pius Ayim not to pronounce the impeachment of former President  Olusegun Obasanjo in 2002.

    The concern of this writer is the fate of the Judiciary in this comic dance of absurd in our nation’s democratic practice. Professor Yemi Akinseye-George (SAN) had sounded a note of warning to judges in his book, ‘’Legal system, corruption and governance in Nigeria,’’ saying General Babangida held the judiciary responsible for the annulment of the June 12, 1993 presidential election.

    In his annulment proclamation, General Babangida argued that ‘’the Judiciary has been the bastion of the hopes and liberties of our citizens. Therefore, when it became clear that the courts were intimidated and subjected to the manipulation of the political process, resulting in contradictory decisions and orders by courts of co-ordinate jurisdiction, then the entire political system was in clear danger. Accordingly, it is in the supreme interest of the laws and order, political stability and peace that the presidential election be annulled’’.

    In the same vein, General Sanni Abacha blamed the Judiciary for sacking Chief Ernest Shonekan’s Interim National Government, following Justice Dolapo Akinsanya of Lagos High Court judgment, declaring the government illegal and an aberration.

    The roles of the Chief Justice of Nigeria and the Chief Judge of a state in the impeachment of either the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria or a state governor are well provided for in the 1999 Constitution (as amended). The constitution asked occupants of these positions to constitute panels to investigate allegations of ‘‘gross misconduct’’ properly levelled against the President or the governor by either the National Assembly or the state Assembly as the case may be.

    Section 188(5) of the 1999 Constitution as (amended) for instance vested the powers on the state Chief Judge to appoint seven-man panel to investigate allegations of gross misconduct of the Executive Governor of a State. While carrying out this function, the chief judges are also to be guided by other sub-sections of Section 188.

    The mere failure by some Chief Judges of states in the past, especially, since the advent of the current democratic dispensation in 1999 has left many a dent on the Judiciary as an institution.

    The National Judicial Council (NJC) which is charged by the same 1999 Constitution to appoint and discipline judges have always taken it up, with utmost seriousness, with any Chief Judge that side-step this provisions of the constitution, which are crystal clear or unambiguous.

    NJC had, at its emergency meeting held at Abuja on December 20, 2006 and pursuant to the powers vested on it by Paragraph 21(d) of the Third Schedule to the 1999 Constitution, suspended, with immediate effect,  the Chief Judges of Anambra, Plateau and Ekiti states for the partisan roles played in the impeachment of their respective states.

    Those suspended were Justices Chika Okoli (Anambra), Ya’u Dakwang (Plateau), and both the Chief Judge of Ekiti state, Justice Kayode Bamisile and the former acting Chief Judge of the state, Justice Jide Aladejana.

    Chuka Okoli, former chief judge of Anambra State, will not forget in a hurry the powers of NJC. He was placed on suspension by the council for what is considered to be his inglorious act in the controversial impeachment of Peter Obi as governor of the state.

    Justice Bamisile was also sanctioned for similar misconduct. He was accused of allegedly compromising  himself by appointing on the investigation panel persons believed to be cronies of suspended Governor Ayodele Fayose, to probe the alleged misconduct of the governor. But Jide Aladejana, who stepped into Bamisile’s shoes without due process, goes with his boss in line with the council’s recommendation. Lazarus Dakyen, the chief judge of Plateau State, also lost his job because of his reluctance to be guided by law in his participation in the processes leading to the removal of Governor Joshua Dariye. Before them were Okechukwu Opene and D. A. Adeniji, who were indicted for taking bribe on the matter of the senatorial election in Anambra State. While Opene allegedly took N12 million, Adeniji was said to have collected N15 million. Though Akin Olujimi, Senior Advocate of Nigeria, SAN, and then federal attorney-general, advised President Olusegun Obasanjo against their dismissal, the President upheld the decision of the NJC. Olujimi based his advice on the procedure adopted by the council in determining the case.

    They are not the only judicial officers who fell victims to the political crisis in Anambra State. Stanley Nnaji, then a judge of Enugu State High Court, was suspended in March 2004 for wrongly assuming jurisdiction on a matter outside his state.

    The judge had ordered Tafa Balogun, then Inspector-General of Police, to remove Chris Ngige, who was then the governor of Anambra State. Nnoruka Udechukwu, the state’s Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, petitioned the NJC, complaining that the ruling was in bad faith and against the code of conduct of judicial officers.

    Nnaji was probably encouraged by the reluctance of the Federal Government to implement a similar decision of the council on Wilson Egbo-Egbo, another high court judge, for granting an injunction directing Ngige to stop parading himself as the governor.

    But shortly after Nnaji committed his own misconduct, Obasanjo approved Egbo-Egbo’s retirement. The latter is one of the nine judges so far retired for endorsing unnecessary ex-parte applications. They are not the only casualties of political cases.

    Five others were implicated in the 2003 Election Petition Tribunal in Akwa Ibom State. They adjudicated on the petition against the re-election of Governor Victor Attah by Ime Umanah, candidate of the defunct All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), at the election.

    By the time the NJC concluded its job, Matilda Adamu, a judge of the High Court of Plateau State, Christopher P.N. Senlong of the Federal High Court, Lagos, and James Isede, a Chief Magistrate in the Edo State Judiciary, had earned themselves dismissal from the judiciary. D. T. Ahura of the High Court of Plateau State and A. M. Elelegwu of the Customary Court of Appeal, Delta State, were recommended for suspension.

    The Federal Government, after approving the verdict of the council on the higher officers in February 2004, sent their case files to the Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) for trial.

  • Dean of law is Chief of Staff

    The Dean of the Faculty of Law  Nasarawa State University, Keffi,  Prof.  Maxwell M. Gidado  has been appointed Chief of Staff to  the Acting Governor of Adamawa State, Ahmadu Umaru Fintiri.

    Prof. Gidado was born in Sugu, Adamawa State in 1960. A 1983 graduate of the University of Maiduguri , he  was  called to the Nigerian Bar in 1984. He obtained he Master of Law (LLM) degree and Ph. D from the University of War wick in  England.

    He did his National  Youth Service Corps (NYSC)  in 1984-85 at the law firm of  A.O. Arulogun & CO in Port Harcourt during whic time he was engaged in serious law practice and became a Professor of Law in 2011 at Department of Private and Business Law,  Nasarawa State University, Keffi before he was an Associate Professor.

    He was a Deputy Dean of Law and was made  Dean Faculty of Law in  2009, a position he occupied till his appointment as the Chief of Staff.

    Gidado was  Senior Special Assistant Legal and Constitutional Matters,  to the former Vice President Atiku Abubakar from 2003 to 2007 and  Senior Special Assistant Legal and Constitutional Matters to former President Olusegun Obasanjo  from 1999 to 2003.

    He was Secretary, Presidential Committee on Review of the 1999 Constitution from 1999 to 2001,  a former Assistant Director (Academic) at the Nigerian Law School Bwari from January 1999 to June 1999.

    Gidado was also Special Assistant to the former Chairman Constitutional Debate Co-ordinating Committee Justice Niki Tobi JSC  (rtd) which midwifed the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria from  November 11  to December 31 1998.

    A former Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Adamawa State from 1995 to 1997 and former, Adamawa State Christian Pilgrims Leader to the 1995 Christian Religious Pilgrimage to Jerusalem.

    Gidado,  a Fellow, Certified Institute of Management (FCIM)  since  July 2011, was made a Grand Patron, Certified Institute of Management in July 2011.

    He was Decorated with National honour of the Officer of the Order of Republic of Equatorial Guinea (ORG) in 2004, Was the Best Law Student of University of Maiduguri at 1984 Convocation Ceremony and numerous other awards.

    He is a Director of Research, Institute for Oil & Gas Law, Abuja; member, Committee on Nigeria’s Extended Continental Shelf clai, 2004-date; member, Legal/Expert team of the International Boundary dispute case between Cameroun & Nigeria at the International Court of Justice, Hague – 1999-2002,Member, Ministerial Team on JDZ, Nigeria/Sao Tome & Principe (2001-2007),  Member, Oil & Gas Reform Sector Committee (OGIC) of the National Council on Privatisation (N.C.P) of Nigeria.

  • Council chief sensitises residents on flood

    The chairman of Abaji Area Council of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Hon. Yahaya Garba has called on residents of the council to avoid indiscriminate dumping of refuse, especially in drainage systems. This, he said, is to prevent the area being flooded during the rainy season.

    Garba, who gave this advice at a sensitisation and enlightenment programme to educate residents on prevention of flood during rainy season, said the call became necessary as the council is making frantic efforts to reduce the menace of flooding in the council area.

    While declaring the programme open, the council chief the sensitisation became essential in view of recent cases of flood in some parts of the country where several lives were lost and property worth millions of Naira destroyed.

    “I wish to urge residents of the council to be cautious of recent flooding that has displaced hundreds of people.  I want to challenge everyone not to build around riverside areas.

    “I also believe that if residents desist from the habit of dumping refuse in drainage, there will never be threat of flood in Abaji. We should not allow our farms to be too close to riverside so that water can flow freely,” he said.

  • I’m a wartime Army Chief, says Minimah

    I’m a wartime Army Chief, says Minimah

    The Chief of Army Staff, Lt. General Kenneth Minimah, has  said he is a war time chief whose major focus is to put an end to the menace of Boko Haram.

    Minimah, who spoke in Lagos at the weekend while addressing troops at Ojo, Topo and Ibereko Barracks, said  the welfare of troops deployed in various operations have remained top priority.

    He said aside paying operational allowances of troops upfront, the army has ensured that soldiers wounded in battle get the best medical treatment either at army hospitals or abroad as the case may be.

    “As an infantry General, all I know is to plan for and fight war. And in doing this, we have made sure that our troops are taken care of.

    “As I talk to you, troops operational allowance for the month of August are being paid and that is how it has always been.

    “It is only the Nigerian Army that pays operational allowances upfront. We paid that of July in June, and we have also made efforts to upgrade medical facilities at the 7 Division to carter for soldiers wounded-in-action.

    “For those whose cases cannot be handled at the 7 Division, we took them to 45 Reference Hospital, Kaduna.

    “Seven casualties, whose situation could not be handled back home are currently being treated in India and Germany. And we will continue to do our best within our resources to take care of troops,” he said.

    Minimah went on:   “When I became the Chief of Army Staff, there was a proposal on my table about the increase in school fees for all army schools across the country. But I looked at it and considered that soldiers would be stressed with this increment and so I dropped the idea.”

    Lt-Gen. Minimah cautioned officers and men of the army against the use of the social media to spread falsehood, particularly as regards the prosecution of the  war against terrorists, as well as exposing the strength and perceived weaknesses of the service.

    He said: “One trend that is also dangerous to the service we all cherish is the misuse of the social media. I urge you to be careful of social media. Those of you that like to use facebook, twitter, and other social media to report the army as if you are not in the army. What you do not know is that you have been undoing the systems that you are part of.

    “You can tweet on social issues. Do not tweet about our locations, equipment, weapons and ammunition. What has that got to do with you. I hope you have not come to undo the system before you enlist. I urge you to desist from reporting the army.”

  • Army chief on why military can’t stop Boko Haram

    Army chief on why military can’t stop Boko Haram

    The Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lt Gen. Kenneth Minimah  said yesterday that the military has not been able to quell Boko Haram insurgency because military personnel were not trained to fight unconventional war like Boko Haram.

    Minimah spoke at the 9 Brigade, Ikeja Cantonment. He was addressing a troop of 280 soldiers as part of his ongoing familiarisation tour.

    He said that while military personnel were trained to fight known enemies from opposing camps, Boko Haram members are enemies within, whose singular mission is to die, not fight.

    “Boko Haram terrorists come to die not fight. It is a new warfare which military personnel are not trained in. They carry explosives to blow up anyone around. They load hilux with bombs and run into troops with them.

    “It is not a conventional war. You do not see nor know the enemy you are fighting. It is an enemy within war in which case a mother is loyal to the government, child to Boko Haram while the father sits on the fence.

    “But we are on top of the situation and God willing, we will defeat them soon,” he said.

    Lt Gen. Minimah disclosed that a mass burial has been approved for soldiers who died in the course of operations in the northeast, just as he urged the troops to call and encourage their colleagues fighting the terrorists.

    He disclosed that medicare for wounded persons has improved, adding that the materials to be used for the new uniforms and camouflage, which would be ready this year, would be produced in Nigeria to ensure uniformity.

    “We are making uniform materials in Nigeria because we no longer want a situation whereby your uniforms will have different colours or people wearing different boots.

    “Also, by doing that, we will be creating employment and ensuring efficiency,” he said.

    The army chief, who reiterated the need for personnel to respect the rule of law, also directed that seniority especially at the junior leadership cadre must be reignited.

    On army personnel who do not dress properly in their full military regalia, Minimah said they shall not be spared when caught.

    “Do not smear army’s image. Dress fully in the army uniform. Do not mix military regalia with civilian clothes. There is no hybrid of the two, so that when the need arise, you would be properly identified.

    “The soldier in Lagos, which led to the BRT issue, was not properly dressed.  I know we have a few bad eggs and we would rid ourselves of them. Try as much as possible to keep off the BRT lanes, if possible, leave your homes early enough. Being a soldier does not put you above the law of the state or federal government.”

    Responding to a request by a soldier that children of army personnel should be given automatic entry into the force and not treated at par with those of civilians, Minimah said the army should not be exclusive preserve of children of service personnel.

    “We will strive to improve our system. I share in the feeling that our children should be encouraged to come into the force, but there should be equal opportunity with children of civilians who want to serve their fatherland,” he said.

  • Council chief honoured

    The Chairman of Amuwo Odofin Local Government in Lagos State, Comrade Ayodele Adewale has received an award as the “Best Executive Chairman Amuwo Odofin Local Government Ever Had.”

    The honoured was conferred on him by the Festival Town Residents Association Community 2, at its last general meeting and the election of new executives to pilot its affairs.

    The chairman of the association, Comrade Jola Ogunlusi, noted that the award to the council chief is in recognition of his developmental policies that have been transforming the council area positively.

    Adewale thanked the association for recognising hard work and promised to continue to make Amuwo an enviable brand.

  • Aregbesola, Òrànmíyàn’s Chief of Staff

    Aregbesola, Òrànmíyàn’s Chief of Staff

    I had sworn that my first visit to Oshogbo would be to its world-famous Osun Sacred Grove. Instead, I attended a “mega” rally in the historic town of Iwo, one of many at which Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola is asking the Oshun people to renew his mandate as their governor. I had first taken notice of him for his spartan look which together with his beard halfway between shaggy and kempt, his ubiquitous white skull-cap, and his straight bearing spoke more of an ascetic, a hermit even, than of a governor-in-waiting. This was while he fought in the courts to claim his mandate wrongly awarded to his opponent. Then I took notice again after he had entered the State House in Oshogbo and President Jonathan was about to take his turn at the favourite pastime of our heads of state: increasing the already unbearable suffering of the people by removing a phantom subsidy on petrol. If I recall correctly, Aregbesola was the only governor that said no to the further enrichment of billionaire contractors at the expense of the people. I wanted to meet him then,  and it was only fitting that I should make his personal acquaintance at Freedom Park in Lagos, during the night of tributes to Mandela, led by Wole Soyinka, in November last year. I had heard that he was expected, but the evening had worn on a bit before he came in and walked sprightly to join Soyinka and Femi Falana, two tables removed from where I was seated with Odia Ofeimun, Kole Omotoso, and Tunde Babawale. Surprised that I had yet to meet Ogbeni, Ofeimun had led me to shake hands with the man. Seven months after that first encounter, there I was in Iwo to witness first-hand how he mixed the ingredients to fashion a political persona that is quite unlike any other in our contemporary political history.

    I set out from Oshogbo at about 11 AM with Mr Solagbade Amodeni, former Commissioner for Natural Resources in Ondo State, childhood friend of Ogbeni’s and now a voluntary political associate. His mission of gauging the level of preparedness and mood of the people for the rally coincides with mine. As early as Awo town, about 15 minutes from Iwo, we see buses, some screen-painted with campaign posters, ferrying supporters to the venue, small roadside crowds brandishing brooms, the symbol of Ogbeni’s party, the All Progressives Congress (APC). We arrive in Iwo just after noon and feel immediately the energy in the air. On Bowen University Road in the Oke Odo area, all feet, it seems, are heading to the township stadium (actually, only a fenced field), venue of the rally, about a kilometre away. A record store is blasting Aregbesola’s praise in Yoruba. Various tee-shirt groups, walking campaign posters: brown tee-shirts that say “’D’ Team proudly support (sic) Rauf,” red-and-black  shirts are the Progressive Torchbearers and say only “Rauf 2014 OK,” green shirts proclaim him “Oranmiyan — Yoruba Legend,” lemon-green shirts matched with baseball caps are “DeRaufs,” among many other political aso-ebi.

    Finally, we are at the venue, a third full, the crowd swelling by the minute. Sounds of competing talking drum groups, in uniforms, can now be heard underneath the amplified music of King Wasiu Ayinde Marshall, KWAM I, leading his fuji band to entertain the crowd. Brooms, banners and posters everywhere, and even more tee-shirt groups, among them a clutch of women in navy-blue shirts advertising Aregbesola’s “tablets of knowledge” programme with the slogan “Opon Imo, Empowering minds, Enriching lives.” I make my way towards the stage — two actually, one covered, with seats for dignitaries, and an open deck with the microphone stands. With the help of Amodeni, I am allowed past security and onto the speakers’ deck where I can more clearly see the crowd. To get there, I have to walk past the covered stage, at the back of which is a big banner announcing Ogbeni’s signature programmes: “O’Reap (rural enterprise and agriculture), O’Schools (rebuilding schools), O’Meals (balanced diet nutrition for pupils), O’Yes (employment). At the bottom of the banner, a sense of rhyme with O’seun! I climb up the speakers’ stage and scan the “stadium,” nearly half-full and quite agog by now. Someone cries “My in-law!” and I feel hands enveloping me from behind. It is Basiru Ajibola, one of the fearless tribunes of the NANS crusades for democracy and social justice in the eighties and early nineties, now Ogbeni’s Commissioner for Special Duties. I’m his in-law because he had the good sense to travel further down south to Igbide in Isoko South LGA to find his better half. As soon as he lowers his arms, someone else cries “Comrade!” and hugs me. It is Semiu Okanlanwon, another NANS veteran, now a special assistant to Ogbeni. I learn that Segun “Red Drum” Maiyegun, former NANS president, is in the fold too as a special assistant but duty has taken him elsewhere today.

    The atmosphere is getting more electric, a red helicopter is hovering above the thickening crowd, circling the vicinity in wide surveillance arcs, and there is very little time to reminisce — that must wait till after the rally. Basiru and Semiu dart off and I turn to read the banner on the wall at the back of the speakers’ stage. “Òrànmíyàn, Leekan si!” it says. “Òrànmíyàn, Once more.” It is a clever pun, as another banner more baldly asserts: “The Return of Òrànmíyàn.” Ogbeni as the reincarnation of the legendary son of Oduduwa whose fabled staff in Ife is probably the most treasured ancestral relic in Yorubaland. Ogbeni has even had the staff stitched onto the breast pockets of some of his shirts and wears it as a personal logo. If the fastidiously austere Aregbesola can be accused of self-regard, it would be in this appropriation of a hallowed ancestor, but I strain in vain for any outward sign of insincerity. I see, instead, the clever use of myth, blended with pop culture. For soon, Fadeyi Oloro, a popular Yoruba actor, famous for his roles as Ifa priest, comes on stage with his entourage, all in danshikis and blackened faces and hands, one of them carrying a basket of horns adorned with feathers, cowries, strips of red cloth; incantations follow. At their exit, pop culture takes the stage. KWAM I has left his band on a stage 50 meters away to join Sir Shina Peters (Afro-juju/Aregbesola, the difference is clear), Weird MC and Tony Tetuila for banter and photos with their fans among the technical crew and campaign and security teams. Then Peters, Tetuila and Weird MC perform. Back with his band, KWAM I leads sweeping-dance choruses in-between his colleagues’ acts: “Igbale ti m’owa, DEMO ni mo ti gba.” With this broom, I will sweep the reactionary party away, DEMO being a reference to S. L. Akintola’s Nigerian National Democratic Party which allied with the Northern People’s Congress in the First Republic to break the dominance of Awolowo’s Action Group in the old Western Region.

    More than three hours have passed since I entered the stadium. And now a loud buzz followed by faces turned en mass to the stadium entrance warn of Aregbesola’s arrival. He makes his entry to the tune of the song “Stand Up for the Champion” cued for the moment by the DJ. The stadium is now feverish with excitement. Ogbeni’s convoy is led in by a throng of jogging men, followed by a horse-rider, and then an aquamarine 24-seater bus, Aregbesola perched atop the sun-roof. He is dressed in his customary white skull cap, matched with ochre aso oke danshiki, sokoto and shoes. In his right hand is a broom with which he sweeps the air above the crowd. At the entrance to the stage, he dismounts and half-runs to the speakers’ deck to greet the crowd, not to speak yet, this time serenaded by KWAM I. Then he takes his seat on the canopied stage while Osun’s political worthies in the APC fold address the crowd: Isiaka Adeleke, the state’s first governor, now a senator; Senator Sola Adeyeye, the re-election campaign director; Najeem Salaam, speaker of the state house of assembly; Mrs Grace Titilayo Laoye-Tomori, the deputy governor, among others.

    At 4:55 PM, Ogbeni is introduced, right after his deputy has addressed the crowd. He dances onto the stage, broom in hand, to the pulsating beat of Skelewu. He begins his address with a Muslim chant that progresses into a call-and-response with his audience, then he goes through a long list of personalities and groups whom he greets. When he gets to “the great Nigerian students,” he departs from the formulaic “Mo ki” to salute them in the familiar idiom. “Great Nigerian students!” he hails them, and gets the obligatory response, “Great!” “Great gbogbo!!” Gbogbo!! “Great gbagba!!! Gbagba!!! Great gbogbo-gbagba!!!! Greeaaaat!!!! At which point the great Nigerian students in the crowd, all now mysteriously massed in front of him just behind the security fence, break into song. “There is victory for us. In the struggle for Africa, there is victory for us.” Now choirmaster, Aregbesola leads them on to fuller voice. “Forward . . .  ever! Backward . . .  never! In the struggle for Africa, There is viii-ctoo-ryyy for us!!” Then calling on the youths to resist any attempt to turn elections into military operations, to rig the vote, he raises another staple of student street protests. “How many people soldier go kill o?” They snatch it from his lips. “How many people soldier go kill!” “I say, How many people power go kill o?” Tempo rising higher, “How many people power go kill!! Aayyy, dem go kill us tire . . .” Slight of frame, were he in jeans, sweat-soaked tee-shirt, and a beret, he would pass for a 21-year-old student leader rousing his dare-devil comrades to confront tanks and rifles with stones! Very stealthily, Ogbeni works the crowd to a passionate affirmation of his re-election against any machination of the opposition party, brooms hoisted, fists clenched and raised, talking-drums in frenzied rhythms and KWAM I supplying fuji chants to every applause line.

    Ogbeni had been speaking for over half an hour to a rapturous crowd. Amodeni comes upstage to nudge me off the loud-speaker box where I am now seating to give my feet a little reprieve. He says we should leave “just before Aregbe finishes his speech and the crowd surges after him, hampering our exit.” I follow him. Many others have decided to avoid that scenario as well. Soon, we are back on Bowen University Road for the kilometre-long trek to where Amodeni’s car is parked. Under a large white canopy on the right side of the street, at about midway, is a gathering that will discuss the rally till the wee hours. We enter the car and have barely shut the doors than Ogbeni’s convoy is upon us.

    Crowds line either side of the road in the outskirts of Iwo, in Awo, in Ogbagba, down to the suburbs of Oshogbo, brandishing brooms and shouting, APC! Change! The students are in the convoy too. “Aluta Continua!!!” says the back of the white minibus in front of us, belonging no doubt to the Student Union Government of one of Osun’s tertiary institutions. Above the back bumper the bus declares, “One for all, all for one.” I turn to take in the countryside and when I return to the road I see that a different minibus, plate number “Aluta 003,” has replaced the previous one. “Aluta Intervention,” this one says under the roof before declaiming more loudly above its back bumper “TO HELL WITH OPPRESSION!” The heady defiance of student “governments” finds a perfect echo in the quiet revolution of the state government under Ogbeni’s charge. Or not so quiet, after all, given the exclamatory O’s of his programmes: O’Schools, O’Meals, O’Reap, O’Yes!

    Nineteen days after, Aregbesola’s brother governor in neigbouring Ekiti State shockingly loses his mandate to a former governor impeached on several grounds, including corruption, in an election that will be known to history by the unfortunate phrase “stomach infrastructure.” The very improbability of that victory gives the opposition in Osun, led once again by an aspirant under a heavy cloud of suspicion, high hopes. If what I witnessed before, during and after the Iwo rally is anything to go by, I doubt very much that it is not a highly misplaced hope. Aregbesola cuts the picture of a man totally immersed in his people and their history, one who comes from and is of the masses. Blessed with boundless energy, he is astonishingly reanimated in their midst to star in the “total” people’s theatre that each of his mega rallies truly is. I don’t believe in reincarnation but I would bet on Ogbeni’s return as Òrànmíyàn’s chief of staff!

  • Council chief seeks increased allocation

    The Chairman of Abaji Area Council of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Hon. Yahaya Garba, has reiterated the need for the Federal Government to increase the revenue allocations to the area council to enable it improve the lives of the residents of the council.

    Garba, who made the appeal during his administration’s one-year anniversary in Abaji, said despite the financial challenges that the council has been experiencing, it had impact positively on the lives of the people.

    According to the council chief, they have been able to meet some of the people’s expectations that have direct bearing to their lives through the provision of access roads, potable water supply in communities and scholarship to indigent people in rural areas.

    “The people should expect more infrastructural development as the financial situation in the council improves because it is our desire to see how we are going to improve on infrastructural development and provision of basic amenities for our people.

    “What we have done in the past one year is not good enough. We need to do more. That is why we are appealing to the Federal Government to increase the area council’s allocation in order for us to provide more dividends of democracy for our people,” he said.

    The immediate past chairman of the council, Hon. Yahaya Mohammed, who expressed satisfaction over the performance of the present chairman, urged him to pursue all projects with vigour so that the people would benefit more.