Tag: Chukwumerije

  • Chukwumerije returns to taekwondo board as athletes’ rep

    Chukwumerije returns to taekwondo board as athletes’ rep

    Despite strong opposition, one of Africa’s most celebrated taekwondists, Chika Chukwumerije, the election into the board of the Nigeria Taekwondo Federation threw up surprises, as the three-time Olympian returned to the taekwondo board as athletes’ representative.


    In a statement signed by the Secretary-General of the federation, Oriss Taiwo, the internal poll was meant to select the suited persons as representatives of athletes and technical into the board.

     

    The election was held at the Abuja International Stadium with Chinedu Ezealah-Ogundare and Professor Olufemi Adegbesan as observers from the Ministry of Youth and Sports.

     

    32 athletes from 32 states took part in the athletes’ representative poll, Chika Chukwumerije emerged winner after polling 18 votes to beat Adamu Isah Mohammed, who polled 16 votes.

     

    Also, Sani Lawal, a coach with Ahmadu Bello University (ABU) and who has been instrumental to the emergence of top athletes in the country has a convincing win over Emmanuel Peters and Osita Egwim.

     

    To emerge as the technical representative in the board, Lawal polled 22 votes as against Peters and Egwim, who both polled six votes respectively.

     

    Outgoing Vice President of Taekwondo Federation, Margaret Binga returned to the board as representative of National Women in Sports (NAWISS).

     

    Binga, two-time African Champion and WTF International Referee, went head-to-head with veteran female practitioner and the first female taekwondo black belt, Tayo Popoola.

     

    The NAWISS body overwhelmingly voted 29 to 11 in favour of Binga, thus putting the legendary female ex-athlete, who was undefeated for 18 years [1989 – 2007] and won 45 National Gold medals in that space of time, back in the board as the NAWISS representative.

     

    In her two-page manifesto released to NAWISS on her vision and motives, Binga signaled her intention to use “vast and strong networks across Nigeria and the global community to grow the sport, develop policies that ensures greater opportunities for the development of female taekwondo practitioners, get Nigeria more seats at international bodies and work as a team with the entire board to ensure more programs are done across the country.”

     

    Dr Mrs. Anyanwu of Federal University of Technology, Owerri (FUTO) will represent Nigeria Association for Physical, Health Education, Recreation, Sport and Dance (NAPHER-SD) in the board.

  • Enugu set for Chukwumerije’s ‘Made in Nigeria’

    Enugu set for Chukwumerije’s ‘Made in Nigeria’

    Lovers of arts and entertainment in Enugu are set to experience a poetry production by Dike Chukwumerije, Made in Nigeria, on March 25 at the Oakland Centre.

    Dike, a performance poet, won the Abuja Literary Society Poetry Slam 2011 and the National Poetry Slam 2012. He has done three Performance Poetry videos, a bi-annual live Poetry show now in its 5th year and the theatre production, Made in Nigeria, which tells Nigeria’s history over the last 120 years.

    “It is a great joy for us in the South East to know that Dike is coming and he is bringing his very famous “Made in Nigeria” poetry show to Enugu and the South East in general for the first time,” Mr. Ken Ike Okere, South East Zonal Director of Radio Nigeria said.

    “Performance poetry is like the fuel that is driving poetry appreciation in Nigeria at the moment.”

    Chukwumerije also said that after Enugu, Made in Nigeria would go to Kaduna later in the year.

    Made in Nigeria was last performed during in February 2017 at the Transcorp Hilton Hotel, Abuja after previous showings in Lagos in December 2016 and at Merit House, Abuja in September 2016.

  • Olympian Chukwumerije gets British Council award

    Olympian Chukwumerije gets British Council award

    For his efforts to add value to taekwondo coupled with his exceptional contribution and commitment to creating positive social change and improving the lives of others, three-time Olympian, Chika Chukwumerije has been honoured at the inaugural Education UK Alumni Award for “Social Impact” at an event held at the Intercontinental Hotel Lagos, and organised by the British Council in colloboration with UK Education.

    Chukwumerije, a bronze medalist at the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games in China, was rewarded alongside other well-meaning Nigerians.

    Five Nigerians were slected in the social impact award and they included [Durotimi Adeboye, Chukwudera Bridget Okeke, Olasoji Fagbola, Oluwasijibomi Ojajuni] who had done amazing things and made equally important impact in their various fields.

    Reacting to the award, the 2007 African Games gold medalist said: “If I could, I would have divided the award in FIVE, because I was inspired by their stories when it was told on that night. The work that is being done was not started with the purpose of winning any award. The greatest reward will be to see that participants in our programs do very well for themselves for decades to come, and point back to these programs as the turning point in their lives. There are many people to thank [in no particular order] whose contribution has, in one way or the other, influenced the work I currently do with my Sports Foundation.”

    “I want to thank the British Council for providing this platform to recognise and encourage Nigerians doing inspirational things in their various careers. I want to thank Ms. Faith Osiobe, who nominated me without my permission and literally bullied me through the application process. I want to thank Dan Stephenson, who personally took my application to the University of Liverpool in 2009, and then flew all the way to Lagos just for the Award night last weekend.

    “I want to thank the University of Liverpool for such a beautiful learning experience while I was there. Concepts like value creation, time and resources management, waste elimination, operations and strategy became real in my daily life, and helped me totally revamp my approach to my work,” he added.

  • Tributes as college honours Chukwumerije

    It was a moment of tributes and encomiums at the Federal College of Education (Technical) in Umunze, Anambra State, when members of the college community paid their last respect to the late Senator Uche Chukwumerije, the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Education.

    Prof Josephat Ogbuagu, Provost of the college, led staff and students to the college’s main auditorium, where the event was held. He urged the nation to immortalise the late lawmaker for his contribution to the development of the country.

    Ogbuagu, who described the death of the late senator as a great loss, said Chukwumerije’s interventions in education issues were incalculable.

    He said: “As a Fellow and worthy ambassador of this college, we organised this event in honour of the late Senator Chukwumerije, a political titan and technocrat. He was a shining light and a pathfinder. We will miss his contribution to nation-building, because his death has left a vacuum that would be too hard to fill. He was a consummate and passionate Nigerian, who believed in the peace and unity of the nation.”

    While many may disagree with his views, Ogbuagu said most Nigerians never doubted the late Chukwumerije’s patriotism and commitment to build a peaceful nation for all citizens.

    He added: “As a senator, the late Chukwumerije maintained his typical boldness and most of the time became vocal minority against poor legislative decisions. He ýhad paid his dues for Nigeria in his definitive style over the years. He showed in clear terms that he was a technocrat and a political giant. We pray for the repose of his soul.”

    In her remarks, Lady J.C. Madichie, Deputy Provost, said the best way to immortalise the late icon was to imbibe his principles and virtues for which he lived. “Senator Chukwumerije was a fearless fighter, whose back never touched the sand. We cannot fill the vacuum left by his death,” she said, describing the late lawmaker as a fearless fighter for the interest of the common man.

    The highpoint was a session of testimonies on life and times of the late Chukwumerije. There was also a poetry reading session to celebrate his achievement in literature.

    The late Chukwumerije died on April 19, after a battle with lung cancer.

  • Tributes for Chukwumerije in Enugu

    Tributes for Chukwumerije in Enugu

    Hundreds of people yesterday besieged the Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu to pay their last respects to late Senator Uche Chukwumerije who was en route Abia for burial.

    Chukwumerije, a former minister of information, died on April 19 after a protracted illness. Leading the pack were members of Ohaneze Ndigbo, led by its president, Chief Gary Enwo-Igariwey.

    Also present were relations, political associates, cultural troupes and well-wishers. At a brief prayer session, the Methodist Bishop of the Diocese of Agbani, Bishop Onagha Bienonwu thanked God for the life of the late senator. Bienonwu described him as a man of his words and prayed God to grant his soul eternal rest.

    Presidential adviser on inter-party affairs Ben Obi described Chukwumerije as a committed patriot and the voice of the voiceless. “He was fearless and courageous and we will definitely miss him,” Obi said.

    Enwo-Igariwey said Ohaneze Ndigbo was pained by Chukwumerije’s death. He said the organisation was however consoled that he left behind people who could carry on with his ideals.

    The first son of the deceased, Mr. Chair Chukwumerije said his father’s demise was a call for the Igbo to speak up for their cause.

    He described his father as his mentor and friend, saying he would miss him.

    Chukwumerije will be buried today in Isuochi, Abia State.

  • Senate eulogises Chukwumerije, Zannah

    Senate eulogises Chukwumerije, Zannah

    THE Senate conducted a solemn session yesterday to mark the demise of Senators Uche Chukwumerije and Ahmed Zannah.

    The upper chamber devoted the day to eulogise the late lawmakers as senators took turns to extol them.

    Chukwumerije died on Sunday April 19. Zannah died on May 16.

    Senate Leader Victor Ndoma-Egba led the tribute with a motion entitled: “Demise of Senator Uche Chukwumerije and Senator Ahmed Zannah.”

    Senate President David Mark lamented that ‘this is not the best of time for us” with the death of two senators in quick succession.

    Ndoma-Egba paid glowing tribute to the two senators in his motion, which was also endorsed by 106 other senators.

    Other senators, who paid tribute to the late colleagues included, Senators Ike Ekweremadu, Ganiyu Solomon, Olusola Adeyeye, Ali Ndume, Abdul Ningi, Bello Tukur, Gbenga Kaka and George Thompson Sekibo.

    Senator Tukur specifically called on the Senate that the Abuja Cancer Diagnosis Centre is fully equipped to carry out its functions.

  • Chukwumerije’s burial rites begin May 20

    The Family of the late Senator Uche Chukwumerije has released details of his funeral.

    Che Chidi Chukwumerije, the first son of the deceased, said the events will kick off with a valedictory session in the Senate chambers on May 20. A night of tribute will follow same day in Abuja.

    The body will leave Abuja for Enugu on Thursday May 21, and after airport ceremonies, will depart for Isuochi, Abia State where a lying-in-state will take place, to be rounded off with a service of song.

    There will be a church service on Friday May 22 and interment will follow in Chukwumerije’s compound.

    Dignitaries present included Senator Ben Obi, Chief Chekwas Okorie, Senator Bassey Henshaw, Senator Mohammed Saidu Dausadau, and Prof A.B.C Nwosu.

     

  • ASUU eulogies Chukwumerije

    ASUU eulogies Chukwumerije

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities ASUU) on Tuesday eulogized the late Chairman of the Senate Committee on Education, Uche Chukwumerije.

    Chukwumerije died on April 19 “after a long but gallant battle with lung cancer,” according to his family.

    The President of ASUU, Dr. Nasir Fagge in a tribute in Abuja described Chukwumerije as “one comrade whom the trappings of power could not shackle his critical and courageous will.”

    Fagge insisted that the deceased, whose burial has been fixed for May 22 in his country home in Abia North, “brought to bare the spirit of zealous patriotism, and vision of undiluted nationalism” during his stint in the National Assembly.

    The ASUU chief said: “At crucial moments in the history of this nation, he played vital roles for the survival and development of the country.

    “As Director of Information during the Nigerian Civil War, he distinguished himself at the age of 25 years as an outstanding strategist and astute communicator.

    “And when the war ended on the ‘No Victor No Vanquished’ policy, Chukwumerije committed himself with the characteristic zest to the building of a united Nigeria where the rights of the citizens will be the fundamental concern of government.

    “It is not surprising therefore, that Chukwumerije was subsequently invited by the country at other critical times as Minister and Secretary of Information to create platforms for vibrant communication and dialogue between government and the people of Nigeria.

    “Serving variously on the Senate Committees on Power, Inter-Parliamentary Affairs and Education, Chukwumerije brought to bare on the hallowed chamber the spirit of zealous patriotism, and vision of undiluted nationalism.

    “The Comrade Senator approached matters and people with an awesome openness and an unpretentious desire to learn.

    “As Chairman of the Senate Committee on Education, his boldness and frankness facilitated the signing of both the 2009 Federal Government/ASUU agreement and the Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) that resolved the protracted 2013 industrial dispute between ASUU and the government.

    “Chukwumerije has certainly engraved his name on the sands of time as a comrade who remained true to the struggle.

    “The union will surely miss him as one comrade whom the trappings of power could not shackle his critical and courageous will, his strength of conviction and admirably brutal sense of honour and sincerity.

    “Comrade Senator Uche Chukwumerije presents to us the representation of the people at its shinning best.”

  • Chukwumerije: My father,  the comrade

    Chukwumerije: My father, the comrade

    From my earliest recollections, two paintings have occupied pride of place in my father’s collections – a framed outline of the unmistakable profile of Lenin, and a full length, full colour, as tall as a grown man painting of Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah. With him, I am certain, my father was in love. They first met at Our Lady’s High School Onitsha, sometime between 1952 and 1956, when in the company of Abdel Nasser of Egypt; Nkrumah fired my father’s mind with the idea of African revolution and continental unity. Scientific socialism would not come until 1957 in Kuti Hall, when helped along by two friends at the University College Ibadan, Daddy embraced Karl Marx.

    These were life-changing meetings for him, as significant as 30 odd years later, when he met Jesus Christ. As an eye witness to the transformations that followed that particular encounter – the night virgils, daily devotions, Christmases spent at fasting ‘banquets’ – I can confirm what everyone who has ever met Uche Chukwumerije says, the man didn’t half do things. So, till he died, in spite of the collapse of the USSR, and the global triumph of the Washington Consensus, and his grudging acceptance of SOME merit in market-led economic theories, he remained intuitively wary of what he termed ‘bourgeois capitalism’. And I would tease him, “Look at the house you live in, Daddy, and you call yourself a Comrade?” Those were the types of jokes that brought the brightest sparkles to his eyes.

    For, you see, it was not a title, at all, for him – ‘Comrade’ – for he had nothing but utter disdain for crass materialism. Once, curious about the impact of the £20 policy on him after the war, I found a moment and asked. It brought on a look of amusement, followed immediately by his rumbling laughter – “Should you not have asked if I even had a bank account in the first place?” What would he need it for? When he lived on a diet of (as I liked to call it) nuts and berries, and the occasional bottle of Stout (a lingering habit from the early days as a desk reporter in Lagos). A wardrobe full of identical plain white clothes, simple shoes, and an unbreakable habit of carrying his own bag – Uche Chukwumerije was a proud and conscientious citizen of Sparta.

    Not always amusing. I remember the earthmoving arguments we had before he would allow me to take a deck (i.e cassette player) to school, with a small piece of carpet that had already been so used it was without third-hand value. In his mind, these modest furnishings were proof of my developing ‘big headedness’. And in my defense I pointed out that the children of his mates brought cars to school, and lived off campus. He said – “Okay then, but I do not want any of my children prancing around like peacocks with raised shoulders, puffed up over imaginary achievements. The future belongs to those who are so obsessed with it they forsake the pleasures of today.” You see, it was a trait he had the deepest and most sincere respect for, simplicity, and one of the primary reasons for his undying devotion to Mallam Aminu Kano, second only to Mallam’s dedication to the cause of the talakawa.

    For that too was something that always troubled my old man, social injustice and what he called the inequitable distribution of wealth. It didn’t start in the Senate, where he conceived bills like the Corporate Social Responsibility Bill and seriously toyed with proposing one to cap rents in Abuja. I remember our arguments in his office in the Senate, because I stood on the opposite side of the ideological divide, arguing that capping rents and slapping CSR taxes on companies was not the best way to proceed in the 21st century; trying to drag an old socialist a bit more towards the center. And he did make adjustments, as he was always respectful of the well-argued case, but his ideological soul was constantly troubled with that singular concern – how does one make life better for the people?

    Not many people can boast of the same consistency, for my father was already an active socialist by 1961, when fresh out of University he plunged into groups like The Nigerian Socialist Movement and Eskor Toyo’s Socialist Workers and Farmers Party. His ideological framework – undergirded by giants like Nkrumah, Nasser, Marx, and Lenin – was, essentially, double-barreled. Politically he was Pan-Africanist. Economically, he was Marxist. Both strands of thought were linked by the prominent place given to the ideal of Unity – the unity of African states and peoples in the first instance, and of the oppressed proletariat in the second. So, believe me, when I tell you that in 1966, when hostilities first broke out, my father was a reluctant Biafran. But – like I heard him say once at a family meeting, just after he had damned the collective and decided to shoulder the burden of burying his elder brother alone – “what is ours is ours, and what is mine is mine”.

    His engagement in Biafra was, first and foremost, that same visceral decision to stand with his own in their darkest hour, for who should keep the gates but the owners of the house? But the objective facts of the situation also fired his socialist angst – the massacre of innocents, the bombing of civilian targets, the use of starvation as a weapon of war – and in that rugged crucible he began to form his life-long conviction that if we must have one Nigeria, it should not be over the systemic and violent suppression of his, or any other, ethnic or social group. In his mind, Nigeria could only flourish on the socialist foundation of justice to all her component parts, or as Igbo people would say, “Biri ka m biri”.

    This conviction supplied the ideological fire for his consistent defense of the Igbo cause. For him, the path to one Nigeria could either be revolutionary or evolutionary. He would have, of course, preferred the former – where the nation was led by a series of high minded, totally de-tribalised leaders who, like Jerry Rawlings of Ghana or Kemal Ataturk of Turkey, would lay socio-political foundations for true integration. If we could not have that, then we would have to settle for a slower, more organic process with the different ethnic groups constantly negotiating and re-negotiating access to the center. If this process was allowed to continue in an atmosphere of tolerance and mutual respect, and with the constant re-affirmation of the long term goal of de-tribalization and integration, THEN – he would say with the sigh of a man impatient for change – “in the lives of these your children perhaps, or, much more likely, of their unborn children, we will have what we hope for today”.

    But he was already an elderly man when he began to talk like this. After the War, just 31, he was still burning with pan-Africanist zeal, a zeal that empowered him to engineer his own re-integration. For the War had barely ended, when with the financial aid of the late M.D Yusuf, Daddy launched his magazine. Within a few years, Afriscope had developed into a behemoth. Rifling through the pages of this Monthly that ran from 1971 till he closed it down in 1983 to fully face commitments in the Peoples Redemption Party, I still shake my head in deep nostalgia. For I have met legends on the dusty pages of Afriscope – from Kenneth Kaunda to Amilcar Cabral; from the shift to the metric system, to the debates around the Indigenization Decrees, my father’s magazine gave me a front row seat to the definitive happenings of those times. But when Aminu Kano called, he dropped it all – success and material security – and answered.

    For, I remember, it was one of the first Bills he worked on when first elected to the Senate in 2003 – the Election Campaign Finance Regulation Bill. It was what made Aminu Kano so different from the others, he always said, the fact that Mallam – whether with NEPU or PRP – won hearts, and minds, and electoral seats without splashing millions around. “But today” – my father wrote this in 1999 – “there is hardly an elected executive who spent less than a million Naira to buy his seat. When one’s access to power is so morally flawed, probity is compromised from the very beginning. Today, the system has completely destroyed every incentive to selfless service and encourages a new ethos of self-service in all breeds, whether new or old. But the system forgets one historical fact. The system that seeks to abort the birth of future Aminu Kanos only hastens the pace of its own destruction.”

    He believed it. And from where I sat and watched him for many, many years, I know that he lived it. Yes, I will miss him, for he was my ideological fountainhead – my father as well as my Comrade. Ishikaraka, adieu!

    –Chukwumerije sent this piece from Abuja

  • Chukwumerije was passionate about his job, says Ita-Giwa

    Chukwumerije was passionate about his job, says Ita-Giwa

    Former Special Adviser to President Olusegun Obasanjo on National Assembly Matters, Florence Ita-Giwa, yesterday, described the late Uche Chukwumerije as a passionate lawmaker, who abhorred injustice.

    Eulogising the late elder statesman, Ita-Giwa said Chukwumerije was passionate about the plight of the Bakassi people.

    According to her, Chukwumerije learnt on the job and understood legislative procedures thoroughly.

    “Death is a necessary end but I join Nigerians in mourning a distinguished senator, colleague and politician.

    “I have fond memories of my encounters with him and it is sad he left at a time the nation would require more of his political input and wisdom, especially as we transit to another administration.

    “Chukwumerije was a good lawmaker, who learnt on the job and contributed tremendously to the democratic stability of the nation’s polity.

    “He was always on hand to advise me while I was the special adviser on National Assembly Matters to two former Presidents.

    “As a lawmaker, he was passionately concerned about the plight of my people and he supported the struggle. I take solace in the fact that he was a good man and he left his footprints on the sands of time,” Ita-Giwa said.