Tag: Erelu Bisi Fayemi

  • Tinubu, Aregbesola, Ajimobi, others for 200 years of Yorubas in Ghana

    A grand reception in honour of former Lagos State governor, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, holds on November 23 at Accra, during the celebration of 200 years of the Yoruba race in Ghana.

    The event organised by the patrons, executive council and all Yoruba in Ghana will also witness the conferment of Yoruba heritage awards on prominent Yoruba indigenes.

    Recipients of the award include the Oyo State governor, Abiola Ajimobi; his Osun State counterpart, Rauf Aregbesola and Chairman Energy Bank, Ghana, Barrister Jimoh Ibrahim.

    Others include First Lady of Ekiti State, Erelu Bisi Fayemi; Aare Musulumi of Yoruba land, Alhaji Arisekola Alao; veteran actor and writer, Adebayo Faleti, and former Nigerian High Commissioner to Ghana, Musiliu Obanikoro, among others.

    There will also be presentation of Exploits of a migrants’ community: Chronicles of Yoruba in Ghana, dedicated to Tinubu.

    The book is written by Joshua Bolatito Olalere, Managing Editor at Delight Communications West Africa Limited, a publishing and media consultancy firm.

    The celebration holds at Aviation Social Centre, Accra.

     

  • Fayemi’s wife seeks support for film industry

    Fayemi’s wife seeks support for film industry

    Wife of Ekiti State governor Erelu Bisi Fayemi has appealed to Southwest governors to rally behind the indigenous movie industry to promote the Yoruba culture and economy.

    She made the call in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, while receiving an award as a ‘Distinguished Icon of Hope’ from the Mr. Latin Foundation, founded by popular Yoruba actor, Mr. Bolaji Amusan, a.k.a. Mr. Latin.

    Other personalities, who got the foundation’s awards are wife of Ogun State governor Mrs. Olufunso Amosun; General Manager, Ogun State Television, Mr. Ayinde Soaga; and National Coordinator, Oodua Peoples Congress, Chief Gani Adams.

    Highpoint of the maiden edition of the award, which held at the Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library, was a lecture, titled: ‘Role of celebrities in nation building,’ delivered by the Publisher of City People, Dr. Seye Kehinde.

    Erelu Fayemi was optimistic that the movie industry is capable of becoming a major revenue earner for the region, if the talents that abound in the industry are harnessed properly.

    She encouraged theatre artistes to produce films that dwell on the strength and potential of African women, as well as traditional practices and social malaise limiting their accomplishments.

    Amusan noted that the recipients of the awards were chosen by the board members, following their contributions to women and youth empowerment and nation building.

    He said the foundation was poised to unlock the potential of the less privileged, particularly youths and widows.

    The popular actor said he would use the platform of the theatre to enlighten the public on issues relating to health, child abuse, prostitution and other ills rampant in the society.

  • Fayemi’s wife cares for the needy

    Fayemi’s wife cares for the needy

    3000 on three square meals free

     

    The new lease of life being enjoyed by the aged, widows, HIV/AIDS patients and other vulnerable citizens in Ekiti State has continued with the introduction of Soup Kitchen by the wife of the state governor, Erelu Bisi Fayemi through her Ekiti Development Foundation (EDF).

    Under the Soup Kitchen plan, the needy are fed three times a day three days in a week.

    It boosts the subsisting freebies introduced by the government. Such freebies include payment of a monthly N5,000 to the aged from 65 years, consistent free medical missions for all categories of residents in the state, free healthcare for children under five years, the aged over 65 years, expectant mothers and indigent disabled persons.

    The feeding plan started with 200 persons, with beneficiaries accessing meals across centres in Ado-Ekiti, Osi, Itapa, Emure, Aramoko and other centres across the state. Now, there are 3000 persons benefitting from the programme.

    The Soup Kitchen follows closely on the heels of the Food Bank launched in October 2012 through which well over 3,000 selected individuals had been accessing raw food materials at centres located in Ado-Ekiti and other locations in the state, according to Erelu Fayemi, EDF founder.

    The governor’s wife said the EDF spearheaded the food bank and soup kitchen as part of its contributions to the administration’s resolve to banish poverty and extreme hunger from the state.

    Said she at the soup kitchen launch: “The target of the current administration is to ensure that every family secures access to free nutritious meals a minimum of nine times every week. This is not just a dream, it is a goal towards which we are working.”

    On the soup kitchen, the EDF is collaborating with the Centre for Family and Reproductive Health Initiative (CFRHI), a non-governmental organisation, founded by the State Commissioner for Women Affairs and Social Development and Gender Empowerment, Mrs. Fola Richie-Adewusi.

    The governor’s wife said the ultimate target of the initiators is to ensure that the soup kitchen is replicated in each of the 177 wards of the state before the end of the year.

    She is optimistic that the target will be achieved if indigenous people of the state residing at home or in the Diaspora, as well as political appointees in the state, support the initiative.

    The Deputy Governor, Prof. Modupe Adelabu, and some top female officials of the state were with the governor’s wife as she spoke during the launch of the feeding plan.

    The beauty of the soup kitchen, as noted by the governor’s wife, is the decision by some of the beneficiaries with catering background to cook the foods and serve as volunteers in each centre.

    “This will erase any suspicion about the quality and safety of the food. We don’t want political opponents to turn round and say that there is something else to the initiative. “That is why those who are cooking and serving are among those eating it,” Fayemi’s wife said.

    She said the introduction of the soup kitchen was in fulfilment of some of the electioneering promises of the governor when criss-crossing the nooks and cranny of the state for votes.

    She thanked organisations and individuals that have contributed to the success of the projects so far and sought further support.

    She urged all political office holders in the state to ensure the establishment of at least one soup kitchen in their ward to take government nearer to the people at the grassroots.

    In her remarks, Prof. Modupe Owolabi said the initiative was the begining of good things that the people of the state have longed for.

    She described the project as an imitation of best practices in the developed world, adding that the government was proud of the efforts of the governor’s wife towards giving the people a new lease of life.

    She appealed to the people of the state to continue to support the administration to enable it to deliver more dividends of democracy to them.

    The founder of the CFRHI, Dr Richie-Adewusi thanked the state government for its giant strides aimed at ensuring that the people enjoyed the presence of government in their localities.

    She urged the volunteers in charge of the soup kitchen not to divert the food, whether raw or cooked, and to treat the beneficiaries with love and care.

    Two of the beneficiaries, Mrs. Margaret Abegunde in Ado-Ekiti and Mrs. Bosede Folorunso in Emure, lauded the initiative and prayed for the continued success of the administration.

    Abegunde said: “I collect N5000 monthly from the government. I enjoy free health services and now free meal. Fayemi and his wife are taking care of the aged and my prayer is that they will age gracefully.

    “I’m short of words because none of us enjoying these freebies have ever been asked to produce any political party card before we benefit. I’m close to 90 years and I can say this is the first time I’m seeing this type of thing.”

    The governor’s wife also recently supported nearly 200 individuals across families with various sums totalling N11 million direct financial empowerment and individuals in the state. However, what made the event tick was the flavour of the so-called minority groups including the Ibo, Hausa-Fulani, Urhobo and Ebira who took prominence among the list of beneficiaries.

    All the beneficiaries of Erelu Fayemi’s assistance however shared just one common attribute: they all needed material and financial assistance, reached out to her office and succour came their way.

    Many among the 190 beneficiaries who spoke to the nation were lost in words when a total of their accumulated four-month largesse were handed over to them one after the other in sum which totaled N11 million.

    One of the beneficiaries, an Igbo trader in the state, Mrs. Irene Obasi, was full of praises for the governor’s wife on her efforts at supporting people of the state, irrespective of their political or ethnic backgrounds.

    She noted: “I would have made my request last year but I was discouraged by people who said I was Igbo. I was to discover late that the Igbo were among those who benefitted that same year.  I thank the governor’s wife for not discriminating among the people of the state and for offering good leadership to all communities in the state. May God continue to bless you, Ma.”

    The beneficiaries included widows, orphans, multiple birth mothers, students and those seeking assistance to offset medical bills or start businesses.

    At the ceremony, the governor’s wife said she would continue to use her position and networks to empower the people and enhance their well-being.

    She explained that the four-month accumulated disbursement was delayed due to the death of the former Deputy Governor, Mrs. Funmilayo Olayinka, an incident she said plunged the state into mourning.

    The First Lady assured the people of the state of her avowed commitment to sustained financial assistance through her office and EDF, but admonished beneficiaries to make judicious use of the money, urging them to ensure they commit the given sums on whatever they might have planned, with a special prayer for the sick among them to get well quick.

    The governor’s wife used the opportunity to urge the beneficiaries and well-wishers of the Dr. Kayode Fayemi-led administration to continue to disseminate information about its unprecedented achievements, saying “we give assistance not on the basis of political r religious affiliation. Christians have access to my office as much as Muslims. Whoever genuinely approaches my office for succour would surely find one.”

    She however added it would be improper and possibly look like being ungrateful for those benefitting from the different life-changing programmes of the administration to keep silent while detractors run down and talk ill of the government.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    She said: “Let me encourage all of us here to tell others about this programme. The more people we can make happy and restore smiles to in whatever way, the more successful the administration of Governor Fayemi. We should also endeavor to speak the truth to people whenever the enemies of the administration deliberately misinform the public in respect of Governor Fayemi’s many laudable and life-changing programmes.”

    Just as I told our Igbo mothers on their Igbo Day recently, the programmes of my office and that of EDF are not for only the Yoruba or Christians alone. It is for those who lack a definite source of income. Once you come Younwill be asked questions to ascertain how true your claims are. We will definitely reach back to you wherever you come from or your religious/political affiliation.

    Meanwhile, the wife of the governor also recently led advocacy visits of the members of Gender-Based Violence Prohibition Law Management Committee to the Ekiti state University (EKSU); the State Judiciary. She equally visited the Ministry of Justice as well as the Ekiti state Police Command in the drive to ensure zero tolerance for gender violence in the state.

    Erelu Fayemi Fayemi, who is also the Chairperson of the Management Committee said the reason for the visits was to build partnership with all relevant stakeholders including government agencies to combat all forms of violence against women.

    She added that working with stakeholders will enable women have a better grasp of the situation on ground and the plight victims of violence and ensure that response to the law against gender violence was adequate.

    Erelu Fayemi, who was accompanied by the Commissioner for Women Affairs, Social Development and Gender empowerment, Mrs. Fola Richie-Adewusi, said the committee, will not leave any stone unturned to ensure that violence against women and girls became a thing of the past in the state.

    At the Ekiti state University, the governor’s wife commended the university community on the various steps it had taken against some students and even lecturers found violating women.

    She further gave kudos to the university for establishing GBV support club in the school which would make students and lecturers work side by side to address the issue of violence against women.

    Erelu Fayemi promised to fully support the establishment of the Centre for Gender and Development Studies being proposed by the institution. She used the opportunity to advise victims of gender violence not to be silent but to report immediately any form of violation against them in order to get justice.

    The Chairperson advised administrators of higher institutions in the state to ensure that security personnel took the issue of violence against women serious and to discourage out-of-court settlement.

    At the Ekiti state Judiciary and state Ministry of Justice, the governor’s wife solicited for the establishment of a gender court to operate side by side with the family court already in existence in the state.

    She requested the designation of a gender court to hear and determine GBV cases as provided by section 5 of the Gender-Based Prohibition law 2011, as well as replication of the family courts in all the judicial divisions of the state. The committee also demanded that adequately trained gender sensitive court officers should be assigned to work on gender issues, as well as to ensure that gender cases were expeditiously tried.

    Speaking with the state police commissioner, Mr. Sotonye Wakama, Erelu demanded the strengthening of gender desk at the police  stations by posting gender sensitive officers with adequate and continuous training.

    She also request that gender cases must be charged under the Ekiti state Gender-Based Violence Prohibition Law 2011, while also calling for prompt release of case files to ministry of Justice, adding that survivors of gender violence should be given free medical treatment as provided by section 8a of the law.

    In her remarks, the Commissioner for Women Affairs, Social Development and Gender Empowerment, Mrs Fola Richie-Adewusi urged all hands to be on deck to address the challenging issues of gender violence with vigour.

    The commissioner, who is also the vice chairperson of the committee, noted that government has given the committee a mandate to ensure zero tolerance for gender violence in the state, adding that government has also approved GBV support fund to assist those who have been violated to get back on their feet.

    On the visit to the EKSU, Erelu Fauemi made similar appeals and called for supports of the Institution’s management in the fight against various abuses of women.

    Responding to the various demands of the committee, the Vice Chancellor, Prof. Oladipo Aina said the university had embarked on the construction of female hostel accommodation with full security network to ensure that women were adequately protected from all forms of harassment.

    He disclosed that a lecturer of the university was recently sacked as a result of violating female students and promised to meet such stern action on any staff of the institution who used their positions to harass and embarrass female students on the campus.

    The VC disclosed that the University Council has approved the establishment of Centre for Gender and Development Studies to ensure that all men and women are treated fairly and equally with dignity and respect. He used the opportunity to solicit more support from government for empowerment of women in the state.

    Meanwhile, the state government recently opened  a black book, called the Sexual Offenders Register, in which a blacklist.for the programmes founded by the State Commissioner for Women Affairs and Social Development and Gender Empowerment, Mrs. Fola Richie-Adewusi.. for the programmes founded by the State Commissioner for Women Affairs and Social Development and Gender Empowerment, Mrs. Fola Richie-Adewusi. of convicted sexual offenders would be catalogued possibly alongside the specific sexual crime they have committed.

    This was a culmination of several efforts of the wife of the state governor, Erelu Bisi Fayemi in the area of gender advocacy and empowerment which well complement the efforts of the state governor Kayode Fayemi’s at instituting people-centered and genuine socio-economic  progress in the state.

     

    for the programmes founded by the State Commissioner for Women Affairs and Social Development and Gender Empowerment, Mrs. Fola Richie-Adewusi.

     

  • Fayemi’s wife cares for the needy…3000 on three square meals free

    Fayemi’s wife cares for the needy…3000 on three square meals free

    The new lease of life being enjoyed by the aged, widows, HIV/AIDS patients and other vulnerable citizens in Ekiti State has continued with the introduction of Soup Kitchen by the wife of the state governor, Erelu Bisi Fayemi through her Ekiti Development Foundation (EDF).

    Under the Soup Kitchen plan, the needy are fed three times a day three days in a week.

    It boosts the subsisting freebies introduced by the government. Such freebies include payment of a monthly N5,000 to the aged from 65 years, consistent free medical missions for all categories of residents in the state, free healthcare for children under five years, the aged over 65 years, expectant mothers and indigent disabled persons.

    The feeding plan started with 200 persons, with beneficiaries accessing meals across centres in Ado-Ekiti, Osi, Itapa, Emure, Aramoko and other centres across the state. Now, there are 3000 persons benefitting from the programme.

    The Soup Kitchen follows closely on the heels of the Food Bank launched in October 2012 through which well over 3,000 selected individuals had been accessing raw food materials at centres located in Ado-Ekiti and other locations in the state, according to Erelu Fayemi, EDF founder.

    The governor’s wife said the EDF spearheaded the food bank and soup kitchen as part of its contributions to the administration’s resolve to banish poverty and extreme hunger from the state.

    Said she at the soup kitchen launch: “The target of the current administration is to ensure that every family secures access to free nutritious meals a minimum of nine times every week. This is not just a dream, it is a goal towards which we are working.”

    On the soup kitchen, the EDF is collaborating with the Centre for Family and Reproductive Health Initiative (CFRHI), a non-governmental organisation, founded by the State Commissioner for Women Affairs and Social Development and Gender Empowerment, Mrs. Fola Richie-Adewusi.

    The governor’s wife said the ultimate target of the initiators is to ensure that the soup kitchen is replicated in each of the 177 wards of the state before the end of the year.

    She is optimistic that the target will be achieved if indigenous people of the state residing at home or in the Diaspora, as well as political appointees in the state, support the initiative.

    The Deputy Governor, Prof. Modupe Adelabu, and some top female officials of the state were with the governor’s wife as she spoke during the launch of the feeding plan.

    The beauty of the soup kitchen, as noted by the governor’s wife, is the decision by some of the beneficiaries with catering background to cook the foods and serve as volunteers in each centre.

    “This will erase any suspicion about the quality and safety of the food. We don’t want political opponents to turn round and say that there is something else to the initiative. “That is why those who are cooking and serving are among those eating it,” Fayemi’s wife said.

    She said the introduction of the soup kitchen was in fulfilment of some of the electioneering promises of the governor when criss-crossing the nooks and cranny of the state for votes.

    She thanked organisations and individuals that have contributed to the success of the projects so far and sought further support.

    She urged all political office holders in the state to ensure the establishment of at least one soup kitchen in their ward to take government nearer to the people at the grassroots.

    In her remarks, Prof. Modupe Owolabi said the initiative was the begining of good things that the people of the state have longed for.

    She described the project as an imitation of best practices in the developed world, adding that the government was proud of the efforts of the governor’s wife towards giving the people a new lease of life.

    She appealed to the people of the state to continue to support the administration to enable it to deliver more dividends of democracy to them.

    The founder of the CFRHI, Dr Richie-Adewusi thanked the state government for its giant strides aimed at ensuring that the people enjoyed the presence of government in their localities.

    She urged the volunteers in charge of the soup kitchen not to divert the food, whether raw or cooked, and to treat the beneficiaries with love and care.

    Two of the beneficiaries, Mrs. Margaret Abegunde in Ado-Ekiti and Mrs. Bosede Folorunso in Emure, lauded the initiative and prayed for the continued success of the administration.

    Abegunde said: “I collect N5000 monthly from the government. I enjoy free health services and now free meal. Fayemi and his wife are taking care of the aged and my prayer is that they will age gracefully.

    “I’m short of words because none of us enjoying these freebies have ever been asked to produce any political party card before we benefit. I’m close to 90 years and I can say this is the first time I’m seeing this type of thing.”

    The governor’s wife also recently supported nearly 200 individuals across families with various sums totalling N11 million direct financial empowerment and individuals in the state. However, what made the event tick was the flavour of the so-called minority groups including the Ibo, Hausa-Fulani, Urhobo and Ebira who took prominence among the list of beneficiaries.

    All the beneficiaries of Erelu Fayemi’s assistance however shared just one common attribute: they all needed material and financial assistance, reached out to her office and succour came their way.

    Many among the 190 beneficiaries who spoke to the nation were lost in words when a total of their accumulated four-month largesse were handed over to them one after the other in sum which totaled N11 million.

    One of the beneficiaries, an Igbo trader in the state, Mrs. Irene Obasi, was full of praises for the governor’s wife on her efforts at supporting people of the state, irrespective of their political or ethnic backgrounds.

    She noted: “I would have made my request last year but I was discouraged by people who said I was Igbo. I was to discover late that the Igbo were among those who benefitted that same year.  I thank the governor’s wife for not discriminating among the people of the state and for offering good leadership to all communities in the state. May God continue to bless you, Ma.”

    The beneficiaries included widows, orphans, multiple birth mothers, students and those seeking assistance to offset medical bills or start businesses.

    At the ceremony, the governor’s wife said she would continue to use her position and networks to empower the people and enhance their well-being.

    She explained that the four-month accumulated disbursement was delayed due to the death of the former Deputy Governor, Mrs. Funmilayo Olayinka, an incident she said plunged the state into mourning.

    The First Lady assured the people of the state of her avowed commitment to sustained financial assistance through her office and EDF, but admonished beneficiaries to make judicious use of the money, urging them to ensure they commit the given sums on whatever they might have planned, with a special prayer for the sick among them to get well quick.

    The governor’s wife used the opportunity to urge the beneficiaries and well-wishers of the Dr. Kayode Fayemi-led administration to continue to disseminate information about its unprecedented achievements, saying “we give assistance not on the basis of political r religious affiliation. Christians have access to my office as much as Muslims. Whoever genuinely approaches my office for succour would surely find one.”

    She however added it would be improper and possibly look like being ungrateful for those benefitting from the different life-changing programmes of the administration to keep silent while detractors run down and talk ill of the government.

    She said: “Let me encourage all of us here to tell others about this programme. The more people we can make happy and restore smiles to in whatever way, the more successful the administration of Governor Fayemi. We should also endeavor to speak the truth to people whenever the enemies of the administration deliberately misinform the public in respect of Governor Fayemi’s many laudable and life-changing programmes.”

    Just as I told our Igbo mothers on their Igbo Day recently, the programmes of my office and that of EDF are not for only the Yoruba or Christians alone. It is for those who lack a definite source of income. Once you come Younwill be asked questions to ascertain how true your claims are. We will definitely reach back to you wherever you come from or your religious/political affiliation.

    Meanwhile, the wife of the governor also recently led advocacy visits of the members of Gender-Based Violence Prohibition Law Management Committee to the Ekiti state University (EKSU); the State Judiciary. She equally visited the Ministry of Justice as well as the Ekiti state Police Command in the drive to ensure zero tolerance for gender violence in the state.

    Erelu Fayemi Fayemi, who is also the Chairperson of the Management Committee said the reason for the visits was to build partnership with all relevant stakeholders including government agencies to combat all forms of violence against women.

    She added that working with stakeholders will enable women have a better grasp of the situation on ground and the plight victims of violence and ensure that response to the law against gender violence was adequate.

    Erelu Fayemi, who was accompanied by the Commissioner for Women Affairs, Social Development and Gender empowerment, Mrs. Fola Richie-Adewusi, said the committee, will not leave any stone unturned to ensure that violence against women and girls became a thing of the past in the state.

    At the Ekiti state University, the governor’s wife commended the university community on the various steps it had taken against some students and even lecturers found violating women.

    She further gave kudos to the university for establishing GBV support club in the school which would make students and lecturers work side by side to address the issue of violence against women.

    Erelu Fayemi promised to fully support the establishment of the Centre for Gender and Development Studies being proposed by the institution. She used the opportunity to advise victims of gender violence not to be silent but to report immediately any form of violation against them in order to get justice.

    The Chairperson advised administrators of higher institutions in the state to ensure that security personnel took the issue of violence against women serious and to discourage out-of-court settlement.

    At the Ekiti state Judiciary and state Ministry of Justice, the governor’s wife solicited for the establishment of a gender court to operate side by side with the family court already in existence in the state.

    She requested the designation of a gender court to hear and determine GBV cases as provided by section 5 of the Gender-Based Prohibition law 2011, as well as replication of the family courts in all the judicial divisions of the state. The committee also demanded that adequately trained gender sensitive court officers should be assigned to work on gender issues, as well as to ensure that gender cases were expeditiously tried.

    Speaking with the state police commissioner, Mr. Sotonye Wakama, Erelu demanded the strengthening of gender desk at the police  stations by posting gender sensitive officers with adequate and continuous training.

    She also request that gender cases must be charged under the Ekiti state Gender-Based Violence Prohibition Law 2011, while also calling for prompt release of case files to ministry of Justice, adding that survivors of gender violence should be given free medical treatment as provided by section 8a of the law.

    In her remarks, the Commissioner for Women Affairs, Social Development and Gender Empowerment, Mrs Fola Richie-Adewusi urged all hands to be on deck to address the challenging issues of gender violence with vigour.

    The commissioner, who is also the vice chairperson of the committee, noted that government has given the committee a mandate to ensure zero tolerance for gender violence in the state, adding that government has also approved GBV support fund to assist those who have been violated to get back on their feet.

    On the visit to the EKSU, Erelu Fauemi made similar appeals and called for supports of the Institution’s management in the fight against various abuses of women.

    Responding to the various demands of the committee, the Vice Chancellor, Prof. Oladipo Aina said the university had embarked on the construction of female hostel accommodation with full security network to ensure that women were adequately protected from all forms of harassment.

    He disclosed that a lecturer of the university was recently sacked as a result of violating female students and promised to meet such stern action on any staff of the institution who used their positions to harass and embarrass female students on the campus.

    The VC disclosed that the University Council has approved the establishment of Centre for Gender and Development Studies to ensure that all men and women are treated fairly and equally with dignity and respect. He used the opportunity to solicit more support from government for empowerment of women in the state.

    Meanwhile, the state government recently opened  a black book, called the Sexual Offenders Register, in which a blacklist.for the programmes founded by the State Commissioner for Women Affairs and Social Development and Gender Empowerment, Mrs. Fola Richie-Adewusi.. for the programmes founded by the State Commissioner for Women Affairs and Social Development and Gender Empowerment, Mrs. Fola Richie-Adewusi. of convicted sexual offenders would be catalogued possibly alongside the specific sexual crime they have committed.

    This was a culmination of several efforts of the wife of the state governor, Erelu Bisi Fayemi in the area of gender advocacy and empowerment which well complement the efforts of the state governor Kayode Fayemi’s at instituting people-centered and genuine socio-economic  progress in the state.

    for the programmes founded by the State Commissioner for Women Affairs and Social Development and Gender Empowerment, Mrs. Fola Richie-Adewusi.

     

  • Erelu Bisi Fayemi: Celebrating golden milestone of a golden heart

    Erelu Bisi Fayemi: Celebrating golden milestone of a golden heart

    In Nigeria where life expectancy has dropped to as low as 47 years, where the population is daily being decimated by diseases occasioned by clapped-out health facilities, where citizens lose lives and limbs to auto crash due to crater-filled network of roads, and where air mishap exacerbated by poor adherence to basic aviation standards exterminates the bright and the beautiful in the land, attaining the age of 50 years is worth rolling out the drums for. Thus, the wife of Ekiti State Governor, Erelu Bisi Fayemi, had every reason to be over the moon as she clocked the golden age of 50 years on June 11, 2013.

    However, the First Lady shelved the fanfare and merriment synonymous with 50th birthday. She opted for a low-key thanksgiving service at the Government House Chapel as she was still mourning the departed former Deputy Governor of the state, Mrs. Funmilayo Olayinka, her close confidant and friend. For more than three decades, Erelu Fayemi had in her peripatetic career traversed more than 60 countries advocating women’s rights and lifting women of all colours and creeds out of the shackles of poverty and deprivation.

    In her odyssey through the continents, she has acquired professional experience as a gender specialist, social change philanthropist, social entrepreneur, policy advocate, journalist, counsellor, trainer, feminist and organisational development specialist.

    Born in Liverpool, England, the qualitative education she received from the University of Ife (now Obafemi Awolowo University), where she bagged first and second degrees in History in the late 1980s; and Middlesex University, UK, where she received Master of Arts in Gender and Society in 1992, was the springboard for the seamless manner she has combined these roles over the years.

    A global citizen, she has worked with many international organisations, some of which she solely founded or co-founded. She established the African Women’s Leadership Institute (AWLI), a training and networking forum for young African women. Today, the institute has become such a powerful legacy, having trained over 6,000 women across Africa. Most of the beneficiaries are now in senior decision-making positions as ministers, members of parliaments, academics, civil society leaders and employees of international organisations.

    In 2000, Erelu Bisi Fayemi co-founded the African Women’s Development Fund, (AWDF) – the first Africa-wide grant-making fund, which supports the work of organisations promoting women’s rights in Africa. Since it began grant-making in 2001, AWDF has supported over 1,200 women’s organisations in 42 African countries with over U$20 million in grants.

    As a gender activist, she abhors masculinity of everything that is good, as well as the age-old patriarchy ideology, which confers supremacy on men and legitimises their oppression of women. She is not the one to be dubbed obinrin bi okunrin (a masculine woman), a catch-phrase with which the Yoruba applaud heroic exploits of a woman. If you want to see her other side, refer to a female head of any institution as chairman instead of chairperson or simply chair. More so, expressions like ‘women are their own worst enemies’ used to strike the indignation chord in her.

    Delivering the 21st convocation lecture of the College of Education, Ikere-Ekiti, in January, she said: “When people say women are their own worst enemy, they are falling into a very familiar patriarchal trap. This dreadful saying is a narrow-minded analysis of gendered power relations in our society. Patriarchal power and privilege that breeds its own rewards and sanctions is the real enemy of women. And those who are in control of these agendas are mostly men and not women.”

    Little wonder she is the promoter of the Equal Opportunities Bill awaiting passage in the Ekiti State House of Assembly; leveraging on the successful enactment of the gender-based violence prohibition bill into law. A bill she championed and ardently advocated till it became law.

    Her impactful sojourn in Ekiti since her husband became the governor of the state would remain evergreen in the memory of the people of the state. Her sterling qualities could not have been better appraised by any other person than her husband and soul mate of more than 23 years, Governor Kayode Fayemi. Buoyed by the ecstasy of the tumultuous crowd that thronged Ado-Ekiti for his inauguration on October 16, 2010, the governor joined hands with his wife, raised it aloft and declared that Ekiti was “lucky to have got two for the price of one.” He explained this to mean that although he was the person voted as governor due to the people’s belief that he was the messiah that had eluded them, that his wife was an added value who would work tirelessly to complement his efforts.

    And true to the governor’s prediction, Erelu Bisi Fayemi cut the image of a Mother Teresa, who gives wholehearted and Free service to the poorest of the poor since the advent of the administration, using many platforms.

    Among her many novel initiatives was the Ekiti Development Foundation, a non-governmental organisation she founded to mentor and empower the youth and women. Since its establishment, the EDF has supported hundreds of women’s groups and civil society organisations across Ekiti with economic empowerment, health and political participation projects. Breast Cancer Awareness Campaigns and the Ekiti Food Bank are also the brainchild of the foundation, which it does in collaboration with other bodies. Due to the booming multiple births in the state and its attendant challenges, the First Lady also initiated the Multiple Birth Trust Fund to assist parents to cope with the social and health needs of their multiple babies. She founded the Forum of Spouses of Ekiti State Officials, a platform under which spouses of state officials contribute their quota to the development of the state.

    A prophetess with honour among her people, home and abroad, the mother-general of Ekiti, (among her numerous appellations), has many diadems and awards to flaunt in recognition of her efforts so far; very few of which this write-up could accommodate. In April 2009, she was named by New African Magazine as one of the 20 most influential African women on the continent. In March 2011, she was listed among the world leading 100 personalities working for the interests of women and girls by Women Deliver. She is also the recipient of the 2011 David Rockefeller Bridging Leadership Award, one of the most prestigious awards in the field of philanthropy, given by the Synergos Institute, New York. In 2006, she also bagged an Achievers Award given by the African International Media Summit for promoting a positive image of Africa. The New African Magazine named her as one of the 100 Most Influential People of Africa in June 2011. She currently chairs the Advisory Board of the Nigerian Women’s Trust fund, which was set up by the Federal Ministry of Women Affairs.

    Always receiving plaudits from the appreciative people of Ekiti State, it’s common to hear chants of epithet like Mother-general, Erelu Bam Bam, Ochiorah, Mama wa o Ire, anytime she appears at public functions.

    The Ekiti First Lady holds the traditional chieftaincy titles of Ochiorah (People’s Leader) of Imezi Owa, Ezeagwu Local Government, Enugu State (April 2008); and Erelu of lsan Kingdom, in Oye Local Government Area of Ekiti State (March 2011).

    In her treatise, “The First Lady Debate,” she reminisced on her transition from a women’s rights activist, gender specialist and social change philanthropy advocate to the wife of a governor. “My own understanding of what happened to me did not translate into abandoning all the things that are important to me—my world view, values, affiliations and principles.”

    Not looking her age, the irrepressible and cerebral First Lady is not daunted in her avowed commitment to give the women of Ekiti a new lease of life, without a modicum of prejudice to her international engagements.

    Please join me in clinking the glasses to celebrate 50 years of grace of this woman of substance, Erelu Bisi Fayemi.

    •Oyedele is Special Assistant on Media to the wife of Ekiti State Governor.

  • Ekiti First Lady clocks 50 without fanfare

    The likeable First Lady of Ekiti State, Erelu Bisi Fayemi, joined the league of golden age on Tuesday without pomp or ceremony. The kind-hearted wife of Governor Kayode Fayemi shelved many programmes that had been lined up to celebrate her 50th birthday.

    Those who should know told Celeb Watch that the postponement had to do with the passing on of the former deputy governor of the state, Mrs Funmi Olayinka, on April 6, 2013. An insider said the First Lady’s 50th birthday shindig had been shifted to October. She only had a thanksgiving service at the Government House Chapel in Ado-Ekiti.

    Born in Liverpool, England on June 11, 1963, Erelu Fayemi is a product of both Nigerian and UK universities. She has acquired professional experience as a gender activist, social change crusader and journalist.