Tag: father

  • Man allegedly kills father, injures mother

    Man allegedly kills father, injures mother

    A 27-year-old man, Ifeanyi Osita Oguejiofor, from Ezimuko Nsukwu in Abatete, Idemili North Local Government of Anambra State has allegedly killed his father,  Osita, with a with a knife.

    He allegedly injured his mother with the same knife.

    The Divisional Police Officer in-charge of Ogidi Division, Mr. Mark Ijarafu, who confirmed the incident, told The Nation yesterday that the suspect had been arrested.

    He said investigation was on.

    Ijarafu noted that the suspect had no mental problems, “although neighbours said he smokes Indian hemp.”

    It was learnt that trouble started on the day about 8am when the man, a commercial motorcyclist (okada rider), demanded money from his father to buy a new motorcycle, since, according to him, the one he was using had become old.

    Our source said his father told him that he had no money, since he had just bought him a new engine to replace the old one in the motorcycle.

    The source said the suspect did not like his father’s response. He went to the kitchen, took a knife, which he used to stab his father to death.

    The eyewitness said the suspect also attacked his mother, who screamed for help.

    He added: “The woman reportedly fell down. The suspect thought she had died and in a bid to escape punishment, he tried to commit suicide by stabbing himself in the chest.

    “The woman shouted for help and this attracted passers-by and neighbours, who alerted a vigilance group and the Ogidi Divisional Police Officer, Mr. Ijarafu, who went to the scene with his Divisional Crime Officer, Mr. Fidelis Eyisi.”

    The suspect confessed: “I did what my spirit told me to do.”

    Ijarafu said the body had been taken to Iyi-Enu Mission Hospital mortuary in Ogidi, while the woman had been hospitalised.

    He added: “The suspect is in our detention. Investigation is on. He will be arraigned after investigation.”

  • Father arraigned for ‘failing’  to pay son’s bill

    Father arraigned for ‘failing’ to pay son’s bill

    A 45-year-old man, Bashiru Olamilekan, who allegedly refused to pay his son’s N325, 000 bill and abandoned him in hospital for seven months, has been arraigned at an Ikeja Chief Magistrates’ Court, Lagos.

    The accused, a bricklayer, who lives at 15, Babayemi Street, Alagbado, a Lagos suburb, is being tried for breach of peace and refusing to pay his son’s bill.

    Prosecutor Clifford Ogu told the court that the offences were committed between June 25, 2017 and January 2018 at Rem-Yem Hospital, Ijaiye, Lagos.

    He said the accused’s eight-year-old son was knocked down by a driver and was taken to hospital.

    “Since then, the accused refused to show up, leaving the son and his wife to fend for themselves.

    “The driver who knocked down the boy gave the accused money, but he refused to pay the bill,” Ogu said.

    He added that the accused person’s son had been in hospital since then and was discharged last September.

    “The hospital management wrote a petition against the accused and he was arrested. The hospital bill is N325,000 ,” the prosecutor said.

    The offences violate sections 166(d) and 321 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015.

    The accused, however, pleaded not guilty.

    The Chief Magistrate, Taiwo Akanni, granted him bail at N100,000 with two sureties and adjourned the case till February 26.

     

  • ‘Father threw me out because of art’

    ‘Father threw me out because of art’

    Former National President, Society of Nigerian Artists (SNA) Kolade Oshinowo will turn 70 on February 6. In 2004, the Federal Government conferred the renowned artist with the National Productivity Order of Merit Award (NPOM). Oshinowo speaks with Assistant Editor (Arts) OZOLUA UHAKHEME on the price he paid for choosing to study fine art, why he left King’s College, Lagos as an art teacher, his post- retirement experience and his love for drawing, among other issues.

    Going by his track record Kolade Oshinowo, 70   has attained the status of a living legend. He rose to become Deputy Rector, Yaba College of Technology, Lagos between 1992 and 1996 before retiring on February 28, 2008. Apart from being a prolific painter, Oshinowo’s concerns go beyond aesthetics on canvas. He uses his paintings  to draw attention to critical issues in the society.

    In 2016, during his solo exhibition Changing Times, held at Terra Kulture Gallery, Lagos, Oshinowo noted that the nation was going through troubling times. “My current output includes works that attempt to reflect our dark side and the consequences of several wrong choices we have made as a nation. Negative reports have invariably overshadowed what we always assumed to be our ‘normal’ life. Our state of wickedness and penchant for ‘man’s inhumanity to man’ has continued to assault our collective psyche, robbing us of our genuine desire for progress,” he said.

    He has been a campaigner for a saner society using his paintings since 1998 and he is still painting. “There is hopelessness in the land, so we seek God’s intervention. I work with a great deal of energy and passion; unending streams of responses to various stimuli within our socio-economic, political, cultural and environmental space. Decades of uninterrupted studio practice, searching, researching, exploring and discovering has often resulted in my desire to outdo myself.

    “I try to subject reality to a preferential process of selection and choosing only what  is in concert or harmony with my own disposition. I allow my paintings to talk to me in a meditative engagement process in the course of my work. This dialogue has enabled me to give life to a large body of work,” he said.

    Turning 70

    It is a thing of joy to be celebrated at 70. But, do I really deserve it? I just try to enjoy what I do and also enjoy the peace of mind. My private life is difficult to separate from my academic life.

    I joined Yaba College of Technology as a 25-year-old man in 1974. Prof Yusuf Grillo influenced my joining the college. Until then I was a teacher at King’s College, Lagos, but observed that most of my students would drop art while enrolling for O’Levels because they want to study engineering or medicine. On that basis, the option to join Yaba Tech became attractive. But, having spent over three decades there, my students were becoming Heads of Department and Dean. So, it was a signal that my time was up. And I threw in the towel 10 years ago.

    I always tell my friends never wait in doing anything worth doing now.

    For me, to be 70 is a matter of numbers  but age is telling on the frame no doubt. In those days, I could paint for seven  to eight hours non-stop, but today I have to stop and continue again. One needs to slow down a little. However, making it to 70 in good health is God’s grace.

    Realisation of his dream

    If I had followed my late father’s instructions, I wouldn’t have been fulfilled. And if I have to come back to this world again, I will remain an artist. I am glad there are lots of art schools in the country today unlike during our time.

    My secondary school days were memorable. My late father believed strongly in only three professions: Medicine, Engineering and Law. He wanted me to study sciences. As a result, he moved me from one school to another in search of where sciences are well taught. Fortunately for me, in the course of that movement, I got to a school that has a good art room. That was my main attraction. In that school, the art teacher, Pa Osu often handed over the class to me to take charge. In fact, three persons made me realised my dream as artist.

    Pa Osu, my art teacher, is one of them. He would enter me for art competition without my knowledge. Most times, I got awards and I would be presented with item on the assembly ground. The second person was Mr. Banjoko, the manager at the bank where I worked after leaving secondary school. While at the bank, I used to sketch many of our customers without knowing that the manager was watching me. One day he asked what would I like to study? Unknown to me, he had checked the sketch pad in my drawer in my absence and saw all the drawings.

    Shocked by the question I summoned courage to answer I would study for AIB and ICAN, which are professional courses in the banking industry. Unsatisfied, he repeated the question again. It was then I realised he was up to something serious. I then told him I would like to study fine art. He replied saying go and get admission and leave the bank.

    The third person was my late sister who cared for me when my father threw me out of the house because of art. She gave me support when it matters most in my life then.

    First bold step

    When I was seeking admission into Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, I went with my drawings while some students went with giant paintings on canvas. I have always been  the champion for drawing skill. If you are good as an artist, you cannot starve except you are lazy. Drawing skill comes naturally. My focus has been on studio practice despite my years in the academy. And as my incentive to drawing, I will give a prize for it on my birth day.

    Post retirement years

    The whole essence of my retirement was to have enough time for my studio work. Again, artists do not retire. Since I left Yaba Tech 10 years ago, I have had more time to paint because no supervising of any project, no rushing to sign in at school and no teaching of students. It actually gave me more time to practise and the beauty of it all is that I retired to something tangible. Sometimes at some social functions I do go blank with little or no interest in the happenings around me because my mind was in the studio.

    Events lined up for his celebration

    Art community in Lagos has set aside the month of February to celebrate the former Deputy Rector Yaba College of Technology, Lagos beginning with a three-day workshop organised by Prof Peju Layiwola at the Women and Youth Art Foundation in Surulere Lagos on February 5. This will be followed by a drawing session organised by Olu Ajayi tagged Kolade Oshinowo Before the Artists at the Art Complex, Yaba College of Technology on Thursday February 8. There will also be an Art Stampede in his honour on Friday February 9 at the Art Complex Yabatech, by 4pm.

    On Saturday February 10, a retrospective exhibition of Oshinowo’s works will hold at Mydrim Gallery, Ikoyi Lagos by 4pm. Also, the SNA Lagos chapter will also be celebrating Oshinowo during its SNA Week, which shall hold from February 16 to 23. On February 17, at Terra Kulture Lagos, Moses Oghagbon will hold an exhibition in celebrating Kolade Oshinowo.

    The School of Art, Design and Printing Technology, Yaba College of Technology will on February 23 hold an exhibition tagged Living legend: A tribute to Mr. Kolade Oshinowo. There will be an international conference from April 4 to 6, featuring scholars and writers who will unravel Oshinowo, the man and his art, and provide answers to who is Kolade Oshinowo? Papers presented at the conference will be published into a book.

    Oshinowo will be honoured with a Lifetime Achievement Award at a gala night on April 6 sponsored by the Society of Nigerian Artists. All the events are being organised by Lagos State government, Society of Nigerian Artists, Yaba College of Technology, Department of Creative Arts, University of Lagos, Nigerian Society for Education through Arts, Cultural and Creative Arts Foundation, Agufon Publications, Fashion Designers Association of Nigeria, CORA, Mydrim Gallery, OYASAF, Phephe Planet Productions among others.

  • Father, brother held for incest

    Father, brother held for incest

    A father, Segun Durojaiye, and his brother, Emmanuel, were yesterday charged with incest at a Yaba Chief Magistrates’ Court, Lagos.

    Segun and Emmanuel were arraigned for allegedly defiling Segun’s 16-year-old daughter for four years.

    The 52-year-old father, who resides at Baba-Benja Street, and 44 year-old Emmanuel, of 10, Durojaiye Street, in Oreyo, Ikorodu, Lagos, are facing a charge of defilement.

    The prosecutor, Ibijoke Akinpelu, an Assistant Superintendent (ASP), told the court that the accused committed the offence between 2014 and 2017 at their home.

    He said the father began sleeping with his daughter in 2014 after she confided about her uncle’s improper show of affection.

    Akinpelu said after the victim’s stepmother died in 2014, she was asked to stay a few weeks with her uncle.

    “The victim broke her silence after she had had a series of abortions and was helplessly losing weight from the trauma.

    “The case was reported at a police station and the accused were immediately arrested,” she said.

    The prosecutor said the offence contravened Section 137 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015 (Revised).

    News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Section 137 prescribes life imprisonment for child rape.

    The accused pleaded not guilty.

    Magistrate Oluwatoyin Oghre granted the accused N1 million bail each, with two sureties.

    She said one of the sureties should be a Level 15 officer with a titled document, or a traditional ruler.

    Oghre said the sureties should show evidence of three-year tax payment to the Lagos State Government (LASG).

    She adjourned the case till March 12.

  • Father of oil magnate kidnapped in Benue

    Father of oil magnate kidnapped in Benue

    Gunmen have again  kidnapped Atser Kyausu, the octogenarian father of Makurdi-based businessman.

    Kyausu had once been kidnapped from his Vandeikya Local Government home in 2016.

    The late Special Adviser to the governor, Mr. Denen Igbana, had led security men and rescued him in Kwande council.

    The gang leader was killed while three gang members were arrested, tried and remanded in Makurdi prison.

    Police spokesman Moses Yamu said the gunmen stormed Kyausu’s house in a red Toyota.

    “On December 28, they bundled him into the vehicle and drove away; his whereabouts have remained unknown since then,” Yamu said.

    As at last night, the gunmen were yet to contact the family or ask for ransom.

    The victim’s son, known by his business name Kyabiz, appealed to the kidnappers to release his father as he was sick.

    Yamu, however, said a manhunt for the culprits is on.

     

  • Father and son

    Father and son

    In the beginning was the father. The son was yet in the womb when a certain Koro was misbegotten by the father Bode George. Many believed that Koro was the legitimate son and had earned the right to the cot to suckle on the milk of childhood.

    But Jimi Agbaje came in from another mother, and wanted to be the son. The father preferred Jimi because he thought he would be the right heir, the soldier he would deploy to do battle to bestow legitimacy on the family. Jimi, he swore, would unseat the dynasty and usher in a new era of father and son, one a soldier, the other a pharmacist. Who did not know that a big chemistry was afoot. The soldier suffers an injury, the pharmacist son dangles the right aid.

    This set off an earthquake for familial combo.  But not quite long after, Koro cried foul over the internecine malice of an intrigue. Legitimacy belonged not to the rules but to the winner. Jimi became the standard bearer of battle.

    So, hubris came early to Jimi, as the story went. Before the election day, Agbaje had started to assert the power of royalty. I am not referring to his threat to mount Igwes on thrones in the megacity. That has turned out to be a sideshow in the embroiling theatre. He would side-line the moustachioed George with his fuddy-duddy crowd. He had been his own prophet, and Agbaje saw that he would be the potentate of PDP in Lagos. He thought he was cruising to victory. Each had pissed in the pond between them, and a classic oedipal rage had swirled in the family.

    To worsen the tale, the family failed to win. Failure has many orphans. Suddenly, everyone knew George had divorced his son, and vice versa. The soldier father had been wounded in battle, and the son, too, had been routed. The pharmacy had no answer for the wound. So the family, in a manner of speaking, bled to death.

    Koro, better known as Musiliu Obanikoro, flailed in vain to restore his place in the family. He had no prayer, so he moved away and was embraced by the winning party. Meanwhile, father and son sulked peevishly in silence, until another warfront erupted in the PDP.

    This is the battle for the chairmanship of the PDP. If they had lost favour in their homestead, they thought they could find traction on a bigger, wider stage. After all, as the Good Lord said, a prophet is not without honour save by his own people.

    Father and son took the battle up there. George saw him as the 21st century Absalom who wanted to overthrow and slay his father. Agbaje saw himself in the innocence of Oedipus. But they both fought, and fierce was the contest. It, however, ended in an anti-climax. Neither father nor son won. They did not only lose, the party decided that their homestead had none of the beauty or majesty required to bedeck the position of party chairman.

    Father was obviously furious. He wanted that position badly. He had been a party bulwark, while he regarded Agbade as a reed. The humiliation was serious. Agbaje quietly retreated from the race. He knew it was over. Father and son, who should help heal each other, waited for their very conquerors to come to them to say, sorry. In the midst of the humiliation, one of the main men of the PDP had spoken with contempt about their homestead, the southwest.

    But George and Agbaje became the metaphor of the oedipal tension in the larger PDP. There, the fathers of the PDP, including Ibrahim Babangida, Goodluck Jonathan and peripatetic rambler Atiku Abubakar, had wanted to decide who should chair the top seat. The sons, who we know as the governors, decided to push the fathers away.

    Unknown to George and Agbaje, they had sown the seed of potential patricide in the party. They poisoned the larger pool of the PDP. The tool of battle is money. A father loses his power over his son, if he does not control the purse string. Agbaje did not rely on George for money to run his campaign for the governor post in Lagos. He relied on Jonathan and the party at the centre. George realised his impotence. He could not fell the son.

    On the bigger PDP canvas, the governors had money. The Wikes and co, had the nest, and the old goons could not match them dollar for dollar. Not even the great Atiku, who learned that the governors had something as potent as money: delegates. In the end, they governor sons prevailed over the fathers like IBB and Jonathan. Jonathan found himself fighting against the so-called “unity list.” In the final hour, united they stood. But for George and Agbaje, divided they fell.

    It is not good when fathers fall. It is worse when sons fall as well. Okonkwo succeeded in order to vitiate the public folly of his father. Abraham had faith enough to gain redemption in the eyes of Isaac. “God shall provide,” he assured his son.

    The Kennedy sons, including John Fitzgerald, saw their father soar in American politics and commerce, and it buoyed their rise. Never mind that his first son Joe, just like Awo’s first son Segun, did not survive to carry the father’s wishes as they envisioned. But father and son parted with each in blessedness of thoughts about the other. J.F.k’s biographer Arthur M. Schlesinger in his book titled A Thousand Days relates the intimacy and spartan discipline between Joe Kennedy snr and his sons.

    That was clear in George Sander’s Booker-winning novel, Lincoln in the Bardo, where the United States 16th president visits limbo to commune with his departed son. Biographers tell of how Lincoln grieved about him. He died of typhus. “That’s my boy who died,” he was quoted as saying when he pointed to his framed picture on the wall as a way of dealing with his grief.

    We might say that Agbaje was the Absalom and he had killed his political father. Whether he will survive like characters of Dostoyevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov is yet to be seen. But the more tempting comparison is the story of Russian writer Ivan Turgenev in his novel, Fathers and Sons. He tracks a medical student Basarov who falls from idealist to a craven opportunist. Agbaje has no ideal although he brandished a phony progressive credentials in the past until the true colour pops out of his skin in their iridescent ugliness. Credentials without credence.

    The real issue is whether the PDP has the moral power to look inward and deal with its mammoth contradiction, even as APC still battles with its own existential worms.

     

    Ode to teachers

    The following paragraph disappeared in transit to this page last week, no thanks to the quirks of technology.

    “I want to thank Joe Agbro, a friend and critic of In Touch, who calls every Monday morning to critique my offering. I call him Uncle Joe. Also his nephew Victor Agbro, a friend since 1974. Special thanks also go to Olu Adebayo, a regular and profound commentator on this column, although I have never met him and have spoken to him perhaps twice over the years. Thanks to fiery columnist Louis Odion who featured column with The Sun during my U.S. sojourn, and of course Mike Awoyinfa as editor in chief.”

  • Father, son jailed for sale of Ogogoro

    Justice O.A. Faji, of a Federal High Court in Asaba Judicial Division in Delta State, has sentenced a father and son to 14 and 10 years’ imprisonment for possession, production, sale and manufacture of a local gin, Ogogoro.

    They were also jailed for storing the drink in an unsanitary condition.

    The convicts were in 2015 arraigned on a five- count charge contrary to Section 1 of the Counterfeit and Fake Drugs and Unwholesome Processed Food (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act. CAP C34 LFN 2004.

    Justice Faji sentenced Jonathan Uti, 58, to seven years’ imprisonment without an option of fine, on counts 1 and 2.

    Isaac Uti, 28, was sentenced to five years’ imprisonment on counts 1 and 2.

    The judge sentenced Jonathan to 18 months’ imprisonment and ordered him to pay a fine of N250, 000 on count 5, while Isaac was sentenced to 18 months’ imprisonment without an option of fine.

    The jail terms are to run concurrently.

    Justice Faji held that the offences constituted a serious health hazard, wondering how many innocent persons might have died due to the illicit trade.

    Counsel to the defendants Lordson Agbata urged the court to temper justice with mercy, as the defendants are first offenders and are remorseful.

    But lawyer to the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) Adumen Jombo Washington said the culprits should be punished to act as a deterrent to others.

     

     

     

     

  • Father locks children in room for one year

    • Deprived them of food, sunlight

    A 50- year- old father, Aminu Abdulazeez, has been arrested for locking up his two children in a room for a year and depriving them of food and sunlight.

    His neighbours in Maitumbi, a suburb of Minna, said the children, a boy and girl, aged nine and eight, were never seen outside of the house since their mother died of cancer over a year ago.

    The children were rescued by the Child’s Right Agency after neighbours alerted officials.

    The rescued children looked malnourished with multiple marks on their backs, indicating they suffered daily beatings from their father.

    Abdulazeez, a civil servant, was away at work when the agency officials stormed the residence with policemen.

    He was arrested and detained on his arrival.

    It was gathered that the children were taken to the General Hospital and diagnosed to be acutely malnourished and depressed.

    They are also said to be undergoing therapy to recover from trauma.

    Director General of the Niger State Child’s Right Agency, Barrister Mariam Kolo confirmed the incident to our correspondent.

    She said neighbours alerted the agency to the development.

    “Whenever he is going outside, he locks the children in the room. He denied them sunlight, food and education,” she said.

    “The neighbours who are aware of the conditions of the children felt they had to inform the authorities otherwise the children will die.”

    When rescued, she confirmed “they looked like children with kwashiorkor.”

    Kolo said they are receiving treatment at the hospital after which they would be taken to an orphanage for recovery.

    On the father, she said: “We need to know if he is mentally affected or if he did it deliberately.

    “The outcome of his medical examination would determine how we would proceed with the case.”

    The Director General commended neighbours for being concerned about the children and contacting the agency.

     

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Why do you think he did that to his friend?

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    What memories do you have of your late father?

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    How did your mother cope with the situation back then?

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

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

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

  • Father remanded for allegedly sleeping with daughter

    An Ado-Ekiti Chief Magistrates’ Court in Ekiti State yesterday ordered the remand of a 55-year-old man, Adeyanju Basiri, in prison custody for allegedly sleeping with his daughter.

    Police prosecutor Monica Ikebulo told the court that the accused allegedly committed the offence on September 11 at Irona Street, Ado-Ekiti.

    She said the accused and a herbalist at large were arrested for allegedly attempting to use the defendant’s seven-year-daughter for money ritual.

    Ikebulo said the accused claimed he slept with his daughter nine times.

    She said the accused told the police he always used a white handkerchief given to him by the herbalist to clean his daughter’s private part after having sex with her.

    The prosecutor said the offence contravened Section 31(2) of the Child’s Right Law.

    She told the court she had duplicated and sent the case file to the Directorate of Public Prosecution (DPP) for legal advice.

    The plea of the accused was not taken, as his counsel, Mr. Simeon Ojo, sought adjournment, pending the legal advice.

    The Magistrate, Mrs. Dolapo Akosile, ordered that the accused be remanded in prison custody till outcome of the legal advice from the DPP.

    He adjourned the case till October 12 for further hearing.