Tag: Fela Durotoye

  • How Nigerians should judge their leaders, by Durotoye

    How Nigerians should judge their leaders, by Durotoye

    Leadership expert and former presidential candidate, Fela Durotoye, has urged Nigerians to fundamentally rethink how they assess political leaders, warning that campaign promises are among the weakest indicators of leadership quality.

    Durotoye made the call during an interview on The Exchange Podcast, hosted by Olufemi Soneye.

    “Every politician sounds good during elections. They all promise heaven on earth,” Durotoye stated further.

    According to him, the real test of leadership lies far away from campaign seasons. “If you want to know who a person really is, don’t listen to what they are saying now. Go and look at what they did when nothing was at stake.”

    Durotoye stressed that leadership character leaves evidence. “Good people leave a trail of goodness behind them,” he said. “Integrity has receipts.”

    He warned voters against emotional decision-making. “Nigerians vote based on tribe, religion, fear and sentiment, but leadership does not respond to sentiment; leadership responds to character.”

    Using philanthropy as an example, Durotoye said generosity that emerges only during campaigns is suspicious. “If somebody never cared about education before politics, how can you trust them with free education?”

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    He emphasised that leadership is consistent. “A leader does not suddenly become good because he wants your vote,” Durotoye said. “Goodness is a habit.”

    According to him, Nigerians often ignore obvious warning signs. “We reward people who have never managed anything successfully and then we are shocked when they fail at governance,” he said.

    He argued that competence must be proven, not assumed. “Leadership is not about intentions; it is about capacity,” he said. “You don’t test-drive leadership with a whole nation.”

    Durotoye urged voters to interrogate candidates’ past roles. “Where have you worked? Who have you led? What did people say after you left?” he asked.

    He linked Nigeria’s leadership crisis to low expectations. “When citizens don’t demand excellence, mediocrity thrives,” he said.

    According to him, cynicism has become normalised. “People say, ‘They are all the same,’ and that lie has destroyed our standards,” Durotoye said.

    He insisted that credible leaders exist. “There are good people with solid track records,” he said. “But they are often ignored because they don’t have money or godfathers.”

    Durotoye called for voter education and civic responsibility. “Democracy only works when citizens do their homework,” he said.

    He warned that shortcuts have consequences. “When you elect leaders without character, you pay for it in insecurity, poverty and broken institutions,” he said.

    Reflecting on Nigeria’s future, Durotoye remained optimistic. “Nigeria will change when Nigerians decide to change what they reward,” he said.

    He concluded with a simple rule. “If the past is empty, the future will be disastrous.”

  • How values, integrity saved me – Fela Durotoye

    How values, integrity saved me – Fela Durotoye

    Former presidential candidate Fela Durotoye has recounted how his integrity and values saved him from troubles in the past. 

    He recalled an incident where he was offered a lucrative contract to provide ethical leadership training across Nigeria but was asked to inflate the invoice.

    Citing his commitment to ethical leadership and his values, Durotoye said he refused. 

    He noted that accepting the offer would have compromised his integrity and undermined the program’s purpose.

    He revealed that three months later, four people in the Presidency were arrested by the EFCC for stealing N425 million allocated for the same ethical leadership programme.  

    Durotoye emphasised that if he had accepted the offer, his reputation would have been tarnished.

    In a video, Durotoye said: “A few years ago, I’ll not say how long, but it’s not this administration, it’s not last administration it’s a while ago let me leave it like that. I got a phone call and it happened to be a  Man of God from Abuja who called me to say Fela, there’s an opportunity that I want you to explore, infact let me be clear with you,you have already gotten it.

    “So I said okay,what is it about? He said we wanna run a program called Unethical leadership and when we did some kind of vetting,we said we were looking for three things, number one we are looking for someone who has experience and expertise on ethical leadership, number two we were looking for someone who had the reputation of experience and expertise on ethical leadership, and the third one we were looking for somebody who had the capacity to run ethical leadership training across 774 local governments in 8 weeks.

    “So the person must have an army of trainers that can train in 50 local governments at the same time on Monday and Tuesday, and those people will now move to another local government and train 50 so therefore in one week they would have trained 700 local governments.

    “He said we know what you’ve been doing raising speakers, you have speakers corner, you have speakers connect we know all of these things,we know what you’ve been doing in the banking sector,we know you’re the only one that has all three,so please give us your invoice. So we went and I called my team together and said make sure everything is at cost,the pencil must be at cost, the bag the paper, everything. 

    “So they said what do we do as management team, I said No, this is for Nigeria, I’m not charging the management fee on it, so we put in a bill of 1.3 Billion at that time, three days later I get a call, congratulations Fela, you have been given the task but we looked at this costing and it’s most likely you did not put anything for yourself, I said No, I didn’t put anything for myself.

    “He said ‘I told them in that meeting,Fela won’t put anything for himself’ so we decided to put something for you. So we’re going to put 700 million so you’d get 2 billion, but send us an invoice for 5 billion, and we need that invoice in the next three days before they close the account for the year. He said ‘what is it you don’t understand,send it in so we can quickly process it for you don’t worry it’s already allocated to you.’

    “I said, but Sir I thought you said this thing is ethical leadership, and I said if we’re doing ethical leadership and we’re already inflating price then what are we teaching? He said ‘ Ahhh Fela please please, you know if you don’t do this thing, you know these people, they’ll just give it to one of their people who would not do any job but will still deliver, so it’s better it’s you that get it, I said No,the gift and the calling of the Lord is without repentance, but the gift of the Lord maketh rich and added no sorrow,he said there’s no sorrow to this. He said you have been doing well for Nigeria, it’s time for Nigeria to do well for You, I said No Sir, I’m sorry.

    “Long story cut short, I had to turn of my phone for 3 days at one point, he was calling me every 30 minutes, at one point I turned off my phone. Pastor Poju what I didn’t realise was that three months later into the New Year, I saw on page four of a newspaper ‘ Four people in the Presidency arrested by EFCC for stealing 425 million Naira for ethical leadership program,now please listen to this ,none of you remember the names of those people even tho you saw the newspaper, do you know what they would have written ‘Durotoye and four others’, and if they had written that, I promise you I would not have been sitting on this chair several years later.

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    “What’s the point that I’m making, you have to get to the point where you value your values to the point when nobody can offer you anything. Only your values can make you turn down what looks like an opportunity to be corrupt”.

    Durotoye also shared his experience serving as Senior Special Assistant to the President on National Values and Social Justice. 

    According to him, he declined all benefits, including a salary, official house, and car, to maintain his independence and integrity.

    “I served for 6 months in the government of this current administration as Senior Special Assistant to President on National values and social justice. We developed a national plan, I did not charge one kobo, I did not collect one Naira as payment, I did not accept official house, I did not accept official car, and when they called me for that opportunity, the gentleman said to me, it’s been very difficult to get your letter out, I said why,he said because there’s no way they can hold you.

    ” You’re not collecting a salary, you’re not collecting official house, you’re not collecting official car, so there’s nothing to threaten you with. I want you to know Sir that in those six months I met people like me, I’m not special , I’m not holier than thou, there are many people that are making this country work, they are called Heroes, they are people who have values, they have left their nation their families to serve Nigeria,but it’s their values that are at work. Sir when we have the right values, Sir when we have the right values, there won’t be corruption in this Land,”, he said.

  • Atiku, Fela Durotoye win in their own ways

    THOSE who think that President Muhammadu Buhari, the candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), was the only winner in the just concluded presidential election missed the point. One or two other candidates can boast of victory in the election in their own ways.

    For instance, the presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, may have lost the ballot, but he recorded two great victories in the sense that he and his erstwhile sworn enemy and former boss, Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo, are now the best of friends on account of the election and he was able to visit the United States of America after more than a decade of trying in vain to do so.

    In Lagos, the candidate of Alliance for New Nigeria (ANN), Fela Durotoye, was wildly celebrated by the congregation at the House on the Rock Church where he had gone to worship the Sunday before the election in which he polled a paltry 16,799 votes. Buhari polled more than 15 million votes and Atiku, the runner-up, polled more than 11 million.

    The church had barely settled down for service when the presiding pastor, Paul Adefarasin, who is never an admirer of Buhari, and like many pentecostal preachers wanted him to lose, noticed the presence of Durotoye. He drew the congregation’s attention to the candidate and commended him for his courage and for running a brilliant campaign. You are a candidate of the future, Adefarasin, SENTRY learnt, declared. Durotoye got a thunderous applause

    The accolade Durotoye could not get from Nigerians, he certainly got from the pastor and the church members. But whether they voted for him six days after is a different kettle of fish because many members of the church were believed to be ‘Atikulated.’

  • Sunset for the Sandhurst oligarchs

    Several hours before the winner of the 2019 presidential polls would officially become known, Fela Durotoye was already being treated to a feast of hi-fives and fist-bumps. Prior to the sermon Sunday morning, worshippers at the House on the Rock temple in Lagos were intimated of the presence of the presidential candidate of Alliance for New Nigeria by presiding Pastor Paul Adefarasin.

    No sooner had the announcement been made and the “homeboy” shown taking a bow on the multi-media screens than a thunderous ovation swept through the mammoth cathedral in Lekki.

    In the ensuing ululation, the congregants would appear to see moral triumph, though knowing that the trophy of electoral victory would go to someone else.

    To many a believer, overall, there indeed was reason to be thankful. Contrary to earlier apprehension across the land, Armageddon did not descend as the elections were relatively peaceful. Only in Rivers, Bayelsa, Lagos and Oyo were there reports of serious violence and death. Even the celestial forces seemed to have cooperated as nowhere was rainfall reported; only for places like Lagos to be drenched in heavy downpour the following day.

    In a voice suffused with emotion, Pastor Adefarasin then paid glowing tributes to a worthy ambassador of the church and one of the “exemplars” of new politics who “ran a campaign with a strong message” for national rebirth.

    “In no distant future, your time will come,” Pastor Adefarasin prophesied, to a deafening applause of the congregation.

    Though votes polled collectively across the 176,000 polling units across the federation by Durotoye and other debutants like Kingsley Moghalu and Yele Sowore may not have not amounted to a significant dent relative to behemoths like APC and PDP, the House on the Rock shepherd expressed the conviction that the activist flavor they jointly have injected into the national conversation in the last few months has triggered a momentum capable of birthing a new generation of political actors driven by altruistic values.

    Undoubtedly, the H.O.R pastor spoke for incurable optimists unable to give up on Nigeria, detesting the status quo as unsustainable, clinging to the stubborn hope of a miracle for a troubled nation to outgrow the iniquity of money politics some day.

    Such optimism is readily illustrated with beacons like that of fresher Bankole Wellington (Banky W) who ran on the platform of MDP. Bidding for Reps in the Eti-Osa Federal Constituency (Lagos), the articulate R&B musician-turned-politician made an impressive showing, besting the candidates of APC and PDP in some neighborhoods on the island.

    Even as the results were still being collated on Sunday, a confident Banky W tweeted: “Regardless of the final outcome, I hope we have inspired enough people in our generation to realize what we can achieve when we stand up for ourselves, and stand together. We must build this movement and sustain the momentum. This is only the beginning. MDP is the future.”

    Indeed, buoyed by what has been described as a new urban disenchantment fueled by growing self-awareness of the preponderant millennials, the language of Nigerian politics is undoubtedly changing. At no time in the nation’s political history has this sort of “rebellion” been widespread.

    For the Moghalus, what remains is to parlay that energy to erecting physical structure tomorrow to wrest power, even while unrelenting in clarifying and amplifying the message already framed. Once rooted in the urban centers where the big votes reside, it would not be long for the contagion to spread to the hinterland.

    But while that great rebirth anchored around a new generation is eagerly awaited, the nation would seem already conscripted into a political dirge of sorts for the surviving rump of perhaps Africa’s longest-reigning military oligarchy after a bruising battle.

    President Buhari’s victory in the presidential polls will only mean literally shutting the mouths of the likes of OBJ, IBB and T. Y. Danjuma. Other than the age of coup, at no other civil era has the nation witnessed such open confrontation of generals. Well, happily, the supremacy battle between the old warriors was finally decided by the ballot and not bullet last weekend.

    With the colossal casualties the Ota chicken farmer suffered in his polling unit in Abeokuta at the hands of APC’s Buhari, the humbling of IBB – the now tired “Prince of Niger” in his native Niger State, and muting of Danjuma – the hitherto much-dreaded Juku warrior across the Middle Belt, one could, therefore, not help chuckling at the coming to pass of the finale one had anticipated in an earlier piece entitled “Intifada of the old Guard” published last year: “Increasingly, the nation is left to witness the adaptation of martial tactics by vengeful old warriors for a purely civil outcome in what may signal the terminal battle within the oldest cadre of the once powerful military oligarchy.”

    Until now, on account of the fabulous wealth they came to own individually in retirement, it would not be an exaggeration to classify the three generals as emboding the caste weaned not only on a tradition of entitlement but also addicted to the culture of impunity. It will then appear a fitting closure to history and lending primacy of public morality that the regicide of the aristocratic/capitalist corps is undertaken by a rather austere fellow general.

    As for IBB, let it however be clarified that his demystification begun much earlier in 2010 with his humbling defeat by Atiku in the PDP primaries, hence a rather rapid deterioration as a political vegetable.

    Indeed, being alumni of elite Sandhust in the United Kingdom, fate had positioned the likes of OBJ, Danjuma and IBB well in the army before the abortion of the nation’s democracy in 1966. Fortune amassed from successful careers in political adventurism would mean they were in vantage place to dictate and shape Nigerian politics for the next half a century, the turn of which tellingly coincided with Buhari’s inauguration as civilian president (2015) and the subsequent parting of ways.

    As this writer had noted in the referenced article: “While they would readily cite ‘national interest’ as their only motivation, not a few Nigerians will contend that the generals’ uprising is actually fueled either by bruised egos or loss of class privileges and business concessions.”

    In last weekend’s endgame, Atiku Abubakar may indeed have worn the captain band in the challenge to Buhari’s reign, but there was no doubt that the PDP chariots were largely teleguided by Buhari’s former comrades in arms in utter repudiation of “esprit de corps”.

    From penning two acerbic open letters, daring OBJ had, in fact, graduated into steady hurling of verbal grenades at Buhari, urging Nigerians to vote out a man “weak in body and unsound in mind” as a matter of “national emergency”, provocatively addressing Atiku as the “in-coming President”.

    However, restating Buhari’s tragic flaws, as the generals did copiously, was not only opportunistic; it inadvertently painted a sickening picture of hypocrisy. Yes, his clinging to the brood, tribe or sect is toxic in the context of national politics. But the restive generals are no angels either. For instance, true, OBJ is relatively more detribalised by association. However, his concept of politics constitutes perhaps the worst violence to the idea of society. Not content at only “fixing” elections in his days as president, he also attempted what was arguably the worst atrocity conceivable in constitutional democracy – emptying the public treasury in the desperate quest to procure life presidency through the “Third Term Agenda”.

    Moreover, the Owu chieftain is forever quick to evangelize on good conduct. But his lifestyle – whether private or public – can hardly be held aloft as shiny model before a Sunday school assembly.

    On the other hand, Danjuma’s raising the alarm against the infamy of genocidal herdsmen and his allegation of a complicit military surely resonates well with the vast community of victims in the Middle Belt and all men and women of conscience elsewhere. However, many are left wondering whether such weighty statement came from the same man under whose nose as OBJ’s Defence minister Odi town in Bayelsa was completely wiped out by rampaging soldiers even as genocide was levied on the defenceless civilian population.

    Well, as an aside, maybe the general from Taraba might seek therapeutic escape now by channeling the remainder of his geriatric energy into philanthropy as a noble vocation started in retirement.

    As for OBJ, the pain of Buhari’s victory must cut deep for his remaining years. Had he kept his earlier words to quit partisan politics and transition fully to “global statesman”, perhaps what had remained of his old myth of invincibility would have been preserved. But the proverbial “shigidi” in the Yoruba fable would never hearken the voice of restraint until after a spell in the plantation of disgrace.

    How ironic that OBJ who, ordinarily, prides himself as Africa’s – if not global – statesman would, in pursuit of platform, descend into ethnic backwaters in his twilight as neo-Afenifere activist for traction against Buhari’s anticipated onslaught. In his desperation, how pathetic that he, like the proverbial returning prodigal child in soliciting posture at the door, would lately crave the company of – in fact, hustle for photo ops with – same Yoruba leaders he had spent all his presidency years either disrobing or persecuting.

    Now, should Buhari redeem his pledge to probe the $16b energy funds, it would require a miracle of biblical proportions for OBJ to completely avoid a day at the court.

    Meanwhile, it is now surely political sunset for the three musketeers.

  • I’m confident of victory – Fela Durotoye

    The presidential candidate of the Alliance for New Nigeria (ANN), Fela Durotoye, has said he is very confident that he will emerge victorious by the time the result of Saturday’s presidential election is announced.

    He said this after casting his vote at polling unit 033 in Victoria Garden City (VGC), Lagos.

    The motivational speaker was welcomed with loud applause by the crowd when he was invited for accreditation and voting. This was shortly after Vice President Yemi Osinbajo and his wife had voted in the same polling booth.

    He however lamented that the voting process has been very slow. “A couple of the card readers are having battery issues because the batteries have run down and they did not have recharge. We learnt they are bringing rechargeable batteries and all of that. The voting process has been very slow and I hope they can speed up the process before voters start getting agitated due to the delays,” he said.

    Read Also: I’m not a politician — Fela Durotoye

    Durotoye, who said he did not vote for himself but “for my party and for a new Nigeria,” said the country is at a juncture which requires “a new direction for our nation and the new generation that will lead us there.”

    He expressed hope that the votes would count. “We hope the process will go well. As we see here. The process is peaceful. We hope that our votes will count and it will be a free, fair and credible election. We have an opportunity to vote new leaders and I hope that is what we are doing,” he said.

  • ‘Nigeria needs promise keepers as leaders’

    The presidential candidate of the Alliance for New Nigeria (ANN) Fela Durotoye, has said that for Nigeria to grow and be among the leaders of the world, it needs leaders who keep promises. Durotoye said this while speaking to news men recently.

    Durotoye stated that Nigerians have suffered enough unfulfilled promises from the past and present governments which have toyed with the hearts of its citizens thereby making life unbearable for many.

    “We want people of integrity, promise keepers that can make promises and keep them. I believe Nigeria deserves a government that is transparent and accountable to its people and these are the values upon which Alliance for New Nigeria (ANN) was founded and that is exactly what it is that we are brining into governance” said Durotoye.

    “For a nation to become truly great, we must have a government that works for everyone and not just a few, a government doesn’t just work for a privileged few and their families but a government that seeks to serve and not rule over its citizens. We don’t want a government of rulers but a government of leaders, leaders of excellence who have proven themselves in their own endeavors in different spheres of life especially even when they did not have any office”.

  • Nigeria needs promise keepers as leaders – Fela Durotoye

    The presidential candidate of the Alliance for New Nigeria (ANN) Fela Durotoye, has said that for Nigeria to grow and be among the leaders of the world, it needs leaders who keep promises. Durotoye said this while speaking to news men recently.

    Durotoye stated that Nigerians have suffered enough unfulfilled promises from the past and present governments who have toyed with the hearts of its citizens thereby making life unbearable to many.

    “We want people of integrity, promise keepers that can make promises and keep them. I believe Nigeria deserves a government that is transparent and accountable to its people and these are the values upon which Alliance For New Nigeria (ANN) was founded and that is exactly what it is that we are bringing into governance” said Durotoye.

    “For a nation to become truly great we must have a government that works for everyone and not just a few, a government doesn’t just work for a privileged few and their families but a government that seeks to serve and not rule over its citizens. We don’t want a government of rulers but a government of leaders, leaders of excellence who have proven themselves in their own endeavors in different spheres of life especially even when they did not have any office”.

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    Durotoye however task Nigeria to come out in mass to build a new nation with new mindset and fresh ideas that would catapult the country to the top among the community of great nations.

    “The new Nigeria is built by a new people with a new mindset and in February we have the opportunity to decide whether we are going for the old that has brought us this far with the penury and poverty that we have suffered or with the new generation of nation builders who will together build a nation that we will be proud of whether you are at home or in diaspora we must restore the pride and glory of Nigeria among nations.”

  • I’m not a politician — Fela Durotoye

    The Presidential Candidate of Alliance for New Nigeria (ANN), Mr Fela Durotoye, on Wednesday said that he was not a politician and would retain the status if elected president.

    Durotoye made the assertion in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria in Lagos at the 2018 The Future Awards Africa in Lagos where he was a guest.

    NAN reports that the Ibadan-born Durotoye, an Alumnus of the John F Kennedy School of Government, is a business consultant, leadership expert and motivational speaker.

    On the reason for running for the highest office in Nigeria, Durotoye said his intention was to represent a generational change in the leadership structure of Nigeria away from politics.

    “I have said it that I am not a politician and will never be a politician. I am a nation builder.

    “I have always insisted that there is a need to take politics out of governance. We need nation builders so that we can have policy formulators and not politics.

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    “I think it is policies that change the life of the people and not politics, the economy of the nation is in the hands of the policy articulators not the politicians.

    “We should be thinking of those that are ready to build this country through good policies and look away from the politicians who are just to milk the country, he said.

    Durotoye urged the electorate to look out for leaders that were trustworthy to move the nation forward and not those that want to get to office for their selfish gains.

    “We need honest people in governance, those that know the onions of good governance. So, in this light we need to talk to our people at the grassroots and educate them.

    “There is a call to action because everybody’s grass has its roots and it is our responsibility to make the call for the desired change.

    “The change we are talking about is not about me but the whole generation of which I belong to, my presidential race is generational.

    “I am frank person and honest, I want everyone to do what is right and engage in the right attitude; we should speak out on what we want to change about governance in Nigeria,’’ he said.

  • Durotoye is ANN presidential candidate

    The  Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has recognised Mr. Fela Durotoye as the presidential candidate of the Alliance for New Nigeria (ANN).

    He will contest for the presidency along with other 78 other candidates during the poll scheduled for February, next year. of other political parties registered for the 2019 General Elec

    According to the statement from the party, the controversy over the choice of flag bearer has ended.

    It dsaid: “This announcement officially ends all doubts about the position of Mr. Fela Durotoye as our Presidential candidate against the numerous propagandas and allegations invented by the enemies of this great party.

    “After our successful presidential primary that held on September 29,  Mr. Fela Durotoye had emerged the party’s candidate with 240 votes.”

    According to the party,erring members of the National Working Committee (NWC) have been suspended.

    It urged Dr. Jay  Samuels, the former Interim Chairman, to stop parading himself as the chairman of the party.

    It added: “Alliance for New Nigeria remains resolute in being the difference amongst all political parties and will continue to uphold her values of Transparency, Integrity, and Excellence in order to birth a New Nigeria that provides opportunities for all Nigeria.”       

     

  • Felabration kicks off on Fela’s posthumous birthday

    The 2018 edition of Felabration tagged ‘Baba @80: Overtaking Overtake’ is set to officially kick off tomorrow, Monday, October 15, 2018 with the Fela Symposium at the NECA House, Agidingbi, Lagos.

    The symposium has as its theme, ‘African Leadership in the Millennium’ with speakers being some presidential candidates for the 2019 general elections – Donald Duke, Omoyele Sowore, Eunice Atuejide and Fela Durotoye.

    Were he still alive, Fela Anikulapo Kuti, whom Felabration is in honour of, would have turned 80 on that day. However, the annual festival founded by his daughter, Yeni Kuti, includes a symposium, school debates, Afrobics dance competition, art competition and a week-long musical concert at the New African Shrine continues to keep his memory alive. This year’s edition runs from October 15 to October 21 2018.

    As usual, there will be several bands coming from different countries to participate in this year’s Felebration.

    On Wednesday at Freedom Park, a bust of Fela Kuti was unveiled. Also, Yeni Kuti, daughter of the late Afrobeats legend and founder of Felabration, disclosed that Felabration Organising Committee has morphed into a Felabration Foundation poised to look into other activities beyond the fanfare which has always accompanied the annual festival.

    “Felabration is not just about music, symposium and school debates,” said Yeni. “It’s also about helping the people.”

    She also disclosed that due to paucity of funds, top foreign artistes won’t be around but bands and delegates from different countries are expected to join in the week-long fiesta.

    Chairman of the Felabration Organising Committee, Theo Lawson, also noted that though Felabration is base is in Lagos, the festival is being taken up across the world.

    “It is no longer necessarily tied to Lagos or Nigeria alone,” he said. “Fela’s music is out there, inspiring people and groups all over to activate something.”

    The Felabration Secondary Schools Debates held on Wednesday and 10 Lagos secondary schools debated the topic ‘State Police In Nigeria; To Be Or Not To Be.’ While Rainbow College, Surulere, Lagos won first place, Vivian Fowler Memorial College came second and Ipakodo Senior Grammar School, Ikorodu was third. However, the 10 participating schools all got a piano each, courtesy of the Felabration Organising Committee.