Tag: Gani Fawehinmi

  • One year on

    One year on

    Lagos has always been a place of small beginnings. A small port town, a puny army, a humble royalty, a seeming patch of land, straggles of settlers. During the Yoruba Wars, it snorted under the shadows of valiant horsemen and kabooms of gunfire exchanges.

    But it has not taken its smallness with humility. It is as though it is haunted by Prophet Isaiah: “A little shall become a thousand and a small one a strong nation.”

    In the past century and a half, Lagos has dwarfed everyone. It has moved from a tiny port town to a towering harbinger of commerce. It hosts the banks and money, the entrepreneur, soldiers of destiny and the great bards. The nationalist twitted the imperialist, from Macaulay to Azikiwe to Awolowo.

    Its heroes have always followed a trajectory from the unknown. I.K. Dairo, Fajemirokun, Gani Fawehinmi, Awolowo, et al. It is the place where Nigerians have patented their geniuses. One of such narratives is in the offing.

    The story of Akinwunmi Ambode had such a heady start from when he became his party candidate. The PDP had its Jimi Agbaje, and he was in the flush of PDP largesse. His supporters said he was the one. Some young and some professionals and some ethnic stalwarts coalesced. They said Agbaje was the winning formula. They said he had the gift of the garb, a winsome look, a charisma that did not go beyond a nifty suit and rakish fila, or Yoruba cap. He spoke about grandiose topics like “ocean economy” and a murky agenda for the youth.

    Agbaje wore the false garb gladly. He pivoted towards the idol of the tribe, and he raked up tribal hate among Lagosians. He said he was going to elevate the Igbo as a kingdom, at least fiefdoms, in Lagos by ranking their chief on an equal pedestal with the Oba of Lagos. President Jonathan rolled into Lagos to back his separatist and Balkanising agenda. In the heat of the campaign, they had decided to give phantom contracts and offices.

    In fact, a crop of ethnic lawyers amassed money to throw a victory party a week to the polls to celebrate the “takeover of Lagos” as though it was some form of military encounter. Lagosians thought differently and voted for commonsense over clannishness, continuity over brashness, competence over showmanship.

    But as governor, he did not slide into a party. A few stumbles happened early on. Crime smeared the city, and here and there we witnessed fear and trembling. A mere anarchy of hoodlums took over streets and some major arteries. Compounded by a heady traffic snarl, Lagos cast back to military-era melee. PDP critics leapt into the fray and thought that the Lagos voters erred. A temporary Agbaje nostalgia rent the political space. As Mahatma Ghandi noted, “we shall stumble and fall and rise again…”

    So, Governor Ambode never expressed public alarm or rhetorical opprobrium. All he assured Nigerians was that he was working, and he soon would turn everything to rights. A few months later, he fazed the city with an unprecedented supply of security cars, motorcycles, helicopters, walkie-talkies and other gizmos. A new regime of safety suddenly burst into town. The crime lords retreated. Also in a short while, the traffic snarl was contained.

    As he turns one as the helmsman of Lagos, few remember their grumbles. Even the critics have become grudging adulators. Following a tradition of Asiwaju Tinubu and Fashola, he has stamped his signature early. His appetite for development is big. I told a few critics who read this column that they should wait and they would be convinced. I said I had met him a few times before the election and knew he bounced with great zeal, ideas and competence. His resume, I said, was one of the best for governance we ever had in this country. Having worked in all parts of Lagos, he knew where the city hurt and healed.

    Some of them wrote to flay him in the early going, and I counseled patience. Once he settled in, some of them drew my attention to some things he had done even before I knew.

    Some of his early kudos have been in the area of rural Lagos. His infrastructure work, building roads with dual carriage patterns and opening some of the rustic part of the city have impressed citizens. I drove through the Third Mainland Bridge one night, and my car stopped when the security gadget tripped. I had no fear because the bridge was almost like daylight. The long, serpentine stretch of the bridge over the lagoon revealed every detail of lanes and automobile zipping by. No hoodlum could have menaced me without consequences, especially with police also at the ready. A friend once told me that right from work to home at night, all the streets are lighted.

    One of his virtues is his knowledge of the economy. With the economy in bad straits, it now looks like serendipity that an Ambode should hold the state. And he has proved the man to do it. With deft management of the infrastructure of collection, Lagos is perhaps the only prosperous state in the federation today. In the United States, California and New York are regarded separately as world economies, just like Ontario in Canada. Lagos can stand today as an economy in Africa, besting most countries. In the first quarter of this year, the state curled in N101 billion as revenue. This is why Lagos can also boldly pursue grand projects. For instance, Ambode just signed an MOU for the fourth mainland bridge, which could be completed before his first term is over, all things being equal. He also has started what might be the medical mecca of West Africa in Ikoyi.

    He has turned a whole community into a habitat of light, in Ibeju-Lekki where the government is paying the light bill until they get their metres.

    He is doing all these and more without what some thought was his inability to give soaring oratory. Ambode is a man of policy, not a figure of speech. He acts and allows his work, not words, to tell his story. The narrative, so far, is turning him into the alpha governor of today.

     

    Goodbye, Ali

    It was in 1979 at the Tafawa Balewa Square, and I was a student trying to board a bus home. Suddenly, a crowd surged outside the façade of the stadium, and I looked. To my astonishment, the man at the centre was a light-skinned fellow of buxom build faking boxing exchanges with little boys who were ecstatic to return their own fake jabs. The man, with handsome look and dainty footwork, was Muhammed Ali. He was visiting Nigeria to campaign over some humanitarian issue.

    That was my only sighting of Ali. The Greatest died, and I join others to mourn this great black man. He lived a life that is lacking today. A world where religion can be a platform for humane causes. A world where tribe and cant have replaced a multicultural bliss. We have BREXIT, Trump, ISIS, Boko Haram. He was a pugilist for justice. He fought against racism as a conscientious objector when others allowed themselves to die in an America that treated them as sub-human.

  • Law students remember Gani Fawehinmi

    FIVE years after his death, Gani Fawehinmi, a frontline lawyer and human rights activist, remained in the hearts of many.

    Law students of the University of Lagos (UNILAG), under the aegis of the Gani Fawehinmi Students’ Chambers, held an event to honour the late legal icon.

    The event with the theme: Consolidating democratic norms through credible electoral process, was attended by the Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola, his predecessor and first military governor of the state, Rear Admiral Ndubuisi Kanu (rtd), and Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola.

    The students said the event was to consolidate the achievements of the late Fawehinmi whose legacies, they said, made impact on the lives of many.

    Fashola praised the late human rights activist, saying Fawehinmi was a legal brand made of best values.

    He advised the students to emulate the legacies left by Fawehinmi, which he mentioned to include hard work, justice, fairness, rule of law and equality before the law, probity, accountability and liberty, among others.

    The governor urged the students to be courageous, saying it was the best virtue that could help them to go far in life.

    Speaking to CAMPUSLIFE, Lawal Abiola, 100-Level Law, said: “I am very grateful to the officials of the Gani Fawehinmi Chambers for this exhilarative and insightful programme. If I hadn’t come to grasp a first-hand experience, I may never have forgiven myself.”

    During the event,  the Head of Chambers, Lord Henry, who gave awards to guests and some students for their “efforts in making the programme a success”.

    Others at the event include frontline constitutional lawyer, Prof Itse Sagay (SAN),  Dean of the Faculty of Law, Prof Akin-Ibidapo Obe, Ms Basirat Fawehinmi; Barr Taiwo Taiwo, a former Vice President of the Nigerian Bar Association, Ikeja branch  and Senator Oluremi Tinubu, who was represented.

  • Group marches through Bayelsa streets for Fawehinmi

    Group marches through Bayelsa streets for Fawehinmi

    Members of a non-governmental organisation, Edoni-Iza Freemen Educational Foundation (EFEF), on Tuesday marched the streets of Yenagoa, Bayelsa State capital, to commemorate the fifth anniversary of the death of late human rights activist and constitutional lawyer, Chief Gani Fawehinmi.

    Fawehinmi died on September 5, 2009.

    The members who displayed placards eulogising the virtues of the late activist chanted songs in his memory and ended their movement at Opolo junction area of the capital city.

    Their activities caught the admiration of passers-by and motorists who stopped momentarily to catch a glimpse of their display.

    The convener of the group, Mr. Lucky Ifiki, said Fawehinmi was too noble for Nigerians to forget him easily and sweep his ideals under the carpet.

    He asked the Federal Government to dedicate a day to be called Gani Fawehinmi Day to give people the opportunity to promote good ideologies and patriotism.

    He said: “We use the opportunity to tell Nigerians that Fawehinmi needs to be celebrated. The government should dedicate a day for him so that Nigerians would have the opportunity to promote good ideologies such as patriotism.

    “By doing so, we will systematically have a good society. In our social culture, we are promoting nude life, meaningless music. The ideology of Fawehinmi is too noble for us to sweep it under the carpet. We decided to come and celebrate this man. It is going to be a yearly affair.”

    He recalled how the late activist spent over 40 years of his life fighting for the masses, agitating for good governance and a better Nigeria.

    He further reminded Nigerians that Fawehinmi stood against the oppression of the military and contributed in returning the country on the path of democracy.

    He said the abducted Chibok girls were missing the presence of the late social crusader, adding that if he had been alive he would have carried out earth-shaking protests to secure their freedom.

    “If Fawehinmiwere to be alive, he would have been on the street every second carrying out protest. Such activities are attached to his blood. He would have been mobilising us and speaking boldly and loudly.

    “Today, the state of affairs had gone worse because the same people who frustrated him are the same people who are promoting terrorism and wasting our daughters’ lives,” he said.

  • Lagos accuses PDP members of vandalising Gani Park

    Lagos accuses PDP members of vandalising Gani Park

    LAGOS State yesterday accused Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) members of vandalising the Gani Fawehinmi Park in Ojota, Lagos during a rally.

    Commissioner for the Environment, Mr Tunji Bello expressed shock at the level of destruction.

    He said the platform and base of the late human rights lawyer’s statue was damaged; the railings and green lawns were trampled on, while the solar light panels were vandalised.

    “With this act of vandalisation, the PDP again demonstrated their penchant for violence,” Bello said in statement by the ministry’s spokesman Fola Adeyemi

    He said the party members did not only damage the park, they “inflicted great pains and discomfort to the entire users of Ikorodu Road and Ojota areas, while also denying them the right to trade and earn a living during the lock-down of the entire area.”

    He wondered how a PDP-led Federal Government that makes billions from the Apapa port cannot fix the roads in the axis which have become a nightmare to users.

    “The Lagos State Government is pained by the sufferings of innocent Lagosians who eke a living in this axis and are daily locked up in a traffic jam that lasts for hours after a hard  day’s work.

    “Is this the type of hardship they want to bring to Lagosians?” Bello asked.

     

  • Group unveils document on  regional autonomy

    Group unveils document on regional autonomy

    A coalition of Yoruba youth organisations has advised delegates to the National Conference to negotiate the future of Nigeria and set it on the path of development.

    At the unveiling of a publication, “Regional Autonomy…or Nothing”, at the Gani Fawehinmi Park in Ojota, Lagos, yesterday, Prince Tokunbo Ajasin, son of the first civilian governor of Ondo State, the late Chief Michael Adekunle Ajasin, said the pan-Yoruba groups, led by the Afenifere Renewal Group (ARG), are convinced that regionalism is the most viable instrument for a stronger and united Nigeria.

    Ajasin said anybody who does not want a change in the statues quo does not wish the country well.

    He said it was inconceivable that northern leaders were leading the campaign against the devolution of power and restructuring of government, adding that it is either regional autonomy or nothing for the Yoruba.

    Ajasin said: “If any region needs a stronger federating unit with greater capacity to provide education, health, security, wealth creation and other social amenities, it is the North where strong links exist between poverty and the conscription of innocent youths into extremist tendencies. It appears Northern leaders are not concerned and have no plan for the teeming youths in the region, as long as they are able to continue clinging to their hold on power.”

    Listing the demands of the Yoruba as contained in the publication, he said states in Yoruba land want a regional government with its constitution and unfettered political and fiscal autonomy, except on issues it agrees to cede to the Federal Government.

    Ajasin said: “The Southwest must include all Yoruba people outside the imposed artificial boundaries in Edo, Delta, Kogi and Kwara states.”

    Other demands include: a negotiated legislative Exclusive, Concurrent and Residual list; a unicameral legislature at the centre; a parliamentary form of government at the centre; the right to self-determination or the right to secede; establishment of regional police; fiscal federalism and resource control; and a special status for Lagos.

    They also want the outcome of the 2014 National Conference to form the basis for a new constitution.

     

  • Gani Fawehinmi lecture holds Jan. 15

    Gani Fawehinmi lecture holds Jan. 15

    The late Chief Gani Fawehinmi Annual lecture, organised by the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Ikeja Branch, will hold on January 15 at the Lagos Airport Hotel, Ikeja at 10am.

    According to the Chairman of the branch, Mr. Monday Ubani, the topic for this year’s lecture is: Nigeria at centenary, A nation under bondage?

    He said the immediate past President of the Court of Appeal, Justice Isa Ayo Salami will chair the event.

    The lecture will be delivered by the senior Pastor, Latter Rain Assembly, Pastor Tunde Bakare.

    The Special Guest of honour is Ondo State Governor Segun Mimiko while Governor Babatunde Fashola (SAN) is the host.

    Ubani listed the guests of honour to include Lagos State Chief Judge, Justice Ayotunde Phillips; President, Campaign for Democracy (CD), Dr. Joe Okei-Odumakin: former governor of Kaduna State, Alhaji Babarabe Musa; National Chairman, National Conscience Party (NCP), Dr Yusuf Tanko; Mr Femi Falana (SAN), among others.

    Fawehinmi, born on April 22, 1938 on Ondo, died on September 5, 2009.

    He was a renowned human rights lawyer, author, publisher of the popular Nigerian Law Reports, politician and philantropist.

    He studied Law at the Holborn College of Law, University of London.

    He was a fearless critic of military dictatorship and corruption.

    In 2008, Fawehinmi rejected one of the highest honours that can be bestowed on a citizen by the government – Order of the Federal Republic (OFR) – in protest of the many years of misrule since Nigeria’s independence.

    Gani, as he was fondly called, died in the early hours of September 5, 2009 after a prolonged battle with lung cancer. He was 71 years old.