Tag: hometown

  • Ekiti deputy governor honoured by hometown

    The people of Ado-Ekiti, the Ekiti State capital, recently rolled out the drums to celebrate the ascension of an illustrious son, Otunba Adebisi Adegboyega Egbeyemi, to the coveted position of Deputy Governor.

    They came from within and outside the state to rejoice with Egbeyemi, whom they acknowledged contributed positively to their lives for many decades before Providence lifted him to the office of the state’s Deputy Governor.

    Many of the well-wishers had one reason or the other for leaving their tight schedules in order to honour Egbeyemi with their presence at the thanksgiving and civic reception to celebrate his assumption of office.

    To some, the deputy governor deserved to be honoured for his selflessness in handling legal cases for them free when they had no money to pay the professional fees.

    Others, who were his students in his earlier career as a physical and health education teacher said Egbeyemi helped in moulding their career path which had seen them become somebody in life.

    Another group of Egbeyemi’s beneficiaries attested to the fact that he assisted them to get employment as a political office holder in the course of his long political career.

    Egbeyemi was member of the Old Ondo State House of Assembly in 1983 and also served as Chairman, Ado-Ekiti Local Government Area between 1991 and 1993.

    He later won election as a member of the House of Representatives but the result was cancelled by the former Head of State, the late Gen. Sani Abacha, which denied him the opportunity to represent his constituency.

    Egbeyemi served as Commissioner for Education in the administration of Otunba Adeniyi Adebayo from 1999 to 2002, member, Governing Council, National Teachers’ Institute, from 2001 to 2002 and Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Ekiti State, between 2002 and 2003.

    He also served as member representing Ekiti State on the Board of Odu’a Investment Limited, among other positions of responsibility which he used to positively touch the lives of the people he came in contact with.

    Throng of well-wishers trooped en masse to Egbeyemi’s residence in Government Reservation Area (GRA) where old and young, high and low felicitated with the politician whom they noted was reaping from the benevolence extended to many in the pursuit of his careers as a teacher, lawyer, businessman and politician.

    Clad in resplendent commemorative Ankara fabrics, they thronged the Cathedral Church of Emmanuel (Anglican Communion), Okesa, Ado-Ekiti, where a special thanksgiving service was held in his honour.

    A special civic reception was also held in honour of Egbeyemi at the Great Eagle Event Centre, Ikere Road, Ajebamidele.

    In the run-up to the July 14 governorship election, Egbeyemi emerged as the All Progressives Congress (APC) deputy governorship candidate, among many other candidates considered for the position.

    His choice was arrived at by the then governorship candidate, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, in onsonance with party elders, who considered his loyalty, contributions to the party and development of the state, among others.

    Egbeyemi’s tentacles spread from legal profession, to politics, Christendom and community development as he is a traditional chief in his hometown, Ado-Ekiti.

    All these indices worked in his favour to emerge as the running mate on the joint APC ticket with Fayemi which was elected at the July 14 polls.

    The service was attended by the wife of the governor, Mrs. Bisi Fayemi; wife of the deputy governor, Mrs. Margaret Egbeyemi; Speaker, Ekiti State House of Assembly, Mr. Adeniran Alagbada; his wife, Mrs. Kike; former deputy governor, Prof. Dupe Adelabu; Secretary to the State Government, Mr. Biodun Oyebanji; Chief of Staff, Mr. Biodun Omoleye; Ewi of Ado-Ekiti, Oba Adeyemo Adejugbe and other traditional rulers.

    Fayemi, who did not appear at the church service, having been engaged elsewhere, showed up at the venue of the reception.

    At the thanksgiving service, Bishop of Ekiti Diocese, the Church of Nigeria, Anglican Communion, the Rt. Rev. Christopher Omotunde, congratulated Egbeyemi on his election alongside his boss, Fayemi, to pilot the affairs of the state.

    The cleric warned the APC administration not to disappoint the teeming masses looking up to it for good governance.

    The Bishop, who described himself as “a father of all politicians” because all members of his church are in all political parties, said it behoves on him to speak the truth when the need arises.

    Omotunde said God has given Governor Fayemi another chance to make the difference in the lives of Ekiti people and must not fail to do that because “the expectations are very high.”

    While likening Fayemi to the biblical Nehemiah, Omotunde said President Muhammadu Buhari had so much trust in the governor (Fayemi) by releasing him from the federal cabinet to repair Ekiti allegedly damaged by bad governance.

    Omotunde said now that Fayemi’s party, APC, is in power at the federal level unlike what obtained during his first tenure; the Federal Government must grant all the requests of the governor to repair Ekiti and assist the state financially for its people to be relieved.

    “Your party (APC) is in power now, let them know that I said, it’s a government of another chance and God will try you again and see whether you will be faithful or not. It is left for you to prove yourself.

    Omotunde, who counselled Fayemi to pay critical attention to the deplorable state of roads, insecurity especially kidnapping and need to prioritise the people’s welfare, expressed confidence in Fayemi’s ability to deliver the dividends of good governance to the people of Ekiti State.

    The Bishop further urged Fayemi to prevent the state from being taken over by herdsmen and ensure security of lives and property.

    He advised the governor to be vigilant against sycophants lobbying to occupy political positions. “Look for people that will be faithful to you. Be ready to take to correction and don’t scare good people away from you. Be careful of people that will always say good things about you but will not see anything bad,” he said.

     

     

  • Olanipekun builds ultra-modern church in hometown

    Eminent lawyer, Chief Wole Olanipekun, has laid the foundation stone of a new St. Peter’s Anglican Church in his native Ikere-Ekiti in Ekiti State.

    The new church building, when completed, has a capacity for 1,600 worshippers at a time with state-of-the-art facilities.

    The entire project from start to finish will be solely financed by Olanipekun and is expected to be completed and opened for public use in two years.

    Apparently excited by the gesture, the Bishop of the Diocese of Ekiti, Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion), the Rt. Rev. Christopher Omotunde, hailed Olanipekun for building a new church in his community.

    Omotunde urged privileged Nigerians to emulate the gesture of the Senior Advocate by using their wealth to promote assist the church and the less privileged.

    Olanipekun said the desire to build the new church grew last December when he requested for the land to carry out the project.

    According to him, the church is not his personal property but a project dedicated to God and for the use of worshippers.

    He said: “This place is historic. Our parents built the first church here about 100 years ago.

    “This is St. Peter’s Church. It does not belong to Olanipekun. Nobody can take God’s church from here. It is not anybody’s doing and this will not be an abandoned project.

    “Every material to be used like iron, cement, granite and so on are available. By the grace of God, our Bishop and the Primate will be here to commission it when completed.

    “I am a third generation member of this church, my uncle served as the church secretary for 23 years while my father served as secretary for 17 years without receiving any salary and he used to cut the grass of the church vicinity free.

    “We were born into it, wherever we go, we should not be ashamed of our place of birth.

    “Residents of this area, we are not grabbing your land. Please cooperate with us as we build this new church.”

  • Jubilation in Bayelsa, as ‘The Voice Nigeria’ winner arrives hometown

    Jubilation in Bayelsa, as ‘The Voice Nigeria’ winner arrives hometown

    It was jubilation galore in Bayelsa State, as men, women, children and particularly, youths, stormed the streets to celebrate Daniel Diangoli, aka Idyl, winner of the just-concluded The Voice Nigeria talent show.

    The budding singer, Sunday, emerged winner of the Second Season of the talent reality show, which took place in Johannesburg, South Africa.

    Immediately he was announced winner, Bayelsa erupted in jubilation, as youths took over the streets, bars and other public places to drink and dance to the victory. Clubs were said to be congested as Idyl united everybody despite their different political affiliations.

    In celebrating the artiste, Chief John Alphonsus Iworiso, Director of Robert Sunday Iworiso Foundation (RSIF) a Non-Governmental Organization, said that Idyl has made the Ijaw nation proud.

    In a statement, Iworiso said the emergence of Idyl, as winner of the keenly contested competition, is proof of the true spirit of Bayelsans. He observed that Idyl had also taken that path as he showed strength of character on his way to stardom.

    “This is not the first  time individuals and groups will be making the state proud. Few months ago, Perewari Victor Pere bagged a first class and was the best graduating student of his set at Lincoln University in Pennsylvania, USA. We have also witnessed the success story of our students in external exam. In WAEC and NECO we are ranked among the best five.

    “As it is in music and education so it is in  other fields. Students of St. Jude’s girls Amarata have won back-to-back for four years running now, the Milo basketball competition among other laurels. Also, the state cultural troupe has brought home different national and international awards,” he said.

    Also, the Bayelsa State Government said the victory of Idyl was a confirmation that Bayelsa was not a place of militancy. Describing the victory as a welcome development, the state Commissioner for Information and Orientation, Mr. Jonathan Obuebite, congratulated Idyl for being a morale booster for other teeming youths in the state.

    He said the young man, with his scintillating performance had shown to the world that Bayelsa should never be classified as a hub of militant activities.

  • Kinsmen pray  for Buhari in hometown

    Kinsmen pray for Buhari in hometown

    The Daura Emirate Council in Katsina State, home town of President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday  conducted a marathon prayer session for  Allah to continue to protect and grant him good health.

    The  Emir of Daura, Alhaji Umar Farouk, led the prayers at his palace in Daura, according to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

    In attendance at the prayer session were thousands of Daura residents.

    Buhari is  currently in London on medical vacation.

    The emir said that Buhari needs prayers not only for his health, but also divine guidance to lead Nigeria to greatness.

    “Mr President is our son and he deserves much more than this,” he said.

    Farouk told the residents that there was no cause for alarm about the President’s health, pointing out that “going by available contacts we have on a daily basis, the President is in high spirits.”

    The emir said leaders need constant prayers from their subjects, hence the decision by the emirate to organise the prayer session.

    He observed that the nation is undergoing positive reforms under the Buhari leadership, as such “needs our encouragement, support and prayers for him to succeed and build a better Nigeria.”

    Chief imams of major Juma’at mosques in Daura, Mai’adua, Zango, Sandamu and Baure local government areas under the emirate conducted the prayers which included the recitation of the complete Qur’an eleven times.

    Last week,over 300 imams across Borno State held  similar prayers for the President.

  • Ovoke’s goal sinks hometown club Wolves

    Ovoke’s goal sinks hometown club Wolves

    Rivers United striker Bernard Ovoke followed up on his brace against Rangers to net the match winner at his hometown club Warri Wolves yesterday.

    High on his double against Rangers the previous weekend, the former Bayelsa United star boasted before the Wolves game that Rivers United could extend their winning run with a win in Warri and that was exactly what they did.

    Ovoke grabbed the winning goal after 52 minutes.

    In Bauchi, Godwin Obaje grabbed a brace for Wikki Tourists to beat Nasarawa United 2-1, while Heartland stopped El Kanemi 2-1 and Akwa United defeated Fc IfeanyiUbah 2-0.

  • Lokpobiri’s house in hometown riddled with bullets

    Lokpobiri’s house in hometown riddled with bullets

    •Election shifted in Southern Ijaw LGA till today
    •Sylva accuses PDP leaders of sponsoring banditry during election
    •Dickson says he is not satisfied with electoral process

    The country home of the Minister of State for Agriculture and Rural Development, Senator Heineken Lokpobiri, in Ekeremor , Bayelsa State, was yesterday riddled with bullets by thugs in one of the several cases of violence during the governorship election.

    Lokpobiri who doubles as the Director-General of Sylva/Igiri Campaign Organisation, was inside the building, along with members of his family and associates during the shooting.

    The governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Chief Timipre Sylva, accused  leaders of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) of engineering the attack with hoodlums brought in from neighbouring   Rivers and Delta states.

    He alleged that the thugs were deployed to kill him on Friday night but failed in the process.

    The saving grace, according to him, was their inability to gain entry into the minister’s compound and the intervention of soldiers from Operation Pulo (Oil) Shield (OPS) and policemen.

    It was gathered last night that the election in Southern Ijaw local government area might be cancelled as a consequence of the violence in the area.

    Four people were killed in the violence when militants attempted to disrupt the distribution of electoral materials.

    As at 1:30 p.m. yesterday, no polling unit was opened in Southern Ijaw LGA for the electoral process, out of fear of violence.

    Sylva lamented what he referred to as sponsored attacks on APC members by the PDP, saying it was obvious the PDP and its government were not ready for the election.

    He said a government official was going everywhere in Yenagoa with armed thugs, adding that the police had intervened to restore order in the capital city.

    Sylva said the APC had told the police before the election that PDP and Bayelsa government officials were stockpiling arms for the poll.

    He said though the police had their informants, they should have acted on the intelligence provided by the APC.

    He dismissed allegation by Governor Dickson that PDP members were not allowed to vote in Brass LGA.

    Dickson of the PDP, who voted at Unit 4, Ward 2 of his Toru-Orua hometown in Sagbama LGA of Bayelsa state at 3:45 p.m. yesterday, stated that he was not satisfied with the electoral process.

    He accused Lokpobiri and the Federal Government of manipulating the electoral process, through killing and intimidation of his supporters, while thanking Bayelsans for remaining committed to democracy.

    In Nembe LGA, there were gunshots at the Ogbolomabiri part of the council.

    Gunshots at Ogbolomabiri were heard from 6 p.m. on Friday till 11 a.m. yesterday, while some members of the APC, including the Legal Adviser of the party, Mr. Atonye Freedom Stephenson, were critically injured and taken to an undisclosed hospital for treatment.

    APC members, Jubilee Sampson and Thomas Iwokura, were reportedly referred to the Federal Medical Centre (FMC) in Yenagoa by the Nembe General Hsopital, for the treatment of wounds inflicted on them in Nembe-Ogbolomabiri allegedly by PDP thugs.

    The house of the Bayelsa Chairman of the PDP, Chief Serena Dokubo-Spiff, in Nembe was reportedly torched and he had to flee to Yenagoa to seek refuge.

    Besides the pockets of violence, the electoral process was smooth and generally peaceful.

    In Brass LGA, INEC officials arrived their polling units early and started accreditation about 8 a.m.

    There was large turnout of voters in different communities in Brass LGA, especially at Okpoama, the coastal hometown of the governorship candidate of the APC.

    Sylva and his wife, Alayingi, arrived their polling unit 004, Ward 4 in Okpoama at 11:40 a.m. and they successfully went through the accreditation process.

    Speaking with reporters shortly after the accreditation, Sylva said the process was generally smooth and peaceful, besides the skirmishes and violent attacks against members of the APC.

    He, however, pleaded with INEC to look into the intractable problems associated with the card readers.

    The former governor noted that although the card reader read his Permanent Voter Card (PVC) successfully in a record time, it failed to read the PVCs of some other voters, who came to exercise their franchise.

    He said: “I don’t know what is happening to this technology (card reader), but INEC should pay attention to it.”

    Sylva tried to make a stop-over at Odioma, while on his way to Okpoama for yesterday’s election, but he was attacked by PDP youths in Odioma.

    Security operatives attached to the convoy of the former governor and operatives of the OPS stationed at Odioma jetty repelled the attack, while the ensuing gunshots created confusion in the community and sent people, including journalists on election duty, scampering to safety.

    Soldiers arrested 13 youths said to have been deployed to waylay and attack Sylva on his way to his community.

    The youths were arrested in their boat on Odioma waterways around 7:40 p.m., while waiting for the convoy of Sylva.

    A security source said weapons such as guns, machetes and axes were found in the possession of the suspects.

    The source said: “They (the arrested Odioma youths) confessed that they were paid to attack and kill Sylva, but before Sylva arrived, operatives of the JTF at the Odioma base found and arrested them.”

    Our reporters also gathered that PDP thugs, led by officials of the Bayelsa government, attacked APC members at the office of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) on Friday night.

    The APC members, Abarowei, Abacha, Dr. Igbagara and Victor, were reportedly overwhelmed by thugs, numbering over 16, in an attempt to hijack electoral materials meant for Ward 6 of Sagbama LGA.

    Igbagara, a university lecturer, who is an APC’s agent in Sagbama, reportedly ran into the bush with the injuries he sustained, to avoid being killed by the thugs working for the PDP.

     

  • Adeboye opens prayer camp in hometown

    Adeboye opens prayer camp in hometown

    Nearly 30 years after he conceived the idea, the general overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), Pastor Enoch Adeboye, has finally opened a prayer mountain.

    The camp, which was opened at a relatively quiet ceremony, is located in Ifewara the hometown of the respected preacher, some 10 minutes away from the ancient city of Ife in Osun State.

    Elders and pastors from the RCCG family and dignitaries from Ifewara as well as workers and volunteers of the project attended the opening of the facility named Mount Carmel Prayer Mountain.

    Conceived as a prayer village, the facility boasts of a magnificent mix of sanctuaries, dormitories, chalets and numerous prayer huts flowing down the slope of a hill, overlooked by bigger residential blocks.

    There are also halls of various sizes, a restaurant, bookshop and supermarket.

    Welcoming guests at the opening ceremony, Pastor (Mrs.) Foluke Adeboye, who was in charge of the construction, revealed that although the plot of land had been bought years ago but was lying fallow until about seven years ago when her husband moved for its development.

    Tracing the origin of the project, she said: “We had been inspired to build a prayer mountain by what we saw in South Korea in 1985.

    “We went for a David Yonggi Cho prayer conference there, and one afternoon, they took the delegates to their prayer mountain, which we admired so much.

    “So since 1985, we had it in our minds that one day, there would be a prayer mountain of a similar status in Nigeria.”

    Also explaining the name of the prayer mountain, she said: “We named this Mount Carmel after the Mount Carmel where Prophet Elijah defeated the work of the devil. We also remembered the Mount of Transfiguration.”

    Corroborating his wife’s account, Adeboye said, “When we returned from South Korea in 1985, we decided by this grace of God that there would be a prayer mountain in Nigeria that people from all over the world would come to pray.

    “The way I had planned it, the place should have been built many years ago. But in the face of the enormous challenges, we resorted to building a place called “Halleluyah House” at Redemption camp.”

    He went on: “Yet the passion for the prayer mountain was still burning in my heart. I believed that by the time I was 60 years old, we would have built it but it was not possible.

    “When I was getting to 70 years old, I remembered that every year after 70 years of a man on earth is extra time.

    “To ensure that the dream would not die, and efforts that had been made would not be fruitless, I called my wife and gave her the responsibility to build this prayer mountain.”

     

  • Malien-like Boko Haram fighters invade governor’s hometown

    Malien-like Boko Haram fighters invade governor’s hometown

    Geidam, the hometown of Yobe State Governor Ibrahim Geidam, came under Boko Haram attack yesterday.

    Some residents of the town, which is the headquarters of Geidam local government area of the state, said most of the Boko Haram attackers looked like Touareg fighters from Mali.

    Mustapha Yunusa said he saw a large number of the fighters through the window from his house, located on the main access road into Geidam town when the insurgents invaded.

    “I was able to see most of the boys because my house is located very close to the main road entering Geidam. I saw them in large numbers. They came in a convoy of Hilux vans before they disembarked and divided themselves and started shouting all kinds of sounds in Arabic. Most of the boys look very much like the Malian Touaregs,” Yunusa said.

    Another resident said many residents ran out of Geidam as it became clear that the insurgents would attack the town.

    “We got news that the insurgents were advancing to Geidam from Borno State through Damasak to Geidam so many people fled to other villages,” a resident said.

    Our correspondent gathered that the insurgents were spotted in Yaro town saying their prayers before they moved to Geidam to launch their onslaught.

    The casualty from the attack could not be ascertained last night but a security source said the insurgents attacked the military formation in Geidam before moving into the town, shooting sporadically.

    There were reports of fighting between the insurgents and security agents still going on in  the town.

    An Air Force jet fighter was said to have been immediately deployed in Geidam to chase out the insurgents.

    A resident who spoke with on the telephone said he heard the sound of the jet.

    A local government official explained that the insurgents came in large numbers. Some enter military check point, behind polytechnic, and behind the local government Lodge.

  • Turunku: Queen Amina’s forgotten hometown

    Turunku: Queen Amina’s forgotten hometown

    Of all the neglected sites in Kaduna State, Queen Amina’s hometown, Turunku, is probably the most painful. Centuries after her reign and exploits, the warrior queen continues to stir the mind. Primary school pupils study her as much as researchers probe into her intriguing war past. Today, the queen who mastered the art of warfare on horse back, humbling one community after another, is regarded as one of Africa’s greatest women.

    Shouldn’t her birthplace, Turunku, therefore be a money spinner, an irresistible destination for tourists? But successive governments in the state have routinely looked away from the town, leaving it an ungainly settlement.

    The neglect of Turunku is almost as legendary as its illustrious heroine. First, she was always called Queen Amina of Zaria though she never really lived in the town, which was named after her younger sister. Also, many do not know that the Zazzau emirate did not originally start from its present location, but at Turunku in present-day Igabi Local Government Area of Kaduna State.

    What does all that fetch Turunku and its residents? It seems pretty little. The town which would have been generating huge revenues for the state government has been abandoned. The only sign of government’s presence there is the fence round the tomb of Queen Amina’s father. Worse, the fact that the famous warrior queen and her people ever reigned in Turunku may never be known to future generations, due to lack of efforts to protect and promote the site.

    When The Nation visited the tomb of Queen Amina’s father in Turunku, it was covered with weed, even though it was fenced by the government. It was clear that few visitors or tourists will be attracted to the place. Also, the tie and dye wells (known as ‘Rijiyan Rini’ in Hausa) which were used by Queen Amina and her people were also covered by grass, while farmers have taken over the entire area leaving little space by the Turunku-Farakwai roadside. There is nothing to indicate that such a warrior ever passed through the place, let alone reign there.

    When The Nation visited, it was discovered that the villagers had made their own arrangement to conduct would be visitors round the remaining sites, which included the mountain where Queen Amina is said to have lived.

    It was also discovered that there is no designated route to the top of the mountain, but the tour guide attached to this reporter disclosed that there was an easy route to the top. It was an interesting, but scary expedition. At the base of the rocky mountain was the game board used by Queen Amina and her people  to relax. There is also a big, flat rock with several holes, which they used to play the game known today as ‘ayo’.

    Also close to it is what is known as ‘Zakzak’, where Bakwa, Amina’s father from whom she learnt the art of warfare is believed to have buried his sword. It is believed that Bakwa never went beyond this point whenever he saw his visitors off.

    There is also the ‘Dutsen Hiya’ and ‘Dutsen Boyewa. While Dutsen Hiya is said to be the place where she prayed for victory before she went to battle, Dutsen Boyewa is a covering for an underground tunnel where they hid their children during war.

    While these sites still exist, there is no effort to protect them from extinction.

    At the top of the mountain is the rock bed used by Queen Amina and her bodyguards.

    However, while it was noticed that the rock bed was much wider than beds used in those days, the tour guide, Abubakar, told The Nation that people of Queen Amina’s generation were 10 times bigger than their modern counterparts.

    She was the chief protector of her community and this is evident by the placement of her stool located at the northern entrance to her community regarded as Kofar Arewa and another located in the southern entrance to the community known as Kofar Kudu. From these seats, she could see an enemy coming several kilometres away. A big grinding stone said to have been used by the community also sits on top of the mountain. There is also a well to provide water and a poison mortar used to prepare poison for their arrows when preparing for war.

    One interesting discovery was a big hole said to be snake hole in the rock where a big snake is said to have lived for over 100 years. Even though the snake could not be seen, a strange odour which was said to be its breath welcomes visitors to the place. Abubakar told The Nation that the snake usually came out every Sunday and that it stopped coming out since a visiting journalist took its photograph some years back.

    The mention of the giant snake sent jitters down the spine of this reporter and the tour was brought to an abrupt end, but that was not before Abubakar disclosed that there was nothing else to be seen.

    After about three hours journey to and from the seat of Queen Amina, the traditional ruler of Turunku, Alhaji Ahmed Abdullahi told The Nation that if the government had taken serious interest in the sites, climbing the mountains would have been made easier.

    He described Queen Amina as a very successful warrior, saying she always took her war booty to her sister’s settlement in Zaria. He added that over a period of time, her many conquests and subsequent annexation of territories extended beyond the borders of Zaria.

    One of the tour guides who gave his name simply as Ahmed told The Nation that Queen Amina was never married and had no children of her own. He noted that instead of having a husband of her own, the brave Amina always took a temporary mate from the legions of vanquished foes after every battle, spent one night with the man and executed him the following morning to prevent him from ever speaking about his sexual encounter with her.

    Ahmed, a young school leaver who said his ambition is to document the history of Turunku, also said that the legendary “Amina committed suicide during a military campaign at Dekina in the present Kogi State and was buried in Idah”.

    According to him, Queen Amina who had a successful military exploit in Dekina took a temporary husband in the place and could not kill the man after their sexual encounter. He stressed that “a soothsayer had predicted Queen Amina’s coming to Dekina and told their ruler to bury his young daughter and a young man alive to prevent their land from being conquered by the female warrior. And that was what led to her failure to kill the man who spent a night with the warrior queen. The man, it is said, sneaked out in the middle of the night. Worried by that development, Queen Amina refused to return home. She jumped into the river and died at Dekina and was later buried at Idah.”

    Life and times of the warrior Queen

     The Nation’s findings revealed that Queen Amina took after her father as a warrior and leader of her people. Her father, known to the people simply as Bakwa was the 18th ruler of Turunku and their family wealth was derived mainly from trading in leather goods, cloth, kola, salt, horses and imported metals. It was also learnt that Amina’s younger sister, Amamatu who was also known as Zaria left Turunku because of water scarcity and settled in the present-day Zaria, a place that was later named after her.

    Amina who was said to have been born in 1533. In 1576 she became the  ruler of Zazzau.

  • Excitement as Uduaghan drives first car into his hometown

    Excitement as Uduaghan drives first car into his hometown

    The joy and excitement in Abigborodo community in Warri North Local Government Area of Delta State was palpable last Wednesday. Inhabitants of the Itsekiri community hugged one another ceaselessly. Some with tears of joy in their eyes while others just stool still, a look of insuppressible pride in their eyes as the convoy of Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan rode into the peaceful town from Sapele, headquarters of neighbouring Sapele LGA.

    It was the first time any vehicle would drive into the community. And with the historical journey, Abigborodo community became one of only a handful of communities in the local government area that is accessible by road.

    It was a feat long overdue for the people of the fishing and trading community. An unfriendly terrain and government neglect have conspired over the years to isolate the community from the mainland of the state.

    However, with the near completion of the Sapele-Abigborodo road and bridge project, inhabitants of the riverside communities are hopeful that their days of relying only on speedboats and kpekpekpe – a crude, locally fabricated boat analogous to the heavy duty trucks on land – would soon become a thing of the past.

    Even the governor, who has a home in the town, was excited. “This is the very first time we are going to the village by road. For me it is historical and very encouraging and I am so sentimental about it. A car has not been to Abigborodo before but with this bridge that is now a thing of the past and we are very happy,” he told newsmen.

    He said the road would not only cut the time of transportation from the main towns to the agrarian community, but would also remove the risk and discomfort associated with river transport.

    Civil engineers and other experts said the contractor handling the project had conquered the most arduous tasks. The two bridges, including one that is 120 metres long and towering 10 metres above the river to allow passage by tugboats and bigger vessels, have been completed. A long span of the road had also been completed and stone-based.

    A prominent Sapele-based Abigborodo women leader, Mrs Rebecca Woweh (aka Ugbekoro), described the day as an important one that would not be forgotten by indigenes of the community both within and outside the country.

    “The road will help our community develop faster. People who have not been able to come home because of fear of river, those who say they don’t like travelling by boat would no longer have excuse. For this we are grateful to this government,” she added.

    However, Niger Delta Report learnt that the project was nearly stymied on the first month of its existence after its award in October 2010. It would be recalled that the project had just been awarded weeks earlier when Uduaghan was swept unceremoniously out of office by an Appeal Court ruling in November 2010. The judgment followed a petition challenging Uduaghan’s victory in the April 2007 election. It was filed by Chief Great Ogboru of the Democratic Peoples Party (DPP).

    “When that incident happened, our joy that we could one day be able to drive our cars into our community was cut short. All hopes seemed to have been lost because of the conspiracy and opposition against the governor. But we thank God that he won the re-run election and after that his re-election,” an indigene of the town told our reporter.

    In spite of the governor’s victories, doubts persisted on whether he could muster the political will to complete the important road and bridge project because apart from the Abigborodo road, there was also the road leading from Warri metropolis to Ode-Itsekiri (Big Warri), the ancestral home of the Itsekiri people, through the Warri River.

    The specter of doubt was laid to rest on that sunny Wednesday morning, which contrasted strikingly with the mood of the people in November 2010 after the governor was removed from office by a tribunal.

    Mr Godwin Utineyin, a former Treasurer of Abigborodo Community Trust described the day as too surreal. “It is unbelievable that this dream would come to pass. In the past, it was only Koko that vehicles could drive into in this local government, but now we have Abigborodo. It is auspicious for us that we have a brother and son who is governor and we are grateful to him for this feat.”

    The governor, who addressed his kinsmen at the town hall, used the opportunity to reassure the people of the state about his determination to complete all ongoing projects before the terminal date of his administration in May 2015. Already, he disclosed that the Abigborodo road project was about 70percent completed, adding that it had so far gulped N7.2bn.

    “We are determined to complete the all important Abigborodo Road project before the end of 2014. This road is historical and I am very sentimental about it because this is the first time that vehicles can now drive to the community,” he said.

    The elated people of Abigborodo commended the governor for the road and other projects that are going on in the community. A cross section of community members who spoke with our reporter said that road has started impacting positively on their social and economic lives. The people were particularly hopeful that the road would open up the area for property boom because of its nearness to Sapele and other parts of the state.

    Hon Christian Okonedo, a leader of the community, told NDR that the people were determined to offer the state government and the contractor all the support needed to achieve the governor’s determination to complete the project by the end of the year.

    He said, “You can now drive into Abigborodo. The people, women children and elders, are very excited about this. They are willing to do all that is necessary to complete the road project. All the support that is needed would be given.”

    Okonedo commended the state executive council and House of Assembly members for their supports for the work done so far and appealed for their continued support towards the completion and delivery of the road to the people.

    Speaking in the same vein, Utienyin, while commending the governor, appealed that links should be built into other communities on the path of the road in order for the state and the Warri North LGA to reap the full benefit of the government’s investment.

    Meanwhile, Uduaghan also inspected other ongoing projects including the Model school, Alema secondary school and Abigborodo Polytechnic in the town and expressed delight at the pace and quality of work.

    He however expressed displeasure and frustration about the attitude of the students in the area to their education pursuits, lamenting that they were not making adequate use of the schools.

    He particularly lamented that the schools were still mostly deserted nearly two weeks after resumption and vowed to revert the trend by sending ‘Edu-Marshals’ to the area to sensitize parents on the need to send their children to school.

    He also directed top government officials from the riverine areas to join in the education crusade by going to their respective communities and create awareness on the importance of education.

    The governor also announced plans to encourage education in the riverside areas by sending boats to convey pupils to and from schools daily. He however warned parents of dire consequences if they refuse their children the opportunity of going to school.