Tag: miracle
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BBNaija: Miracle is third Head of House
Big Brother Housemate, Miracle has emerged Head of House in Monday’s challenge.The challenge for Head of House starred four housemates, including Ifu Ennada, Ahneeka, Leo and Miracle.Miracle emerged winner of the challenge after successfully picking the right colour of balls in a bucket.This was preceded by Ahneeka’s elimination, after Ahneeka failed to obey the rules guiding the challenge.The four housemates were required to randomly pick the correct colour of balls arranged in a bucket, blindfolded by the ninjas.Ahneeka however continued to look down into the bucket disobeying Biggie’s instructions to look up while using their fingers to pick the correct ball.After several attempts and subsequent eliminations of Leo and Ahneeka; Miracle emerged winner, closely followed by Ifu Ennada who gave quite a fierce challenge.Miracle will now share his new Head of House lounge with his paired partner, Anto as Biggie refused him the right of picking any other housemate, which would most obviously be Nina, his former strategic pair and romantic partner.Ifu Ennada failed to hide her frustration and angst at her continued misfortunes. She lamented that this was the fourth time she qualified for the Final Head of House Challenge and failed to win again.“I would no longer compete for Head of House Challenge. I would nominate Leo or someone else to participate. This is bad luck indeed,” she complained. -

I hope my boyfriend forgives me- Nina
2018 Big Brother Naija Housemate Nina has reacted to her kissing fellow housemate Miracle in the showers despite claiming to have a boyfriend.
During her Diary session with Biggie, Nina explained that she always feel bad thinking about the intimate moments she had with Miracle in the shower because her boyfriend who is watching the show will feel bad and publicly apologized to him.
“I know my boyfriend will feel bad, I know he’s feeling bad at the moment. I’m begging him not to feel bad about everything happening here. I’m sorry; I’m trying to control it. My boyfriend might even be crying watching me here.
Read Also: BBNaija: Miracle and Nina kiss in shower
“I’m really sorry but I’ll keep controlling it.”
When asked if her Miracle is not annoyed with her antics with him? She replied “Miracle knows I have a boyfriend, I told him, he told me he was single, and I told him I was dating.
“Because my relationship is something I cannot, no matter what, I cannot deny I’m just open, for people to know I’m dating. I don’t know what’s in his mind, but Miracle knows I have a boyfriend”
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BBNaija: Miracle and Nina kiss in shower
Less than two days in the house and the romance journey has already begun in the house.
This morning Miracle and Nina take the lead as they are captured sharing a passionate kiss in the shower.
The twists, emotions and desires have begun in two days. Who will be the next to share the next intimate moment.
Read Also: BBNaija: Tobi becomes first Head of House
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The miracle boy of Chibok
ALI AHMADU IS just six, but he has a strong will. He is alive today by the grace of God and his own will to live. Boko Haram did not mean well for the boy when some of its members ran over him with their motorcycles in 2014 in Chibok, Borno State. The incident happened few days after the insurgents abducted over 200 pupils of the Government Girls Secondary School in the early hours of April 15, 2014.
Ali broke his spinal cord and he was left in that state in the bush for days. No treatment, nothing. People gave up on him because they thought his case was hopeless, but the small boy did not give up on himself. Where others saw despair and a bad case, he saw hope and life. This was why when he was being taken to Dubai on September 14 for corrective surgery, he called on God in Hausa repeatedly to let him walk again.
Since He is God that answers prayers, He granted Ali’s wish. The boy successfully underwent surgery and he can now walk again. The surgeons gave him 14 days to get back on his feet after the operation, but he surprised them all when he rose on his feet after seven days and began to walk. He is a child of promise and since he is back on his feet, nothing can stop him again. Many thanks to the foundation which footed his hospital bill. By your humanitarian gesture, you have made a bold statement that what matters at the end of the day is our service to humanity and not the wealth we amass.
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My emergence as Governor a miracle, says Akeredolu
Governor Rotimi Akeredolu of Ondo State has described his emergence as governor of the state as “a miracle”.
The governor said this at a thanksgiving service held in his honour at the All Saint’s Church, Jericho, Ibadan, on Sunday.
Akeredolu, the APC candidate, defeated Mr Eyitayo Jegede of the opposition PDP and Dr Olusola Oke of the AD to emerge winner in the November 2016 governorship election in the state.
He said his victory was a manifestation of the peoples trust and love for God.
“I can tell you that our success and victory in the election was a miracle. I contested once and I told the Lord that if I win, I will build a place of worship for you.
“I was not too sure that the victory will come but I said to the Lord that whether win, lose or draw I will build a place of worship for you.
“It is because I have that strong faith in God and we did it. And now that same Lord gave us the victory. So, my people you don’t have to wait until he answers your prayers before you do things for God.
“Do it may be that is where success will come. May be God remembered what we did and that was why he gave us victory, ” he said.
Akeredolu promised to lead a purposeful government in the state, adding that he was indebted to the church because he had found all that he wanted in the church.
According to him, “It was in this church that I became a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, President of Nigeria Bar Association (NBA) and now a governor.”
Earlier, Ven. Godwin Daramola in his sermon, urged the governor to make thanksgiving his lifestyle in order to experience the blessings of God on a daily basis.
“When you acknowledge the blessings of God, he will be committed to preserving all that he has done for you,” he said.
He charged Akeredolu to emulate the exemplary life of Jesus Christ, to strive for integrity and to be wary of sycophants.
Mrs Mojisola Ojo, Chairperson, Oyo State Branch of the Nigeria Red Cross Society, described Akeredolu as a staunch and committed member of the society.(NAN)
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Lagos and the miracle of ‘little things’
The world has always been waiting for this-that ‘common’ touch that calms frayed nerves; that little, extra spice that adds the needed flavour to the soup which satiates the palate of hunger and that powerful pace that breaks long-held sprints record. There is of course, that potent push from Mother Muse that gives life to latent dreams. But few leaders have identified that secret ingredient which makes the difference. And fewer still can bridge the gap between political precepts and pragmatic performance
Such little things may not be as profound as the efforts of Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826), the third President of the United States of America who was the author of the Declaration of Independence.
Interestingly, one of the new set of political leaders in Nigeria who has started to exhibit such admirable trait of caring for the needy and the most vulnerable members of our society is Governor Akinwunmi Ambode of Lagos State. This is a deliberate effort to fulfill his mandate to the people, as he obtained from the effective feedback mechanism during the tour of 20 LGAs covering 37 LCDAs.
For instance, as events have unfolded over the past six months his administration has bought ambulances for all the public hospitals in the state, paid the aggrieved medical doctors their outstanding salaries and the long-suffering pensioners. He has similarly lent helping hand to victims of disasters including motor-accidents, fire outbreaks and mudslide in addition to diffusing governance to those at the lower rung of the Lagos society.
Specifically, for the health sector, the governor has commissioned 20 Mobile Intensive Care Units (MICU) and 26 Transport Ambulances one for each of the 26 General hospitals. He has also approved the recruitment of more paramedic staff and special medical coordinators to guarantee 24 hours service. Besides, he has upgraded General Hospitals and constructed a Medical Park fully equipped with quality drugs and new mobile X-Ray machines. Indeed, empirical evidence attests to the fact that since the ambulances were made available deaths related to emergency situations have drastically reduced.
It would be recalled that before his predecessor left office, salaries of medical personnel were withheld for months because the members took part in the national strike called by the National Medical Association(NMA).This caused some avoidable friction between the government and those with the constitutional mandate to promote and protect the people’s healthcare. But Ambode in his characteristic prompt response to issues bothering on the citizen’s welfare has risen to the occasion. This has rejuvenated their sagging spirit and boosted their morale and performance. Now, the doctors, nurses and other medical practitioners are smiling and so are we.
So also, is the timely intervention of governor to reverse the ugly drift of pensioners who had served the state meritoriously but were left in the lurch. To ensure that those who served the state meritoriously retire to smile he approved the payment of N2.2billion to 658 retirees from the Civil Service, Local Government, SUBEB other agencies and parastatals. The unique Retirement Benefit Bond presentation is the 18th consecutive one since the inception of the Contributory Pension Scheme.
This prompt payment of their terminal benefits, running into billions of naira, soon after he took the reins of governance has pulled many of them out of the ignoble pit of poverty. Before then several of them had died while queuing for what rightly belonged to them. Those still surviving were left to stew in penury and made to regret putting in their best while in service.
The clear message this noble gesture has sent to those in the employ of the government is significant. It has no doubt enhanced their confidence, that they would be adequately rewarded for their energy, time and other resources when they eventually take a bow. This new paradigm has oiled the government machinery for greater productivity and efficiency. One interesting feature of Ambode’s governance style that has appealed to people is demystifying leadership. Now we know that it is meant to benefit the people rather than any avaricious political class. The story is told of one Mr. Olamide Akinsola, a twitter user who wrote a proposal, dropped it at the office of the governor without going through anybody of influence in the corridors of power. To his pleasant surprise he received calls with regards to his letter eight days later.
All these ‘little things’ may not be gigantic white elephant projects but more like streams that flow into River Niger they have the cumulative capacity to irrigate our arid desires.
Welcome to a bright new dawn of limitless possibilities.
- Ajanaku is the Senior Special Assistant, Media and Strategy to Lagos State governor.
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Dance with Peter: Kelvin, Miracle, three others on probation
•As Funke Akindele stars as guest judge
The battle for survival in the Glo-sponsored Dance with Peter reality T.V show grew even more intense on Saturday night as housemates challenged one another in a face-to-face, win-or-go-home contest. Nollywood star and Glo ambassador, Funke Akindele, was guest judge.
The edition focused on ‘Battle Face-off’ in which the remaining 10 housemates challenged themselves one-on-one, to avoid eviction. A contestant who lost to the other was put-up for eviction. Dance Director, Wale Rubber, said the idea of the challenge was to prepare the dancers for the challenges ahead of them as professional dancers.
As a curtain-raiser, dance choreographer and one of the judges, Don Flexx, gave a star performance to lighten up the show. He did WizKid’s Juru.
Kelvin from Team Flexx, who was clad in boxing gloves and hooded top, challenged top-rated C-Fly of Team Peter in a fierce contest which left the judges comprising dance choreographer, Don Flexx, dance queen, Kaffy and Peter Okoye of P-Square in a tight situation on which dancer to vote for. The dancers performed T-Pain and Chris Brown’s Freeze.
Don Flexx, when asked to comment and make his choice said “I’ll stick with Kelvin because he is innovative and versatile”. Kaffy could not make decision as both dancers impressed her beyond imagination. “Both dancers are great and engaging. I can’t choose anyone because you are both awesome and it will be a great injustice for me to send anyone of you home”, she said.
Glo ambassador, Funke Akindele, the guest judge on the show, voted C-Fly for what she called a “zestful and energetic performance”. Peter Okoye described C-Fly’s performance as breath-taking and gave him a nod. With a vote of 3-1, Kelvin was consequently put on probation.
Other housemates in the contest were G-Xtreme from Team Flexx who faced Teejay of Team Peter. This was an intense battle with Amazing Amy winning the head to head after the only tie of the day of 2-2 from the judges. Amy however won convincingly after another round of dancing to get the vote of all the judges.
Other battles were between Miracle from Team Peter who faced Mali HotBoy of Team Kaffy; Amazing Amy of Team Kaffy who challenged T- Rubber of Team Flexx and Julius Faktah of Team Kaffy who went against Da Octopus of Team Peter.
The contest ended with Kelvin, Teejay, Julius Faktah, T-Rubber and Miracle who all lost to their opponents put on probation for eviction.
The show airs on Africa Magic Urban on Saturday night and African Independent Television (AIT) on Sunday at 5pm and also runs on MTV Base on Wednesdays from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m.
The public can vote for their preferred contestant by sending his or her code to 55518 at the cost of N50 per SMS. Voting lines opened from 8 p.m. on Saturday and will close by midnight on Monday.
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Saint Valentine’s Day massacre or miracle?
Even as I write this there are indications that the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) was still facing intense pressure to shift the polls earlier scheduled for February 14 and 28.
But if the commission sticks to its consistent position of being ready, then six days from now Nigerians would be voting in the most momentous polls since the return of democracy in 1999. All portents are indicative of a seismic shift in the country’s power calculus. It is a measure of the heightened stakes that political tension has reached boiling point.
Most foreign analysts have been projecting a very close and competitive race – with the winner and loser being separated by hundreds of thousands of votes and not millions as was the case in 2011. Other local estimates suggest that the gap might be much wider.
One year ago if anyone had told stalwarts of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) that they would be fighting for their political lives, they would have laughed him to scorn. The reality is that they are staring at the abyss.
The opposition All Progressives Congress (APC) has reasons to be optimistic. This was the party that the cynics never gave a chance. Some prophesied that it would be history in 12 months. Others expected an implosion as the different strands competed for party positions, and ultimately for the presidential ticket. Instead of the expected infighting a miraculous cohesion has taken hold of the party – imbuing it with a momentum that may very well propel it into Aso Villa.
So how did the PDP blow an electoral contest that it could have won comfortably had it handled its internal contradictions differently? How did President Goodwill Jonathan succeed in tossing away the cross-party goodwill that elevated him to Acting President courtesy of the Doctrine of Necessity contrivance?
How did he dismantle the 2011 coalition that neutralised the northern lobby for the presidency which was then using the agency of the PDP’s internal zoning arrangements? How come some of those who fought hardest to enthrone him have become his fiercest critics?
Today, a party that once believed it could re-enact in Nigeria the sort of dominance that the African National Congress (ANC) enjoys in South Africa; a party that once boasted it was the largest on the continent and would reign for 60 years, now faces the real prospect of ending up a shrivelled behemoth. It all happened on Jonathan’s watch and he must take responsibility.
Unlike under the more malleable parliamentary model, the election cycles under the presidential system are fixed. Everyone knows that the United States elects a new president every four years on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November. The Nigerian constitution which is fashioned after the American document also specifies a fixed time frame for holding the polls.
That timetable is inviolable except under very extreme conditions which are equally spelt out in the constitution. So if a president is battling with a depressed economy and low approval ratings, he has no choice but to face the electorate.
It is different with the parliamentary system where the Prime Minister could choose to call elections at a time when he or she enjoys relatively good polls and all other conditions favour victory. They would call such elections even when their tenure has not expired.
Compared to 2011, Jonathan and the PDP are returning to voters in terrible shape. Four years ago, the ruling party quickly rallied its ranks after the heated primaries. Northern governors moved to mollify sections of the region which felt they should have been given another bite of cherry on account of Umaru Yar’Adua’s demise.
The party’s southern flank was intact and energised. Such was its goodwill that it even entered into unofficial electoral arrangements in the South that delivered millions of votes to Jonathan.
Back then Muhammadu Buhari’s Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) was monstrous up north but a virtually non-existent minnow down south. The APC didn’t even exist in the imagination of its prime movers. Today, it provides Buhari with what he lacked in 2011 without losing ground to Jonathan and the ruling party.
Aside its internal divisions, the ruling party’s greatest albatross is the Boko Haram insurgency that has claimed between 20,000 and 30,000 lives in five years and led to the displacement of 1.5 million people internally.
The terrorists control at least 14 local government areas across three states in the North East, and their activities have devastated the economy of the region.
But the most graphic symbol of the failings of the administration regarding the insurgency remains the over 200 Chibok schoolgirls abducted by terrorists from their dormitories in the dead of night almost 10 months ago. Hopes of them ever returning are fading fast just as repeated pledges by the president to free them now ring hollow.
In any election an underperforming economy can kill an incumbent. It is just Jonathan’s luck that despite the nice sounding claims of Nigeria’s economy being the largest on the continent, conditions are deteriorating. The collapse of crude oil prices and the crash of the naira against the dollar have grave implications. States and some federal government agencies have been experiencing difficulties paying salaries as their share of what normally flows from the Federation Account takes a hit.
Already, government has introduced austerity measures that could see it unable to deliver critical new infrastructure or finish those that are already ongoing. The outlook is truly bleak and it is a nightmarish condition under which any politician would approach the electorate.
For the APC and its candidate, Buhari, the prospects could not be better. Not being the incumbent he doesn’t face Jonathan’s peculiar challenges. But he too has to defend the record of what he did in office 30 years ago. He has to defend his character as well as every niggling thing the PDP can find to throw at him – including the entertaining claim that he’s a stark illiterate who didn’t go to secondary school.
Ordinarily, Buhari’s record as a former military dictator contains enough to make any political strategist salivate. However, such are the dire conditions in the country today that people are more willing to forgive him his ancient sins than to contemplate that the Jonathan we’ve known in the last five and a half years would be radically transformed in the next four.
Another thing working in favour of the former military ruler is time and that peculiar Nigerian tendency to move on quickly. A generation of voters has entered the register since the general ran the country. Most of them don’t even remember the ‘atrocities’ that the PDP would want them to be outraged about.
But even those who are old enough to recollect the days of queuing don’t mind that he tried to do something about the problem of indiscipline – even if his methods were draconian. Thirty years on it remains a problem and it is appealing to have an alternative candidate with a reputation for confronting the issue.
What should tell the PDP which way the wind is blowing is that despite the slew of advertorial bombs hurled in his direction, Buhari sails on unscathed. He appears to be cut from the same cloth as another septuagenarian politician – former United States President Ronald Reagan – who was also the target of such savage attacks from his opponents but always emerged undamaged. That led to commentators dubbing him the “Teflon President” after a synthetic material of the same name on which nothing ever sticks.
He is equally helped by the relative unity in the ranks of the APC. The party surprisingly has managed the fallout from its primaries better than the PDP.
Another important factor that many are not recognising is what can best be described as ‘ruling party-fatigue’. It is that affliction that comes upon the electorate in different countries from time to time and causes them to turn upon their long time rulers. They just get fed up with the same set of characters and want a change. How interesting that the APC’s rallying cry is ‘change!’ Sixteen years after Nigerians may just have come down with a bad case of ‘PDP-fatigue’.
I return to where we started and predict that if the elections were to hold today, the PDP and Jonathan would need a miracle to win. Any postponement within the window anticipated by the constitution might not help the ruling party much. If anything, it could even anger voters and make them more determined to kick out the party.
So this Saturday, if it goes ahead, Nigerians are likely to witness a St. Valentine’s Day electoral massacre if Buhari wins, or the political equivalent of Lazarus rising from the dead if Jonathan prevails against the odds. But then miracles can happen given that the president keeps the company of some of the biggest pastors in the land!
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The Ebola ‘miracle’
Hello readers, Edutalk is back. I was on Leave. I apologise for not informing you before ‘disappearing’. Well, a lot has happened while this column was on break. The most significant of them was the Ebola outbreak. I remember dreading the thought of my son developing a fever. I feared facing stigmatization at the hospital without being diagnosed with Ebola. We all know initially, health workers were afraid of the disease. They would not touch a patient with a fever with a long pole. A woman said at an event that I attended in August that a doctor who summoned the courage to attend to a patient with a fever was shunned by his colleagues.
A friend of mine was ill during the uncertainty that followed the arrival of the disease in Nigeria. Unfortunately, about that time, she had to write exams at the University of Lagos (UNILAG) where she is a Masters student. Her mother insisted on following her to school in case she collapsed and nobody offered to help her because of fear that she might be infected with Ebola. I had a good laugh hearing that. But I had had similar concerns. For instance, I refused to wear a dress sewn by someone whose husband was ill with Ebola-like symptoms. When I learnt of his illness, I washed the dress in water disinfected with plenty of Dettol. The problem was that I carried out this exercise close to midnight and the dress was for a wedding I was to attend the next day. Of course the dress did not get dry. And, I did not go for the wedding.
But overall, I was impressed with the way Nigeria managed the disease. For the first time, our governments at the state and federal levels [particularly Lagos State] demonstrated good leadership, were proactive, and followed the case to a logical conclusion. They kept us informed as the issue progressed, and acted quickly to quell damaging rumours. A colleague told me that for the first time, she felt proud to be a Nigerian. For me that pride particularly swelled when the United States sought to learn how we managed the disease. Considered against the fact that they had turned down our request for the ZMapp Ebola vaccine, it was good news. But it was even better that we rolled up our sleeves and faced our demons the best way we could, and came out victorious – that we did not wait for aid agencies to rescue us. Now, we have raised a volunteer team of about 500 health workers to help the three badly affected countries (Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea), which is commendable. Some people have argued that our governments were forced to act fast to check Ebola because it is a disease that respects no persons. It afflicts both the rich and the poor – and fast too. Surviving it is not dependent on the amount of money in the victim’s bank account. I sincerely hope this is not true.
However, going by the situation in many public schools across the country, they may be right to be critical of our success. Resumption for the new session was delayed by two weeks to enable authorities of both public and private schools put their houses in order. While we have scored high in terms of awareness about the disease and its prevention and management, sanitary facilities in many of our public even private schools are less than satisfactory. The state governments have not addressed the problem of water supply in many public schools. Instead of providing potable running water for use in schools and good toilet facilities, the governments are providing tanks, wash hand basins and buckets to fetch water. This is not good enough. God forbid the virus should make a second visit to Nigeria, we would be in trouble. The public funds being wasted on elephant projects or lost to corruption should be invested in improving facilities in our schools.
We should not let the lessons from the Ebola saga be lost. We need to build on that success in all other areas of national life that are in dire need of attention, the chief of which is the education sector.
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‘Miracle Baby my most challenging case’
Not many still remember the case. The Miracle Baby saga was a sensational case which enjoyed wide media coverage. It was handled by former Lagos State Chief Judge Justice Ayotunde Phillips, who retired last Saturday. In the case, a 65-year-old woman and a young girl lay claim to the maternity of little Bose, who became known as Miracle Baby. Justice Phillips ruled in favour of the young mother. She describes the matter as one of the most challenges in this interview with ADEBISI ONANUGA. She also speaks on challenges faced by the judiciary, such as corruption, delay in justice administration and the judiciary workers’strike.
In the course of your career, you must have been influenced by somebody. Who has been most influential in your life?
Yes, my father really. That is why I am fulfilled today and I thank him for that.
If you have not read law, what would you have studied in the university and how did your father influence your choice of study?
To be honest, before I went to the university I wanted to read History or just a general degree. I never thought of having a career but my father called me and said now you have passed your HSC, what do you want to do. I said I wanted to read History. He said no, that I should think of getting a profession. And that if I read History the best I could do was to get a master and lecture in the university but that if I choose a profession like Law, I could work for the rest of my life and the sky would be my limit. And I now realise that was a very good advice. So, he told me to read Law. In fact, he took my papers to the Faculty of Law to meet the Dean, who was then Dr. Elias and I was admitted to read Law and that is where it has found me today.
So, having read Law, why did you then take to the Bench as against the Bar where you normally find most budding lawyers?
To be honest, I thought that the Bench was too weak at a time and that I could do it differently and still do it well. So, my thought then was that “I’m going to vie for the Bench and do it as I see it fit’’. My father was a Judge. I more or less saw him working so I became attracted to adjudication and doing what is right. So, I said let me try this and do it my own way. That’s what made me come to the Bench, to be able to dispense justice, and dispense justice even with a human face. That the law and the rules on one side and common sense and decency on the other side and where the two meet you find that not only have you dispensed justice but that even the person who is found culpable, the person who is found liable, the person who is adjudicated as being wrong would know within himself or herself that he or she is wrong. And I’ve had a couple of cases like that in my career where the defence lawyers even said we thank you my Lord, we would abide by your decision. And only a few of them went on appeal, most of them accepted what I did because they trusted it and they knew in themselves that what I did was not wrong. So, that was my reason of taking to the Bench and I’m very fulfilled in that I’ve come, you can still be friendly, approachable, you can still live your life and still do justice and have people respect your decisions. That was why I joined the bench and I think I’ve done it my own way and so far, I’ve not got too many negative reports.
Being on the Bench is one thing but getting to the pinnacle of one’s career is another. How did you feel the day you were sworn-in as the Chief Judge of the Lagos State by Governor Babatunde Fashola (SAN) two years ago?
I felt very fulfilled, it just shows that you don’t have to lobby, you don’t have to make a nuisance of yourself as it were. If you trust in God and you do your work properly and you keep above boards, you don’t get involved in any scandal, and in Lagos State, it is done by seniority. Once you get to that point where you are number two and you are younger than number one, you will definitely succeed number one. And that’s why I thank the Lagos State Judiciary so much because we have it in place, there’s no hop, step and jump. You wait for your turn. When your turn comes, you will be the Chief Judge in so far the person ahead of you is not younger than you. If the person ahead of you is younger than you, definitely you will retire before you get there. But if the person is older than you, definitely you will get there and you would be fulfilled and then you will be able to contribute your quota not only on the bench as a judge but administratively because you are going to wear three caps. You are going to wear the political cap because it’s a political office, you are going to wear the administrative cap and then still be a serving judge. And I felt very good, very fulfilled and I was glad that I would be able now to contribute again in my own way and my own little bit to the administration of justice in Lagos State in particular and in Nigeria in general.
It has never been a smooth ride for those at the top. What would you say have been the challenges you encountered as a Chief Judge?
My first challenge was with the union, Judicial Staff Union of Nigeria (JUSUN). It was then led by Mr. Adekanye and he came into my chambers and said: “Excuse me, you know you’ve been a good mummy to all of us. I just came to tell you that we have a nagging problem about N10,000 allowance” and that if I didn’t find a way of paying that allowance they were ready to down tools. That happened even before I was sworn in. In fact, it was as soon as I was announced as successor to my predecessor. They came to welcome me and then he brought a long list of demands, the chief of which was the N10,000 allowance.
He said I should leave other demands to give priority to allowance issue, and threatening to go on strike if they were turned down. He said: “We know you are our mummy but when a child is hungry, he doesn’t know any mummy. That was my first challenge, how am I going to pay this N10,000. So, I called one or two of the principal officers then, Mr. Safari now Justice Safari, who was the Chief Registrar and we had a discussion then. So, I called the person in charge of money and asked how much we get every month, he told me and I said go and calculate how much it will be to pay all the staff N10,000. He calculated it to be a sizeable sum and I said I have to pay that money to give myself peace and make my children happy. You know we mothers, we have to be very careful before we think about ourselves, we have to think about our children. Once your child is happy, he would do well in school and you too will be happy. And I asked is it okay for me to take that money, and they said yes, the money is ours. I will decide how it’s going to be spent. And I said from this minute pay them the N10,000 each. And within three weeks of my being sworn-in, I was sworn-in on June 14, 2012, so the money was for June salary. So, three weeks later they got the alert and they came to my office prostrating, kneeling down and that’s where their prayers for me started. And I don’t think they have stopped those prayers for now. I wake up in the morning I pick my phone prayers from anonymous numbers praying for me, for my children, and my children’s children. So, that was my first challenge and since that time I had no problem with them at all. The atmosphere is calm, even the strike they are on now, they came to explain to me that they are very sorry but it is for the betterment of the Judiciary and it is something they have to do but that it will not disrupt activities marking my retirement. And they all turned up en masse for the novelty match, they have really honoured me. They’ve spoken so well about me in all nooks and crannies of this country. When I meet other sister Chief Judges, they ask me what are you doing in Lagos that they love you so much and I say I don’t know, maybe it is the N10,000 allowances. But I thank God. That was my only challenge that I had.
To what extent did your decision affect your budget?
When you are at the helm of affairs, you have to make decision. And you make decisions not to please yourself or make yourself comfortable because as a leader you are really a servant. And I always say to be a good leader, you have to be a good servant because you are serving the people whom you are leading indirectly. If they are not happy, you are not happy. Everybody knows that we are taking these chunks from our running cost and we are making do with the rest. So, we are blocking holes here and there, say let’s do this, we pay half now and balance later and so on. So, we found out that we’ve been able to manage things. It has been rough this year because last year globally, I think the estimated revenue did not come in and so every department of government have suffered the cost. No new contract has been awarded; the emphasis now is on completing the on-going projects, more so, as the government is going to change hands next year at the executive level. So all of us are going to take the cut and when you take your cut, you cut your coat according to the cloth or size and make do with what you have. So, I’m not finding it too difficult but I’ve not done much as I would have loved to do. I had to abandon a few of my ideas but in my handing over note, I am going to put those ideas down for the incoming Chief Judge. If she thinks they are worthy, she can take them up. There are so many things we want to do like the ceremonial court. We should stop going to Igbosere for valedictory and all that. In the courts they are building now, there is a special ceremonial court, a huge court where all the judges would sit, the public would sit in the gallery, there will be changing room for judges and lawyers, there will be toilet facilities, there will be a restaurant where you can have refreshments after. So, we are building that, we’ve started that, the governor has approved it and they’ve given us land for that. So, that’s a project I would have loved to start, lay the foundation and all that but government’s work is continual, you can’t do it all. Even if I have five years as Chief Judge, I’m sure I will still leave a lot behind; there will still be a lot to be done.
We have the Tapa Commercial Court project that will cost about N1.5 billion, where all the commercial court would be is where the Tapa Magistrate Court is now. It will have courtrooms, libraries, restaurants, changing rooms, judges’ recreation rooms, conference rooms. That one is on course, the file actually has gone to the governor but it has not been approved yet because there’s no money for it in the budget. So, that is also pending and there are so many things still pending because of finance, may be when the Judiciary becomes autonomous we would be able to do things on our own.
What are some of the innovations and reforms you introduced into the justice delivery system?
I’m sure you’ve heard of the Judicial Information System, it was started by my predecessor. The contract was awarded before I came on board and they have started to put the infrastructure in place but I just made sure that the whole system was put in place properly and became functional. So now lawyers can file from their offices. But for now, it is just that they can’t pay yet because there are still issues with the Naira Master Card due to some technical things that only accountants can understand. But at least lawyers can access the website, upload their documents and then come to pay for them in the court.
The libraries are now been upgraded as I speak, the contracts have been awarded. Igbosere has started to work, Ikeja is yet to start but the money has been given for them to upgrade. All the judges and magistrates, I made sure that they are all gadget compliance as I call it. I’m an IT savvy person. I love gadgets, my I-pad is my fifth child, I carry it around with me anywhere I go I read my speeches from my I-pad, all the judges have Ipads, all the magistrates have gadgets. And then, at the magistracy, I’m trying to enforce and implement the 2009 Magistrates Court Laws. If you notice, the latest thing we have done is that all of them are now wearing robes. So, just a few of the things I’ve mentioned, we have done to uplift the Lagos State Judiciary and even make it greater. And I was telling the governor when he came in last week to commission the Achieve and that’s the last thing I’ve done. The Achieving of all our files, put all our files in the achieve, put them online so that any time you want access information on any file in respect of any case, it would be easily accessible. We won’t dumb them in one room where rats and cockroaches will be feeding fat on them. We now had to preserve our documents, you know our documents are very, very important. So, you find that these are things we have put in place to make sure that the Lagos State Judiciary is above all.
So, my vision for the Lagos State Judiciary in some five, ten years is that they should demolish some building in Ikeja here and build high rise courtrooms, state of the art courtrooms, conference rooms, waiting rooms, restaurants, family courts and things like that. We’ve started work on the Family Court too, we’ve got land for that too so that where they build the ceremonial court there would be Family Court too. So, we would have special court for family matters just like we are going to have special court for commercial matters. All these I’ve laid the foundation for and I hope my successor would build on it.
Why is prison congestion still a problem despite the efforts of your administration to decongest prisons in Lagos State?
I really don’t know but I’ve thought about it. In May this year, myself and members of the Judicial Service Commission went to the United Kingdom to talk to our counterparts over there . I really thank God for that trip, it was arranged for us by a company here in Nigeria. It was a beautiful experience. In England, they have ‘Sentencing Guidelines’. When the man showed us the book, it was very voluminous and I’m not exaggerating. Sentencing Guidelines where they have envisaged every single, possible eventuality that can come up in a criminal case. The Guideline says Magistrates and Judges should do and handle cases, when this happen do this, when that happens do that. I think we need something like it here and we need real guidelines too. I tried to work on it but I was so busy doing so many things and my time was too short, so my successor would have to handle that. We need to put special guidelines for our magistrates. Of course, the police have their own fare of the blame, so do we as judicial officers. There are certain defendants that should not go into prisons. With the community service, the probation, all those new innovation that has been introduced by the Criminal Administration of Justice Law in Lagos State 2011 those are the things we need to look into now and utilize to the maximum to ensure that we don’t congest the prisons.
Some of you follow me when I go on prisons decongestion visit, the least I ever released from any prison is 50 but by the time I’m leaving another 75 are going in. The people appreciate what I’m doing but I think there’s something wrong with the system and we need to address that. So, I think with a Sentencing Guidelines, bail guidelines, full implantation of the new features introduced by the Criminal Administration of Justice Law in Lagos State 2011 and above all training and further training and more training of our judges and magistrates on this issue, we should be able to conquer it. But right now, we seem to be using the backroom to win the war.
What has been your experience with the judicial staff, the judges, and magistrates?
I have received maximum cooperation from them. You know where you have a lot of women it is always very difficult. But as woman, I have not had any problem with any of them. You might know that I have an open door policy, so when a judge or magistrate comes to my chambers you can come in without being announced and discuss any problem at all, personal, official or other problem can be discussed with me. And they see me more like a big sister. Those who are much younger see me like a motherly figure while those of my contemporaries see me like a big sister and we speak honestly to ourselves. If I receive report about anyone of them, I summoned the person to chambers and we talk heart-to-heart and tell them how I feel and let them know how I would have handle the situation and they listened. So, I have had no problem whatsoever with them, I am very, very happy. I really appreciate the cooperation I received from every single one of them, the males and the females, the judges and magistrates. And I hope that they would give my successor the same cooperation and love they have shown me. I have had really a good time with them and I really appreciate them.
Corruption has been a major problem in Nigeria, as a stakeholder in the Judiciary how do you think the problem of corruption can be addressed in the Judiciary?
There are two parts of the judiciary, the judicial officers and the support staff. As regards the judicial officers just make them comfortable. In Lagos State Judiciary now in my two years tenure, no judge or magistrate was reported to me on the allegation of corruption. There was an instance I must confess and we dealt with the situation and the magistrate has been separated from the service when we find out that the complaints were getting too much and some of the allegations confirmed to be true. But apart from that, I have had no problem whatsoever with my judicial staff. In respect of the support staff, there are still one or two bad eggs that we have heard reports of. Some of them have been removed for bad behavior;, one or two that were caught with their hands in the cooking jars as they say, those two have also been separated from the service. We still have this nagging problem because even just yesterday the Code of Conduct Bureau Commissioner and Director informed me that some people are still taking money from those who want to sign Code of Conduct forms. I have asked the Chief Registrar to look into it because we are yet to identify whether it is our staff or some touts. You know we still have problem of touts. But luckily for us, the Judicial Information System has removed the issue of signing affidavit and that kind of thing as far as the High Court is concerned. I will not deny that the problem might persist but the best way to tackle it is to tackle it head on and once you catch anybody you deal with that person accordingly. By the time two, three persons lost their jobs, it will send a lesson to others to stop.
But generally, in Nigeria workers are not very happy with their remunerations. There’s need for total and thorough overhaul of the public service salary structure to meet the present day Nigeria. We all go to the same market and we still buy the same gari, tomatoes and pepper. So, government need to take the welfare of the workers more seriously, once that is done I’m sure to most people, except you are born greedy or a born criminal, you will not need to be corrupt, extort money or to steal. If you have good salary, nice place to stay in and of course good transport to and from work. I think government still need into the welfare of the workers when that is done there will be less fraud.
Don’t you think there’s need to also look at the appointment of those who are being appointed to the Bench as a way of curbing corruption?
Yes, we need to appoint judges now on merit and when I say merit, you don’t need to be brilliant alone, you need to have a character that is above boards. The Constitution provides that any legal practitioner who is ten years at the bar and above is eligible for appointment as a judge. In ten years, if you bring a private practitioner or even you’ve been working with the ministry or a corporation or a bank or wherever you may be, you would have acquired your reputation. And if there’s any coma, any black spot in that person’s reputation you are automatically disqualified from being considered a judge. But you know in Nigeria today, you might want to go by merit and somebody come to say this is my brother, he wants to be a judge because we want a judge in our family and they just put him there without even him being tested. And of course, when you get the wrong people on the Bench you are going to get bad report about that person. They say one bad apple spoils the whole apples, the judicial appointments are very sensitive. Once one is tainted, it will taint everybody. They will say that’s how they are. The Lord is elevating you by making you a judge, the Lord is elevating you above your peers, you are going to be adjudicating over your peers. In order to do this, no bad words must be said about you because once you are bad then you don’t belong to the class of people who are to adjudicate and to find your fellow citizens wrong.
So, the appointment process, I must say that the NJC has put guidelines in place. In fact, one of the guidelines that surprised me when I saw it was that the governor is not to be involved in the process at all. Is there in the guidelines. So, they’ve done their best to make it transparent but you know the Nigerian factor. Because the same governor who is not supposed to be involved in the process will still be the one to approve the appointment and even swear them in. All the NJC does is to say Chief Judge Lagos we approved your list then I will send the list to the governor. If the governor does not like say number six on the list what should we do? We are stuck. He would say I’m not going to swear in number six. So, we still have to look at the process of appointment of judges.
In my father’s day, because I remembered how my father did it many times in my presence. He would call a lawyer and say Mr. X I’ve noticed the way you comported yourself in my court, I’ve noticed the way you handled your cases and I’ve seen that you have appeared before me in several matters, would you like to be appointed a High Court Judge? That’s how it was done in the good old days. When it comes to the legal profession, I am a traditionalist, I believe in tradition because that is what separates the legal profession from any other profession. And that’s why we call it the Noble profession. But with politics and politicians here and there, I must confess we are not getting the best people on the bench.
Talking about tradition, would you approve of female wearing trousers in the Bar?
Oh yes, there is no male or female at the Bar, we are all gentlemen of the Bar. There’s nothing wrong with that, it is what is in your brain, how you can present your case. Just dress formally, I approve wholeheartedly.
There has been agitation for total independence of the Judiciary. Would you say Lagos State has been able to achieve this?
Well I will say 75 per cent not totally. In fairness to Lagos State Governor, Babatunde Fashola (SAN) I’ve rarely ask for anything and he does not give but we still have to line up with other ministries and parastatals to collect money. That situation, may be, should stop. That is why the present strike action that is on-going is well structured, is well thought of, is well founded and is on very strong ground. The court has even now ruled that we must be independent and the relevant sections of the Constitution must be complied with. So, we should be independent so we can handle our own projects ourselves, we can spend our own money ourselves and of course any Chief Judge, or Chief Registrar or Director of Finance and Admin who meddles with government funds will just have to face the music. There’s only one thing that reminds me to be in the Judiciary, reminds me to put the proper departments in place because when now you are going to handle projects, you are going to need engineer, you are going to need quantity surveyors, so maybe we may have to work something out with the Ministry of Works by way of consultancy. But the Constitution states clearly that we should be independent. Even people have stated reasons that we should be at par so when we are adjudicating we shouldn’t think that if I do this thing against the governor I may not get the money we have requested for a particular project. So, things like that. Our capital project is what is left for us to handle on our own. Monthly running cost we get our money, we run the court. It’s just the capital projects that we are yet to handle on our own in Lagos State. So, I very much support it and it’s the constitutional provision and we have to obey the Constitution of the land.
You have been on the Bench for a very long time as a judge and as the Chief Judge, from your experience, how can we eliminate delays in our criminal justice system?
When I was appointed in 1994, we were then still living in the dark ages, we were writing in long hand, no computerization, no power, sometimes you can’t sit in court for a week because of no power. Then the salary was about N4,800 per month it was terrible. Then we were operating the 1994 Rules. But with time, we got the new Rules 2000 and then Justice Sotiminu came on board as the Chief Judge and we started using 2004 Rules and that’s where things began to change. Then we had front loading of our processes and then computers. I think I was about the first person to start using a laptop. In 1997, a friend of mine Mrs. Joseph called me one day and said you still have a long time on the Bench, is this how you are going to be writing? You will kill yourself, for 20years you will be writing and by the time you are leaving your hand would have folded. So, she was making fun of me and she said she just bought a Toshiba laptop and that I should go and buy one and call one of these young men to teach me how to use it. So, I asked the guy who was taking me for exercise if he knows somebody who does computer and he said yes that there was somebody in his church. So, when the guy came to see me he said My Lord don’t start with laptop, start with a desktop, that is how to start learning. So, that is how he taught me how to use computer and I was using one hand. But one day my son, saw me and say mummy use the two hands, how long will it take you to write a judgment with one hand. So, that was how I started using the two hands. And that’s how I started on my own to make the job more interesting for me.
Now when the 2004 Rules came on board, we now know everybody needed to know more about computer. I remember Justice Ade Alabi the two Chief Judge ahead of me, arranged for us o go for computer classes in Alausa at the Computer Centre and we all went one by one. And some of the older judges couldn’t really pick it up but we the younger ones quickly picked it. And when the Millennium judges came on board from 2001, then we now have some young minds, fresh young bloods and everybody is using computer. You will find out that all of us are now using computers and laptops now. It was very bad, very difficult then but now it is much easier, even the lawyers all of us are now computer literate. The rules even demand that you must know how to use computer otherwise, you won’t be able to work well.
On the issue of importance of training for judicial officers, how much training was organized for them during your tenure?
I’ve organized a lot, we’ve trained a lot. First of all, from our annual retreat, the judges go on retreat every year so do the magistrates. We get resource persons to talk to us about our health or topical issues. For the magistrates believe it or not criminal matters and land loads and tenants. For the judges, they talked to us about the new Rules, how to enforce the Rules and things like that. And then we’ve done training for the Registrars, both here and a few of them abroad. We couldn’t really afford to send too many abroad but some of them have gone abroad even for management training and all that. I’ve tried to emphasise a lot on training, especially the Registrars during vacation like this, this is time when the Registrars can benefit from training because the courts are not sitting. I think in my first year some of them went to Ghana and the magistrates too. We have done quite a bit on training; we have done a lot of conferences abroad and locally for the judges, magistrates and even registrars. Not everybody because we couldn’t afford it but as many we could accommodate.
How do you relax while on the bench despite your tight schedule?
I watch movies, I have what they called Apple TV and I downloaded all my favourites series like Law and Order. It’s terrible, this job has affected me; anything legal is what I watch now – I watch Law and Order, Bursting Legal, The Brief – all those legal programmes; I’ve downloaded them all onto my laptop and I use Wi-Fi to screen it to my television. That’s how I relax. I sit down, put my feet up with a cup of tea may be some biscuits. That’s my main form of relaxation, watching movies and watching those programmes.
So, MiLord, how do you intend to spend your retirement?
I’ve been working non-stop for 40 solid years. I was called to the bar in June of 1974 straight to Youth Corps, that one is work not enjoyment. Came back from Youth Corps in June of 1975, got married in October of 1975 and I’ve started working. Throughout my pregnancy I was working. My daughter was two months old when I began work again in LSDPC in 1977. So, everyday I’d woken up in the morning to go to work except for when I’m on vacation and that is just two, three weeks in a year. So, I’m looking forward very much to waking up in the morning and having absolutely nothing to do because it’s strange to me. I still woke up this morning to come here. My children are actually worried about me I must confess. Because they believe it’s going to affect me. They say what are you going to do with yourself mummy? I said of course, I’m going to enjoy myself and lie down and be totally jobless for once in my life. And then I will travel, I want to go back to Australia and explore those places I’ve been hearing about, I will travel. I want to go away on holiday and not know when I will come back. Out of all my friends I’m the only one that is still working, all of them have retired and they are waiting for me.
I was worried at first I must confess. Six, seven months ago that please I’m going to retire, what am I going to do but now I can see a beautiful life for myself after retirement. You know they say that rest is sweet after labour, I have labored, I’m now going to rest and enjoy
Which of the cases you handled did you find most challenging?
I found the Miracle Baby case a bit challenging. I did the Miracle Baby case and it was quite challenging. And then I’ve done some land matters. I’ve done one recently, I delivered the judgment about two, three weeks ago where we had about 26 witnesses and we had several legal issues. The judgment runs into about 90 pages, I delivered it about three weeks ago just before the vacation started.
For the land matter, two contending parties all bought land from one family and each one says the land is mine, the claimant says the land was his, the defendant too says the land was his. You know land matters are always intricate, a lot of issues come that has to be considered and I found that very challenging. As I was writing the judgment, you get to understand the issues involved. But for the Miracle Baby case, in particular I think more because of the outside attention. There was a lot of media attention and I refused to talk to the press, I refused to appear on the television, in fact I drove them from my court that they should not come into my court. That was challenging but I was glad that at the end of the day, the person who I found to be the mother of the child was the true mother of the child because you could even see from the facial resemblance. And the mother still sees me and she will come to introduce herself. So, those were some challenging cases.
So, which is your memorable day on the Bench?
I think the day I was sworn-in as a Chief Judge because that was a beautiful day. The day I could stand up before everybody and give my assurance speech to say I would do this and I would do that and the Lord blessed my utterances on that day because most of the things I said I would do I have done. What I’ve not completed at least I have started. Because that was the icing on the cake, like you’ve worked for all these years, I could stand there, I was not sick, I was not blind and they did not manage to carry me there, I stood there in good health and besides God see me through it all. I think that was a memorable day for me.
Also, what would you like to be remembered for apart from being a Chief Judge with human face?
I want to be remembered for doing things differently. I think I’ve been different from those that have preceded me. I want to be remembered for my unique way of approaching the administration of justice. Above all, I want to be remembered for having come to make my mark. I don’t like to sing my praises because I really don’t know how to do it but at the end of the day I want history to judge me and I hope history will give me a pass mark.
What was your first day in court as a counsel like?
I remember that day clearly. I appeared before Justice Agoro with Mr. Kehinde Sofola. In the car on the way to the High Court, he told me I was going to move the motion. I will never forget that day in my life. I said move motion; when you leave the Law School you don’t really know how to do these things. He then said it’s very easy, you will just say My Lord; this application is brought pursuant to section so so. And as he was talking, I was writing everything. But when we got to court, I thought he was joking that he just wanted me to be prepared. But as Justice Agoro came in, he announced me and said My Lord; my learned friend, Mrs. Olagbende is going to move the application. And I said to myself, this man is serious, so I quickly took that paper and I began to move the motion. Then when I finished I said I so moved My Lord and I sat down. The judge knew me of course because my father was a serving judge. He said well done, is this the first time you are moving? I said yes My Lord. Then Mr. Sofola said you’ve done very well you deserved a gift for that. That was my first day in court.
What is your view on the abolition of death sentence?
I don’t think death sentence does anyone any good unless the crime committed has been particularly in heinous, that the person does not deserve to live in the society. The greater thinking now is that death sentence should be abolished and I think they should commute it to life sentence. I was asking the Comptroller of Kirikiri Maximum Security Prison on one of my visits there, when last did they carry out execution, he said it has been a long time because the governor has to sign and I don’t think any governor in recent time has sign it. So, I think it is gradually going out of fashion. In Lagos State, this is the second term of Governor Fashola and I don’t think he has signed any death warrant for anybody to be executed. I think it’s dying on its own; they should just let it die and commit it to life sentence.
Do you have any regret as you bow out of office?
Do I have any regret? I don’t have any regret. I believe the time given to me to serve as Chief Judge is what God has given to me. Some people would say they would like to stay for five years, they would like to stay for 10 years, I believe it is not how long you do a thing but how well. You can be there for six months and make a monumental impact than somebody who has been there for 10 years. And you can be there for 10 years and do nothing tangible. I have no regret, I have come, I have played my part and it is time to leave and I believe I want to leave graciously and I’m bowing out graciously. I’m very, very happy with my career so far and I thank God for giving me long life and good health and I ask for more that I could even enjoy a longer life now in retirement.
How did you end up being a judge?
I was born on July 25, 1949 in London, England where my parents were studying at the time. When my father finished reading Law in 1959, as it was done in those days, he immediately returned to Nigeria, and started working in the Federal Ministry of Justice as a counsel.
So, I had my nursery and part of my primary education in England. When we came back in 1959, I attended Ladi Lak School in Yaba for two years, the latter part of 1959 to 1961. I passed a common entrance examination in 1961 and in 1962 I gained admission into Queens College. And I was in Queens College, Yaba till 1966 when I did my school certificate examination.
I left Queens College and went off to Ibadan Grammar School, where I did my Higher School Certificate (HSC) examination and that’s where my life took a radical posture. Then there was a different phase of my life all together. I was in Ibadan Grammar School between 1966 to 1968, I then moved to University of Lagos in 1969, read Law, passed out in 1973 with an honours degree. Then I went to the Law School from 1973 to 1974 and I was called to Bar in June 1974. By that time, the Youth Corps Scheme had caught up with us and so we were the first set of lawyers to do Youth Service. I was posted to the then East Central State. So what you have now as Abia, Imo, Ebonyi, Enugu and all that was all one state under Ukpabi Asika. He was then the administrator. So, I was posted to Enugu Ministry of Justice as a state counsel for one year. I came back to Lagos in 1975, worked for some time in Kehinde Sofola Chambers and joined Lagos State Development and Property Corporation (LSDPC) from 1976 to 1977, and rose from Legal Officer to Secretary and Legal Adviser. Then I decided in 1990 to move to the Ministry of Justice in order to get to the High Court because ordinarily, I won’t be appointed from LSDPC. And so in 1990, I moved to Ministry of Justice; I was Director of Commercial Law for two years and in 1992 to 1994 I became Director of Civil Litigation and in February of 1994, I was appointed a High Court Judge. That’s my life in a nutshell. I’m married to Mr. Folorunsho Phillips, he lives in America. We have four children and four grandchildren, all boys. So, I’m begging them to give me a grand daughter.