Tag: Nigeria newspaper

  • Lagos community signs deal with foreign investors on infrastructure

    A partnership between local residents of Odo-Ogun community on the outskirt of Lagos and a team of Chinese investors may soon bring about infrastructural development and job creation in the rural community located along the Lagos-Ikorodu highway.

    According to the details of the deal unveiled yesterday during a stakeholders’ meeting, the investors, led by Mr. Lin Anping, will provide residential houses for the villagers, good roads, hospitals, schools, shopping mall, potable water and other basic amenities as part of the projects tagged ‘Odo-Ogun Castle’.

    Read Also: Sanitation: Lagos community lauds Sanwo-Olu 

    “Although, this would be my first project in Nigeria, I have done a number of projects in China where I come from. But I have plans to develop this community into a castle which will be named ‘Odo-Ogun Castle’. According to the development project plan, we have made reservation for resident houses for the villagers, good road, hospitals, schools, shopping mall, water corporation, among others, will be built in the Castle,” Anping said at the meeting which was attended by traditional rulers, Community Development Association leaders, youth groups representatives, women leaders, indigenous groups’ leaders and numerous other residents.

    Oba Abdullateef Adewale Amodemaja of Maparaland, Agbada, Ogun State, who also attended the meeting, said, “the project is laudable for the development of this community and I am in total support of the development plans. This community has been in a deplorable state over the years and we must endeavour to embrace this opportunity.”

    Secretary of the Odo-Ogun Indigenous Progressive Movement Committee set up by the Odo-Ogun community to scrutinise the project proposal, Yusuf Muyideen, said, “the project is one of the best things that will ever happen to us in Odo-Ogun. All residents will benefit immensely from the project because it presents us with employment, economic development and good standard of living for the people.”

  • Int’l Day of Peace: LASG urges manufacturers to package products with recyclable materials

    The Lagos State government has urged manufacturers and producers of consumable goods to package their products with biodegradable or recyclable materials to save drainages from blockage and flooding.

    State Commissioner for Justice and Attorney General, Mr. Moyo Onigbanjo, made the appeal in his welcome address at the tree planting exercise to commemorate the year 2019 International Day of Peace which was held at Gani Fawehinmi Park, Ojota, at the weekend.

    The programme with the theme, ‘Climate Action for Peace: Clear Blue Skies’, was spearheaded by the Citizen’s Mediation Centre, CMC, an agency under the state ministry of justice.

    Read Also: Lagos affirms commitment on environmental laws

    Other activities to commemorate the day was the sensitisation of public and stakeholders on opportunities for wealth generation and job creation in the area of waste recycling of biodegradable materials dropped in drainages but picked up by staff of CMC.

    According to Onigbanjo, causes of flooding in Lagos are traceable to the disposal of plastic and nylon products which clog drainage channels and results in flooding.

    “We have to synergise as a people to ensure that waste products are properly disposed; the year 2019 international day of peace celebration is another opportunity for us, as a people, to be in harmony with nature by ensuring environmental management and conservation for the benefit of our society and future generations.”

    The theme, he pointed out, is expected to raise public awareness through enlightenment campaigns and advocacy to the threat posed to human settlements through natural disasters, conflicts, food insecurity, human migration and deforestation.

    “We owe it as a duty to sustain our world by adopting and supporting the use of renewable energy and environmentally friendly practices,” Onigbanjo said.

  • Lambo: Time to end beauty contest in health sector

    Leveraging on his expertise and experience in the apex global and national health systems, former Minister of Health, at a Scientific Conference in Abuja, has called for an urgent end to the disharmony and unhealthy rivalry among the various professional groups in the nation’s health sector.

    The age-long issue of inter-professional disharmony in the Nigerian health sector resonated in the ornate Africa Hall of the International Conference Centre, Abuja recently as hundreds of health professionals and other stakeholders assembled for the 55th Annual Scientific Conference and Workshop of the Association of Medical Laboratory Scientists of Nigeria whose theme was “Global Health Security: the Medical Laboratory Agenda for sub-Saharan Africa”. Agenda (GHSA). The aim was to focus on how the lofty goals of GHSA could be advanced through an interconnected network of medical laboratories in both public and private clinical settings that are capacitated to rapidly detect and report disease outbreaks in Nigeria and other sub-Saharan African countries.

    Renowned Health Economist and former Minister of Health, Professor Eyitayo Lambo, had accepted the Association’s invitation to be the Chairman of the Opening Session of the Conference and the Guest Speaker at one of the plenary sessions on the topic: “Managing Inter-Professional Disharmony in Nigeria’s Health Sector for Health Security.” Lambo, who superintended over the nation’s health sector for four years of momentous developments, was on familiar terrain. For the four years he was on the saddle, not a single industrial action was witnessed in a sector that had built a reputation for being patently unstable.

    Prior to his appointment, debilitating industrial actions by workers were a regular fare in the sector, caused often by issues arising from disharmony and needless unhealthy rivalry among the professionals.

    Guided by a robust career as a University teacher, Health Economist with the World Health Organization and the peculiar advantage of not being a health professional who had to coordinate the activities of the various professional groups in the sector, Lambo, with no worries about who might take offence, tackled the subject with clinical detachment and spoke truth to those engaged in what he calls unnecessary “beauty contest” in the health sector as very few could do.

    Stressing that the process of providing healthcare was interdisciplinary and requiring many health professionals to work as a team or in teams, Lambo noted that effective team work among health professionals was an essential tool for patient-centred health service delivery system. He observed with regret that disharmony and unhealthy rivalry among professionals in the health sector was an age-long problem in Nigeria that had hitherto not been adequately and effectively dealt with by policy makers and the various governments.

    Such disharmony and unhealthy rivalry, he added, had become so pronounced that it had negatively impacted on: the quality and continuity of patient care; the confidence of patients and the general public in the nation’s healthcare delivery system; and even job satisfaction among some of the feuding groups of health professionals. He lamented that the ugly trend had also led to a further weakening of the national health system and poor health outcomes.

    Lambo, therefore, called on stakeholders, led by the government, to boldly confront the monster of disharmony and unhealthy rivalry among health professionals, and restore harmony, stop unnecessary conflicts among the various groups of health professionals and promote inter-professional collaboration rather than competition and confrontation. A united health workforce, he noted, was necessary for strengthening the national health system, which in itself is a prerequisite to achieving universal health coverage (UHC) and the goals of the Global Health Security Agenda (GHSA).

    He examined the dimensions and drivers of disharmony and unhealthy rivalry among health professionals in Nigeria and identified some of them as the rivalry between the Joint Health Sector Union (JOHESU) and medical doctors/dentists. Issues in contention, he said, include: the supremacy and the alleged arrogance of doctors towards other health professionals; leadership of the health team; and the headship of health agencies and federal tertiary health institutions. Others are the appointment of Health Ministers, the structure of the Federal Ministry of Health/other health institutions, and the appointment of Directors of the Ministry.

    The groups, he said also bicker over salary structure and emoluments, especially as it pertains to the adjustment and harmonization of emoluments; special training programmes and expanded roles for allied health workers; the appointment of non-medical professionals as consultants in hospital settings; professional autonomy; membership of Boards of Federal Health Institutions; conditions of service as well as the advocacy for the creation of Office of  Surgeon-General.

    According to Lambo, the disregard for existing regulatory laws of the health professions, non-implementation and selective implementation of the scheme of service for health sector personnel, non-adherence to job definitions and descriptions and selfishness in the pursuit of health workers’ welfare are also among the alleged causes of bitter disagreements.

    The former Health Minister further identified other dimensions of clashes as between pharmacists and doctors, nurses and doctors, medical laboratory scientists and pathologists, radiographers/radiology technicians and radiologists, physiotherapists and doctors as well as optometrists and ophthalmologists.

    The needless dishonoring and unhealthy rivalry among the professionals, he said, was a major contributor to the incessant strikes by health workers with serious effects on patients, the health system and health outcomes. For patients, the negative effects he listed included increased deaths and worsening health conditions due to moving patients from one health facility to the other; discharge of patients from public health facilities without completion of care; treatment/recovery delays; prolonged suffering and irreversible damage to health.

    The unhealthy rivalry among the professions, according to him, also: promotes inequality in access to quality health care because most of the poor cannot afford to pay for private health care; increases morbidity and mortality, especially among the poor; leads to sub-optimal contribution by the various professional groups to the care of patients; encourages outbound medical tourism by those who can afford it; and contributes to job dissatisfaction and emigration of qualified health workers. The trend, Lambo said, also contributes to: further weakening of the national health system and the nation’s poor health outcomes; and client dissatisfaction with and loss of confidence in the public healthcare delivery system.

    To manage and resolve the disharmony and unhealthy rivalry among the health professionals, Lambo urged government to take the need to bring all stakeholders together seriously and adopt an impartial approach in order to effectively resolve most, if not all, of the outstanding causes of the trend. He also enjoined the leaders of the relevant professional groups to come to the table to resolve all outstanding issues with an open mind. In other words, he said, the round table conversation should enjoy the attendance and frank participation of all concerned with a spirit of no-victor-no-vanquished.

    Government and other relevant stakeholders, he said, should promote mutual respect and trust among the various professional groups as well as create a mechanism for ensuring adequate involvement of all groups in decision-making concerning the care of patients. They should also make industrial relations mechanisms and collective bargaining more effective and transparent as well as ensure the timely honouring of any collective bargaining agreements.

    The former Health Minister further called on government to: adopt a holistic approach in dealing with issues relating to health workers; establish open communication channels for groups of health professionals; review existing legislation concerning Federal Tertiary Health Institutions, taking into consideration the best practices from other countries with better health systems; and vigorously promote inter-professional collaboration in health care.

    He itemized the possible benefits of harmony among health professionals and inter-professional collaboration to include the enhancement of patients’ satisfaction with care, enhancement of the co-ordination of health services, improvement of patients’ care and outcomes and the enhancement of patients’ safety.

    To health professionals he said, they would reap the benefits of improved job satisfaction, reduced job- related stress, lower staff turnover, maximized utilization of the skills and expertise of health professional, improved understanding of roles and improved coordination among care givers.

    Lambo, who said it would be a win-win situation for all, added that health care organizations stand to gain the benefits of improved effectiveness and responsiveness, improved health outcomes, increased capacity to serve a variety of healthcare needs, and reduced medical errors.

    Reflecting on his tenure as Health Minister between 2003-2007, Lambo attributed his widely acclaimed success and the industrial peace experienced in the health sector during the period to: the grace and mercy of God; his not being a member of any of the health professions which enabled him to deal with issues dispassionately and impartially without bias in favour or against any group; and his leadership style and skills which encouraged most of the professional groups to work closely with him Other factors were his vision for the sector which was shared by most members of each professional group and the development/implementation of the nation’s first comprehensive health sector reform program to attain the vision. That, he noted, was a major unifying factor.

    Other factors that contributed to industrial peace during his tenure were: the maturity exhibited by the leadership of most of the professional groups; the open door policy adopted which encouraged the various groups to approach him for necessary consultations, even at short notice, on any relevant issues; commitment to transparency in the appointment of heads of federal tertiary health institutions; and the strategic support he got from President Olusegun Obasanjo and the Finance Minister to make money available to settle outstanding payments to health workers.

    Lambo said there were no “sacred cows” under him when there were known infractions while the leadership of the unions were regularly updated, especially when monies and dues were involved. They were also informed of releases and cash backing as and when due.

    He said no personal demands were placed on federal tertiary health institutions and their management by the Minister beyond the line of duty, which he said gave no opportunity for the unions to accuse him of putting pressure on the finances of the institutions, thereby creating conflict.

    Lambo also spoke extensively on the appointment of Ministers of Health, which has been a major sore point in the relationship among the various groups in the health sector. As against the popular trend and agitation by some for medical doctors to always be named ministers, he was emphatic that what was required of a Health Minister is not the knowledge of medicine per se, since a Health Minister is not required to perform surgeries or attend to patients in health facilities. Rather, the most pertinent requirements for an ideal Health Minister, according to Lambo, include: a very sound knowledge of the national health system (which has health service delivery as just one of its six major pillars or building blocks); strong management and leadership skills  including being visionary and a strategic thinker; ability to make economic and political arguments with the President, Finance Minister and the leadership of National Assembly for financial resources and elicit high level support for health system changes; skills required to effectively engage the Ministries and Departments of Government that oversee the key determinants of health that are beyond Health Ministry’s purview as well as engage with non-state actors which have expertise and vested interests in health, including private providers of health services, special interest groups, advocacy organizations and donors; and ability to ensure the provision of essential health functions directly or indirectly through the agencies and private sector parties.

    To support his position that Health Ministers do not necessarily have to be medical doctors, Lambo presented the profiles of the current Health Ministers in 80 of the Member-States of World Health Organization (WHO) of which almost half are non-medical doctors. Among the countries with non-medical persons as Health Ministers currently are the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Denmark, Norway, Australia, New Zealand, Israel, Ireland, China and The Netherlands. In Africa, he said Ghana, Zimbabwe, Cameroon, Sierra Leone, Lesotho, Mali and Kenya are among countries that have Health Ministers who are not medical doctors.

    The audience gave Lambo rapt attention as he waded through the fairly long presentation and rewarded him with a resounding standing ovation at the end of the engagement, which some of those who made comment on the occasion said was sure to elicit a change of thinking in the nation’s health sector.

  • Olojo festival begins in Ife

    One of the greatest festivals for which the ancient town of Ile-Ife is known is the Olojo festival.  Every year a whole month is devoted to it.  It is time to reflect on the socio-cultural lives of the people of the old Ife who constitute the kingdom and have also contributed immensely to the historic values of the Yoruba heritage.  This year’s Olojo began three weeks ago and the grand finale will be celebrated on the 27th and 28th of this month.

    In a statement made available to The Nation, Mr. Akin Adejuwon, one of the directors of the festival said that on 21st, there will be a street carnival.  Entitled Gbajure, the carnival will take the people round designated routes and streets within the precincts of Ife town.  Some of the important sons and daughters of the ancient historic town will be in attendance.  This is essentially to give clout and credence to the glorious outing.  Usually it is the glow of the people that add vibes and colours to the carnival.  Already some of these important personalities have begun to arrive Ife in readiness for the grandiose epic gathering.

    On 25th there will be a colloquium.  This colloquium became an important segment of this show to enable scholars, culture technocrats, administrators, activists and advocates to brainstorm and determine how best to ensure that Olojo and other related cultural festivals do not lose focus.  The contributions of these eggheads will add more values to the ideas already on ground and then proffer more ingredients to be added to the festival to make it richer, bigger and more attractive.

    Adejuwon, a former Director of the National Troupe of Nigeria is of the opinion that the outcome of the colloquium will be documented for further references for future use.  Ideas germinate.  Ideas propel an issue and ignite new moves to help civilization.  Therefore all ideas to be tabled and discussed there will be totally taken into cognizance for the sake of culture in Nigeria.  Olojo needs to go places.  It needs to lead while others follow.  That is the basic concept and idea.

    On 27th and 28th, the main events will then happen.  On these days the Ooni, Oba Adeyeye Ogunwusi will be in place to receive the people.  The whole town will be in special mood to welcome visitors, tourists and culture enthusiasts from all over the world.  It will be colourful and magnificent, bringing the town to the full attention of the world.

    The festival is one of the many traditional celebrations from time immemorial by the people of Ife.  They do not treat it with levity.  It is part of the town as the cradle of the Yoruba race, a place where customs hold sway.  Indeed, a place where the Ooni does not joke with the heritages bestowed on the people by their great ancestors and progenitors.

  • Anambra community warns trouble makers, say culprits risk life ban

    Elders of Umunya community in Oyi local government area of Anambra State have frowned at the spate of attacks on the traditional ruler of the community, Igwe Kris Onyekwuluje.

    They warning those behind the attacks to desist or risk banishment, insisting they would no longer tolerate trouble makers in the area.

    The elders spoke during oath taking ceremony of indigenes of the community, including its town union branches in various parts of the country, convened by the monarch, Igwe Kris Onyekwuluje.

    Moving a motion for peaceful coexistence among the people of the area, Chief Reuben Jephat said anyone involved in fomenting trouble in the community would be ostracised.

    Read Also: Anambra lawmaker to community: Let’s give peace a chance

    The motion was seconded by Nze Emma Nweke.

    Chief priest of the community, Ichie Sunday Anaeze who presented the community’s ‘offor’, the Igbo symbol of truth and justice at the meeting, instructed all respondents to make their oath barefooted.

    He warned that anyone who lied would die after seven days.

    Earlier, the monarch, Igwe Kris Onyekwuje, said he was compelled to call the meeting following lingering crises rocking the area which had led to series of protests.

    Onyekwuje, while pardoning his detractors, pledged continued pursuance of peace in the community, just as he called on the gods of the land to go after whoever that would henceforth tarnish his throne after the resolution.

    Meanwhile, the governor of the state, Chief Willie Obiano, has reassured his commitment to ensuring relative peace was restored in the community.

    Obiano, represented by the senior special adviser to the governor on traditional institution and community matters, Mr. Benjamin Umerah, said there was need to seek peace in the community to ensure speedy development.

  • ARA THUNDER: Meeting President Macron inspired me greatly

    Janet Chiwendu Ofurum, known by the sobriquet Ara Thunder, is making waves after she fell in love with drums. In this interview with Yetunde Oladeinde, she talks about her passion for drums, presenting the talking drum to French President Emmanuel Macron, inspiration and more.

    How did you fall for the drums?

    I have always had love for music and I always wanted to be different. So, the spoken drum was what I was entrusted to. It could talk and communicate while making different melodies.

    How was it like at the beginning?

    It was difficult at the beginning. But since it was something that I really wanted to do, I had to persevere.

    What messages do you usually deliver when you play bata?

    For me, the message that I try to communicate is very important and it inspires change in the listener. At the centre of the message usually are African unity, love and happiness. Inspiring others as I do my thing, I try to entertain and bring some African feel to it.

    How did you learn all these since you are not a Yoruba lady?

    Music is a general language. I never thought that being an Igbo lady could stop me from playing the talking drum.

    How have your fans been able to decode the message coded in your drumming?

    Some don’t, while others do. While some don’t understand the message, I actually try to entertain because of the energy that I bring to the stage. So, if they are entertained and leave, they would naturally want to research and understand the message.

    Outside Nigeria, what has the reception been like?

    It’s been amazing; the reception has been really amazing. Even though sometimes they do not know what the talking drum is saying, they still move their feet and their heads.

    Tell us about your experience during the display of drums when Macron visited Nigeria

    I never expected it to be that awesome. And the idea of me presenting the talking drum to President Macron was carefully thought out by my boss in Atunda Entertainment. And it would have been unfair of me not to teach him one or two drum lines to take back to France.

    What were you doing before this?

    I was a back-up singer in Atunda Entertainment and in the process of doing this, my talent shone out and that was how they decided to make me a brand. So, they groomed me and taught me all of the things that I know and do now, thus making me a better artist. Let’s talk about some memorable moments as a drummer

    The first on my list would be playing for President Macron and the second would be when I went to Turkey for trophy victories.

    How about the challenges?

    One of the top challenges that I faced is the gender issue about women playing the talking drum. And it has been restricted to just the male folk in the past. Secondly, would be the tribe. Most people are turned away the moment they hear that I am an Igbo lady. I have to convince them, play it for them for them to know that I am good enough.

    When was the turning point in your career?

    I have had some great outings and on top of the list would be the event where I played for President Macron of France.

    Who or what do you consider as the greatest influence in your life and career?

    My greatest influence would be God first. Some people like Ambassador Wanle Akinboboye and Atunda Entertainment.

    Let’s compare when you started drumming and now, what has changed?

    My understanding of music has changed dramatically. It has changed from me infusing my drum lines, my dance moves into my repertoires. It has been a turn around because when I started, I didn’t really do that. So, it is amazing. It has made me a better person and creative. I would also say that with the talking drum, I can keep fit. When I perform, I give a top notch performance.

    What are some of the changes you would want to see in the entertainment sector?

    Women need to be given more opportunities and also it is important for African music to be taken to the rest of the world in a creative way.

    Any lessons learnt?

    I would tell them that hard work pays and if you want something you must be determined and go get it, regardless of what anyone says.

    Who are people you admire and role models?

    It would be Ambassador Wanle Akinboboye. He is my mentor, the founder of Ara Thunder Initiative and Atunda Entertainment. He is the owner of one of the biggest and award-winning resorts, La Campaigner Tropicana. He is an activist, a philanthropist and a continent builder. He is the man that has endeared himself to my heart because of what he represents. He has given the platform to young talents to shine. I am a testament to that. Others include Fela Anikulapo Kuti; what is left to be said about the Abami eda himself? Fela took our music beyond the shores of Africa to the world. Fela was a prophet; he predicted what is happening in our country today. And he was not afraid of speaking out about it. Angelina Kidjo is a woman first and foremost and she has motivated me to be more of myself beyond song writing. She is an activist, a voice for the people and herself. We all grew up listening to her wonderful voice.

    Tell us about your style. What do you wear and what image do you portray?

    My style is unique. My style represents Africa in all sense of the word and because of my talking drum and stage act. My music is afro pop and high life

    So, I just released a new single titled bojuboju, it’s an all musical platform and it can be down loaded. I have a unique brand here which is red in color, it is always red. If it is not red, I am not putting it on. And it is always in a braided form and long. My brand color is red and silver which is also my best color. I portray Africa in a positive way. I portray Africa to the world at large. What I wear is African and most time it is classical. My style is basically my own style. It is just for me and African in all ramification of the world.

    Lets talk about some of the things you would not do in the name of fashion?

    The things that I won’t do in the name of fashion is dressing semi-nude. That naturally is something that I am not comfortable with. No matter how pretty or how trendy it is, I won’t put it on. Also my first rule of fashion is to be comfortable first and foremost. So, if I am not comfortable with it I won’t wear it. I can’t wear it. I can’t come out in nudity just to show some style of fashion. It is just not my thing

    How did you get into music?

    I don’t think I got into music, music actually got into me. Basically music found me. I have always been all out for music, ever since I was little. It was so obvious even back then, from my primary to secondary school days. I was a music lover from way back. It has always been music all the way. It has always been entertainment all my life. It wasn’t difficult to know that this was what I wanted in life and what I want to do for the rest of my life. So, it has always been my music and I.

    What are the other things that you are passionate about?

    I love to draw, I am a collector of art. I love painting. I actually love anything artistic and immensely. I also love to cook, majorly I enjoy cooking just soup, any kind of soup at all. I can do with just eating only soup for a whole month and I would be fine. So, when I am not playing the talking drum I am busy cooking soup. One other thing that really occupies my time is drawing, it gives me great inspiration all the time

    Tell us about your encounter with president Macron of France?

    I was nervous at the beginning but interestingly I was happy at the same time. I was also scared because I didn’t think he was going to accept my talking drum. Also when I started performing I was very very observant. At that point, I was watching and when I started performing I could see how happy he was and how well he accepted my performance by shifting his head to my rhythm. It was a great inspiration for me.

    That alone really made my heart skip a bit. And when I reached out to present the drum to president Macron of France, the way he stretched out his hands to accept the drum from my hand was mind blowing. The experience was really awesome. I could feel tears running down my eyes and cheeks. It is actually the height in my career right now. It has helped me drastically and it is still helping and paving way for me.

  • ‘Our festivals bring peace and unity’

    Oba Ayorinde Ilori Faboro is the traditional ruler of Ido-Ekiti, in Ekiti State. This season he will be celebrating ten years on the throne. Oba Faboro was a staffer of Shell and Exxon-Mobil where he worked as an expatriate loadmaster and seaman before he was recalled by his people to become an Oba. In this interview with Edozie Udeze in his palace at Ido-Ekiti he speaks on national and international matters, festivals in his domain that are celebrated to usher in peace and unity.

    You are ten years on the throne. What is the experience like so far?

    The experience has been good.  We thank God.  Initially I was reluctant.  At the beginning I wasn’t happy.  I was not happy to leave or abandon my profession to come and stay at home here in Ido-Ekiti.  When you want to make a drastic life transition, it is a very difficult decision to make.  Then you leave your profession to come to a place you’re no longer able to work, where you can no more look for income.  You have to content yourself with whatever you find on ground.  For some time I wasn’t happy.  But in the past four years or so, God started showing me a lot of blessings.  The sons and daughters of the town started lifting me up.  For now, you can see many of them surround me like Biodun Abe, your friend here seated.  Even then when you have good people behind you, you’ll be bold all the time.  And when you also have God behind you, things work out better.  You know, when I look at the progress the town has made since I became Oba ten years ago, I marvel.  The town has more than doubled.  Well meaning indigenes of the town have started coming home not only to join in the development but to also identify with the progress of the kingdom.  God has done that for me – to attract the well-meaning sons and daughters of the town to come home, to build their own houses and contribute immensely to the development of the town.  It is sweet when you see how the town is spreading, how development is spreading fast.  You know when government knows I have big people in this town behind me, it helps to make the government refocus attention here.  I am lucky then.

    So, in other words, I have made that transition from unhappiness to happiness.  Seeing these illustrious indigenes around me I am happy.  So the journey so far has been like this.  As you know, the task of looking after human beings is the hardest.  If you do not do it, you’ll not have the experience.  Human beings are difficult to look after.  But for God to have put me here, there’s now so much peace and happiness.  The rate of development is tremendous.  And for these I am happy, I am grateful.

    You have placed so much emphasis on your profession…?

    Oh yes, I was a loading master for Exxon-Mobile.  I was a loading master for Shell too, before I went to Exxon-Mobile.  I was a seaman.  That was what I did before I was brought home to be an Oba by my people.  I was going round the world as a seaman for these two oil companies.  If you know what I mean, it is not the same when you’ve been there and then you see yourself here now.  It can never be the same.  I was working as an expatriate in Nigeria for those oil concerns.  So I was well-looked after.  But when you come to our own government, our own people, it can never be the same, especially financially.  And that is what I was talking about that I was not too happy.  When you now realize that what they give me in a month is not up to what I received in a day where I was before, then you know you have to make drastic adjustment.  And if you do not have a wife who is ready to support you, then you’re in trouble.

    Now, let us look at the community festivals here.  How have these been useful in the area of socio-cultural development in the kingdom?

    Yes, we have many festivals here which we celebrate annually.  There’s one we do which is the major one.  That is the Ido-day, a big celebration indeed and which is a part of this kingdom.  It started like twenty years ago and we have been celebrating it to bring our people together.  Before I became Kabiyesi, it used to be celebrated first week of October.  But when I became king I needed to adjust the calendar.  I was appointed Kabiyesi last week of November.  I now shifted it to last week in November to coincide with the coronation.  We do not have to have two celebrations close to each other.  So, this year, I will be ten years on the throne and we will be celebrating both the Ido day and my ten years anniversary.

    We talk about security in the kingdom, what do you do to safeguard your subjects and strangers?

    You know, there is an organisation from the palace.  I have chiefs who report to me.  People only quarrel when they do not have people to report to.  I provide leadership.  When people are quarreling in town, instead of exchanging blows, they bring it to the palace and we are able to settle 75% of cases they bring in here.  This is a local government headquarters.  Therefore we have a divisional police headquarters here in town.  Also we have the area command here.  So the town is well-covered and secured.  But I think the one that is going for me is the traditional security, I have organized.  Hunters go out at night and people know that they are there.  They are even more effective than the police.

    Ido is not the only town in my domain.  Ido kingdom comprises of 13 communities.  Ido is the head.  Some of them include Ifaki, Usi, Igbonla, Aye, Orin; those are my kingdom.  The Oyibo arrangement they added Osi, Aiyetoro too.  So, those people and places are under my traditional authority.  We have the same arrangement in all these towns.  When they have problems they run to me and I am here to solve them all.  I usually settle their problems.  So, that is the mechanism of security we have put in place here to secure both the indigenes and other people.  And then I do not discriminate when it comes to religion.  As a father, I bring everybody together – Christians, Muslims, the babalawos – everybody is one here in my kingdom.  They see me as their father.  In fact, they have access to me.  You saw some set of Christians when you came here earlier.  I am able to bring them together and there is peace in the land.

    How do you ensure people of means come to the kingdom to bring infrastructural development to create jobs for the youths?

    I am a traditional ruler, first and foremost.  I am not the government.  The government is there.  But we have well-meaning sons and daughters of the town.  Yet, it is the responsibility of the government to give us industries; to give us factories, to give us social infrastructure to develop the domain and make it more attractive.  It is for the government to develop our town for us; to give us electricity, to bring water to the town, to give us hospitals and health centres.  And also pay teacher’s salaries.  The position of the Kabiyesi is to only lobby those people to come to our place to do so.  This is so because I cannot buy all the transformers they will use in town.  It is the government who should provide that.  My duty is to make sure we have people in government and then have access to the government and the ministers and talk to them.  And then when we hear what to do, our people in Abuja will get in touch with us over here.  Then if need be we write a letter and present it to the government in Abuja.  My position as Kabiyesi is that of a coordinator, or that of a flag bearer.  It is not the responsibility of the Oba to build industries or factories for the people.  I can encourage all that to happen.  However once there is peace, development comes in naturally.  Peace attracts development to a place.  Once people see peace and prosperity, banks will come, entrepreneurs will come, because they want to enjoy the peace.   What I do however is that people who come here, I guarantee them peace, security and guidance.  Even then, people see for themselves that there is peace here.  This is why people now come from all over the country to settle down here.

    The festivals are celebrated to cement unity.  In what other ways do they also help to attract investments and tourism to the domain?

    We have a number of festivals that attract people home annually.  We have also Ogun festival.  All these have been going on since time past.  Nobody can put any date on them.  They are as old as the kingdom itself.  Part of what you are doing now to put it in the newspapers and what others do to ensure publicity help us to have resounding festival every year.  We also print magazines that we send out to people.  In addition we do jingles on radio and television to attract people to the festivals.  It is to let people know what we are doing and I tell you a lot of dignitaries usually come here to be part of these festivals.

    Are you making any arrangement to ensure one of the festivals is made a UNESCO – recognized festival?

    I have not exploited that possibility.  But with some of my people being in the highest echelon of culture administration there in Abuja I think it can be made possible.  Biodun Abe is there as the director of Abuja Carnival and a top notch in the culture sector.  He and others can set that in motion and see how it works out.  So those are the people who can be encouraged to broadcast what we are doing and let others get to know and hear about them.  Those people can also come to advise us and equally finance our activities because all these need huge budgets.  We do not have much, we rely heavily on what we get from government.  If the town can have its own businesses apart from selling lands and the sorts, we will generate enough resources.  I am talking to government to site industries here.  There are people who are asking for schools, universities.  They are good, for they help to swell the town up.  But they are not necessarily what we need to improve the quality of life.  It is industries we need more.  Here we have a teaching hospital that employs a lot of people.  And government pumps a lot of money into it.  A lot of the people are there and receive salaries, do consultancy and sorts.  However, industries make a lot of difference in terms of employment, helping to settle youths who are there looking for what to do.  This is why we are talking to politicians to remember us when they are citing their industries so that the youths can be employed.

    On our own we invest in agriculture.  We have attention focused on agriculture.  The only problem we have now is that the youths do not want to go into agriculture.  They want white collar jobs.  Me I have done all these and I have discovered that agriculture has its own values.  I have my own farm.  I have plantains, I have yams.  I farm all the time and it has been really good.  I grow castor bean now and all that help a lot.

    What are the major features you expect at the anniversary this year?

    The anniversary is going to take a weeklong.  In the morning there will be prayer procession through the town, involving all the people, religions, and all that.  There is an organizing committee to handle this.  It has already been set up.  There will be a novelty match, followed by series of cultural displays.  There will be dancing competition, then followed by street carnivals throughout the town.  The final ceremony will be on the last Saturday in November.  That will be the grand finale.  It is where all of us will come together.  Then we will raise money in the palace.  That was how we raised money to build this palace like this, plus the little savings I had to do this.  It is a befitting palace.  We also have other projects.  We are building an army barracks in town.  The area command is in my house.  They use my house right now.  I evacuated my personal house for them.  So the government needs to provide them with a permanent place of their own so that they can leave my house.  We raise money to finance our own securities, to check criminals.  We also equip our local security with the materials to work with.  We want to do so because hoodlums tend to fear the army more than they fear the police.  After we have done that we then hand it over to the Nigerian Army and ask them to bring some soldiers over here.

    Lets go to Xenophobia. Nigerians and other foreigners are being attacked by South Africans.  What is your take on this?

    I’d like to leave the comments for politicians.  I lived abroad.  I schooled abroad.  Sometimes when you are abroad – it is not only Nigerians who are in South Africa.  I was reading the statistics on that.  There are more foreigners of other African nations there than Nigerians.  Nigerians are only 27,000.  From Zimbabwe you have 400,000 people.  Also from Zambia, you have about 400,000.  I think and that is my own personal advice to our fellow Nigerians is that when they go abroad no matter how prosperous they become, they have to be humble.  They should be humble in their dealings with others.  They should be decent, quiet, and conform to the rules and orders of their host society.

    We say it in Ekiti here, that if your yam is big, use your hand to cover it when you are eating it.  Our people need to conform.  Yes, it is not good that those people are attacking us.  Like I have heard the Minister of Foreign Affairs said, there is no Nigerian casualty.  The point is that our people are garrulous – noisy.  Very noisy indeed.  It is as if it is only Nigerians they know there.  Our people are loud.  We are very loud and manner less.  Some of the things we do here in Nigeria cannot be tolerated outside of this clime.  They will not allow it.  I mean other societies cannot allow the sort of behaviour we display here in their own countries.  If you go to another man’s country and you find prosperity, you have to humble yourself.  You do that, when there is trouble they will not target you.  Our people; I think the way they live there make people target them.  It is not only our people that travel in the world.  When you go to America it is Nigeria, Nigeria, you go to Britain it is Nigeria, Nigeria.  Even in Ghana, they are pursuing us there.  You go to Gabon, the same thing.  Wetin?  So we need to talk to ourselves.  That is my opinion.  We need to talk to our people over there to take it easy.  It is not as if it is right for South Africans to attack us.  No!  I even learnt some of our people got themselves together to defend themselves.  Now, generally Nigeria is not seen as a serious country because what is our government doing to protect its citizens.  Nothing!  Even if government orders them to come home, will they come home?  It is not the first time they are attacking Nigerians in South Africa.  So, the question still remains: what are they doing there, you cannot do here?  Like I tell my children who live abroad, precisely in the States, when the police stops you, stop, obey the law where ever you find yourself.  If they ask questions, answer them quickly, be friendly with them.  Don’t do like the Americans that will confront the police and the police may shoot them.  You notice that police in America kill more of Black Americans.  It does not happen to immigrants, for we are more polite.  So, like I have said, let our people be humble, live quietly even when they have made money over there so that they will not attract attention to themselves.

    Do we then say it is because we are losing our cultural value that has made some of us to forget simple mannerisms?

    Our people are mannerless.  Can you believe that in a small town like this, there are hoodlums; there are area boys and girls.  There are cult boys, there are garage boys all over.  So in terms of mannerlessness I think Nigeria went off the track about thirty or forty years ago.  We have lost it and it will take serious leadership to bring us back on track, to teach our people.  I know it is not everybody that has lost it.  No.  My children cannot misbehave.  So, also are your own children.  But the main problem that is contributing to this is uncontrolled population.  The government is not doing anything to encourage family planning.  Most of the boys out there, their fathers do not even know they are there.  They do not even know them or who they are.  Their mothers have forgotten they have them.  And nobody is controlling them or what they do.  These boys you see them, a boy of 18 years has already impregnated four girls.  And you see a girl of 18 with four children.  What is she going to teach those children?  So I think government has to make a deliberate effort to discourage unplanned childbirth.  That is what is contributing to our lawlessness.

    Again UNESCO is saying that by 2050, many world languages will go extinct…?

    It is possible.  It is already happening.  About two weeks ago, I read somewhere that governor Fayemi made a law that in every traditional gathering in the state, you must use Yoruba to conduct it, you must use Ekiti dialect to do so.  Like I said, government has to make deliberate efforts to make Nigerians, Nigerians.  Those of us in positions it is a shame.  For instance my wife is Igbo.  When my children were growing up she wanted them to speak her language.  She was speaking it to them.  I was speaking Yoruba to them.  The children became confused.  So they spoke English, but they are picking Yoruba now.  My grown up children, those ones are okay.  We must encourage ourselves to speak our languages at home to our children.

    How do you appraise the security situation in the South-West as it is today?

    Oh, I do not follow the politicians to assess the security situation in our land.  Our politicians make politically correct statements all the time.  I believe that Nigeria is not as bad as it was in the 1980s.  Then we used to have robberies from street, house to house in most urban areas of the country.  They would come with megaphones and say all of you bring out all your money and come deposit them here.  If we come to your house you are in trouble.  In this West, in Lagos, there was hardly any night when you did not hear cases of armed robbers terrorizing residents.  They would be shooting and people would be crying and dying.  In this same country car snatching also happened at a time.  Then if you boarded a Peugeot car you had 90% chances of being kidnapped or the car being snatched.  At times the passengers may be robbed or shot at or even killed.  This country, was worse than this.  Yes, things are bad in the North, in Zamfara, Jigawa, Katsina and some others.  Borno is a war zone.  It is evil for those in the West to be crying as if the Boko Haram war is here with us.  Even people are saying it is the Fulani herdsmen who are invading us when there are more troubles in the North.  The people who are killing or being killed in the North over there, are they Yoruba?  People in Zamfara they carry a whole village and say okay we will massacre all of you and they do so even after they have paid ransom.  Those are the people facing the trouble but here we say oh, they are the ones attacking us here.  I am not saying there are no crises here in the West; but I believe we should talk about the whole country and not isolate one from the rest.  That’s my take on it.

  • Ijaw council demands end to fuel importation

    The Ijaw Youth Council (IYC) Worldwide, has appealed to the federal government to take practical measures to end importation of petroleum products into the country.

    The Ijaw youths said it was disheartening that the government spent whooping N19trillion on importation of refined petroleum products into the country.

    Describing it as capital flight and the sum of money involved in the transactions as heartbreaking, IYC said it remained an economic blunder for the government to continue lacking capacity to refine crude oil.

    The IYC in a statement signed by its Secretary-General, Alfred Kemepado, said the body wept after reading the revelation contained in a publication of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).

    Read Also: New NDDC director visits key Ijaw leaders, promises changes

    Kemepado said the publication disclosed that the federal government spent about $54.6bn that is N19trn, importing refined petroleum products into the country.

    He said the Niger Delta was the biggest loser in the transactions following failures by the government to set up modular refineries in the region.

    Kemepado said if the federal government had lived up to its promise of setting up modular refineries, it would have helped to retain the money in the economy of the Niger Delta and the country.

    Speaking in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State capital, the activist expressed his displeasure over what he described as the financial recklessness of the federal government, adding that the lost money would have created many jobs and repositioned the battered economy.

    He said it smacked of insincerity on the part of the government to continue to play politics with key decisions required to grow and develop the Niger Delta and the country.

  • I won’t resign, Bayelsa Speaker dares Dickson, others

    Speaker of the Bayelsa State House of Assembly, Tonye Isenah, has vowed not to resign his position contrary to the directive of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) leaders including the state Governor, Seriake Dickson.

    Isenah came under intense pressure to relinquish his office in the House of Assembly to enable his party balance political equations ahead of the November 16 governorship election.

    The speaker was said to have reached an agreement with Dickson and other PDP leaders to vacate his office in the event that Senator Douye Diri, who hails from his Kolokuma-Opokuma Local Government Area, emerged the candidate of the PDP for the election.

    Following the emergence of Diri, PDP leaders were said to have asked Isenah to surrender his position to another lawmaker from Southern Ijaw to enable the party garner votes from the council.

    But Isenah was said to have insisted that he would not let go of his position before the governorship poll.

    The speaker in a statement signed by his Special Adviser on Media, Aotendeike Boloigha, said he had served the PDP faithfully and had yet to see how his resignation would help the party in the forthcoming poll.

    He also denied the insinuations that Dickson was after him because he failed to carry out the governor’s request to initiate an impeachment proceeding against his Deputy, Rear Admiral John Jonah (retd).

    Isenah was compelled to officially react on the matter following a social media post by his Senior Special Assistant on New Media, Mr. Dickson Didi Opuene, that the speaker was undergoing the travails for refusing the governor’s request.

    Read Also: PDP denies reported romance between Dickson, Petroleum minister

    Opuene in the post that went viral wrote: “First they asked him to impeach the deputy governor for no just reason and he refused, now they want him to resign just to perfect their aim and plan. No way, he will not resign, they should come and impeach him and let’s see.

    “Rt. Hon. Tonye Emmanuel Isenah remains the Speaker of the Bayelsa State House of Assembly and he has not resigned or will ever contemplate of doing so, please disregard any rumour of his resignation”.

    Debunking Opuene’s claims, Isenah described the posts as generated and authored by over-ambitious politicians taking advantage of the present situation in the assembly.

    Isenah said the claims were not only untrue but misleading and aimed at heating up the system.

    He said at no time had the governor imagined anything relating to impeachment of his deputy, whom he constantly described as a dependable ally adding that Dickson had never given such directive to the assembly.

    He said: “My stand on the issue of resignation has been that I have served the party PDP and Governor Seriake Dickson faithfully and with unflinching loyalty and I will not resign as doing so at this time will not in any way help the party succeed in the November 16, governorship elections.

    “I call on my teeming supporters to distance themselves from making unnecessary statements and posts in the social media. When the need arises, I will make official statements on his stand”.

  • NUJ to partner police in fight against fake journalists

    The Kano State Council of the Nigerian Union of Journalists (NUJ) is ready to partner with the Nigeria Police in the fight against fake journalists.

    Chairman of the council, Comrade Abbas Ibrahim, expressed the need for the collaboration, when he led other executive members of the union on a courtesy visit to the state Commissioner of Police,  Ahmed Iliyasu, in his office.

    Ibrahim, who expressed disgust at threats being posed by fake journalists ridiculing the profession, noted that journalism is a noble  profession of ethics and decorum.

    Read Also: NUJ President urges FG to tackle insecurity

    He called on the commissioner to enforce the relevant sections of cyber Act 2015 in curtailing hate speeches and fake news that are capable of causing chaos in the society.

    He hailed the commissioner for his track record in fighting crime and criminality in the state.

    In his remarks, Iliyasu noted that journalists are significant forces in making sure society remained in peace.

    He said: “Society will not develop in chaos and disorder,” noting that most conflicts emanate from hate speeches.

    He said the police will do everything possible to support Nigeria Union of Journalists in discharging its responsibilities, stressing that “Communication is integral part of society, it needs to be propagated according to the ethics.”