Tag: Nigerians

  • Ikeme thanks Nigerians

    Ikeme thanks Nigerians

    Super Eagles Goalkeeper Carl Ikeme has appreciated Nigerians for giving him the support needed to keep a clean sheet  in the Africa Cup of Nations (Afcon) qualifying match against the Tafias of Tanzania in Daar salem on Saturday.

    The Wolves of England safe glove, who had earlier told Sportinglife that he has all it takes to step into the shoes of Vincent Enyeama, really proved his worth in the match, as he made some saves to deny the host the opportunity of disgracing the former African Champions.

    Quoting his words, the 29 -year- old goalkeeper said: “First I have to thank Nigerians for giving me the support alongside other players to serve the country, also, we have to thank the coach for extending invitations to us, we promise Nigerians that we would do better in subsequent matches. My performance was nothing extraordinary, but what is expected of me as a goalkeeper” he  said.

    Born in Sutton Coldfield, West Midlands, Ikeme progressed through Wolverhampton Wanderers’ academy and made the first team squad in their 2003–04 Premier League season. Due to Matt Murray’s long term injury, he was promoted to the substitutes’ bench for a string of games but never played. To gain first team action, he moved on loan to League Two side Accrington Stanley. He made senior debut on  October  16, 2004 when he played the first of four games for them, keeping a clean sheet at Aldershot Town. He also had a further loan move to Stockport County in Autumn 2005 which was cut short due to a hand injury. He finally made his Wolves debut the following season, in a 5–1 win over Chester City in the League Cup on August  23, 2005. However, although often on the bench, he had to wait until August 26, 2006 for his first league appearance for the club when he appeared as a late substitute in a 1–0 win over Luton Town.

  • Unemployment, war… Concerns as Nigerians, Syrians, others invade Europe

    Unemployment, war… Concerns as Nigerians, Syrians, others invade Europe

    The influx of asylum-seekers migrants from Africa and troubled Syria into Europe is giving Europen nations some nightmares. Eupean governments are divided on how best to manage the crisis. 

    Two days ago, about 40 people drowned off the coast of Libya after a vessel carrying 140 people deflated, causing panic on board. The International Organisation for Migration (IOM) said the victims include Nigerians, Somalis and Sudanese.
    The death toll for migrants from Nigeria and other African countries drowned in Mediterranean Sea since the beginning of this year is already worse than the death toll for Titanic catastrophe.
    More than 1500 people have died in its waters since January, comparing with 96 for the same period of time in 2014.
    A record 50,000 migrants hit Greek shores in July alone. They were ferried from inundated islands to the mainland by a government already floundering in financial crisis and keen to whisk them north into Macedonia, whence they enter Serbia and then Hungary.
    Hungary said it had recorded 165,000 entering so far this year. Countless others may have crossed its borders without registering.
    Determined to stem the tide, Hungary is building a 3.5-metre (11.5-foot) high fence along its border with Serbia.
    At the weekend, the Budapest parliament adopted measures the government says will effectively seal the frontier to migrants as of 15 September.
    But, Austria and Germany threw open their borders at the weekend to thousands of exhausted migrants from the east, transported to the frontier by a right-wing Hungarian government that had tried to stop them but was overwhelmed by the sheer numbers of people.
    Left to walk the last yards into Austria, rain-soaked migrants, many of them refugees from Syria’s civil war, were whisked by train and shuttle bus, first to Vienna, and then on by train, to Munich and other cities in Germany.
    By early evening on Saturday, about 6,000 had arrived in Munich and nearly 2,000 more were expected on two trains due after midnight, said Christoph Hillenbrand, head of the Upper Bavaria regional administration.
    Last Thursday, Germany and France ordered the European commission to come up with a new “permanent” and binding regime for spreading the refugee load around all of the 28 countries in the union. British Prime Minister David Cameron and Home Secretary Theresa May want nothing to do with the scheme and have absented themselves from the policymaking, carping from the sidelines.
    Last Friday, the prime ministers of Hungary, Poland, Slovakia and the Czech Republic told Paris and Berlin to get stuffed, arguing that west European-style multi-culturalism is nothing but trouble and that they have no intention of repeating the same mistakes.
    The commission has already done what Berlin is demanding. On Wednesday, its President, Jean-Claude Juncker, will unveil proposals obliging at least 22 countries with a combined population of almost 400 million to absorb 160,000 people from Italy, Greece and Hungary, which are struggling with influxes from the Middle East and Africa.
    The all-powerful busybodies of Brussels are relatively impotent when it comes to immigration.
    The seven countries of central Europe and the Baltic are being asked to take fewer than 30,000. It should not be a problem for big international cities such as Warsaw, Prague and Budapest. But the east Europeans is retreating into parochialism, digging into their national bunkers while nursing resentment at what they perceive to be German bullying.
    Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orbán is the cheerleader of the “Europe is useless” chorus, but Robert Fico, the Slovakian Premier, and President Milos Zeman in Prague are not far behind. Ewa Kopacz, the Prime Minister of Poland, sounds more moderate, but she looks likely to lose an election next month to the nationalist right. Her hands are tied.
    When Europe’s leaders last met to grapple with the crisis, in June, they argued until 3.30am and dispersed without agreement, bringing Matteo Renzi, the Italian Prime Minister, to lament: “If this is Europe, you can keep it.”
    Things have worsened considerably since then. Governments are floundering, pirouetting on policy in response to front-page pictures of tragedy on a Turkish beach, engaging in a blame game which, coming on top of five years of division over Greece and the euro, is exposing major divisions.
    If the euro proved to be a fair-weather currency whose structures and rules buckled and nearly collapsed in a storm, the same is now evident on immigration. The system is flimsy, not fit for purpose in an emergency.
    There is no “European” immigration policy or regime. There is a mish-mash of national policies, a patchwork of systems and criteria which are contradictory, incoherent, fragmented. Italy is very far way from Finland, not only geographically, but when it comes to immigration and asylum. France and Germany have quite different historical approaches to integrating newcomers. Sweden and Denmark are neighbours with a close shared history, but their immigration policies are chalk and cheese.
    National governments guard these prerogatives jealously. “Europe” in the form of the European Union (EU) authorities in Brussels has minimal say over policy-making. Almost all power here lies with heads of national governments and interior ministries.
    Yet, in this crisis, Brussels-bashing has become routine, the cheap and easy option for shameless national leaders acting unilaterally, blocking every suggestion that comes out of Brussels and then blaming it for the ensuing chaos.
    Orbán proved the point in Brussels last week. “Europe” had failed, its leaders had irresponsibly created this mess, their response was “madness”. He has put up a razor-wire fence on the border with Serbia and announced he was fast-tracking legislation to establish a zero-immigration regime within 10 days, with the army deployed on the border.
    Brussels cannot stop him because these powers are national. If need be, he said, he would put up another fence on the border with Croatia, a barrier between two EU countries. On Friday, Brussels shrugged and said it did not like this, but could not do anything about it.
    Cameron responded to growing international and domestic pressure for Britain to take more refugees fleeing the Syrian civil war and other conflicts by saying that the United Kingdom (UK) will fulfill its moral responsibilities.
    In a marked shift of tone, as Europe’s human rights watchdog criticised Britain for failing to offer shelter, Cameron spoke of how moved he was by the picture of Aylan Kurdi, the three-year-old Syrian boy, whose body was washed up on a Turkish beach.
    Speaking at a Hitachi train plant in Newton Aycliffe, County Durham, the prime minister said: “Anyone who saw those pictures overnight could not help but be moved and, as a father, I felt deeply moved by the sight of that young boy on a beach in Turkey. Britain is a moral nation and we will fulfill our moral responsibilities.
    “We are taking thousands of people, and we will take thousands of people.” his remarks stopped short, however, of a specific commitment to take more refugees. Cameron said he will keep the issue under review, a stance that gives Whitehall time to work out a scheme with the Home Office, local councils and international agencies.
    Cameron said Britain had already stepped up to meet the challenge of the refugee crisis facing Europe by assisting in the rescue mission in the Mediterranean, spending 0.7 per cent of its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) on international aid and donating money to fund Syrian refugee camps in the Middle East.
    He insisted, however, that taking more refugees was not the only answer to the problem. “We need a comprehensive solution, a new government in Libya, we need to deal with the problems in Syria.
    “I would say the people responsible for these terrible scenes we see, the people most responsible, are President Assad in Syria and the butchers of Isil (Islamic State) and the criminal gangs that are running this terrible trade in people. And we have to be as tough on them at the same time.”
    The Btritish prime minister’s intervention came as he faced growing domestic and international pressure, including from within his own party, to start to take the numbers already being taken elsewhere in Europe.
    The Scottish first Minister, Nicola Sturgeon, accused him of adopting a “walk on by on the other side” approach after he said on Wednesday that the UK would not take any extra refugees.
    Harriet Harman, the interim Labour leader, has called on Cameron to convene an emergency meeting of Cobra cabinet committee to coordinate the government response.
    The Shadow Home Secretary, Yvette Cooper, stepped up her criticism of his refusal to accept more than a few hundred refugees. “It is shameful, utterly shameful, that our prime minister is just turning his back,” she said.
    “My problem with the prime minister’s response is that he only wants to talk about the things that he will do to help far away, but he won’t actually do anything here at home. We have a responsibility to act.”
    London’s Mayor, Boris Johnson, became the most senior Conservative to call for more action, saying it was Britain’s moral responsibility to take those fleeing persecution. But he said the UK must not become a magnet or pole of attraction for “economic migrants”.
    Johnson said it was time to look harder at resolving the Syrian problem. “No one would say non-intervention is working,” he said.
    The chancellor, George Osborne, speaking during a factory visit in Sunderland, said: “There is no person who would not be very shocked by that picture – and I was very distressed when I saw it myself this morning – of that poor boy lying dead on the beach.
    “We know there is not a simple answer to this crisis. What you need to do is first of all tackle Isis (Islamic State) and the criminal gangs who killed that boy.”
    In a letter to Cameron, Harman urged him to adopt a four-point plan to help more refugees. She urged him to:
    •Agree now that Britain will take more refugees, both directly from Syria and from the southern European countries where most refugees have arrived.
    •Convene an urgent meeting of EU leaders next week to agree a process for resolving the immediate refugee crisis on Europe’s borders.
    •Convene an urgent meeting of Cobra so that a cross-government plan can be agreed and implemented. This was now a problem spanning beyond the Home Office, affecting transport, small business, tourism and local communities, she said.
    •Bring together a summit of local authority leaders to agree a framework on what more can be done locally to support refugees and asylum seekers.
    She added: “We are all proud of Britain’s historical role of offering a sanctuary to those fleeing conflict and persecution. We are an outward-facing, generous-hearted nation, not one that turns inward and shirks its responsibilities. I know you will not want to be the prime minister of a government that fails to offer sanctuary while our neighbours are stepping up to respond.”

  • FG approves N400m for students on foreign scholarships

    FG approves N400m for students on foreign scholarships

    The Federal Government has approved N400 million for the payment of upkeep allowances of Nigerian students on foreign scholarships.

    The Acting Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Education, Hajia HIndatu Abdullahi, made the disclosure in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja on Wednesday.

    Abdullahi attributed the delay to non-release of capital allowance and the change in government which delayed the release of capital allocation for 2015.

    She explained that the upkeep allowance of the scholars did not come as over head allocation but capital allocation.

    According to her, the allowance payable to the scholars outside the country is from January to December and it is calculated and captured in the budget every year.

    She said that the plight of the students was being taken seriously, adding that “we just have an approval of about N400 million, we are now working with the Federal Ministry of Finance to obtain it.

    “After that, we will head to the Budget Office and the Central Bank of Nigeria to ensure that the money is remitted as soon as possible to the missions.

    “In terms of the paper work, we have concluded; we want to pay something so that their hardship will be minimised.

    Abdullahi said the entitlements were being worked out from January to December, adding that in 2014, the students got all allowances for the year between July and August.

    “Whenever we receive capital allocation in the ministry, we work out the scholarship money and pay into CBN.

    “CBN will now remit same in line with the information we have given them; it will remit to embassies which will remit to the scholars.

    The acting permanent secretary said that if there was any delay in the release of capital allocation, it would affect scholars’ upkeep allowances.

  • ‘64 million Nigerians are mentally sick’

    Former Power Minister Prof. Chinedu Nebo has rated governments at all levels low in the provision of psychiatric and mental health care.

    He said this was worrisome in the face of findings that about 64 million Nigerians suffer from one form of mental disorder or the other.

    Nebo spoke yesterday at the second public lecture of the Federal Neuropsychiatric Hospital, Enugu, in collaboration with the West African College of Nursing.

    Speaking on the theme “Psychiatric and Mental Health in Nigeria: Challenges and Prospects”, the former minister said whereas government had done much in Primary Health Care, much was yet to be done in psychiatric and mental health.

    “I will confess that while government had built modern diagnostic centres, dialysis and ophthalmological centres, and constructed more than 710 Primary Health Care centres in all political wards in Enugu, we are only beginning to optimise and modernise our psychiatric and mental health institutions to meet demands.

    “Despite the efforts of all levels of government, Nigerians still grapple with social challenges such as poverty and unemployment. These situations have escalated because of lack of understanding of the malaise of mental health disorder and the treatments required”, he said.

    Nebo identified causes of mental illness to include genetic composition, early development, neurological and psychological experiences and environmental stresses.

    While calling for increased awareness on the treatment and management of the sickness, Nebo said “the belief of many Nigerians that mental disorder comes due to supernatural forces and can only be cured through traditional practices and supernatural incantations, must give way for the realities of modern conditions, which infact, produce the stresses that causes these conditions.”

    The former minister called for adequate research funding and training of workers, stressing that “this will increase our output of psychiatric nurses and create more positions for residency training in psychiatry”.

    Chief Medical Director of the Federal Neuropsychiatric Hospital, Dr. Jojo Onwukwe said the institution was the only one of its kind, east of the Niger, with a staff strength of 1,000, including eight consultant specialist psychiatrists, more than 400 psychiatric nurses and 27 resident doctors.

     

     

     

  • Some eminent Nigerians who lost their cancer battles

    Some eminent Nigerians who lost their cancer battles

    Going by the prediction of the World Health Organisation (WHO) on the World Cancer Day on February 4, 2013 about 84 million people may die of the disease by this year.

    The National Cancer Prevention Programme (NCPP) said that no fewer than 80,000 Nigerians die from various forms of cancer annually, with an estimated 10 people dying from cancer every hour.

    Some prominent Nigerians who have died of the non-communicable disease include politicians, celebrities and others.

    Former President, Alhaji Umaru Yar’Adua fell victim of the disease in May 2010 after years of battling that kept him away from his constitutional duties as first governor of Kastina State and then President.

    Second Republic Senate Leader, Dr. Olusola Saraki, also died of cancer as confirmed by his youngest son, Olaolu, who admitted that the political giant of Kwara politics “had been battling with cancer for about five years” before he breath his last on November 14, 2012.

    Maryam Babangida, wife of former military President Ibrahim Babangida also had her life cut short by the dreaded disease on December 27, 2009. She had to leave behind her pet project – Better Life Programme for Rural Women – which launched many co-operatives, cottage industries, farms and gardens, shops and markets, women’s centres and social welfare programmes.

    The doggedness with which renowned activist and social crusader, Chief Gani Fawehinmi fought successive and oppressive military dictators was not enough to survive the monster called cancer.

    He lost the battle to lung cancer  on September 5, 2009.

    For two years, ace broadcaster, Yinka Craig, who made his name with Nigerian Television Authority (NTA) battled to stay alive until September 23, 2008 when he died at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, United States (U.S.). He received treatment for cancer of the immune system.

    Yusuf Jibo, former Zonal Director of the Nigeria Television Authority (NTA), also died of colon cancer on December, 2010.

    For Sonny Okosun, one of Nigeria’s great musicians, the music stopped playing when he died on May 24, 2008 at 61 in the U.S. after a prolonged battle with cancer. He had gone to seek medical advice on his deteriorating health.

    Clara, the wife of labour leader turned governor, Adam Oshiomole was also said to have died of cancer on December 8, 2010, eleven days to her daughter’s wedding.

     

    This story was first published in The Nation of February 14, 2013.

  • Nigerians warned against sedentary lifestyle

    Nigerians have been warned against living a sedentary lifestyle to prevent heart problems, especially coronary heart disease.

    At the continuing medical education (CME) training for surgeons by Apollo Hospital, New Delhi, in Abuja, a Senior Consultant Cardiologist, Dr. Rajeeve Rajput, said coronary heart disease was rife in Nigeria and the world at large.

    He said the increase is due to the high incidences of diabetes, high blood pressure and smoking, adding that they aid heart problems.

    Moreover, they do not exercise enough, and many live a sedentary life by being inactive.

    “All these are factors, which make people have blockages in the blood supply to their heart. Majority of them come down with chest pain, artery pain and heart problems in the process,” he said.

    Besides, Africans and Asians are more prone to artery blockage than other races.

    He said a lot needs to be done to train doctors in the country.

    On treatment, he said: “The gold standard of managing heart attack these days is to do a gene venography of patients and open the artery and put a stand. I spoke to the doctors who came here that there is one centre doing it. It is not routinely available in Abuja.

    “With Abuja population of about four million, if it were a developed country, we need to have between 12 and 15 cardiology hospitals to take care of cardiac problems. The information I have is that there are only two big cardiac centres here and the two are not offering the best services.”

    Rajput said there is room for improvement in the management of the problem, saying New Delhi in India was where Nigeria is 15 years ago.

    “What we have today is a general reflection of the development of the economy. When you have a better economy, education and infrastructure; better hospitals will come up. There is no developed country without good facilities, especially good hospitals. Health in all developing countries does not get as much money as it should get,” he said.

    To prevent coronary heart problems, he said, people should change their lifestyle by quitting smoking and avoid second-hand smoke too. “Quitting smoking may be the best thing you can do to prevent heart disease. They should also exercise regularly. There are lots of ways that exercise boosts people’s heart health. It can improve cholesterol and blood pressure as well as helping people have a healthy weight.”

    He enjoined people to talk to their doctor before starting an exercise programme to make sure that it is safe for them.

    “They should also eat a heart-healthy diet. The way people eat can help them control their cholesterol and blood pressure or mar it,” he said.

    People, he said, should stay at a healthy weight be getting active. Eating healthy foods can help people stay at a healthy weight or lose weight if you need to, Rajput added.

  • 110 million Nigerians are poor, says Osinbajo

    110 million Nigerians are poor, says Osinbajo

    Vice President Prof. Yemi Osinbajo yesterday said there are 110 million poor Nigerians.

    He added that  some past polices and planning, including budgeting, did not reflect the needs and conditions of the people, who have become disempowered.

    He spoke while receiving  the Alumni Association of the National Institute for Policy and Strategic Studies (NIPPS), in Abuja.

    Expressing concern about extreme poverty in the country, Osinbajo said two third of the population had become disempowered following the policy formulation in the past.

    “When you look at the economic and social policies, and you look at the level of illiteracy, some are extremely bad and some with  cases of about 80 or 90 per cent of children out of school, and other cases of unimaginable decayed infrastructure,” he said.

    Stressing that policies should address the needs of the people, he said the main challenge now is how to make this possible.

    “Governments have not been accountable to the people, otherwise policies should have roots in the real condition of the people.”

    The Vice President challenged the notion  that a country could be described as rich when about two-thirds of its people were extremely poor.

    He said one of the challenges of policy formulation is how to speak to the people and address their plight, adding that the people were concerned about “how do I get a meal, how do I get health care and how to send children to school.”

    Vice President Osinbajo urged the Alumni Association to discuss how policy formulation ought to take  root in the conditions of the people.

    Speaking earlier, President  of the association, Major-General Lawrence Onoja, appreciated President Muhammadu Buhari’s determination to fight corruption and reposition the economy.

    He pledged the support of the Association for the actualization of what he called the Three-Point Agenda – Security, Corruption and Economy of the Buhari Administration.

    Onoja urged the Administration not to only conduct a forensic audit of the government agencies but should jail all those found guilty of looting the country and seize the looted assets as well.

  • Lagos calls on Nigerians to conserve energy

    The Lagos State Government has called on residents to cultivate the habit of conserving energy to promote energy efficiency.

    The General Manager, Lagos State Electricity Board (LSEB), Peter Okonji, who stated this at a conference organised by the Power Sector Group of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), said there was need for energy conservation in the country.

    He said electrical appliances are supposed to be switched off when not in use, but regretted that Nigerians do not switch off their bulbs after business hours.

    “If we conserve energy, we will reduce the demand of energy and have higher voltage of energy for other purposes. The available power is not enough for all Nigerians if we switch on all our bulbs. So it is important to practice power conservation. For every watt that is wasted, it is money we are wasting.”

    He said Lagos is a 24-hour commercial centre, but darkness has forced businesses and other activities to close early due to insecurity which darkness conveys. He said: “Captive power has helped to power Lagos State facilities and we opted out of the national grid so that there will be enough power for the rest of the citizens in Lagos State. Constantly powered economy will provide efficiency and stimulate productivity.

    “Power demand for Lagos State is 10,000Mw after our last audit in June. The national grid can only transmit about 10 per cent of what we required. However, our five Independent Power Plants (IPPs) which include Akute IPP, Island Power, Mainland Power, Alausa Power and Lekki Peninsula IPP, are together generating 47.5MW to power government facilities like water corporations, general hospitals, the secretariat and state High Courts,” he said.

    The President of LCCI, Remi Bello said the theme: “Embedded power generation and the economy” of the event  was germane at this critical stage of the economy, knowing that the increased  power generation and distribution play a significant  role in the development of our economy.

    “The economy can truly be an investors’ haven if the issues around the power sector are holistically addressed. We expect to see government provide an enabling environment for private sector investment in the embedded power generation sector,” he said.

    According to the rules by Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), embedded power regulation allows an independent power producer to embed power within the network of the local distribution company without going through the trouble of connecting to the transmission line, he added.

  • ‘Nigerians should pray for Buhari to succeed’

    The President of the Apostolic Church of Nigeria (ACN), Pastor Gabriel Olutola has said President Muhammadu Buhari cannot solve myriad of Nigerian problems alone except Nigerians intercede on his behalf with fasting and prayers to God.

    The cleric spoke during the 70th birthday celebration of the President of Christ Apostolic Church, (CAC), Worldwide, Pastor Abraham Akinosun in Bashorun, Ibadan.

    Pastor Olutola said: “The only advice I have for Nigerians is to fervently to God for President Buhari to succeed as there is no other solution to myriad of Nigerian problems, saying because Nigerians have decided not to withdraw from their wickedness.”

    He said until they turn away from vices such as favouritism, nepotism, corruption and other immoral acts, the country will continue to suffer from problems caused by these wicked acts, saying except this, there is little President Buhari can do.

    He, therefore, congratulated the celebrator, saying he is a product of Christ and the birthday is to celebrate Christ; which made many people to  celebrate the man of God because of his many virtues.

    Pastor Akinosun, however, thanked God for giving him the grace to celebrate the birthday, adding that many of his mates are dead but he was opportune to see the glorious day.

    Reacting to the crisis rocking the church, the celebrator said the church today, unlike the time of Apostle Ayo Babalola and his co-founder, many people plant churches without reckoning with the centre. This is very dangerous.

    He said they do not consider the importance of being under the authority of the church saying, “this is the reason we are tasking members to be heavenly-focused by doing away with perishable things of life to avoid further rancour in the church”.

    On the effort by the church to bring back departed members, the President said: “We are trying our best but they are not after unity but position. Our faction, from all indications, maintain that we are the original CAC while they are members without names.

    “We recently went to them to seek reconciliation but they insisted that out of three principal officers’ positions, they should be given two which we considered impossible.”

    The CAC President, however, said they are still making efforts to persuade the departed members to come back even though the real institution is with them and standing better chances, adding that they want them back to become one body in Christ.

    While performing the launch of a book written by Pastor Ade Alawode, the church’s Public Relations Officer in honour of the celebrator, entitled The Lifestyle of a Performer and Reformer, Pastor Edwin Etomi said the celebrator is a good mentor and a man of great honour.

    Etomi, who represented the General Overseer of Mountain of Fire and Miracle Ministry (MFM), Pastor Daniel Olukoya added that he dedicated the book to the  General Overseer whose ministry is the offshoot of the CAC Worldwide.

  • Osun APC hails Nigerians, others for mourning Sijuwade

    •Party pays tribute to late monarch 

    Osun State All Progressives Congress (APC) has hailed Nigerians and others for sympathing with the Yoruba nation over the passing of the Ooni of Ife, Oba Okunade Sijuade, Olubuse II, whose body was buried last Friday.

    In a statement yesterday, its state chairman, Prince Adegboyega Famodun, said that “even if all of us had wished for it, there was no way we would have stopped his passing, for his time to leave had come. And he has gone”.

    Famodun, however, expressed relief in the memory of Oba Sijuwade’s dignified presence in Yorubaland and the world.

    The late Ooni, the APC chief said, was a glorious symbol of the Yoruba culture ever seen in nearly two centuries.

    The statement reads: “He (Ooni) was ‘Atobalete’ personified. Borne a king, he also lived it like nobody else had done before him in 200 years. Okunade Sijuade, Olubuse II was an exceptional and authentic representation of royalty that Yoruba nation has ever experienced in two centuries.

    “Occasionally, his personality stirred controversy; he had been through some rough and tumbles. But what made the late Ooni so special is that he commanded your respect, even when you were reluctant to give it. The authority of Oodua radiated through him.”

    Famodun added that the APC “is proud to be associated with this great monarch, who will live on in our memories as one of the greatest and compelling personalities in Yorubaland, Nigeria, Africa and the cultural world that nobody could afford to ignore”.

    “Like him or hate him, the late Ooni is one royalty, whose charismatic and cultural opulence will live on in the history of world royalties. He has set a standard that will be difficult to outshine in Yorubaland. That is what makes him so unique.

    “We accept his passing as natural; just as we realise that mourning the event is also natural. However, the Ooni lives on with his ancestors while we carry on and live the traditions of our forefathers to make our people prosperous and our country great.

    “Osun State, the APC and the Yoruba nation thank the world for empathising with us on the death of the Ooni of Ife.

    “His great soul will luxuriate in peace and comfort in the world beyond as it pleases the Creator spirit to offer him,” the APC said.