Tag: OBA

  • Ekiti monarch returns seven months after crisis

    Ekiti monarch returns seven months after crisis

    The Onigogo of Igogo-Ekiti, Oba Sunday Adewumi, has returned to his palace after fleeing for seven months in the heat of a crisis.

    The monarch and his family left Igogo, a community in Moba Local Government Area of Ekiti State, on May 19, after irate youths attacked his palace and other property, folowing a chieftaincy dispute.

    The youths were protesting the arrest of a contestant for a chieftaincy stool for alleged impersonation.

    They believed the monarch masterminded the arrest.

    The Council of Traditional Rulers and prominent indigenes intervened and the tension was doused.

    This paved the way for Onigogo’s return to his palace yesterday.

    Oba Adewumi was accompanied to the town by over 40 traditional rulers.

    The indigenes welcomed the king back amid drumming, singing and dancing.

    They wore customised dresses, including T-shirts embossed with the monarch’s picture, saying they were happy to have Oba Adewumi back on his throne.

    The Ewi of Ado-Ekiti, Oba Adeyemo Adejugbe and Deputy Governor Kolapo Olusola urged the people to embrace peace.

    Addressing his subjects, Oba Adewumi said he had put the crisis behind him.

    The monarch urged indigenes to work for a better relationship to accelerate development of the town.

    He prayed for peace, development and growth of his kingdom.

     

  • No arrest of IPOB members, Police declare in Anambra

    No arrest of IPOB members, Police declare in Anambra

    …IPOB raises alarm over alleged plot to kill members by FG

     

    The Anambra State Police Command Friday declared that no arrest of members of Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), has been made in the state.

    The State Police Public Relation’s Officer (PPRO), Princess Nkeiruka Nwode, told The Nation Friday  in Awka that the command had no problem with IPOB members since after the proscription.

    She said Friday members of the group had been peaceful and going about their normal businesses including the residents in the state.

    Meanwhile, members of the group had been hiding since the proscription in the state, while the sales of IPOB insignia, flags among others are no longer being displayed at public places.

    However, the group yesterday raised the alarm that the federal government was planning another round of massacre against the members.

    This was contained in a statement yesterday in Awka which was sent to reporters by Emma Powerful, Media and Publicity Secretary for IPOB.

    According to the statement, “We the family of Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) worldwide under the command and leadership of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu wish to urgently draw the attention of the civilized world to the dastardly plot being perfected by Nigeria against peaceful unarmed members of IPOB residing in Biafra land in the next few weeks”

    “IPOB Intelligence Unit has uncovered elaborate plans by the government to incriminate IPOB members in order to justify their controversial and unpopular proscription of IPOB with the attending laughable tag of terrorist organization against a world recognized peaceful movement”

    “The government has resolved to commence another round of their periodic genocide of innocent civilians across South East and South-South, within the next few weeks under the cover that IPOB is a terrorist organization”

    “They have concluded plans to kill as many people as possible. They want to spread terror, intimidation and instill fear in the minds of those that will survive this massacre and cause our people to renounce or abandon their legitimate quest for freedom”

    “The plan is to bring the people of old Eastern Region to submission before 2019 presidential elections’

    “In the meeting where they concluded this devilish line of action, they boasted that they have succeeded in bringing some South East and South-South politicians, especially South East governors under their control, what was left for them was to complete the conquest and subjugation of entire Biafraland and the youths”

    “It is presently clear that a special squad has been trained to spearhead and carry this plot to the letter. The plan is to trigger an ethno-religious crisis of immense proportion as a prelude to unleashing what they termed the final solution to the Igbo question in Nigeria” IPOB said.

    Meanwhile, one of the Igbo leaders and the Founder of Ogilisi Foundation, Chief Rommy Ezeonwuka, has called on governors of South East states to take a more holistic approach towards ending the spate of agitation for Biafra.

    He told reporters Friday in Oba, Idemili South council of Anambra that the decision of the governors to proscribe IPOB was hasty and may not lead to the end of activities of Biafra agitators.

    He attributed the perennial call for actualization of Biafra to the yearnings of the souls who died during war for proper burial.

    The spiritual leader, who lauded the unity among the governors, urged them to unanimously decide on how the souls of those who lost their lives during the civil war between 1967-1970 and related struggle would be reburied and appeased.

    Ezeonwuka said only such a befitting burial and memorial would appease the Biafran Spirit, which had taken over minds of most youths across the South East and South South regions.

    He said it was a popular practice among countries in the world to remember the souls that were lost during wars and natural disasters.

    “But the governors have not done enough research in it before their decision to proscribe the IPOB, there is a spiritual aspect of what is going on, the souls that died during the war are still hovering because they have not been recognized and buried”

    “As a spiritual person, I can tell you that those souls that were lost are still alive, they have possessed our youths that is why they are calling for Biafra even at the risk of their lives”

  • Sallah: Oba Ewuare urges Muslims to pray for nation’s unity

    Sallah: Oba Ewuare urges Muslims to pray for nation’s unity

    The Omo N’Oba N’Edo Uku Akpolokpolo, Oba Ewuare II, Oba of Benin,
    has urged Muslim faithful to use this period of Eid-el-Kabir to reflect on positive virtues and pray for continued peaceful coexistence of Nigeria.
    The Oba made this appeal in a statement signed by  his  Chief Press Secretary, Mr Desmond Agbama on Thursday  and made available to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Benin.
     The traditional ruler reminded Muslims on the importance of praying for the well-being of their leaders to enable them succeed.
    He said the Nigeria’s leaders needed good health, knowledge and wisdom to be able to rule well.

    “Muslims should also pray for the leaders to have understanding and the political will to lead the country on the path of progress, fairness, equity and justice,” the monarch said.

    The statement added that the royal father wished the Muslim faithful a successful celebration.

  • Oba Elegushi acquires new ‘toy’

    Oba Elegushi acquires new ‘toy’

    As more and more people are crashing out of the millionaires’ club, the truly rich are looking for new ways to set themselves apart from the rest. Enter the craze for the Rolls Royce. The classy brand of car, particularly the Rolls Royce Phantom series, has become the new marker for the really big boys.

    One of the royal fathers who has embraced the new trend is Oba Saheed Ademola Elegushi, the Elegushi of Ikate Kingdom. The dashing young monarch has a custom-made Rolls Royce Gushi, which was custom built to fit his taste and style. The snow white wonder on wheels is bulletproof and has customised number plates which make its ownership clear to anyone with a clear sight. It is a unique contraption that marks the youngest monarch in Lagos State out from other monarchs.

    Believed to cost in excess of $500,000, the car is only taken out for a spin on special occasions to complement the exuberant monarch’s royal regalia complete with designer accessories.

  •  ‘Declare state of emergency in Anambra sports’

    The Managing Director of Rojenny Sports Complex, Oba, Rommy Ezeonwuka, has urged Gov. Willie Obiano to declare a state of emergency in the sports sector in Anambra.

    Ezeonwuka made the call on Tuesday when he received the leadership of Sports Writers Association of Nigeria (SWAN), Anambra Chapter at the Rojenny Stadium in Oba, Idemili South Local Government Area on Tuesday.

    He said that sports administrators in the state had failed the youth because of their inability to conceptualise and implement programmes that were amenable to sports excellence.

    The investor in sports facility said the N10 billion Rojenny Complex was under utilised because such activities as inter-house sports, school sports, state sports festival and other organised games were no more.

    “I call on Gov. Obiano to declare a state of emergency in sports sector in Anambra.

    “I declare lack of confidence in those that are in charge of sports management in Anambra and hereby call for their sack and replacement with vibrant, creative, proactive and talented people.

    “The youth of Anambra have been exposed to unbearable neglect.

    “Those that could have given this country gold at the world stage and make our state proud have been denied the opportunity to develop their potential by our sports managers.

    “Anambra has huge potential to give the world the best in athletics, soccer, boxing and tennis but because school sports is dead, sports festival is dead, these potential have died in them,’’ he lamented.

    Ezeonwuka urged the youth to forgive the governor because he meant well; he has the youth at heart but his lieutenants were weak and had not much to offer.

    “I exonerate the governor but I want him to give Anambra his best to the sports sector because those that have been there for these three years have failed.

    “Anybody who sees this over N10 billion sports facilities lie idle and is not moved is an enemy of sports and youths, I invested in sports because I want to develop talents and help the government to manage youths,’’ he said.

    Ezeonwuka enjoined SWAN members in Anambra to work for the revival of sports through effective and objective coverage of events as they remained the hope of people.

    He expressed his willingness to partner with the body, adding that he was convinced that sports had assumed a new life with the zeal of the new SWAN in Anambra.

    The chairman of SWAN in Anambra, Anthony Oji, lauded Ezeonwuka for building the biggest sports complex east of the River Niger back in 1986 in the interest of youth development.

    Oji said SWAN decided to visit and inspect the facility to draw the attention of the world to it, adding that his contribution to Nigerian sports development had been under celebrated.

    Also, a veteran sports writer, Philip Balepo, said it was time for men of goodwill to fight for the redemption Anambra’s lost glory in sports.

     

  • Edo: New Oba, new governor

    Today, Thursday October 20, the ancient kingdom of Benin and indeed the good people of Edo State are making history. A new dawn beckons as the 39th Oba of Benin is being crowned. Twenty-one days from now, that is on November 12, a new governor, elected after a fierce gubernatorial election of September 28 will be inaugurated to steer the ship of the state for the next four years.

    By any standards, the two events, with their promises of new beginning, are historic as they are auspicious. While both Prince Ehenede Erediauwa and Godwin Obaseki come to office in the atmosphere of great expectations, the good news of course is that both, young in age and at heart, possess not just the vitality, but come fully prepared for the burden of service to the good people of Edo State. It is truly a new dawn for the people of the state.

    Talk of answers to prayer, the emergence of Godwin Obaseki as governor-elect, could only have come as personal testimony to the countless prayers offered by the new monarch to his ancestors –prayers for a peaceful poll, and the emergence of a credible individual to pilot the affairs of the state in the next four years. In the heat of the tension that enveloped the governorship election, one recalled the Oba as saying: “We all went down to our knees…We prayed harder and honestly, our ancestors and God Almighty answered all we prayed, that He should give us a peaceful election and a governor that will keep food on the table for our people and respect the traditional institution”.

    Today, it is unlikely that anyone will still doubt that the prayer has been answered hence the Oba is thankful to “God and our ancestors for hearing the fervent prayers we prayed before the election and for bringing out somebody that will uplift our people and respect the tradition”.

    Never one to miss the import of the mandate and the burden it carries, the Oba would not fail to admonish the governor-elect: “I will tell the governor-elect, keep to your promises, keep your words, put food on the table of our people, respect the traditional institution and ensure you build on what Oshiomhole has done”.

    In this, the Oba of Benin is not alone; it was the same refrain from other traditional rulers from Edo Central and Edo North who, aside offering their unanimous in the support for Godwin Obaseki have also expressed their willingness to partner with the government, to safeguard investment that will improve on the economy and well-being of their subjects.

    Not that Obaseki’s loyalty to the royal family and the Benin tradition is ever in doubt. For guidance and advice, Obaseki has stated that he would be counting on the Oba to succeed just as the governor-elect has spoken of his vision of Edo State where the famous cultures and traditions will be reinvigorated as part of economic growth strategy and harnessed to the greater benefit of our people.

    Said Obaseki, “I see an Edo state where our people will leave in peace, equanimity and where social justice, equity and fairness shall prevail at all times”.

    On a day like this, the two great men not only have reasons to celebrate each other. Together with the entire people of Edo State, they have enough reasons to be proud of the new dawn. For Obaseki in particular, it must come as something of pride not only to witness the milestone in the Great Benin Kingdom, but as a major participant. Moreover, the import of the partnership between the palace and the in-coming government can only forebode greater strides in a state ordinarily hungry for development.  For the good people of Edo State, it is time to tap into Obaseki’s formidable personal and leadership skills garnered in the course of a sterling career in private and public life – a factor which has now propelled him to become the first banker to be governor in the state. Surely, the people cannot wait to see him deploy these managerial skills to end the socio-economic gridlock that the opposition PDP has plunged the country to build a better, prosperous and economically sustainable Edo State based on cultural cohesion and ethical values.

    Little wonder  the mood, across the state today, is one of great excitement. The city centre and its environs are wearing a new look while all traders and drivers carrying out commercial activities around the Urhokpota Hall have been found a new arena for their business are they welcome their new monarch. Visible on the horizon is the huge tent – the temporary abode for the Crown Prince erected at the Urhokpota hall premises – the place called Eko-Ohae (bachelors’ camp) where Prince Erediauwa is expected to stay for three days immediately he leaves his Palace at Uselu.

    Once again, Edo people have shown that we can never be more hopeful about our future; indeed, we’ve never been more hopeful about Edo State and the progressive government and virile traditional institution as we are about to experience. And this hope, Edo people will sustain under our new Oba and our new governor.

     

    • Mayaki writes from Benin City.
  • Benin and the Oba

    Benin and the Oba

    Benin Kingdom would have stolen the limelight tomorrow. Reason: After a long wait, its Crown Prince would have received the staff of office from Governor Adams Oshiomhole, who in a matter of months will quit the Government House for a candidate no one can say with certainty.

    The greatness of this kingdom is such that when there was need to postpone the governorship election, the Oba’s coronation had to be taken into account.

    But those who want to witness the coronation have to wait. The event is not holding tomorrow again. The new date is now October 20. By then, the election to choose Oshiomhole’s successor would have been done with and a governor-in-waiting would also have been chosen.

    The postponement of the coronation takes nothing away from the fact that it was clear to even the blind long ago that His Royal Highness Edaiken N’Uselu Eheneden Erediauwa was destined to be king. Now, his time is here.

    As a lad, a picture of the kingdom had a space in my head. It was that of a kingdom so great that mystery could pass as its other name. We heard all kinds of dos and don’ts about this vast land where Oba Ovomramwen Nogbaisi made history. We heard of facts that wore attires of myths. Or were they myths that wore the robes of facts?

    Now, as an adult, this great kingdom of sculptors and painters, of intellectuals and administrators is one that we all will never fully comprehend. Its mystery seems to be its power. When it is Benin, there are things you dare not say or write. You just content yourself with hush-hush gist about this kingdom and its people, whose history has given birth to cinematic thrillers, such as Invasion 1897 and Iyore.

    The late Ola Rotimi could not resist the delight that Benin history was and still is that he penned the irresistible drama known as Ovomramwen Nogbaisi.

    If you are in doubt about the greatness of Benin kingdom, take a trip to the British Museum. There you will discover that its most-prized artworks were stolen from Benin and displayed with braggadocio. I like the scene in Lancelot Oduwa-Imasuen’s Invasion 1897 where the lead character who had invaded the museum and took an artwork defended himself in court by saying he could not have stolen the item because it belonged to his forefathers and by extension him.

    The mystery and complexity of the Benin mores could be gleaned from the statement of the Crown Prince when Governor Adams Oshiomhole paid him a visit following the announcement of his father’s death. He said he was probably the first crown prince in the history of Benin Kingdom that was so close to his father.

    Before he said that the story out there was that he was not supposed to see eye to eye with his father being the heir apparent. Judging from his statement, that used to be the situation. Modernity seems to have softened things a bit. So close was he to his father, who many of us thought was not supposed to see him face-to-face, that both knew each other’s ways.

    “It’s really an emotional moment for me and everybody virtually knows how close I was to my father. The elders here know how close I was to my father, and I am probably known as the first crown prince in the history of Benin Kingdom that has been so close to his father,” the incoming Oba of Benin said.

    He continued: “It’s been said far and wide that the Oba’s eldest son doesn’t see his father, they don’t meet each other, that they are far apart. So, he knew my ways and I knew his ways. So, I can beat my chest and say I understand certain inner workings of the mind of my dear father.”

    Oshiomhole’s speech on the visit bore glimpses of the greatness of the kingdom and the late Oba Erediauwa, whose death he described as shattering.

    He said: “We are all shattered by this very sad news. In my formal tribute, I have already made a statement that represents my evaluation of the life and times of our Royal Majesty. But in all of that, we know that kings will come, kings will transit, but our joy even in the midst of this grief is that we are fortunate; indeed very fortunate that in spite of the vacuum left by the departure of His Royal Majesty, we have in your Royal Highness a true royal Crown Prince that has already gone through all the rigours of life, and sufficiently travelled and held sensitive diplomatic positions in most strategic countries.

    “For people like me who have had the very rare privilege of interacting very closely with your Royal Highness over the years, I believe that His Royal Majesty has prepared a Crown Prince that, as tradition prescribes, has what it takes to fill the big royal shoes that His Majesty left behind. That for us gives us the confidence that the robust tradition, the national respect and international recognition and the way in which His Royal Majesty carried the office, that it will be sustained and built upon by your Royal Highness.”

    His Royal Highness Edaiken N’Uselu Eheneden Erediauwa is inheriting a great history. With his new status, the Oba, who is also known as Omo N’Oba, is the traditional ruler of the Edo people. He is also the head of the historic Eweka dynasty of the Great Benin Empire.

    Until Oba Eweka I, the headship of Benin Empire was not known as Oba. All that changed with the great Oba Eweka, who is believed to have reigned between 1180 and 1300. This great kingdom was raped by the British in 1897 when it launched an imperialist expedition. It deposed and exiled Oba Ovonramwen to Calabar, now the capital of Cross River State. It took control of the area to establish the British colony of Nigeria. He died in 1914. He never returned to his throne.

    What got the British angry and led to the expedition was the defeat of a British invasion force which violated Benin territory in 1896. It consisted of both indigenous soldiers and British officers, and is still remembered by the Edo people with trepidation today. Under the pretext of covering for the cost of the expedition, the Benin royal art was stolen and auctioned off by the British. Many of them are still in the British Museum.

    The mystery of the Benin makes it unclear what its relationship with Ile Ife and the Yoruba was. There is no agreement about the place or otherwise of Oduduwa, Oranmiyan and Igodomigodo in the history of this amazing empire in whose domain sits a chapel where the Oba is the General Overseer (GO).

    As the incoming GO of this over 500-year-old cathedral, which is located on Akpakpava Road, Benin City, prepares to take his seat on the pulpit and dish out the gospel— not according to the Bible—  I wish him well.

    My final take: Benin under the late monarch was respected. Its light will not dim now that his son has taken over. He will lead this great people well and years from now, we will look back and say ‘His Royal Highness Eheneden Erediauwa is a monarch with a difference’.

    • Parts of this piece first appeared on this space on May 27, 2016
  • It’s time for an Oba in Ikeja, say kingmakers

    Kingmakers in Ikeja community of Lagos State have renewed their appeal to the state governor, Mr. Akinwumi Ambode, to expedite action on the appointment of a new monarch, the Olu, for the community.

    Their appeal came on the heels of last week’s press statement by the community’s youths, the Orile Ikeja Indigenes Association, in which the body alleged that a cabal was trying to make the governor appoint an Oba for Ikeja without the input of kingmakers.

    The Ikeja kingmakers had since December 2014 forwarded the name of Prince Samsondeen Adeleye as Olu-elect of Ikeja, to the Ikeja Local Council, in expectation of approval from the state government.

    Speaking with our correspondent yesterday  in his Seriki Aro, Ikeja residence, Chief Olufemi Titi-Thomas, Secretary to the Ikeja traditional council and to the Body of Afobajes (kingmakers) of Ikeja, said the kingmakers were pleading with the Lagos State Government “to expedite action towards the emergence of a new Olu of Ikejaland.”

    Titi-Thomas, who is the Asipa of Ikeja, noted that the absence of a traditional ruler in the community for over three years had been generating various disaffections, “whereas we are noted for peace in Ikeja.”

    Complementing him, another kingmaker, Chief Morufu Balogun, the Eletu of Ikejaland, stressed that the government would benefit more with the presence of a traditional ruler in the state’s capital, “as all will look up to him for peace and development.”

    In a letter dated December 20, 2014, five kingmakers led by a former deputy governor of Lagos State, the late Chief Rafiu Jafojo, who was Ajiroba of Ikeja, had forwarded the name of Samsondeen Adeleye to the Ikeja Local Council as the Oba-elect.

    Other members of the kingmakers’ body include, Princess Folashade Illo (Iyalode of Ikejaland); Madam Alaba Adelemo (Iya-Oba of Ikejaland); Balogun and Titi-Thomas.

    The letter was duly acknowledged by the Ikeja local council, dated December 29, 2014.

    Only on Wednesday, however, the Orile Ikeja Indigenes Association warned that any attempt by the government to appoint a traditional ruler for the community without the input of kingmakers will be an open invitation to crisis.

     

  • Richard Arisco Osemwengie: The man who dared the Oba

    The Bini people in Edo State consider the holder of the title ‘Oba of Benin’, as a king that is not only to be revered, but also feared. Appellations such as Aisiokuoba, Obaisiagbon, Obayantor, Aisagbonrioba, Obaretin, are among many used to elevate him over and above other humans and his subjects. Stories abound about how Obas dealt with errant subjects, chiefs and others, who dare to question his authority or refused to obey his directive.

    It was therefore shocking to the Binis when Richard Arisco Osemwengie, a businessman and chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the state recently dared the Oba by carving the ‘Utantan Kingdom’ out of the ancient Benin Kingdom, after he was installed as Chief Ogiamien.

    Arisco thereafter named part of Oredo, Uhunmwode, Orhionmwon and Ikpoba-Okha, which are part of the old Benin Kingdom, as his domain. He further went ahead to set up his Utantan Traditional Council. He made some persons Chiefs and Enogies (Dukes) in his effort to consolidate his ‘kingdom’, after his controversial coronation that took place at 3:00 a.m., ostensibly to prevent attacks.

    The action of Arisco was premised on the belief by some members of the Ogiamien family that they are the original owners and rulers of Benin Kingdom. Arisco promised to provide the leadership since the incumbent Ogiamien Osarobo Okunghae was not around.

    Ogiamien Osarobo has not been seen since 1998. He was said to have left in a mysterious circumstances and did not tell any family member where he went. A Master Degree holder in History, Osarobo was 13 when his father died and as at the time he left, he was not married and had no child. He only has a sister.

    Before the ‘coronation’ of Arisco, a section of the family placed a newspaper advertorial declaring Osarobo missing. This happened barely few months after Oba Erediauwa II was declared indisposed. What, perhaps, a prompted supporter of Arisco was who will lead the Ekiokpagha battle in the absence of Ogiamien Osarobo.

    The Ekiokpagha mock battle is an integral ceremony in the activities leading to the coronation of a new Oba. It is symbolic and reminiscence of the defeat of Ogiamien by Oba Ewedo on his way to Benin in the 13th Century. The Ogiamiens claimed there was a treaty after the battle, which led to their eventual parting of Benin Kingdom to Oba Ewedo; but others said the treaty was a well-kept secret between the Oba and Ogiamien.

    It, however, appeared that a price tag has been placed on the next Ekiokpagha battle, as Arisco, in letter to the Crown Prince of Benin Kingdom, Prince Eheneden Erediauwa, demanded the establishment of a separate traditional council for the Ogiamien Kingdom, total refund of money due to the Ogiamiens from three-and-a- half local government council areas and the payment of N350 million.

    How the face-off between Arisco and the Oba will end is what has heightened tension in the ancient kingdom. Now, Arisco appeared to have been left in the lurch even by some members of his family, as some members of the family have allegedly written a petition denouncing his membership of the Ogiamien family.

    Arisco has remained in prison custody since September 29 when he was granted bail by Magistrate O.C Ojobo, after his arrest. A six-count charge of unlawful coronation and conspiracy to commit misdemeanour was preferred against him and one Patrick Osabuohien.

    Each count carried a punishment of two years imprisonment without an option of fine.

    In granting him bail, Magistrate Ojobo set condition that Arisco considered stringent and almost impossible to meet. The demand of two sureties, who must be traditional rulers in Benin Kingdom and a serving Permanent Secretary in the Edo State Civil Service, are seen as tall orders, considering that nobody in the kingdom would want to be declared an Oghionoba (enemy of the Oba).

    Arisco’s and his co-accused travails appeared to have just begun as nobody knows the next move of the Benin Traditional Council.

    During his first appearance in court, he was dressed in full regalia of a traditional ruler but at his next appearance, he did not wear cap or traditional beads.

    The case was adjourned to October 26 and there are ample indications that Arisco may remain behind bars.

     

  • How I won the heart of Oba of Benin’s daughter-86-yr-old ex-Science and Tech Minister Emovon

    How I won the heart of Oba of Benin’s daughter-86-yr-old ex-Science and Tech Minister Emovon

    Prof. Emmanuel Emovon was the Minister of Science and Technology during the General Ibrahim Babangida-led military administration. He is also a former Vice Chancellor of the University of Jos. He recently clocked 86 years and wrote a book about his life and the things that shaped his decisions. In this interview with OSAGIE OTABOR, Prof. Emovon, whose wife is Prof Adesuwa Emovon, daughter of Oba Akenzua II, reveals the secrets behind the success of his 57-year-old marriage and explains why he wrote a book to coincide with his 86th birthday. Excerpts: 

    Why did you choose to write a book about your life at 86?

    I have lived in this country for 86 years. I have made some contributions to the development of this country, no matter how modest it is. I didn’t want to close my eyes without those contributions made known to the public. I then decided to write this book. It has come at the late age. I wanted it to encompass everything that I stood for; every contribution I made to this country and my children in particular. Although some of them grew up with me, they may not have known all that I knew. So it will be a monument to them.

    I stood for some qualities: humility, hard work and honesty. Those are qualities you lack these days. I also stood for discipline, lack of which is the bane of our society today. There is no discipline. Anybody who reads will discern those qualities.

    How did you make out time to write the book?

    I retired from active service some years ago. Rather than sit back and watch events, I thought I could put what I did on paper, because a number of my friends told me to write something so that people will make reference.

    How long have you been married to your wife?

    We have been married since September 6, 1959. That is almost 57 years. We have been living together all these years. She is probably the only one that knows everything about me. Writing that book will fill the gaps in their knowledge of me.

    Were you not scared when you approached the daughter of a monarch for marriage?

    I had the courage to brace it because I was associated with a number of people from the palace and also attended the school where some of the daughters of the Oba attended. One started nursing ideas at that moment.

    What did you tell her that made her to accept you?

    It was not a question of sitting down and praising myself. Her brothers were friendly with me and they would have told her who I was. I broke the idea after walking round the family, ensuring that I would not have any opposition—the Oba, the queen, the brothers all said they would be happy. I was someone who had good character, which I thought was a recommendation for me. I was also promising because I was in the university.

    What is the secret of spending so many years as a married couple?

    There is no secret. What you need for any marriage to succeed is mutual confidence. Your wife must know your thinking just as you know hers. We must be honest with ourselves and, above all, there should be love. It was love that brought us together, and then we worked hard to sustain it. Both of us contributed to make the love blossom.

    People think princesses are bossy. What qualities of your wife swept your feet?

    That was the attraction to her. She was a humble person. She was not haughty and would not go out to announce that she is a princess. She was humble and firm.

    How do you feel being a son in-law to the Oba of Benin?

    I feel great.

    What pushed you to study Chemistry?

    I started out by wanting to become a medical doctor. I did the entrance examination to the University College and passed, but there was no scholarship to study Medicine. The Benin Native Authority called BNA, which encompasses seven local government areas today, advertised for people to be sponsored in the university. I was so sponsored but on condition that I did science and not medicine. I then had no choice but to do science. My choice of Chemistry was after my intermediate examination. I did so well that I was offered a college scholarship. I decided to study Chemistry.

    Why is there is a dearth of science teachers?

    Having a enough science teachers or researchers has been a problem in this country. A solution was suggested some years back that admission into the university should have 60 per cent science and 40 per cent arts and social sciences. A number of people find science difficult, particularly mathematics, physics and chemistry. Biology is made up of things we can see, but subjects like physics and chemistry look abstract. You don’t see them as you see plants and animals. That is why there is a dearth of science teachers. Only a few of them get to read science in the university.

    Since I wanted to study medicine and I diverted into the sciences, there was a disparity in the question of remuneration for social science teachers. Teachers were not well paid. They were looked down upon for a long time in this country. If you studied social science, the sky was the limit. But if you study science, it was said that you would end up in the classroom. Most people gravitated towards the arts and social sciences rather than science. The impression that those subjects are difficult is still there.

    As a former Minister for Science and Technology, what things did you put in place?

    Before I came in, there were two other ministers who were appointed by Shehu Shagari. I was an official of the Science Association of Nigeria and, of course, the Academy of Science. We pressurised the Shagari administration to set up the Ministry of Science to have a voice in the cabinet of his government. He agreed and appointed one Sylvester Ugwu. He was teaching English at Nsukka. After him, there was another person.

    The Buhari coup came and the new administration thought that there was duplication of efforts. He decided to merge education with science and technology and they became one ministry. When Babangida came, he resuscitated the science and technology ministry and I was appointed the minister.

    People were not too enthusiastic about science and technology. They did not see any direct relationship between science and technology and the economy. I did my best to ensure that the public was oriented to adopting science as a way of life and as a basis for economic prosperity. We had a number of structures. Raw Materials Research and Development has a big establishment. There is the pharmaceutical research, the Social Science and Technology complex in Abuja. The Seed Bank also provided safety for seeds. They preserved the seeds of plants that were getting extinct. Those things are still subsisting.

    I reorganised the research institutes to become more oriented towards productivity because we had results. I set up a lot of committees which yielded fruits; like the committee consisting of bankers, industrialists, deans of science and technology in the universities and the institutes themselves.

    What do you think would make science and technology develop?

    We have taken some positive steps to make sure that the sciences are ingrained in this country. Everybody is now aware that science and technology should be the basis for economic development. Places like the Asian Tigers invested in science and technology. That was how they caught up with Europe. One thing that is lacking in us at the moment is the will. With good remuneration, you can get people to carry out research. Some of them are beginning to come back because we have taken a positive step to ensure we get to the right place in 2020.

    How do you spend your time?

    I am a chief of the Benin Palace. I spent my time at the palace, stay at home, do some reading and play some games. During my youthful days, I was a sportsman. Even though my legs are not strong enough, I still play snooker and others.

    You played cricket in your secondary school days. Why do you think the enamel of cricket is yet develop in the country?

    It is unfortunate because cricket is not just a game, it teaches morals. Unfortunately, the equipment for cricket is expensive. In those days, it was only government colleges that played cricket. The mission schools were not interested. They played football but not cricket. In my school, Edo College, we played cricket because we had a big field, which is lacking these days in most schools. When I got to the university, I continued playing cricket. They are trying now in this country to raise a team to compete in the world cricket games, but the effort is concentrated in Lagos.

    What steps do you think should be taken to develop cricket at the grassroots?

    They cannot develop cricket at the grassroots here like they do in the West Indies. Over there, cricket is the alternative to football. You don’t hear about football there. Every person plays cricket in the West Indies. It is an expensive thing and government has not been too willing to fund the game as it should. The balls are expensive.

    Lack of quality education has been the bane of the country’s development. What steps should be taken for us to get to the right place?

    Government should regard education as the bedrock of development. We are still lagging behind in the literacy level. We should be able to invest in education so as to provide the necessary infrastructure, which is in a shambles. Government should concentrate on improving facilities at the universities. Investment is the basis and good monitoring with the money provided. UNESCO has said 25 per cent of national income should be devoted to education. What they release is pittance to what is needed.

    Did you allow your children determine the courses they studied?

    Somehow, I did guide them, but not force them. They have their interest but I still tell them stories of what I wanted to do.

    What lessons did you learn from your father that shaped your personality life?

    The first is discipline. My father was a disciplinarian, so he ensured that we were all disciplined. The second thing is selflessness. He thought us to be generous. My mother always gave people the bean cake she used to fry. Steadfastness, firmness and humility were the things that stand me out.

    You said that you got scholarship from the Benin Native Authority. Why can’t the present day Benin Traditional Council continue same to help indigent students?

    The structure is very different these days. The BNA took overall management of the whole of Benin Division. In those days, we had the Benin Province. We had a lot of forest which yielded money for the BNA, which has been taken over by government and over-exploited by the people through issuance of licenses. These were sources of income and BNA was reputed to be one of the richest in the west of those days until all the changes now occurred. There were only three local government areas in Benin Division.

    Why they cannot do it now is that whatever allocation came to them went through the state government to the local government. How much of that money came to them, I don’t know. The type of council set up also drains money. You have all sorts of departments. The amount they were getting in those days was pittance.

    What is your advice to the younger generation?

    They must adopt the spirit of discipline and hard work. Mountains are not climbed by merely looking at them. Many youths want to get to the top without work. They don’t have patience and honest living. They should be determined. Why did you choose to write a book about your life at 86?

    I have lived in this country for 86 years. I have made some contributions to the development of this country, no matter how modest it is. I didn’t want to close my eyes without those contributions made known to the public. I then decided to write this book. It has come at the late age. I wanted it to encompass everything that I stood for; every contribution I made to this country and my children in particular. Although some of them grew up with me, they may not have known all that I knew. So it will be a monument to them.

    I stood for some qualities: humility, hard work and honesty. Those are qualities you lack these days. I also stood for discipline, lack of which is the bane of our society today. There is no discipline. Anybody who reads will discern those qualities.

    How did you make out time to write the book?

    I retired from active service some years ago. Rather than sit back and watch events, I thought I could put what I did on paper, because a number of my friends told me to write something so that people will make reference.

    How long have you been married to your wife?

    We have been married since September 6, 1959. That is almost 57 years. We have been living together all these years. She is probably the only one that knows everything about me. Writing that book will fill the gaps in their knowledge of me.

    Were you not scared when you approached the daughter of a monarch for marriage?

    I had the courage to brace it because I was associated with a number of people from the palace and also attended the school where some of the daughters of the Oba attended. One started nursing ideas at that moment.

    What did you tell her that made her to accept you?

    It was not a question of sitting down and praising myself. Her brothers were friendly with me and they would have told her who I was. I broke the idea after walking round the family, ensuring that I would not have any opposition—the Oba, the queen, the brothers all said they would be happy. I was someone who had good character, which I thought was a recommendation for me. I was also promising because I was in the university.

    What is the secret of spending so many years as a married couple?

    There is no secret. What you need for any marriage to succeed is mutual confidence. Your wife must know your thinking just as you know hers. We must be honest with ourselves and, above all, there should be love. It was love that brought us together, and then we worked hard to sustain it. Both of us contributed to make the love blossom.

    People think princesses are bossy. What qualities of your wife swept your feet?

    That was the attraction to her. She was a humble person. She was not haughty and would not go out to announce that she is a princess. She was humble and firm.

    How do you feel being a son in-law to the Oba of Benin?

    I feel great.

    What pushed you to study Chemistry?

    I started out by wanting to become a medical doctor. I did the entrance examination to the University College and passed, but there was no scholarship to study Medicine. The Benin Native Authority called BNA, which encompasses seven local government areas today, advertised for people to be sponsored in the university. I was so sponsored but on condition that I did science and not medicine. I then had no choice but to do science. My choice of Chemistry was after my intermediate examination. I did so well that I was offered a college scholarship. I decided to study Chemistry.

    Why is there is a dearth of science teachers?

    Having a enough science teachers or researchers has been a problem in this country. A solution was suggested some years back that admission into the university should have 60 per cent science and 40 per cent arts and social sciences. A number of people find science difficult, particularly mathematics, physics and chemistry. Biology is made up of things we can see, but subjects like physics and chemistry look abstract. You don’t see them as you see plants and animals. That is why there is a dearth of science teachers. Only a few of them get to read science in the university.

    Since I wanted to study medicine and I diverted into the sciences, there was a disparity in the question of remuneration for social science teachers. Teachers were not well paid. They were looked down upon for a long time in this country. If you studied social science, the sky was the limit. But if you study science, it was said that you would end up in the classroom. Most people gravitated towards the arts and social sciences rather than science. The impression that those subjects are difficult is still there.

    As a former Minister for Science and Technology, what things did you put in place?

    Before I came in, there were two other ministers who were appointed by Shehu Shagari. I was an official of the Science Association of Nigeria and, of course, the Academy of Science. We pressurised the Shagari administration to set up the Ministry of Science to have a voice in the cabinet of his government. He agreed and appointed one Sylvester Ugwu. He was teaching English at Nsukka. After him, there was another person.

    The Buhari coup came and the new administration thought that there was duplication of efforts. He decided to merge education with science and technology and they became one ministry. When Babangida came, he resuscitated the science and technology ministry and I was appointed the minister.

    People were not too enthusiastic about science and technology. They did not see any direct relationship between science and technology and the economy. I did my best to ensure that the public was oriented to adopting science as a way of life and as a basis for economic prosperity. We had a number of structures. Raw Materials Research and Development has a big establishment. There is the pharmaceutical research, the Social Science and Technology complex in Abuja. The Seed Bank also provided safety for seeds. They preserved the seeds of plants that were getting extinct. Those things are still subsisting.

    I reorganised the research institutes to become more oriented towards productivity because we had results. I set up a lot of committees which yielded fruits; like the committee consisting of bankers, industrialists, deans of science and technology in the universities and the institutes themselves.

    What do you think would make science and technology develop?

    We have taken some positive steps to make sure that the sciences are ingrained in this country. Everybody is now aware that science and technology should be the basis for economic development. Places like the Asian Tigers invested in science and technology. That was how they caught up with Europe. One thing that is lacking in us at the moment is the will. With good remuneration, you can get people to carry out research. Some of them are beginning to come back because we have taken a positive step to ensure we get to the right place in 2020.

    How do you spend your time?

    I am a chief of the Benin Palace. I spent my time at the palace, stay at home, do some reading and play some games. During my youthful days, I was a sportsman. Even though my legs are not strong enough, I still play snooker and others.

    You played cricket in your secondary school days. Why do you think the enamel of cricket is yet develop in the country?

    It is unfortunate because cricket is not just a game, it teaches morals. Unfortunately, the equipment for cricket is expensive. In those days, it was only government colleges that played cricket. The mission schools were not interested. They played football but not cricket. In my school, Edo College, we played cricket because we had a big field, which is lacking these days in most schools. When I got to the university, I continued playing cricket. They are trying now in this country to raise a team to compete in the world cricket games, but the effort is concentrated in Lagos.

    What steps do you think should be taken to develop cricket at the grassroots?

    They cannot develop cricket at the grassroots here like they do in the West Indies. Over there, cricket is the alternative to football. You don’t hear about football there. Every person plays cricket in the West Indies. It is an expensive thing and government has not been too willing to fund the game as it should. The balls are expensive.

    Lack of quality education has been the bane of the country’s development. What steps should be taken for us to get to the right place?

    Government should regard education as the bedrock of development. We are still lagging behind in the literacy level. We should be able to invest in education so as to provide the necessary infrastructure, which is in a shambles. Government should concentrate on improving facilities at the universities. Investment is the basis and good monitoring with the money provided. UNESCO has said 25 per cent of national income should be devoted to education. What they release is pittance to what is needed.

    Did you allow your children determine the courses they studied?

    Somehow, I did guide them, but not force them. They have their interest but I still tell them stories of what I wanted to do.

    What lessons did you learn from your father that shaped your personality life?

    The first is discipline. My father was a disciplinarian, so he ensured that we were all disciplined. The second thing is selflessness. He thought us to be generous. My mother always gave people the bean cake she used to fry. Steadfastness, firmness and humility were the things that stand me out.

    You said that you got scholarship from the Benin Native Authority. Why can’t the present day Benin Traditional Council continue same to help indigent students?

    The structure is very different these days. The BNA took overall management of the whole of Benin Division. In those days, we had the Benin Province. We had a lot of forest which yielded money for the BNA, which has been taken over by government and over-exploited by the people through issuance of licenses. These were sources of income and BNA was reputed to be one of the richest in the west of those days until all the changes now occurred. There were only three local government areas in Benin Division.

    Why they cannot do it now is that whatever allocation came to them went through the state government to the local government. How much of that money came to them, I don’t know. The type of council set up also drains money. You have all sorts of departments. The amount they were getting in those days was pittance.

    What is your advice to the younger generation?

    They must adopt the spirit of discipline and hard work. Mountains are not climbed by merely looking at them. Many youths want to get to the top without work. They don’t have patience and honest living. They should be determined.