Tag: Oduduwa

  • Oduduwa off to Qatar for surgery, nurse denied visa

    Oduduwa off to Qatar for surgery, nurse denied visa

    Injured Nigeria Olympic team defender Segun Oduduwa will finally fly out to Qatar for surgery today after he dislocated his knee in training and will be out of action for about a year.

    However, he will not be accompanied by a nurse from the sports ministry after AfricanFootball.com learnt she was denied entry visa to Qatar.

    It was further learnt that the player’s club Nath Boys of Lagos have stepped in to sponsor another person to accompany Oduduwa to Doha.

    Oduduwa will be operated on at the FIFA-certified Aspetar Orthopedic and Sports Medicine Hospital in Doha based on a pact entered with the Nigerian sports ministry.

  • Encomiums for Oduduwa varsity founder

    Encomiums for Oduduwa varsity founder

    A don, Prof Sola Ehindero has described the Maye of Ife and founder of Oduduwa University, Osun State, Prince (Dr) Ramon Adedoyin as God’s greatest gift to Ife in this generation.

    Prof Ehindero who spoke an event to celebrate the 59th birthday anniversary of Dr Adedoyin held at Maye Castle, Ile Ife on the New Year Day, challenged anyone to name any Ife son dead or alive as at the 1st of January 2016, who can beat Adedoyin’s records in Ife.

    Going down memory lane to when the celebrant was one of his students at the then University of Ife, now Obafemi Awolowo University, Prof Ehindero described Adedoyin as a brilliant scholar who was able to achieve so much by the dint of hard work and tireless doggedness.

    Other guests including the immediate past Commissioner for Information, State of Osun, Prince Sikiru Ayedun, also showered encomiums on this great Ife prince.

    They described Adedoyin as a distinguished educationist, and notable business mogul, who could be best described as a role model worthy of being emulated by many Nigerians.

    They commended him as one of the foremost educationists in Nigeria whose singular effort has contributed immensely in providing Nigerians especially the youths with solid education which is indispensable for social and economic empowerment.

    In the field of community development, Adedoyin has made monumental contributions to the development of Ile- Ife community in particular and the society in general. He is a great philanthropist who has been giving scholarship awards to outstanding students especially those from indigent background.

  • Bad PR for Oduduwa

    Some of the things said and done on Oduduwa’s platform injure the reputation of the Yoruba ancestral father figure.  Also abbreviated as Odudua or Oòdua, his name continues to suffer as a result of exploitation by opportunists and self-projected cultural ambassadors.

    A striking instance of this reduction by association was the August 21 ego-serving entrance by the National Coordinator of the Oo’dua Peoples Congress (OPC), Otunba Gani Adams, at the finale of the Osun-Osogbo Festival in the Osun-Osogbo Grove, Osun State. When Adams arrived with his circle of exuberant followers, they caused quite a stir. Whip-wielding noisemakers disruptively created a path for Adams as he approached the sacred River Osun to announce his presence. He witnessed the unruliness of his men and encouraged it by his silence. The unflattering drama was performed on Oduduwa’s platform. His group was listed among “Partners” on the cover of the festival programme; the others were MTN, Goldberg, Seaman’s Royale, IOD, Kasapreko Alomo Bitters. The group’s emblem bore his name, suggesting that Gani Adams is OPC and OPC is Gani Adams.

    Two days later, a newspaper report quoted him in an interview where he commented on the wall between him and the national leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Tinubu: “We had some people who left our group because he was financing them to break it; they couldn’t break it, so they left. We continued to address the issue; even in the media, people were asking what I had with Tinubu, but they couldn’t find any reason. I decided that if I didn’t tell the whole world, my life and integrity would be at stake.”  He continued: “That was one of the reasons that I decided that if Tinubu goes to A, I will go to B. Somebody who has been working to block my progress for the past seven years; if I support him to be in power, he will do worse. Even though he is supporting the right candidate, I will go for the wrong candidate.”

    This expressed irrational hostility helps to situate Adams’ politics as bereft of any progressive content. Considering the recently achieved political dominance of the APC at the federal level with its popular change mantra, his unapologetic opposition defines him as an anti-change supporter and promoter.

    Interestingly, Adams also said about Tinubu: “When I asked around, people told me what he was hammering on was he (Adams) attacked us during the election. Did I use thugs to attack him? Is there any report in any police station that the OPC attacked the APC because of the Peoples Democratic Party?”

    It is unclear whether Adams had a memory challenge or whether he decided to challenge his memory. The incident of March 16 is still fresh enough. On that day, OPC stood for Operation Public Chaos as the self-identified defender and promoter of Yoruba interests demonstrated that it had not only sold its soul for filthy lucre but also lost its collective mind. Members of Adams’ OPC faction took their militancy to heights that mirrored a disturbing depth of degeneration.

    In an unprecedented demonstration of desperation ahead of the general elections, the group terrorised Lagos in the name of a political protest. A report at the time said: “The two pamphlets distributed by the protesters had 7 reasons why President Goodluck Jonathan must continue in office and 7 reasons why Prof Attahiru Jega, the INEC boss, must go on terminal leave and be replaced with a credible administrator before the elections.”

    It was a message of force by forceful messengers. According to a report: “The protesters got traffic stuck for hours, smashed cars, harassed motorists and disrupted business in many parts of the city. They destroyed banners and campaign billboards of All Progressive Congress (APC) candidates.”

    Who was behind the bedlam? A subsequent eye-opening disclaimer said: “We, the members of the National Coordinating Council of the Oodua Peoples Congress, OPC, the highest ruling body of the organisation, wish to disassociate ourselves from the shameful, destructive, violent and reactionary activities of the Gani Adams-led team which occurred in Lagos today.” The statement added: “What was witnessed in Lagos was the highest level of political violence sponsored and funded by certain elements in the Jonathan government.”

    From all appearances, the protesters were fuelled by reported multi-billion naira oil pipelines protection contracts controversially awarded by the Jonathan administration to a selection of militant and pro-militancy groups, most likely to influence their support for Jonathan’s reelection ambition. There were certainly enough pocket-related reasons to be overexcited.  The movement from pipelines protection to public chaos was a sign of a chaotic group headed by perhaps a chronically convoluted character.

    It is a point to ponder that today Adams is crying about the same contract that made him laugh and possibly fuelled his group’s destructive manifestation on that day.  He is paying the price for the politicisation of contracts. In July, Adams was among three controversial contractors who held a meeting to consider how to get the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) to pay the money it allegedly owed them in respect of a three-month oil pipeline security deal that took effect from March 16 in the Southwest and some parts of the Niger Delta.  Dr Frederick Fasehun and General Shoot-at-Sight also attended the meeting.  According to Adams: “About 4,000 workers were engaged by our companies – New Age Security Company owned by Dr. Fasehun; Galaxy Security Outfit Nigeria Limited owned by General Shoot-at-Sight and Donyx Global Concept Nigeria Limited owned by me.”

    Politics remains in the picture, considering that the political figure who influenced the award of the contracts while he was in power, former President Jonathan, failed to get a second term in office. With President Muhammadu Buhari in the saddle, there was no way his promise of change would not have changed things for the contractors. The non-renewal of the contracts after they expired was logical and reflected the public mood. It is interesting to note that although rivalry between Adams and Fasehun split the OPC, the two factional leaders are joined or conjoined by what may be described as “the whiff of money”. Again, the drama is connected with Oduduwa’s platform.

    When a contractor’s cheese has been moved, particularly if it’s a large chunk of cheese, expect contractor confusion. Adams reflected such confusion by what he said in another interview: “All I’m saying is that government can merge the community residents and law enforcement agents to police the neighbourhood.” What Adams meant was that militiamen, euphemistically described as “community residents”, should be allowed to operate side by side with the official security agents. Despite the obvious absurdity of the imagined combination of forces, Adams couldn’t see the nonsense of downgrading the normal security agencies in favour of militiamen. He couldn’t recognise the irrationality of enriching militia leaders to the detriment of the empowerment of the country’s security personnel.

    Adams is also the Chief Promoter of the Olokun Festival which the organisers describe as being “at the forefront of the promotion and cultural revival of Yoruba Tradition and Culture.” His involvement in this project looks like a ploy to reinforce his performance on Oduduwa’s platform. The reality is: The PR isn’t working.

  • Contra-interpolations postulations in Oduduwa’s ancestry

    Contra-interpolations postulations in Oduduwa’s ancestry

    The heated controversies surrounding the ancestry of Oduduwa and the Bini-Yoruba divergent postures may have derived a realistic panacea in the fictive amassing of Jude Idada. It’s been said afterall, that what every human owes the universe is either to protect it in its pristine state or add unadulterated colourations to it. These alternatives could well describe the attempt by this young Nigerian-Canadian, to re-face a perhaps, near-defaced issue, in a bid to salvage the very important history of these proud races, using the channel of creative writing to ostracise the demons of historical distortions.

    Employing the imperialist bequest- English Language in its dialogue, the author immersed himself in shark-infested waters of tradition and historical mythology  ensuring a balance is attempted with the use of Bini and Yoruba dialects to course through the rhythmic invocations of music and somber dirges, lighting up the embers of tradition in its unalloyed form. It must be noted, that referring to Oduduwa as Ekaladerhan; Owomika as Eweka and Ogiso as Oba and a fews others should make for better appreciation as same.

    Oduduwa, King of the Edos can best be described the Microcosm of our current geopolitical entity; complete in intrigues, distrusts, treachery, foibles and scarce integrity; vices and virtue which may not elude any civilization, even if such a sphere wields the toga of civility and sanctimoniousness, it no doubt has evolved overtime from the dregs of bloodshed and ugly inhuman cultivations.

    An unforgettable savageness is the seventh century Greek theatre- where Dionysus, god of wine and fertility basked in the wanton revelry of those thespians. One from the current civilisation was the American civil war in the 17th century, characterised by ideological loggerheads and consequent decimation of fellow American rebels, as that’s what they are, having crossed the Atlantic to the Americas from the United Kingdom. A more contemporary allusion is the Umbrella Revolution in the former British colony of Hong Kong, where people clamour for what is theirs and the authorities in Beijing are dung-faced about it.

    The work opens with introduction of the treacherous and tempestuous warrior Uwafiokun, leading fellow fighters against Evian and Ogianmen, a regent of Igodomigodo and his son, whose heads eventually leave their bodies to his sword. Shameful and deserved, Uwafiokun’s retributive imbecility comes to the fore as one journeys through the work and definitely attest to fate’s punitive measure against hypocrisy and greater iniquity. A plunge from an initial exalted position, where war fought was for his pernicious intents than the preservation of the revered culture and heritage of Ogisos, and the Edo people.

    Hear him in Act One, Scene One:

    “Let the hunger of the greedy consume the usurper of the crown of the Ogisos…Ogiamen!”

    If anyone ever predicted his own end, then Uwafiokun just did. Expressing to the ears of all within earshot and impressing on the justification for beheading some usurpers. It is no doubt an auto-prophecy for the same crime he accuses Evian and Ogiamen of. He shares similarity with Odewale in Ola Rotimi’s The gods are not to Blame, who unknowing predicts his own end on the knowledge that Oba Adetusa has been killed by none other than himself.

    This opening foreshadows unveiled chains of plots by power mongers and power brokers who jostle with wisdom, practical steps and at times deviousness in order to stem the tide of what causes man to be left in delirium. This disorientation can be adduced to the overriding influence of the gods; seeming insatiable cum conflicting tendencies of man and certain inexplicable phenomena. These descriptions definitely chart its course through different levels of conflicts in the work

    Evian the beheaded regent says in Act One, Scene two:

    “Culture is silent; it needs a man of wisdom, foresight and courage to speak on its behalf….”

    Crave for wisdom, foresight and courage results in the need for an Ogiso to occupy the throne of his ancestors. How then can Igodomido have her “Ruler from the sky”? Banished, hasn’t he been? Majority of Ovbiedo believes he is long dead in the forest of Igo, following his fate occasioned by the  treacherous Queen Esagho and subsequent verdict by Ogiso Owodo- Ekaladerhan’s father. Conversely, a handful knows Oduduwa lives. The accomplices include, Ezomo- a highly respected member of the Edion’isen and Odionmwan- chief of the palace executioners- whose acts of omission eventually guarantees a royal lineage.

    In Ola Rotimi’s The gods are not Blame, King Adetusa’s and Queen Ojuola’s joy become shortlived, when it gets predicted that their source of fulfillment-Odewale- will become their eventual failings. It is in similar vein that Oduduwa is sentenced to die, so as to make way for other sons to be sired from the loins of Ogiso Owodo. Situating both works side by side, one finds the gods’ intervention in man’s affairs, with an instruction to tow a line so as to address an immediate concern or avert an impending doom. While Ekaladerhan was not killed by Odionmwan, Odewale was himself spared by Gbonka, leading up to the fates of these core personas, who at best are reflections of an artist impression.

    A contrast however surfaces. It is gullibility, cowardice cum stupid verdict from Ogiso Owodo, who prefers to cast out the strength of his youth-Ekaladerhan- as that appeared to placate his inability to bear more sons. It however happens to be a bull’s eyes prophecy in Ola Rotimi’s work, where the prophecy comes to pass, but also enabled by man’s inability to adhere to instructions-Gbonka.

    An important precedent in the work is that, only blue bloods who are eldest males become Ogisos, so the revelation about Oduduwa bearing rule over Yorubas in Ile Ife is received with mixed emotions. Ezomo reveals the veracity of Ekaladerhan’s existence, but since patience is alien to Uwafiokun and treachery pitches a concrete tent at his domain, such stories are best left as myths from Europe’s dark ages.

    Hear him again in Act One, Scene Two:

    “I stand here ready to go to war with anyone who tries to use guile and flowery words to usurp the throne”

    Uwafiokun appears to breathe on war. His every existence is in making another life go down lifeless, should any situation not find an immediate comprehension in his cerebrum. He even refuses to make peace with his fellow chiefs because to him, war alone resolves knotty issues. Power indeed has its stuporous tendencies.

    Priority for the Edo is seeing Ekaladerhan return to his homeland, so that an unoccupied throne will be ascended. Oliha, a member of the Edion’isen carries this burden of destiny. His childhood fondness and friendship with Oduduwa is leveraged to accomplish this daunting task of salvaging the throne. This quest however has its thorny sides, because a trap set is often forgotten, but he who gets entrapped and wrenches out with bruises never forgets. This dialogue between Oliha and Oduduwa in Act Two , Scene Three spells it aptly.

    ODUDUWA: “The Edos are not my people”

    OLIHA: “The land of the Edos has wronged you. Your father, Ogiso Owodo, dictated your death, believing at the time that it was the will of the gods and in silence, we supported him”.

    Faith is a virtue of survival but fate is its parallel which charts its own course. This expression best describes the departure of Oduduwa to Ile Ife. He met a people with open arms and with exceptional dexterity, strengthened the land which affords him love and life; together with them becoming the Oba of an economically viable and militarily structured land. Love has never been attained or enjoyed in isolation. Oduduwa adds value to the land that embraced him with peace and plenty, even when his land almost snuffed Olodumare’s life out of him. He shows qualities and powers only gods wield, warming his way through their hearts and enjoying the delightful bossom of a wise daughter of the Ile Ife – Okanbi, the mother of his son, Oranmiyan.  It was recorded in the book titled Ekaladerhan by Ovbia Edu Akenzua that His Royal Highness Omo N’Oba N’Edo Uku Akpolokpolo Erediauwa I said to His Imperial Majesty Alayeluwa Oba Okunade Sijuade Olubuse II Ooni of Ife

    “if the Ooni  calls the Oba his son

    and the Oba of Benin calls the Ooni

    of Ife his son, they are both right”

    It is evident that the author sharpens his horns with research, so as to engage in this realistic rumble with those who would not rather enjoy fiction than pick holes in sealed planes.  I dare say he may well have rested the heated claims and counter claims over whose progenitor charted the course of life ahead of the other or for the other.

    Jude Idada adventured through themes of  culture, ancestry, authority, power, politics, providence, indiscretion, wisdom, patience, endurance, death, treachery,  love, women and procreation. He employed the core elements of drama in dialogue, songs and dance;  creating very apt character interactions with copious and rich use of proverbs, befitting moulds of characters and relaying the essential pleasures between man and woman in most subtle, honest yet modest bravado.

    It is impossible to avoid one’s common inheritance as the heritage of the Edos and Yoruba is one.

  • Oduduwa House berths in Spain

    Oduduwa House berths in Spain

    IT was a gathering of who-is-who among the Nigerian community in Spain. Led by the Nigerian ambassador to Spain, Her Excellency, Lady Bianca Olivia Odimegwu Ojukwu, the gaily dressed people, especially the Yoruba resident in Spain, made history, with the formal launch of a pro- Yoruba organization, the Oodua Progressives Union (OPU) and the take-off of the building of Oduduwa House. Ambassador Ojukwu commended the efforts of the Yoruba community in Spain at engendering the unity of the nation, saying their efforts is worthy of emulation. Speaking in an emotion-laden voice, Lady Ojukwu urged all Nigerians in Spain to borrow a leaf from the OPU towards promoting Nigerian culture and unity. She lauded the efforts of the National Coordinator of the Oodua People’s Congress, Otunba Gani Adams, for rebranding the OPC and ensuring that a new organization, the OPU, is in the forefront of the efforts to rejuvenate the Yoruba culture among its people in the Diaspora. “Your objective and goals, which are tuned to cultural rejuvenation, responsible citizenry and patriotism are noble, worthwhile and worthy of emulation. I have been keeping a close watch and monitoring the European tour of Otunba Adams since last year, and I am happy that he is in the forefront blazing Yoruba culture in Europe and other continents.” While addressing the gathering, which included Nigerians of all shades and colours, the newly-installed President, Federation of Yoruba community in Spain, Alhaji Mustapha, said the launch of the OPU in Spain was the collective decision of all the sons and daughters of Oduduwa resident in the country. Mustapha said: “Apart from the need to discuss personal matters and engage in social interaction, we felt there is the need to rise up and do something urgently to the dwindling fortune of our heritage. This is particularly important because our children are on the verge of losing our culture through cultural assimilation and modern trend. It was for this reason that we decided to rekindle our interest in our culture and also redouble our efforts by building the Oodua House in Spain. The House will cater for all the cultural needs of our people and also serve as a rallying point for all Yoruba in Spain.” While commending Lady Ojukwu for her open door approach to all matters affecting Nigerians in the country, Mustapha described the Convener of the OPU, Otunba Gani Adams, as a true and dedicated Yoruba man. “He is a man who risks his life and all things he has to continue to promote Yoruba values, freedom and culture. He is a man who has given the Yoruba nation the hope of a better tomorrow, culturally. It is credit to him that our values and culture have not been submerged.” In his welcome address, Otunba Adams, who also doubles as the chairman of the event, praised the ambassador for being a rallying point for all Nigerians in Spain. “All the testimonies being said about you today show that you are not only a perfect representative, but also an asset to the nation,” Adams said. Adams, who said he was in Spain to reinforce the unity of the Yoruba community, said the OPU is purely a cultural association formed to rekindle the interest of all Yoruba people across the globe in Yoruba culture and value system. He urged the people to continue to be good ambassadors of Nigeria, while at the same time maintaining and sustaining their own culture. While lauding the plan to build an Oodua House in Spain, Adams promised to mobilize eminent Nigerians to contribute to the quick completion of the project

  • Oduduwa comes alive at King’s College

    THE comic genre as a platform for educating young readers got a boost when Panaramic Entertainment unveiled the ‘Okiojo’s Chronicles’  at a public presentation at King’s College annex, Victoria Island, Lagos.

    Five hundred and sixty copies of the comic books were donated to the college at the event.

    The Okiojo series is a product of three years’creative efforts of former pupils of the college, Tunji Anjorin, Adeniyi Adeniji, Rotimi Dawodu and Rotimi Anjorin and others who formed Paranamic Entertainment.

    They said the Okiojo’s Chronicles is designed to educate and entertain, especially students about Nigeria’s rich cultural heritage.

    The Principal of King’s College, Otunba Oladele Olapeju, praised the old boys for creating a comic series that would help project Nigerian heroes.

    “Oduduwa, Queen Amina are well-known personages in history who played heroic roles that cut across their respective communities and influenced the history of their eras. It is important younger generation of children must know them; the roles they played in our history which will help the children to appreciate the fact that people have been here and achieved something monumental for the society,” he said.

    General Secretary, King’s College Old Boys Association (KCOBA), Mr. Lucky Idike, said the old students behind the comic book series have helped in creating employment.

    He added that Nigerians have never been found wanting of ideas. “Circumstances have forced people to dig deep into their ingenuity and come up with something tangible that is relevant to the yearning of the society – the Okiojo’s Chronicles falls within this bracket,” he said.

    Apart from Oduduwa, the two other comic in the series are: The Story of the Yoruba: 1897 (tells the story of the Benin Kingdom); and Queen Amina 1 and 2.

  • Enter the Serbians

    Enter the Serbians

    A Yugoslavia-Nigeria parallel is instructive.

    The final trigger for the break-up of Yugoslavia was Serbian ultra-nationalism.

    Now comes Nigeria’s season of ethnic ultra-nationalism: Oduduwa and MASSOB’s Biafra (active: because they push carving Nigeria into new countries) and the North (passive: because  it insists on the failing status quo).

    On Josip Broz Tito’s defunct country, Wikipedia writes: “Yugoslavia was a country in South East Europe during most of the 20th century.  It came into existence after World War I in 1918 …”  It broke up in 1991, after 73 years.

    Lord Frederick Lugard amalgamated northern and southern Nigeria in 1914.  Though Nigeria hit its centenary this year, 2014, there is no guarantee, with the escalating tension, Wikipedia would not write on Nigeria in the past tense, as it does on Yugoslavia now.

    Yugoslavia’s World War II (1939-1945) dead was around one million. Tito’s Yugoslav Partisans fought the (guerrilla) war to secure Yugoslavia’s integrity against carve-up threats from Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy).

    Nigeria’s Civil War (1967-1970) casualty tally was also around one million dead. Nigeria fought the war to thwart the Igbo attempt to break away.

    According to Wikipedia, the rise of nationalism, coupled with religious differences between Orthodox Serbs, Catholic Croats and Muslim Bosniaks prompted the collapse of Yugoslavia.

    Nigeria now appears locked in religious antipathy, aside from the Boko Haram mass slaughter; and ethnic nationalism is on the upswing.

    A “Croatian spring” protest in the 1970s, which condemned Yugoslavia as a Serb hegemony, led to Yugoslavia’s 1974 constitution.  It slightly watered down Serb influence by granting federating republics more autonomy.

    But the Serbs (self-proclaimed special breed) resented that  constitution’s “threat to national unity” (read Serb dominance). Much later, Slobodan Milosevic, Serbian communist leader, attempted to cancel the 1974 reforms and re-impose Serbian sovereignty over other ethnic nationalities, particularly Croats (who incidentally were the late Tito’s people, though he lived and died a Yugoslav national icon; and ethnic Albanians in Kosovo).  That move proved fatal for Yugoslavia.

    Nigeria’s status quo ensemble has a ready cant: “Nigerian unity is non-negotiable”; as it tries to block campaigns by ethnic nationalities and other lobbies to restructure the country.

    But remember: agitations by “ethnic nationalities” were fair reactions to Nigeria as a northern hegemony.  Like Serbia, the North fancies itself a special power breed, with near-divine right to rule.  Add the merry-go-round national conferences (Abacha 1994-95, Obasanjo 2005 and now Jonathan, 2014), just to buy time, and what you see is intransigence.

    If such intransigence proved fatal for Yugoslavia, could it prove any less for Nigeria?

    Even a more eerie parallel: “In 1986” Wikipedia wrote, “the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts drafted a memorandum addressing some burning issues, concerning position of Serbs as the most numerous people in Yugoslavia.”  Six years later, Yugoslavia was history.

    In 2014, a northern think-tank collective authored the North’s position paper to the ongoing National Conference (NC).

    The paper told “Northern Nigeria, the backbone and strength of Nigeria” to use its “extremely understated” population to maintain the status quo, and even roll back to five per cent, the 13 per cent paid to Niger Delta as oil derivation!

    Was this a virtual chapter from the Serbian Academy paper?  And, in six years’ time, would Nigeria stand strong and united, guaranteed by a northern spine, as the northern elite hope or, like Yugoslavia, have fallen to pieces, as the Serbian elite perhaps now rue?  Nobody knows.

    What is clear is that since that Northern NC document was made public, Nigeria has been gripped by virulent ultra-nationalism, reminiscent of the last days of Yugoslavia.

    First, Femi Fani-Kayode, the gentleman who never does things in half-measure, has gone dramatically poetic on Yoruba ultra-nationalism:  “Give me Oduduwa or let me die”, he thundered in a now famous article, trending on the social media.

    Another set of Yoruba groups, at the Gani Fawehinmi Freedom Park, Ojota, Lagos, declared with no less finality: “Regional autonomy … or nothing”.  But the groups said while they had no intention to impose their will on others, they would resist the imposition of others’ will.

    Across the Niger, the Movement for the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) in Owerri, Imo State, led by Ralph Uwazurike, wanted Nigeria split into six republics, along the present geo-political zones.

    Chief Uwazurike talked of “deep-rooted hatred among major ethnic nationalities in Nigeria”, the mistake of 1914’s Lugard amalgamation, “irreconcilable disdain existing between Islam and Christianity” and “a failed state called Nigeria”.  He also dismissed Igbo mainstream politicians as parasites who mouth “one Nigeria” because Nigeria is their corrupt “cash cow”.

    And drama of dramas: Uwazurike not only donned, with matching ceremonial cap, a blue outfit his supporters called “the navy blue Biafran uniform”, he also came accompanied with two MASSOB representatives in UK and Europe!

    The Yoruba and Igbo groups were also devastating in their politics of memory.  MASSOB hailed May 30, the day in 1967 Emeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu declared the ill-fated Biafra Republic, as a “watershed” that boldly questioned the “mistake” of Lugard’s amalgamation, but remained the true path to Igbo liberation even 47 years after.

    The Afenifere Renewal Group (ARG) also thumbed down May 29, Nigeria’s official national Democracy Day, as a date of infamy.  First, May 29, 1962: date phony emergency rule was imposed on the old Western Region, marking the beginning of the end for the First Republic.  May 29, 1999: the Army Arrangement (apologies to late Fela), that sold (un)civil rule as Democracy.  And — ARG did not cite this one — May 29, 1966: anti-Igbo pogroms started in the North.

    Meanwhile, from up North came dire news: Boko Haram had killed an emir and sent two other scuttling into the bush for dear lives!  The symbolism is scary: the creeping collapse of the northern community where the emir was something of a demigod?  Now, if the North cannot secure its own spine, how can it be a backbone for a failing Nigeria?

    Even from the South West, some dissonance.  The Yoruba declared “regional autonomy or nothing” in Lagos.  Yet, Lagos, at the NC rejected regionalism and upheld the artificiality of Nigeria’s current 36-state structure!

    And that comic piece about creating Ijebu State as trade-off to guaranteed Igbo security nationwide!  Champions of regionalism still hankering after Ijebu State?  Comic confusion indeed, in the Yoruba camp!

    Ethnic nationalists giving up on Nigeria can be excused.  Its unsustainable structure is unravelling fast.

    But the Lagos NC rebellion shows it’s no use being gung-ho about Nigeria’s collapse.  If and when it happens, the balkanisation might just be total — as Serbia and Montenegro’s failure to keep Yugoslavia’s name on the map has shown — and no single geo-political zone might be sure to stay as one.

    That is why the North must moderate its empty conceit on “national unity” and the opposing camps, their delirium on Nigeria’s collapse.

    Genuine restructuring, on productive federal lines, remains the best option.

    Otherwise, Nigerians might just be fated to Niger-nostalgia (when recalling former Nigeria) and maybe The Economist would coin Nigersphere (as it has coined Yugosphere), to refer to the space Nigeria now occupies.

  • Oduduwa varsity students shine

    Students of Oduduwa University, Ipetumodu (OUI) Osun State have held participants spell bound at a seminar organised for private universities students at the Joseph Ayo Babalola University (JABU), Ilesa, Osun State.

    The event was organised by the Association of Nigerian Private Universities to stimulate the students towards positive thinking and joint action to rescue Nigeria’s education failing system.

    Speaking during the two-day event, leader of the OUI team and 300-Level Mass Communication student, Eriye Uche, called for a concerted effort by all to move the country’s education system forward.

    He recommended a tripartite remedial approach – adequate funding, discipline and expanding the research base and potentials of the nation’s ivory towers as solutions to address the perennial quagmire being experienced in Nigeria’s education system today.

    Another OUI student, Daniel Eluyemi, who is a finalist in the Microbiology department, made a case for government intervention in all private tertiary institutions in Nigeria in the areas of infrastructures, and donation of books to aid teaching and learning.

    On her part, Miss Cynthia Uzochukwu of the Department of International Relations sought for more purposeful and result-oriented curriculum which should encompass entrepreneurial programme meant to prepare students for different vocations, professions and enterprises.

    She enjoined administrators in Nigerian universities and curriculum designers to be more creative in their efforts to give a new meaning to Nigerian educational system.

     

  • Oduduwa proprietor honoured

    Proprietor of Oduduwa University, Ipetumodu, Osun State, Dr Ramon Adedoyin has been honoured with a professorial chair by the Institut Littoral Des Etudes Professionnelles Superieures, Republic of Benin.

    At the event held at the National Stadium at Porto-Novo, Vice-Chancellor and founder of the Institut Littoral Des Etudes Professionnelles Superieures, Prof Oyebode Ayeni, praised Adedoyin for his contributions to the development of education in Nigeria and abroad through his Our Savior University of America, Delware, USA; the Oduduwa University and The Polytechnic, Ile-Ife.

    While decorating Adedoyin the Registrar and Secretary to the Governing Council of the University, Dr Doyin Adelaja said the professorial chairs are awarded in recognition of the merit of individual member of academic staff who have distinguished themselves in their various fields at national and international level, and whose standing in their profession is widely acknowledged.

    Adelaja affirmed that Adedoyin was assessed using some rigorous areas of academic activities such as research and development, teaching, learning, human empowerment, entrepreneurship, capacity building, engagement and knowledge transfer and found competent to be conferred with professorial appointment.

    Responding to the honour, Adedoyin vowed to remain steadfast in upholding the tenets of academic glory through continuous investment in education and scientific research, socio- cultural transformation, protection of justice, human rights and community development beyond the boundaries of ethnicity, religion and nationality, and to live up to his new mission and status as an academic ambassador.