Tag: Odumakin

  • Group slams Odumakin for comments on Afenifere

    A socio-cultural group, Yoruba Young Progressives (YYP), has chided Mr Yinka Odumakin for his comment on the summit held recently in Ibadan by the Afenifere (Egbe Ilosiwaju Yoruba).

    YYP President Morris Awosile in a statement yesterday described as laughable the attempt by Odumakin to discredit the “respectable Yoruba leaders.”

    Awosile said: “We understand that the pot of soup of Odumakin is being threatened following the decision of the Yoruba leaders to support the re-election of President Muhammadu Buhari and Prof Yemi Osinbajo.

    “Odumakin should come out to tell the world his source of income. As active participant in the summit held in Ibadan by the Afenifere (Egbe Ilosiwaju Yoruba), we stand by the unanimous decision to support all the candidates of All Progressives Congress (APC) as the party has proved beyond reasonable doubt that it is a progressive party who preach and implement the ideals of the late sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo.”

    YYP said the attacks on Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu and Prof Osinbajo were out of envy and lack of relevance in the political realm of Southwest.

    Awosil said: “If not for selfishness, why would the Yorubas support a party who failed for 16 years to address the challenges in the Yorubaland but only being deceived with restructuring it could not do when it was in power for close to two decades.

    “We need to restate the position of our elders that we will not lose our prime position in government by voting for the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), who offered position and benefits lower than Vice President currently occupied by a Yoruba person,” he said.

    “The summit held in Ibadan comprises of the real representatives of the Yorubas, thousands in numbers. Any other group claiming to be Afenifere should be treated as jesters. It is evidenced that the party of the late Chief Awolowo is progressive and if he were to be alive, he will have nothing to do with PDP as exhibited in his political activities. The PDP as a party, has never claimed to be progressive in all its stay in government.

    “There is no good intention behind the noise of Odumakin and his co-travellers. They are always in opposition to progressive moves. It is crystal clear that PDP political ideology is alien to Awolowo philosophy.

    “Yorubas were not moved by the recent adoption of the PDP presidential flag bearer, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar by Odumakin’s group. The same way they did in 2015 general elections of which they lost gallantly in the presidential and governorship elections in the Southwest. This has further proved their irrelevance in the politics of Southwest and false representation of the Yorubas.”

  • Odumakin: Jackal at large

    Eminent professor of law Prof Itse Sagay (SAN) replies Afenifere Renewal Group Publicity Secretary Yinka Odumakin’s open letter to him.

    When I use the word Jackal to describe Yinka Odumakin, I do not mean the wild animal itself.  Rather I mean a human being who has the traits of a Jackal.  A human jackal is a person who performs menial routine tasks; a dogsbody. A person who behaves in an opportunistic way. A base collaborator.  Jackals love carrion, that is, dead, putrefying flesh of man or beast.  That is Odumakin.

    On the 28 of January, 2019,  Odumakin launched a savage and vicious attack on me in the Tribune Newspaper.  The letter was addressed to me personally, but was never sent to me.  Rather, one subscriber to Tribune drew my attention to it.  In that hate letter, Odumakin accused me of many crimes and called me all sorts of indecent names.  And this is a boy who had not yet been admitted into the University of Ife at the time I left Ife for Benin to start a new Faculty of Law there.

    I am flattered that Odumakin obtained information from the internet about my life as a student at University of Ife.  It  is true that when I saw the low morale in the student’s populace and the country at large, amongst the supporters and followers of Awolowo, I decided to form a branch of the Action Group in the University of Ife.

    This branch in collaboration with the University of Ibadan branch led by persons like Akin Omoboriowo, former Deputy Governor of Ondo State and Dipo Adamolekun, recently of the United Nations, played an effective role in the December 1964 Federal Elections.

    We sacrificed our Christmas holiday, organised ourselves in different groups, using old fashioned jeeps, provided by the Action Group National Executive Council, campaigned all over the Yoruba West for the Palm Tree, (The Action Group symbol).  I learnt to speak Yoruba during that campaign. My operational area was the current Osun State.  We nearly lost our lives at Ile-Ife when armed thugs sent by the Late Chief Remi Fani-Kayode descended on us with an assortment of weapons.  We had a miraculous escape.

    I personally, as leader of the University of Ife Student’s Action  Group was appointed to the National Executive Committee of the Action Group, presided over by Alhaji Dauda Adegbenro.

    We were not paid a kobo for our sacrifices both in terms of the risk to our lives, our time and our resources.  We participated gladly and freely because we believed in the principles and ideology of the party and had great love and admiration for the leader.

    This is Itse Sagay that was, is and shall continue to be.  Therefore, genuflecting sycophancy is alien and revolting to my nature.  I have never changed. I am serving the Buhari government with the same fervour and passion with which I served Awolowo and Action Group.  Just as I believed in Awolowo, so I believe in Buhari.  Both leaders have the same traits; integrity, honour, spartan orientation, austere disposition and an uncommon love for the masses, the poor, the vulnerable and a resolute determination to raise the standard of living and welfare of Nigerians.

    Yes, Femi Adesina and Garba Shedu may be more reticent than I am.  They are full time Government Officials. I am a free man; just a part tie Chairman of a Government Committee. So, I suffer no limitations of the type that Adesina and Garba may be experiencing.  I speak as a free Nigerian, not as Chairman of PACAC.  I, therefore, have an encyclopedic freedom to express my views on any topic of my choice, just as Odumakin has and does exercise frequently.

    I have never been involved in politics for gain in my life.  In 1979, I joined the UPN of Chief Awolowo.  I was a member of the UPN Think-Tank based in Ile-Ife and headed by no less a person than the Late Prof. Sam Aluko.  We asked for no material reward and were given none.

    I was a supporter of AD, AC and ACN led by Asiwaju Tinubu, who I regard as the closest inheritor of the Awolowo mantle.  Now, I am a member of the APC and I am serving it just as I served the Action Group.  I have not changed since 1962.  I will never change.

    In 2011, Odumakin came calling at my house with a card from Gen. Buhari seeking my support.  Odumakin spent two hours, vigorously putting across the high qualities of Gen. Buhari.  Although, I was already inclined to support Buhari, Odumakin’s visit capped the whole matter.

    But what of Odumakin himself?  He was a chief supporter and spokesman for Buhari in 2011, but as the whole world knows Buhari has no free money for anybody.  And so, Odumakin packed his bag abandoned Buhari and headed for Jonathan to become Jonathan’s errand boy.

    As expected, the morally bankrupt Odumakin collected money from the Jonathan campaign to set up a fake news Radio Station in Ibadan in 2015.

    Jonathan lost the election and carpet bagger Odumakin pulled up his tent from Jonathan’s environment and headed for Atiku to pitch his tent there.  Odumakin always follows the money.  As someone once described him, Odumakin is unprincipled, a moral invertebrate: a vulture, always seeking new fields of carrion – a jackal.

    He is a man who moves from camp to camp in order to feed.  Unfortunately, Odumakin brings bad luck to every Principal he purports to serve.  When he served Buhari, Buhari lost the presidential election in 2011. He moved on to Jonathan, and Jonathan lost the presidential election in 2015.  Now that he has moved on to Atiku, Atiku’s fate can be foretold.

    For me, the most painful part of his savage attack on me is his assertion that I betrayed Deprieye Alemieyeseigha, former Governor of Bayelsa State.  Odumakin had made this assertion before in October 2017; I  corrected it in the newspapers.  That he has repeated these lies again shows that Odumakin is a chronic and unrepentant liar.

    Let me say straight away that I was strongly opposed to the rumoured move by Government to extradite the former Governor.  I was certainly not consulted by the Government and could therefore, not have advised them on that subject.  All these stories were concocted by his enemies in order to ruin my reputation.

    I was indeed, one of the Counsel to Alemieyeseigha in the period of 2005 and 2006.  My main effort was towards getting him reinstated as Governor of Bayelsa State because of the horrific, illegal and unconstitutional manner in which he was removed from office.

    Armed Police were deployed to arrest members of the Bayelsa State House of Assembly, who were carted to Abuja and tortured into signing an impeachment notice.  The whole state was taken  over by troops and the  government’s bank  accounts were  frozen.  They even shut down Radio Bayelsa.

    This was the aspect of the Legal struggle I was involved in.  I appeared with Chief Mike Ozehkome at the Supreme Court three times on behalf of the former Governor.  The Federal Attorney-General had no answer to our case, and the matter was finally struck-out because the Solicitor-General of Bayelsa State filed a notice of discontinuance of the case without our consent.

    The Supreme Court struck out the case for this reason on the ground that if we were not acting on behalf of Bayelsa State, but only on behalf of Alemieyeseigha, we had no right to invoke the original jurisdiction of the Court.  We should commence at the High Court level.

    That effectively scuttled our case because the Bayelsa State Judiciary would have been hostile to our case, given that the then Chief Judge was neck deep in the illegal ouster of the Governor.

    I had great respect for Alemieyeseigha and my view is that he had paid very dearly for whatever offence he had committed and should have been left alone to enjoy the rest of his life in peace.  Indeed, if he had lived longer, he would probably have still played an important role in the struggle to resolve the intractable Nigerian National Question.  I fully supported the state pardon granted him by President Jonathan.  I was not only appalled, but I was vehemently opposed to the blood thirsty proposal to extradite him to the United Kingdom.

    It can therefore, be seen by all and sundry that Odumakin is indeed a jackal.  He is a man with no loyalty to anybody or anything, including the truth.  His loyalty is only to money.  I am sorry for him because,  he will never leave a legacy of any value behind, because he has no values.  He will forever continue to eat carrion, as his opportunistic and exploitative nature demands.

  • Breaking: Court restrains EFCC, Police from arresting Fani-Kayode, Odumakin

    An Abuja Federal High Court, has restrained the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, (EFCC), the Department of State Services (DSS) and the Nigeria Police from arresting or detaining Femi Fani-Kayode and Yinka Odumakin.

    Justice John Tsoho, gave the order on Monday, following an ex parte application argued by Mr Chukwuma Machukwu-Ume (SAN) on behalf of the duo.

    Machukwu-Ume told the court that the three security agencies were planning to arrest and detain his clients over comments they made with regard to the travails of the Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Walter Onnoghen.

    “The spokesman of the EFCC, Mr Tony Orilede, was alleged to have made the threat to arrest them publicly at a conference where he represented the EFCC chairman.

    Read Also: Court restates order stopping CCT from forcing CJN to vacate office

    “He said they are doing everything possible to arrest these two gentlemen just for speaking their minds.

    “The EFCC is established to pursue corruption and not comments made by Nigerians, expressing themselves,” he said.

    The lawyer told the court that his clients had gone into hiding for fear of being arrested for merely expressing their freedom of speech, alleging that their family lives had also been affected by the alleged threat.

    Machukwu-Ume told the court that the application was brought pursuant to Section 6 (6)(b) and Section 46 of the 1999 Constitution as well as Order 4 Rules 3 of the Fundamental Rights Procedure Rules.

    He urged the court to grant the order restraining the respondents from arresting and detaining his clients pending the determination of the application on notice.

    Justice Tsoho said that he was satisfied that the applicants had made a case that their lives were being threatened.

    “I am satisfied that the applicants have made out a case for the court’s intervention.
    “Accordingly, the respondents are restrained from either arresting or detaining the applicants on grounds of the applicants’ public statements pending the determination of the application on notice,” the judge ruled.

    The Judge adjourned the matter until Feb. 4.

  • Fani-Kayode, Odumakin sue EFCC for N20m over planned arrest

    A FORMER Minister of Aviation, Chief Femi Fani-Kayode, and Afenifere Renewal Group Publicity Secretary Yinka Odumakin have sued the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) over an alleged plan to arrest them.

    They joined the Department of State Services and the Police in the suit filed at the Federal High Court in Abuja.

    The applicants, through their lawyer Chukwuma-Machukwu Ume (SAN), are praying the court to stop the respondents from arresting them over alleged false information they spread.

    They are demanding N20 million “as damages for the unlawful threat to arrest the applicants”.

    Fani-Kayode had claimed that EFCC operatives surrounded Chief Justice Onnoghen’s home. Odumakin shared a video to that effect. Fani-Kayode later retracted the publication, saying his sources misinformed him.

    The applicants are praying for a declaration that the respondents’ public declaration to arrest them on the basis of spreading false rumours is an infringement of their fundamental rights as enshrined in Section 34 (a), 35 (1) (4) and (5) of the 1999 Constitution.

    They said the threat to falsely imprison their liberty, safety, peace and security is a breach of their rights.

    Fani-Kayode and Odumakin prayed for an order of perpetual injunction restraining the respondents and their agents from harassing, arresting or detaining them.

    They are praying for the enforcement of their fundamental rights and an order stopping the respondents from threatening them with unlawful arrest.

    The applicants prayed for an order compelling the respondents to tender an unreserved apology to them for the infringement of their fundamental rights and for “describing them in demeaning manners”.

    In a verifying affidavit in support of the application, the deponent Rev. Emmanuel Olorunmagbe, said he was at the Online Publishers Association of Nigeria (OPAN) conference on Wednesday when EFCC’s spokesman Tony Oriade threatened to arrest the applicants.

    “He stated openly that while the first applicant tweeted that the EFCC wanted to arrest the CJN, the second applicant released a video on it, and that two of them will be invited and if they fail to turn up within 48 hours, they will be arrested,” the deponent said.

    The applicants said they and their families are living in fear  “as to what might happen if these respondents are not restrained by the court, coupled with their state of health.”

     

  • Kogi gov, Lagos Speaker, Odumakin for Young Achievers Awards

    High profile personalities including Governor Yahaya Bello of Kogi State; Speaker of Lagos State House of Assembly, Rt Hon Mudashiru Obasa and rights activist, Dr Joe Okei-Odumakin will grace the 8th edition of Young Achievers Awards.

    The event, according to its organiser, Ibrahim Adeduntan, will hold on Sunday October 28 at Ibis Hotel, Ikeja, Lagos.

    The theme of the event is ‘’Are Nigerian youths truly ready for the future or ranting.’’

    In a statement issued in Lagos, Adeduntan, who is also the publisher of youngachieversnigeria.com, said the annual youth event ‘’which is the biggest gathering of young Nigerians who have broken the ceilings of limitations to excel in their various fields, will celebrate 50 new schools heroes, who have excelled despite different challenges and obstacles.

    ‘’Leadership has been the problem of Nigeria and the entire Africa despite this, some certain individuals have distinguished themselves in different fields and also exhibited qualities that people look for in an achiever, that is, honesty, competence, progress, intelligence and inspiration.’

  • Odumakin, community protest 4-hour weekly power supply

    Women Arise President Mrs. Joe Okei-Odumakin joined scores of  Badagry residents yesterday to protest over the epileptic power supply in the area in the last decade.

    The protesters, who carried placards, marched through the coastal town, causing heavy traffic congestion at the roundabout on the Badagry–Lagos Expressway.

    Among inscriptions on the protesters’ placards were: “FG give us light”; “No light no bill”; “Electricity is our fundamental human right’’; and “Ambode please save us”.

    Mrs. Okei-Odumakin expressed displeasure over the epileptic power situation in the ancient city.

    She noted that estimated billing without power supply was corruption and must be eradicated.

    She said: “Badagry is written in gold in our history books because it is the cradle of civilisation. So, it’s saddening that such an important place doesn’t have power supply. I learnt that for over 20 years, the power supply in the city has been extremely terrible and despite all these, residents still receive estimated bills for services not rendered. Estimated billing is evil and part of corruption. So, it must be eradicated totally. This protest would drive home our request that something must be done in that aspect.”

    Mr Ayo Akinde, a resident of Itoga Road, said Badagry residents only got a maximum of four-hour power supply weekly in the past 10 years.

    According to him, Badagry residents have not enjoyed two hours of uninterrupted day time power supply in the past decade.

    “The power situation in Badagry has become so bad that many people have moved out of the ancient town to other areas such as Agbara and Ibereko where there is stable electricity,” Akinde said.

    Another resident, Sewedo Samuel, said the epileptic power supply was killing small businesses in the area.

    “It is a shame that an ancient town known as `tourism haven’ is in darkness and businesses running on generators,” Sewedo said.

    Mr Ovi Kuponu, the coordinator of the protest, noted that the poor power supply was negatively affecting economic activities of the people.

    He said: “We have been affected by the non-existent of power in the town as this has affected most economic activities, especially the tourism and hospitality sectors.

    “Tourists who are supposed to stay over after visiting the town’s numerous tourist sites do not do so, because most hotels cannot run on generators for 24 hours.

    “Drastic steps must be taken to rectify our power supply because it has slowed down development the city.”

    An official of the Eko Electricity Distribution Company (EKEDC) in Badagry told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that measures were being taken to rectify the issue.

    “The city would soon be connected to the national grind and the power supply would improve drastically,” said the EKEDC official who pleaded for anonymity.

  • Odumakin: When Activism Is Enslaved By Sinister Motives

    To say the least, I am amused, with the apparent self-contradiction by Comrade Yinka Odumakin, a veiled politician, masquerading as a social activist of the Afenifere stuff. He has just pierced himself with a sharp knife.

    In a published piece captioned “What is wrong with Buratai’s Army,” Odumakin , was on a voyage of perfidy, but truth held him back to unconsciously declare that “Less I am accused of crying wolf where there is none…, ” thus watering the substance of his arsenals as an attack dog.

    Obviously a hatchet job, Odumakin had taken scathing jabs at the Nigerian Army under the leadership of the Chief of Army Staff (COAS) Lieutenant General Tukur Yusufu Buratai for executing its Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) through the free medical outreach programmes in host communities in Nigeria.

    I immediately sensed in him shadows of a desperate politician and ethnic chauvinist groping for cogent reasons to deliver what he presumed to be an irrecoverable punch on the institution of the Nigerian Army. In so doing, he simultaneously minced no words in expressing his veiled hatred, ethnic bigotry and aversion to the leadership of Nigeria by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    Therefore, the short piece was replete with confounding blunders and contradictions to a level of even confessing to the truthfulness of some of the issues he held sacrosanct as weapons to disparage the Nigerian Army. Nigerians are known for their flair for flaunting an identity far from their innermost convictions.

    When I perused Odumakin’s piece, his image as the last don of this clan of reprehensible characters assailed my senses as the sole motivation for his baseless umbrage. The writer knows beyond doubt that the speculated news about soldiers of the “Operation Python Dance II” inoculating school children in parts of Nigeria with vaccines infused with the deadly Monkey Pox virus is a mere rumour, patently false and unfounded.

    Also, Odumakin knows the peddlers are miscreants, which antagonizing politicians have deployed against the Federal Government under the Buhari Presidency to discredit the Army. He knows, the Nigerian Army has not stepped into any school or community to administer free medication without the consent of relevant authorities, as attested by the presence of government officials and traditional rulers at the flag-off of the programme by “Operation Python Dance II,” or “Operation Crocodile Smile II.”

    I can bet to high heavens that Odumakin has no evidence or proof of any reported incident of death arising from any medication by the Army in any of the places it has been administered. Yet, he elected upon himself to add strength to the tantalizing wind, flesh up the wild and destructive rumour tales by enthusing a confirmation and rehearse of the speculations as;

    “The rumour mongers of course succeeded because the Nigerian state already lost credibility with the people. The idea of medical mission by the military is not totally alien.”

    The exposition by Odumakin confirms the current deliberate attempts to put Nigeria in disarray. More than anything else, his plot to destroy the reputation of the Nigerian Army by lending credence to a rumour is visible, hence Odumakin admits that the Army’s free medical programmes is not strange to the people. And so, by any stretch of imagination, Buratai’s Army, as he puts it, could not have launched it because it was handed an agenda of depopulating some regions as he claimed.

    And he was right in the sense that the Nigerian Army under General Buratai had undertaken these CSR projects as far back as 2015 when he assumed office as the COAS. No one raised eyebrows and the CSR projects have extended beyond Medicare to cover water, roads and electricity projects across Nigeria.

    These are facts on the fingertips of every Nigerian, Odumakin inclusive. But bolstered by the desperation to deliver on the assignment of executing a selfish and ethnic political agenda, handed down to him by his pay masters, he dramatized the artificial panic scenarios created by the rumours, shamelessly in these comic words; “I saw a woman scaling a fence that even men will have difficulty climbing in order to get hold of her child.” But the writer failed to notify Nigerians further whether the panicked woman who scaled a fence sustained a broken rib or leg and which hospital admitted her.

    Somewhat petulant and resisting the aura of truth, as reflected in subsisting realities, Odumakin confessed he was motivated to drop his lines after watching General Buratai’s advertisement of his proposed “empowerment programme for internally displaced persons,” “on Channels TV on Saturday.” And his pedestrian reasoning for condemning the advert hinged on the inaccessibility of IDPs to television sets and so, “This advert is therefore not for them.”

    Yes, the advert is not for them! But he missed the point that the advert is meant for demonic souls like him and the other agents, experts and specialists in rumour peddling. It is meant to forestall concocted tales on the Nigerian Army to the effect that it has again sneaked into IDPs camps to dish out “poisoned items or cash,” to hapless victims of armed internal conflicts.

    I am the least surprised that Odumakin would remember the selfless and humanitarian services rendered to IDPs from time immemorial by the Nigerian Army. They treated the wounded in camps, offered them a share of their loaf of bread, and operated makeshift schools, where soldiers spared time out of their tight schedules to teach children of IDPs in camps.

    Then, Odumakin never questioned whether soldiers have become teachers or the loaves of bread were poisoned. But himself and the group/ organization he represents never perceived these humanitarian crisis as worthy of intervention by rendering assistance. When soldiers camped repentant insurgents; de-radicalized and de-militarized terrorists with a new orientation and absorbed them into the sane society, Odumakin and buddies never questioned whether soldiers have become psychologists.

    When soldiers pushed by the passion of humanity, stretched themselves to rescue trapped victims of kidnappers in the Niger Delta, free of charge, they were not queried for usurping the responsibilities of civil security. That’s the extent of hypocrisy in us, which is actively and relentlessly promoted by the likes of Odumakin.

    So, he was indiscernibly piqued with General Buratai’s appearance on BBC “Hard Talk” programme; forgetting in his peevish idiosyncrasies that aside being the COAS, General Buratai doubles as the leader of the Counter-Insurgency Operations in Nigeria. Consequently, he owes eager Nigerians a sacred obligation to once in a while explain the progress, challenges and developments concerning the counter-insurgency operations in the country.

    If America’s Secretary of States, Mr. Rex Tillerson admits that fighting insurgency across the globe is beyond the sound of weapons on the battlefield alone, as propaganda is also key, I cannot understand Odumakin’s failure to decode the dynamics.

    But to embellish clannish and selfish sentiments to appear as a patriotic national cause, the writer cleverly encased it in political ambitions of the military/Army, with stale historical allusions. I cannot buy the idea that yesterday’s coup history, would dictate today’s signals for a coup just because the Army has decided to be selfless and humane to the people they serve or use the media as a counter-terrorism strategy. Coups generally are unfashionable in any part of the world, as democracy has triumphed defiantly even in Nigeria.

    The Nigerian Army, particularly under the watch of General Buratai has not only consistently pledged subordination to civil authority and defended Nigeria’s democracy, but soldiers have been re-oriented, re-professionalized and disciplined. It explains why the Nigerian Army especially has excelled in all its assignments, observing the best practices of professionalism, upholding human rights and sticking religiously to rules of engagements in all assignments.

    The Nigerian Army’s current leadership’s aversion to coups is not in doubt. Some elements in the country, which Odumakin strikes as one believes everything in Nigeria, must be tied to politics and the feeling becomes more overt when they fail to clinch appointments in patronage. These were the same forces which wanted a military coup in Nigeria and sprouted a rumour to this effect.

    They allegedly had their names penned down for juicy appointments, as PR Managers and so on, before the Army leadership by Gen. Buratai thwarted this obnoxious plan by issuing a rebuttal statement and placed soldiers on secret surveillance. And still pained by this frustration, they think, extracting their pound of flesh against the Army Chief is to haul any balderdash at him or the Army, whether real or imagined. It cannot work!

    The Nigerian Army is adamantly professionalized, as attested by the global encomiums poured on them. It is not a fluke, but a product of careful assessments by independent international bodies and governments.

    I agree that accusations can surface from time to time. It’s normal and no one has the capacity to restrain anybody from cooking allegations against the Army. But several probe panels and independent civil society organizations have proven such accusations as a farce and vindicated the Nigerian Army. The ongoing Presidential Probe Panel is almost left with no job to do, as the accusers of the Nigerian Army of crimes against humanity are refusing to step out to substantiate their claims. Amnesty International (AI), a leading crusader in this direction has declined appearance too.

    I believe, Odumakin is less informed or deliberately malicious for personal reasons. We have seen situations where the Army bent backwards to accept unprovoked armed attacks on them, without reprisal reactions, as recently recorded in Abia state in the build-up to the commencement of the “Operation Python Dance II.”

    My candid advice to Odumakin and coy is that they are free to hate the Buhari Presidency to any length. But he has no liberty to extend to the limits of attempting to discredit the Nigerian Army, with infantile speculations. He lives on politicians and thinks everyone in government should invite him for lunch. But today, there is a new order in Nigeria and he must discard the old mentality to be at peace with his soul.

    In recent times, the likes of Yinka Odumakin have demonstrated a penchant for selective interpretations of our laws and its applications as it suit their debased thoughts to push illegitimate gains. We shall therefore not allow him to dance naked on the graves of our founding fathers by allowing these tissues of falsehood to settle down anywhere near sane minds.

    No amount of blackmail can intimidate the Nigerian Army and its leadership under General Buratai from protecting and defending the sovereignty of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. The Odumakins can again mask to try a new style another day; but the one of today under activism is sinister. It has become stale and useless.
    Odeh is a public affairs analyst and contributed this piece from No19 Anthony Enahoro Street, Utako, Abuja.

  • Danjuma, Odumakin decry lack of family values

    Danjuma, Odumakin decry lack of family values

    •Women urged to imbibe H.I.D’s virtues

    THE Chairman of the Advisory Council of late Hannah Idowu Didelou (H.I.D) Awolowo Foundation, Senator Daisy Ehanire Danjuma and President, Women Arise for Change Initiative Dr. Joe Oke-Odumakin have decried the absence of values in Nigerian families.

    Mrs. Danjuma and Mrs. Oke-Odumakin said the lack family values were responsible for the country’s economic challenges and other social problems.

    They spoke yesterday at the Ikenne, Ogun State home of late Chief Obafemi Awolowo at the one-year anniversary of Mrs. Awolowo’s death and inauguration of the Foundation Advisory Council.

    Mrs. Oke-Odumakin, who was the guest speaker at the event with the theme: “The Nigerian Woman in the Footprint of HID”, implored Nigerian women to imbibe the virtues of the late Mrs. Awolowo to restore values in the families.

    She stressed the need to learn and copy from the model of the Awolowo family that has become a reference point for a responsible family.

    According to her, Mrs. Awolowo stood by her husband all through his travails and managed the home front when the late sage travelled abroad for studies.

    She made reference to Awo’s comment in one of his books while exploiting HID’S virtue thus: “with her on my side, it has been possible to weather all financial storms”.

    The rights activist said HID would be remembered for her ideals.

    “She was principled, disciplined and dedicated her life to human development. She was endowed with innovative ideas and uncommon courage,” she said.

    She regretted that instead of emulating the lives of this exemplary couple, “we are today inundated with domestic violence with women on the receiving end.”

    Executive Secretary Obafemi Awolowo Foundation Dr. Tokunbo Awolowo-Dosumu explained that they decided to establish another foundation in memory of their mother because she deserved all the recognition that could come her way.

    According to her, HID foundation is poised for advocacy and, if necessary, intervention on issues that inspire women, promote values and build the nation.

    “Our focus will be to underline the careers of role models like Yeye Oodua HID Awolowo in a bid to re-set the values of younger Nigerians who already, I fear, appear to be morally adrift,” she said.

    The highlight of the occasion was the inauguration of the advisory council of HID Foundation. The council is headed by Senator Danjuma. Other members are Prof. Wale Adebanwi, Mrs. Yemi Alabi, Chief Tunji Ayanlaja (SAN), Yeye Olufunke Daniel, Mrs. Toyin Fape, Erelu Bisi Fayemi and others.

    Others were Prof. Segun Gbadegesin, Mrs. Fatima Waziri Ibrahim, Lady Maiden Ibru (MFR), Ms. Lana Mandilas, Mrs. Eriwu Molajo, Dr. Insa Nolte, Dr. (Mrs.) Femi Ogunsanya, Mrs. Fola Olumide, Mrs. Folusho Olaniyan (secretary) and Dr. (Mrs.) Jayne Soboiki.

    Senator Danjuma promised that they would justify the confidence reposed in them.

    Dignitaries present on the occasion include Obi of Onitsha Igwe Nnaemeka Achebe, Prof. Kayode Oyediran, Prof. Oladipo Akinkugbe, Prof. Ayo Olukotun, Dr. Amos Akingba and Princess Adenrele Ogunsanya, among others.

     

     

     

     

  • Odumakin and Ogun politics

    Mr Yinka Odumakin, author of the piece, “Finishing well: The Osoba example”, is a “change fiend”. At one point he belonged to the Afenifere camp. Later he switched allegiance to the Afenifere Renewal Group, which was and is not in good terms with the parent Yoruba socio-cultural group. Today, he is back in the old Afenifere. At a point, he fought the then President Goodluck Jonathan to a standstill. But just before the 2015 general election, he espoused the virtues of Jonathan to the heavens. He was a prominent figure in the quest of the current President, Muhammadu Buhari, to lead the nation in 2011. Today, he is a budding critic of the Buhari administration. Like a bolt from the blue, Odumakin now sings the praise of Chief Olusegun Osoba. We pray to God to grant Osoba good health and long life so he may be in a position to form the right opinion about Yinka.

    Given this background, I hardly had time for anything written or said by Odumakin, until the very latest assault on my home state. Not even Joseph Goebbels of the Nazi Germany was capable of the propaganda spin introduced by Odumakin in the article published recently in the papers. More worrisome is the timing of his write-up. The SDP, for all you care, is no longer in any public space in Ogun State. Even the ruling APC in the state has been quiet, concentrating on governance. It’s only the PDP that is already preparing for 2019, albeit by subterfuge. I agree with a commentator who says Isiaka has no case but only chose the tribunal option in order to court public opinion ahead of 2019.

    But at the level of political mischief, Ogun State has not been silent, as the opposition hacks outdo themselves in their mission to discredit Governor Ibikunle Amosun. And there are no blinkers in their obsession with “Pull Him Down”, hence the campaign of calumny also directed against his family. So, why did Odumakin choose this time to launch this malevolent propaganda?

    According to Yinka, “They (the Osoba camp) moved to the unknown SDP and campaigned like never before in all nooks and crannies of Ogun state. There wasn’t much electoral dividend to all the efforts given the sham nature of our electoral process…”

    Odumakin was totally wrong when he blamed the woeful performance of SDP on what he termed “the sham nature of our electoral process.” Well, he is not from Ogun State, so I assume he does not know the level of political consciousness of our people. Yes, the SDP “campaigned like never before in all nooks and crannies of Ogun state”. Yes, they spent money like water. Yet, they were overwhelmingly rejected by the electorate because the party was seen as anti-progress and anti-people. From within and without, they did everything possible to sabotage all the pro-masses policies and programmes of the Amosun government. Our people saw all the machinations and punished SDP commensurately at the polls.

    Indeed, it was sheer happenstance that made my cousin drive along Itoku market in  Abeokuta during the SDP campaign. If the party could not command a modicum of respect in what should ordinarily be the jurisdiction of its leader despite the name, money and well-oiled propaganda against Amosun, I wonder how it should have fared elsewhere. And when the votes were counted at the polling booth of Osoba, news went round that SDP recorded just thirty-six (36) votes as against APC’s one hundred and sixty-nine (169) votes; PDP got twenty-four (24) votes. It was apparent the electorate had taken side with the APC even right to the doorsteps of Chief Osoba. If the poll was rigged as Odumakin tried in vain to establish, was the election also rigged at the polling booth in front of Osoba’s house, where majority of the voters were his neighbours? Haba! Odumakin! Tell us something else!

    No one in Nigeria, except Odumakin and a few wishful-thinkers like him, gave SDP any chance. Check in-depth media reports during the election period, it was a straight fight between APC and PDP, with analysts predicting a landslide for Amosun not just because of his outstanding performance and the fanatical support he enjoyed and still enjoys from the masses, but the tug of war within the Ogun PDP and the political albatross around the neck of its candidate. Therefore “the most sophisticated rigging machine” could only have been around the home of Odumakin. And indeed, they deployed it in Ogun with the support of the then ruling PDP at the centre to deny thousands of supporters of APC their PVCs especially in some of the strongholds of the party. Otherwise the margin of APC’s victory should have been a lot wider. After all, Amosun mauled Isiaka in 2011 by polling three times his votes.

    Yinka was equally economical with the truth when he insinuated that the Amosun government owed salaries before the elections. From the facts available in the media, Amosun did not owe salaries, before, during and after the elections. The problem, according to some workers that I know personally, has to do with co-operative deductions, which was caused by the financial problem in the country. And I read in the papers recently that the deductions in question amounted to only one month salary of workers. So if Amosun owes just a month salary at a time many state governments owe up to nine or thirteen months, how does that imply the governor won elections without winning power?

    However, let me say that I have no sympathy for Amosun on this matter of wages. I remember when the Minimum Wage problem began some years ago, I was on a radio programme where I cautioned Amosun against implementing the increase across board. My argument was that somebody cannot sit in Abuja and decree what the states must pay their workers. We need money for capital projects. The cost of living in Lagos, Rivers, Abuja etc is higher than that of Ogun, yet Amosun decided to pay above the Wage, citing as excuse the need to motivate workers for productivity. He did not stop there, he implemented the percentage increment up to the highest level in the civil service which ballooned the salary bill to twice the figure he inherited from the previous government. Up till today some states have not implemented the minimum wage. Many that did so only stopped at the level of junior staff. When the going was good, we did not hear the voice of Odumakin and by the time the governor will sort out the deductions, no external voice will be needed.

    But the most tragic aspect of Odumakin’s piece was his reference to an incident that did not happen on the day Amosun was inaugurated in 2011. From the two public events that I attended and some that I viewed on television, Amosun always recognised Chief Osoba as “our leader” before recognizing ex-governor Bola Tinubu or any other leader. Interestingly, I relate with a couple of ACN chieftains on another level. They agreed that Odumakin is a good “fiction writer”. According to them, there was no single ACN chieftain that was not aware that Asiwaju Tinubu would not attend the inauguration ceremony early that day as he was billed to honour other ACN governors, with a promise to attend Amosun’s post-inauguration lunch, which he did. Therefore, the idea of tagging a seat next to Amosun for Tinubu instead of Osoba was a criminal lie, a complete fabrication and distortion of history. Where again is honour in this land, Mr Odumakin?

    As I stated earlier, based on the political trajectory of Yinka, I am not sure his publicity stunt for Osoba is with good intentions. Another aspect of his piece does a disservice to Osoba. If Osoba knew the former governor of Lagos was a “rogue” as Odumakin alleged and related with him very closely for years, having their houses beside each other, eating and drinking together, wearing the same clothes to private and public functions,  logic teaches that it is either the two of them are “rogues” or the former Lagos governor is not a “rogue”. I know the two former governors are men of honour, who served their states meritoriously.

    The political battle between Chief Osoba and Senator Amosun remains a tragic interlude in the political evolution of Ogun in this generation. If it’s all about the electorate or public service, then the voters have spoken, and loudly too. And it is commendable that both Osoba and Amosun have since moved on with their lives.

     

     

    • Chief Adetayo writes from Ifo, Ogun State.
  • Odumakin warned over attacks on Aregbesola

    The Coalition of Odua Self-Determination Group (COSEG) has called on an activist, Mr. Yinka Odumakin, to “desist from his deliberate attempt to undermine the achievements of Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola”.

    COSEG, in a statement at the weekend by its President Mr. Dayo Ogunlana and Secretary Mr. Rasaq Oloko-Oba, called on Yoruba leaders to call Odumakin to order.

    The group noted that it was “rife to alert Yoruba people of the hatchet job and activities of the publicity secretary of the factionalised Afenifere Group”.

    “Odumakin’s action of submitting a petition against the governor to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and various media attacks have shown that he is hobnobbing with some few disgruntled elements against the Yoruba people,” the statement said.

    COSEG added that Odumakin’s “failed summit billed for Osogbo, which was later transferred to Ile-Ife, has also revealed that there is a calculated attempt by him (Odumakin) and the governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Osun, Otunba Iyiola Omisore, and a few others to sustain their attacks and through that detract the state government”.

    The group said Osun under the Aregbesola administration, remained investor-friendly and capable of attracting the best of minds for positive engagements because of its peace and tranquility.

    COSEG added: “We are opposed to his petition given the achievements of Aregbesola in Osun. We condemn his media attacks on the governor. This is a  government that has completely revolutionised education across board – both primary and secondary levels.

    “It is on record that Osun is among one of the few states in Nigeria that can be judged as peaceful and with lowest crime rate.

    “Even with the meagre finances of the state, the administration in less than five years has completed close to nine hundred kilometres of road and this has not stopped, but for the temporary challenges occasioned by finances.”