Tag: Oluwatosin Adeola Ajayi

  • Oluwatosin Adeola Ajayi: A legacy of compassion, service

    Oluwatosin Adeola Ajayi: A legacy of compassion, service

    By Jacob Edi

    While scouring the streets of Facebook days, ago, I stumbled on a post by Hon Ifunanya Nwanegwo, who happens to be the Chairman, Mbaitoli LGA, Imo state. In the post, she was appreciating the Director General of the Department of State Services (DSS) , Mr Oluwatosin Adeola Ajayi, for empowering ten people in the LGA to help them boost their small businesses. 

    What struck me the most wasn’t the post, but the comments that ensued. It was laden with emotion-laced testimonies of how the  DSS boss has always been benevolent. Expectedly, my initial reaction was that this must have been a political move. However, it struck me that the name didn’t sound Igbo. In fact, he is Ijebu from Ogun state. And from my little knowledge of the Yoruba, I know that they are considered the most thrifty, if not the stingiest, of the Yoruba race.

    When I enquired if this gesture was because his wife is from Imo State,  I discovered that she isn’t. Therefore, I ruled out politics. This is humanity at play, combined with leadership, purpose and achievement of national security objectives. In that moment. I decided to dig a bit further to attempt the difficult task of unraveling the man, mystery and the motive.

    While researching the background of Mr. Ajayi from colleagues, superiors and subordinates at the DSS, it dawned on me that the man has what I would describe as a ‘special place in his heart’ for the less privileged in the society. For instance, I got to learn that as far back as in 1994, when he was still a budding officer, Ajayi’s hobby was providing financial assistance to orphanages and leper homes in Akure, Ondo State. As he rose in rank and got transferred to other states, he improved on the scope of the support. Now, as the DG of the DSS, I heard, he carries out outreaches at orphanage homes across all states at different times of the year.

    Friends and former colleagues describe Mr. Ajayi as an uncommon humanitarian. “He is led by principles of humanity, not of politics, nor religion nor tribe or any sentiment whatsoever, ” said one of his university classmates. While serving in Bauchi state, offered a now retired deputy director of the Service, Ajayi renovated a mosque at Tafewa-Balewa. He rebuilt the Church of Christ in Nations (COCIN) which was in near ruins, even as he reportedly renovated the Evangelical Church of West Africa (ECWA) church there. 

    He didn’t stop at providing assistance to churches and mosques. The DSS boss, I learnt, made it a point of duty to host Christian and Muslim leaders yearly as a means of fostering unity while also extending humanitarian assistance to them. He would feed those fasting during Lent and Ramadan, and provide assistance to any who met him for pressing issues.

    As I dug deeper, I was struck by awe as to how a security chief could be so moved by passion for humanity to do all he did and is still doing. 

    In my home state, Kogi, where I served as Special Adviser on Media and Strategy to former Governor Idris Wada,  I couldn’t but notice the impact Mr. Ajayi made in my state when he served as the State Director of Security.  Even though his deployment came after that administration, while other neighbouring states struggled with insecurity, Ajayi, I learnt, largely succeeded in keeping Kogi safe, apparently using his unique style of engaging aristocrats and plebeians alike. 

    Aside occasionally empowering people, the DSS boss, I further learnt, had the habit of visiting hospitals and offsetting bills of indigent patients. He would support widows with empowerment programmes and offer scholarships to their children. From what I gathered, when selecting beneficiaries, Ajayi does not discriminate on the basis of tongue or creed. 

    From Bauchi to Bayelsa, and from Plateau to Rivers, and from Ondo to Kaduna States, I learnt, Ajayi’s benevolent fingerprints in orphanages and several humanitarian gestures are as clear as the day. In a clime where it is not uncommon for public officers, especially security chiefs, to seek to make the best of their postings, Ajayi chose to be different. He always gave back, in very special ways, to the indigents in the states he served. 

    In the course of my investigating this  interesting man, I learnt that security may not just be about brandishing arms and ammunition. I got to learn that the DSS boss believes that humanitarian acts have proven to be a very efficient non-conventional method of maintaining peace and security. One of the driving forces of the DSS boss, noted a retired director of the Service, is in his belief that any intelligence service without human asset will be struggling as, according to the spy chief, human intelligence aka HUMINT is more effective. He reportedly believes that the collection of information from human sources through interpersonal contact is very effective. 

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    I guess he believes that when an idle mind is meaningfully engaged, chances of indulging in criminality become slimmer. In the states he served across all the geo-political zones, Ajayi was able to use this unconventional approach to record successes. It, therefore, came as a little surprise that President Tinubu appointed him to head the DSS, and realize the National Strategic Security Plan.

    Apparently, due to the classified nature of DSS activities, I, understandably, couldn’t lay hands on some information I desired. Thankfully, by virtue of his becoming Director General, some of his activities have become public information which makes it easy to better understand his true nature. I remember that months ago, friends of the DSS boss donated an Islamic school to a community in Kaduna state. He had served in the state and, in 2009, directed the successful rescue of a Canadian lady and official of Rotary International. 

    We cannot overemphasize the importance of security to our daily lives. The earlier we begin to realize that all aspects of the society needs to be fully secured for us to make progress, the better we start appreciating people like Mr Ajayi who leaves no stone unturned in the quest to make Nigeria safer. 

    It goes without saying that a man’s true nature is exposed through his actions. The kind nature of the DSS boss perhaps is the reason he finds it easy to compensate individuals who were wrongly arrested by the Service. Apparently, only a kind, just and true man who expresses empathy towards the plight of others will go through the inconvenience of apologising and compensating suspects arrested or detained in error. 

    At this point some might be wondering, if with the DSS boss, charity is indeed beginning at home? In other words, if DSS personnel are also beneficiaries of Ajayi’s kindness. I cannot claim to have all the details. However, most serving and retired personnel of the DSS I interacted with say they’ve never had it so good. I hear they are better enumerated, personnel issues are prioritized, families of personnel lost in the line of duty are adequately compensated, wives and relatives of inactive personnel are empowered and most importantly, personnel of the agency are hopeful for a better future in the Service.

    The humanitarian deeds of the DSS boss are too numerous to mention in a single piece as this. I’m happy to have come to realize that Ajayi is not just the Director General, DSS. He is a man who sees the hollowness in the hearts of the needy and goes overboard to support them and give them hope. 

    It is my sincere prayer that, some day, other leaders across the country will emulate this Good Samaritan who continues to build on a worthy legacy of kindness and service for humanity.

    Edi, Special Adviser to Governor Usman Ododo on Information and Communications,, and former chairman, NUJ (FCT chapter), wrote from Abuja

  • Izala leader hails DGSS role In Kano peace

    Izala leader hails DGSS role In Kano peace

    The national leader of the Izala (Ahlus-Sunnah) movement, Sheik Bala Lau, has praised the Director-General of the State Services, Mr. Oluwatosin Adeola Ajayi, for helping to ease tensions in Kano State.

    Speaking during a preaching session in Ibadan, Sheik Lau said the intervention of the DGSS was key in “taming the brewing crises” over the case involving Mallam Abubakar Lawal, also known as “Triump.”

    He noted that what was initially expected to end in a court charge was redirected after the DGSS ordered the Kano State Command to mediate between Islamic denominations in the state.

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    The move, he stressed, helped both sides to explore amicable resolutions.

    The cleric urged the Kano State Shura Council, which was set up to investigate the matter, to ensure fairness and justice in its probe.

    He explained that only a just outcome would guarantee peace in the state and the country at large.

    Sheik Lau also thanked residents of Ibadan and members of the Ahlus-Sunnah movement for standing as ambassadors of Islam.

    He called for tolerance and wisdom in religious engagements, saying, “Be tolerant and always apply wisdom in your mode of preachings. May Allah continue to guide us.”

  • JNI lauds DGSS for pragmatic leadership style, sense of unity

    JNI lauds DGSS for pragmatic leadership style, sense of unity

    The Secretary General Jama’atu Nasril Islam (JNI), Prof. Khalid Aliyu Abubakar, has lauded the Director General, State Services (DGSS) Oluwatosin Ajayi, for his pragmatic leadership style and sense of unity.

    He gave the commendation as the DGSS called for greater religious harmony amongst Christians and Muslims in the country.

    This was as both Muslims and Christians were hosted for the Iftar (the breaking of the Ramadan fast) at the weekend in Abuja, according to a statement by Prof. Abubakar on Tuesday in Abuja.

    While speaking, Prof. Abubakar noted that Mr. Ajayi, despite being the son of a Christian cleric, thought it significant to assemble Muslims and Christians across the Federal Capital (FCT) to the break of the Muslim fast, stressing that the DSS boss “made history.”

    He commended the DG for his pragmatic leadership style, bridge building, and the sense of unity with which he convened the event.

    Abubakar prayed for Allah’s wisdom upon the DG to help overcome the challenges of securing Nigeria.

    Ajayi described the event, which several less privileged persons and those with special needs in the city benefitted from, as a gesture of love and peace that comes with Ramadan.

    Leading hundreds of Muslim faithful and scholars at the historic breaking of fast were Secretary General Jama’atu Nasril Islam (JNI), Prof. Khalid Aliyu Abubakar, Senior Imams, National Mosque Abuja, Prof. Kabir Adam, Bar. Harun Muhammad Eze, Imam National Mosque.

    Also present were Sheikh. Dr. Tajuddeen Adigun, the Chairman, committee of FCT Imams, Imam Fuad of Al-Habibiyyah Mosque and Dr. Bashir Abdullahi Ismail – Imam FOMWAN.

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    Also speaking at the event, notable Christian leaders, including, Rev. Fathers Peter B. Audu, Michael Banjo, and Boniface Idoko of the Catholic Secretariat of Nigeria, as well as Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) officers in the FCT.

    They also lauded the DSS boss for his leadership style which they said has helped made Nigeria safer.

    Other CAN officers included Reverend Canon Smart Simon, Reverends Saboyaro Adams, Nicodemus Izuchukwu, Timothy Amazon, and Ogbonife Nnamdi, as well as Snr. Special Apostle Beneni Iyaye lauded the DSS boss for promoting religious harmony.

    Reverend Adams urged other security chiefs and heads of other national leaders to emulate Mr. Ajayi, whom he said has, by his actions in office, demonstrated true love for others as taught by Christ.

    Responding, the DG disclosed that, even though a Christian, it had become a tradition for him, to identify with Muslims during the holy month.

    He said he believes such would help deepen religious harmony and trust, even as he looks forward to the beginning of the Lenten season in a few days.