Tag: OPC

  • OPC leader urges Tinubu to work with community-based security organisations

    OPC leader urges Tinubu to work with community-based security organisations

    The national president of the Oodua People’s Congress (Reformed), Comrade  Dare Adesope, has urged President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to work closely with community-based security organisations in the fight to tackle insecurity in the country.

    Adesope made the call in his New Year’s message to members of OPC-R in Lagos.

    ”The past year came with challenges, but through unity, courage, and resilience, we stood firm. I am proud of the discipline and commitment shown by our members in promoting peace, protecting our communities, and upholding the Yoruba heritage.

    “This new year presents another opportunity for us to deepen our role in securing our land, supporting good governance, and empowering our people.”

    Read Also:OPC seeks empowerment of local security outfits in fight against insecurity

    Adesope tasked his members to remain security conscious, law-abiding, and ever ready to serve with honour. While urging the government to work more closely with community-based security structures like OPC(R) to tackle insecurity and promote national unity.

    ”I also want to use this medium to plead that President Tinubu should equip OPC to use them as community security support.

    ”We are ready to work with government law enforcement agents to provide adequate security for all. Judging by our background check, we work without fear and are ready to protect our communities.

  • OPC seeks empowerment of local security outfits in fight against insecurity

    OPC seeks empowerment of local security outfits in fight against insecurity

    Leader of the Oodua People’s Congress Reformed (OPC R), Chief Dare Adesope, has urged the federal and state governments to equip and actively engage local security outfits in tackling the rising wave of insecurity in communities across Nigeria.

    Adesope, who spoke during a media briefing in Lagos, stressed that the involvement of trusted local structures like community vigilantes, traditional rulers, and ethnic-based security groups could strengthen grassroots intelligence and complement formal security agencies.

    “Local security outfits understand the terrain, the language, and the people. Their involvement is not only strategic but necessary,” he said.

    Read Also: Experts demand security overhaul in Nigeria 

    He urged the government to create a legal framework that will support, monitor, and fund local security structures without politicizing their operations.

    Adesope noted that insecurity is not only affecting lives but also crippling local economies, particularly in the South West. He warned that if urgent steps are not taken, trust in national protection could further decline.

    The OPC boss condemned the recent attack by suspected bandits on a church in Eruku, Kwara State, describing the incident as a

  • OPC seeks Mr President’s support for local security outfits to combat crime

    OPC seeks Mr President’s support for local security outfits to combat crime

    The Oodua People’s Congress reformed (OPC-R) has urged President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to approve the engagement of local security outfits in combating crimes such as kidnapping, armed robbery and banditry in parts of the southwest region.

    Speaking during a press briefing held on Thursday in Lagos, President of the group, Comrade Dare Adesope, also urged Tinubu to equip local security outfits to complement the efforts of the law enforcement agencies.

    Adesope noted that like Ondo, Oyo, and Ogun have witnessed a recent surge in insecurity, especially along highways and remote villages, leaving residents in fear and economic activities disrupted.

    “The federal security agencies are overstretched. The OPC (R) has the grassroots advantage, but they lack adequate weapons, training, and logistics to operate effectively.

    ”Yoruba people in Kwara, Kogi and Ekiti  States are being oppressed on their own soil; the police force is trying its best but OPC- R members can complement  their  efforts because they are more familiar with their communities like the back of their palms and can fish criminals out from their hideout,” he said.

    Adesope further said that his members have deep-rooted connections with their people, understands their terrain,  language, and the hidden dynamics of their communities, making them valuable assets in tackling local threats such as banditry, kidnapping, and armed robbery.

    READ ALSO: FULL PROFILE: Meet new Chief of Army Staff Major-General W. Shaibu

    He argue that supporting local security outfits with proper legislation, funding, and modern equipment will complement federal efforts and enhance quick response to threats. 

    ”As a Yoruba son, President Tinubu is being urged to show leadership by ensuring that the South-West does not slide into lawlessness. Ignoring these warning signs may escalate the crisis beyond control if urgent steps are not taken. It is also important to recognize and formally include traditional rulers in the nation’s security architecture. As custodians of culture and community leadership, traditional rulers have long played a stabilizing role in local conflict resolution, intelligence gathering, and peacekeeping.

    ”I  want to advise our royal fathers to stay united in this sensitive period and team up to face this insecurity that is ravaging their territories.  We, members of OPC reformed are ready to defend our people but we shall need their support.”

  • OPC gifts N5m startup capital to members

    OPC gifts N5m startup capital to members

    No fewer than 50 members of the Odua People’s Congress Reformed (OPC-R) on Wednesday received N100, 000 each as startup capital as business empowerment.

    The empowerment was held in Lagos during which the National President, of OPC-R, Chief Dare Adesope restated his commitment to the uplift of the economic status of members of group.

    ”I am not just a security advocate, but a man deeply committed to uplifting lives and creating real change where it matters most. Over the years, I have witnessed the struggles of our people — mothers who work hard but earn too little, youths with dreams but no tools, and families burdened by economic hardship. This is why I have made it my life’s mission to empower our members, not just with words, but with real support — in skills, resources, and opportunity.

    Read Also: OPC hails Tinubu for honouring Fasehun

     ”Today, we reaffirm that commitment. Through our initiatives, this is the 3rd episode of the empowerment as we started it in Lagos. We aim to equip more individuals with vocational training, startup support, health access, and community-building projects — to ease their burdens and restore hope.”

     He added: ”However, true progress can not be achieved alone. I therefore use this moment to call on the government, private sector leaders, and all stakeholders to partner with us. Together, we can amplify impact. We can reach more people. We can move from survival to sustainability. Let us stop waiting for change. Let us be the change — together.”

  • OPC warns Southwest governors over influx of insurgents

    OPC warns Southwest governors over influx of insurgents

    The Oodua People’s Congress (OPC) has urged all six governors of the Southwest to treat the influx of insurgents and terrorists, fleeing military bombardment in the North into forests in the region with the urgency it deserves. 

     In a statement, its President, Otunba Wasiu Afolabi, has offered the assistance of the OPC in tackling the menace. Afolabi said: “These foreign Fulani terrorists have always said that after conquering the North, the South will be next. Now it is happening. But the OPC is ready to let these evil dreamers know that Yorubaland can never be conquered or occupied by foreign invaders. Let the six governors of Lagos, Ogun, Osun, Oyo, Ondo and Ekiti states invite us to deal with this menace today before it is too late.

    “We have the men and capacity to confront these foreign invaders physically, militantly, technologically and spiritually. All we are demanding from South-West governors is the necessary invitation, equipment and support to do what needs to be done to wipe out this menace of foreign criminals.”

    Afolabi’s statement was in reaction to the alarm recently raised by Oyo State’s Governor Seyi Makinde that bandits and terrorists escaping from military bombardment in the North were finding their way to the Southwest and were building camps in the forests there.

    The Yoruba socio-cultural group also called on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to collaborate with the governors of Lagos, Ogun, Osun, Oyo, Ondo and Ekiti states to ensure that the threat of Boko Haram and other similar insurgents was quickly neutralised in the Southwest before it became too late.

    Afolabi advised Southwest governors to urgently invite all capable organisations, individuals and security veterans, mobilise all resources, and task them with the responsibility of collaborating with security forces to stamp out the menace posed by the non-state actors that had made life a hell for Northerners and were now importing greater insecurity into the South.

    The statement reads: “Enough is enough of paying lip service to the issue of tackling insecurity. Peace is the most important thing in any society. Without security and peace, no society can make progress. With the alarm sounded by Governor Seyi Makinde, all hands must be on deck to wipe out this existential threat to our collective welfare and send these evil people to hell or wherever they came from.

    Read Also: Leave Faleke out of divisive politics in Yagba, Abejide tells supporters

    “The Federal Government led by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu must not play politics with this matter. Tinubu must lead from the front and mobilise the armed forces to align with Amotekun, OPC, vigilantes, hunters, Agbekoya and Sunday Igboho’s team to face this dangerous threat to our collective peace and existence.

    “Tinubu must realise that destiny has placed him in this position to correct the great disservice done to this nation by President Muhammadu Buhari, who opened our borders to foreign Fulani militants and herdsmen because they are his kinsmen.

    “Let it be clear that although Yoruba people have nothing against the Nigerian Fulani, with whom we have enjoyed centuries of a cordial relationship, we will not concede an inch of our land to foreign elements masquerading as herdsmen whose pastime is to kidnap, rape, plunder and kill our people. OPC and the Yoruba race will never allow such a wicked agenda.

    “For starters, the governors must insist that all herdsmen and foreigners move out of the forests, games reserves, forest reserves and farm settlements in line with the 2021 order issued by the Late Governor of Ondo State, Rotimi Akeredolu SAN. After that directive has been reissued, any group found camping in the forests will be regarded as terrorists and summarily dealt with accordingly. A word is enough for the wise.

    “Right now, these invaders have constituted themselves into a danger to everyone, including their Nigerian Fulani kinsmen, whom they have been kidnapping, raping and killing. Nigerian Fulani too have been losing cattle and other livestock to these foreign rustlers and terrorists. So everyone has become a victim.”

  • Many injured as Okada riders, OPC clash in Ekiti

    Many injured as Okada riders, OPC clash in Ekiti

    There was tension in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital on Thursday when the men of Oodua People Congress (OPC) and the motorcycle riders engaged in a violent clash over the death of a motorcycle ticketing officer.

    Members of the OPC and the motorcycle riders used dangerous weapons such as cutlasses and knives, leaving many injured during the clash.

    An eyewitness, who preferred anonymity, explained that trouble started when the motorcycle riders accused the member of the OPC of being responsible for the death of a motorcyclist ticketing officer stationed near Atikankan area of Ado Ekiti.

    Read Also: 2025 Budget Defence: Senators quiz Ministers, heads of MDAs

    It took the swift intervention of men of the Rapid Response Squad of the Ekiti State Police Command to restore sanity to the area.

    Speaking of the development, Ekiti police spokesperson, CSP Abutu Sunday, said the command has arrested six suspects in connection with the violent clash.

    He said: “Today being 09/01/2025 at about 11:20hrs, the Command received a distress call that some hoodlums were attacking and robbing innocent people in Atikankan Area of Ado-Ekiti.

    “The operatives of the RRS were deployed to the axis where six of the suspects were arrested.

    “They are currently undergoing investigation. Effort is underway to arrest other fleeing members of the gang.”

  • OPC boss commends President on his stand on agriculture

    OPC boss commends President on his stand on agriculture

    Leader of the Oodua People’s Congress reformed(OPC-R), Chief Oludare Adesope has commended President Tinubu on his policy on agriculture.

    President Bola Tinubu recently declared that the vision of his administration was to position Nigeria as a leading agricultural export nation by the year 2025.

    According to Adesope, this move by the president would create a food security initiative capable of transforming subsistence farming into robust, export-driven economic opportunities, thereby revolutionising the country’s agricultural landscape and ensuring National Food Security.

    Read Also: Tinubu deserves support to consolidate – APC

    ”Though I support mechanized farming, Mr President(Tinubu) should look inward and invest in our local farmers.

    ”I welcome everyone to a new year of restoration and I pray that God will use President Bola Tinubu to restore Nigeria’s lost glory. I also believe that he has good plans for the country because he is a go-getter, but he should consider the poor masses.

    The OPC boss noted that ”it is a registered fact that inflation is everywhere, but advise the federal government to open the window for relief.”

    He commended security improvement under Tinubu’s administration, noting that long-distance travel, which used to be impossible in previous times due to insecurity, has become possible.

  • Wale Adebanwi: why my book on Gani Adams, OPC took 20 years

    Wale Adebanwi: why my book on Gani Adams, OPC took 20 years

    Wale Adebanwi, Presidential Penn Compact Professor of Africana Studies at the University of Pennsylvania’s Department of Africana Studies, is also  the Director of the university’s Center for Africana Studies. In this interview with OLUKOREDE YISHAU, Adebanwi gives details about his new book on Aare Ona Kakanfo Gani Adams’s rise in the the Oodua Progressive Congress (OPC) and related matters. Excerpts:

    Why did you decide to carry out a study on Gani Adams?

     I was tangentially interested in the Oodua Progressive Congress (OPC) as a Yoruba nationalist group when it started because I was, at that time, interested in a long-term study of the Yoruba political elite, primarily the Chief Obafemi Awolowo political movement. However, when the spate of violent clashes within the group—which led to a split—and the clashes between the group and members of other ethnic groups in Lagos started, I began to pay a new kind of attention to the group. This was around 1999. As you know, the group was initially led by Dr. Frederick Fasehun. When the split happened with the then 29-year-old Gani Adams emerging as the leader of his own faction, I became interested in a new way. Perhaps the dominant perspective, particularly in the media, was that the Adams group was dominated by young people who were revolting against “elders,” as represented by Fasehun.

    Though this was not completely true, the perspective of youth-versus-elders in the context of the group and the larger social context struck me as a potential theoretically-rich way to approach a study of the group. I was then interested in youth studies. When the youth-versus-elders factor was related to the question of violence, it became even more interesting for me. Therefore, I devoted myself to a more serious study of the group starting with both factions in 1999, to understand the role of social maturation, that is, youth, in relation to violence, and in the context of democratic rule. Remember that Nigeria had just transited to democratic rule in 1999 when this became a major challenge, such that, at a point, President Olusegun Obasanjo issued a shoot-on-sight order to the police regarding members of the OPC. So, I wanted to study the connections among youth, socio-economic crisis, perceived political marginalization, ethno-regional relations, and the democratic struggle. This was the context in which the OPC was formed.

    Therefore, I didn’t start wanting to study Gani Adams as a social actor. He was just emerging as a critical social actor at this point, though he was becoming increasingly “popular” or “notorious,” depending on where you stood. However, it was the group dynamics in relation to these other factors that first attracted me as a student of society. I was then teaching Political Science at the University of Ibadan while also working on my first doctoral research which was on the Nigerian press. The focus on the Gani Adams faction of the OPC came later, and the decision to use Gani Adams’ life history as a pathway to the analysis of subalternity, elites, ethno-regional politics, and democratic rule emerged more than one decade after I started the research. It was not until about one and half decades into the research project that it struck me that narrating this particular social life-in-transformation, this unique process of social maturation, and this compelling story of social transformation from a subaltern to an elite, and the intriguing ways in which this could help tell the story of a particular era in Nigerian political history, was too strong for me to resist.

    What did it take to finally get this book out?

    The research for the book took 21 years. I had gathered vast data, including several hours of interviews with the major actors (Fasehun, Adams, the members of the group, other members of the Yoruba elite), several years of participant-observation, a huge archive of publications, and numerous audio and video materials that I didn’t even know where to start. I also didn’t have the time work on the manuscript. Over those years, I was engaged in many other research projects, including my work on the Nigerian press, the Yoruba progressive elite, and intellectuals and the domestication of the Enlightenment in the West Coast of Africa in the late 19th and early 20th century. I also had administrative duties. In the last couple of years of the research, I was heading the African Studies Center at Oxford. Anyway, I couldn’t find the time to focus on writing the book. Meanwhile, Adams is an intriguing generator of news (and images too; the book has no less than 200 images). It was difficult to have an ending for the research. He just kept generating more and more news that could form interesting angles to the book. No surprise, therefore, that the book ended up being more than 600 pages. The publishers had to do something about the typeface and type size to reduce it to less than 600 pages.

    Anyway, to answer your question directly, the great lockdown imposed by the COVID-19 pandemic gave me the mental space and time to write the manuscript between 2020 and 2021. I doubt if I could have written the book at the point I did, but for the lockdown.

    How did you come about the title “How to Become a Big Man in Africa: Subalternity, Elites, and Ethnic Politics in Contemporary Nigeria”?

    My initial response on the trajectory of the research and its evolution explains the title. I started out studying a socio-cultural group protesting the political configuration of the country and the nature of its ethno-regional configuration, particularly against the backdrop of military autocracy and emergent democratic rule. Then that morphed into the study of the internal dynamics of the group and the struggle for supremacy which led to the split into two factions, the Fasehun and Adams factions. Many other factions have since emerged.

    And then, there was the question of violence within the groups in the contest for supremacy, the inter-ethnic violence, and the vigilante activities of the group which made the group very popular in urban areas. In the context of all these, politicians identified the salience of the group and its mass membership as potential tools for their electoral ambitions, which caused further rifts among the factions and within the factions. This also connected the group firmly to party and electoral politics, including the political ambitions of certain politicians and those who wanted to be or maintain their positions as state governors or even presidents. For instance, I deal with the latter in chapter 5 of the book entitled, “Playing (with) Big Men: Elites, Ethno-Regional Competition and Electoral Politics” – in terms of Adams’ relationships with Presidents Olusegun Obasanjo and Goodluck Jonathan and his relationships with Governors Bola Tinubu and Gbenga Daniel.

    As I hinted earlier, in the end, in reflecting on what I had studied for almost two decades, it occurred to me at a point that the transformation of Gani Adams himself as a social actor within a particular structural framework – whether you think about the group’s (OPC’s) structure, the structure of Yoruba political organization in relation to ethno-regional politics, and the structure of Nigerian party politics – was the core path to telling this story: The story of how a “young man” who had been socially disabled by the deep political and economic crisis of the Nigerian state and its irresponsible, even criminal, national elite leverages the socio-economic and political disabilities to challenge the system.  He then uses his dissent and his resistance not merely to mobilize young people (the subaltern) to ensure socio-economic and political transformation but also as a ladder for personal social transformation. Adams’ story, for me, is one of the most compelling stories of personal social transformation in Nigerian public life in the last half a century. As a student of structure and agency, the leveraging of agency that I witnessed in this case was most fascinating.

    Read Also: Encomium as Olusunle’s books X-ray Nigeria’s political complexities

    You don’t have to endorse the tactics and strategies that led Adams to become a Big Man from a high-school dropout eking out a living in Mushin and a foot-soldier of the democratic struggle. But, as a student of society or as a social observer, you cannot but be fascinated by his story. Therefore, tracing that process was how I came about the title of the book.

    What are the challenges you encountered while following Gani Adams and other major figures in the Oodua People’s Congress (OPC) for over two decades?

    Well, the usual challenges you face as a researcher and the peculiar ones you will face in the specific circumstances. Generally, as I acknowledged in the book, in the earlier years, Dr. Fasehun and Adams were generous to me in giving me access to the meetings of the two factions, letting me observe the activities of the two factions, and granting many interviews. After a few years, I decided to concentrate on the Adams’ faction, which was called the “Militant Faction.”

    One of the challenges I faced was getting to some of the low-income areas of the Lagos where the group usually held its National Coordinating Committee (NCC) meetings. I grew up in my early teens in Lagos. So, I knew of some of these areas, and in my adult life, particularly after I left journalism, I wasn’t eager to visit many of these areas. But I had to be there and stay around for endless hours to interact with the regular members of the group. The other challenge was how to get to know some of the most intimate secrets of the group. This is where my training as a reporter (in journalism) and as a researcher (in academia) became crucial. I stayed the course for many years while gathering the materials I could gather. I went about accessing some of the most intimate secrets of the groups in two ways. One was to find a few people I knew or had developed a relationship with who could reveal these to me. They helped in giving me a round picture of the man beyond the headlines or beyond what a scholar would call the “public transcripts.” The other was to wait for the opportune time. This came when both factions also fractured. Two or three factions emerged from the Adams’ faction, while at least one other faction emerged from the Fasehun faction. With these, the new factions members told me things they couldn’t tell me before the disagreements.

    Of course, as a researcher, you recognize that some of the things you are being told were a function of the anger and frustrations of the group members. Therefore, it was essential to check the pieces of information and to present them either as manifestations of the grievances that emerge from the division within the group and/or as factual expressions of what went on behind the curtains that could be illuminating in terms of the public actions and activities of the group as well of as the leader of the group, that is, Adams. There are plenty of examples of these in the book.

    The third challenge was the tension that the transformation of Adams to a Big Man caused in our relationship over time, notably after he received his ultimate acclaim as the Aare Ona Kakanfo of Yorubaland. And this for me, as a researcher, was also fascinating. He was now less available than he was in the early years. And he was a big chief now, and even before becoming the Kakanfo, the transformation presented a different set of research challenges. But what I did was focus on the new forms of data generated by his new status that was useful for my study. For instance, though I am not on social media, I had research assistants and colleagues who fed me constantly with Adams’ activities on social media and the Internet, in general.

    However, I must say that he granted me a lot on access over the years, apart from the fact that he also operated and still operates among the highest level of the elite that I also relate to since I study them. So, there were points of social convergence for us in some ways – as any readers of the book would find. This is why I had the unique insight demonstrated in the book as an ethnographer and social analyst. But I suspect these would also have their drawbacks.

    Based on your findings, will you classify Gani Adams a hero or a bloody opportunist who knows the meaning of being in the right place at the right time?

    That would be a rather simplistic conclusion. I was not looking to study “a hero” or “a bloody opportunist.” I was seeking social analysis based on observed social reality from the vantage point of an ethnographer and a student of society who happens to come from the same culture as Adams. What he represents as a social actor within a particular socio-cultural, economic, and political field is what I tried, both theoretically and empirically, to capture in the book. I leave the conclusions of who he is to the readers.

     Aside Gani Adams are they other African figures who have been able to challenge existing models of political ascendancy?

    Absolutely. There are countless others. In a comparative sense, within Nigeria, you could think of the ex-militants in the Niger Delta, particularly the leading ones, as young people who also went through similar forms of personal transformation and are now Big Men. Some of them are multi-millionaires, if not billionaires, now, including being traditional rulers or owners of universities. The question is, how can we account for their agencies within a particular structural context?  That is what interests me. Beyond Nigeria, another comparative example is Julius Malema of South Africa, the Commander-in-Chief of a political party, Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) and member of the South African parliament. His story is similar in some respects to Adams. I am working on a comparative study of both men now, while another colleague is studying the ex-militants who are now the Big Men of the Niger Delta.

     From your study, do you think the self-determination talk by the likes of Gani Adams is genuine or part of the strategy for political relevance?

    Again, that was not the core focus of my research. But the book tracks the trajectory of the self-determination struggle in which Adams was a prominent figure. Readers will reach their own conclusions. But let me say that, in the early years of his engagement with the public process, Adams was one of the critical foot soldiers of the pro-democracy movement. There is no doubt that he made critical contributions at the time to the struggle to free Nigeria from the military’s stranglehold.

    Have you seen the semblance of the sort of model that saw Gani Adams transforming from ‘area boy’ to ‘big man’ anywhere outside of Africa?

    Technically, Adams was never an “area boy.” Although so many of his detractors described him as such when he emerged in the social scene. So, apart from young people who are actually proud of being “area boys,” “area boy” is also a term used in Nigeria for young people who are poor and unemployed. Dr. Fasehun, in his books, called Adams many names, including describing him and other members of the OPC as “an embodiment of poverty,” and Adams as an “illiterate” who earned a “meagre income” from being an “okada rider,” and so on.

    Anyway, there are other examples outside of the continent, particularly in Central and South America, of similar transformations from subalterns to big men.

    What are your expectations for this book? Do you hope to see it become one of the most cited political biographies in African Studies?

    I only hope that people will read it in Nigeria, in Africa, in particular, and elsewhere worldwide. If I find a willing publisher, I hope to publish a Nigerian edition. There is no greater compliment for an author than for the work to be read. What happens beyond that is out of the author’s hands.

    Let’s talk briefly about your current position, which saw you relocating to the U.S. after years in the UK. What does it entail?

    I have been fortunate to have had opportunities in Nigeria, the UK, and the United States. But I am sad that members of my generation were driven out of Nigeria. We had a better hope for Nigeria. My generation was also the foot soldiers for the pro-democracy movement. While the likes of Gani Adams were protesting on the streets, some of us were working in the newspaper press, the student unions, and the civil rights movements. A significant part of that generation is now abroad. We sacrificed the best part of our youth to build a good country where we could grow up and nurture the next generation.

    So, while as individuals, we might be doing well in our current vocations, in a sense, we feel a sense of failure about our collective sacrifices to build a better country. Though we thought we defeated the military in 1999, and we did in a sense. But the military and their allies appear to have had the last laugh. They remain directly or indirectly in charge of the country. And you can see the evidence of that all around us. It’s tragic.

  • Fasehun’s role hailed as OPC marks 30th anniversary

    Fasehun’s role hailed as OPC marks 30th anniversary

    The Chairman of the Board of Trustees (BoT) of the Oodua People’s Congress (OPC), Olawale Oshun; its President, Otunba Wasiu Afolabi, and other stakeholders on Thursday recalled the pioneering role of the late Dr. Fredrick Fasheun and others like the late human rights activist, Dr Beko Ransome-Kuti played in the establishment of the pan-Yoruba group, following the annulment of the June 12, 1993 presidential election won by the late Chief Moshood Abiola.

    Read Also: Edun commends military’s role in economic recovery

    Speaking at a ceremony in Ejigbo, Lagos to mark the 30th anniversary of the OPC, Oshun and Afolabi paid glowing tributes to the departed gentlemen, particularly Fasheun “Who took the bull by the horn and founded the OPC,  when the Abacha-led military junta was terrorizing many Yoruba sons and daughters.”

    The BoT chairman said: “I am happy that you deemed it fit to mark the 30th anniversary of the foundation of OPC by a revered gentleman, Dr. Fredrick Fasheun. I am so glad because Dr. Fasheun established this organization with some of his colleagues. Whilst we are remembering the role Dr. Fasheun played in founding OPC, I also want to recall the invaluable contribution of Dr. Beko Ransome-Kuti.

  • OPC kicks against protest

    OPC kicks against protest

    Leader of the Oodua People’s Congress Reformed(OPC-R), Chief  Oludare Adesope has urged the people of Southwest to distance themselves from the planned August 1st nationwide protest against the Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration.

    Speaking with reporters on Friday at the OPC headquarters in Lagos, he urged Yoruba people not to allow themselves to be used as tools by “unpatriotic” persons to destabilise the country in the name of national protests or strikes because the protests will be hijacked and that there will be loss of lives.

    Read Also: Planned August 1 protest may truncate democracy, Onitiri warns

    ”We just got to know through our intelligence that lives and property would be destroyed or vandalised. By this, I am appealing to all the youths within Yoruba territory to shun the protest. Should we give a helping hand to people who are not happy about the development in the Southwest to destroy our heritage?” he asked.

    ”However, anyone who wants to protest should go to their various states to do so because the outcome of ‘Endsars protests can’t be forgotten easily or reversed, rather, the government is using money needed for new infrastructures to fix the damage. Therefore, I am imploring every Yoruba youth to learn how to save their heritage, do not help to destroy it. We, members of OPC(R) are ready to assist the police to maintain peace at this period so that the hoodlums will not hijack the protest.