Tag: Pini Jason

  • Good Night, Pini Jason

    SIR: For certain reasons, I never knew Pini Jason had exited our terrestrial milieu until I saw “Just Before Pini Jason Goes Home” by Kanayo Esinulo in The News, May 27.

    I was jolted. Could it be the same Pini Jason? I ran through the piece and it turned out to be the same ace columnist.

    I was an addict of Pini Jason’s column in the Vanguard in those days. I recall sending him a letter in 1990 or ‘91 on his criticisms of the then military government.

    He acknowledged it was a rare occasion where he would take up a reader’s reaction in his column.

    Pini was one of the few in the media of that era that excited my friend, Biodun Sodule and I.

    There was Chris Okojie of the “Blunt But Fair” sports column in the same Vanguard – I sent write-ups to him regularly from 1989 as far as I could recall.

    Danladi Bako’s “Morning Ride” was a ‘must watch’ for us every Saturday morning on NTA Channel 5.

    I met both Chris and Danladi for the first time at the National Stadium in 1991 during a match between Nigeria and Burkina Faso. It was almost 20 years after that I met Bako at Daily Independent during one of our Editorial Board meetings. How ineffable was my joy! But Danladi had no cheery tidings for me when I asked after Chris.

    I never had any particular encounter with Pini but always admired his incisive and cerebral opinions on national issues both in the print and electronic media.

    Pini later had a stint as Media Adviser to the immediate past governor of Imo State.

    It is interesting that I later became a columnist myself and a guest analyst on stations like Channels, AIT,  TVC and Galaxy before my current post as Special Assistant on Media to the governor of Ogun State.

    I have no doubt that whatsoever is my story today, Pini Jason had had a positive part in one way or the other.

    Pini fought a good fight and ran a good race. We all can make our lives sublime…

    • Soyombo Opeyemi,

    Abeokuta.

  • Renowned columnist, Jason, buried amidst encomium

    Renowned columnist, Jason, buried amidst encomium

    It was a  harvest of tributes and accolades by  relatives, friends and associates of late renowned columnist, Pini Jason Onyegbadue, bade him final goodbye.

    The solemn ceremony which started at the St Andrew’s Anglican Church Obizi Ezinihitte, in Mbaise Council Area of Imo State, was attended by dignitaries and close friends of the late social critic, including for Governor of Imo State, Chief Ikedi Ohakim, Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives, Rt. Hon Emeka Ihedioha, one time Military Governor of old Imo State, Rear Admiral Ndubuisi Kanu, Chief Chris Asoluka among others.

    In his sermon, the officiating Priest, Ven Chris Ukabiala, described the late Jason as a man of virtue who worked for the advancement of human freedom and justice.

    He said that he lived a good life that should be emulated by his children, family and friends.

    The Priest advised the children to bear the loss of their father with fortitude and hope, urging them to sustain the ideals of freedom, hard work and knowledge, which their father treasured during his life time.

    Also speaking, Rt. Hon Emeka Ihedioha, noted that the ace columnist lived an exemplary life that will continue to be remembered with fond memories.

    He observed that the best way to remember the late frontline Journalist is to do “our best in whatever human endeavour we find ourselves”.

    Ihedioha further noted that Pini dedicated his life to service to humanity, adding that, “he was one of the few who will never see anything wrong and keep quiet. He was meticulous and we will all miss him”.

    In his speech, Ikedi Ohakim, insisted that Pini Jason was not dead but lives on in the mind of the people and will continuously be remembered by all men of good conscience.

    According to him, “Pini was fearless, he never feared Ibrahim Babangida or Mohammed Abacha, he spoke for the people at the risk of his personal safety and comfort”.

    Narrating how he met the late columnist during the early days of his administration as Imo State Governor, Ohakim, disclosed that, “when I met Pini Jason in a hotel in Abuja, I invited him to work with us, he said he will not accept the position of a Commissioner but that of Adviser with a proviso that any day I fail to heed to his advice, he will quit. But he never quit, we have been together ever since until his death”.

    Concluding on a philosophical note, Ohakim said, “Pini is not dead, people like him don’t die, he was in the same level with Aristotle, he was a great man and he lives on”.

    Ndubuisi Kanu, said that the late Pini Jason will be remembered for his contributions towards the building of a truly free Nigeria.

    He said that he spoke for the people and will continue to be a voice for the oppressed and marginalized, “he was a great Ibo son and a true Nigeria  who fought doggedly for a free Nigeria ”.

  • Adieu, Pini Jason

    Adieu, Pini Jason

    •Ace columnist and social activist passes on at 65

     

    Pini, as he was fondly called by all meant so many things to different people, but one thing all are unanimous about is that he was an exquisitely brilliant and wise fellow. Imbued with the gift of the gab, he had a strong sense of history and recollection of events and was quick to regale friends and associates with a repertoire of important happenings, not only in Nigeria but around the world. His tales are so juicy and fresh that you wonder whether they happened just yesterday. Such was the strong mental acuity of Pini that he seemed like a walking book of records.

    It may not be altogether surprising for a man of the word, a journalist and one of the longest-standing columnists in Nigeria until his death in Lagos on May 4. Pini kept a column in the national newspaper, Vanguard, since the ‘80s and, apart from his brief period of political appointment in Imo State (2007 – 2011), he kept faith with his readers with his last instalment coming on April 30, just four days before his demise.

    Pini who hailed from Aboh Mbaise local government of Imo State had a lifetime devotion to writing and journalism. He started out as a Customs officer but ironically, had to leave what is considered the most ‘lucrative’ job in Nigeria today, which many would pay a huge sum to get. By his admission in his last article for Vanguard, the lure of the word, instead of lucre, drove him to write columns under the pen name, Pini Jason for Daily Times, Nigeria’s foremost national daily at the time, even while in public service. He had earlier worked with Lagos Weekend and was an editor with the African Guardian, a weekly magazine under the stable of The Guardian Newspapers in the early ‘90s. He later founded The Examiner in the late ‘90s, which became defunct shortly after due to inadequate financial planning.

    Pini continued to keep faith not only with journalism but with his country through his weekly offerings in his column. He was one of the most read columnists in Nigeria, being very incisive, fresh and objective. Initially quite acerbic and no-holds- barred, Pini could be said to have mellowed with age, proffering deeper insights and masterly interventions in national affairs. His last piece in his column symbolises his current disposition and benign approach. Titled “A Letter to Yushua Shuaib,” he literally took Mr. Shuaib (who had drawn the ire of a serving minister with an article) aside like a great uncle and lectured him on public service rules and norms.

    Pini wrote: “this letter is not about whatever you wrote about the Honourable Minister of Finance. After reading your syndicated explanation, I asked myself whether it was an answer to a query, an apology to your establishment, NEMA, an apology to Dr. Okonjo-Iweala or just a deliberate enlistment of the community of public affairs analysts. After going through it over and over, I concluded you were simply a victim of a society that has lost its institutional memory. This loss of institutional memory has contributed to the rot we are in today. We have forgotten the proper way of doing things. We have destroyed every known ethos. Those who are custodians of the fine ethics that served us in the past are either ignorant themselves or too preoccupied with other interests to care.” This is vintage Pini at his best, matured like fine wine – subtle, detached, yet alluring.

    Those who knew Pini attest to his rigour, his commitment to duty and his high-mindedness. In a tribute, the former governor of Imo State, Chief Ikedi Ohakim who appointed Pini a special adviser described him as his debating partner and a man who had sound opinion on nearly all issues. Indeed, if there was a man who could be described as full of wisdom, Pini Jason Onyegbadue was one.

  • Pini Jason, Aloy Aguwa: Tributes

    Although the entire nation weeps over the most unexpected death of the late Dr. Aloysious Aguwa and the late Pini Jason Onyegbadue, not many Nigerians know that the two late icons were kinsmen who hailed from the great Mbaise clan in Imo state. Not many Nigerians also know that between 2007 and 2011, the two were members of the Imo state executive council in which, by the grace of God Almighty, I was privileged to serve as governor.

    While, the death of the two gentlemen at the same time (within a space of four days) is doubtlessly devastating, I am certain that it brings fond memories of that era which every well meaning Imolite acknowledges as one in which the state saw the biggest manifestation of its potentials. Needless to say, the involvement of Aloysious Aguwa, Ph.D., an academic and environmentalist of international repute and Pini Jason Onyegbadue, ace journalist and easily one of the most brilliant newspaper columnists Nigeria has ever produced, in that administration drew the attention of many, both within and outside Nigeria, to Imo.

    To be sure, that administration boasted of other very brilliant men and women who had distinguished themselves in various fields of endeavour, but I can say without any fear of contradiction that I count myself particularly fortunate to have been able to bring those two fellows, not only to be part of it, but to have remained with us throughout the period.

    As a public affairs commentator, Pini Jason had established a reputation as a fearless, bold and courageous fellow who would render his views no matter whose ox is gored. To be quite candid, I initially had to contend with a few friends who expressed some anxieties over the fact that I invited such a fiery critic, indeed, a radical, to serve with me. But I had no difficulty with that because my idea of governance was, and still is, that the people being governed should be given the benefit of having inputs from their best brains and hands, irrespective of the personal idiosyncrasies of the fellow who calls the shots as chief executive.

    Given his background, the late Pini Jason came in mostly as a member of my media team but his designation was that of Special Adviser on Special Projects. To be quite candid, I merely hid under that appellation to tap from his very fecund mind, after I had discovered that Pini was very vast on several other issues outside core media related matters.

    There was no topic the late Pini Jason would not give a sound opinion on (which you may disagree with) based on a thorough analytical expose. From politics to economics, from religion to culture, from diplomacy to folklores, Pini would treat you to fine details of both historical and contemporary perspectives that, if you had the patience to listen, you would wonder why you never knew all that before.

    Perhaps his most significant input in our administration was his insistence that we must accommodate criticism while, of course, abhorring the use of thugs. Looking back, I greatly appreciate that because that singular attitude shaped the character of our administration, an aspect that is being today remembered with nostalgia by the great people of Imo state who have since seen the difference.

    While we were in Owerri, even casual observers noticed that the late Chief Pini Jason Onyegbadue was one of the closest appointees to me. It was not for nothing. He shuttled between his office and mine several times and in most cases, he would return after close of work and together we looked at issues far into the night. When we completed the new Governor’s Office Complex, Pini got an office directly opposite mine. In fact, he was the only Special Adviser who shared the third floor with me. And unknown to many, the late Chief Pini Jason Onyegbadue until his death shared the same office complex with me in Abuja.

    I was with him when the news of the death of Dr. Aguwa came. We were both very shocked but he managed the devastation that arose from losing such a young and illustrious kinsman of his; to be able to continually tell me: “Take it easy”. Pini took off to Lagos to take advantage of the May Day public holiday to be with his family. Before he left for the airport, he passed through my place to see how I was faring. I bade him farewell but little did I know that that was the last time I would see him.

    Even before he suddenly took ill in Lagos, he had called and the major discussion was on the late Aguwa. Aguwa was of late in constant touch with me. We spoke almost every day especially in connection with the new book he was about to release on the environmental protection programmes of our administration. The late Aguwa was the Commissioner for Petroleum and Environment and had come up with a very fine account of what we did to make Imo state a model as far as cleanliness is concerned. The late Aguwa it was who presided over our programme that earned Owerri the sobriquet of the cleanest state capital in Nigeria.

    Once, I was elected governor, one of the first things I did was to begin to ask for the best Imo brains on environmental issues wherever they might reside. The search took us to Michigan in the United States of America where the late Aguwa was presiding over an organization known as Altech Environmental Services Inc. U.S.A. It took weeks of persuasion from well meaning citizens of the state, especially members of the highly respected Aguwa clan, for Alloy to accept to return home to serve the country. It is unfortunate that the nation is losing him at a time his wealth of experience and expertise is mostly needed.

    But in spite of the tragedy, part of my consolation is that it pleased God to let us come close to one fellow that combined intellect with a mien that almost set him aside as an enigma. Could a fellow of such academic standing and professional exposure be as humble as the late Aguwa? That must have been the question most of his colleagues were asking.

    If Aloy Aguwa were to be alive and I lost two members of my cabinet at a go, it is to him I would have run to for comfort and wise counsel. Just as Pini Jason kept on telling me when the news of his (Aguwa’s) death reached both of us: “What can we do?” Indeed what can we do? The demise of these two great men reminds all of us of the futility of life. In fact, the late Pini Jason preached that we should do things today as if there will be no opportunity to do them tomorrow. That was why he was himself a stickler to excellence. He believed that you should leave no stone unturned today.

    Did Pini Jason have a premonition of death? I have been asking myself this question because in death, Pini achieved what he would himself: Have his wife, to whom he was very close, watch him die. And that was precisely what happened. Was it destiny that took him back to Lagos where his family resides? Pini was so proud of his family and would seize every opportunity to tell you: “God gave me a wonderful family”. Was his manner of death a wish that came true? Why did it happen that way, so fast? Why did it please God to take away these two great fellows the same time?

    Adieu great ones.

    • Ohakim is ex-governor of Imo State

  • Ohakim:  I wished I  died before  Pini Jason

    Ohakim: I wished I died before Pini Jason

    Former Imo State Governor Ikedi Ohakim was emotional yesterday as he reflected on his relationship with the late columnist and veteran journalist, Mr Pini Jason Onyegbadue.

    The Vanguard columnist, who died at the weekend, was the former governor’s aide.

    Ohakim said it would have been better if he had died before the columnist because it would be difficult for him to cope without the late journalist.

    The former governor showed the depth of his relationship with the late journalist when he visited the deceased’s family in Lagos.

    Ohakim said: “Pini was a rock. He was our Rock of Olumo. He was a master and we all learnt from him.”

    He described his State Executive Council (Exco) as the best across Africa.

    According to him, there were 16 Ph.D holders in the Exco of 18 members.

    The former governor recalled that the deceased only complained of kneel aches during their last month’s medical tour abroad.

    Ohakim said: “How I wished I even died before Pini! It would have been better for me because I cannot imagine how I will cope. Right now in his house, I have told him to tell me how I will manage, because he was my rock.

    “In the military, there is what will call S and T, which is where you get supply from at the war front. He was our S and T and was supplying us with motivation, programmes and plans. Then we continued to be in the trenches today because he was giving us lifeline.

    “Now that he is no more, I do not know whether we are to surrender? But I have assured him that surrender is out of the question. So, I have told him to tell us what to do right here in his house and he should provide the answers to our questions. I am demanding for an answer and want to get it before I leave his house. He should tell me why now?” Ohakim lamented.

    Recalling their last social outing, the former governor noted that the deceased with his wife, Obby, visited him during the Eid-el-Moulud and had barbecue.

    He said they also discussed the state of the nation for about two hours.

    Ohakim said: “I recall vividly that during the last Muslim holiday, Pini came with his wife, Obby, and the three of us with my children had barbecue. We spent almost two hours discussing the state of the nation and that very day remains one of the best moments in my life.”