Tag: Remi Oyo

  • Remi Oyo buried

    Remi Oyo buried

    It was a solemn moment on Friday at the St Dominic Basilica, Yaba Lagos, where a funeral service for the late managing director of the News agency of Nigeria, Dame Priscilla Oluremilekun Oyo, was held.

    In his sermon, the parish Priest of St’s Timothy and Titus Catholic Church ijegun, a Lagos suburb, Rev. Fr Jude Abulu, recalled his last moment with the deceased.

    “She was in tears. I thought she was crying because she knew she will die, but it was because she was happy to receive the Sacrament.”

    He preached a life of selfless giving, a feature that was synonymous with the late Oyo until her death.

    The deceased, who was ordained as a knight of the Order of St Gregory the Great in 2011 was also a former Special Assistant, Media and Publicity, to former President Olusegun Obasanjo from 2003-2007.

    Her remains were interred at the Ebony Vaults, Atan Cemetery, Yaba, Lagos.

    The funeral was attended by the Managing Director of Sun newspapers, Mr. Femi Adesina; Mr. Lanre Idowu and Mr. Frank Nweke Jnr, among others.

  • Remi Oyo’s burial rites commence October 16

    Remi Oyo’s burial rites commence October 16

    The husband of late Remi Oyo, Mr Vincent Oyo, has disclosed that the burial rites of his wife will start on Thursday, October 16, with a Christian wake and Requiem Mass in Abuja.

    He also said that other activities will include a Requiem Mass on 22nd October at Saints Joachim and Anne church, which was her home parish and then, a Christian wake on 23rd October at the NAN Media Centre, where she last served as the immediate-past Managing Director.

    Oyo noted that the final memorial service will be held on Friday, October 24, with a funeral Mass at the Saint Dominic Catholic Church, Yaba, Lagos, after which the interment will follow at Atan Cementry, Yaba, Lagos.

    He said that by the seventh day of her departure, over 250 sympathisers have signed the condolence register in her London residence. He also said that due to the friendly nature of his late wife, guests and sympathisers have ceaselessly thronged their Ijegun home.

    On the late Remi Oyo, who passed away on Wednesday, October 1st, Nigeria’s 54th Independence Day, due to cancer-related illness in a London hospital, the Director General,  Nigerian Television Authority (NTA), Mr Sola Omole, on his visit to the Ijegun home, urged upcoming journalists to emulate the excellence in the profession, as was demonstrated by late Remi Oyo.

    Omole, while condoling the husband, affirmed that the late icon never compromised her profession.

    He said, “She has accomplished the dignity of the profession. She should be celebrated for her exclusive excellence. She was a woman that never compromised her grounds on policies.

    “Remi demonstrated superb expertise in journalism. She was an exceptional bright woman, which elevated her to becoming the first female journalist to be a spokesman at the presidency and first female to be the Managing Director  at NAN.”

  • Remi Oyo was a role model, says Aliyu

    Remi Oyo was a role model, says Aliyu

    Niger State Governor Babangida Aliyu has described the late Mrs. Oluremi Oyo as a role model for women in the media.

    In a statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Israel Ebije, Aliyu said the former Managing Director of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) would be remembered for her role in repositioning media practice in Nigeria.

    He urged women journalists to emulate her hard work, discipline and determination, adding that her attitude to work earned her great heights.

    The governor said: “Mrs. Oyo competed favourably with her male counterparts and attained enviable heights within and outside the newsroom. She was a thoroughbred media icon, who raised the bar of professionalism to enviable heights. She was indeed an accomplished professional.

    “Her death is a great loss. It is sad that her demise came a few weeks after another talented media manager and journalists, Dimgba Igwe, was knocked down by a yet-to-be-identified hit-and-run driver in Lagos. Her death is a huge loss to the media.”

    Aliyu said the late Mrs Oyo belonged to the class of patriotic journalists, who placed national interest above personal interests.

  • My last moment with Remi  Oyo in UK hospital  – Nephew

    My last moment with Remi Oyo in UK hospital – Nephew

    The late former Managing Director of News Agency of Nigeria, Oluremi Oyo, had looked forward to returning to the country before the cold hands of death snatched her away, The Nation has learnt.

    She was said to have planned to take a date for her return before she died in a London hospital on Wednesday.

    Femi Oke, a nephew to the deceased, who visited her in a United Kingdom hospital shortly before her death, made this known when The Nation visited the deceased’s residence on Friday. He said  she was full of life when he visited and was already planning to take a date for her return to the country.

    He said: “When I visited her in August, she was expressing hope of returning to the country. In fact, she was planning to take a date for her return but we the family members prevailed on her to relax until the doctors certified her okay.

    “We took the decision because if she had returned and there was an emergency, it might be difficult to handle the situation.  We felt it was better for her to be where she could have easy access to medical attention.“

    He said he was in great shock when he heard the news of her death because he had looked forward to her safe return to the country, adding, “We will miss her. We will really miss her because she was a very caring and generous person. Everybody was a family member to her and she personally taught me that family comes first.  She would bend back to help even people that she didn’t know even when people did not appreciate or recognise her efforts.”

    The deceased’s brother-in-law, Joseph Oyo, also described her death as a great shock to the family.

    “The news of her death is shocking and very difficult to express. She was a God fearing woman. She was loving, caring and philanthropic all her life. She touched many lives. The family would take over from where she stopped,” he said, adding, “She was in high spirits before she died. She had a fighting spirit and was full of all that until she died. She was a workaholic as well.

    “We were expecting her back in the country before the news of her death came. As Christians, we leave it to God because He knows everything.

    One of the relations who gave her name as Mrs Agunsoye Lara also bemoaned her exit. She spoke glowingly of her generousity and humility.

    She recalled: “When I was working in a Lagos State hospital in Isolo, she asked me what she could give to the hospital. She provided over 100 bed sheets for the hospital. That was how she had always extended her support to organisations and every individual that came her way.  We will miss her a great deal.”

  • Ex- presidential aide Remi Oyo dies at 61

    Ex- presidential aide Remi Oyo dies at 61

    Journalism has lost one of its jewels, with the death in Britain of  former presidential aide Mrs Oluremi Oyo. She was 61.

    The immediate past Managing Director of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) passed on Wednesday while receiving treatment for cancer-related ailment.

    Oyo was the media adviser to former President Olusegun Obasanjo between 2003 and 2007.

    Her death was announced in a statement by her husband, Mr. Vincent Oyo yesterday.

    It reads: “With gratitude to God for a life well spent, I regret to announce the death of my dear wife, Dame Felicia Oluwaremilekun Oyo. She died peacefully on Wednesday (October 1, 2014) in the United Kingdom where she was receiving treatment for a cancer-related ailment.

    “Dame Oyo was a seasoned journalist who began her journalism career in 1973 in the Nigerian Broadcasting Corporation now known as the Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria (FRCN).

    “She joined the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) as a Desk Editor in 1981, and left in 1985 as Editor, the first woman to attain such a high position in the Agency.

    “After leaving NAN, she joined the Inter Press Service News Agency (IPS) as the Nigerian Bureau Chief. She later became the international news agency’s West African Bureau Chief.

    “Having first served as Secretary of the Nigerian Guild of Editors, Dame Oyo was elected President of the Guild for two consecutive tenures from 1999 to 2003. She was the first woman to be so honoured.

    “As President of the Guild, she set up a functional secretariat which still exists today at the NAN complex in Iganmu, Lagos. She also ensured capacity building for Editors through regular training which she pioneered for the Guild.

    “She was appointed Senior Special Assistant (Media and Publicity) to former President Olusegun Obasanjo in 2003 and served in that capacity until the end of the President’s tenure in May 2007.

    “This appointment was also a first as she was the first woman to hold that position in the history of the country. Dame Oyo was thereafter appointed the Managing Director of the News Agency of Nigeria in July 2007. During her tenure, she improved the fortunes of the Agency and increased its clientele.

     ”A committed and patriotic Nigerian, whose friends cut across the length and breadth of the country, Mrs. Oyo put Nigeria first in her private and official activities.

    “Born into a Catholic family, Dame Oyo had her primary education at the St. James’ Catholic Primary School in Ilorin, where she grew up. She attended the prestigious St. Louis Girls Secondary School, Bompai, Kano and had her higher education in Lagos and Britain.

    “A devout Catholic, Dame Oyo was a former Vice Chairperson of the Parish Pastoral Council of SS Joachim and Anne of the Catholic Church, Ijegun, Lagos.

    “Dame Oyo, who had a Master’s Degree in International Relations from the University of Canterbury at Kent, also earned a post-graduate Diploma in International Relations from the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs (NIIA), Lagos.

    “In recognition of her patriotism, the former Head of State, General Abdulsalami Abubakar, appointed her as a member of the Constitution Drafting Committee to craft the constitution that ushered in the present democratic dispensation in 1999.

    “A recipient of Nigeria’s National honour, the Officer of the Order of the Niger (OON), Dame Oyo also earned many other awards among which was the National Council of Catholic Women Organisation of Nigeria merit award.

    “She was Fellow of the Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE), Nigerian Institute of Management (NIM), and the Nigerian Institute of Public Administrators.

    “On January 7, 2011, His Holiness, Pope Benedict XVI made her a Papal Dame of the Order of St. Gregory the Great. Dame Oyo and I were blessed with two children, Otome and Okiemuote who are married and have given us beautiful grandchildren.

    “She was born on October 12, 1952. Members of her family and her large circle of friends and well-wishers were looking forward to her 62nd birthday come October 12. She is survived by her husband, Vincent, her children, grand-children and siblings – Sunday Oke and Yomi Oke.”

    President Goodluck Jonathan led tributes to her. Governors, ministers and other categories of public officers and Nigerians from all walks of life joined the media in mourning Mrs Oyo

    The Newspapers Proprietors of Nigeria (NPAN) in a statement addressed to the Nigerian Guild of Editors President Femi Adesina titled Remi Oyo: we mourn, said the NPAN received the news of her death with shock.

    The NPAN described her as “a woman of many firsts.” She was the first woman to be elected President of NGE, the first woman to be appointed presidential spokesman and the firast woman to be made Managing Director of NAN.

    According to the NPAN, “she accomplished the difficult tasks therein effectively with grace and professionalism.”

    It regretted that her death came at a time the organisation was coming to terms with the death of The Sun Vice Chairman Dimgba Igwe.

    “Her death through cancer underscores how this silent killer has eaten deep into the fabric of our healthcare system.

    “It is on record that Nigerians spend aboput $200m abroad annually on medicals in their bid to fight this silent killer which four years ago overtook heart disease oa number one killer of mankind”, the statement added.

    Delta State governorship aspirant Tony Obuh, expressed shock over Mrs Oyo’s death.

    Obuh who described Oyo as one of the most eminent Nigerian journalists lamented that she died too soon, noting that she served the country selflessly.

    “Remi Oyo was a special person who would be deeply missed and be always remembered as a hardworking and dependable professional. As we all mourn her, we should also have it at the back of our minds that she lived a purposeful life in defence of the truth and public interest as well as the promotion of the highest standards in her chosen profession of journalism,” Obuh said.

    He prayed God to give her husband and her children the fortitude to bear the irreparable loss.

    “Although no words can take away the pain of the family over the loss of Remi, I want the family to know that our hearts and thoughts are with them in this moment of grief,” he said.

    Obuh also commiserated with the NGE.

  • Tinubu mourns Remi Oyo

    Tinubu mourns Remi Oyo

    The National Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, has described the death of Mrs. Oluremi Oyo as one death too many and indeed  another sad day for  journalism.

    He said: “She was an icon, a leader among women, a pacesetter and one who touched many lives. Her charismatic personality stood her out and earned her respect among all.

     “My condolences to her husband and family. Most importantly, to the media, an institution she was a part and parcel of. She was a senior member. Journalism suffers yet another blow less than a month when another veteran passed on.   “Because of Remi’s stewardship as a journalist and news manager, the media stands tall on the world stage. Her legacy endures. Though dead, the candle will still burn in her honour.

      “As we mourn her demise, we must offer supplication for many who face similar health challenges that they will receive healing. May her soul rest in peace.”

  • Remi Oyo was exemplary, inspiring trail-blazer – Jonathan

    President Goodluck Jonathan has expressed sadness at the death of one of the most eminent Nigerian female journalists and former managing director of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), Dame Felicia Oluwaremilekun Oyo.

    In a statement issued by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, President Jonathan extended condolences to her husband, Vincent, her children, Otome and Okiemuote, her surviving siblings and other relatives.

    He also commiserated with the Nigerian Guild of Editors who Dame Oyo served most admirably as a two-term president in the course of her trail-blazing journalism career, the management and staff of NAN as well as the many colleagues, friends and protégés she garnered in her very fulfilled life.

    President Jonathan also joined them in mourning Dame Oyo who having attained great success in a profession hitherto dominated by men, patriotically entered national service as Senior Special Assistant (Media & Publicity) to former President Olusegun Obasanjo in 2003 and served with great distinction as the first female Press Secretary to a Nigerian leader until 2007.

    The President believed that although she was already much honoured in life with accolades and awards including Officer of the Order of the Niger, Dame Oyo will always be remembered and continually honoured in posterity for her exemplary professional life, her inspiring leadership qualities, motherliness and generosity, her immense patriotism and her remarkable transformation of the News Agency of Nigeria during her tenure as the agency’s Managing Director.

     

  • Ex-NAN MD Remi Oyo is dead

    Ex-NAN MD Remi Oyo is dead

    The former Managing Director of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), Dame Felicia Oluwaremilekun Oyo on Wednesday died in the United Kingdom.

    Oyo, who was the Senior Special Assistant (Media and Publicity) under former President Olusegun Obasanjo, died while receiving treatment for a cancer related ailment.
    Her death was announced in a statement on behalf of the family issued by her husband, Vincent Oyo,  by the office of the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity.

    It reads: “With gratitude to God for a life well spent, I regret to announce the death of my dear wife, Dame Felicia Oluwaremilekun OYO. She died peacefully on Wednesday (October 1, 2014) in the United Kingdom where she was receiving treatment for a cancer related ailment.”

    “Dame Oyo was a seasoned journalist who began her journalism career in 1973 in the Nigerian Broadcasting Corporation now known as the Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria (FRCN).”

    “She later joined the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) as a Desk Editor in 1981, and left in 1985 as a Principal Editor, the first woman to attain such a high position in the Agency.”

    “After leaving NAN, she joined the Inter Press Service News Agency (IPS) as the Nigerian Bureau Chief. She later became the international news agency’s West African Bureau Chief.”

    “Having first served as Secretary of the Nigerian Guild of Editors, Dame Oyo was elected President of the Guild for two consecutive tenures from 1999 to 2003. She was the first woman to be so honoured.”

    The statememt added: “As President of the Guild, she set up a functional secretariat which still exists today at the NAN complex in Iganmu, Lagos. She also ensured capacity building for Editors through regular training which she pioneered for the Guild.”

    “She was appointed Senior Special Assistant (Media and Publicity) to former President Olusegun Obasanjo in 2003 and served in that capacity until the end of the President’s tenure in May 2007.”

    “This appointment was also a first as she was the first woman to hold that position in the history of the country. Dame Oyo was thereafter appointed the Managing Director of the News Agency of Nigeria in July 2007. During her tenure, she improved the fortunes of the Agency and increased its clientele.”

    “A committed and patriotic Nigerian, whose friends cut across the length and breadth of the country, Mrs. Oyo put Nigeria first in her private and official activities.”

    “Born into a Catholic family, Dame Oyo had her primary education at the St. James’ Catholic Primary School in Ilorin, where she grew up. She attended the prestigious St. Louis Girls Secondary School, Bompai, Kano and had her higher education in Lagos and Britain.”

    “A devout Catholic, Dame Oyo was a former Vice Chairperson of the Parish Pastoral Council of SS Joachim and Anne of the Catholic Church, Ijegun, Lagos.”

    “Dame Oyo, who had a Master’s Degree in International Relations from the University of Canterbury at Kent, also earned a post-graduate Diploma in International Relations from the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs (NIIA), Lagos.”

    “In recognition of her patriotism, the former Head of State, General Abdulsalami Abubakar, appointed her as a member of the Constitution Drafting Committee to craft the constitution that ushered in the present democratic dispensation in 1999.”

    “A recipient of Nigeria’s National honour, the Officer of the Order of the Niger (OON), Dame Oyo also earned many other awards among which was the National Council of Catholic Women Organisation of Nigeria merit award.”

    “She was Fellow of the Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE), Nigerian Institute of Management (NIM), and the Nigerian Institute of Public Administrators.”

    “On January 7, 2011, His Holiness, Pope Benedict XVI made her a Papal Dame of the Order of St. Gregory the Great. Dame Oyo and I were blessed with two children, Otome and Okiemuote who are married and have given us beautiful grandchildren”.

    “She was born on October 12, 1952. Members of her family and her large circle of friends and well-wishers were looking forward to her 62nd birthday come October 12. She is survived by her husband, Vincent, her children, grand-children and siblings – Sunday Oke and Yomi Oke.”

  • ACROSS THE STATES (2/1/2013)

    ACROSS THE STATES (2/1/2013)

    1 ACTING CHIEF JUDGE OF NASARAWA, JUSTICE SULIEMAN UMARU-DIKKO, TAKING HIS OATH OF OFFICE IN LAFIA.

    2. GOV. GODSWILL AKPABIO OF AKWA IBOM  PRAYING FOR PEACE IN THE STATE AT THE 2013 SOLEMN ASSEMBLY IN UYO.

    3 CLERGYMEN LED BY PRELATE EMERITUS OF METHODIST CHURCH OF NIGERIA, HIS EMINENCE SUNDAY MBANG (M), PRAYING FOR PEACE AND DEVELOPMENT IN AKWA IBOM AT THE 2013 SOLEMN ASSEMBLY IN UYO.

    4 FULL BUSINESS ACTIVITIES RESUMED AT THE ABUBAKAR GUMI CENTRAL MARKET IN KADUNA AFTER THE NEW YEAR HOLIDAY ON WEDNESDAY.

    5 PHYSICALLY CHALLENGED PERSONS AND LESS PRIVILEGED FAMILIES SELECTED UNDER THE POVERTY ALLEVIATION SCHEME COLLECTING CASH ASSISTANCE AT KANKARA, KATSINA STATE, ON WEDNESDAY. RIGHT IS CHAIRMAN OF THE COMMITTEE AND SPECIAL ADVISER TO THE STATE GOVERNOR ON POVERTY REDUCTION, ALHAJI BATURE MASARI.

    6 GOV. JONAH  JANG OF PLATEAU (L), BEING DECORATED WITH ARMED FORCES REMEMBRANCE EMBLEM BY MISS RHODA DADON DURING THE 2013 ARMED FORCES REMEMBRANCE DAY EMBLEM AND APPEAL FUND LAUNCH IN JOS.

    7 COMMISSIONER OF POLICE, PLATEAU, CHRIS OLAKPE (L), IN A HANDSHAKE WITH  GOV. JONAH  JANG  DURING THE 2013 ARMED FORCES REMEMBRANCE DAY EMBLEM AND APPEAL FUND LAUNCH IN JOS.

    8 FROM LEFT: DIVISIONAL POLICE OFFICER (DPO), IPONRI, CSP KUNLE OLUSOKAN; MANAGING DIRECTOR, NEWS AGENCY OF NIGERIA (NAN), DAME OLUREMI OYO, AND MANAGING EDITOR AND HEAD OF NAN LAGOS OFFICE, MR ISAAC IGHURE, DURING THE VISIT OF THE DPO TO NAN OFFICE IN LAGOS.

    9 NASARAWA SOLICITOR-GENERAL AND PERMANENT SECRETARY, MINISTRY OF JUSTICE, MR MOHAMMED IDRIS-APA, TAKES OATH OF OFFICE IN LAFIA .

     

     

     

    PHOTO:  NAN-PHOTO