Tag: Senator Babafemi Ojudu

  • Nigeria must never, ever return to PDP’s evil days

    Buhari has, in his first four years, begun the work of repositioning the country

    In 1985″, wrote Senator Babafemi Ojudu,  the Special Adviser to the President on Political Matters,     “the military and civilian arms of the Nigerian looters came together and aborted the march of Nigeria to true independence and development. At the time, the duo of Generals Muhammadu Buhari and Tunde Idiagbon held sway as Head of State and Chief of Staff, Supreme Headquarters, respectively. Prior to their assumption of office on 31 December, the prognosis for the country’s state of health was very bad. The country was clearly in need of resuscitation in the intensive care unit where it lay helpless. The two were , therefore, determined to give it a new lease of life but those who Ojudu calls the  League of Looters, both  in uniform and agbada ( see:  Ojudu’s: Don’t Underrate The Conspiracy Of Nigerian Vultures), would hear none of that. “The wreckers of our nation, he went on,  “came together, mobilized  resources, manipulated public opinion using the media, and took out the Buhari/Idiagbon regime. Though not perfect, that government was the best in the circumstances. Thus began the roller coaster journey that would lead Nigeria into the predatory embrace of the Peoples Democratic party in 1999.

    Before then, wrote Ojudu, “these same elements, and the interests they represent, had ensured that Chief Awolowo never had the opportunity to govern Nigeria to deliver a Singapore of sub- Saharan Africa”.

    Ojudu was not done yet:

    “One evening in 1992”, he continued, “my colleagues and I had visited a very wealthy Nigerian who, after taking  us  on a tour of his expansive palace, told  us Abiola would never be President of Nigeria. That was a whole eight months before the June 12 election which he won handsomely, but was never allowed to take up the mantle of leadership of Nigeria.

    The rest, as they say, is history.

    ‘They’ are gathering again. ‘They’ stopped Chief Awolowo; ‘they ‘stopped Buhari in his first attempt to effectively sanitise Nigeria. We must stop them in their tracks. We must reject them, together with their lies and their dollars, lest they turned to items of merchandise like they recently did in Port Harcourt. Under the supercilious supervision of an old guard retired general, representing the real falconers.

    All we seek, as Nigerians, is a sincere, honest, patriotic and incorruptible Nigerian who will build a solid foundation upon which others will come and erect a magnificent edifice. That job of laying that foundation, is what Buhari, warts and all, has started, and must complete. Rebuilding Nigeria, after PDP’s 16 – year demolition job could never have been an easy job, not after they left a ferocious Boko Haram war, having completely looted the 2.1billion dollars meant for equipping the military.

    Buhari has, in his first four years, begun the work of repositioning the country. He had never said this will be an easy task. All the same, he confronted the job head-on, determined to take down the altar of corruption which the predators had erected, telling us during the 2015 campaigns that if we did not kill corruption, it will kill Nigeria.

    Therefore, working through the EFCC under the courageous Ibrahm Magu as Acting Chairman,,  President Buhari’s government secured 142 convictions within six months and has, so far,  recovered from these corporate gangsters, a total loot  running into  over N1 trillion, with N527 billion, $53 million, and £122,890 coming  through the whistle blower policy started by  his government.

    With all his imperfections, Nigerians have come to realise that President Buhari is a hundred times better, integrity-wise, and therefore, preferable, to what PDP is throwing up because with a leader of integrity, a country is guaranteed to take its place in the comity of nations.

    We must never ever go back to Egypt.

    Uncle Bola Ige talks to us from paradise -an ex-ray of Professor Ben Nwabueze, restructuring’s latest town crier and author of THE PUBLC ORDER DECREE, helplessly holding on to Atiku’s bosom in a classical display of duplicity.

    It is with exceeding pleasure, these days of restructuring , as trade, that I quote from the works of the inimitable Uncle Bola Ige, the country’s Attorney-General and Minster for Justice, killed in his bedroom in Ibadan during Olusegun Obasanjo’s administration.

    From Chief Bola Ige’s people, politics, and politicians of Nigeria

    (1940-1979) Pages 315 & 316

    “Fajuyi spoke to me of his readiness to lay down his life for the good of Nigeria when we discussed the rumor we heard that Ironsi wanted to move the Military Governors round. Little did we know that within a month he would lay his gallant life down to save his guest, Ironsi. One only wished that Ironsi deserved such greatness, such nobility of action. I wonder if Ironsi would have put his life on the way Fajuyi did, if the roles were reversed.

    The Unification Decree

    I travelled throughout the whole country during twenty or so days. I went from Ibadan to Benin, from there to Onitsha, then on to Calabar to visit Awo in prison, then to Owerri, Umuahia, Enugu and Nsukka where I stayed with Professor Sam Aluko who had found a refuge at the University of Nigeria following Akintola’s savage repression at the University of Ife; from Nsukka I went to Tarka in Gboko, then on to Makurdi, Jos and Kaduna; from Kaduna I went to Zaria and Kano, returned to Kaduna from where I found my way to Bida, Mokwa, Jebba and Ilorin;  from Ilorin, I went to Ogbomoso and returned home to Ibadan.

    My visit to various parts of the country confirmed what I had already analysed and known: that most Nigerians, except the Igbos of Eastern Nigeria, thought Ironsi’s Unification decree of 24 May, 1966 a most unreasonable and most unrealistic piece of legislation.

    Ironsi had in that unification decree “abolished the regions. Nigeria was now to be governed as a single unit; Military Governors were henceforth to take orders from Lagos; in the meantime, they were now prefects to be in charge of groups of provinces; the Civil Service was unified. A careful reading of the Decree cannot but lead the reader to appreciate the absolutely radical change that it envisaged for a country with our heterogeneity and fragility.

    When Hassan Usman Katsina arrived at Kaduna airport from the meeting in Lagos where Ironsi had brushed aside the objections of Fajuyi and himself,  and the Unification Decree promulgated, all he said was a very pregnant: “The egg has been broken”.

    During the months of June and July 1966, Ironsi did nothing tangible to arrest the drift into which he was plunging Nigeria. Many thought he would take firm but reasonable actions, not only to avert a reoccurrence of the May 29 slaughter but also to indicate measurers to assure the “trouble makers” of the North that they were not about to be annihilated. The pogrom of 29 June was sparked off by the rumor that Southern (for that euphemism read Igbo) civil servants were being brought to the North in large numbers to take jobs from Northerners. Ironsi did nothing to scorch this pernicious rumour, now that he had unified the Civil Service. Hassan Usman Katsina was himself horrified by the extent of the slaughter of 29 June that he had to order that rioters be shot at sight. But he carefully avoided to say anything concrete to contradict the rumours that were raging like wild fire and which gave ammunition to the Araba jihadists”.

    Public order decree (from 13 years of military rule by James O. Ojiako)

    By decree No. 34 signed on May 24th, 1966, the National Military Government dissolved 81 existing political parties, prohibited the formation of new ones and banned 20 Tribal Unions.

  • ‘Nobody can rig Ekiti APC primary’

    Presidential Adviser on Political Matters Senator Babafemi Ojudu has announced his governorship ambition in Ekiti State on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC). He spoke with reporters in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital, on his transformation agenda, the proposed primary and how APC can defeat the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) during the election. MUSA ODOSHIMOKHE was there.  

    Many of you are in the governorship race. How will the party mend fences after the primary?

    It would not be right for now to say we have so many of us in the race. The reason being that the party has not even called for nomination. We have not obtained forms. In about a month’s time, the party will call for nomination. Then, we will obtain forms. When you now see the number of those who obtain forms, then, you can now say whether we are many or not. Right now, I know those who are out, saying they want to become governor, but some of them actually want to become chairmen of local government councils, some want to become commissioners, senators and members, House of Assembly. People are calling attention to themselves, they want people to know them and they want to have something at hand to negotiate with. If I become governor and someone comes to me and say after all I wanted to become governor, so what do you have for me? These are some of the prevailing circumstances so far.

    How can the party prevent post primary crisis?

    In case it occurs, we have elders and leaders who will bring everybody together. But, one thing that is going to determine what happens after is the transparency, fairness and justice people are able to observe in the course of the primary. I was one of the people that conducted the primary in Anambra. Many of you must have watched it over the television. You could have seen how transparent it was, how fair and everything was in the open. It was difficult for anybody to come out and say no, I won’t accept this. See Andy Uba, who everybody thought would have won, came to embrace the man who won and they went into the election in unity.

    But, the Ondo experience is still fresh in the memory of the people…

    Someone asked in the course of an interview, if we are prepared for the Ondo formula. I said well, I don’t know of Ondo fomula. I said what is the Ondo formula about? He translated it as manipulating delegates list. I said no, that will not happen here. I have been to the party headquarters and they have assured me weeks before the primary they will give us the list of delegates which we all have to study and bring back our observations. They will now invite us to a round table, to resolve issues observed in the delegates list amicably before going to the primary. I don’t think that was done in the case of Ondo. I expect that this may be different because I am the Special Adviser to the President on Political Matters I have been a journalist, reporter, editor and media manager. I have been a Senator and it will be very difficult for anybody to come and do that in my presence. There is Segun Oni, who had been governor before, who is now Deputy National Chairman of APC South; it will be difficult to give him nonsense. Others who may also want to come have pedigree and reputation and I can assure you that I will be as vigilant as I can. I have set a team of lawyers; one of them a SAN and they will examine every process and make sure everything is just and fair.

    Why should Ekiti people prefer you to other contestants?

    Why they should vote for me is because I have been passionate about this state. I was born and raised here. I struggle for this place. I don’t think there is anybody who has been governor here from 1999 till date, that I have not been involved with. I have headed so many associations either in the Ekiti Progressives, E 11, human rights organisations, Pan Yoruba  organisations, I have done so much here. I have removed governor here, I have installed governor, so I have done quite a lot. On the social level; I belong to at the Ado Progressives Union, I belong to the parapo association of Ekiti generally. I have given scholarship; I have assisted people quite a lot even before I became a politician. I have empowered and employed Ekiti people in so many figures. I think I have done quite well for the people, I have paid my dues. That is why I told everybody who cares to listen, that this is not an ambition for me, it is a mission. It is a mission to make an example that governance should not be as difficult as some makes it to appear. That we can do it, I want to show that we can turn governance around and make it easy. We can reduce all those things that make governors swollen headed. I told people that I will live in my house when elected. I have a three bedroom bungalow, so I am living there because if I leave governance, I will go back there. So, why don’t I just live there, drive to the office every morning from there? All these methods of driving with several cars in your convoys, blaring siren and pushing people off the roads are odds.

    There are claims that the APC is planning to use federal might…

    No, we don’t do that. You all witnessed the election in Anambra, did you see federal might or federal power?  You have witnessed elections everywhere, President Buhari, the leader of our party and president of this country does not believe in federal might. He will tell you ‘go and work’. If today, I contested with his wife, Aisha, he will not raise a finger in favour of his wife. He will probably advise her on what to do, to win the hearts of the electorates.

    People say Governor Fayose is still a factor in the coming election. You seem to underrate his importance…

    He is going to be a factor, but he is going to be a factor of failure.

    There is no longer stomach infrastructure again. It is a myth.  People have not been paid in twelve months. Salaries have not been paid; civil servants and local government officials have not been paid. You are talking of stomach infrastructure, if I am a civil servant and you have not paid me in twelve months, what is the stomach infrastructure in that?  If truly, you are doing stomach infrastructure, you must regularly pay the workers, so that they can feed themselves.  This last Christmas, he didn’t even give them rice as he used to give them.  It is a government of deceit. Fayose is just deceiving the people. Go around with him now, nobody hails him anywhere again. Since we got into Ekiti, he ran away since yesterday. We told him ‘we have our billboards in town, come and remove one and let me see you’. I am his husband.  The Yoruba people have a saying that the mad man has a master. In 2006, I chased him out of this place. I took all his lawmakers who were members of PDP, I took them to Lagos for two months. I kept them there. When I was ready, I brought them back to impeach him. In 2011, he contested against me for Senate, I defeated him. I had 68,000 votes, he had 21,000 votes. So, forget about all these myths he sells to you out there. I am back again and I know I am the one who can  chase him out. If there is anybody he fears, it is me. We will take care of him on July14.

  • Mrs Buhari, Osinbajo call for women appointment

    Mrs Buhari, Osinbajo call for women appointment

    The wife of the President, Hajiya Aisha Buhari, has appealed to governments at all levels to ensure fair representation of women in appointments.

    She made the appeal on Saturday night when she hosted Nigerian women and youths to an appreciation dinner for their support toward her husband’s victory in the last general election.

    The dinner held at the old Banquet Hall of the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    Mrs Buhari expressed concern that the number of elected women in governance had reduced drastically in this new dispensation, saying that National and State Assemblies are the worst hit.

    “This is not fair; we are not asking for equal representation but fair representation in governance.

    “We must all make case for the fair representation of women and other challenges facing them especially the high rate of divorcees in the North and harmful widowhood practices in some part of the South East.

    The wife of the president expressed regret that the rate of divorce among young women is a major setback, stressing that something has to be done to check the trend.

    “Also, the issue of sexual harassment of female students in our tertiary institutions must be checked.” She called for the speedy implementation of the Violence Against Persons Prohibition (VAPP) Act.

    Mrs Buhari also dispelled the rumour that she was kept in the purdah (Islamic seculation) by her husband during the last Presidential campaigns.

    She said it was her personal decision not to come out for campaign because she needed to take care of the home front while her husband was in the field campaigning.

    “It was Asiwaju Bola Tinubu who talked me into it before I decided to join the train. I have never been in purdah since I got married to my husband.

    “My husband is a very gender sensitive man with many daughters. He even allowed me to go to school and to cut the long matter short, he is the pillar of my success.”

    Also speaking, the wife of the Vice President, Mrs Dolapo Osinbajo, thanked the women for their support and urged them to continue to promote national unity.

    “Nigerians are people with strong faith; we as women must wake up and defend its unity. It is time for us to stop fragmenting this country; Nigeria needs something new. A new Nigeria means a new You,” Mrs Osinbajo said.

    Earlier, the APC Women Leader, Hajiya Ramatu Tijjani, said that the party leadership must ensure that they deliver on the change they had promised Nigerians.

    She said the dinner was meant to appreciate those who made the change possible by touring all parts of the country to campaign for the party’s victory.

    Former Rivers state governor, Mr Rotimi Amaechi, who was also the Director-General of the Buhari/Osinbajo Presidential Campaign Organisation, was the Chairman of the occasion.

    Other dignitaries were wife of the President of the Senate, Mrs Toyin Saraki; wife of the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Mrs Gimbia Dogara.

    The rest were wife of the National Chairman of the APC, Mrs Victoria Odigie-Oyegun; wives of APC state governors and APC female deputy governors as well as wives of former governors.

    The APC national leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, was represented at the occasion by Sen. Babafemi Ojudu.

  • Jonathan scheming for two-year extension, says senator

    Jonathan scheming for two-year extension, says senator

    •APC faults polls postponement

    The March 28 and April 11 elections may not hold because President Goodluck Jonathan is planning a two-year tenure extension, Senator Babafemi Ojudu (Ekiti Central) said yesterday.

    Ojudu spoke at a social discourse organised by the Afenifere Renewal Group (ARG) at the University of Ibadan (UI).

    The programme was in honour of former Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi, who turned 50 on Monday.

    The senator said Nigeria was on her way to “a very long night.”

    “We are entering into a very long night in Nigeria. If anybody thinks there will be election on March 28 and April 11, he is deceiving himself. They are just deceiving us. The body language of some top leaders is that the Federal Government is not willing to organise any election now.

    “We are resuming next week. I will not be surprised if they bring a motion seeking postponement of the election for six months because of the Boko Haram war. Interestingly, about 80 per cent of senators are not returning. And senators are broke. All they need to get the motion adopted is a simple majority. Then, they may ask for two more years. That is what they are working towards.”

    Ojudu said All Progressives Congress (APC) members and other progressives had not been speaking against it in public because they believed it was absurd.

    When asked how APC lawmakers and others planned to tackle the challenge, the senator said they would regroup next week in preparation for resumption in the National Assembly to coordinate efforts to respond appropriately to the Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP’s) alleged hidden agenda.

    He said the Yoruba must clamour for the change that is appropriate for their aspirations and values.

    The ARG faulted postponement of the election, alleging moves to Balkanise the country.

    In his closing remark, the ARG Chairman, Hon. Olawale Oshun,  said  the position of the ARG was that the election shift was not about elections but about preparing the ground for military take-over or Balkanisation of the country. He rejected both agenda, saying the ARG and the Yoruba would not support such.

    Oshun said: “It is in this light that we in Afenifere Renewal Group, and by extension, the Yoruba, contend that this election shift is certainly not just about elections. We believe that the postponement is about something more sinister.

    “This postponement had long been foreseen by Nigerians, and we had awaited its doomed arrival in awe. The Federal Government and  its security agencies have been fighting Boko Haram in the last five years, and had not, at any time, dealt that enemy of state any sucker punch.

    “The first sinister motive we suspect is that this postponement might be the ground to prepare a soft surface for a sympathetic group within the Armed Forces to take over the reins of power, since in character and content there is little to distinguish the present rudderless government from the one that ruled us till 1983.

    “It is necessary to warn that the Yoruba would not be part of any country that is forcibly taken over by any military insurrection, no matter the direction or purpose of any such self-styled messiahs. We as a people know what we want, and this is clearly not part of it. This is definitely not the change we as a people would clamour for.

    “If for any reason, Nigeria ceases to be ruled democratically, or would be Balkanised into smaller groupings, then we Yoruba people would rather go our  way and choose to become an independent nation. This is a change we would agitate for.”

    The guest lecturer, Rotimi Akeredolu, who traced the history of the country and how it came to this condition, also called for true federalism.

    Akeredolu said: “Our people appear fully mobilised for change. It has become the theme song in the land and even the cynical are waking up to the realisation of the possibility of having a change in government soon.

    “It is not going to be sufficient to have a new government, which will be prepared to continue with the old ways of doing things. We must depart from the path of over dependence on the government for everything. Now is the time for all true Yoruba sons and daughters to insist on being different.

    “We must never compromise our firm belief that it is through true federalism that our region can rise again. Development is about the people. We must be able to set our priorities right.

    “We must no longer subscribe to inexplicable tardiness in realising our dreams for development. We must join others to discourage those who have turned politics into a full time job. Only our best should be encouraged to come forward to represent our people. Our over dependence on oil is the bane of our society.”

    At the event were Mrs. Bisi Fayemi; soccer legend Segun Odegbami; Asiwaju Bisi Adegbuyi; Prince Oye Oyewumi; Mr Ayo Afolabi; Dr Femi Orebe and the Director General, Development Agenda for Western Nigeria (DAWN) Commission, Dipo Famakinwa and the Orangun of Oke-Ila, Oba Adedokun Abolarin.

     

  • The journey of an  ‘accidental’ politician

    The journey of an ‘accidental’ politician

    “Femi, you have come again with your jokes,” she said that fateful afternoon when I invited her to become the running mate to the governorship candidate of the Action Congress in Ekiti State. “I am not a politician. When last did I visit Ekiti?”she asked.

    I persisted.

    “So you are serious about this?” she asked.

    I said, “Yes.”

    “Running mate to who?” she pursued.

    “To Dr. Kayode Fayemi, a committed young man with good education and a decent family background.”

    “Ha! If that is the case, Femi, let me think about it.”

    She promised to call back after discussing with her husband and her boss at work.

    An hour before this discussion, I was driving on Aromire Avenue in the Ikeja area of Lagos and suddenly the Land Cruiser I was in with my friend, Kayode Afolabi, had a flat tyre. For about a week prior to this time we had been searching and racking our brains on who would best pair up with Dr. Fayemi to fight for the governorship seat of Ekiti State. Our parameters were that the person must be as equally educated as Fayemi, urbane, good-looking and committed to the development of the state. We were looking for a co pilot as the Governor later stated in his tribute, and not a spare tyre . We were limited in our search because we had agreed that the deputy must be a female and must be from Ado Ekiti – where the two main parties going for the election had zoned the position of the deputy.

    While we were waiting for the tyre to be fixed, we were ruminating over this when Kayode Afolabi who had just relocated from Atlanta, US said, “Femi, what about this Ado Ekiti lady I once met in your office?”

    “Which Ado-Ekiti Lady?” I asked to be sure.

    “The banker,” he said.

    “Oh! You mean Funmi Olayinka?

    “I don’t remember her name,” he said.

    “You must be talking about Funmi,”I told him, “But Kay, Funmi is not a politician and she appears too clean and delicate to go for Ekiti politics,” I tried to dissuade him.

    He insisted that I put a call through to her and suggest the idea. “There is no harm in trying,” he said.

    Right on that roadside on Aromire, I made the fateful call to Funmi and there began Olufunmilayo Adunni Olayinka’s journey into politics and finally to Ekiti Government House.

    It was rough. It was full of thorns. Sleepless nights, frustrations, insults and abuses, an accident on Lagos – Ibadan highway that almost terminated her life, all of these characterised the quest.

    When Funmi finally got back to me about three hours after I first broached the idea to her, she said to me in a measured tone: “Femi, the ways of politicians are very strange to me. But coming from you and having also googled the governorship candidate, I can see you people mean well.”

    After pausing for a few seconds, she said, “Since it is about our people, do count me in.”

    I immediately linked her up with Dr. Fayemi who later got back to me to say she sounded very intelligent, committed and urbane.

    The following day, Funmi and I were on our way to Ado Ekiti. Our first port of call was the palace of Ewi to pay homage to the Kabiyesi and also get introduced to a couple of elders in the town that I had alerted and asked to be at the palace to meet this accomplished daughter of our town who had agreed to sacrifice her plum job in a bank and serve the town and the state.

    Apparently, the news about her coming had leaked to some party members. They organised a reception, albeit a negative one at that. The moment we stepped out of my car, the crowd of about 200, largely women, greeted us with abuses. We were both called all manner of unprintable names and almost physically attacked. Their grouse: why were we bringing a “Lagos import” when they had an idea of a local person who they wanted as deputy governor”. We ran into the palace to avoid attack.

    “Funmi”, I said, “I am sorry for this embarrassment I have caused you. Let’s get back into our car and be on our way back to Lagos. Our people do not want to be helped, to be salvaged.”

    Funmi took a long look at me and said: “Femi, listen, you and I were born and raised in this town. We should not allow ourselves to be intimidated. It is precisely because they have behaved in this manner that I am going to stay put and make this dream a reality.”

    She was not through with me. She then went on to lecture me on the need to save these ‘misguided people’ from themselves.

    “If we don’t tackle this problem now, help this people out, our children will not be able to visit this place, not to talk of live here in the future.”

    This was my first lesson from

    her. Courage was her forte.

    Her heart was full of tenacity and she radiated commitment the way she radiated beauty.

    When we were finally ushered her to where the elders were, Chief Dele Falegan, the retired Managing Director of Federal Mortgage Bank and former Director of Research, Central Bank of Nigeria, had come to the same conclusion as I did and in annoyance said: “Femi, Funmi, you people should go back to your work in Lagos. Your fathers have tried for this town. If these people don’t want you to assist their progress, leave them to continue in their suffering.”

    Funmi, as she earlier did again put her foot down.

    All this while, I was eager to get out of town and be back on my desk in The News.

    I kept reporting the situation to Dr. Fayemi and overnight he was able to calm frayed nerves. He too had met with similar antagonism when he was first introduced in the state to be the AC gubernatorial candidate. When Funmi stepped out the following morning to visit some elders of the party, it was the same women who gave us hell the previous day who were quarrelling among themselves as to who would carry her bag.

    Several meetings thereafter with party elders across the state, Funmi was announced as running mate to Dr. Fayemi and her name forwarded to INEC, the electoral body.

    She worked very hard, partnering with Bisi Fayemi, another accomplished woman who gave up her women advocacy job to join in our collective mission to rescue Ekiti. Between them, they quickly fashioned out programmes of mobilisation and empowerment for Ekiti women while also giving time to join in our endless strategy sessions either in my house in Ado or at the Isan modest bungalow of Dr. Fayemi, or in Ibadan where the couple built their first home.

    Funmi took on the financial management of the campaign. We set out to mobilise resources and left her to disburse the funds as it is done in a corporate environment. For this, she again drew the ire of traditional politicians who could not understand why they should make written requests for funds or found it insulting to be asked to retire same after spending.

    Funmi took to the podium campaigning as if she was Indira Gandhi who was born into politics. She switched easily from Queens English to Oyo Yoruba and sang fluently in Ekiti dialect. She was a delight to see as she engaged in a call and answer with fellow women, shaking her body to the rhythm of Ekiti songs, dancing and waving the broom, her party’s symbol.

    Before long she had been given the title ‘Moremi’, the Yoruba woman in mythology who sacrificed all for her community. Looking back now that was so prescient.

    Sometimes, she got irritated, but she was never deterred. She will always find a very deep local proverb to explain the situation.

    She gave her all. Journeying from Lagos to Ekiti, taking care of family responsibilities, managing the affairs of her young daughters who were all registered in US universities.

    She combined all this with the drag of unending political meetings, settling petty rancors among the locals while finding time to organiSe. It was telling for her and on her both physically and psychologically but her strenght of character kept her going.

    The schedule was very hard and tough on her. Sometimes Kayode (Afolabi) and I, would take a look at her and conclude that we had been unfair in bringing her into politics because sometimes we could see that she had lost the sheen and radiance we knew her for. There was no time for make-up anymore, no time to wear those designer dresses and jewelries anymore. It was total commitment to the objective of rescuing Ekiti. Our mantra for this purpose was COLLECTIVE RESCUE MISSION.

    The journey to Ekiti Government House, which we thought was going to last for a few months, good or bad, was going to consume another three years . From the first election to a journey through tribunal, to the Appeal Court, then a re-run and back to the tribunal, again to the Appeal Court and finally the Government House , it was a challenge that could weigh down a faint hearted but Funmi soldiered on like the amazon she has come to be known as.

    The challenges and intrica

    cies of serving a people who,

    over the years, have been deprived of purposeful leadership and life-changing service itself was daunting. Funmi remained undaunted.

    All through this period, Funmi stood resolutely by her principal, unflinching, unwavering, ever-smiling and always full of words of encouragement to our compatriots and to supporters young and old, men and women, genuine or fake.

    Funmi had poise and she was dignified in it, she had splendor and she was sartorial . She was a woman of extraordinary courage.

    On the occasion of our first judgment at the tribunal, we were gathered in my house to know the outcome. The moment we heard the verdict, people around us burst into crying. Funmi was the Consoler-in-Chief, assuring everyone that we were just starting and that the destination was sure.

    Very early the following morning – I think about 5.00am (and that is the time we used to talk to each other all through our campaign, victory and governance) – I put a call through to Funmi and apologised for the trouble I had put her through by bringing her over: I was overwhelmed by emotions and started crying. She put down the phone and emerged at my house 30 minutes later, pleading with me not to regret bringing her into politics. She said good or bad, victory or defeat, she would forever be appreciative of me for the experience.

    “Femi”, she said, “let’s keep hope alive.” She went further to say that her fate and the genuineness of our purpose would see us through.

    We parted smiling and with a new resolve to continue to fight. That was the stuff Funmi was made of, never say die – a woman of intellect, a woman of substance, a woman of courage, a woman forged in steel. All through, she was the chair of our strategy committee, a task she handled with tact, maturity, intelligence, experience and candour.

    When I started seeing the telltale signs of the sickness in her, I couldn’t summon the courage to ask her. I went on the internet to research the symptoms and came to the conclusion about what was wrong with her, while praying that my fear would not be confirmed. As she later told her very loyal personal assistant, Teju, she too could not tell me. We had become like twins and she told Teju if she told me, I might die before her. It would be better for her to fight it without putting me in the know. I kept my suspicion to myself and this itself was killing. Every morning, I would wake up, call her and offer the few words of prayers I could summon and thereafter send a text message telling her to take care of herself and have enough rest. She probably knew at that point that I knew something was wrong, yet she wouldn’t tell me and I wouldn’t ask pointedly.

    When in February, Senators

    Oluremi Tinubu and

    Olusola Adeyeye were honoured by the State College of Education, I came back from there and went to her house to ask why she was absent from the event. She told me she was tired and barely made it a day earlier to the convocation lecture delivered by Mrs. Bisi Fayemi.

    On the evening of the Sunday following the convocation, I requested to see her to discuss some political developments in the town. She gave me an appointment for 7.00 pm. I got there at exactly 7.00 pm and I could see that the security aides were unusually dodgy, first telling me she was not in and when I pressed further, they said she was sleeping. I called her number and unusually it rang out. I rang that of her PA and she too did not pick the call. I left the house with a lot of misgivings. Somehow I had this feeling, a feeling that something must have gone wrong? I then switched off my phones. Two hours thereafter my wife and everyone close to me gave me messages that Funmi said I should see her urgently.

    When I got to the house, I sat in the outer sitting room and I saw her come out of the bedroom, but not with the usual gait. I immediately put on my reporter’s cap. As a result of my earlier suspicion, I had invited Kay (Kayode Afolabi) to join me for the meeting. She ushered us into the inner room of the Deputy Governor’s lodge and struggled to take her seat. I saw the difficulty with which she went on with the meeting and I signalled Kay that we should keep it short.

    When we got up, she struggled to see us to the door. Kay and I discussed our suspicion and we both agreed that I should go and raise her health issues with the governor so that we could do something urgently.

    I went that night to see the governor who gave me a detailed account of the ailment and how they had been managing it. For me, that was it. We agreed to go see the husband to help convince her to take time off to take care of her health. Incidentally, she was scheduled to fly to London during the week to see her doctors and undergo further tests and treatment. We chose the day she was supposed to travel to see Lanre. It was in the course of this meeting that I heard stories of her bravery, how she fought to keep her condition away from those she loved. How she would leave her desk in Ekiti for Lagos to have chemotherapy and return the following day to her desk. How she one day left Ekiti for treatment and spent about 10 hours on the highway due to gridlock and collapsed on getting home and had to be rushed to the hospital. How she left the hospital after having chemo and insisted on calling on my colleagues in TheNews magazine to commiserate with them on the fire incident that ravaged the office. She flogged herself , sometimes over-flogged herself. With the benefit of hindsight, perhaps, knowing she might not survive, she was bent on leaving people with a good impression of her.

    I remember her bringing her children home in December 2011 and taking them on a trip to Calabar to watch the carnival. I remember a similar trip to Dubai in December 2012. I remember the details of the planning and execution of Mama and Papa Famuagun’s 80th birthdays in 2011 and 2012 respectively. I remember the early morning prayer messages she used to send to Tola, my wife, and her close circle of friends daily in the last one year.

    All these now suggest to me that Funmi may be have been aware that the end was nigh and tried to face it with candour while spending her time doing good and spending quality time with the children and friends alike.

    We came to an agreement

    that when she returned

    from Lagos she should not bother coming around until she was fully recovered, but we didn’t know the worst was about to come.

    While in London, I called her; she didn’t pick my call. I called Teju, her PA, who had stood solidly by her all through this period and demanded to know the result of the test. She was reluctant and when I saw that she was battling with her emotions, I ended the call. I knew the door to the long night had opened and the journey to the final day for my sister had begun.

    I kept calling Lanre (her husband) and he kept telling me things were under control. Of course, she returned and apologised to me profusely for having kept me in the dark about her condition. I then started praying for her and I could hear her sobbing at the other end. Before I could ask her why, we both started crying. That night, I couldn’t sleep. I had to call Kabiyesi, the Ewi of Ado-Ekiti, to let him know what the situation was.

    I kept in regular touch with Lanre with text messages, praying and consoling him. Similarly with Yeside, her first daughter. I didn’t give Teju too a breathing space. I couldn’t summon the courage to talk to Funmi on the phone again. Two days after the encounter, I couldn’t sleep. I woke my wife up and told her I was worried for Funmi. She said I should not call at that hour of the night. By 5.00 am, I called Teju several times, but there was no response. I called Lanre too; the phone rang out.

    I went to the toilet in the visitors’ room downstairs and cried. After ridding myself of that emotion, a call came through from Teju and I shouted, “What happened!”

    “Sorry”, she said, “your sister was rushed to the hospital last night.”

    I cried and cried again. There was nobody to share my sorrow with other than my wife who was scheduled to return to her Lagos base from Abuja that morning.

    Later that day, a call came through from the First Lady of Ekiti, my sister Bisi Fayemi. She too burst out crying as soon as I picked the phone. “Ha! BOT (Chairman, Board of Trustees, her affectionate name for me) I don’t like the way I saw your sister today,” she said. She had just arrived from a trip to Australia and went to the hospital from the airport to see her.

    Bisi had from the moment

    Funmi was diagnosed of

    breast cancer stood by her. She was her pillar of support. She was with her whenever she went for radiotherapy, mastectomy, days of chemotherapy and the final visit to her doctor in London. We cannot thank her enough. This has been the stuff our friendship, association and partnership are made of. Even when people want to divide us and sow seeds of discord, we just laugh it off and with the refrain that: “They think we are fools ,they don’t know we have come a long way.”

    The governor too came back from a trip to South Africa the following day and called to tell me how Funmi’s condition had taken a turn for the worse in less than a week after returning from London. I called Teju who confirmed this and said the governor couldn’t hold himself when he saw her.

    All this while, I was still too scared to go see her on her sick bed in a discreet hospital off Gerald Road, in Ikoyi. When I finally summoned the courage and entered into the room where Funmi’s ghost lay on the bed, I didn’t know when my legs crumbled under me and I rolled on the floor crying. She cried with me and I rushed out of the room to cry the more. When she failed to stop crying, the husband came to me and said I should come and pacify her.

    I summoned courage again, went in and held her hand assuring her she was going to pull through. “Do you mean it, Femi?” she asked. I said, “Yes.” She then said I should stop crying. “This too will be over and we shall celebrate, have a big thanksgiving”, she said with a quaking and distant voice. “Yes,” I said, mumbling all manner of mumbo jumbo in the form of prayers. I was completely devastated and disoriented. I held her hand, tears welled up in my eyes again. I pulled back, but she held me still. She beckoned me to come and give her a hug. I did, but with trepidation. Funmi, my dear sister, friend and compatriot, comforter in difficult times had began the journey to the end.

    When I got there the following day, she was no longer talking intelligibly. She kept murmuring. Nobody could decipher what she was saying. I ran out again crying. It was Yeside who came and said I should not cry but keep praying for her. She told me of plans to bring back her two siblings from the US to see her. I left praying for miracle to turn her around and put her firmly on her feet.

    I paid the last visit the day after. In company of Senator Oluremi Tinubu, I was at her bedside. At that moment, I suspected it was a matter of days, if not hours…

    …And Funmi has gone to the land of no return, never to smile at me again. Never to hug me again. I called her ‘Eye’ and she called me ‘Aba’, an affectionate title of mother and father in our dialect.

    I am crying as I write this, Funmi. I can only wish you a peaceful rest. You have surely earned a place in the pantheon of our Ekiti , of Yoruba and Nigeria.

    I miss you sorely, Eye.

     

    O digba o!