Tag: tinubu

  • Tinubu refutes alleged comment on Buhari, defecting PDP members

    Tinubu refutes alleged comment on Buhari, defecting PDP members

    National Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, yesterday refuted a report in an online platform, Newswire, alleging that he flayed the defection of some Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) members to APC.

    He described the report as a figment of the imagination of the platform’s reporter and a plot to cause disaffection within the ranks of the APC.

    The report had quoted the APC leader as saying that the mass defection of the PDP members to APC might have grave consequences on President Muhammadu Buhari in 2019.

    Tinubu observed that Newswire and a section of the social media were being used by the PDP for a concerted campaign against his person.

    He recalled, for instance, a recent report by that section of the social media linking him with the decision of The Nation newspaper to return the N9 million it got through the Newspapers Proprietors Association of Nigeria (NPAN) as compensation for the disruption of its operations by security agents last year.

    The APC leader wondered why he would be linked with the return of the said sum when he is not involved in the running of the newspaper and did not know about NPAN’s decision to ask for compensation.

    The report by Newswire had quoted the APC leader as expressing fears that the influx of PDP members would “crumble the APC, especially if President Buhari decides to do just a term.”

    The report further quoted Tinubu as saying: “The President Buhari I know has very good intentions for Nigeria and he would want to hand over to someone he deems not to be corrupt.

    “It is even possible that the President already has a successor in mind. And the danger is this: at the fullness of time, these PDP defectors will form an unholy alliance with some politicians in APC and across the board to thwart the President’s succession plan. And that will be the end of the APC and a new rising for the PDP.”

    “I’m not elated about the news of former senators and even serving ones defecting to the APC. Even if a governor from the opposition defects today, I will not celebrate it.

    “I think the President should be leery and extremely cautious of these PDP defectors and should not give them any serious responsibilities because at the appropriate time, they will manifest great evil and disaster against the President and the APC.”

    Tinubu, however, said he did not grant any interview to any news medium and could never have said what was ascribed to him.

    He said it was a hatchet man’s job aimed at causing disaffection in APC.

    “It is not the first time that kind of story would be ascribed to me even though I did not grant anyone an interview. It is a hatchet man’s job whose purpose is to cause disaffection in our great party,” he said.

  • Nigeria can be great, says Tinubu

    Nigeria can be great, says Tinubu

    All Progressives Congress (APC) National Leader Asiwaju Bola Tinubu has congratulated Nigerians on the new year, saying “there is no reason that we cannot attain greatness”.

    In his new year message, the former Lagos State Governor, said:

    “The new year presents a  chance for us to place this precious nation  on the right path. This path will not be easy as we must press to surmount obstacles that should have been laid behind us long ago. There are no short cuts to take to greatness, but there also is no reason that we cannot attain that greatness. Our new government offers the country its best chance.

    “Thus, we must dedicate ourselves to creating a more perfect nation,  one built on justice, peace, unity and prosperity. We must join hands in common purpose to defeat insecurity poverty and corruption and bring back prosperity.  Let us pledge never again to fall victim to these scourges. Let us pledge this year to walk together in strong unity. May 2016 go down in history as the year Nigeria reached  a higher plain by conquering those things that for so long had set us back.

    “May this nation rise and become the standard for Africa and the black race that God intends it to be.

  • Tinubu: learn lesson from Jesus’ birth

    Tinubu: learn lesson from Jesus’ birth

    National Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC) Asiwaju Bola Tinubu has urged Christians to learn the lessons from the birth of Jesus.

    In his Christmas message, Tinubu said: “The lessons of humility, selflessness, humanity and meekness that we glean from the evergreen Christmas story must not depart from our relationships here on earth”. According to Tinubu, this is the only way the blessings of Christmas will abide always beyond the celebration.

    “Nigeria is at the cusp of a new moral threshold and the role of religion in making a success of this effort is critical. While wishing Nigerians a merry Christmas we must not forget that Nigeria needs us to contribute our quota in making it achieve greatness”.

    Tinubu advised Nigerians to make the sacrifice necessary and appropriate in making the new political dispensation a success. To do otherwise is to remain held down by the forces of failure and anti-progressiveness.

  • Tinubu,  others extol Gbadegesin’s virtues at 70

    Tinubu, others extol Gbadegesin’s virtues at 70

    Memories of the landmark June 12, 1993 election filled the air yesterday in Lagos.

    Many politicians and activists who fought for the restoration of democracy, following the annulment of the election —Nigeria’s freest and fairest ever—gathered to celebrate the 70th birthday of one of those at the vanguard of the struggle, Prof. Segun Gbadegesin, who marked the occasion with the presentation of his book “All The Way: Serving With Conscience”.

    Gbadegesin, a professor of Philosophy and Head of Department of Philosophy and Dean, College of Arts and Sciences, Howard University, Washington DC, United States, worked as an undercover operative in the dark days of the Abacha dictatorship as one of the main anchors of Radio Kudirat, the propaganda organ of the National Democratic Coalition (NADECO).

    Speaker after speaker poured encomiums on Gbadegesin, a columnist of The Nation, at the event, which turned out to be a roll call of political activists, politicians, his associates, traditional rulers and notable youths.

    Former Governor of Lagos State and All Progressives Congress (APC) National Leader Asiwaju Bola Tinubu praised Gbadegesin’s efforts in writing the book, describing it as an insightful contribution that has placed on the front burner some of the issues staring the nation in the face.

    The APC chieftain said he was not surprised that Gbadegesin was marking his 70th birthday with a memoir of his childhood days, adding that he celebrated his 60th anniversary with two books. Recalling the role Gbadegesin played during the seizure of Lagos State local government funds and during former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s failed third term bid, Tinubu said the professor continued to contribute to the advancement of democracy even after the return to civil rule in 1999.

    Tinubu, one of the leading lights of NADECO, assured the audience that progressive politics is the answer to Nigeria’s problems and that the hope Nigerians had in voting the APC into power would not be dashed.

    He said leaders of the parties that formed the APC had to suppress their personal ambitions to chase away the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) government led by former President Goodluck Jonathan because in the past those who floated political parties ended up as  chairmen and presidential candidates.

    During a panel of discussion moderated by Mr. Adebola Williams, who led the rebranding campaign that changed the perception of young Nigerians about candidate Muhammadu Buhari, Tinubu said the youth had not realised the power they held with their understanding of the internet revolution and their inquisitive nature.

    In response to a question on why the elders were reluctant to let go of power, the APC chieftain admonished young Nigerians intent on taking part in politics to demonstrate commitment and a willingness to take responsibility, adding that nobody gets political power on a platter of gold.

    He added: “I’m not quarrelling with you being in a hurry, but you must recognise that it is not going to be easy. You see opportunities quicker and you utilise it faster. Without what you did, we will not be able to send Jonathan out of office. But, you can’t ask us to move over.”

    Gen. Alani Akinrinade, one of those who supported Gbadegesin in his NADECO campaign from the United States, said he was meeting the professor of philosophy for the first time when he called on him in Washington, “but he justified the confidence reposed in him by Tinubu and others”.

    Gen. Akinrinade, like many speakers at the event, recalled the support provided by  Gbadegesin’s wife, Mrs. Adetoun Gbadegesin, who provided Nigerian food, particularly amala and gbegiri for the visiting activists.

    Former Ogun State Governor Chief Segun Osoba praised the contribution of Gbadegesin to the pro-democracy struggle, with the programmes he anchored in Yoruba on the defunct “Radio Kudirat”.

    Osoba recalled with nostalgia that the late NADECO leader, Chief Abraham Adesanya, used to threaten during Afenifere meetings that anybody who could not speak in Yoruba would be sent to America to learn the language from Gbadegesin.

    He said: “Today, not only is Gbadegesin versed in Yoruba, he is also interested in the survival of the Yoruba Nation. He visited me the other day to plead that I should re-unite politically with my estranged APC family.”

    Another comrade in the NADECO struggle, Dr. Olu Otubusin, said though Gbadegesin, who hails from Okeho in Oke-Ogun, Oyo State, “was not the financier of the struggle, the way Tinubu and Akinrinade were, but his salary was always made available to us”.

    Otubusin added that the professor was always ready to sacrifice for the interest of the generality. He noted that Gbadegesin was loyal and committed to the struggle and does not understand conspiracy.

    Executive Editor/Director, TheNEWS and PM News, Mr. Kunle Ajibade, who reviewed the book, said: “All the Way: Serving with Conscience is essentially an inspiring stocktaking of Gbadegesin’s sense of duty not only to his family members —- both nuclear and extended—- but also to the public at home and abroad.”

    In the review tittled: “Of Gbadegesin’s sense of duty”, Ajibade, who was also an activist during the Abacha military junta, said: “Very early in his life he learnt from his father to be focused on any duty at hand. He often wanted to make his father happy by making excellent grades, which he did in all the schools he attended. He was mercilessly beaten and tongue-lashed by his father only two times as a boy.

    “The first time was when he skipped church to follow a popular masquerade called Ogbogbon. The second time was when he left his father’s retail shop to go on an errand for a family relation. He never saw adherents of Islam, Christianity and traditional religion clash.”

    The crème de la crème of the society, particularly from the Southwest, graced the occasion. The dignitaries include Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi, the Oba of Lagos, Oba Rilwan Akiolu, who came with a retinue of chiefs; the Onjo of Okeho, Oba Rafiu Osuolale-Mustapha, also with a retinue of chiefs; and the traditional ruler of Ota, Oba Alani Oyede, who also came with a retinue of chiefs.

    Other dignitaries are: Chief Bisi Akande, Sen. Olurunimbe Mamora, Otunba Niyi Adebayo, Prof. Ropo Sekoni, Mr. Festus Ajekigbe and Hon. Wale Oshun.

     

  • Tinubu to deliver Usman Lecture

    Tinubu to deliver Usman Lecture

    ALL Progressives Congress (APC) National Leader Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu will today deliver the keynote address at the 10th anniversary remembrance lecture of late Dr. Yusufu Bala Usman at the Arewa House in Kaduna.

    The lecture is being organised by the Centre for Democratic Development, Research and Training, Zaria.

    He will explore key elements of the APC change agenda in relation to the liberation theology of the late Bala Usman and within the context of the present political and economic challenges facing the country.

    The former Lagos State Governor is expected to offer a lucid economic analysis of what confronts Nigeria and suggest ways to move the nation’s politics and economy forward.

    “For decades, Nigeria has danced in close confines with economic disaster. In the past, higher oil prices allowed us to dodge the worst. We have survived but not thrived. Improvised but not planned. Spent but not invested. Laughed, drank and feasted but did not build, construct or maintain. Now, Nigeria has collided into a wall, merciless and immovable. The present downturn in oil prices may be more than just a transient slump in the business cycle,” the APC national leader was quoted as saying.

    Tinubu will also seek a new economic paradigm.

    Emir of Kano Sanusi Lamido, Kaduna State Governor Ahmed el-Rufai and many northern intellectuals are expected to attend the lecture.

  • Agency hails Tinubu’s foresight

    Agency hails Tinubu’s foresight

    Lagos State Materials Testing Laboratory has hailed All Progressives Congress (APC) National Leader Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu for laying the ground work for the establishment of the outfit.

    Its Consultant Manager Shola Famakin said the outfit has made remarkable contributions to the safety and wellbeing of Lagosians in the last eight years of its establishment.

    Famakin urged government to consider compulsory materials testing as a pre-requisite for all building contractors in the state.

    Mandatory materials testing for new buildings as well as soil test, he said, would further reduce incidences of collapse buildings.

    No incidence of building collapse had been recorded from any of the certified buildings and materials by the agency, he said, stressing that noncompliance to building standard and negligence by contractors had been responsible for the perennial building collapses.

    He appealed to contractors, site engineers and the general public to always pay attention to the materials test results and comply with recommendation therein as applicable

    Famakin hailed the collaboration between the agency, Lagos State Safety Commission and Lagos State Building Control Agency (LASBCA).

  • Bayelsa APC hails Tinubu, Osinbajo, others

    Bayelsa APC hails Tinubu, Osinbajo, others

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Brass Constituency II, Bayelsa State, has thanked the party’s national leadership, especially the National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, the National Chairman, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, President Muhammadu Buhari, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo and Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Mr. Babachir David Lawal, for supporting the people in their effort to free themselves from “PDP-imposed poverty”.

    They hailed the Chairman and Deputy Chairman of the APC Governorship Election Campaign Council, Edo State Governor Adams Oshiomhole and Sokoto State Governor Aminu Tambuwal, as well as other members of the council for their dedication.

    In a statement yesterday, following the successful grand finale of the APC governorship campaign in Bayelsa State, the constituency’s leaders, Abaye Ayebatonyo and Fayenengigha Jacob, said: “The massive nationwide support shows that the country values Bayelsa State people.”

    The constituency expressed gratitude to “Bayelsa people for supporting our son, the APC governorship candidate, Chief Timipre Sylva.”

    Brass Constituency II is Sylva’s home base.

    The statement said: “We thank especially, the APC National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, the National Chairman, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, President Muhammadu Buhari, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, and the members of the APC National Working Committee. We appreciate the dedication of the chairman, deputy chairman and other members of the APC Governorship Election Campaign Council.

    “Your support has been great in the historic effort by our people to free the state from the regime of poverty and underdevelopment foisted and supervised by the PDP.

    “The overwhelming support for Chief Sylva and APC in Bayelsa State from the APC family nationally and locally is a worthy recognition of the wonderful potentials of the candidate and the party in the state.

    “The APC family in Brass Constituency II and, indeed, the whole of Bayelsa State, pledge to justify the huge confidence reposed in us as the party steers the ship of the state, by the grace of God, after the December 5 election.

    “We are bolstered by the support of the APC national leadership, and we promise to come out en masse tomorrow to reclaim our state and free the people from years of PDP-imposed poverty. We will win, by God’s grace.”

     

  • Tinubu, AfDB President for award

    Tinubu, AfDB President for award

    Chairman, National Oracle Magazine, Blessing Agbomhere has disclosed plan to award National Leader of the All Progressives Congress, Chief Bola Tinubu and Akinwumi Adesina current President of the African Development Bank (AfDB).

    Agbomhere said during a briefing, Thursday in Abuja that the award was to recognize outstanding patriots who contributed immensely to development of the country.

    According to the organizer, Tinubu made an indelible impact in the political history of Nigeria by transforming an opposition party to a ruling government.

    He said, “Man of the year award is Bola Ahmed Tinubu. The award is to celebrate him because of the role he has played in bringing change to this country. He also seem to be the agent of change until today because he stood in the opposition and as opposition, he was able to
    transform the opposition into a ruling party. For that, he deserves our honour.”

    However, he urged the APC national leader to drive the change agenda to meet expectations of the people.

    He stated that 28 other patriots would be awarded including the former Central Bank Governor, Sanusi Lamido and current Custom General of the Nigeria Customs Service, Hamid Ali for his anti-corruption campaign in the NCS.

    The event would be organised in partnership with gatekeepers foundation, Nigerian Youth Movement for Change and Nigerian Muslim Christian Association.

    “Nigerians should emulate Sanusi for exposing corruption in the oil and gas sector despite being appointed by his government. He stood by his allegation against the former Minister of Petroleum Resources, Alison Diezani and that is what is expected of Nigerians. We should
    not harbor corruption,” he said.

  • Buhari, Tinubu, Oyegun, Oshiomhole, Tambuwal, others campaign for Sylva

    Buhari, Tinubu, Oyegun, Oshiomhole, Tambuwal, others campaign for Sylva

    •President: it’s time to move to APC
    •Commissioners, govt officials dump PDP

    There was massive support yesterday for the All Progressives Congress (APC) and its governorship candidate, Chief Timipre Sylva, to wrest power from Governor Seriake Dickson.

    Party faithful, residents and APC leaders thronged the Samson Siasia Stadium, Yenagoa to back Sylva’s ambition.

    President Muhammadu Buhari, represented by Vice President Yemi Osibanjo; APC National Leader Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu and the ex-Interim National Chairman of the party, Chief Bisi Akande, added colour to the final rally of the APC.

    The National Working Committee of the party temporarily relocated to Bayelsa State, as the National Chairman, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, led other members of the committee to the rally described by people as APC’s icing on the cake.

    Governors elected on the platform of the party like Comrade Adams Oshiomhole (Edo), Aminu Tambuwal (Sokoto) and Rochas Okorocha (Imo) represented by his deputy, Eze Madumere, attended the campaign.

    The event was further spiced with the presence of APC governorship candidates in the Southsouth states, who are seeking justice in courts- Dakuku Peterside (Rivers), Otega Emerhor (Delta) and Umana Umana (Akwa Ibom).

    Senator Magnus Abe was also there.

    The Secretary to the Federal Government, Babachir Lawal and ministers graced the occasion.

    The ranks of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) were further depleted and the chances of Dickson narrowed, following the defections of commissioners and government officials to the APC.

    Artistes like Face, Maleke, J. Martins and Desmond Eliot, now a lawmaker in the Lagos State House of Assembly, entertained the crowd.

    A group of beautiful maidens called Sylva Angels thrilled the audience with their victory dance.

    APC supporters defied the scorching sun to attend the event.

    President Buhari said it was time for Bayelsa to change from PDP to APC, to realign with the centre.

    He said: “The time for change has come. The time of prosperity, the time of good governance has come. Don’t miss the train. We are expecting Bayelsans to participate in what we are doing at the federal level. Bayelsa deserves its pride of place among the states.

    “This state and its people are great. But you must do the right thing. The right thing is to defect from the PDP to the APC. It is time to move. On Saturday, vote for change by voting for APC. Go to the polling centres with your permanent voter cards (PVCs) and effect that change you desire.

    “If you do so, you will have the right to demand. You will have the right to ask our candidate, who will be the next governor, what he has promised you. I assure you that you will see a real difference.

    “There will be jobs, progress in this state. Everyone of us looking for promotion will have it by the grace of God. You will achieve great things.”

    Asiwaju Tinubu, whose presence excited the crowd, urged the people to send PDP and its 16 years of ineptitude out of office.

    He said after 16 years of government, the party could only boast of hunger, unemployment, darkness and lack of basic amenities.

    The ex-Lagos State governor said APC was the cure for unemployment and other problems caused by the PDP misrule.

    He said the people, who were led into the wilderness, now have the opportunity to enjoy prosperity “by voting out Poverty Development Party.”

    Tinubu, who spent time to demonstrate to the people where and how they should vote on Saturday, enjoined them to eschew violence at the polls.

    He told them to vote for the broom, the APC symbol and defend their votes by waiting and ensuring that they are counted.

    The APC national leader said Saturday’s election represents freedom for the people, stressing that the road to freedom is not easy.

    His words: “For 16 years you have been led in the wilderness by the Poverty Development Party. Send PDP away with its poverty. No potable water, jobs and electricity.

    “Vote and defend your votes. They are already afraid. You are the master. Sylva is back. He has bounced back. Only you can make him win.”

    Lawal advised the people to join the government at the centre.

    According to him, identifying with the centre would enable the state have its fair share of dividends of democracy.

    Odigie-Oyegun thanked the people for welcoming him with surprises each time he visited the state.

    He urged them to give him the most important gift by returning Sylva to the Government House.

    The APC national chairman said the party and the Federal Government relocated to the state to demonstrate the value attached to Bayelsa State.

    Odigie-Oyegun, who called for a minute’s silence each for the late Abubakar Audu and the late Diepreye Alamieyeseigha, said Sylva would offer security, employment and other dividends of democracy if elected.

    He said: “Saturday is the red-letter day. It will be the biggest present to our dear President when you return Sylva to the Government House. Victory is assured.”

    Sylva said he would rescue Bayelsa from darkness, dirt, unemployment and underdevelopment.

    Said he: “Our people will experience prosperity. Bayelsa State will be developed. Salaries, pensions and gratuities will be paid. We will focus on diversifying the economy, creating jobs, wealth and providing security. We will strengthen the civil service.

    “We will pay civil servants salaries and give students scholarships. It is wicked to send our children abroad on scholarships and ask them to fend for themselves. Vote for APC and make sure your votes are counted.

    “We must not allow violence. On Saturday, Pharaoh will fall and the Egyptians will be under the Red Sea. This is the meaning of Opuabadi. My government will be about you and not about my family.”

  • The poet’s verdict: Danjuma, Tinubu

    The poet’s verdict: Danjuma, Tinubu

    In “Piano and Drums”, Gabrial Okara, the poet — or in any case, the protagonist — suffers a serious dissonance: to stick with the vitality of the drums of his nativity (African culture) or be lured by the seductive though destructive lure of the European piano — but end with putative cultural death!

    Cultural death is, of course, the most lethal for the living dead: for without your culture, what are you?

    Performance poet, Akeem Lasisi and his performing songbirds suffer no such dissonance.  Their earlier works, Wonderland: Eleleture, the sweet Udeme and the epochal Ori-Agbe, in celebration of Wole Soyinka, our own WS, at 80, were a splendid mix of the piano and drums for poetic euphony and vitality.

    Way back, in the late 1960s to late 1980s, during the musical hegemony of the duo of Ebenezer Obey and Sunny Ade, and the Abami Eda, Fela Anikulapo-Kuti’s Africa 70 and Egypt 80 ruled the roost of Afrobeat (Fela’s own piano and drums musical brew), the debate between always ensued between “praise” and ideological music.

    Juju, where both Obey and Sunny excelled, was often dismissed as happy-go-merry, praise music without any ideological core.  Afrobeat, on the other hand, was trumpeted (and not unfairly) as ideological music that spoke truth — nasty truth — to power, no matter the huge cost.

    Indeed, costly it was: for Fela really did bear a lot of brunt in military-era savagery; by a ruling military order, scared stiff by Fela’s fearless and formidable moral authority, even if the soldiers-in-government controlled all the hideous instruments of state coercion.

    So, from Eleleture and Udeme, solid socio-political poetic commentaries, is Akeem Lasisi the poet veering into “praise” poetry, as his poetic telescope zooms on two eminent citizens, Gen. Theophilus Yakubu Danjuma (rtd) and Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu?

    Not quite, though the listener would make his or her own judgment.

    One quick observation, however, on From General to Manager, Lasisi’s tribute to Danjuma.  In this work, Lasisi’s trademark African drums (to borrow again from the Okara image) are mute.  Only the European piano raises its plaintive voice.

    The poet should perhaps have, as he is wont, given the Danjuma work some Jukun musical background.  That would have steeped it in African nativity; and added more vitality to its performance and rendition.  Sure, that would have needed some arduous research.  But the final product would have been much more pleasing — and entertaining.

    Still, that hardly distracts from this work: a fair, if poetic assessment, of the public persona of Gen. Danjuma, from when he first burst on Nigerians’ public consciousness as a young military officer, to his exploits as chief of Army staff and virtual guarantor of return to civil rule in 1979, under Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo as commander-in-chief, his foray into business thereafter, brief return to politics during Obasanjo’s second coming as elected president from 1999-2003, and his philanthropic activities happily ever after!

    If I deny you a place in the Muse’s house,” the poem opens, “The Zuma rock will break its stony silence/The Niger and Benue will find their liquid tongues/From Mokola to Trinidad battalions will rise/Millions of IDP children will join a flood of SAPETRO staff/The Congo will rise and sing your praise …”

    Mokola and Trinidad battalions, the Congo, SAPETRO workers and millions of IDP [internally displaced children] are all allusions to Gen. Danjuma’s rich vein of past and present life: the early regimented times, peace keeping at the Congo, another era as oil investor and community charity in troubling times, tending Nigerian children displaced by the murderous Boko Haram fanatics, by virtue of chairing a presidential fund-raiser to care for the displaced.

    One life?  Ay, but with a texture of many rolled into one!  That would appear why this allusion echoes another in the scriptures — that bit about nature, animate and inanimate, rising to applaud the virtues of the Christ Jesus, even if spiteful humans demurred.

    Indeed, Gen. Danjuma burst on the public consciousness, as somewhat an enforcer of northern political hegemony, given his reported roles in the July 1966 counter-coup.  But over the years, he would appear to have morphed into a revered Nigerian patriot.

    Hear the poet’s parting shot: “Danjuma, teach me a cardinal lesson/to dodge invisible bullets in the market square/Give me the magic wand/To coast to victory in our Civil Peace [Note the clever pun on Civil War?]/From Barracks to the board room your breed is rare/From General to Manager your gut is high.”

    In the Lion Speaks to the Poet, the Lasisi tribute to Tinubu, the parting shot is reminiscent of the concluding lines in J.P. Clark’s poem, “Streamside exchange”, a deadpan response that further confounded the child-protagonist, over its mother’s return prospect: “You cannot know” replied the river bird, “And you should not bother;/Tide and market come and go/And so shall your mother.”

    But while the Clark river bird deadpanned, the Lasisi Lion revealed the “secret” of Tinubu’s stunning political triumphs — which has reaped him bitter and implacable enemies; and his rare talent at nurturing future leaders — which has earned him due praise, even from grudging quarters.

    When others were saving for the rainy day,” the Lion roared in full glory, “I picked my cutlass and sharpened my hoe/I tilled and planted for the rainy day.  The dreaded season has finally come/They are chasing my crops with their anxious cash.”!

    That is as clinical a poetic response as any to the thick peer envy against Tinubu, from political opportunists who hate to sweat, yet love to be the first to swoop on the groovy.

    Why, it even echoes another Obafemi Awolowo quip: When others are busy chasing after women of easy virtue, I was always at my desk, forging out solutions to Nigeria’s problems!  Awolowo was, after all, the most meticulous politician of his generation, if not, so far, in all of Nigerian history.

    As to the old issue of piano and drums, the Lion has both aplenty.  The poem itself runs on cutting wit: “But is it really true,/That everything golden belongs to you?”  And a couple of hyperboles, perhaps to underscore ridiculousness of it all: “They say Aso Rock now belongs to you/That you are the new owner of Disney Land …?”

    But this piquant piano soars on the wings of African drums: a traditional Yoruba genre that thrives on ote (intrigue) and efe (biting humour), twin-concepts the Yoruba devastatingly deploy to wrong-foot adversaries.  That sure would be music to Tinubu’s friends; but pure poison to his fiends!

    In General and Lion, Lasisi has entered uncharted waters in his glorious poetic career: that of a poet making definitive judgment on active, if not outright controversial, citizens in the public space.

    Will he retain his poetic rigour?  Time will tell.  Meanwhile, like Ori-Agbe that toasted Prof. Soyinka at 80, General and Lion epitomise praise clinically — and poetically — earned.