Tag: violence

  • Marshall Harry’s son condemns violence

    The first son of the late politician, Marshall Harry, Sonny, has described the political crisis in Rivers State as a sign of distraction, which will disrupt development.

    He admonished politicians to sheathe their swords and allow peace to reign in the state.

    Sonny spoke yesterday at a briefing in Port Harcourt, the state capital.

    He said: “Evans Bipi and his group (five anti-Amaechi lawmakers) are all from the Rivers East Senatorial District as Governor Rotimi Amaechi and cannot produce the Speaker throughout this dispensation.

    “Let us all abide by the working principle of zoning and not to create more confusion and bad blood, by craving for positions/offices zoned to other ethnic groups or senatorial districts.

    “I am worried about the ugly incident in the House of Assembly. I condemn it in its entirety the use of thugs to attack members of the Assembly and the attempt to remove the Speaker, Otelemaba Dan Amachree.

    “A fake mace was criminally imported into the House. The unsuccessful attempt to remove the speaker speaks volumes of the deadly design of a few to cause mayhem and disrupt the peace in our dear state.

    “I must warn that the Kalabari people will not be happy that a position zoned to them and which their son (Amachree) is presently occupying, is scuttled and removed from them illegally.

    “Rivers people want peace and development. The ongoing crisis is aimed at removing the House leadership unconstitutionally and eventually impeaching Governor Amaechi. The crisis can be resolved amicably and any misunderstanding among members settled peacefully.”

     

  • Boko Haram… Violence persists despite emergency

    Boko Haram… Violence persists despite emergency

    State of Emergency was declared to clip their wings. But, Boko Haram members have found a way where there seems to be no way to continue their campaign of violence against the government and the ordinary people, writes Reuters

    They crept up to the school under cover of darkness, armed with petrol and automatic weapons.

    Most of the teachers and pupils had fled, but some students, one teacher and headmaster Adanu Haruna were still in the compound, one of many rural boarding schools in Nigeria surrounded by forest and farmland.

    “They made the students line up and strip naked, then they made the ones with pubic hair lie face down on the ground,” Haruna said, eyes wide with horror at describing the attack on the iron-roofed school built by British colonisers in the 1950s.

    “They shot them point blank then set the bodies on fire.”

    The Mamudo government school, charred and smelling of scorched blood after 22 students and a teacher were killed there in the July 6 attack near Potiskum in Nigeria’s northeast, was the fourth to be targeted by suspected Boko Haram militants in less than a month.

    The attacks reveal much about the rebels who are fighting to revive a medieval Islamic caliphate in northern Nigeria, the type of state they are seeking to establish and the impact of their efforts to do so on the African economic powerhouse.

    In a video uploaded to the Internet on Saturday, Boko Haram’s purported leader Abubakar Shekau denied ordering the latest killings, saying Boko Haram does not itself kill small children, but he praised attacks on Western schools.

    “We fully support the attack on school in Mamudo, as well as on other schools,” he said. “Western education schools are against Islam … We will kill their teachers.”

    Boko Haram, a nickname which translates roughly as “Western education is sinful”, formed around a decade ago as a clerical movement opposed to Western influence, which the sect’s founder, Mohammed Yusuf, said was poisoning young minds against Islam.

    Yet security forces and politicians were the main targets of the armed revolt it started after Yusuf’s killing in a 2009 military crackdown that left 800 people dead.

    Since those days Boko Haram has splintered into several factions, including some with ties to al Qaeda’s Saharan wing, which analysts say operate more or less independently, despite Shekau’s loose claim to authority over them.

    Before June, there had been only a handful of attacks on the Western-style schools it so despises.

    An offensive against the insurgents since President Goodluck Jonathan declared a state of emergency in three remote northern states in May, wresting control of the far northeast from Boko Haram and pushing its fighters into hiding, has changed that.

    Across north-eastern Nigeria, schools are emptying out, threatening further radicalisation and economic decline in a region left behind by the country’s oil-rich Christian south.

    Nassir Salaudeen, a teacher whose son was killed in a strike on Damaturu government school on June 16, the first of the wave of recent attacks, said he had put all his efforts into his boy’s education in the hope he would get a good job.

    “They killed him in cold blood, just because he was a student and his father a teacher,” a tearful Salaudeen said. “I regret ever being educated.”

     

    “SOFT TARGETS”

     

    For some, the school attacks are a sign the offensive has weakened the Islamist group, which is still seen as the main security threat to Africa’s leading oil and gas producer.

    “Given the security clampdown, many of the places like police stations or the military are getting harder for Boko Haram to hit,” said Kole Shettima, chairman of the Centre for Democracy and Development. “Schools are soft targets.”

    But the attacks also reflect a radical ideology that resents modernity and yearns to wind back the clock to an era before West African lands were conquered by Europeans.

    Centuries ago northern Nigeria, like much of West Africa, was ruled by Islamic empires feeding off trans-Saharan trade routes connecting Africa’s forested interior with its Mediterranean coast.

    Boko Haram rarely gives statements to the media. But the little it has said suggests it wants to restore those glory days.

    Last year, the sect said it wanted to revive the 19th century caliphate of Usman Dan Fodio, an Islamic scholar who threw off corrupt Hausa kings and established strict Sharia law.

    When Britain established Nigeria as a territory, it agreed to spare the largely Muslim north’s leaders the activities of missionaries, who brought Christianity but also education and literacy that gave the south a head start over the North.

    The North was able to retain its Islamic culture but at the cost of suffering economically; political and economic power has shifted to the south and the education gap has played a role in that growing discrepancy.

    A lack of education and high youth unemployment has also helped Boko Haram’s Islamist ideology to thrive.

    “Boko Haram think the secular school system has brainwashed Nigerians to accept the post-colonial Western order and forget the Islamic ways that existed before,” said Jacob Zenn, an expert on the sect at the Washington-based Jamestown Foundation.

    The attacks, which the U.N. children’s fund (UNICEF) says have killed 48 students and seven teachers in the past month, aim to scare parents and their kids away from schools.

    “It says: ‘either take your children out of school or put them into an Islamist school we approve of’,” Zenn said, one that teaches only in Arabic and omits courses like science.

    He added that such schools need not necessarily be Boko Haram sponsored: there are conservative Islamic schools for children where they study under an Imam and the curriculum is all in Arabic and focused on the Koran. The sect accepts them.

     

    “SCHOOLS DESERTED”

     

    Many people are turning away from education altogether.

    “The risk isn’t worth it. These guys are just mindless,” said Mike Ojo, a mechanic in the north-eastern city of Maiduguri who is taking his three children out of school.

    Even if they stayed, many teachers have left, said teacher Ali Umar from a Maiduguri secondary school, and in many schools there are often too few teachers for the pupils who stay put, leaving them with little choice but to leave.

    “I am not prepared to die for teaching. Time to start looking for a new job,” he said, shrugging. “Most of our schools are deserted anyway.”

    The spot where Halima Musa’s husband was shot dead at their home on June 16 — in front of her and the children — is still caked with his dried blood, the wall pocked with bullet holes.

    They came at 3 a.m., guns blazing, demanding she open the door. She begged them to stop as they dragged the teacher out.

    “They shot him three times in the head and told me that this should be a lesson not to marry a western educated person or any person that works for President Jonathan,” she said, choking back tears in front of three traumatised children.

    Yobe State Education Commissioner Mohammed Lamin complained that the military had not done enough to protect schools from attack, even after they were targeted.

    Before the murderous assault on the Maumdo school, there had been an earlier attack on May 8, in which some property was burnt. Headmaster Haruna said the security forces he called for help patrolled initially but stopped after a week.

    The military was not immediately available to comment, but it has said in the past it is doing all possible to protect civilians while crushing the insurgents in its offensive.

    Schools are a devastating target for an impoverished region suffering a high rate of illiteracy, but Lamin says he is determined that Yobe’s children get educated.

    “These terrorists are trying to stop western education but we cannot allow them do that,” he said. “We must do everything to ensure children are safe in the school.”

     

  • NBA condemns violence

    The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) yesterday in condemned the political crises in Rivers State.

    NBA President, Okey Wali (SAN), in a statement, urged security agencies to sanction the perpetrators.

    The statement reads: “The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) is very disturbed by the turnout of events in Rivers State. The political differences in Rivers State up and until now, have been in the courts, which was the right and proper way to settle disputes in any civilised society, that was why the NBA had refrained from issuing statements on the matter, as they were sub-judice.

    “The NBA calls on the Federal Government and security agencies to do all that is lawful in ensuring the restoration of peace and tranquility in Port Harcourt, Rivers State. The rule of law must prevail, and there must be no sacred cows, as nobody is above the law”.

    The NBA described the latest twist of violence, as a dangerous dimension that must be condemned . It appealed to the parties to sheath their swords and return to the courts.

    The NBA said the security agencies must not only be above board, but must be seen to be so in carrying out their lawful duties at all times, adding that the interest and well being of “the good people of Rivers State must remain paramount”.

    A human rights activist and lawyer, Mr. Morakinyo Ogele, yesterday called for the prosecuton of those who perpetrated violence on the floor of the assembly.

    Ogele, in a statement, said: “The political violence perpetrated at the Rivers State House of Assembly is another indication that some of our politicians are not fit for office.

    “Police should arrest the perpetrators for prosecution as their action is criminal.”

  • Violence against women, a ‘global health problem

    ACCORDING to a new WHO report, one in three women experience sexual or physical violence. Recently an Indian member of a social organisation called Our City Our Right held a candle during a silent protest following the recent gang rape and murder of a 20-year-old college student in Barasat, in Kolkata on June 15, 2013. Activists and social groups in various parts of the state held rallies and protests following the incident.

    About one in three women worldwide experience sexual or physical violence at least once in their lives, according to a World Health Organisation report released Thursday.

    Put together by the WHO in partnership with the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and the South African Medical Research Council, the report says 35 percent of women around the world are victims of sexual or physical violence, and that assault at the hands of an intimate partner is by far the most common form of such violence. In fact, a whopping 30 percent of women globally were found to be domestic violence victims.

    “These findings send a powerful message that violence against women is a global health problem of epidemic proportions,” said Dr. Margaret Chan, director-general of WHO, in a statement. “We also see that the world’s health systems can and must do more for women who experience violence.”

    The study found that 38 percent of all women who were murdered were killed by their intimate partners, and more than 40 percent of domestic violence victims were found to have suffered injuries from those incidents.

    In addition, the study showed that women who experience violence at the hands of their intimate partners are more likely to suffer from depression, have alcohol use problems, unwanted pregnancies and abortions, as well as sexually transmitted infections, including HIV.

    Citing the recent assault of celebrity chef Nigella Lawson by her husband, one of the report’s authors told Reuters that violence against women is truly a concern for everyone on the planet.

    “This is an everyday reality for many, many women,” said the author, Charlotte Watts, a health policy expert at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine. “[I]t’s not just poor women, or women in a certain country. This really is a global issue.”

    According to NPR, this WHO report, which considered data from 81 countries, has offered the “first comprehensive look at domestic violence globally.”

    The report’s authors say they hope their findings will help raise awareness about this global problem and will spark the beginnings of change. The first step, they say, will be equipping health care professionals with the knowledge and tools needed to provide the necessary care to victims of violence.

    “There is no magic bullet, no vaccine or pill [for rape or abuse],” Claudia Garcia-Moreno, a physician with the WHO and a co-author of the report, told NPR. “But what we hear from women is that oftentimes, just having an empathetic listener who can provide some practical support and help her get access to some other services –that in itself is an important intervention.”

  • CROWD VIOLENCE AT MATCH VENUES Lobi seek more protection for away teams

    CROWD VIOLENCE AT MATCH VENUES Lobi seek more protection for away teams

    Lobi Stars have called on the Nigeria Premier Football League (NPFL) to ensure that away teams are protected from fan violence initiated by desperate supporters of home teams.

    The Makurdi-based side noted that violence by home fans could worsen if something is not done.

    Lobi’s media aide Jack Moses Ekwe Ekwe in a chat with NationSport said Lobi’s players, officials and the match arbiters were victims of assault allegedly by Gombe fans on Sunday because Gombe United didn’t pick all points as expected.

    He said the League Management Company (LMC) should ensure that home teams, the Nigerian Football Federation (NFF) and the security outfits should provide adequate cover for players and officials of visiting teams.

    Ekwe said: ”Lobi Stars players and officials escaped Gombe United fans’ mayhem last Sunday at the Pantami Stadium and their transit camp at Kanem Hotel, Federal Low Cost, Gombe.

    “After we played a 2-2 draw against Gombe United, we were the target of hostile fans and we were lucky that no life was lost considering the magnitude of assorted missiles targeted at us before we had to take a quick dash to Bauchi.

    “I will implore the LMC to beckon on home clubs to take up the issue of security of lives of the visiting teams.

    “It is not ideal to lose players due to crowd violence.

    “The States’ FA and other security outfits should cooperate to ensure that the away teams do not suffer unnecessarily for what they do not have a hand in. We should make sure our league is used to attract investors.”

  • Our Father…Deliver us from ‘K-evil’; Racism, sports violence fines?

    We hoped the kidnapping ordeal of friends the Rhodes –Vivours would be over if never forgotten by now. A kidnapping is a particularly malignant form of invasion of privacy. A week is a long time in article writing and often matters such as this are settled within one or two days and comments are rapidly made out of date. But it is three weeks already. This was why I did not comment earlier. Another reason is that one should not give the criminals any opportunity to gloat or appear successful at their despicable performance as they probably have access to the print media and scour it for articles on themselves just to torment their victims -an innocent mother and daughter just going about their typical ‘Nigerian responsibility’ activities- attending a wedding in a far off place at great inconvenience and price and at huge personal sacrifice because ‘apology will not be acceptable’.

    Let us all, readers, families and listeners to you, follow Our Lord Jesus Christ’s advice when we pray and today say a loud and complete ‘Our Father who art in Heaven…. Deliver us [the Rhodes-Vivours and all kidnapped victims] from ‘K-evil’. Amen’. K-evil = Kidnap-Evil. O God Please Make us ‘Invisible to the Enemy’. Amen. We pray that the power of joint prayer complemented by the efforts of the police will bring them and all kidnap victims home, safe and unharmed, Amen.

    Once more Nigeria features prominently in an ugly side of violence. After the rich kid, fully Nigerian but trained abroad Abdulmutallab incident, which, remember, could easily have killed the over 200 airline passengers aboard, we now have the Woolwich affair in which two Nigerians, including one called Michael Adeboloja, a Nigerian by descent who has never been to Nigeria, who ran over and then barbarically killed a white British soldier Drummer Rigby, leaving blood on their hands for social media worldwide. What possessed them? The media gives the impression that their Nigerian ancestry is to blame. They disgrace their ancestors, Africa and Nigeria. Successful children are claimed by the father, ‘My child has passed’. Failing ones are blamed on the mother, ‘Your child has failed’.Successful athletes of Nigerian descent are claimed by foreign powers like Britain. Nothing wrong with that, as they used the facilities. But bad ones are blamed on Nigeria-something wrong with that! What is it that makes a young man of Nigerian ancestry kill in a foreign land, even if he was born in that land? Drugs, religion, brainwashing, publicity, protection, paradise, bullion or what? Was it murderous madness or malicious murder? He sounded sane when distinguishing between women who could and men who could not approach the dying victim. One or two women were so spectacularly bold they should be in the Queen’s Honours List.

    This frightening event reminds us of Nigeria’s Plateau State ‘Civil War’ with murderous violence inflicted by Hausa Fulani herdsmen settlers on indigenous farmers apparently systematically killing 8-10 farmers per day or the regular bloody border clashes in Nigeria or the killing of ‘other’ personnel during kidnappings. The murderers of Drummer Lee Rigby have succeeded in questioning the achievements and friendship of millions of Fellow Nigerians and Africans worldwide and replacing trust with fear. There will be a new debate which will not only involve Moslems but also Christians as one of the killers started as ‘Michael’. The net of mistrust is now wider. We Africans, and particularly Nigerians, are all ‘suspect’,questionable and worth avoiding during ‘choose your friends carefully’sessions. The murderers have truly managed to ‘murder sleep’ for millions of non-Nigerians moving closer to Nigerians and Africans in need or for love and friendship. The clock has been turned back. Many will cross to the other side of the road when an on-coming person is black and Nigerian.

    The international football organisations are taking racism and physical attacks on officials like referees and linesmen a little more seriously. Other sports including golf should follow quickly. Punishment should be meted out for verbal and violent ‘V&V’offences on and off the field of play. It is well known that snide remarks are the bedrock of even formerly staid ‘games’ like cricket where insults are part of psychological warfare to destabilise opponents. Fines for sports‘V&V’ offences should be larger. Closure of stadia for sports ‘V&V’offences only costs the clubs money in lost income which goes to nobody. Every punishment must also compensate the victims of the racist chants, slurs, whispers and offensive gestures. Closure also results in the good being punished along with the bad by denying all the enjoyment of the game. Personal bans sound good also but may not cost the perpetrator anything as he has a contract not a daily paid job. Such bans could amount to a pre-planned holiday if the player insults someone only to get banned and thus have time off to attend a friend’s wedding. However, what happens to the fines? Government and sport governing bodies must not be the sole beneficiary. If we settled for higher fines with most, or all, of the fines going directly to enriching the offended player or victim, things will quickly correct themselves and make targeted players very rich from compensation. Racists do not want to make their victims rich. Such transfer of fine fee funds from violator to victim will solve the racist problem immediately.

  • ‘Rising violence ‘ll not derail us’

    ‘Rising violence ‘ll not derail us’

    The Chairman of the Presidential Committee on Dialogue and Security Challenges in the North and Minister of Special Duties, Alhaji Kabiru Tanimu Turaki, yesterday assured that the current rising security challenges in the country would not interfere with the work of the committee.

    Speaking with State House correspondents after the committee’s meeting with President Goodluck Jonathan, he said their desire and intention to get to the root of the crisis had not been affected by the recent events in the country.

    According to him, the presidential committee is now well positioned to face the rising challenges in the North.

    While stressing that the committee is yet to establish contact with Jama’a, Turaki said negotiation does not mean that every party will get what it wants as there must be give and take in the process.

    On whether the current violence will deter the committee, he said: “I would not want to speak on this thing because there is a lot of dimension into it. It is something that the committee has still not considered. But what I can say on that is that the past events have not in any way derailed our programme. They have not derailed our resoluteness, resolution, desire and intention to get to the root of this problem.”

    The Minister said the fact that there is ongoing dialogue does not mean that there will not be differences.

    Said he: “So, there is peace not only in the Middle East including even the Far East. What we are saying is that we are convinced that with all the efforts we are making, we will now be able to arrive at the middle course. Of course, dialogue does not mean there would be absence of differences.”

    Responding to a question on when he plans to meet Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau, he said: “I cannot tell you that now because you will agree with me that it will not be in the committee’s own interest and it will not be in the interest of the processes for us to begin to disclose how, what and when we want to do these things.”

    He went on: “Similar efforts in the past were said to have had problems here and there because before you reach an appreciable height, you have people running their mouth, saying things they ought not to say. We want to keep things as secretive as possible not because we do not want the public to know about them, but because we feel that we have not got to the level yet where the public will be given those details of what we are doing.”

    Besides meeting the President yesterday, Turaki said the committee would meet governors, traditional rulers, clerics and leaders of the frontline states.

    “We will meet the governors, traditional rulers, leaders of the frontline states, the clergy. We will go and inspect the epicentres of this crisis, see the people that have had casualties, see the victims because do not forget that part of our responsibility and recommendations we will make is for a Victims Support Programme. So, unless we are able to get to the field and see these stakeholders, discuss and take useful information from them like we have done from this other side also, our work will not be balanced.”

    On whether the committee will conclude its assignment within the time frame, he said: “What we have been doing now is laying the foundation and unless we lay a strong foundation you may have problems. I am satisfied and convinced that we are still on course and that we are still working within the time frame. What will happen tomorrow I do not know, but for now I know we are on course. We are on target.”

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Jonathan approves N5.7bn for victims of 2011 post-election violence

    President Goodluck  Jonathan has approved the release of a total sum of N5,747,694,780.00 to nine states of the federation for direct disbursement to those who suffered losses of properties, means of livelihood and places of worship in the post election violence of 2011.

    Special Adviser (Media) to the President, Dr Reuben Abati said in a statement that the approval was based on the submission of the Sheik Ahmed Lemu’s panel and its adoption by the Federal Executive Council.

    Following the post election violence and civil disturbances in some states after the April 2011 elections, President Jonathan set up a Panel of Enquiry headed by Sheik Ahmed Lemu to among other things, identify the spread and extent of losses suffered across the country.

     The Federal Ministry of Lands and Housing was later  mandated to assess the reported losses and damage to properties in all affected states.

    Consequently, President Jonathan has approved the release of funds to nine of the 14 affected states as follows:

    1.      Bauchi                 –        N1,574,879,000.00

    2.    Sokoto                 –        N55,888,506.00

    3.    Zamfara               –        N93,253,485.00

    4.    Niger                    –        N433,375,875.00

    5.     Jigawa                 –        N208,667,634.00

    6.    Katsina                –        N1,973,209,440.00

    7.     Kano                    –        N944,827,000.00

    8.    Adamawa            –        N420,089,840.00

    9.    Akwa Ibom          –        N43,504,000.00

    Total                –        N5,747,694,780.00

    President Jonathan has also directed that an Implementation Committee for the disbursement of the funds to beneficiaries in  the nine states be constituted as follows:

    1.      Executive Governor  or Deputy Governor        –        Chairman

    2.    Representative of State Government                –        Member

    3.    Secretary of the Sheik Lemu Panel                   –        Member

    4.    Representative of the OSGF                              –        Member

    5.     Representative of the FMLH&UD                    –        Member

    Inspection and assessment of damages and losses suffered are yet to be carried out in Borno, Yobe, Gombe, Kaduna and Nasarawa states as modalities and further instructions for the exercise are still being expected from the state governments.

    Funds to cover the losses sustained by victims of the post election violence in theses five states will be approved and released at the conclusion of the assessment exercise.

  • Shun violence, group tells Nigerians

    NIGERIANS have been urged to shun all forms of violent and consider themselves as agents of changes through positive attitudes.

    The National Coordinator of Do It Right Foundation, Mr. Dixon Jubri, stated this during a briefing to unveil the Do It Right

    Jubril lamented that Nigeria is gradually sliding into a state of chaos and the citizens are becoming resentful of the government because of unmet expectations.

    He warned: “We may not have a nation in future if nothing is done to salvage the nation from the path of destruction”.

    Jubril argued: “As bad as it seems, there are still certain things that binds the nation together.

    “If we stand as a people who love Nigeria we would harness all the negative acts and turn it into good for the benefit of the generation yet unborn.”

    The Deputy National Coordinator of the Foundation and a human rights activist, Joe Barggie, opined that criticism cannot help any nation.

    “We have lost out for a very long time and the best time to start talking to ourselves is now,” he said.

  • Avoid greed, violence, cleric warns politicians

    The Anglican Bishop of Ekiti Diocese, Rt. Rev. Christopher Omotunde, has warned political office holders against greed and other excesses.

    Omotunde spoke at St. Andrews Anglican Church, Okeila, Ado-Ekiti, capital of the state over the weekend at the burial of late Chief Obayemi, a notable Ado-Ekiti indigene and member of the defunct National Party of Nigeria (NPN) in the second republic.

    Obayemi was the father of Hon. Fatima Rasaki, wife of General Raji Rasaki (Rtd.), former Military Governor of Lagos State.

    The cleric urged political leaders to observe limits in material acquisition, saying “life is a zero sum game, vanity upon vanity, all equals vanity.”

    He said: “What endure in life are legacies of selflessness, patriotism, and commitment to humanity in all regards.”

    He equally encouraged Nigerian leaders to eschew violence and unite for the peaceful progress and development of the country, adding “they should endure to forgive their perceived political opponents.

    According to the cleric: “politically motivated violence is a disturbing trend in the country today about which something urgent must be done.”

    Omotunde recalled the times of Chief Obayemi, the Baba Ijo of St. Andrews Anglican Church, Ado-Ekiti, stating that “he forgave all his political adversaries and eventually triumphed over them all. He died an immensely accomplished man at a ripe old age.”

    Omotunde further urged Nigerians to halt the unbridled struggle for money and other worldly objects, stating “no one takes anything away from this world. This is where it all ends.”

    Meanwhile, dignitaries from across Nigeria on Friday were in attendance at both the church service and reception which followed at Christ’s School in the capital to honour General Raji Rasaq and his wife, Fatima Rasaq.

    They included former military administrators of Ogun, Ondo and Ekiti States, Rear Admiral Joseph Olaseinde, Rear Admiral Abiodun Olukoya, Commodore Kayode Olofinmoyin and Navy Capt. Atanda Yusuf respectively.

    Others were the Aare Musulumi of Yorubaland, Alhaji Arisekola Alao; Ibadan High Chief, Akogun Lekan Alabi; Senior Chief Lateef Oyelade; and former Deputy Governor of Oyo State, Alhaji Hazeem Gbolarumi.