Tag: wonderful

  • ‘Super Eagles victory a wonderful Sallah gift for Nigeria’

    ‘Super Eagles victory a wonderful Sallah gift for Nigeria’

    The Deputy National Chairman (South) of the All Progressives Congress and former Governor of Ekiti State, Chief Segun Oni, has described the Super Eagles 4-0 mauling of the Indomitable Lions of Cameroon  as a wonderful Sallah gift to  Nigerians. He charged the team to go all out for victory in Yaounde tomorrow when the  teams meet again in their Group B African qualifying series for the 2018 World Cup in Russia.

    A statement issued by his spokesman, Mr. Steve Alabi, in Ado-Ekiti yesterday said  Oni congratulated the Mikel Obi-led Super Eagles for rekindling the hope of Nigerians in their fatherland with the unity of purpose and oneness displayed in the emphatic 4-0 victory over the current African champions.

    The APC chieftain commended President Muhamadu Buhari for his crucial fatherly support for the Super Eagles and other national teams which has seen Nigeria’s flag flying high in international sports in recent times.

    Also congratulating the national female basketball team, DTigress, who were crowned African champions last week, Chief Oni said the APC-led federal government will continue to accord sports development the priority and attention it deserves in the onerous task of nation building.

    Chief Oni acknowledged the strong influence sports exert on the strengthening of unity in the country and enjoined Nigerians to promote the nation’s unity in diversity so exemplified in the victories of the Eagles and DTigress in all spheres of national life.

    “When we are united and work together as the Eagles and other national teams do without dwelling on our differences, there is nothing that we cannot achieve as a nation,” Oni said.

    With the good and focused leadership provided by President Buhari under this APC government, Nigeria will soar higher, not only in sports but also in other aspects of human development, he added.

    Urging the Super Eagles to maintain their clean slate against Cameroon in the return leg, Oni advised other national teams to emulate the determination, industry and dedication exhibited by the Eagles and DTigress so as to achieve successes for Nigeria in their own competitions.

    The 2018 Ekiti State governorship hopeful, who will be 63 twenty-four hours after Monday’s crucial return leg, said the senior national team have already given him and other Nigerians celebrating their birthdays a most befitting birthday gift and looked forward to an icing on the cake with another victory and outright qualification for Russia 2018 on Monday.

  • Wonderful Willie

    Triumphalism is never in the character of Hardball so there is no attempt here to do a victory jig. On the other hand, putting thoughts (and even thoughtlessness) in perspective is his eternal calling and that is what is being re-enacted here now.

    0n Monday, August 24, in a piece titled “Whimsical Willie”, Hardball raised his voice about a deliberate attempt by Governor Willie Obiano of Anambra State to obliterate the modest accomplishments of his predecessor, Governor Peter Obi.

    To Hardball’s mere 500-word note, a certain Gov. Obiano’s man had released about 1500 words denying that Obi had not been denied any due credit. But of course keen readers would have seen that the rebuttal was akin to a man trying to beat his own shadow to pulp. It was self-laceration, to say the least, but in the liberal traditions of The Nation, the aide had his space and exhausted himself thoroughly. He had his keep to earn anyway.

    That was a month ago, Hardball gets all sorts and he merely takes them in his strides and keeps moving.  But one is happy to note today that Governor Obiano has confounded busybodies which include Hardball of course. He has also handed Hardball his due vindication.

    Speaking at a function described as stakeholders’ meeting in the state capital, Awka last week, Gov. Obiano was said to have showered praises on his predecessor, Obi, describing him as a great leader who laid solid foundation for the state.

    Regretting the feud that had brewed between them in the past 18 months, Obiano said Obi laid foundation for a great Anambra State.

    This, indeed, is the Hardball spirit. This is simply what was being canvassed all this while. It does not help to exert so much energy seeking to subvert and obliterate a predecessor. That is what a number of successors around here are wont to do today. As much as we would want to set the records straight, we must equally give credit and acknowledge people who have done their bit in serving the public.

    We refer particularly to leaders like Peter Obi and one or two former governors who were exemplary in making genuine efforts at lifting their people from the morass of underdevelopment. Obi did not only bring an especial comportment to the office of the governor, he exemplified prudence and judicious use of state funds.

    While most other governors were sinking their states six feet deep in debt, Obi never borrowed a dime for eight years. Instead he left a savings in the state’s kitty in excess of N75 billion. That is only worthy of commendation. For any successor to seek to undermine a feat such as this would be akin to self-damnation. That is not to say that we must not hold former leaders to account if we must; by all means let us do so but with decency and decorum.

    Hardball hereby commends Gov. Obiano for taking heed and backtracking. He is hereby re-christened Wonderful Willy. His aides like to call him working Willie, but Hardball will rather let time tell on that.

  • Some wonderful class narrative

    The democracy we declared has recoiled into a spent shadow. Sixteen years on in the grip of blood-drenched mascots, it steals from our sweetest fantasies like the proverbial slut making a surreptitious exit with her drunken lover’s wallet.

    Consequently, we suffer poverty in character that manifests as mean-spiritedness. It’s akin to that patience of the wild that holds motionless for endless hours the motorist at the police checkpoint, the kidnapper in his lair, the assassin in his ambuscade and the public officer on his perch – this patience belongs primarily to the predator while it hunts its prey.

    Oftentimes, it manifests in uncontrollable spasms that have seen us bury our best and elevate our worst in abject negation of the cycle of the universe and morality. But who needs morals in a nation where fair is foul and foul remains fair?

    As you read, many a Nigerian of commonplace roots live through each day without ever contemplating or criticizing their living conditions. They find themselves born into dehumanising squalor or somewhat indecent circumstances and they accept such sordidness as their fate thus exhibiting no conscious effort to better their lot beyond what their immediate circumstances dictate.

    Almost as impulsively as the beasts of the wild, they seek the satisfaction of the needs of the moment, without much forethought and consideration that by sufficient endeavor, they just might improve their living conditions. However, a certain percentage – comprising men and women of privilege – guided by personal ambition, consciously strive in thought and will to attain higher status but very few among these are concerned enough to secure for all, the advantages which they seek for themselves. This explains the number of self-centred and treacherous human rights activists, women’s rights activists, journalists and columnists parading our streets.

    Very few men are indeed capable of that humaneness that drives martyrs to persistently rebel against glaring social evils in the interest of less fortunate members of the society. But there exists a few however, that are truly bothered by the impoverishment of their fellow citizens regardless of any risk or discomfort it might attract to them personally.

    These few, driven by compassion tirelessly seek, first in thought and then in action, for some way of escape; some new system of society by which life may become richer, more joyful and devoid of avertable evils that mars the present. But surprisingly, such men oftentimes, fail to curry the support of the very victims of the injustices they wish to remedy.

    This is because more unfortunate sections of the Nigerian population are hopelessly ignorant, apathetic from excess of toil and disillusionment, apprehensive through the imminent danger of instantaneous chastisement by the holders of power, and morally defective owing to the loss of self-respect resulting from their degradation. To excite among such classes any conscious, deliberate effort in pursuit of general improvement of the status quo proves basically a hopeless task, as antecedents of such efforts have proven.

    Thus despite our claims to modernity, higher education, sophistication and relative rise in the standard of comfort among wage-earners in the country, the Nigerian society have failed woefully to achieve better living conditions and a better society even in the throes of rising demand for more radical intervention and reconstruction of the social order.

    It is no surprise however that the Nigerian working class has persistently proved a dismal failure. And the reasons are hardly far-fetched: Nigerians have a problem with differentiating between appropriate and inappropriate political behavior.  That is why the nation’s democratic experiment like any other system of governance practicable by us was doomed from the start.

    What exactly has democracy offered? A 4-1-9 progressive plan that booms circumspectly like it had been doctored as part of a cold-war era propagandist scheme? But despite our self-righteousness and persistent cynicism with the current order, we really cannot explore a more worthy alternative than what we have now. The average Nigerian can’t bear to be led by a truly honest, visionary and accountable leadership. That explains our choice of the incumbent leadership.

    Apparently, we possess an overwhelming and oft-convincing inclination to self-destruct thus our lack of a coherent and defensible political ideology essential to the evolution of a progressive leadership and state.

    The average Nigerian is no more electable than the leadership he endures yet he loves to speak truth to power even as he functions simultaneously to smother his own voice in the riotous gabble of his exultation of the same ruling class whose end he claims to pursue. No matter who is elected, the demographic and economic realities of Nigeria will persist, and there is a very limited range of politically-viable solutions for dealing with them.

    No man; be he a distinguished columnist, lawyer, soldier, or public officer in any office can command the tides of history. The few that appear to have done so–the Napoleon’s, Caesar’s, Hitler’s–were really nothing more than the most capable at making it appear that they command the tides, when in fact they were simply skimming along with them.

    Thus the need for the Nigerian working class to consciously evolve in thought and will in pursuit of a more balanced social order. Such conscious evolution could only be achieved by a re-orientation in scholarship and purification of thought and action.

    The foundations of scholarship and knowledge must be tirelessly reconstructed to guarantee more progressive responses to internal problems of social advance — problems of work and wages, of families and homes, of morals and the true value of life – and all these and other inevitable problems of civilization must be resolvable largely by an average member of the working class by reason of his exposure and constitution.

    This informs a greater need for study and thought and an appeal to the rich experience of past and current mistakes in the journey towards the reduction to the barest minimum, the possibility of future foibles. The answer to Nigeria’s widening income and social gap – which has so far manifested in preventable crises and persistent state of insecurity – is to found an educational process geared to steer successfully, the commonplace trains of thought away from the dilettante and the fool stereotype.

    It’s about time poor, struggling members of the nation’s working class learned to scorn the maxim that holds that if their stomachs be full, it matters little about their brains; the paths to stable peace and security winds between honest toil and dignified manhood. That proverbial better society that we seek calls for the guidance of skilled thinkers, the loving, reverent comradeship between the low income earners and ambitious middle class emancipated by training and culture.

    Such human elements would no doubt be conscious of the fact that not even the sustenance of oil subsidy, higher wages and a fairer economic system could protect its members from the usual handicaps and monstrosity constituted by the incumbent and predatory ruling class.

    Hence they would be able to understand that the much clamoured social enterprise and gesture towards change must be mooted and achieved by the working class itself in further substantiation of the working class’ capacities to assimilate the culture and refinement of humane civilization; a veritable step towards such reality is to vote the incumbent administration out of office

    • To be continued…
  • Double celebration for ‘wonderful’ principal

    A double celebration it was for Mr Rasheed Oyeyinka Adesina, the retired Principal of Igbo-Owu Senior Secondary School, in Lagos. A send-off party and 60th birthday bash were held for him on the school premises. OLATUNDE ODEBIYI writes.

    For the retired Principal of Igbo-Owu Senior Secondary School in Mushin, Lagos, Mr Rasheed Oyeyinka Adesina, it was a double celebration. He celebrated his last day in office as the Principal of the school and also marked his 60th birthday on the school premises on February 21.

    Before noon, students, teaching and non-teaching staff of the schoo were waiting for the arrival of Adesina.

    Tents were erected in the school compound and decorated in gold and brown. White plastic chairs were set round tables.

    Some members of staff and students stood on the left and right sides from the school gate to the tents to receive the celebrator.

    The students wore their uniform while the members of staff were in uniformed brown Ankara with gold head gear/cap. Most of the guests wore traditional attire. Some members of the school’s old students association were also there.

    The event started at the entry of the retiree and his wife, Abisola. They wore blue traditional attire.

    He came in with his entourage amid songs supplied by Booms and Pops D.J.

    He and his wife greeted guests and hugged some as they moved through the tents to their seats.

    After the national and school anthems were taken, the Chairman, organising committee for the retirement/send-off party, Mr Idowu Akinbile, welcomed guests.

    He thanked the students, staff of the school, old students, friends and family members for coming to share in the joy of Adesina.

    Akinbile said Adesina managed the school like a private school.

    “He has given the school a new lift since he became the principal. Many new things happened during his tenure, including provision of I.C.T. facilities, modern laboratories, sizeable classrooms, excellent S.S.C.E, results, disciplined students and a new block of 18 classrooms to mention a few,” he said.

    Mr Abdul Raheem Sayi, a lawyer, took to the microphone.

    He urged everyone to hold on to Allah and put their total trust in him. He told them to understand the purpose for which Allah created them, adding, Allah is so great that He does not need assistance from any body.

    Prayers were said for the retiree. The event continued with a dance performance by a cultural group.

    The dancers wore uniformed attire with traditional beads and had horse tail in their right hand. They sang Yoruba songs. The retiree joined them, dancing and spraying money.

    Guests later presented gifts to Adesina and his birthday cake was cut. He was assisted by his wife and other guests. Guests took turns to take photographs with him.

    Adesina took to the microphone singing a song O ye ki a dupe.

    He thanked God for the day. He also thanked the staff and students for making his tenure a successful one.

    “When I first came to this school, it was a school of all sorts. But I thank God I made it through,” he said.

    The Vice Principal (Academics) of the school, Mrs Bolanle Olufowobi, described Adesina as a disciplinarian, goal setter and goal achiever.

    “Some people may see him as too strict, some people may see him as too rigid but none will say he is wicked. He only has zero tolerance to laziness and indiscipline,” she said.

    Mrs Olufowobi wished him long life with good health.

    The daughter of the retiree, Mrs Lola Fagbemi, thanked her daddy for showing his children the right ways.

    “You are the best dad in the whole world and we are proud of you. If we can be half of the person you are, we would consider ourselves to be extra-ordinary human beings,” she said.

    President, Ijebu Mushin College Old Students Association (IMCOSA) Club 71, Prof Omooba ‘Lasun Gbadamosi, described the retiree as a matured individual who interacts with everybody, not minding the age difference.

    “He is sociable and easygoing gentleman; always considerate in his dealings with people,” he said.

    Ambassador Alu Akinola, for Igbo Owu Senior Secondary School Alumni ’99 (IOSSA ’99), thanked Mr Adesina for his contributions to the school, adding that the legacy he left would not be erased.

     

     

     

  • He was wonderful, says widow

    He was wonderful, says widow

    Florence, widow of the late Dr. Olusola Saraki, yesterday described him as a wonderful man.

    She said: “I have to thank God for everything. He was a very wonderful man. I can never forget him. He was a good father, a good husband and he was very good to his people. He was a nice man. I pray that Almighty God would grant him eternal rest.”

    Daughter Mrs. Tope Edu said: “He was a loving man, nice, generous. I pray that God will grant him eternal rest.

    “I will miss his kindness and his warmth and his affection. He was a very affectionate father. I will miss his generousity and love he had for everybody.”

    Frontline businessman Chief Adekunle Ojora, the late Saraki’s in-law, described his death as “a tragedy at this time when we still need very much of his contributions. But we thank God for his life and his legacy.

    “All of us that were close to him would ensure that his legacy is preserved. May his soul rest in peace. Baba made his mark. You can see the thunderous crowd. That shows his contributions to Kwara State.”