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2 — SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021<br />

Osinbajo, Osoba, Amuka, others fete late<br />

media icons<br />

*VP tasks journalists on fake news, deepening democracy, keeping govt on its toes<br />

*Says you fought colonial masters, military rule, you’ve to deepen democracy<br />

By Clifford Ndujihe,<br />

Politics Editor<br />

VICE President Yemi<br />

Osinbajo,SAN;<br />

former Governor of Ogun<br />

State, Chief Olusegun<br />

Osoba; Publisher of Vanguard<br />

Newspapers, Mr.<br />

Sam Amuka; and a cream<br />

of captains of the media<br />

industry, yesterday, celebrated<br />

nine media icons,<br />

who passed on, recently.<br />

Showering torrents of<br />

tributes on the deceased<br />

icons, the vice president<br />

and the leaders said the<br />

late media pillars charted<br />

a course that journalists<br />

must thread to turn the fortunes<br />

of the country<br />

around.<br />

Specifically, Osinbajo,<br />

who delivered the keynote<br />

address, noted that the<br />

media fought for independence,<br />

and against<br />

military rule, adding that<br />

now that Nigeria is at a<br />

defining moment, the<br />

mainstream media must<br />

fight fake news, keep<br />

elected leaders on their<br />

toes and deepen democracy.<br />

Indeed, the seven<br />

months period, July 2020<br />

to February 2021, can be<br />

described as the worst in<br />

the history of Nigeria’s<br />

media industry. It was<br />

when journalism lost nine<br />

icons, pillars, leaders and<br />

mentors, a set back that<br />

threw the industry into<br />

deep mourning.<br />

However, in unison, the<br />

media industry, yesterday,<br />

elected to turn the losses<br />

to gains when at an afternoon<br />

of tributes at the<br />

MUSON Centre, Lagos,<br />

it honoured, and celebrated<br />

the life and times of the<br />

departed leaders with the<br />

aim of inspiring the living.<br />

Reason: The nine media<br />

leaders, proprietors,<br />

editors, administrators<br />

and journalists were ‘’people<br />

who shaped the narrative<br />

of who we are and<br />

what we stand for.<br />

Through joyful and stressful<br />

times, they set the tone<br />

and chose the words that<br />

interpreted the Zeitgeist<br />

of an emerging nation<br />

and put perspectives to<br />

our diversity and uniqueness<br />

as a people.’’<br />

Organised by the Nigeria<br />

Press Organisation,<br />

NPO, consisting of the<br />

Newspaper Proprietors<br />

Association of Nigeria,<br />

NPAN; Nigerian Guild of<br />

Editors, NGE; Nigeria<br />

Union of Journalists, NUJ;<br />

and Broadcasting Organisations<br />

of Nigeria, BON,<br />

the icons celebrated yesterday<br />

included pioneer<br />

President of NPAN and<br />

former governor of Lagos<br />

State, Alhaji Lateef Jakande;<br />

former Life Patron<br />

of NPAN, Malam Ismaila<br />

Isa Funtua; former Minister<br />

of Information and<br />

Culture, Mr. Tony Momoh;<br />

and former Publisher<br />

of New Nation and<br />

Sunday Times Editor,<br />

From left:Publisher, Thisday Media Group, Prince Nduka Obaigbena;<br />

Lagos State Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu; Chairman, Niger State Council<br />

of Traditional Rulers, HRM, Dr. Yahaya Abubakar; former Governor<br />

of Ogun State,Aremo Olusegun Osoba at the celebration of nine media<br />

icons who passed on,recently in Lagos.<br />

Chief Gbolabo Ogunsanwo.<br />

Others were former Director-General,<br />

Federal<br />

Radio Corporation of Nigeria,<br />

FRCN, Mr. Ben<br />

Egbuna; former Publisher,<br />

Leadership Newspapers,<br />

Mr. Sam Nda-Isaiah;<br />

former General Manager,<br />

Lagos State Broadcasting<br />

Corporation, Mr.<br />

Bisi Lawrence; former<br />

Editor, Daily Express, Mr.<br />

Eddie Aderinokun; and<br />

past NGE President and<br />

former MD/Chairman,<br />

News Agency of Nigeria,<br />

NAN, Malam Wada Maida.<br />

Malam Ismaila Isa Funtua<br />

died on July 20, 2020.<br />

He was followed by Wada<br />

Maida on August 17,<br />

2020; Bisi Lawrence (November<br />

11, 2020), Gbolabo<br />

Ogunsanwo (November<br />

27, 2020), Sam Nda-<br />

Isaiah (December 11,<br />

2020), Eddie Aderinokun<br />

(January 3, 2021), Ben<br />

Egbuna (January 28,<br />

2021), Tony Momoh (February<br />

10, 2021) and Lateef<br />

Jakande (February 11,<br />

2021).<br />

They lived impactful<br />

lives – Yusuf<br />

President of the NPO,<br />

Malam Kabiru Yusuf,<br />

opened the flood gates of<br />

eulogies. In his welcome<br />

remarks, he said the media<br />

industry had mourned<br />

the nine deceased it was<br />

now time to celebrate them<br />

because each of the nine<br />

men lived an impactful<br />

life in their families, the<br />

people they mentored and<br />

the institutions they led.<br />

Reeling out the crucial<br />

roles each of them played,<br />

he said: ‘’We don’t look at<br />

them in past tense but in<br />

present tense,’’ adding<br />

that it would be hard to<br />

find another journalist like<br />

Alhaji Jakande.<br />

Henceforth we ‘ll<br />

celebrate ourselves<br />

while alive – Isah<br />

President of the NGE,<br />

Mr Mustapha Isah, said<br />

all those being celebrated<br />

were connected to the<br />

NGE as president, fellow<br />

or promoter and their legacies<br />

‘’will inspire us to<br />

overcome various challenges.’’<br />

According to him, Jakande<br />

was governor for<br />

four years but 38 years after,<br />

he remained a reference<br />

point for good governance;<br />

Ben Egbuna was a thorough<br />

bred professional in<br />

broadcast industry; and<br />

Tony Momoh was one of the<br />

best Information Ministers<br />

Nigeria has ever produced.<br />

Going forward, he said<br />

the media should celebrate<br />

its own while alive not after<br />

their death. ‘’Henceforth we<br />

must celebrate our own<br />

while alive, perhaps on<br />

their birthdays.’’<br />

It’s sad media ignores its<br />

own often – Adefaye<br />

Speaking in like manner,<br />

General Manage/Editorin-Chief<br />

of Vanguard, and<br />

Provost of the Nigerian Institute<br />

of Journalism, NIJ,<br />

Mr Gbenga Adefaye, lamented<br />

that the media often<br />

times ignores its own,<br />

and thanked the NPO for<br />

the event.<br />

His words: ‘’It is not often<br />

that the media celebrates its<br />

own—dead or alive. In fact,<br />

the media, more often than<br />

not, ignores itself for too<br />

long, despite its humongous<br />

contributions to<br />

national development, despite<br />

the risks taken to discharge<br />

constitutional duties<br />

assigned it in a very difficult<br />

operating environment.<br />

‘’We can only thank the<br />

NPO for putting up this remembrance<br />

which is<br />

unique for drawing attention<br />

to the lives and times<br />

of our revered but departed<br />

media icons; drawing attention<br />

to their immense<br />

contributions to media and<br />

national development.<br />

Those, truly, were our icons.<br />

This moment inspires.<br />

‘’For us at NIJ, the honorees<br />

were either our primary<br />

promoters or great<br />

alumni. Their aspirations<br />

were that we produced<br />

greater and better media<br />

players of the future. And<br />

to that we are committed.<br />

We have their examples to<br />

look up to in the discharge<br />

of our duties.<br />

This event naturally<br />

draws our attention to perhaps<br />

an important branch<br />

of knowledge that we<br />

should actively develop:<br />

studies of the life and times<br />

of media leaders, perhaps<br />

while they are alive.<br />

‘’Thank you NPO for<br />

lighting the candle. Thank<br />

you NPAN in particular—<br />

our patrons and principal<br />

owners of the NIJ. May we<br />

have a memorable outing.<br />

Funtua, a blessing to<br />

Nigeria Media—Sam<br />

Amuka<br />

Mr Sam Amuka, in a tribute<br />

to Malam Ismaila Isa<br />

Funtua, which was read by<br />

Mr. Adefaye, said: ‘’Out of<br />

Nigeria’s more than 200<br />

million population, none<br />

has suffered such debasement,<br />

indeed, bastardisation<br />

by peddled false news<br />

online as my friend and late<br />

brother, 78 years old Alhaji<br />

Ismaila Isa Funtua, patron<br />

of NPAN, president of the<br />

NIJ and Chairman of Bullet<br />

Construction Ltd.<br />

‘’Because, many people<br />

believe Ismaila was a member<br />

of the Cabal (which he<br />

accepted and was glad to<br />

be—indeed—he would<br />

say, often in joke, ‘Look, I’m<br />

not a member of the Cabal,<br />

I am the Cabal’ which is<br />

true.<br />

‘’The conventional definition<br />

of Cabal elsewhere is<br />

Kitchen Cabinet and every<br />

political ruler has one; but<br />

Buhari’s Kitchen Cabinet is<br />

called Cabal—Negatively<br />

because of disapproval of<br />

his style.<br />

‘’And so; many fake news<br />

reports are peddled online<br />

about Ismaila, being a Cabal<br />

as a corrupt businessman.<br />

And because Online<br />

readers swallow fake news<br />

hook, line and sinker, they<br />

castigate the victim totally.<br />

This pre conceived bias has<br />

damaged Ismaila Isa’s reputation<br />

and denigrated his<br />

hard work career both as a<br />

business construction mogul,<br />

and minder and mender<br />

of successful Nigerian<br />

media organizations. The<br />

result is that many outsiders<br />

dared to question and<br />

query the NPAN for naming<br />

the newly reconstructed<br />

three-storey NIJ House<br />

in Victoria Island after Ismailia<br />

Isa Funtua.<br />

‘’Let me use this occasion<br />

to state very briefly that my<br />

friend, Ismaila Isa Funtua,<br />

one of those we are celebrating<br />

today was a very big and<br />

successful businessman<br />

long before our President<br />

Buhari came to power and<br />

Ismaila became a Cabal in<br />

2015. His coy, Bullet Construction<br />

Ltd built the Foreign<br />

Affairs Building in<br />

Abuja and the Justice Building<br />

beside the Secretariat<br />

among others. The American<br />

Embassy, Abuja was<br />

once his tenant besides<br />

many other buildings. Ismaila<br />

spent his life servicing<br />

other people’s lives and<br />

organizations. For example,<br />

my drivers, cook and stewards<br />

used to look forward to<br />

his visit.<br />

‘’He was a blessing to the<br />

Nigerian Media. Besides<br />

serving the NIJ of which he<br />

was President, Ismaila used<br />

his influence to raise the<br />

funds to rebuild the New<br />

NIJ House in Victoria Island<br />

at no cost to NIJ.<br />

‘’Thank you, dear Ismaila,<br />

I miss you and look forward<br />

to meeting you sometime<br />

again. Yonder!’’<br />

Obaigbena, Akiotu,<br />

Bonuola, Ishiekwene,<br />

Idowu, Momoh, Ekpu<br />

speak<br />

At the event, Prince Nduka<br />

Obaigbena, publisher of<br />

Thisday, paid glowing tributes<br />

to Mallam Wada Maida,<br />

a past president of NGE<br />

and former chief press secretary<br />

to General Muhammadu<br />

Buhari as head of<br />

state in the 80s.<br />

Mr Tony Akiotu, managing<br />

director of Daar Communications,<br />

showered tributes<br />

on Mr Bisi Lawrence;<br />

Mr Lade Bonuola, Consultant<br />

to The Guardian<br />

newspapers,spoke on Chief<br />

Gbolabo Ogunsanwo; Mr<br />

Azubuike Ishiekwene, editor-in-chief,<br />

Leadership, eulogised<br />

Mr Sam Nda-Isaiah;<br />

Mr Lanre Idowu, CEO<br />

of Diamond Publications,<br />

spoke on the legacies of Mr<br />

Eddie Aderinokun; Mr<br />

John Momoh, chairman of<br />

Channels television, eulogised<br />

Mr. Ben Egbuna<br />

while Mr. Ray Ekpu, director<br />

May Five Media, spoke<br />

glowingly on the footprints<br />

of Prince Tony Momoh.<br />

Jakande was grandfather<br />

of Nigeria’s journalism—Osoba<br />

Chief Osoba, in his tributes<br />

to Jakande, lamented<br />

that Jakande’s humongous<br />

contributions to the development<br />

of journalism and<br />

the media industry have not<br />

been documented.<br />

Arguing that Jakande’s<br />

contributions to journalism<br />

were ‘’higher’’ than his contributions<br />

to good governance,<br />

Osoba begged the<br />

late politician’s widow, Alhaja<br />

Abimbola Jakande, to<br />

make Jakande’s huge library<br />

open to researchers to<br />

unravel the story behind the<br />

formation of NPAN, NGE,<br />

NPO, and others.<br />

‘’Jakande was first in<br />

many areas of journalism.<br />

He was first editor of Tribune,<br />

first president of<br />

NPAN, first president of<br />

NGE, first president of NPO.<br />

I am begging Mama to open<br />

Jakande’s library for the story<br />

of the Fourth Estate of the<br />

Realm in Nigeria to be written.<br />

Alhaji Jakande was the<br />

grandfather of Nigeria’s<br />

journlism,’’ he said.<br />

Media can’t afford to<br />

get it wrong—Osinbajo<br />

Osinbajo, who was the last<br />

to speak recalled that Nigeria’s<br />

press dates back to 150<br />

years ago, and recalled the<br />

roles played by late Dr<br />

Nnamdi Azikiwe, Chief<br />

Obafemi Awolowo, Herbert<br />

Macauley, Mr Ernest Ikoli in<br />

the battle for independence.<br />

He also articulated the contributions<br />

of the nine titans<br />

being celebrated, saying that<br />

the democracy we have today<br />

were as a result of the<br />

sacrifices of the media.<br />

Arguing that power is a<br />

public trust, he said the media<br />

must investigate and hold<br />

those in power accountable<br />

because the Media is the<br />

Fourth Estate of the Realm<br />

and no other institution<br />

comes close to the Media in<br />

the task of holding governments<br />

to account.<br />

Harping on the dangers of<br />

fake news and the need to<br />

check them, he said Nigeria<br />

is at another defining moment<br />

in history as information<br />

revolution has democratised<br />

media ownership and<br />

everyone now has a voice.<br />

Some of the disadvantages<br />

of the information revolution,<br />

he said include the<br />

emergence of individuals<br />

that cannot be easily held to<br />

account and surge of fake<br />

news that cause social instability.<br />

He urged mainstream media<br />

to help check the menace<br />

of fake news. He noted<br />

that the country is not perfect<br />

but amplifying issues that<br />

can cause disruption or anarchy<br />

was not the solution.<br />

Noting that nation building<br />

is not the preserve of government<br />

and politicians<br />

alone, he said the media and<br />

civil society have critical roles<br />

to play and enjoined the<br />

Media to take ownership of<br />

the country.<br />

Notable leaders at the<br />

event include governors Babajide<br />

Sanwo-Olu (Lagos)<br />

and Kayode Fayemi (Ekiti),<br />

Deputy Governor of Ogun<br />

State, Noimot Salako-<br />

Oyedele, former Deputy<br />

Governor of Lagos, Alhaja<br />

Sinatu Ojikutu, and Etsu<br />

Nupe, Dr Yahaya Abubakar.<br />

Media icons and captains<br />

of industry at the ceremony<br />

included Maiden Ibru (The<br />

Guardian), Ajibola Ogunsola<br />

(Punch), Frank Aigbogun<br />

(Business Day), Mr. Eniola<br />

Bello (This Day), Mr Muyiwa<br />

Adetiba (former Editor of<br />

Vanguard), Mr Toye Akiyode<br />

(former Editor of Vanguard),<br />

Dr Patrick Dele-Cole<br />

as well as leaders of NPO,<br />

NPAN, NGE, BON and<br />

NUJ.<br />

Family members of the<br />

media icons being celebrated<br />

were at hand to receive<br />

awards for their patriarchs<br />

They include Alhaja Abimbola<br />

Jakande, Mrs Zainab<br />

Nda-Isaiah, who gave a vote<br />

of thanks, Mrs Abiola Aderinokun,<br />

Mrs Betty Egbuna,<br />

Mr. Bayo Ogunsanwo, Mr.<br />

Abdulrasheed Momoh,<br />

Hajia Wada Maida, and Mrs<br />

Omowunmi Lawrence.


An afternoon of tributes for departed media leaders<br />

SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021 — 3<br />

Afternoon of Tributes for Departed Media Leaders organized by NPAN,NGE,NUJ,BON held<br />

in Lagos yesterday.<br />

Photos:Akeem Salau and Lamidi Bamidele<br />

Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo (third right) presents awards to the family of<br />

late Alhaji Lateef Jakande being received by his wife, Alhaja Abimbola Jakande<br />

(second left) and the son, while Lagos State Governor Babajide Sanwo-<br />

Olu (second right); Deputy Governor of Ogun State, Mrs. Noimot Salako-Oyedele<br />

(right) and Governor of Ekiti State, Dr. Kayode Fayemi (third<br />

left), watch on, during ‘an Afternoon of Tributes’ in honour of fallen media<br />

leaders, at the Muson centre, Onikan, Lagos, yesterday.<br />

From left: Aremo Olusegun Osoba, former governor of Ogun State; Dr<br />

Kayode Fayemi,Gov of Ekiti State; Prof Yemi Osinbajo,Vice president of<br />

Nigeria; Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu of Lagos State; Mrs Noimot Salako-<br />

Oyedele, Deputy Governor of Ogun State and Malam Kabiru Yusuf, President<br />

Nigerian Press Organization & Newspaper Proprietors Association of<br />

Nigeria.<br />

Mr Steve Ayorinde(l),former Commissioner for Information and<br />

Strategy, Lagos State and Mr Moses Jolayemi.<br />

From left:Mr Jim Ovia, Chairman, Zenith Bank Plc and Prince<br />

Nduka Obaigbena, Publisher Thisday Newspaper.<br />

From left:Dr Adeboye Olarenwaju; Alhaja Abimbola<br />

Jakande; Alhaja Sinatu ojikutu,former Deputy<br />

Governor of Lagos State and Deji Jakande.<br />

From left:Mr Adeleye Ajayi, Chairman, Lagos<br />

NUJ; Mr Ken Ugbechie, Publisher/Editorin-Chief,<br />

Political Economist;Mr Eze<br />

Anaba,Editor, Vanguard Newspaper;Mr Gbenga<br />

Adefaye,GM/Editor-in-Chief, Vanguard/<br />

Provost,NIJ;Mr Oluwadare Kolawole, Deputy<br />

Director,Socio Economic Right and Accountability<br />

(SERAP).<br />

From left; Mr Kayode Komolafe, Deputy Managing<br />

Director, Thisday Newspaper;Mr Lanre Arogundade,<br />

former NUJ chairman and Mr Martins<br />

Oloja,Editor-in-Chief,Guardian Newspaper.<br />

From left:Patrick Dele Cole and Lade Bonuola<br />

From left:Mr Fidelis Anosike, Publisher Daily<br />

Times; Mr Frank Aigbogun, Publisher, Business-<br />

Day Newspaper and Prof Ralph Akinfeleye.<br />

From left:Mr Eniola Bello, Managing<br />

Director,Thisday;Steve Nwosu and Mr Gbemiga<br />

Ogunleye,former NIJ Provost.<br />

From left:Mrs Dupe Ajayi and Mrs Funke Egbemode,<br />

Commissioner for Information and Strategy<br />

Osun State<br />

From left:Zainab<br />

Nda-Isaiah, Leadership<br />

Group and lady<br />

maiden Ibru, Publisher,<br />

the Guardian<br />

Newspaper.


4 — SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021<br />

Imo APC registration battle: Without me and<br />

Araraume nothing like APC — Okorocha<br />

By Chinonso Alozie,<br />

Owerri<br />

The former governor<br />

of Imo state and the<br />

Senator representing Imo<br />

West senatorial district,<br />

Rochas Okorocha, yesterday<br />

said that without him<br />

(Okorocha) and Senator<br />

Ifeanyi Araraume nobody<br />

can talk of the All<br />

Progressives Congress,<br />

APC, in Imo state.<br />

Okorocha spoke in Owerri,<br />

through his Special<br />

Adviser on media, Sam<br />

Onwuemeodo, while reacting<br />

to the Imo state governor,<br />

Hope Uzodimma’s<br />

statement that Okorocha<br />

has refused to participate<br />

in the APC registration/revalidation<br />

exercise in the<br />

state.<br />

Senator Okorocha said<br />

that himself and<br />

Araraume, were the ones<br />

making APC, thick in the<br />

state.<br />

According to Okorocha,<br />

“the media had reported<br />

what the Imo State Governor,<br />

His Excellency, Chief<br />

Hope Uzodinma told the<br />

APC’s appeal Committee,<br />

on the Party’s Registration<br />

and Revalidation exercise.<br />

He said that, Senator Okorocha<br />

refused to be registered<br />

as APC member in<br />

Imo during the exercise.<br />

“This claim could only<br />

be laughable to most Nigerians<br />

who still remember<br />

how APC came to Imo<br />

and indeed, to the South-<br />

East. Okorocha needed to<br />

revalidate his membership<br />

of APC and not to register<br />

as APC member. Governor<br />

Uzodinma has always delighted<br />

in propaganda that<br />

does not fly again.<br />

“The registration and<br />

revalidation exercise<br />

didn’t take place anywhere<br />

in Imo. It was done at the<br />

Nick Banquet Hall in Government<br />

House, Owerri.<br />

The governor’s appointees<br />

were generating fictitious<br />

names at the Local Government<br />

level and taken<br />

them to the Government<br />

House, to be enrolled.<br />

“We Challenge the governor<br />

to tell the public how<br />

the exercise was carried<br />

out in Imo. Whether it was<br />

by Polling unit by Polling<br />

unit, like Okorocha did<br />

when APC anchored. Or,<br />

Ward by Ward or by Local<br />

Government by Local Government.<br />

And let’s take off<br />

from there.<br />

“If Okorocha had refused<br />

to be registered like<br />

our governor had claimed,<br />

what happened to Senator<br />

Ifeanyi Araraume and his<br />

Destiny Political family,<br />

who produced six House<br />

of Assembly members, that<br />

joined others to give Governor<br />

Uzodinma the Majority<br />

in the House?”<br />

“What happened to top<br />

Imo Politicians in APC and<br />

their supporters who could<br />

not go to the Government<br />

House to be part of the abracadabra,<br />

including Sir<br />

Jude Ejiogu, Lady Chidinma<br />

Uwajumogu, who was<br />

a senatorial aspirant and<br />

a mobilizer of note, High<br />

Chief Chidi Ibeh (MFR)<br />

and so on?<br />

Group commends Onuesoke’s consistent<br />

support for PDP<br />

A<br />

group under the ae<br />

gis of PDP Youths<br />

Across States’ Border<br />

(PYSB) has commended<br />

Peoples Democratic Party<br />

(PDP) chieftain and former<br />

Delta State gubernatorial<br />

aspirant, Chief Sunny<br />

Onuesoke for his consistent<br />

support for the growth<br />

and development of the<br />

party in Delta state, South-<br />

South and Nigeria in general.<br />

They equally appealed to<br />

the party to elevate<br />

Onuesoke to a position<br />

where he could be empowered<br />

strategically to further<br />

pursue the growth<br />

and development of the<br />

party.<br />

The group made the<br />

commendation and demand<br />

in a communiqué<br />

signed by its National<br />

President, Mallam Yahaya<br />

Usman and National Secretary,<br />

Joseph Osadolor<br />

after a meeting<br />

in Abuja saying whatever<br />

support that is given to<br />

Onuesoke will act as a<br />

morale booster for others<br />

to work harder for the<br />

progress and development<br />

of the party.<br />

“If loyalists like Onuesoke<br />

and others were rewarded<br />

for their action<br />

towards the development<br />

of the party, it will act as a<br />

morale booster for other<br />

members to work harder.<br />

Although, we have not met<br />

Onuesoke one on one, but his<br />

activities through the media<br />

had made him a household<br />

name not only among us<br />

but other PDP and even APC<br />

members across the nation.<br />

“There is no day one<br />

opens the national newspapers<br />

or internet that one<br />

will not read about Onuesoke<br />

defending the interest<br />

of the party. We guess he<br />

must have been consistently<br />

spending his own money for<br />

the benefit of the party. If<br />

such a person is empowered<br />

he will do more for the good<br />

of the party,” the communiqué<br />

read.<br />

We are raising African<br />

Leopards to redefine<br />

continent — Ooni<br />

By Shina Abubakar, Osogbo<br />

Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Ogunwusi has<br />

disclosed that his leadership initiative<br />

forum is raising new sets of leaders, tagged<br />

“African Leopards” to turn the fortune of the<br />

continent around.<br />

Oba Ogunwusi, who spoke at a press conference<br />

at his palace in Ile-Ife to herald the<br />

2021 Royal African Young Leadership Forum<br />

Award, said the new generation of leaders<br />

would imitate the Asian Lions that transformed<br />

the continent’s economic prosperity.<br />

He said the forum is bringing together various<br />

youths that have excelled in their fields<br />

of endeavour to cross fertilize ideas with<br />

emerging young leaders and mentor them for<br />

larger role in the society.<br />

“At RAYLF we believe in helping youths break<br />

barriers, either of age for those seeking employment<br />

or social status, we connect youths<br />

across the continent to discuss leadership challenges<br />

and proffer solutions.<br />

“Out of the many youths that applied for the<br />

programme only one hundred were chosen and<br />

taken around different leaders across Africa<br />

for mentorship programme. The selection process<br />

was thorough and was conducted by prominent<br />

scholars and industrial magnate”, he<br />

said.<br />

The monarch added that the 2021 programme<br />

will take off from tomorrow, Saturday and last<br />

through the next two weeks, adding that the<br />

new emerging leaders would be corrupt-free<br />

and instill new societal values in the coming<br />

generation.<br />

“We don’t encourage internet fraudsters in<br />

our midst, we raise leaders with discipline that<br />

would be corrupt free, that would build a society<br />

with morals and values, not those agitating<br />

wrongly but leaders with conscience”,<br />

he added<br />

The Nigerian Labour Congress and its continued relevance<br />

By Emmanuel Ado<br />

“The only way that we can<br />

live, is if we grow. The only<br />

way that we can grow is if<br />

we change. The only way<br />

that we can change is if we<br />

learn. The only way we can<br />

learn is if we are exposed.<br />

And the only way that we<br />

can become exposed is if we<br />

throw ourselves out into<br />

the open. Do it. Throw<br />

yourself -Joy Bell C.<br />

Benard Longe, the former<br />

managing director and<br />

chief executive officer of<br />

First Bank of Nigeria, was<br />

hated by the Nigerian<br />

Labour Congress (NLC)<br />

over the reforms he<br />

initiated in the bank, which<br />

at the time he took over was<br />

literally speaking dead.<br />

With an aging workforce<br />

that was very comfortable,<br />

that in fact celebrated<br />

archaic banking as a way<br />

of life, a workforce that<br />

preferred the tally number<br />

system that kept its<br />

customers the whole day in<br />

the bank, a workforce that<br />

bluntly refused to embrace<br />

technology that made life<br />

easy. The reforms no doubt<br />

transformed First Bank and<br />

ensured that it remains to<br />

date one of the strongest<br />

banks. Young vibrant<br />

graduates were brought in<br />

and the bank embraced<br />

technology, becoming in<br />

the process the first bank to<br />

introduce and implement<br />

International Monetary<br />

Transfer System in Nigeria.<br />

Longe’s Enterprise<br />

Transformation Project,<br />

“Century II” and the<br />

“Century II The New<br />

Frontier” project were no<br />

doubt a huge factor in<br />

defining the fortunes of the<br />

Bank. He was undoubtedly<br />

bold and decisive, but<br />

“wicked and heartless” from<br />

Labour’s point of view.<br />

Like Longe, Nasir El Rufai<br />

the governor of Kaduna<br />

State is in the bad books of<br />

the NLC. The Congress surly<br />

hates Nasir El Rufai’s guts<br />

for embarking on critical<br />

reforms – the Public Service<br />

Revitalization Programme<br />

and the reforms of the<br />

educational sector,<br />

especially the competency<br />

test which many of the<br />

teachers flunked. To the NLC<br />

the reforms are “antipeople”<br />

and a high crime –<br />

treason – against their hard<br />

working members. Labour<br />

is not convinced that the<br />

reforms are compelling, nor<br />

urgent. It is an open secret<br />

that Kaduna State the<br />

regional capital of the old<br />

Northern Region is lagging<br />

behind other states in<br />

virtually every area – the<br />

worst being in the areas of<br />

education and healthcare.<br />

But there seems to be a tiny<br />

minority that is clearly<br />

contented with the state’s<br />

consistent 44% performance<br />

in national examinations<br />

over the years. Kaduna State<br />

has firmly held on to the 12th<br />

position nationally, though<br />

it remains a local champion<br />

in the north. Is it that it would<br />

rather compete against<br />

Zamfara State which<br />

presented 186 candidates<br />

for the 2017 National<br />

Examinations out of which<br />

only 4 students passed with<br />

5 credits, than compete<br />

against Anambra State that<br />

is presently topping the table.<br />

Every organization,<br />

entity, or even individual who<br />

refuses or fails to reform and<br />

change will definitely<br />

become irrelevant with time,<br />

locked into the past in a<br />

dynamic world where the<br />

only consistent is change.<br />

The NLC itself recognizes<br />

this fact and I quote it’s take<br />

on reforms “The New<br />

Beginning is a decisive<br />

response to the imperative<br />

of rebuilding the movement<br />

in a direction that makes it<br />

more relevant to union<br />

members and other<br />

segments of civil society,<br />

which believe in its<br />

empowering and socially<br />

redemptive vision and<br />

capacity”. So if Labour is<br />

mindful of the need to<br />

reform, why is protesting<br />

just about every policy of<br />

government its way of life?<br />

This is especially so when<br />

the outcomes of its various<br />

protests have been near<br />

negative. For instance, the<br />

revelation by the Group<br />

Managing Director of the<br />

Nigerian National<br />

P e t r o l e u m<br />

Corporation(NNPC), that<br />

the Muhammadu Buhari<br />

administration is secretly<br />

paying subsidy on imported<br />

How can the<br />

NLC demonstrate<br />

against these<br />

numbers – 83% of<br />

teachers scoring<br />

less than 25% in<br />

maths and literacy<br />

and primary two<br />

pupils averaging<br />

14% in English<br />

and 27% in Maths<br />

fuel calls for a public<br />

apology from the NLC,<br />

which had mobilized<br />

Nigerians against the<br />

Jonathan Goodluck<br />

administration over its<br />

decision to remove the<br />

subsidy. Labour should<br />

acknowledge that it has<br />

gotten it wrong severally,<br />

and that acknowledgement<br />

will help it moving forward.<br />

Are the protests like that of<br />

Kaduna meant to remind<br />

Nigerians that it is still in<br />

existence?<br />

If there was one policy<br />

the NLC should have<br />

handled with some tact, it<br />

is that of the Kaduna State<br />

Teachers who woefully<br />

failed the competency test<br />

administered on them by a<br />

committee that included<br />

members of the Nigerian<br />

Union Teachers (NUT), and<br />

the Teachers Registration<br />

Council of Nigeria(TRCN).<br />

The question that the<br />

committee ought not to<br />

have administered it and the<br />

high cut-off point that the<br />

NLC is holding onto in<br />

protesting<br />

the<br />

disengagement shows the<br />

congress as lacking in<br />

elementary shame. The NLC<br />

should be scandalized<br />

rather than defending<br />

what is clearly indefensible,<br />

thereby rubbishing<br />

whatever is left of its<br />

reputation. The<br />

demonstration is a public<br />

relations disaster and very<br />

unfortunate because it has<br />

not changed anything. On<br />

the issue of the<br />

disengagement of the<br />

clearly incompetent<br />

teachers the Kaduna State<br />

Government is on a very<br />

high rational and moral<br />

ground. The sheer number<br />

of 21,000 failed teachers<br />

out of 33,000 is enough for<br />

Labour to have hidden its<br />

head in shame. And if it is<br />

about check-off dues, it is<br />

going to earn more, as the<br />

government is going to hire<br />

4,000 more teachers.<br />

How can the NLC<br />

demonstrate against these<br />

numbers – 83% of teachers<br />

scoring less than 25% in<br />

maths and literacy and<br />

primary two pupils<br />

averaging 14% in English<br />

and 27% in Maths. The<br />

primary four pupils didn’t<br />

fare any better – they<br />

averaged 13% in English<br />

and 17% in Numeracy in a<br />

Programme sponsored by<br />

the DFID. The competency<br />

test of June 2017 was<br />

obviously the finisher. Of<br />

the 33,000 that sat for the<br />

examination, only 11,591<br />

teachers(33%) scored 75%.<br />

The rest fell by the way side.<br />

How can the government<br />

redeem the irredeemables?<br />

That is the answer the NLC<br />

is not providing, because it<br />

prefers as always to defend<br />

the narrow interest of<br />

workers as against the<br />

common good of the larger<br />

society. The strike is<br />

obviously face saving and<br />

an attempt to convince the<br />

sacked teachers that the<br />

union stood by them.<br />

I don’t want to agree with<br />

Labour that El-Rufai is<br />

heartless, though taking the<br />

difficult decision might<br />

portray him as such. The<br />

fact remains that education<br />

is too sensitive an area that<br />

incompetent teachers<br />

should be allowed to<br />

control. And like El-Rufai<br />

has passionately argued<br />

“the poor are entitled to<br />

equal opportunity, because<br />

it enables every human<br />

being to widen their<br />

horizon, develop skills and<br />

lift themselves up”. Audu<br />

Amba, the Kaduna State<br />

Chairman of the NUT is<br />

also spot-on in his<br />

description of quack<br />

teachers as mass<br />

murderers, because they<br />

forever murder generations<br />

of children , unlike quack<br />

doctors who at best<br />

murder one or two patients.<br />

But why is Amba who<br />

holds politicians that<br />

employ their thugs as<br />

hugely responsible for the<br />

plight of the teaching<br />

profession, resisting the<br />

disengagement of the<br />

thugs? The question is why<br />

strike if a Daniel has<br />

finally come to<br />

judgement? Labour would<br />

have won friends if for once<br />

rather than protest, it<br />

partnered with the<br />

government in addressing<br />

the rot in the sector.<br />

In 1981 the Professional<br />

Air Traffic Controllers<br />

Organization (PATCO), a<br />

trade union embarked on a<br />

strike that would ultimately<br />

lead to its de-certification.<br />

Late President Ronald<br />

Reagan declared the strike<br />

illegal. More than 11,000<br />

Air Traffic Controllers<br />

ignored Reagan’s order to<br />

return to work. Reagan<br />

gave them 48 hours, while<br />

the authorities made<br />

contingency plans.<br />

Thankfully the FAA’s<br />

contingency plans worked,<br />

as about 3,000<br />

supervisors joined the 2,000<br />

non-striking controllers and<br />

the 900 military controllers<br />

in manning the airport<br />

towers. The strike was<br />

broken and that was the<br />

beginning of the end for<br />

PATCO.<br />

Continues on<br />

www.vanguardngr.com


SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021 — 5<br />

How COAS Attahiru, 11 top aides perished<br />

in plane crash<br />

*NAF begins probe of crash<br />

By Soni Daniel; Kingsley<br />

Omonobi, Ibrahim<br />

Hassan Wuyo &<br />

Johnbosco Agbakwuru<br />

NEARLY four months<br />

after being named<br />

as Nigeria’s Chief of Army<br />

Staff, Lt. General Ibrahim Attahiru,<br />

died yesterday<br />

evening in an air crash at the<br />

Kaduna International Airport.<br />

The COAS, who was heading<br />

for Kaduna on official<br />

duty, reportedly perished<br />

with no fewer than seven top<br />

aides, who were travelling on<br />

the same 350 Beechcraft Aircraft.<br />

The loud screams coupled<br />

with the explosion resulting<br />

from the aircraft before it finally<br />

crashed, reportedly<br />

threw the inhabitants of the<br />

airport community into chaos,<br />

fear and confusion.<br />

Some of the locals, who<br />

witnessed the crash, said that<br />

the troubled aircraft exploded<br />

and got burnt completely<br />

by the time it hit the ground.<br />

“All the crew members and<br />

passengers numbering 12<br />

died in the crash,” a source<br />

at the airport told journalists<br />

in Kaduna.<br />

‘The crew apparently lost<br />

control of the aircraft due to<br />

sudden change of weather<br />

accompanied with violent<br />

storm and lightning,” the<br />

source explained.<br />

The Nigerian Airforce<br />

confirmed the crash but was<br />

silent on casualties. They<br />

however announced that an<br />

investigation into the crash<br />

would be carried out.<br />

“An air crash involving a<br />

Nigeria Airforce aircraft occurred<br />

this evening near the<br />

Kaduna International Airport,”<br />

Nigerian Airforce<br />

Public Relations Officer, Air<br />

Vice Marshall Edward<br />

Gabkwet, said in a statement.<br />

Lt. Gen Ibrahim Attahiru<br />

was appointed Chief of<br />

Army Staff along with other<br />

Service Chiefs by President<br />

Muhammadu Buhari on<br />

January 26, 2021.<br />

Born on 10 August 1966 in<br />

Doka, Kaduna North Local<br />

Government Area, Kaduna<br />

State, Attahiru graduated<br />

from the Nigerian Defence<br />

Academy and was commissioned<br />

as a Second Lieutenant<br />

in December 1986 as an<br />

Infantry Officer.<br />

The late COAS held a<br />

Master’s degree in Strategic<br />

Management and Policy<br />

Studies from the Nigerian<br />

Defence Academy.<br />

General Attahiru had<br />

held several key appointments<br />

during his military<br />

career and had undertaken<br />

many strategic duties within<br />

and outside Nigeria.<br />

Ibrahim Attahiru: 30th<br />

Army Chief; Second Shortest<br />

Stint<br />

Lt. Gen. Ibrahim Attahiru,<br />

was the 30th Chief of<br />

Army Staff of Nigeria. He<br />

was also the 26th indigenous<br />

Chief of Army Staff and<br />

was in office for three<br />

months and 26 days. It was<br />

the second shortest stint as<br />

army chief after the three<br />

months stewardship of Lt.<br />

Late Lt Gen Ibrahim Attahiru<br />

Gen. Aliyu Gusau between<br />

September and November<br />

1993.<br />

The shortest stint before<br />

him in the democratic era<br />

was Gen. Andrew Azazi who<br />

served for 11 months before<br />

he was promoted to the post<br />

of Chief of Defence Staff.<br />

Gen. Attahiru was appointed<br />

army chief on January<br />

26, 2021 when President<br />

Muhammadu Buhari made<br />

a sweeping change of the<br />

service chiefs.<br />

Born on 10th August 1966<br />

in Doka, Kaduna North Local<br />

Government Area, Kaduna<br />

State, he graduated from<br />

the Nigerian Defence Academy.<br />

He commenced cadets<br />

training in January 1984 and<br />

was commissioned into the<br />

rank of Second Lieutenant<br />

in December 1986 as an Infantry<br />

Officer. He had a Masters<br />

degree in Strategic<br />

Management and Policy<br />

Studies from the Nigerian<br />

Defence Academy.<br />

General Attahiru held<br />

several appointments on the<br />

staff, instructional and in<br />

command during his military<br />

career. He had a tour of<br />

duty with the United Nations<br />

in Sierra Leone as a<br />

Military Observer, where he<br />

facilitated United Kingdom<br />

military engagement, Operation<br />

BARASS in September<br />

2000.<br />

He was an Operation Officer<br />

and later Company<br />

Commander in NIBATT 19<br />

ECOMOG Operations in<br />

Liberia. Also, he had the<br />

unique privilege of having<br />

commanded with distinction<br />

all through the chain of command<br />

in the Nigerian Army.<br />

Prominent among these appointments<br />

were Commanding<br />

Officer 146 Battalion<br />

Nigerian Army (Operation<br />

HARMONY IV) in the<br />

Bakassi Peninsula, Commander<br />

13 Brigade Nigerian<br />

Army (Operation PULO<br />

SHIELD), General Officer<br />

Commanding 82 Division<br />

Nigerian Army. He was one<br />

time Theatre Commander<br />

Operation LAFIYA DOLE.<br />

Buhari expresses shock<br />

over Gen. Attahiru death<br />

—Also mourns others<br />

President Muhammadu<br />

Buhari Friday night expressed<br />

sadness over the air<br />

crash that claimed the lives<br />

of Chief of Army Staff, Lt.<br />

Gen. Ibrahim Attahiru, and<br />

other military officers.<br />

The President in a statement<br />

issued by his Special<br />

Adviser on Media and Publicity,<br />

Chief Femi Adesina<br />

condoled with families of the<br />

deceased, the military, and<br />

Nigerians in general, describing<br />

them as “heroes<br />

who paid the ultimate price<br />

for peace and security in the<br />

land.”<br />

While praying that God<br />

receives the souls of the patriots,<br />

the President said the<br />

crash “is one mortal blow to<br />

our underbelly, at a time our<br />

armed forces are poised to<br />

end the security challenges<br />

facing the country.”<br />

President Buhari pledged<br />

that the departed would not<br />

die in vain.<br />

In his own reaction, Mr.<br />

Peter Obi who described the<br />

crash as painful to the nation,<br />

commiserated with the Nigerian<br />

Army, the Air force<br />

and Mr. President and<br />

prayed for the peaceful repose<br />

of the souls of the<br />

dead.<br />

COAS ENTOURAGE<br />

1. LT GEN I ATTAHIRU - COAS<br />

2. BRIG GEN MI ABDULKADIR - Chief of<br />

Staff to Army Chief<br />

3. BRIG GEN OLAYINKA - Acting Provost<br />

Marshal, Nigerian Army<br />

4. BRIG GEN KULIYA - Acting Chief of<br />

Military Intelligence<br />

5. MAJ LA HAYAT - ADC to COAS<br />

6. MAJ HAMZA - Chief Security Officer<br />

(CSO) to COAS<br />

7. SGT UMAR - Orderly to COAS<br />

Aircraft Crew<br />

8. FLT LT TO ASANIYI - Pilot<br />

9. FLT LT AA OLUFADE - Co-Pilot<br />

10. SGT ADESINA.<br />

11. ACM OYEDEPO.<br />

INFERNO: N3.685 trn property<br />

saved in 3 months, says Fire<br />

Service boss<br />

By Omeiza Ajayi & Fortune Eromosele<br />

THE Federal Fire Service FFS said it has in the first<br />

quarter of 2021 saved property worth N3.685 trillion<br />

and an estimated property loss of N9.42 billion.<br />

Controller General of the Federal Fire Service, FFS,<br />

Dr Ibrahim Alhaji Liman disclosed this on yesterday in<br />

Abuja when the Senate Committee on Interior paid an<br />

oversight visit to the Service.<br />

According to him, “In 2020, the Service attended to<br />

3,555 fire calls and 353 rescue emergencies 1,100 lives<br />

were saved while 147 were lost. Estimated property saved<br />

N1.351 trillion and an estimated property loss of N32.12<br />

billion.<br />

“The first quarter of 2021, 986 fire calls, 34 rescue<br />

emergencies, 175 lives saved and 11 lives lost with an<br />

estimated property saved of N3.685 trillion and estimated<br />

property lost of N9.42 billion. The reason behind the<br />

spike in 2021 figures is because of a significant number<br />

of industrial fires.”<br />

He noted that the constant training of firefighters has<br />

proven effective, promising that they will continue to<br />

deliver adequate service in times of dire need.<br />

“The quest for professionalism has made the Service<br />

tailor its training needs to meet specific requirements.<br />

Choice trainings, refresher courses and train-the- trainer<br />

courses are being pursued both locally and internationally.<br />

Fifty personnel have been trained in Medical<br />

Emergency Preparedness, while 50 Instructors and 30<br />

Investigators have been trained locally.<br />

"Twenty One Officers are currently training in Belarus<br />

in different fields and 10 are ready to travel to Dubai for<br />

training on hydraulic platform while 15 are going for<br />

International Disaster Management course in the UK.<br />

Osinbajo, Gowon, CAN President<br />

pray for a New Nigeria<br />

By Johnbosco Agbakwuru<br />

VICE President Yemi Osinbajo in Abuja yesterday<br />

declared that a new Nigeria was in the making,<br />

despite the current travails besetting it.<br />

The Vice President said the development would eventually<br />

give way to a glorious and bright new morning of<br />

a new nation.<br />

Prof Osinbajo spoke at the National Prayer Breakfast<br />

held at the NAF Conference Centre, Kado, Abuja.<br />

The Vice President was joined by former Head of State,<br />

Gen Yakubu Gowon (retd); President of the Christian<br />

Association of Nigeria (CAN), Dr. Samson Ayokunle,<br />

among other dignitaries who attended.<br />

According to him, “the new nation is birthing already.<br />

It is covered by a cloud, but the cloud will pass, and God<br />

Almighty will take all of the glory for the birthing of a<br />

new nation.”<br />

While he noted that the theme of the Prayer breakfast,<br />

the “Birth of a New Nation”, was significant, especially<br />

in these times, Osinbajo emphasized the need for collective<br />

prayers, faith, hope and action, adding that Nigeria<br />

would prevail over the challenges of today.<br />

He said the National Prayer Breakfast “comes at a<br />

time of great travail and tribulation for the nation: in<br />

the throes of a pandemic for well over a year, leading to<br />

a severe economic downturn, loss of jobs and livelihoods;<br />

and as we climbed out of the recession, we have been<br />

faced with an unprecedented scale of insecurity, in different<br />

zones of the nation.<br />

Vice- chancellor’s appointment:<br />

Sanwo-Olu dissolves LASU<br />

governing council<br />

By Olasunkanmi Akoni<br />

LAGOS State Governor and the Visitor to the Lagos<br />

State University (LASU), Mr. Babajide Olusola Sanwo-Olu,<br />

has ordered dissolution of the institution’s governing<br />

council in line with the recommendations in the<br />

report of the Special Visitation Panel on the appointment<br />

of the 9th Vice-Chancellor.<br />

Commissioner for the Information and Strategy, Mr.<br />

Gbenga Omotoso, announced the governor’s directive<br />

in a statement released on Friday, May 21, 2021.<br />

According to Omotoso, “After consideration of the report<br />

of the Special Visitation Panel and by the powers<br />

conferred on him by the Lagos State University Law,<br />

Cap L69 volume 7, Laws of Lagos State, 2015 (as amended),<br />

hereby adopts the recommendations and directs as<br />

follows: The immediate dissolution of the Lagos State<br />

University Governing Council and the removal of the<br />

Pro-Chancellor and Chairman of Council for flagrant<br />

violations of the extant laws and regulations of the University<br />

guiding the appointment of a Vice-Chancellor.<br />

“Cancellation of the second failed exercise to appoint<br />

the 9th Substantive Vice-Chancellor as a result of the<br />

flagrant contravention of extant laws, breach of due process,<br />

failure and total disregard to follow its own laid<br />

down criteria guiding the process for the appointment<br />

of a 9th Vice-Chancellor as publicly advertised.<br />

“In due course, a new Governing Council for the Lagos<br />

State University will be constituted. The reconstituted<br />

Council shall conduct a new process for the appointment<br />

of the 9th Vice-Chancellor.


SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021 — 5<br />

How COAS Attahiru, 11 top aides<br />

perished in plane crash<br />

*NAF begins probe of crash<br />

By Soni Daniel; Kingsley<br />

Omonobi, Ibrahim<br />

Hassan Wuyo &<br />

Johnbosco Agbakwuru<br />

NEARLY four months<br />

after being named<br />

as Nigeria’s Chief of Army<br />

Staff, Lt. General Ibrahim<br />

Attahiru, died yesterday<br />

evening in an air crash at<br />

the Kaduna International<br />

Airport.<br />

The COAS, who was<br />

heading for Kaduna on<br />

official duty, reportedly<br />

perished with no fewer<br />

than seven top aides, who<br />

were travelling on the<br />

same 350 Beechcraft Aircraft.<br />

The loud screams coupled<br />

with the explosion<br />

resulting from the aircraft<br />

before it finally crashed,<br />

reportedly threw the inhabitants<br />

of the airport<br />

community into chaos,<br />

fear and confusion.<br />

Some of the locals, who<br />

witnessed the crash, said<br />

that the troubled aircraft<br />

exploded and got burnt<br />

completely by the time it<br />

hit the ground.<br />

“All the crew members<br />

and passengers numbering<br />

12 died in the crash,”<br />

a source at the airport<br />

told journalists in Kaduna.<br />

‘The crew apparently<br />

lost control of the aircraft<br />

due to sudden change of<br />

weather accompanied<br />

with violent storm and<br />

lightning,” the source explained.<br />

The Nigerian Airforce<br />

confirmed the crash but<br />

was silent on casualties.<br />

They however announced<br />

that an investigation into<br />

the crash would be carried<br />

out.<br />

“An air crash involving<br />

a Nigeria Airforce aircraft<br />

occurred this<br />

evening near the Kaduna<br />

International Airport,”<br />

Nigerian Airforce Public<br />

Relations Officer, Air Vice<br />

Marshall Edward Gabkwet,<br />

said in a statement.<br />

Lt. Gen Ibrahim Attahiru<br />

was appointed Chief of<br />

Army Staff along with<br />

other Service Chiefs by<br />

President Muhammadu<br />

Buhari on January 26,<br />

2021.<br />

Born on 10 August 1966<br />

in Doka, Kaduna North<br />

Local Government Area,<br />

Kaduna State, Attahiru<br />

graduated from the Nigerian<br />

Defence Academy<br />

and was commissioned as<br />

a Second Lieutenant in<br />

December 1986 as an Infantry<br />

Officer.<br />

The late COAS held a<br />

Master’s degree in Strategic<br />

Management and<br />

Policy Studies from the<br />

Nigerian Defence Academy.<br />

General Attahiru had<br />

held several key appointments<br />

during his military<br />

career and had undertaken<br />

many strategic duties<br />

within and outside Nigeria.<br />

Late Lt Gen Ibrahim Attahiru<br />

Ibrahim Attahiru: 30th<br />

Army Chief; Second<br />

Shortest Stint<br />

Lt. Gen. Ibrahim Attahiru,<br />

was the 30th Chief of<br />

Army Staff of Nigeria. He<br />

was also the 26th indigenous<br />

Chief of Army Staff<br />

and was in office for three<br />

months and 26 days. It was<br />

the second shortest stint as<br />

army chief after the three<br />

months stewardship of Lt.<br />

Gen. Aliyu Gusau between<br />

September and November<br />

1993.<br />

The shortest stint before<br />

him in the democratic era<br />

was Gen. Andrew Azazi<br />

who served for 11 months<br />

before he was promoted to<br />

the post of Chief of Defence<br />

Staff.<br />

Gen. Attahiru was appointed<br />

army chief on<br />

January 26, 2021 when<br />

President Muhammadu<br />

Buhari made a sweeping<br />

change of the service<br />

chiefs.<br />

Born on 10th August<br />

1966 in Doka, Kaduna<br />

North Local Government<br />

Area, Kaduna State, he<br />

graduated from the Nigerian<br />

Defence Academy.<br />

He commenced cadets<br />

training in January 1984<br />

and was commissioned<br />

into the rank of Second<br />

Lieutenant in December<br />

1986 as an Infantry Officer.<br />

He had a Masters degree<br />

in Strategic Management<br />

and Policy Studies<br />

from the Nigerian Defence<br />

Academy.<br />

General Attahiru held<br />

several appointments on<br />

the staff, instructional and<br />

in command during his<br />

military career. He had a<br />

tour of duty with the United<br />

Nations in Sierra Leone<br />

as a Military Observer,<br />

where he facilitated<br />

United Kingdom military<br />

engagement, Operation<br />

BARASS in September<br />

2000.<br />

He was an Operation<br />

Officer and later Company<br />

Commander in NI-<br />

BATT 19 ECOMOG Operations<br />

in Liberia. Also,<br />

he had the unique privilege<br />

of having commanded<br />

with distinction all<br />

through the chain of command<br />

in the Nigerian<br />

Army. Prominent among<br />

these appointments were<br />

Commanding Officer 146<br />

Battalion Nigerian Army<br />

(Operation HARMONY<br />

IV) in the Bakassi Peninsula,<br />

Commander 13 Brigade<br />

Nigerian Army (Operation<br />

PULO SHIELD),<br />

General Officer Commanding<br />

82 Division Nigerian<br />

Army. He was one<br />

time Theatre Commander<br />

Operation LAFIYA<br />

DOLE.<br />

Buhari expresses shock<br />

over Gen. Attahiru death<br />

—Also mourns others<br />

President Muhammadu<br />

Buhari Friday night expressed<br />

sadness over the<br />

air crash that claimed the<br />

lives of Chief of Army<br />

Staff, Lt. Gen. Ibrahim<br />

Attahiru, and other military<br />

officers.<br />

The President in a statement<br />

issued by his Special<br />

Adviser on Media and<br />

Publicity, Chief Femi Adesina<br />

condoled with families<br />

of the deceased, the<br />

military, and Nigerians in<br />

general, describing them<br />

as “heroes who paid the<br />

ultimate price for peace<br />

and security in the land.”<br />

While praying that God<br />

receives the souls of the<br />

patriots, the President<br />

said the crash “is one mortal<br />

blow to our underbelly,<br />

at a time our armed<br />

forces are poised to end the<br />

security challenges facing<br />

the country.”<br />

President Buhari<br />

pledged that the departed<br />

would not die in vain.<br />

In his own reaction, Mr.<br />

Peter Obi who described<br />

the crash as painful to the<br />

nation, commiserated<br />

with the Nigerian Army,<br />

the Air force and Mr. President<br />

and prayed for the<br />

peaceful repose of the<br />

souls of the dead.<br />

COAS ENTOURAGE<br />

1. LT GEN I ATTAHIRU - COAS<br />

2. BRIG GEN MI ABDULKADIR - Chief of<br />

Staff to Army Chief<br />

3. BRIG GEN OLAYINKA - Acting Provost<br />

Marshal, Nigerian Army<br />

4. BRIG GEN KULIYA - Acting Chief of<br />

Military Intelligence<br />

5. MAJ LA HAYAT - ADC to COAS<br />

6. MAJ HAMZA - Chief Security Officer<br />

(CSO) to COAS<br />

7. SGT UMAR - Orderly to COAS<br />

Aircraft Crew<br />

8. FLT LT TO ASANIYI - Pilot<br />

9. FLT LT AA OLUFADE - Co-Pilot<br />

10. SGT ADESINA.<br />

11. ACM OYEDEPO.<br />

INFERNO: N3.685 trn property<br />

saved in 3 months, says Fire<br />

Service boss<br />

By Omeiza Ajayi & Fortune Eromosele<br />

THE Federal Fire Service FFS said it has in the first<br />

quarter of 2021 saved property worth N3.685 trillion<br />

and an estimated property loss of N9.42 billion.<br />

Controller General of the Federal Fire Service, FFS,<br />

Dr Ibrahim Alhaji Liman disclosed this on yesterday in<br />

Abuja when the Senate Committee on Interior paid an<br />

oversight visit to the Service.<br />

According to him, “In 2020, the Service attended to<br />

3,555 fire calls and 353 rescue emergencies 1,100 lives<br />

were saved while 147 were lost. Estimated property saved<br />

N1.351 trillion and an estimated property loss of N32.12<br />

billion.<br />

“The first quarter of 2021, 986 fire calls, 34 rescue<br />

emergencies, 175 lives saved and 11 lives lost with an<br />

estimated property saved of N3.685 trillion and estimated<br />

property lost of N9.42 billion. The reason behind the<br />

spike in 2021 figures is because of a significant number<br />

of industrial fires.”<br />

He noted that the constant training of firefighters has<br />

proven effective, promising that they will continue to<br />

deliver adequate service in times of dire need.<br />

“The quest for professionalism has made the Service<br />

tailor its training needs to meet specific requirements.<br />

Choice trainings, refresher courses and train-the- trainer<br />

courses are being pursued both locally and internationally.<br />

Fifty personnel have been trained in Medical<br />

Emergency Preparedness, while 50 Instructors and 30<br />

Investigators have been trained locally.<br />

"Twenty One Officers are currently training in Belarus<br />

in different fields and 10 are ready to travel to Dubai for<br />

training on hydraulic platform while 15 are going for<br />

International Disaster Management course in the UK.<br />

Osinbajo, Gowon, CAN President<br />

pray for a New Nigeria<br />

By Johnbosco Agbakwuru<br />

VICE President Yemi Osinbajo in Abuja yesterday<br />

declared that a new Nigeria was in the making,<br />

despite the current travails besetting it.<br />

The Vice President said the development would eventually<br />

give way to a glorious and bright new morning of<br />

a new nation.<br />

Prof Osinbajo spoke at the National Prayer Breakfast<br />

held at the NAF Conference Centre, Kado, Abuja.<br />

The Vice President was joined by former Head of State,<br />

Gen Yakubu Gowon (retd); President of the Christian<br />

Association of Nigeria (CAN), Dr. Samson Ayokunle,<br />

among other dignitaries who attended.<br />

According to him, “the new nation is birthing already.<br />

It is covered by a cloud, but the cloud will pass, and God<br />

Almighty will take all of the glory for the birthing of a<br />

new nation.”<br />

While he noted that the theme of the Prayer breakfast,<br />

the “Birth of a New Nation”, was significant, especially<br />

in these times, Osinbajo emphasized the need for collective<br />

prayers, faith, hope and action, adding that Nigeria<br />

would prevail over the challenges of today.<br />

He said the National Prayer Breakfast “comes at a<br />

time of great travail and tribulation for the nation: in<br />

the throes of a pandemic for well over a year, leading to<br />

a severe economic downturn, loss of jobs and livelihoods;<br />

and as we climbed out of the recession, we have been<br />

faced with an unprecedented scale of insecurity, in different<br />

zones of the nation.<br />

Vice- chancellor’s appointment:<br />

Sanwo-Olu dissolves LASU<br />

governing council<br />

By Olasunkanmi Akoni<br />

LAGOS State Governor and the Visitor to the Lagos<br />

State University (LASU), Mr. Babajide Olusola Sanwo-Olu,<br />

has ordered dissolution of the institution’s governing<br />

council in line with the recommendations in the<br />

report of the Special Visitation Panel on the appointment<br />

of the 9th Vice-Chancellor.<br />

Commissioner for the Information and Strategy, Mr.<br />

Gbenga Omotoso, announced the governor’s directive<br />

in a statement released on Friday, May 21, 2021.<br />

According to Omotoso, “After consideration of the report<br />

of the Special Visitation Panel and by the powers<br />

conferred on him by the Lagos State University Law,<br />

Cap L69 volume 7, Laws of Lagos State, 2015 (as amended),<br />

hereby adopts the recommendations and directs as<br />

follows: The immediate dissolution of the Lagos State<br />

University Governing Council and the removal of the<br />

Pro-Chancellor and Chairman of Council for flagrant<br />

violations of the extant laws and regulations of the University<br />

guiding the appointment of a Vice-Chancellor.<br />

“Cancellation of the second failed exercise to appoint<br />

the 9th Substantive Vice-Chancellor as a result of the<br />

flagrant contravention of extant laws, breach of due process,<br />

failure and total disregard to follow its own laid<br />

down criteria guiding the process for the appointment<br />

of a 9th Vice-Chancellor as publicly advertised.<br />

“In due course, a new Governing Council for the Lagos<br />

State University will be constituted. The reconstituted<br />

Council shall conduct a new process for the appointment<br />

of the 9th Vice-Chancellor.


6 — SATURDAY VANGUARD, MAY 22, 2021<br />

From left: Director of Information, Naval Headquarters, Commodore Suleman Dahun; Chief of Policy and<br />

Plans, Naval Headquarters, Rear Admiral Christian Ezekobe;'Director Funds, Accountant General’s office, Sabo<br />

Mohammed, Chief of the Naval Staff, Vice Admiral Awwal Gambo, Accountant General of the Federation, Alhaji<br />

Ahmed Idris FCNA, Chief of Accounts and Budget, Naval Headquarters, Commodore Kasimu Bushi, Director<br />

Inspectorate, Accountant General’s office, Chuks Anamekwe, Chief of Logistics, Naval Headquarters, Rear Admiral<br />

Muhammad Nagenu, and Director Information and PR, Accountant General’s office, Henshaw Ogubike<br />

during a courtesy call on the CNS by the AGoF yesterday at the NHQ Abuja…<br />

15 gunmen attack Catholic Church in<br />

Katsina, abduct priests, kill one<br />

*75-yr-old Rev. Fr. missing<br />

*Police arrest 2, launch manhunt<br />

CAN: Incident happened close to police station<br />

By Bashir Bello&<br />

Luminous Janamike<br />

FRESH facts have<br />

emerged revealing<br />

how gunmen attacked<br />

St. Vincent Ferrer<br />

Catholic Church, Malumfashi,<br />

Katsina State, and abducted<br />

two priests at the<br />

Catechetical Training<br />

School located inside the<br />

church premises.<br />

Saturday Vanguard<br />

learned the attackers, who<br />

were about 15, had stormed<br />

the parish at 11 pm last<br />

Thursday, abducting Rev<br />

Fr. Alphonsus Bello and Rev<br />

Fr. Joe Keke .<br />

Bello’s corpse was later<br />

found some metres away<br />

from the church on Friday,<br />

while the whereabouts of<br />

75-year-old Fr. Keke was<br />

unknown as at press time.<br />

The parish is under the<br />

Catholic Diocese of Sokoto<br />

Ḋirector of Social Communication,<br />

Sokoto Diocese,<br />

Rev.Fr. Chris Omotohso,<br />

who had earlier revealed<br />

the incident in a brief<br />

statement, told Saturday<br />

Vanguard in a chat that the<br />

gunmen shot sporadically<br />

after gaining access to the<br />

church premises.<br />

He further said the Dean<br />

of Malumfashi Deanery, Fr.<br />

Stephen Ojapah (MSP), had<br />

raised the alarm about the<br />

incident at about 1.35 am.<br />

•Rev. Fr. Joe Keke,<br />

missing<br />

Omotosho quoted the<br />

priest to have said the parish<br />

house of St. Vincent Ferrer<br />

Church had been attacked<br />

by bandits numbering<br />

about 15.<br />

Meanwhile, Katsina State<br />

Police Command said two<br />

suspects were arrested in<br />

connection with the incident.<br />

Spokesperson for the<br />

Command, Superintendent<br />

of Police, SP, Gambo Isah,<br />

said manhunt for the missing<br />

priest had commenced.<br />

The Police image maker<br />

told Saturday Vanguard<br />

that complicity on the part<br />

of the security guards at the<br />

church couldn’t be ruled<br />

out.<br />

Police should rescue Fr.<br />

Keke—CAN<br />

•Rev Fr Alphonsus<br />

Bello, killed<br />

Reacting to the incident,<br />

Chairman, Katsina State<br />

Chapter of Christian Association<br />

of Nigeria, CAN,<br />

Rev. Fr. Nelson Onyekachukwu,<br />

appealed to security<br />

agents to ensure the<br />

missing priest is rescued.<br />

According to him, “last<br />

night, I received a call from<br />

Malumfashi, informing me<br />

about the ugly incident that<br />

one of our priests was killed<br />

and another kidnapped. I<br />

was told they entered the<br />

church compound and<br />

started shooting. People ran<br />

helter-skelter for safety.<br />

The incident happened<br />

around 11pm and not even<br />

2am.<br />

“My greatest concern is<br />

that a police station and an<br />

Area Command are close to<br />

the church. It is just adjacent<br />

to Malumfashi hotel.<br />

“We are not happy. We are<br />

in pain. What type of country<br />

are we in? That you are<br />

in your house, you are not<br />

safe. You are travelling on<br />

the road, you are not safe as<br />

you are scared. We don’t<br />

have leadership in this country.<br />

Our appeal is for the security<br />

agents to help us rescue<br />

Reverend Father Joe<br />

Keke from captivity. The abductors<br />

are yet to reach<br />

out.”<br />

We’re praying for his immediate,<br />

safe return -<br />

Chancellor<br />

Also, the Chancellor,<br />

Sokoto Diocese, Rev. Fr.<br />

Cornelius Tagwai, said they<br />

were praying for the immediate<br />

and safe return of Fr.<br />

Keke whose whereabouts<br />

was yet unknown.<br />

Tagwai. in a brief statement,<br />

said: “With a heavy<br />

heart, I officially announce<br />

the call to eternal rest of Rev.<br />

Fr. Alphonsus Yashim Bello,<br />

who until his death was<br />

a Fidei Donum Priest from<br />

Kaduna Archdiocese and<br />

the Parish Priest of St. Vincent<br />

Ferrer’s Parish,<br />

Malumfashi, Katsina State.<br />

This sad event took place in<br />

the early hours of today,<br />

Friday, May 21, 2021. The<br />

late Fr. Bello, was kidnapped<br />

with Very Rev Fr.<br />

Joseph Keke, the most senior<br />

priest of Sokoto Diocese,<br />

but his lifeless body<br />

was later found abandoned<br />

behind the CTC, Malumfashi.<br />

The whereabouts of Fr<br />

Keke is not yet known.<br />

“May the soul of Fr. Bello<br />

and the souls of the faithful<br />

departed, through the mercy<br />

of God rest in peace.<br />

“Kindly join us in prayer<br />

for the immediate and safe<br />

return of Fr. Keke and the<br />

peaceful repose of Fr. Bello.”<br />

The missing priest, who<br />

was ordained in 1976 by the<br />

late Bishop Dempsey, is the<br />

oldest priest in Sokoto Diocese<br />

under the leadership of<br />

Bishop Mathew Kukah.<br />

He is the second diocesan<br />

priest of the diocese.<br />

YOV seeks release of 3 OPC members in<br />

Police custody<br />

By Dapo Akinrefon<br />

THE apex Yoruba Di<br />

aspora Group Yoruba<br />

One Voice, YOV, on Friday,<br />

called for the release of three<br />

members of the Oodua People’s<br />

Congress, OPC, who<br />

handed over the kidnapping<br />

kingpin, Iskilu Wakili, to the<br />

police in March this year.<br />

YOV, made their position<br />

known in a statement by its<br />

Publicity Secretary, Olori<br />

Omoladun Orolugbagbe.<br />

The organization, which is<br />

the coalition of over 174<br />

Yoruba groups in Diaspora,<br />

expressed worry at the way<br />

the Oyo state Commissioner<br />

of police, Ngozi Onadeko<br />

handled the the case, adding<br />

that the OPC had rescued<br />

the situation in Ibarapa<br />

and its environs at a time<br />

when, banditry kidnapping,<br />

and killings were at an unprecedented<br />

rate in Ibarapa<br />

and its environs.<br />

Robbers attack Chinese bizman,<br />

kill policeman in Abia<br />

By Ugochukwu Alaribe<br />

GUNMEN yesterday attacked a businessman, said<br />

to be a Chinese national and killed a policeman<br />

accompanying him. This happened in Mission Hill area<br />

of Umuahia, the Abia State capital.<br />

Vanguard gathered that the gunmen had trailed the<br />

businessman from a new generation bank to the Mission<br />

Hill area where they started shooting at his jeep.<br />

The policeman was said to have engaged the gunmen.<br />

In the ensuing gunfire, the gunmen killed the policeman<br />

and fled with the cash they withdrew from the bank.<br />

The driver to the businessman sustained gunshot injuries<br />

on the leg.<br />

Due to the gunfire, residents and shop owners scampered<br />

to safety as it was believed that bandits had invaded<br />

the city.<br />

However, when the shooting died down, it was confirmed<br />

to be a robbery attack as the businessman started<br />

calling for help. Police Public Relations Officer, SP Geoffrey<br />

Ogbonna, confirmed the incident as a case of armed<br />

robbery.<br />

FG releases N7b for completion of<br />

East-West road<br />

By Chris Ochayi<br />

The Federal Government has released a total sum<br />

of N7 billion for the completion of the East West<br />

highway dualisation projects.<br />

The government, while releasing the money to the contractors<br />

handling the projects, urged them to comply<br />

with the directives in order to complete and hand over<br />

the project to the people of the region before the end of<br />

the First Quarter 2022.<br />

The Minister of State, Ministry of Niger Delta Affairs,<br />

Senator Omotayo Alasoadura, disclosed this during<br />

the inspection of the East-West road from Section II<br />

Sub Section II, Ahoada – Kaima, to Section II Sub<br />

Section I, Eleme Junction – Ahoada, and Section IIIA,<br />

Eleme Junction - Onne Port Junction, in Port Harcourt,<br />

Rivers State.<br />

Western education, only antidote to<br />

banditry, kidnapping, insurgency in<br />

Nigeria — Obasanjo<br />

By Ola Ajayi, Ibadan<br />

FORMER President Olusegun Obasanjo has said huge<br />

investment in Western education was the only antidote<br />

that can check insurgency, banditry and other social vices<br />

which are on the increase across the country. He said this on<br />

Friday at the commissioning of Prof. Abayomi Oluwatosin<br />

Jiboku Building, at Lariken International College, Ologuneru,<br />

Ibadan.<br />

While calling on all Nigerians to inculcate good values in<br />

their wards, he said, although ending banditry and other vices<br />

could take time, investment in Western education would definitely<br />

bring desired results.<br />

Obasanjo stressed that nothing else could substitute sound<br />

education in ridding insecurity in the country.<br />

Advising Nigerians not to place too much premium on money,<br />

he said money would never make him compromise his<br />

stance in any issue. The ex-President said, “The erroneous belief<br />

that money can buy anything does not apply to me. If you<br />

have money, you cannot buy my conscience. If we are to get<br />

out of this insecurity, banditry, Boko Haram, kidnapping, and<br />

other criminal activities, we will need to go through a very<br />

long gestation period of training, educating all Nigerian children.<br />

I mean all Nigerian children because there is emphasis<br />

on all the children.”<br />

The three members of the<br />

OPC still in police custody<br />

are Awodele Adedigba, Dauda<br />

Kazeem, and Hassan Ramon.<br />

The statement reads:<br />

“It is unfortunate that the<br />

Oyo state Commissioner of<br />

police had severally ignored<br />

the calls by well meaning<br />

Nigerians, including the<br />

Aare Onakakanfo of<br />

Yorubaland, Iba Gani Adams<br />

on the need to release<br />

the three OPC members<br />

from police custody. But<br />

rather than heed the calls,<br />

the police decided to play<br />

politics with the situation.<br />

The OPC members were<br />

transferred to the State<br />

Criminal Investigation Department,<br />

SCID, Iyaganku,<br />

Ibadan. From there, they<br />

were taken to court.<br />

“The police also levelled<br />

allegations of arson and<br />

murder against the three<br />

OPC members when they<br />

were taken to court. But the<br />

truth of the matter is that if<br />

the OPC members are criminals,<br />

they would not have<br />

arrested Wakili alive and<br />

still take him to the police<br />

for further investigation.<br />

“It is also still surprising<br />

that the police had charged<br />

the three OPC members<br />

with arson and murder. The<br />

charges were done in bad<br />

faith and those of us abroad<br />

will continue to raise our<br />

voices against the unjust detention<br />

of the brave members.<br />

Orolugbagbe, who noted<br />

that the OPC members are<br />

not criminals said they<br />

should be released.<br />

“They should have no case<br />

to answer. They are law-abiding<br />

citizen. They only complemented<br />

government’s efforts<br />

at reducing crime rate<br />

in Nigeria. The security<br />

agencies are overwhelmed<br />

and they need the support of<br />

non-state actors to strengthen<br />

the security architecture<br />

of the country. This is exactly<br />

what the OPC members<br />

did in arresting Wakili.


EJIGA<br />

FESTUS OKIKI<br />

I, formerly addressed as Okiki<br />

Ganiyat Abosede now wish to be<br />

addressed as ABOLARINWA<br />

Ganiyat Bose. All former<br />

documents remain valid. NIN<br />

and the general public please<br />

take note.<br />

YAKUBU<br />

CHANGE OF NAME<br />

I, formerly known and addressed<br />

as EJIGA ADA, now wish to be<br />

known and addressed as EJIGA<br />

ADAH AKPO. All Former<br />

documents remain valid. Bank<br />

authority and general public to take<br />

note.<br />

I, formerly known and addressed as<br />

YAKUBU EZEKIEL, now wish to<br />

be known and addressed as SIMON<br />

JONATHAN. All Former<br />

documents remain valid. General<br />

public to take note.<br />

NATHANIEL<br />

I, formerly known and addressed as<br />

NATHANIEL PATIENCE, now<br />

wish to be known and addressed as<br />

NATHANIEL OJOMACHEWN.<br />

My date of birth is 16 AUGUST<br />

1992. All Former documents remain<br />

valid. General public to take note.<br />

ABDULLAHI<br />

My name was wrongly<br />

captured as Abdullahi<br />

Adewale Mubarak instead of<br />

Abdullah Mubarak Adewale,<br />

now wish to be known as<br />

Abdullah Mubarak Adewale.<br />

All former documents remain<br />

valid. General public to take<br />

note.<br />

ELIOJO<br />

I, formerly known and<br />

addressed as JAPHET<br />

JULIANA ELIOJO, now<br />

wish to be known and<br />

addressed as OGBADU<br />

JULIANA. All Former<br />

documents remain valid.<br />

General public to take note.<br />

MOHAMMED<br />

I, formerly known and addressed as<br />

MOHAMMED SULEIMAN<br />

ABBAS, now wish to be known and<br />

addressed as SULE MUHAMMED<br />

ABBAS. All Former documents<br />

remain valid. General public to take<br />

note.<br />

UDOH<br />

I, formerly known and addressed as<br />

UBONG NNANNA UDOH, now<br />

wish to be known and addressed as<br />

UBONGABASI NNANNA<br />

UDOH. All former documents<br />

remain valid. General public and<br />

authority concerned please take note.<br />

DAVID<br />

HASSAN<br />

OJIH<br />

I, formerly known and<br />

addressed as OJIH<br />

WILLIAMS OJONILE, now<br />

wish to be known and<br />

addressed as OJIH<br />

CORDELIA. All Former<br />

documents remain valid.<br />

General public to take note.<br />

SATURDAY VANGUARD, MAY 22, 2021 — 7<br />

INSECURITY: NSCDC commissions female<br />

squad to secure schools<br />

By Omeiza Ajayi<br />

AS part of efforts to<br />

promote its Safe<br />

School Initiative and<br />

provide full-proof security<br />

for schools, the Nigeria Security<br />

and Civil Defence<br />

Corps NSCDC has commissioned<br />

an all-female<br />

squad after four weeks of<br />

intensive and rigorous<br />

training at the NSCDC<br />

Training College, Katsina.<br />

Director, Public Relations<br />

at the national headquarters<br />

of the NSCDC in Abuja,<br />

DCC, Olusola Odumosu<br />

disclosed this in a statement<br />

issued yesterday in Abuja.<br />

At the passing out parade<br />

in Katsina, Minister of Interior,<br />

Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola<br />

commended the leadership<br />

of the Corps for taking<br />

the lead in establishing a<br />

Female Squad as part of<br />

strategies to address present<br />

security challenges confronting<br />

the nation.<br />

The minister who expressed<br />

delight over the<br />

initiative said the move<br />

would no doubt add value to<br />

the security architecture of<br />

the country, while at the<br />

same time enhancing the operational<br />

capacity and efficiency<br />

of the corps.<br />

Speaking on the significance<br />

of women in the fight<br />

against terrorism, banditry,<br />

kidnapping and other forms<br />

of insecurity, Aregbesola reiterated<br />

that since women account<br />

for more than half of<br />

the nation’s population, it<br />

was apt to include them in<br />

all aspects of nation building<br />

as studies have shown that<br />

women are more likely to attract<br />

the cooperation, confi-<br />

OJI<br />

UDOCHI<br />

This is to confirm that the name;<br />

Udochi Imagwe and Udochi<br />

Ogbudu Francis refer to me. I<br />

now wish to be known as Udochi<br />

Ogbudu Francis. All former<br />

documents remain valid. General<br />

public and authority concerned<br />

please take note.<br />

note.<br />

DAVID<br />

GODDY OT<br />

KABIRU<br />

I, formerly known as Goddy<br />

Nwokedi now wish to be<br />

known as Godwin Ifeanyi<br />

Nwokedi. All documents<br />

MUHAMMADU<br />

bearing my former names<br />

remain valid. Banks and<br />

general public should please<br />

take note.<br />

the general public take note.<br />

EJEM EKPE AKUMBOBIA<br />

I, formerly known and addressed as<br />

DAVID CHIZORO JOY, now wish<br />

to be known and addressed as OBA<br />

CHIZORO JOY. All former<br />

documents remain valid. General<br />

public and authority concerned<br />

please take note.<br />

I, formerly known and addressed<br />

as Ejem Maduabuchi Innocent<br />

now wish to be known and<br />

addressed as Nkwoemeka<br />

Innocent. My correct date of<br />

birth is 17-10-1990. Former<br />

documents remain valid. General<br />

public take note.<br />

AMEH<br />

I, formerly known and<br />

addressed as Ameh Ada<br />

AdaNow wish to be known<br />

and addressed as Ameh Ada.<br />

All former documents remain<br />

valid. Uba authority and<br />

general public to take note<br />

BADAMASI<br />

I, formerly known as Badamasi<br />

Jamiu Olamilekan, now wish to be<br />

known and addressed as Badmus<br />

Olamilekan Jamiu.All former<br />

documents remain valid.JAMB<br />

,NIMC and general public please<br />

take note.<br />

I, formerly called and addressed as<br />

KPAMOR TORNHEN DAVID<br />

now wish to be addressed as<br />

KPAMOR TORMHEN DAVID.<br />

All former documents remain valid.<br />

National Identity Management and<br />

general public should take note.<br />

DONLAD<br />

I, formerly known and addressed as<br />

DONLAD<br />

OKURO<br />

AGBORUBERE, now wish to be<br />

known and addressed as DONLAD<br />

IGBANIBO AGBORUBERE. All<br />

former documents remain valid.<br />

NATIONAL IDENTITY<br />

COMMISSION and general public<br />

please take note.<br />

ORJI<br />

I, formerly known and addressd<br />

as AGOHA CHUKWUEMEKA<br />

ORJI, now wish to be known as<br />

AGOHA CHUKWUEMEKA<br />

HOPE. All documents bearing<br />

my former name remain valid.<br />

Any other concerned authority<br />

and the general public should<br />

please take note.<br />

This is to notify the general public<br />

that as a matter of fact my name<br />

was wrongly entered by me as<br />

HASSAN MARIAM instead of<br />

HASSAN MARIAM OMALE.<br />

Former documents remain valid. The<br />

Management of Jaiz Bank/Authority<br />

concern and general public to take<br />

note.<br />

OJEMEN<br />

I, formerly known and addressed as<br />

Miss Vivian Ojemen, now wish to<br />

be known and addressed as Mrs<br />

Vivian Okoduwa. All former<br />

documents remain valid. General<br />

public and authority concerned<br />

please take note OJO<br />

During registration of my National<br />

Identity Card. My name was<br />

erroneously written as USMAN<br />

OJO. Now wish to be known and<br />

called as HASSAN<br />

ABDULSALAM. Former<br />

documents remain valid. Authority<br />

concern and general public to take<br />

I, formerly known as Imaikop<br />

Favour Ekpe, now wish to be<br />

known and addressed as Ekpe<br />

Favour David. Date of birth 13/05/<br />

1982.All former documents remain<br />

valid. General public please take<br />

note.<br />

EFFIONG<br />

I, formerly known and addressed as<br />

NSEOBONG EFFIONG, Now wish<br />

to be known and addressed as<br />

NSEOBONG MICHAEL<br />

EFFIONG.. All former documents<br />

remain valid. General public and<br />

authority concerned please take<br />

note<br />

I, formerly known and addressed as<br />

Miss Oji Chiyenum Rita, now wish<br />

to be known and addressed as Mrs<br />

Okebugwu Rita Kingsley. All former<br />

documents remain valid. General<br />

public and authority concerned please<br />

take note.<br />

I, formerly known and called<br />

AISHATU KABIRU, now wish to<br />

be known and addressed as<br />

AISHA<br />

KABIRU. All former documents<br />

remain valid. Relevant authority and<br />

I, formerly known and called<br />

AKUMBOBIA NSORMAH<br />

HANNAH, now wish to be known<br />

and addressed as HANNAH<br />

NSORMAH BADU. All former<br />

documents remain valid. GHANA<br />

EMBASSY Relevant authority and<br />

the general public take note.<br />

ORSI<br />

I, formerly known and<br />

addressed as ORSI JOY JOY,<br />

now wish to be known and<br />

addressed as ORJI JOY<br />

ANURIKA. All former<br />

documents remain valid.<br />

General public and authority<br />

concerned please take note<br />

dence and trust of the<br />

citizens than their male<br />

counterparts.<br />

He maintained that the<br />

spike in security challenges<br />

in the country occasioned<br />

by the activities of Boko<br />

Haram insurgency, armed<br />

banditry, robbery, kidnapping,<br />

farmers/herders<br />

clashes among others necessitated<br />

the clamour for<br />

security agencies to redouble<br />

their efforts by strategizing<br />

to provide a safe and<br />

secure environment, where<br />

meaningful development<br />

can thrive.<br />

Aregbesola urged the<br />

newly established Female<br />

Squad to exhibit high level<br />

of discipline, focus, vigilance<br />

and mental alertness<br />

in discharging their responsibilities<br />

while calling on<br />

the citizens to provide<br />

operatives with actionable<br />

intelligence that will assist<br />

in finding lasting solution to<br />

the problem of incessant<br />

kidnapping of school children<br />

for ransom.<br />

Earlier, Commandant<br />

General of the NSCDC, Dr<br />

Ahmed Audi explained that<br />

the female squad was a<br />

child of necessity, borne out<br />

of the need to effectively<br />

curtail the recent upsurge of<br />

insecurity and to proactively<br />

engage bandits and<br />

kidnappers of school children<br />

as directed by the Federal<br />

Government on the implementation<br />

of the safe<br />

school initiative by the<br />

corps.<br />

Dr Audi said the frequency<br />

of attacks on schools by<br />

bandits which indulge kidnapping<br />

of students for<br />

ransom has made it<br />

imperative to focus attention<br />

on intensifying security<br />

within and around vulnerable<br />

schools’ environment<br />

across the country.<br />

“This is a proactive step<br />

aimed at ensuring safety of<br />

school children and restoring<br />

the confidence of students,<br />

parents, teachers and<br />

the host communities,” he<br />

said.<br />

According to Audi, the<br />

corps has concluded a vulnerability<br />

survey on all<br />

schools in the country to<br />

collate data with a view to<br />

identifying the gaps in the<br />

existing security arrangement<br />

for schools in Nigeria<br />

and to give the corps needed<br />

clues on necessary strategies<br />

to adopt in enhancing<br />

safety in the nation’s<br />

schools, especially those<br />

that are susceptible to attacks.<br />

Group chides UN over insecurity<br />

*Demands urgent intervention<br />

By Dirisu Yakubu &<br />

Fortune Eromosele<br />

A<br />

group, The Malcolm<br />

Omirhobo Foundation,<br />

has berated the United Nations<br />

Security Council for failure<br />

to rise to the occasion of<br />

the incessant genocide and<br />

bloodletting in the country, calling<br />

for an urgent intervention<br />

to stem the spate of killings.<br />

Addressing newsmen at the<br />

UN office in Abuja, president<br />

of the group, a rights activist<br />

and lawyer, Chief Malcom<br />

Omirhobo, said it was alarming<br />

how the atrocities of the<br />

Fulani militias and terrorists,<br />

have been greeted with aloofness<br />

by the UN as well as its<br />

security council comprising<br />

China, France, Russia, the United<br />

States of America and the<br />

United Kingdom.<br />

He described the situation as<br />

undeserving, adding that the<br />

Federal Government has left<br />

Nigerians to scamper for safety.<br />

According to him, “While<br />

the Nigerian government permits<br />

the Fulanis ethnic groups<br />

to bear arms, it effectively disarmed<br />

other ethnic groups up<br />

to their kitchen utensils and<br />

criminalize any of them that<br />

dare to bear arms, thereby depriving<br />

them of their right to<br />

self defense.<br />

“While the Nigerian government<br />

plays Ostrich, the Fulani<br />

ethnic group stock pile arms<br />

and ammunition and train<br />

their men, women and children<br />

I<br />

n corroboration with the<br />

United Nations<br />

Sustainable Development<br />

Goals, Gtext Homes have<br />

embarked on a tree planting<br />

exercise in all of their estates<br />

in Lagos and Abuja.<br />

Speaking at the event,<br />

Opemipo Loto, Sales<br />

Manager, Gtext Homes<br />

clarified that the trees that<br />

were being planted have been<br />

carefully selected for warmth<br />

and comfort for residents of<br />

their estates.<br />

“One of the species of trees<br />

we are planting today is<br />

gardenia. It is a flower that<br />

has a very good scent. Its scent<br />

is inviting; it also has a vanilla<br />

fragrance. It makes the<br />

environment sweet to come<br />

in to and also colourful; it has<br />

a sharp green colour. Apart<br />

from the global warming that<br />

we are trying to tackle, we<br />

want to create an<br />

environment that is serene<br />

and very comfortable. A<br />

luxury of nature,” she said.<br />

Chioma Orazudike,<br />

Business Development<br />

as combatants and how to kill<br />

in preparation for the Jihad.<br />

The Nigerian government<br />

stands by and watches as the<br />

Fulani militias wreak havoc on<br />

Nigerians of other ethnic<br />

groups.<br />

“The Nigerian government<br />

sees nothing wrong in terrorism<br />

but sees everything wrong<br />

in agitations the Nigerian government<br />

listens and negotiates<br />

with terrorists but refuses to discuss<br />

with agitators.<br />

“Nigerian citizens are haplessly<br />

and helplessly trapped<br />

between the devil and the deep<br />

blue sea as they do not have<br />

who to report their plight to or<br />

where to seek justice due to the<br />

systematic and institutionalized<br />

nature of the genocide<br />

going on in Nigeria.<br />

“The President of Nigeria is<br />

a Fulani man and virtually all<br />

the public institutions in Nigeria<br />

are headed and controlled<br />

by the Fulani or their stooges<br />

and cronies."<br />

Partner FG on Inland Dry<br />

Port project, Amaechi tasks<br />

Oyo government<br />

By Dirisu Yakubu<br />

MINISTER of trans<br />

portation, Rotimi<br />

Amaechi has urged the Oyo<br />

state government to put infrastructures<br />

in place for the Inland<br />

Dry Port in Ibadan and<br />

access roads to service the dry<br />

port and the train station in<br />

Moniya or relinquish the<br />

project to another state along<br />

the corridor.<br />

The Minister stated this<br />

yesterday in a meeting with<br />

Governor Seyi Makinde at<br />

the government house,<br />

Ibadan on the sidelines of his<br />

visit to the Inland dry port site.<br />

He said: “We are here to<br />

inspect the inland dry port<br />

Gtext Homes plant 1000<br />

trees in Lagos, Abuja<br />

Manager for Gtext Homes<br />

further affirmed that a total<br />

number of 1000 trees will be<br />

planted in all of their estates<br />

as a start.<br />

“We would be planting a<br />

total of 1000 trees today and<br />

this is part of our green and<br />

smart home that we are<br />

working towards. Tree<br />

planting is the green part of<br />

green and smart homes<br />

where you have an ecofriendly<br />

environment. Also,<br />

tree planting helps in climate<br />

change; it controls erosion; it<br />

helps to ensure that we are<br />

breathing clean air and it is<br />

for a sustainable<br />

environment, which is key for<br />

us. We want an environment<br />

that is safe for all. The tree<br />

planting exercise is a key part<br />

of Gtext Homes vision, and<br />

this will not be the first and<br />

last. It is a continuous thing<br />

for us,” she said.<br />

Dr Stephen Akintayo, MD<br />

Gtext Homes, speaking from<br />

the Abuja estate revealed that<br />

Gtext prides itself on keeping<br />

to their word.<br />

and to make sure that Ibadan<br />

is ready before the commissioning<br />

of the Lagos-Ibadan<br />

rail line. There are issues of<br />

border, we had acquired the<br />

land and got Certificate of Occupancy<br />

when the former<br />

Governor, Senator Abiola Ajimobi<br />

was here. Now, they are<br />

denying us entry into the land.<br />

We had 90 acres of land, now<br />

we have access to only 40.<br />

“In building the Inland Dry<br />

Port, part of the regulation is,<br />

when the government acquires<br />

land and gives to the<br />

Federal Government, the<br />

state government will provide<br />

infrastructure. If we convert<br />

that infrastructure to equity,<br />

then Kaduna will be the<br />

first to ask us for equity, because<br />

they were the first to<br />

provide those infrastructures<br />

in Kaduna Dry Port.<br />

“So many state governments<br />

have given us land to<br />

build inland dry port and Oyo<br />

state will not be an exception.<br />

And we don’t expect that Oyo<br />

State will ask us to convert<br />

those constructions into equity.<br />

“If you don’t want to crash<br />

Ibadan town, you need to<br />

build a road to link Moniya<br />

to the old Ibadan/Oyo road.<br />

The reason is, the moment we<br />

start trucking cargoes from<br />

Lagos to Moniya, even if the<br />

dry port was not there, you<br />

will have pressure in your city<br />

if there is no road to get them<br />

to exit from there.<br />

“So, if you don’t want pressure<br />

in your city and on your<br />

infrastructure, because what<br />

we have today in Lagos, Apapa<br />

gridlock and others will<br />

transfer to this place; we need<br />

to start preparing now, because<br />

in June the President<br />

will commission Lagos<br />

Ibadan rail line. And when he<br />

commissions it, it’s our intention<br />

to begin to move cargoes<br />

on that track, and those cargoes<br />

that are going to Kano,<br />

Port Harcourt and other states<br />

may end up in Ibadan.”


8 — SATURDAY VANGUARD, MAY 22, 2021<br />

2023: APC Govs shoot down zoning,<br />

say anyone free to contest<br />

*To provide platform for Ayade’s future political aspirations, negotiations<br />

By Omeiza Ajayi<br />

Youths of Brass Local Government protesting at the Government House<br />

over alleged non-implementation of the Government MoU between Agip Oil<br />

Company and Oil Communities in Ovom, Yenagoa Bayelsa on Thursday.<br />

AHEAD of the 2023<br />

general elections,<br />

governors of the ruling<br />

All Progressives Congress<br />

APC on Friday<br />

put paid to speculations<br />

regarding zoning of<br />

party offices and elective<br />

positions in the<br />

country, saying the party<br />

belongs to all Nigerians<br />

and that everyone<br />

from any part of the<br />

country is free to vie for<br />

any position.<br />

“APC belongs to all<br />

Nigerians. Everyone,<br />

from every part of the<br />

country is free to aspire<br />

for any position in the<br />

party in line with provisions<br />

of our party’s constitution<br />

and the 1999<br />

Constitution of the Federal<br />

Republic of Nigeria<br />

as amended. The guiding<br />

philosophy as enshrined<br />

in the provisions<br />

of our manifesto is<br />

economic, social and<br />

political development of<br />

Nigeria”, the governors<br />

declared.<br />

This came as they<br />

pledged to yield the<br />

platform of the party to<br />

its new entrant, Gov.<br />

Ben Ayade of Cross River<br />

state to actualise his<br />

future political aspirations<br />

and viable negotiations.<br />

“Given all his achievements<br />

in Cross River<br />

State, Mr. Ayade is only<br />

coming home where he<br />

belongs. APC is indeed<br />

the party that will provide<br />

him and his people,<br />

and indeed all Nigerians<br />

the viable platform<br />

for political aspirations<br />

and negotiations”,<br />

the governors said in a<br />

statement by their<br />

Chairman and Kebbi<br />

state Governor,<br />

Abubakar Atiku Bagudu.<br />

Bagudu said with Mr<br />

Ayade and all leaders in<br />

the APC, “our party’s capacity<br />

to serve the collective<br />

interests of all<br />

Nigerians through effective<br />

representation<br />

will be strengthened<br />

and reinforced”.<br />

“Our party, APC, is<br />

open, transparent and<br />

will continue to guarantee<br />

fair contestation in<br />

politics, in line with the<br />

overarching commitment<br />

of President Muhammadu<br />

Buhari and<br />

all our founding leaders.<br />

Our National Caretaker<br />

Extraordinary/<br />

Convention Planning<br />

Committee has worked<br />

hard to restore the political<br />

credentials of the<br />

APC as a strong institution<br />

for Nigeria’s democratic<br />

development”,<br />

he added.<br />

Welcoming Prof. Ayade<br />

to their fold, the<br />

governors said the political<br />

and democratic<br />

credentials for President<br />

Muhammadu Buhari<br />

have continued to attract<br />

more people to the<br />

APC.<br />

“The Progressive Governors<br />

Forum PGF welcome<br />

Mr. Ben Ayade,<br />

Governor of Cross River<br />

State to the All Progressives<br />

Congress<br />

APC. We join all leaders<br />

and members to welcome<br />

this illustrious Nigerian<br />

into our great<br />

party. The decision of<br />

Mr. Ayade to join the<br />

APC is a testament of our<br />

party’s capacity to mobilise<br />

all Nigerians consistent<br />

with the vision of<br />

the founding fathers to<br />

ensure that the APC is<br />

a platform to unite all<br />

Nigerians. The coming<br />

of Mr. Ayade into the<br />

APC further reinforces<br />

the process of membership<br />

and leadership recruitment<br />

at all levels”,<br />

the APC governors added.<br />

After several weeks of<br />

permutations about his<br />

political trajectory, Prof.<br />

Ayade had on Thursday<br />

dumped his erstwhile<br />

Peoples Democratic Party<br />

PDP for the ruling All<br />

Progressives Congress<br />

APC.<br />

Chairman, APC Caretaker<br />

Extraordinary<br />

Convention Planning<br />

Committee and Yobe<br />

state Governor, Hon.<br />

Mai Mala Buni, and several<br />

other governors of<br />

the APC had received<br />

Ayade on Thursday in<br />

Calabar.<br />

The governors in their<br />

statement said; “We congratulate<br />

our leader, President<br />

Muhammadu Buhari,<br />

whose sterling qualities<br />

and fair mindedness<br />

endear patriotic Nigerians<br />

to the party.<br />

“Mr. President’s credentials<br />

as a fair leader<br />

who is impartial will continue<br />

to promote our party<br />

and serve as a major<br />

source of electoral advantage.<br />

As Progressive Governors,<br />

we will remain<br />

steadfast in supporting the<br />

efforts and initiatives of<br />

Mr. President to build our<br />

party, APC, as a strong<br />

and democratic political<br />

party in the country.<br />

“Also, we salute our<br />

members of the APC National<br />

Caretaker Extraordinary/Convention<br />

Planning<br />

Committee under the<br />

leadership of Mai Mala<br />

Buni for this milestone<br />

achievement of once again<br />

getting another experienced<br />

leader in the person<br />

of Ben Ayade to join<br />

the APC.<br />

“We welcome Mr. Ben<br />

Ayade for taking the courageous<br />

decision of leaving<br />

the Peoples’ Democratic<br />

Party PDP to join our<br />

party, the All Progressives<br />

Congress. The movement<br />

of our compatriot to the<br />

APC is indicative of his<br />

principles, commitment<br />

and conviction to the development<br />

of Nigeria.<br />

“We will continue to support<br />

the National Caretaker<br />

Extraordinary/Convention<br />

Planning Committee<br />

in all its current initiatives<br />

to rebuild our great party.<br />

With the coming of Mr. Ayade,<br />

the capacity of our<br />

party to mobilise all patriots<br />

and other like-minded<br />

progressive Nigerians to<br />

join the APC is stronger.<br />

The Progressive reinforcement<br />

of our party continues.<br />

We look forward to receiving<br />

more patriots and<br />

progressive minded Nigerians<br />

into the APC!”<br />

We never asked Nigerians to<br />

submit their IMEI numbers — FG<br />

...As NCC deploys DMS to prevent phone<br />

theft<br />

By Emmanuel Elebeke<br />

THE Federal government has denied issuing a di<br />

rective asking Nigerians to submit the International<br />

Mobile Equipment Identity (IMEI) of their mobile<br />

phones to the Nigerian Communications commission,<br />

NCC.<br />

A media aide to the Minister of Communications and<br />

Digital Economy, Yusuf Abubakar in an interview with<br />

Vanguard said the ministry was surprised to see the story<br />

when it never issued such directive.<br />

Recall that a report in some sections of the media reported<br />

that the federal government issued a directive<br />

asking Nigerians to submit the International Mobile<br />

Equipment Identity (IMEI) of their mobile phones to the<br />

commission from July, 2021.<br />

Also reacting, the NCC through a statement signed by<br />

the Director of Public Affairs, Dr. Ikechukwu Adide also<br />

debunked the media publications, saying that subscribers<br />

were never required to Submit International Mobile<br />

Equipment Identity (IMEI) Number<br />

The Commission however, noted that it was in the process<br />

of deploying a Device Management System (DMS)<br />

which will essentially protect subscribers against phone<br />

theft and will identify and enable the elimination of fake<br />

devices from the networks. The system will capture IMEI<br />

automatically without any requirement for subscribers<br />

to submit same. It therefore advised the general public<br />

to disregard the said publications, which it said had created<br />

the erroneous impression that telephone subscribers<br />

will be required to register their IMEI with their networks.<br />

WAP signs global distribution deal<br />

for ‘Knockout’<br />

WALE Adenuga Productions,WAP, producer of<br />

the2019 comedy blockbuster, Knockout’ has announced<br />

the signing of an MoU with Media Pros Africa,<br />

a Kenya-based international film agency owned by seasoned<br />

industry player,Wangeci Murage, for the global<br />

distribution of the movie, through various platforms including,<br />

but not limited to VOD, TVOD, SVOD, Cinema,<br />

Pay TV, Free-to-Air, and Terrestrial.<br />

According to Wale Adenuga Jnr., producer of Knockout,<br />

“We are pleased to have finally come to a Global<br />

Distribution Agreement with such a reputable organization<br />

as Media Pros Africa as well as Osezua Stephen-<br />

Imobhio’s Oduma Creative Worx Limited, through which<br />

the deal was brokered. When Knockout was released in<br />

the cinemas across Nigeria and Ghana, the response<br />

was overwhelmingly positive. So, with this deal, we can<br />

finally achieve our desire of showcasing the movie to a<br />

wider audience.”<br />

Released on the 19th of April 2019, Knockout tells the<br />

comical story of what happens when news of a boxing<br />

competition, with a cash prize of $3Million hits town,<br />

and sends a group of people into a hilarious frenzy as<br />

they devise mischievous means to participate and win.<br />

The clumsy boxer they choose, and the crazy characters<br />

they meet along the way results in a myriad of mayhem<br />

and madness.<br />

Lagos establishes education radio<br />

to boost quality<br />

*Colleges, LASPOTECH to become<br />

‘varsitiesa<br />

By Olasunkanmi Akoni<br />

The Lagos State Government, has announced plans to establish<br />

an Education Radio Station for mainly educational<br />

content aimed at improving qualitative education in the state.<br />

Commissioner for Education, Mrs. Folasade Adefisayo,<br />

disclosed this on Friday, during the 2021 ministerial press<br />

briefing to mark the second anniversary of Governor, Babajide<br />

Sanwo-Olu’s administration.<br />

According to Adefisayo,”The state has filed for licensing of<br />

the radio station. It would serve as a channel for educational<br />

and training content for pupils and teachers only. It is a long<br />

process because approval has to come from Abuja, but we<br />

have started the process and I think we are getting close to<br />

approval.”<br />

The commissioner also disclosed plans to establish special<br />

skill-based schools (mono-academies) that would appeal to<br />

specific interests of learners; and the establishment of six mathematics<br />

laboratories in each of the six education districts.<br />

She said: “We will establish four mono-academies - multimedia<br />

and ICT academy (we have found a facility for this);<br />

fashion institute, construction academy, and agric/mechanical<br />

academy, in partnership with the private sector, because<br />

we want to give our pupils more options. If you cannot attend<br />

university, you can have a career in something you are good at<br />

and love doing. We will also give them the skills so they can be<br />

master practitioners.”<br />

“We will also establish six mathematics laboratories, and<br />

Casio has promised to donate the six labs to us in the six<br />

educational districts. We plan to roll out 150 computer systems<br />

in our vocational colleges; another 30,000 devices across<br />

all our schools, and even more, complete with the scheme of<br />

work, for our pupils because their generation is so adept with<br />

it and is tech savvy. We want to teach them in the way they like<br />

to be taught so they will learn as they should learn.”


SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021—9<br />

Our lawmakers cannot initiate<br />

change, they’re strangers to us,<br />

Nigerians lament<br />

•Say they’re inaccessible to their constituents<br />

•They’re benefiting from the corrupt govt system<br />

•Engage in meaningless discussions, centred on their own needs<br />

•They’re rubber stamp NASS, timid, lethargic<br />

•Nigeria is bleeding, govt must rise to the occasion<br />

•We need the president, not presidency to address us, answer questions<br />

•Senate President,<br />

Ahmed Lawan<br />

By Dayo Johnson; Samuel<br />

Oyadongha;Vincent Ujumadu;Wole<br />

Mosadomi; Festus Ahon; Umar Yusuf;<br />

Tina Akannam; Peter Duru; Marie-<br />

Therese Nanlong; Peter Okutu; Rotimi<br />

Ojomoyela; Ugochukwu; Alaribe;<br />

Charly Agwam; Dennis Agbo; Femi<br />

Bolaji; Ozioruva Aliu; James<br />

Ogunnaike; Chioma Onuegbu; Shina<br />

Abubakar; Ibrahim HassanWuyo; Steve<br />

Oko; Ikechukwu Odu &Chinedu<br />

Adonu<br />

Following unceasing agitations for self<br />

determination by some sections of the<br />

country, the presidency recently argued<br />

that only lawmakers as the<br />

representatives of the people have the mandate<br />

to effect whatever change they desired in the<br />

country. Some people are asking for the<br />

restructuring of the country or fiscal federalism<br />

with full autonomy for the regions. Others are<br />

agitating for self rule, or separate nations out<br />

of Nigeria. The presidency therefore tasked<br />

the various groups to make all their demands<br />

through their representatives at the national<br />

assembly.<br />

The residents however did not find the<br />

presidency’s advice funny. According to them,<br />

although the legislators were elected to<br />

represent their constituencies, they pursue their<br />

personal interests and not those of the<br />

electorate who elected them. The respondents<br />

lamented that in as much as they would want<br />

a change in the structure of the government in<br />

the country, the current legislators can’t<br />

legislate themselves out of office as they are<br />

currently benefiting from the corrupt political<br />

system.<br />

Their fears were confirmed last week<br />

Thursday, about two weeks after they said they<br />

had given up hope on their lawmakers when<br />

both Senate President, Ahmad Lawan spoke<br />

against the restructuring of the country which<br />

the agitators have been calling for. The<br />

southern governors had , asked the Federal<br />

Government to among other things restructure<br />

Nigeria. But Lawan faulted the call saying the<br />

governors were trying to take the country back<br />

to the regional era accusing them of playing<br />

to the gallery as they failed to first restructure<br />

their own state.<br />

It will be recalled that the All Progressives<br />

Congress, APC, Committee on Restructuring<br />

led by Governor Nasir El-Rufai of Kaduna<br />

State submitted its recommendations to the<br />

National Assembly but the lawmakers had<br />

refused to touch the report. Similarly, the APC<br />

as a party had shown no interest in restructuring<br />

three years after the El-Rufai Committee<br />

endorsed true federalism.<br />

The people therefore want the government<br />

to dust the report of the 2014 Constitutional<br />

Conference and similar reports and effect the<br />

desired change that will bring smiles on their<br />

faces.<br />

Nigeria’s ex envoy to the Philippines, Dr Yemi<br />

Faroumbi said, ordinarily in a normal society,<br />

the lawmaker has the responsibility of making<br />

cases for the desires and working to reduce the<br />

pain of members of his constituency.<br />

In any other society, given the amount of<br />

heat that is being generated in the political<br />

atmosphere, the lawmakers would have<br />

assembled the wishes of their constituents and<br />

would have presented them in the National<br />

Assembly. If Nigerians are asking for new<br />

constitution, reorganization or restructuring,<br />

if they are asking for a new arrangement that<br />

will help to protect lives and property of the<br />

people, members of the National Assembly<br />

need no prompting for them to enact law that<br />

will make the situation better for their<br />

constituents, but what do we have? Lamentation<br />

by the National Assembly, people who ought<br />

to aggregate the grief of Nigerians and make<br />

laws that will represent that grief and present<br />

the new law to the President to accent and now<br />

let us see whether the executive will refuse to<br />

accept it.<br />

“These are people who ought to have<br />

•Gbjabiamila<br />

•Ndume<br />

restructured Nigeria, who ought to have risen<br />

in Nigeria beyond the partisan and marginal<br />

amendments that they have been making, but<br />

they have not done their job.<br />

“They have opportunity to be remembered<br />

for life for being the legislature that gave<br />

answers to Nigerian questions, they ought to<br />

have taken that step that will be remembered<br />

as the legislature that provided solutions for<br />

the problems of the people, that removed the<br />

tears from the eyes of people and remove the<br />

•Omo-Agege<br />

•James<br />

Manager<br />

fears from the minds of people. So what do we<br />

have? Meaningless chat, meaningless<br />

discussions that are centred around their own<br />

needs, rather than the wishes and the desires<br />

of the people”.<br />

In his own submission, human Rights<br />

Activist, Dr Akpo Mudiaga-Odje, said: “we<br />

have always channeled our agitations and<br />

apprehensions through our elected<br />

Representatives. However, that procedure has<br />

largely been unhelpful and ineffective. Our<br />

Continues on page 10


10—SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021<br />

Say they’re inaccessible to their constituents<br />

Continues from page 9<br />

lawmakers really do not put our interests first,<br />

rather our collective interests are subsumed<br />

under their personal interest and as such, we<br />

never get any good results back at all. And<br />

that is why we are clamouring openly and<br />

directly to the presidency about our plight and<br />

current state of insecurity in our land. Even<br />

though we are still going to channel our<br />

demands through our representatives, we shall<br />

not stop there, but move on to pressurize the<br />

presidency to do the needful.<br />

A legal practitioner based in Uyo, Mr Mfon<br />

Peters, said “most of our Senators and our<br />

House of Representative members are not<br />

operating as those sent there to represent their<br />

constituents. Most of them are rather<br />

promoting their selfish interests. It is so<br />

difficult for constituents today to access their<br />

representatives. My thinking is that the<br />

leadership of this country is not being sincere<br />

about solving the problem of the people by<br />

pushing people back to their representatives.<br />

How many lawmakers visit their constituents<br />

with a view to knowing their problems or<br />

challenges? Even when your effort to see him<br />

or her becomes difficult, and you are asked to<br />

drop a letter at the constituency office, you<br />

will never get a response because the Senator<br />

or House of Representative member never<br />

visits that place. It pains that every four years<br />

you go to the polls to vote for somebody as<br />

your representative, at the end of the day the<br />

person is gone, you cannot reach out to him or<br />

her again.”<br />

Similarly, Comrade Joe Jackson, National<br />

President of Niger Delta Youth Movement<br />

(NDYM) said, “For me that idea that we should<br />

channel our demands through our<br />

Representatives is not the best approach. The<br />

representatives don’t visit their constituencies.<br />

Some stay in Abuja, and even when you drop<br />

a letter at their constituency office they won’t<br />

look at such letters. When they have few bags<br />

of rice and tricycles that they want to give out<br />

as empowerment they would claim they are<br />

engaging in constituency briefing where<br />

constituents would not be able to express their<br />

opinions or make demands.<br />

The Presidency should not ask us to channel<br />

our demands through our lawmakers because<br />

we cannot reach out to them and they don’t<br />

hold town hall meetings. What we (NDYM)<br />

expect is effective representation where<br />

lawmakers come down to their constituencies<br />

and hold town hall meetings to find out about<br />

the needs of the people”.<br />

A prominent trader in Minna, Niger state<br />

capital, Alhaji Ibrahim Nagogo said<br />

Nigerians don’t need to go through anybody<br />

including their Representatives before they are<br />

governed. The expectation of all Nigerians<br />

now is a government that will restore peace in<br />

the country, a government that will put food<br />

on our tables at minimal cost, a government<br />

that will restructure our economy to bring<br />

down prices of essential commodities, a<br />

government that will stop the incessant strikes<br />

in the Education, Health and other sectors<br />

among others.”<br />

Convener of Youthlead in Nigeria, Comrade<br />

Mohammed Saidu Etsu also kicked against<br />

channeling their demands through their<br />

legislators. He said “We were forcefully<br />

brought together by Britain some years back,<br />

went through military rule until 1999 when<br />

we got full democracy and since then, people<br />

have been agitating on how to restructure the<br />

country so that every Federating unit will know<br />

how to take responsibility of its own state but<br />

it is very glaring that the Federal government<br />

is not prepared for the restructuring. The<br />

Electoral Bill passed by the National Assembly<br />

during Dr. Bukola Saraki’s tenure as Senate<br />

President was not signed by President<br />

Muhammadu Buhari because of their selfish<br />

interests whereas the document will be of<br />

immense benefit to us and so pushing us back<br />

to the legislators again is meaningless because<br />

it is recycling the same thing that will not be<br />

implemented. If actually we are serious,<br />

Nigeria need to be restructured and if we want<br />

to do it, there is no better time than now<br />

because if we don’t do it now, it is like forcing<br />

ourselves on each other and there cannot be<br />

peace because nobody is comfortable with<br />

each other and if we actually want true<br />

Federalism, we need to restructure the country<br />

now”, Etsu declared.<br />

Speaking in the same vein, former<br />

Spokesman of All Progressives<br />

Congress,(APC) and former Commissioner of<br />

Information in Niger State, Mr.Jonathan<br />

Vatsa said instead of calling on agitated<br />

Nigerians to go through their Representatives<br />

again, the President should dust report of the<br />

last Confab submitted and implement. “There<br />

is no need going through the Representatives<br />

because their election was not through<br />

democracy but rigging so, they are going to<br />

be manipulated in whatever report they<br />

submit. The manifesto of the party,(APC) alone<br />

if implemented is enough to transform this<br />

country but unfortunately, the manifesto was<br />

dumped by powers that be for their selfish<br />

interest:”<br />

Barrister Iniruo Wills, President Ijaw<br />

•Senate President,<br />

Ahmed Lawan<br />

Professionals Association (Homeland<br />

Chapter) submitted that: “We need a<br />

democratically constituted sovereign national<br />

conference to produce a constitution flowing<br />

from “We the People” for the first time in<br />

Nigeria’s history, to reform the structure and<br />

system of governance in alignment with<br />

federalism properly so called, to institute<br />

meritocracy, and to make public governance<br />

attractive and accessible to serious minded<br />

people.”<br />

Eric Omare, former President, Ijaw Youth<br />

Council (IYC) worldwide said: “In any case,<br />

how many times has the Presidency even<br />

listened to representatives? So from whatever<br />

angle you look at it, the<br />

statement by the Presidency<br />

simply shows that it is not<br />

ready to provide leadership<br />

by directing Nigerians to<br />

direct their grievances to<br />

their representatives.”<br />

Mr.<br />

Joseph<br />

Ambakederimo, Convener,<br />

South South Reawakening<br />

Group in his reaction<br />

however believed that: “the<br />

system is not the problem, the<br />

operators of the system are<br />

the problem. The<br />

followership too are on one<br />

hand the problem. What we<br />

are experiencing today does<br />

not start today, it is the<br />

manifestation of decades of<br />

rottenness of wrong doing<br />

that we have refused to<br />

punish. And until we begin<br />

to punish wrong doing in this<br />

country nothing will change,<br />

even the restructuring people<br />

shout about today will not<br />

cure anything. Those<br />

advocating restructuring<br />

have not told us what form<br />

would the restructuring take. The President<br />

has started the process of restructuring by<br />

executive orders he has signed to make the<br />

local government tier become independent<br />

in order for us to begin to hold that tier of<br />

government to account but no one of us<br />

Nigerians stood behind him. He did the same<br />

for states Houses of Assembly autonomy no<br />

one of us stood with him. Same thing he did<br />

for the judiciary no one of us stood with him.<br />

We all look at Abuja forgetting that we all<br />

come from our local community and a local<br />

government and a state yet we call Abuja for<br />

everything. We have governors who we must<br />

hold to account at all times but the citizens<br />

are scared to criticise their governors. There<br />

is no form of accountability whatsoever at the<br />

state level and we think that is normal? The<br />

same governors who are calling for state police<br />

does not want local government police. Our<br />

lawmakers are partly to blame for the<br />

situation we find ourselves because many of<br />

them at the state level and at the national level<br />

hardly understand why they are even called<br />

lawmakers. It is a very sorry situation and the<br />

Presidency is saying we should engage people<br />

The expectation of all<br />

Nigerians now is a<br />

government that will<br />

restore peace in the<br />

country, a government<br />

that will put food on our<br />

tables at minimal cost,<br />

a government that will<br />

restructure our<br />

economy to bring down<br />

prices of essential<br />

commodities<br />

•Gbjabiamila<br />

who don’t know their left from their right?.”<br />

Former Vice Chancellor of Michael Okpara<br />

University of Agriculture Umudike MOUAU<br />

Professor Hilary Edeoga, advised members<br />

of the National Assembly to ensure that true<br />

federalism is reflected in the proposed<br />

constitutional amendment. Professor Edeoga<br />

said that the failure of those in power to allow<br />

the practice of true federalism in the country<br />

was the reason states run to Abuja every month<br />

for allocations. He argued that if the<br />

federating states or different regions in the<br />

country enjoy a level of independence as they<br />

should in ideal federalism, the over<br />

dependence on the centre and the excess<br />

concentration of power at the centre which is<br />

often abused would be<br />

avoided. Edeoga blamed<br />

youth restiveness, agitations<br />

and some deviant activities<br />

on the deficiencies of the<br />

current flawed constitution<br />

which he said could no<br />

longer be sustained.<br />

“Inequality and injustice are<br />

the reasons for all the<br />

problems bedeviling<br />

Nigeria today, and these<br />

must be addressed in the<br />

proposed amendment,<br />

otherwise it will amount to<br />

futile exercise”, he said<br />

Similarly, a Professor of<br />

Political Science at the Abia<br />

State University Uturu,<br />

Professor Harts Ofoeze,<br />

said the endemic injustices<br />

in the country as a result of<br />

the current constitution<br />

skewed to favour a<br />

particular section of the<br />

country must be corrected in<br />

the proposed amendment if<br />

Nigeria must stay united. He<br />

said that mere<br />

constitutional review would<br />

never bring solution to Nigeria’s woes until<br />

the fundamental issues of injustice and<br />

lopsidedness were genuinely addressed.<br />

Ofoeze argued that Nigeria could not be<br />

talking of a constitutional amendment without<br />

first creating an additional state for the South<br />

East to bring the zone at par with other zones.<br />

“There should be equal number of states in all<br />

the zones for the sake of equity”, he said. He<br />

also doubted the ability of the National<br />

Assembly as currently constituted to bequeath<br />

to the country a workable new constitution.<br />

According to him those people going to<br />

handle the amendment are part of the<br />

problems in the country and will still<br />

manipulate it in favour of their region because<br />

they are in the majority. “The NASS can’t<br />

genuinely give us a type of constitution that<br />

will solve the Nigeria equation. The Nigerian<br />

people must be part of any genuine efforts to<br />

review our constitution. Whatever name they<br />

want to give it, the various nationalities in the<br />

country must be involved to dialogue and<br />

decide how they will be governed”. He however<br />

said if they decide to forge ahead, key areas of<br />

resource control and fiscal federalism have to<br />

be addressed.<br />

In his reaction, former Speaker, ECOWAS<br />

Parliament, Senator Mao Ohuabunwa<br />

advocated for power devolution, saying that<br />

the concentration of too much power at the<br />

centre was the cause of the friction in the<br />

country. Senator Ohuabunwa said certain<br />

issues on the exclusive list should be removed<br />

and taken to residual list for states to have<br />

absolute control over them. The former<br />

Leader, House of Representatives also said<br />

return to regional structure could help proffer<br />

solution to Nigeria’s woes.<br />

He advised members of the National<br />

Assembly to holistically review the constitution<br />

and genuinely address the burning issues,<br />

warning that if this last opportunity to avert<br />

the looming danger is lost, the country might<br />

be headed for implosion.<br />

Similarly, the President Coalition of South<br />

East Youth Leaders COSEYL, Comrade<br />

Goodluck Ibem, demanded devolution of<br />

more powers to states. COSEYL also<br />

demanded the establishment of state police<br />

and increase in revenue sharing formula in<br />

favour of states.<br />

“We want states to have Anti-Corruption<br />

agency Commissions that will ensure that<br />

states’ resources are not misappropriated by<br />

political office holders. The states should be<br />

in charge of security. Our current security<br />

challenges would not have been this bad if<br />

states were in control of the police and other<br />

security agencies. More powers to the states<br />

and local governments will bring government<br />

and governance nearer to the people. A<br />

situation where every thing must come from<br />

Abuja is not good for rapid development of<br />

the country. The youths and women should be<br />

given more opportunity to participate in the<br />

government and administration of the<br />

country.”<br />

Anthony N Z Sani, the immediate past<br />

Secretary General of ACF argued that<br />

“Nigerians should demand good governance<br />

that comes from purposeful leadership in the<br />

hope of bringing about a situation whereby<br />

politics, economics and morality would<br />

intersect for common good. What is more, the<br />

term restructuring seems to depend on the<br />

agitators. There are those who clamor for true<br />

federalism, whatever that means, there are<br />

also those who call for fiscal federalism. Yet<br />

there are others who agitate for resource<br />

control. Still, we have agitators for resource<br />

control whereby host communities ask that<br />

the 13% derivation be paid to them directly<br />

and not to state governments which use it to<br />

construct fly overs, five star hotels and airports<br />

in the state capitals to the detriment of the<br />

host communities of the natural resources. I<br />

expect the elected representatives to listen to<br />

the demands by their constituents, articulate<br />

same and bring to the chambers for effect after<br />

deliberations. I understand the concern by<br />

some people is in the area of devolution of<br />

power through paring down the number of<br />

exclusive list in favor of concurrent<br />

list,considering some items are better handled<br />

by state governments.”<br />

Rev John Joseph Hayab, Chairman of<br />

CAN,Kaduna state said “the Presidency is<br />

simply shying away from engaging citizens<br />

on a frank dialogue about Nigeria’s problems<br />

and how to find a lasting solution. Telling<br />

Nigerians to make demands through their<br />

legislators is not appropriate at this time<br />

knowing that some of them have cut off with<br />

their constituency and what about the<br />

constituency where no bye election has been<br />

conducted to replace the former who will the<br />

people make demands through?There are<br />

many previous laws or amendment that this<br />

present National Assembly had passed and<br />

nothing had been done about them. The<br />

Federal Government should instead go back<br />

to previous reports of different National<br />

Conferences and other Committees set up by<br />

Government that contain the larger views of<br />

Nigerians with people’s representatives to<br />

start the process of restructuring this country.<br />

Nigerians have talked, and have<br />

documented their views and all we need now<br />

is honest action from Government.<br />

According to Prima Angyu, “Full autonomy<br />

should be granted to the local government<br />

system. The same financial independence<br />

should also be extended to the judiciary and<br />

the legislative arms of government. I also<br />

expect the legislators to ensure strict adherence<br />

to the federal character principles and putting<br />

in place institutions that will truly promote<br />

national unity and integration as well as<br />

enhancing the secular nature of the nation<br />

without promoting one tribe or religion over<br />

another.<br />

Gabriel Yough on his part said, “I will simply<br />

ask for true federalism. The system we are<br />

operating at the moment where the cost of<br />

governance is the priority of government in<br />

power is not sustainable.<br />

The constitution should be amended to put<br />

more items on the concurrent list for states to<br />

produce what will sustain them. The current<br />

arrangement where almost all mineral<br />

resources are on the exclusive list is inimical<br />

to development. The amended constitution<br />

should clearly prohibit nepotism which has<br />

created suspicion among Nigerians. In fact,<br />

nepotism should be criminalised so that<br />

Nigerians will be given equal opportunities.<br />

Another respondent, Abdulgafar Audu, said<br />

“in my humble opinion the real reason behind<br />

this uprising isn’t because of distribution of<br />

resources or power but lack of law<br />

enforcement. The representatives should as a<br />

matter of urgency formulate laws that will<br />

Continues on www.vanguardngr.com


SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021—11<br />

•Lucky Irabor<br />

By Vincent Ujumadu; Samuel<br />

Oyadongha;; Emma Una;<br />

Davies Iheamnachor, Chioma<br />

Onuegbu; Steve Oko &<br />

Ikechukwu Odu<br />

Every part of the country is presently<br />

feeling unsecured. No day passes that<br />

there are no killings and kidnapping<br />

for ransom by terrorists and bandits. Secondary<br />

students and university undergraduates are<br />

abducted, communities are sacked by bandits<br />

rendering the residents homeless. Traveling on<br />

the highway has now become a risky venture.<br />

But the situation in the South East and South<br />

South appears peculiar. The attacks and<br />

killings are targeted at security personnel and<br />

security formations. Scores of security<br />

operatives have been killed in the last couple<br />

of months and police stations set ablaze. Many<br />

policemen are now scared to walk along the<br />

streets in their uniform. But who are these<br />

gunmen who target security personnel and<br />

what is their motive? And why have they<br />

remained unknown?Leaders and residents in<br />

the region hold divergent views on what could<br />

be the motive for these attacks on security<br />

operatives<br />

Police brutality, extortion<br />

Respondents in the South East attributed the<br />

killing of policemen and burning of police<br />

stations in the region to accumulated anger<br />

by the people over police brutality in the region.<br />

Some of the reasons given by the people include<br />

alleged human rights abuses associated with<br />

police extortion and demand for gratification,<br />

humiliation of people at checkpoints, arbitrary<br />

arrests and detention of innocent citizens,<br />

raiding people’s homes for no justifiable<br />

reasons and forcing people to admit crimes<br />

not committed. There are<br />

also allegations of using<br />

cases before the police as<br />

revenue window, unduly<br />

picking up progressive<br />

Nigerian youths and<br />

dubbing them criminals<br />

out of jealousy,<br />

abandoning police official<br />

duties to serve politicians,<br />

often times turning cases<br />

against the complainants<br />

and protecting known<br />

criminals in the society.<br />

There also those who<br />

blame it on pure<br />

criminality of some people<br />

who are after the weapons<br />

of the officers.<br />

A lecturer of sociology,<br />

Dr. Ikem Nwankwo<br />

observed that the people<br />

have been enduring these<br />

abuses for decades until it<br />

exploded during the<br />

•Usman Baba<br />

Why gunmen target<br />

security formations,<br />

personnel in South<br />

East, South South<br />

•Security personnel accused of condoning atrocities of herdsmen<br />

•Anger over police brutality, extortion, arbitrary detentions<br />

•Attacks meant to deny S’East opportunity to produce president in 2023<br />

•Hoodlums need weapons to prosecute their criminal activities<br />

•Criminals want security personnel to abandon streets for them<br />

No day passes that<br />

there are no<br />

killings and kidnapping<br />

for ransom by terrorists<br />

and bandits. Secondary<br />

students and university<br />

undergraduates are<br />

abducted, communities<br />

are sacked by bandits<br />

rendering the residents<br />

homeless.<br />

#endsars protests.<br />

Nwankwo said: “The most<br />

common venues for<br />

extortion are the police<br />

roadblocks, which were put in place to combat<br />

crime. In practice, these checkpoints have<br />

become a lucrative criminal venture for the<br />

police who routinely demand bribes from<br />

drivers and passengers alike, in some places<br />

enforcing a standardized toll. Motorists are<br />

frequently detained, harassed and threatened<br />

and sometimes extended to their family<br />

members to negotiate payment for their<br />

release. Extortion-related<br />

confrontations between the police<br />

and motorists often escalate into<br />

more serious abuses. The police<br />

have on numerous occasions<br />

severely beaten, sexually<br />

assaulted, or shot to death<br />

ordinary citizens who failed to pay<br />

the bribes demanded. Sometimes<br />

they randomly round up citizens<br />

in public places, including<br />

restaurants, markets, and bus<br />

stops. Those who fail to pay are<br />

often threatened and unlawfully<br />

detained, and at times sexually<br />

assaulted, tortured, or even killed<br />

in police custody. Many of these<br />

abuses are perpetrated as a means<br />

to further extort money from<br />

ordinary citizens or from fearful<br />

family members trying to secure<br />

the freedom of those detained.<br />

Nigerians are also disturbed that<br />

over 100,000 police officers are<br />

hanging around politicians and<br />

rich men, while the country is<br />

grossly under policed. It was<br />

therefore not surprising that the<br />

#endsars provided an<br />

opportunity for Nigerians to vent their anger<br />

on the police.”<br />

An Awka based businessman, Mr. Philip<br />

Okoroma said “although accusing fingers<br />

were pointed at members of the Eastern<br />

Security Network, ESN, which is an arm of<br />

the Indigenous People of Biafra, IPOB, for the<br />

attack on police formations and killing many<br />

of them, the truth of the matter is that the influx<br />

of criminal Fulani herdsmen in the South East<br />

infuriated pro Biafra groups. But it is still<br />

possible that it’s the same Fulani herdsmen<br />

who have virtually taken over many forests in<br />

Igbo land with their sophisticated arms, that<br />

are attacking and killing the security<br />

operatives to create the impression that the<br />

men of ESN are responsible for it.<br />

Protest against<br />

discrimination, bias<br />

The National Publicity Secretary of Pan<br />

Niger Delta Forum, PANDEF, Hon Ken<br />

Robinson, on his part believed that the gunmen<br />

must be targeting security personnel as a result<br />

of the selective approach of governance in the<br />

country. Robinson said: “The people behind it<br />

are ‘unknown gunmen’. And our position is<br />

that the attack is an expression of anger and<br />

some kind of hopelessness among citizens.<br />

The people doing this are not foreigners, they<br />

are Nigerians. They come from communities.<br />

They feel the pain of the discrimination and<br />

bias against some parts of the country. We had<br />

condemned the selective approach in saying<br />

that South-South and South-East would have<br />

a security arrangement which is unnecessary.<br />

It is a protestation, people are angry and they<br />

are protesting. It is a demonstration of anger.<br />

This the only reason we can proffer on why the<br />

attack is on security. We think that it is a sign<br />

that certain persons are not happy with the<br />

way things are happening in the country and<br />

they think that is the only way they can show<br />

their anger. But, our message to those carrying<br />

out this act is that these actions are needless.<br />

That is not the way to go.<br />

This may destroy the South<br />

East/South South regions<br />

A minority rights activist and immediate past<br />

President of Ijaw Youth Council (IYC)<br />

worldwide, Mr. Eric Omare, said “honestly, I<br />

am at a loss as to the reasons for the attacks<br />

and those behind them. I do not know the point<br />

they are trying to prove with those attacks. As<br />

far as I am concerned, attacking security posts<br />

and killing innocent people is never a means<br />

to express one’s grievances.<br />

Criminals want<br />

police off the streets<br />

For Joseph Ambakederimo, Convener<br />

South South Reawakening Group, criminals<br />

are simply on the prowl and nothing more.<br />

He said: “The antic is trying to apply<br />

maximum pressure for the police to give in<br />

and abandon the streets for them (criminals)<br />

to have a field day. I can remember vividly the<br />

‘Osunbo and Anini’ days in the old Bendel State<br />

where policemen had to wear mufti to be able<br />

to walk around town. This is a similar scenario<br />

playing out itself and it goes to confirm that<br />

the criminals are being caged and the only<br />

way to push back is to embark on such attacks.<br />

The police need to and must fight back with<br />

the support of all Nigerians.”<br />

It’s preparation<br />

for war in Nigeria<br />

Comrade Alagoa Morris, a renowned Niger<br />

Delta environmentalist, asserted: “Those<br />

saddled with the responsibility of securing<br />

lives and property and, indeed the well-being<br />

of the nation should know better as some have<br />

received related training and being paid by<br />

government for that service to the nation. That<br />

aside, I am of the view that the actions and<br />

body language of the Presidency as regards<br />

how security issues are handled have<br />

encouraged more Nigerians to take to selfdefence,<br />

which is a natural law of survival.<br />

Agreed that the nation has lost a great number<br />

of officers and men of the military fighting<br />

terrorists, kidnappers and bandits, most<br />

Nigerians are of the view that the efforts of the<br />

Federal Government in tackling threat posed<br />

by these criminals have not been good enough.<br />

It is even worse, what we hear daily about<br />

alleged actions of herdsmen and<br />

inflammatory statements by leaders of the<br />

herdsmen. In a situation whereby even<br />

governors are attacked shows how helpless<br />

the situation is. Nigerians, I believe are<br />

preparing for the worst in case of a full scale<br />

war. People are beginning to take steps, I guess,<br />

towards protecting their territories, while some<br />

may also be trying to take advantage of the<br />

almost uncontrollable security situation to<br />

actualise self determination through arms<br />

struggle. In my view, these groups are the ones<br />

Continues on page 12


12—SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021<br />

Why gunmen target security formations, personnel in South East, South South<br />

Continues from page 11<br />

going after the police and soldiers; killing and<br />

taking their rifles. It is getting out of hand.<br />

While the 2023 elections may also be in the<br />

minds of some who may be sponsoring these<br />

violent crimes, Nigerians are also very much<br />

concerned about the alleged influx of<br />

foreigners, especially Fulani from other<br />

African countries and the rumoured plot to<br />

Islamise the country. As a direct result, the<br />

different ethnic groups in the country are also<br />

gearing up, for any eventuality. The situation<br />

is not only unfortunate and sad; it paints a<br />

gloomy prognosis. Some of us have been<br />

calling for a national conference on security<br />

so that Nigerians would jaw jaw and chart the<br />

way forward and allay the fears of the people.<br />

Besides that, a state of emergency should have<br />

been considered on security. If the nation was<br />

locked down in 2020 due to Covid-19; has the<br />

violence perpetrated by those terrorising<br />

Nigerians, kidnapping and killing daily not<br />

done more harm than Covid-19? The buck<br />

stops on the table of the President and<br />

Commander-in-chief of the Armed Forces of<br />

the Federal Republic of Nigeria.<br />

Chief Ogar Jones, a clan head in Cross River<br />

North, warned that war was looming in the<br />

country. According to him, “What we are<br />

experiencing is preparation for full blown war<br />

in Nigeria soon. Ethnic nationalities are<br />

gathering weapons to prosecute warfare in<br />

Nigeria. They are attacking policemen and<br />

military personnel to reduce the number of<br />

those to face in the full blown war which may<br />

break out before 2023.”<br />

But Dr Ibiang Omini, a lecturer at the<br />

University of Calabar, differed saying, “It is<br />

apparent that hoodlums need weapons and<br />

the easiest way is to kill those who are in<br />

possession of such weapons to prosecute their<br />

nefarious activities.”<br />

Security personnel accused<br />

of condoning herdsmen’s<br />

atrocities<br />

In Akwa Ibom state, a total of twenty-two<br />

police personnel have been killed so far in the<br />

attacks cutting across Essien Udim, Ika, Ikono,<br />

Etim Ekpo, Ini and Abak local government<br />

areas, all in Ikot Ekpene Senatorial district. A<br />

public servant, simply identified as Mr. Akpan,<br />

said he believed the gunmen belonged to Akwa<br />

Ibom pressure group affiliated to Indigenous<br />

People of Biafra (IPoB) fighting the police and<br />

the military for always protecting herdsmen<br />

in the country while victimizing the South<br />

South people and the youths who were<br />

engaged in genuine struggle. His words:<br />

“Those boys cannot just begin to kill the police<br />

and military. They are not happy about what is<br />

happening in the country today where Fulani<br />

herdsmen kill, maim innocent people and<br />

farmers while the government of the day will<br />

look the other way. Instead of dealing with the<br />

terrorists, the government would order security<br />

men to kill and arrest militants, IPOB, ESN<br />

who don’t harm innocent citizens. If nothing is<br />

done by government to address this, I don’t<br />

know what this country and the state will<br />

become tomorrow.”<br />

Some other citizens,<br />

however, were of the<br />

opinion that the attacks<br />

were targeted at<br />

government officials and<br />

not the police, stressing<br />

that those youths were<br />

trying to get the police out<br />

of the way to be able to<br />

penetrate government<br />

officials that use them as<br />

escorts.<br />

One of them said, “Those<br />

boys are not strangers, they<br />

are locals. They are<br />

indigenes of Akwa Ibom<br />

State. They interact with<br />

our people in our own<br />

language. They come to<br />

town to buy things, food to<br />

eat. When they came out<br />

to buy things in town and<br />

people were running away,<br />

they would say, ‘don’t run,<br />

sell for us’. Today, you<br />

cannot find a politician<br />

with police escort in this<br />

whole area because those<br />

boys will go after them. But honestly I can’t say<br />

why they are targeting police, I think they may<br />

actually be targeting government. Their body<br />

language shows they are angry with<br />

government because of the way things are<br />

going on. For instance, sometimes they would<br />

come to town just to stop people selling ticket<br />

to commercial motorcylists and Keke Napep<br />

saying it is wrong at this time when people are<br />

suffering so much.”<br />

The situation is not<br />

only unfortunate and<br />

sad; it paints a gloomy<br />

prognosis. Some of us<br />

have been calling for<br />

a national conference<br />

on security so that<br />

Nigerians would jaw<br />

jaw and chart the way<br />

forward and allay the<br />

fears of the people<br />

Attacks meant to deny S’East<br />

opportunity to produce<br />

president in 2023<br />

Coalition of South East Youth Leaders<br />

COSEYL, blamed the escalating attacks on<br />

security formations in the zone on antidemocratic<br />

elements bent on making South<br />

East ungovernable. COSEYL National<br />

President, Goodluck Ibem said the<br />

masterminds target police and the military to<br />

pave the way for a swift military invasion and<br />

destruction of Igbo land.<br />

His words:”From all indications, the<br />

perpetrators of the dastardly acts are antidemocratic<br />

forces who are hell-bent on<br />

truncating our democracy. These are external<br />

forces who want to make the South East<br />

ungovernable but their aim is dead on arrival.<br />

The perpetrators of these attacks<br />

understand that the only way to<br />

make the military, police and<br />

other security agencies to come<br />

hard on any area or people is to<br />

launch attack against security<br />

formations.” The COSEYL<br />

President further linked the<br />

attacks to forces opposed to South<br />

East producing the Nigeria<br />

President come 2023. According<br />

to him, the aim of the attackers is<br />

to demarket the zone and rob it<br />

of the opportunity to produce the<br />

country’s next President.<br />

“These forces believe that the<br />

easiest way to deny Ndigbo<br />

presidency in 2023 is by causing<br />

mayhem in the South East and<br />

the inability of the forces to<br />

unmask the perpetrators till now<br />

raises suspicion.<br />

“In Owerri attack that led to<br />

the destruction of Police<br />

Headquarters, correctional<br />

facility and other governments<br />

facility, the place is close to the<br />

military barracks in Obinze. The<br />

attackers conducted the attack<br />

for two and a half hours and there was no single<br />

response from the military or any other security<br />

agencies. This is exactly what happens anytime<br />

Fulani herdsmen want to launch an attack.<br />

The attackers of the Correctional facility in<br />

Owerri were shouting up IPOB. Which<br />

criminal will come to steal and he will be<br />

announcing his or her name for all to know<br />

that he is the one committing the crime. It is<br />

only someone who wants to frame-up another<br />

person that will do that.<br />

“Anytime Fulani herdsmen want to attack,<br />

all the security formations will be inactive. In<br />

the attack at Uzo-Uwani in Enugu state that<br />

led to the death of scores of people, the governor<br />

of the state got the information and called the<br />

82 division Headquarters in Enugu. They were<br />

dilly-dallying until the Fulani herdsmen<br />

finished killing and left before the military<br />

appeared to stop the villagers from reprisal<br />

attack.<br />

“It is unfortunate that our political leaders<br />

do not understand what is really happening.<br />

This whole confusion is just to keep Ndigbo<br />

busy on how to resolve their security challenges<br />

while the North will be busy working on how<br />

to retain power in 2023. Mr Noel Chigbu was<br />

killed in Owerri just for not observing the<br />

checkpoint rule according to the soldiers that<br />

killed the young man. What a shame! There is<br />

no where in the world where a soldier will kill<br />

a harmless civilian for not obeying a<br />

checkpoint rule .<br />

“The military have never arrested those<br />

murderous Fulani herdsmen killing people in<br />

South East, South South and Benue state. We<br />

challenge the military, if they are working for<br />

the peace of this country, let them arrest just<br />

one herdsman that is involved in the killing of<br />

Benue indigenes as well as killings in Ebonyi,<br />

Enugu, Anambra and Imo states.”<br />

The paramount traditional ruler of Isuochi<br />

ancient kingdom HRM Eze Godson<br />

Ezekwesiri (Ochi 1 of Isuochi), said the sad<br />

development had remained a puzzle to him.<br />

The monarch said thorough investigation was<br />

needed to establish the source of the attacks,<br />

adding that he could not point accusing fingers<br />

at anybody without evidence.<br />

Asked if agitators of self determination could<br />

be responsible, he said it was unlikely, arguing<br />

that it makes no economic sense to destroy<br />

infrastructure and facilities that would serve<br />

as a take-off assuming they succeed in getting<br />

the new country. The monarch called on Igbo<br />

leaders to look beyond the surface and get to<br />

the root of the challenge to save the race from<br />

doom.<br />

In his own submission, the traditional ruler<br />

of Obimo Autonomous Community in Nsukka<br />

Local Government Area of Enugu State, HRH,<br />

Igwe Spencer Ugwuoke said, “anybody going<br />

to attack police personnel and their facilities<br />

has grievances. The police should not detain<br />

suspects beyond 24 hours. However, if you go<br />

to police stations, you will see someone who<br />

has been there for months, if not years without<br />

being charged to court. Some people locked<br />

up in police cells could have invited hoodlums<br />

to police facilities”.<br />

Also, most members of these agitating groups<br />

are looking for a way to earn their livelihood.<br />

That’s why I attribute insecurity and uprising<br />

in South East to unemployment. Everyone<br />

should be given a sense of belonging and not<br />

treated as a second class citizen in his own<br />

country. Let South East governors co-opt<br />

Eastern Security Network, and Ebubeagu for<br />

proper security of the region. Let the Federal<br />

Government also remove the outlaw tag on<br />

IPoB and seek a way of working in harmony<br />

with them.<br />

Ayade and his 2023<br />

political permutations<br />

By Dirisu Yakubu<br />

Governors particularly in third<br />

world countries come across as<br />

powerful forces whose words are<br />

laws. In Nigeria, they are seen as demigods;<br />

men who have everything at their<br />

beck and call. So powerful are they that<br />

when they are yet to exhaust their first tenure,<br />

most of them have a way of prevailing<br />

on their political platforms to assure<br />

them of a second shot at the plum seat.<br />

Slogans such as “No vacancy,” “four<br />

plus four,” “tazarce” (continuity) have<br />

found their way into the nation’s political<br />

lexicon owing primarily to the largerthan-life<br />

disposition of our state chief executives.<br />

These powers derive partly from the quasi-democracy<br />

model in the land which has<br />

seen elected leaders reign with reckless<br />

impunity since the return to democracy in<br />

1999.<br />

In the past few years; the public had become<br />

more potent in asking questions that<br />

matter. As a result, incumbent governors<br />

have lost elections even as a sitting President<br />

failed to secure maximum votes to<br />

remain in office for the first time in 2015.<br />

This week’s defection of Cross River state<br />

governor, Professor Ben Ayade from the<br />

Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, to the ruling<br />

All Progressives Congress, APC, has<br />

continued to elicit diverse reactions from<br />

Nigerians.<br />

Ayade, who premised his decision to<br />

pitch tent with APC on President Muhammadu<br />

Buhari’s “charismatic disposition,”<br />

is finding it difficult to win enough supporters<br />

to this eleventh hour theory.<br />

Ayade’s loss of the party structure left<br />

him with no option but to seek a new platform<br />

ahead of the 2023 general elections<br />

given his rumoured ambition for a seat at<br />

the Senate; the retirement home of twoterm<br />

governors.<br />

The governor’s troubles have been well<br />

documented and a few warrant a recap<br />

here. In December 2020, youths under the<br />

aegis of Yala Political Development Forum<br />

stormed the PDP headquarters, Abuja<br />

protesting against what they called the<br />

imposition of local government chairmen<br />

and their vice chairmen by Governor<br />

Ayade. They vowed to quit the party<br />

if the people were not allowed to have a<br />

say on who becomes their leaders at the<br />

grassroots level.<br />

Following the death of Senator<br />

Rose Okoh, the lawmaker representing<br />

Cross River North;<br />

Ayade brought his dependable<br />

ally, Dr. Stephen Odey<br />

as his preferred candidate<br />

in the by-election and<br />

sought the support of his<br />

predecessor, Liyel Imoke.<br />

While Imoke and other<br />

PDP leaders in the state<br />

did not have anything<br />

against Odey, they insisted that only a<br />

transparent primary election would determine<br />

the party’s flag bearer. Ayade lost<br />

out as Hon. Agom Jarigbe, a member of<br />

the House of Representatives, representing<br />

Ogoja/Yala federal constituency<br />

emerged winner.<br />

Apparently tired of counting his losses,<br />

the Professor of Biology a fortnight ago<br />

gave a hint on what to expect if the tables<br />

continued to be turned against him.<br />

Addressing his Bauchi state counterpart,<br />

Senator Bala Mohammed, Ayade invariably<br />

gave the PDP something to ponder<br />

on<br />

He said: “I cannot blind myself to the<br />

challenges of PDP and decide not to know<br />

what to do at the right time for their [Cross<br />

River people] sake. I know you are somebody<br />

that doesn’t take injustice. One single<br />

injustice they will see a new Cross River<br />

state.<br />

“And I say it as a warning because it does<br />

appears that your party seems to celebrate<br />

people who threaten and stress them.<br />

“All councillors [in the state are PDP,<br />

council chairmen are PDP, all House<br />

of Assembly members are PDP,<br />

all commissioners are PDP, and<br />

all the National Assembly<br />

members except one are PDP:<br />

all of them are under my leadership.”<br />

Reacting to the defection of<br />

the governor yesterday, the<br />

Cross River state chapter of<br />

PDP came short of describing<br />

the development<br />

as good<br />

riddance.<br />

In a statement<br />

endorsed by Imoke,<br />

Jarigbe<br />

and a host of<br />

others, they<br />

said:<br />

“The exit of<br />

•Gov Ayade<br />

the Governor from our party, while being<br />

rather regrettable, does not come to us as<br />

a surprise as it was not unexpected.<br />

“We join the national leadership of our<br />

party to wish him well in his new found<br />

adventure. We understand that the people<br />

of Cross River state who have stood firmly<br />

with the PDP since 1999 and other lovers<br />

of Cross River state are deeply disappointed<br />

by this move made by a governor who<br />

has won all his elections under the platform<br />

of the Party.<br />

“Given the overwhelming support which<br />

he enjoyed under the PDP and the fact that<br />

PDP has undeniable strong grassroots in<br />

the state, we affirm that Cross River state<br />

remains a PDP state.<br />

“An overwhelming majority of Cross<br />

River state people are PDP members. Our<br />

key stakeholders, members of the National<br />

and State Assemblies and strategic<br />

grass root mobilizers are still members of<br />

our great party.<br />

“We as a party, therefore remain virile<br />

and strong. Our shell remains uncracked.<br />

The leadership of Cross River state under<br />

the aegis of PDP since 1999 has led the<br />

state to a pedigree of progression and seen<br />

to the attainment of all the lofty achievements<br />

the state has been known for. Hence,<br />

the events of the last 24hours in our state<br />

avail us an opportunity to re-strategize<br />

and realign ourselves with the PDP in<br />

Cross River state which was characterized<br />

by a trajectory of growth and development<br />

geared towards the path of greatness.<br />

“We therefore enjoin all Cross Riverians<br />

and the teeming members of PDP in Cross<br />

River state not to falter in the faith they have<br />

in the party. While the current events may<br />

seem to present a glitch to the progress of<br />

the state, we hereby affirm our unwavering<br />

commitment towards serving the interest of<br />

the good people of Cross River state as we<br />

strongly believe that Cross River state shall<br />

be great again.”<br />

Will the governor make it to the Senate as<br />

it is being speculated? Time will tell.


SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021—13<br />

•Burnt house of ex Anambra Commissioner<br />

By Vincent Ujumadu, Awka<br />

THE protracted land dispute between Anaku and Omor communities<br />

in Ayamelum local government area of Anambra State, which has<br />

lasted about 100 years, early this week claimed the lives of three<br />

persons, including two policemen posted<br />

to the area. In the latest clash between<br />

the two communities, a former chief judge<br />

of Anambra State who hailed from Omor<br />

was physically assaulted, while the<br />

country home of a former Commissioner<br />

in the Willie Oboano administration, Dr.<br />

Christian Madubuko and 30 other<br />

mansions in Anaku were set ablaze. The<br />

National Youth Service Corps members’<br />

lodge and teachers’ quarters close to the<br />

police station in the town were heavily<br />

torched and looted and the Youth Corps<br />

members have fled.<br />

When Saturday Vanguard visited the<br />

troubled communities, the entire area was<br />

deserted as the people had abandoned<br />

their homes and fled into the bush and to<br />

neighbouring communities where they<br />

take refuge. The only secondary school in<br />

Anaku, Ogbe High School, has been<br />

closed down and all markets and primary<br />

schools have also been deserted.<br />

Following the incident, Governor<br />

Obiano has imposed an indefinite curfew<br />

between 7,pm and 6am in the area, while<br />

the state police command has beefed up<br />

security in the area. At the Anaku Police<br />

Station, the policemen looked dejected<br />

after losing their colleagues to the clash.<br />

Fortunately, the hoodlums who burnt the<br />

houses did not attack the police station,<br />

despite the fact that it is located close to<br />

some of the houses destroyed.<br />

At the palace of the traditional ruler of<br />

Anaku, Igwe Peter Oforkansi, his two –<br />

storey building, two bungalows and six<br />

vehicles were burnt and whereabouts of<br />

all members of the royal household could<br />

not be ascertained. Also, burnt vehicles<br />

littered the major Otuocha –Anaku –<br />

Omor road.<br />

Saturday Vanguard gathered that the<br />

policemen lost their lives while trying to<br />

stop youths suspected to be from Omor<br />

from invading Anaku. The state<br />

Commissioner of Police, Mr. Chris<br />

Owolabi said he has already commenced<br />

investigation to find out what led to the<br />

attack.<br />

An indigene of Anaku, Mr. Michael<br />

Atumanya recalled that a similar attack<br />

took place in 2020, adding that<br />

stakeholders had to intervene to restore<br />

peace in the area. He said: “The people<br />

of Amikwe Omor invaded a piece of land<br />

belonging to Obukwu kindred, Anaku in<br />

April 2020, but the matter was timely<br />

managed by Ayamelum LGA which<br />

settled it with the active participation of<br />

the traditional rulers of the two<br />

communities.<br />

“An agreement was signed on 28 April<br />

2020 that everybody should maintain<br />

How 100 year –old<br />

land dispute sent<br />

two policemen,<br />

one other to early<br />

graves in Anambra<br />

•Monarch’s palace, ex Commissioner’s<br />

house, 30 others burnt<br />

peace and status-quo. Unfortunately,<br />

Omor people started building houses on<br />

the disputed area of land belonging to<br />

Anaku such that by the time the<br />

constituted boundary adjustment<br />

committee visited the area, they were<br />

already claiming ownership of the place.<br />

While they were scrambling for land, a<br />

fight ensured among them and they<br />

started destroying structures.<br />

“This latest action is not unusual, as<br />

over the years, they have always<br />

employed both violent and nefarious<br />

means for forceful annexation of lands<br />

belonging to neighbouring towns.<br />

Anaku people have always been at<br />

the receiving end of this age-long land<br />

dispute between the two<br />

communities.”<br />

According to Atumanya, in 2008, the<br />

people of Omor attacked late Mr.<br />

Ayaduno Obodeze and other<br />

indigenes of Anaku at Igbachala<br />

farmland which eventually led to his<br />

untimely death. The same year, they<br />

massacred late Mr Ozoemena<br />

Edunor. In 2016 their mercenaries<br />

decimated late Mr. Okaka Atumanya<br />

on the same piece of land; took his<br />

•Another<br />

burnt house<br />

in Anaku<br />

body away and mutilated it.<br />

“The matter was reported to the<br />

government and suspects charged to<br />

court but, it died in Otuocha High<br />

Court without justice. In 2015, they<br />

demolished Obukwu Town hall and<br />

the country homes of Mr. Raphael<br />

Onochie, Stephen Ndife, Chijioke<br />

Okechukwu, Oranefo Nwakwudo. In<br />

2019 they equally burnt down<br />

Ayamelum customary court at Ikpa<br />

Obukwu Anaku.<br />

“These clashes led to wanton<br />

destruction of multiple lives and<br />

properties worth huge amounts of<br />

money. Of greater importance is the<br />

atmosphere of bitterness, resentment,<br />

enmity, daunting and protracted legal<br />

suits such conflicts create among the<br />

neighbouring towns in the local<br />

government, thereby defeating the<br />

aim of working together as brothers<br />

and sisters and coexisting<br />

harmoniously in peace for the<br />

achievement of progress and<br />

development in our local government<br />

as a political unit.”<br />

Investigation showed that in the<br />

1920s, the people of Igbariam in<br />

Anambra East local government area<br />

were crossing the Ezu River to Anaku<br />

to claim farmlands, which Anaku said,<br />

was unexpected given the fact that Ezu<br />

River was a natural boundary. The<br />

encroachment was then duly resisted by<br />

the people of Obukwu and this led to a<br />

litigation process at the native court<br />

during the colonial era.<br />

During the litigation, the people of<br />

Amikwe (Omor) and Umuerike<br />

(Umerum), offered their support to the<br />

people of Obukwu. After the case was won<br />

by Obukwu, and to ensure no further<br />

encroachments to the farmlands, the<br />

people of Amikwe (Omor), Obukwu<br />

(Anaku) and Umuerike (Umerum) struck<br />

an agreement to allow free farming on<br />

their borders.<br />

In 1974, when the Shell-BP Petroleum<br />

Development Company of Nigeria<br />

Limited came to the area for oil<br />

exploration, the people of Obukwu,<br />

Anaku invited the other two<br />

communities of<br />

Amikwe (Omor)<br />

and Umuerike<br />

(Umuerum) to<br />

become co-owners<br />

of the oil wells. At that<br />

time, land was in<br />

abundance and there<br />

was relative peace<br />

among the people. A<br />

twelve -man<br />

committee, comprising<br />

four members from<br />

each community, was<br />

raised to oversee the<br />

activities of Shell on the<br />

land.<br />

Also, in 1980 the<br />

Federal Government<br />

provided an irrigation<br />

infrastructure for the benefit of the local<br />

farmers in the area. The land for the rice<br />

fields were acquired from Umumbo,<br />

Omor, Umuerum, and Anaku<br />

communities. The Lower Anambra/Imo<br />

Irrigation Project (LAIP) was achieved<br />

using a location map (1982), created by<br />

the Federal Government and authorities<br />

of the irrigation project allocated specific<br />

number of plots to each of the four<br />

communities according to the size of land<br />

expropriated from them. The land of<br />

Amikwe (Omor), Obukwu, Ikenga<br />

(Anaku) and Umuerike (Umerum)<br />

communities jointly constitute the South<br />

West Zone of the project.<br />

Atumanya called on the Anambra State<br />

government to use the available<br />

topographical information to intervene<br />

in the land dispute to ensure that peace<br />

was restored in the area and justice done<br />

on the matter. According to him, the<br />

intervention would also ensure that<br />

boundaries between Omor and Anaku,<br />

Omor and Umumbo, Omor and Igbakwu,<br />

as well as other communities in the area,<br />

were properly delineated for peace to<br />

reign.<br />

•Burnt palace of Igwe Peter Oforkansi<br />

•Deserted Anaku road


14—SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22 , 2021<br />

DELTA 2023:<br />

Deconstructing<br />

Okowa!<br />

By Emma Amaize,<br />

Regional Editor, South-South<br />

Gov’s riveting tactics<br />

FOR some leaders and collections in<br />

Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, Delta State,<br />

who thought they could outfox the<br />

Governor of Delta State, Senator Ifeanyi<br />

Okowa, in the hot scramble for his successor<br />

in 2023, he unconstrained some brain<br />

teasers, during the week and drove political<br />

spin doctors back to the drawing board.<br />

Many have found it intriguing and<br />

difficult to understand the governor’s<br />

pronouncements in Owa-Alero in Ika North<br />

East and actions in the past six days,<br />

especially as to who succeeds him. What<br />

baffled strategists is his startling bluntness<br />

in where they expected him to be<br />

diplomatic.<br />

As if adding to the conundrum, the<br />

governor on Tuesday sacked all his<br />

Commissioners, Secretary to the State<br />

Government, SSG, Special Advisers,<br />

Political Strategist, Senior Political Adviser<br />

and Special Advisors, saying a number of<br />

them had entangled themselves in the<br />

politics of 2023 and causing distractions to<br />

governance.<br />

Ibori, Amori,<br />

DC-23 ambush<br />

However, the struggle for who succeeds<br />

Okowa did not just start in 2021. Everybody<br />

knows that it started in 2019 soon after he<br />

won his second term election. About<br />

September , 2019, former governor of the<br />

state, Chief James Ibori, former Minister<br />

of Information, Prof Sam Oyovbaire,<br />

chairman, Delta Capital Territory<br />

Development Agency, Chief Ighoyota<br />

Amori and other Delta Central senatorial<br />

district (Urhobo) PDP leaders, at Ibori’s<br />

Oghara country home in Ethipe-West local<br />

government area, were declaring that<br />

Governor Okowa, who hails from Delta<br />

North senatorial district (Anioma) would<br />

hand over power to the district in 2023,<br />

according to the subsisting power rotation<br />

arrangement among the three senatorial<br />

districts.<br />

The early meeting and declaration by<br />

Urhobo political leaders was to get the<br />

better of their counterparts from the Ijaw<br />

ethnic nationality in Delta South senatorial<br />

district, who have become<br />

vociferous in their demand that<br />

the next governor should<br />

proceed from their ethnic group.<br />

Ibori, who spoke at the<br />

meeting was quoted to have<br />

said: ”Governor Okowa during<br />

his campaign promised to<br />

handover to Delta Central and<br />

as a gentleman and promise<br />

keeper, we have no doubt in our<br />

minds that he will do everything<br />

within his God given powers to<br />

adhere strictly to his promise.”<br />

“We expect all genuine<br />

members of our great party, PDP,<br />

to comply with the power<br />

rotation agreement. It is for the<br />

good of all; majority and<br />

minority, the weak and the<br />

strong, for a balanced society.<br />

“Equity, justice and good<br />

conscience are some of the major<br />

pillars of constitutional democracy, hence<br />

PDP in Delta state encourages power<br />

rotation to enable both the majority and<br />

minority groups and or ethnic nationalities<br />

via senatorial districts power arrangements<br />

to produce governor, and the agreement<br />

remains sacrosanct,” he stated.<br />

Ibori added: “Let me also state clearly<br />

that 2023 is still much ahead and it is not<br />

time yet for political campaigns but we shall<br />

commence primary arrangements and<br />

wide consultations in the near future. We<br />

must remain united and avoid unnecessary<br />

division and attacks on personalities within<br />

and outside Delta Central Senatorial<br />

District as we make steady<br />

progress towards the historic<br />

inauguration of the next<br />

Urhobo governor come 2023.”<br />

A year and months after, in<br />

2021, Chief Amori, marshaling<br />

other Urhobo leaders with Ibori<br />

behind the scene, has floated Delta<br />

Central 2023 (DC-23) to<br />

commence the said ‘primary<br />

arrangements and wide<br />

consultations…towards the historic<br />

inauguration of the next Urhobo<br />

governor in 2023’ obviously based on<br />

the aforementioned power rotation<br />

arrangement.<br />

Though the PDP contrivance or<br />

gentleman agreement that has seen power<br />

rotate from Delta Central to Delta South<br />

and Delta North from 1999 till date has<br />

brought a measure of peace and stability<br />

in the state, it was not really because<br />

governorship aspirants, especially<br />

those of Urhobo stock, respected it<br />

all these years, it appears to be<br />

more of the line of attack of the<br />

aspirant that finally emerged<br />

as standard-bearer and the<br />

will of God.<br />

No formal<br />

agreement on<br />

power<br />

rotation<br />

—Okowa<br />

Answering<br />

questions<br />

from<br />

newsmen on<br />

the<br />

presumed<br />

gentleman<br />

agreement by<br />

PDP leaders<br />

to rotate<br />

governorship<br />

position<br />

during his<br />

quarterly briefing, Wednesday,<br />

at Asaba, Governor Okowa stated<br />

categorically: “A gentleman agreement is<br />

an agreement that is not written and l<br />

want to believe that that is what it<br />

supposed to be.”<br />

“But whether there was any<br />

formal meeting in which a<br />

gentleman agreement was<br />

reached, there was no formal<br />

meeting where a gentleman<br />

agreement was reached and<br />

We expect all<br />

genuine<br />

members of our<br />

great party, PDP,<br />

to comply with<br />

the power<br />

rotation<br />

agreement<br />

that is the truth as at today,”<br />

he asserted.<br />

The governor obviously<br />

disappointed those who<br />

wanted him to emphasize<br />

clearly that he was going to<br />

handover to Urhobo as Ibori<br />

and others predicted in 2019.<br />

What DC-23 proponents<br />

would want do straightaway<br />

was to affirm the agreement,<br />

whether written or oral, and<br />

add that Urhobo is it in 2023.<br />

But the governor opted to<br />

be shrewder than supposed.<br />

During his own<br />

governorship primaries in 2015, when it<br />

was supposed to be the turn of Delta North,<br />

this was after he backed out from run-off<br />

primaries in 2006, seven or so years earlier,<br />

to enable his predecessor, Dr. Emmanuel<br />

Uduaghan, fly the party’s flag, aspirants<br />

from Delta Central, despite the gentleman<br />

agreement the senatorial district currently<br />

professes, slugged it out against him.<br />

From his reaction, Okowa did not say that<br />

there was no gentleman agreement, he<br />

merely pointed out that there was no<br />

approved position taken on the matter,<br />

which is to say that nobody should<br />

blackmail or intimidate him to do his or<br />

•Ibori<br />

•Okowa<br />

•Amori<br />

their bidding with such arrangement.<br />

Leaders‘ll do proper<br />

analysis<br />

Earlier, last Saturday, at the<br />

empowerment of constituents of Aniocha/<br />

Oshimili Federal Constituency by their<br />

representative and Minority Leader of<br />

House of Representatives, Hon. Ndudi<br />

Elumelu, in Asaba, the governor<br />

admonished politicians to place the<br />

collective interest of the people above self,<br />

irrespective of ambitions, adding: ”I can<br />

see that a lot has been on in our dear state,<br />

especially the scramble on who will replace<br />

Dr. Ifeanyi Okowa come 2023.”<br />

He made a point which some probably<br />

did not assimilate, which was: “I am not<br />

all-knowing, but at the appropriate time,<br />

leaders must be ready to sit down for us to<br />

do a proper analysis politically, before we<br />

take decisions so that we will not lead our<br />

people into darkness.”<br />

According to him: “Unfortunately, some<br />

are not even patient, they started their<br />

campaigns in the first three months of my<br />

second term in office. I want to charge our<br />

leaders and people to be cautious because<br />

politics is such that if you don’t read it<br />

rightly, you will directly throw your people<br />

into fire.”<br />

I’m not God, can’t<br />

decide my successor<br />

Besides his deputy, Barrister Kingsley<br />

Otuaro, an Ijaw, who many said has<br />

displayed absolute loyalty to the governor<br />

in almost six years, the longest serving<br />

lawmaker in the upper chamber, Senator<br />

James Manager, also Ijaw, are prospective<br />

governorship contestants in 2023.<br />

Apparently because of Okowa’s decision<br />

to keep his cards close to his chest until the<br />

time comes, some people are already<br />

saying that he planned to hand over to Ijaw<br />

in Delta South senatorial district.<br />

Again, responding to journalists, he said:<br />

”On allegations of intention to hand over<br />

to an Ijaw man, it is only God Almighty<br />

that knows who will be governor after me. I<br />

cannot pretend to be God, I do not know<br />

who God is going to bring and I do not<br />

have the intention of playing the role of<br />

God.”<br />

” You will hear a lot more things just as<br />

they said I want to handover to an Ijaw man,<br />

I do not think that I have the strength to<br />

play God, but the issue is when the politics<br />

starts, politics will be played, and God<br />

Almighty will take the decision on who will<br />

be Governor.<br />

”But as I said, at some point in time as a<br />

party, because I can only speak for my party,<br />

that we will sit down to look at issues to<br />

find out what truly will be fair, what truly<br />

will be justiciable and what should equity<br />

really mean. On where the governorship is<br />

going, I think if you pray, God will reveal it<br />

to you,” he added.<br />

Power ambassadors<br />

disorganized<br />

Since Tuesday when the State Executive<br />

Council was dissolved, there have been topsecret<br />

meetings by DC-23 leaders, Ijaw<br />

politicians and groups across the state to<br />

critically study the governor and what he is<br />

up to.<br />

Some said he sacked the commissioners<br />

and other top politicians around him so<br />

that those reporting his activities to their<br />

godfathers would not have anything to<br />

report anymore or correctly read his mind.<br />

Presently, power negotiators in the state are<br />

confused on the governor’s body movement,<br />

but PDP leaders are all likely to end up at<br />

the dialogue table as projected by the<br />

governor to decide who could be backed to<br />

be the next governor.<br />

Before he handed over in 2015, former<br />

governor, Dr. Uduaghan, was faced with a<br />

situation where his commissioners and top<br />

advisers took sides with different<br />

governorship aspirants and worked against<br />

his interest. Governor Okowa has not<br />

disclosed his preferred candidate and does<br />

not want to make the mistake Uduaghan<br />

made in choosing a successor.<br />

A political analyst, Prof John Arhada,<br />

told Saturday Vanguard: “PDP should<br />

thank itself from having a master political<br />

strategist like Governor Ifeanyi Okowa,<br />

Urhobo leaders were about making an<br />

overpriced mistake that would have cost<br />

them governorship of the state. The All<br />

Progressives Congress, APC, was already<br />

smiling knowing the direction DC-23 was<br />

going with its plan and the end result would<br />

have pitted the entire state against them<br />

because nobody wants to hear of that<br />

political dynasty in 2023.”<br />

“What the people across the three<br />

senatorial districts of the state are saying is<br />

that there is nothing wrong with continuing<br />

with the PDP power rotation formula, but<br />

the party should make a clean break from<br />

the old order, Deltans do not want<br />

plunderers of their collective patrimony and<br />

their stooges anymore, we want a governor<br />

that will industrialize the state, otherwise,<br />

the party will lose the state to APC in 2023,”<br />

he added.<br />

C<br />

M<br />

Y<br />

K


SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021—15<br />

•Okonkwo<br />

•Maduka<br />

•Ezeemo<br />

•Ude<br />

•Soludo<br />

By Vincent Ujumadu<br />

Primaries: It’s battle of billionaires in PDP<br />

instantly donated N6 million and later donated 21 sienna cars to all the<br />

•Why PDP is indebted to Dr. Obiora Okonkwo<br />

local government chairmen of the party.<br />

Dr. Ugochukwu Uba, a former senator and two time Commissioner in<br />

•Dr. Godwin Maduka’s homes worth $7m, his hospital $4m Anambra State is one aspirant that has not defected to another political<br />

party since he became a politician. While many politicians in the state<br />

•Godwin Ezeemo currently employs 3,000 Nigerians<br />

were jumping from one party to the other and later returning to PDP, Uba<br />

said he had no reason to defect to another party because, as a founding<br />

•Dr. Winston Ude first to donate 21 Sienna cars, N6m to party member of the party, he believes in the ideals of PDP. That consistency<br />

has earned him enormous credibility in Anambra politics. Since leaving<br />

By Vincent Ujumadu<br />

the senate, Ugochukwu had remained at the background in the Uba<br />

F<br />

political dynasty of Uga, while his two brothers, Andy and Chris, held<br />

or the June 26 primaries of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, for the selection of the forth in the political terrain. In fact, he was seen as the engine room of<br />

party’s candidate for the November 6 governorship election, the battles will be fought by politics in Uba family and many believe that his time has come. The<br />

billionaires. The billionaires are not just among the contestants, but also godfathers who university teacher says he would bring his experience to bear in the<br />

determine who gets what in Anambra politics. Among the billionaires wanting to take over from governance of the state if he eventually becomes the governor of the<br />

Governor Willie Obiano in March next year are Dr. Obiora Okonkwo, the Russian -trained state.<br />

political scientist who is the managing director of Nigeria’s newest airline, the United Nigeria The interesting thing about the forthcoming primaries of PDP is that<br />

Airlines, United States of America (USA) - based medical practitioner and pharmacist, Dr. Godwin even those who are not billionaires among the aspirants have billionaires<br />

Maduka, USA -trained lawyer and architect, Dr. Winston Udeh, and a businessman/ farmer, Mr. backing them, and that makes the contest very dicey. For instance, it was<br />

Godwin Ezeemo, The other billionaires on the sideline include but not limited to those in Nnewi gathered that the Nnewi axis of the state, which has the highest<br />

axis.<br />

concentration of billionaires in the state, are likely to collectively back<br />

Dr. Obiora Okonkwo, is one person who many believe, can prosecute the election on his own one of their own for the PDP ticket. There are three major aspirants from<br />

based on the resources at his disposal. His United Nigeria Airlines came into the aviation sector from Nnewi in PDP namely, Hon Chris Azubogu representing Nnewi<br />

with a bang as he launched the airline with no fewer than five aircraft in one fell swoop. Okonkwo North, Nnewi South and Ekwusigo in the House of<br />

started as a humble trader in the commercial city of Onitsha, he fought his way through life and Representatives, Mrs. Chidi Onyemelukwe, the daughter of the former<br />

earned first class degree in Russia and capped it up with a PhD. Even when PDP was in crisis in the vice president, Dr. Alex Ekwueme and Chief Emeka Etiaba, SAN, son<br />

state, Okonkwo was servicing the party at the various levels and paying the rent for the party’s of the former governor of the state, Mrs. Virgy Etiaba. In the meantime,<br />

state secretariat in Awka. A top member of PDP said the party is indebted to him, arguing that it there are reports that some Nnewi billionaires are putting heads together<br />

would amount to ingratitude if he is denied the party’s ticket. Okonkwo is one of the consistent to prevail on aspirants in the major political parties, including PDP, to do<br />

members of PDP.<br />

everything possible to ensure that Nnewi people emerge the candidates<br />

Another aspirant, Dr. Godwin Maduka is considered one of the richest people in Anambra of the various political parties.<br />

State. The actual net worth of Godwin Maduka is currently unknown. However, his hospital in Dr. Tony Nwoye is another experienced politician in the race. The<br />

USA is valued at over $4 million in addition to his residential properties valued at over $7 million. former state chairman of PDP had contested for the governorship twice<br />

His 17 floor medical research center at his hometown Umuchukwu is a site to behold and he has in the past and was a member of the House of Representatives for Anambra<br />

single-handedly transformed the rural community into a semi -urban town. In the course of his East and Anambra West federal constituency. A great mobilizer, Nwoye,<br />

tour of the various local government areas of the state to mobilize support from the would -be a medical doctor, is a darling of the youths and should he get the PDP<br />

delegates, Maduka has been promising the people of the state that he would not be relying on the ticket, contestants in other parties would face a real battle. He also has<br />

allocation from the Federation Account to run the affairs of Anambra State if he became the the backing of one of Anambra’s billionaires, Prince Arthur Eze, who<br />

governor, assuring that he would use his contacts across the world to to attract funds for the has adopted him as his political son. Arthur Eze once described him as<br />

development of the state.<br />

one person who can work for the state because he has the energy of the<br />

Godwin Ezeemo, from Umuchu, left Nigeria after his studies and established lucrative businesses youth.<br />

with headquarters in London. In 2012, Ezeemo decided to relocate to Nigeria because of his Chief Val Ozigbo is another serious contender for the PDP ticket.<br />

desire to develop Anambra State. He subsequently invested in agriculture, manufacturing, media, Within the one year he has been in the political field, the former Managing<br />

tourism and his companies currently employ over 3000 people. Ezeemo had virtually turned his Director of Transcorps Plc has become a household in Anambra State.<br />

Umuchu community in Aguata local government area into an industrial town. He said he decided He is said to be favoured by some political stakeholders across the state<br />

to go into politics because of the sorry situation he found Anambra State in when he came back and beyond and his gentlemanly disposition is one of the factors going<br />

and therefore wants to serve the people to better the situation. Ezeemo was the first to donate a for him.<br />

vehicle to the leadership of PDP in the state.<br />

Mrs. Chidi Onyemelukwe, the late Dr. Alex Ekwueme’s daughter is<br />

Hon Chris Azubogu of the House of Representatives, another contender for the PDP ticket has another aspirant that has some kind of advantage above others. She<br />

what it requires to contest for the governorship of Anambra State. The three -time lawmaker has hails from Oko in Orimba North of Anambra South senatorial zone<br />

projects dotted not just in his federal constituency, but also in all parts of the state such that he is and is married to the popular Onyemelukwe family of Nnewi, also in<br />

popularly known as ‘Mr. Project’. As a native of Nnewi, he is one of those seriously being considered Anambra South. With the two families backing her, Chidi is placed<br />

by Nnewi billionaires to fly the ticket of his party and the people of the industrial town are not among the top contenders for the PDP ticket.<br />

pretending about it.<br />

As Nnewi billionaires are said to be rooting for one of their own to<br />

Dr. Winston Ude, is one of the surprises among the PDP aspirants as he was the first person to become governor, other parts of the state are also doing same. In Ihiala<br />

make a serious financial donation to the party as part of preparations for the primaries. When Mr. zone, notable billionaires, including Dr. A.B.C. Orjiako, Dr. Ernest Obiejesi<br />

Ali Odefa, the South East zonal chairman of PDP visited Anambra State as part of the party’s of Nestoil Group and Chief Allen Onyema of Air Peace Airlines, are<br />

sensitization efforts and solicited for funds from the aspirants to help in running the party, Ude being wooed by some of the politicians, although their political interests<br />

have not been ascertained.<br />

Mr. John Nwosu, a governorship<br />

aspirant on the platform of APGA<br />

for the November 6 election<br />

contested with the incumbent governor,<br />

Willie Obiano for the primaries of the party<br />

in 2013 and lost. He believes that this is his<br />

time to clinch the party’s ticket and wants the<br />

party leadership to conduct free, fair and<br />

credible primary next month. He fielded<br />

questions on the Anambra election.<br />

Why are you still pursuing your aspiration<br />

in APGA when there is the feeling that the<br />

party leadership has settled for another<br />

candidate?<br />

I don’t believe there is an anointed candidate,<br />

but even if such exists, I can tell you that it<br />

will boomerang. The best option is to allow<br />

a level playing field for all the aspirants.<br />

During the first outing of Governor Obiano,<br />

after becoming governor in 2014, he called<br />

all of us that contested the primaries with him<br />

both in APGA and other parties for a meeting,<br />

although all the promises he made to us were<br />

not fulfilled.<br />

But we are not complaining; rather we have<br />

moved ahead. I believe that it won’t be business<br />

30 groups contributing money for Soludo’s nomination form<br />

By Vincent Ujumadu<br />

About 30 groups, which have been supporting the governorship<br />

aspiration of the former governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria,<br />

CBN, Professor Chukwuma Soludo, have moved into another phase of<br />

the support by contributing money to support the purchase of his<br />

nomination form on the platform of All Progressives Grand Alliance,<br />

APGA. The party was said to have pegged the nomination form at N22<br />

million.<br />

One of the groups, the Soludo Support Group (SSG) has donated<br />

N10 million to the project, while another group, Youths Earnestly Seek<br />

Soludo, YESS, also donated N2 million.<br />

The convener and national coordinator of SSG, Mr. Chinedu Nwoye<br />

said the group was formed in 2019 as Soludo Fans Club. Recently, the<br />

various groups have been collapsed into SSG for more effective<br />

coordination.<br />

as usual this time. I know that our great<br />

leader, Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegwu<br />

Ojukwu, even in his grave, would wish that<br />

real democracy be practiced in our great party,<br />

APGA by giving power to the grassroots. It is<br />

only true democracy that can save this country.<br />

Rigging of elections brings bad leadership and<br />

when you take money and rig, the person sees<br />

it as a business and if he enters there, he will<br />

first of all try to recoup his expenditure before<br />

doing anything. After that, he sees governance<br />

as a private business.<br />

What will be your cardinal points to drive<br />

the economy if elected?<br />

Infrastructure is number one. When you<br />

talk about the major infrastructure needed in<br />

the state and nation at large, electricity comes<br />

first. Once there is electricity, if we ensure<br />

there is steady supply of power in Awka, Nnewi<br />

and Onitsha industrial clusters, the Asian<br />

companies will relocate to Anambra. During<br />

the time of Peter Obi, a private company was<br />

encouraged to build a power plant in Onitsha;<br />

another company is also planning to build in<br />

Ozubulu. The state government can<br />

encourage them and ensure they get the<br />

needed support. Nnewi Industrial centre was<br />

one of the industrial centres among the seven<br />

centres to be given power plant under the<br />

During the donation, elated Soludo said that he had never before<br />

witnessed where groups came together to contribute money to<br />

sponsor an aspirant and recalled that the previous day another support<br />

group donated N2million for purchase of Expression of Interest<br />

Form.<br />

”This is new. You have begun a new revolution in Anambra State.<br />

I believe there is a hand of God in all these. There is a rebirth in our<br />

political practice. Initially it was like a child’s play. What you did<br />

will live with me for the rest of my life. It is new and different,”<br />

Soludo said.<br />

He traced the beginning of support groups to three years ago when<br />

he marked his birthday when three young men, who were all students<br />

at the time, brought him a cake.<br />

He told them that the issue of governorship of the state lies in who<br />

has the knowledge, the experience and the network to sustain the<br />

state now that Nigeria had changed in the face of dwindling resources.<br />

What Ojukwu, in his grave, would be wishing APGA —John Nwosu<br />

Jonathan administration. Once that happens,<br />

industries will spring up , our GDP will grow,<br />

Small and Medium Enterprise will spring<br />

up while cost of doing business will<br />

drastically come down. There will be<br />

employment and with that, insecurity<br />

will reduce.<br />

Now with the statistics, we will<br />

implement the National Health<br />

Insurance and the state patterned<br />

scheme too. Every family with an<br />

average of N10,000 will get a card in<br />

a year and we will help the<br />

private hospitals to team up<br />

and ensure that every<br />

Anambra family will be<br />

registered to benefit from<br />

free medical checks and<br />

highly subsidized<br />

medicare cost. Indirectly,<br />

we are going to empower<br />

the churches and private<br />

hospitals so that no one will<br />

be left out.<br />

Youth empowerment is<br />

the in thing. What are your<br />

plans for them?<br />

Why there is insecurity<br />

today is because of unemployment and<br />

mistrust in the system. To draw out the<br />

youths already involved in criminality is a<br />

difficult task because they don’t trust the<br />

government. You know Boko Haram<br />

became a problem in the North<br />

because their leader was killed extra<br />

judicially. Before the killing, they were<br />

just there doing their thing<br />

undisturbed. No one can win guerrilla<br />

warfare; you reach out to them, know<br />

their problems and find a way to<br />

engage them in productive<br />

ventures.<br />

I also strongly believe that<br />

people are feeling cheated in<br />

our Nigerian system. That is<br />

why they can accept that it is<br />

better to do something and<br />

die than waiting for hunger<br />

to kill you. We have so<br />

many youth driven patterned<br />

projects which will not only<br />

make the youths in the state<br />

productive, but make them<br />

actively involved in<br />

governance. These include<br />

creating job opportunities and<br />

making them part of the<br />

government where they will<br />

have a say.<br />

•John Nwosu


16—SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021<br />

ATTENTION MALAMI:<br />

‘Our constitution guarantees<br />

rights to Nigerians, not cows’<br />

By Omeiza Ajayi<br />

Minister of Justice and Attorney<br />

General of the Federation AGF,<br />

Abubakar Malami has come under<br />

attack for comparing the ban on open grazing<br />

by Southern Governors with prohibition of<br />

spare parts trading in the North.<br />

Malami had in an interview while reacting<br />

to the decision of the Southern Governors, said<br />

it is a dangerous decision for any governor in<br />

Nigeria to think that they can bring any<br />

compromise on the freedom of liberty of<br />

individuals to move about, comparing it to<br />

northern governors prohibiting the sales of<br />

spare parts in the North.<br />

He insisted that the ban does not align with<br />

the constitution in the context of human rights.<br />

Arise Television presenters bared their hearts<br />

on this when they discussed trending videos<br />

anchored by Orji Okpe, a model.<br />

In his reaction, a former Presidential<br />

spokesman and television presenter, Dr Rueben<br />

Abati urged the AGF to stop misreading the<br />

constitution, saying Section 41 of the 1999<br />

Constitution as amended, guarantees freedom<br />

of movement to person and not cows.<br />

He said; “The office of the Attorney General<br />

of the Federation is provided for in Section<br />

150 of the 1999 Constitution and the functions<br />

of the Attorney General are very clear. He is<br />

the Chief Law Officer of the Federation. He is<br />

the Chief Legal Adviser to the Federal<br />

Government of Nigeria. At the state level,<br />

Section195 provides for Attorneys General of<br />

the states.<br />

“However, the first problem we have with<br />

this comment by the AGF is that when an<br />

Attorney General begins to dabble into<br />

politics, it becomes a very untidy situation and<br />

it is one of the reasons some persons have been<br />

arguing that we need to separate the Office of<br />

the AGF from the office of the Minister of<br />

Justice, because the office of the minister is a<br />

By Ndahi Marama, Maiduguri<br />

There are discordant tunes over the<br />

rumoured death of Abubakar Shekau,<br />

the leader of the dreaded terrorist group,<br />

Boko Haram, during a fierce battle when<br />

members of an armed group suspected to be<br />

Islamic State of West Africa Province (ISWAP)<br />

invaded Sambisa forest last Wednesday 19th<br />

May 2021<br />

Sambisa forest shares border with parts of<br />

Konduga, Bama, Gwoza Askira Uba, Hawul,<br />

Kaga and Biu Local Government Areas in<br />

Borno, with some parts of Gujba, Buni Yadi,<br />

Goniri in Yobe and Madagali in Adamawa<br />

state.<br />

Although, military authorities who are<br />

directly involved in the fight against terrorism<br />

are yet to issue official statement on the<br />

rumoured death of the terrorist leader in<br />

Nigeria, sources said, hundreds of ISWAP<br />

fighters invaded Sambisa with heavy gun<br />

trucks during the week hunting for Shekau<br />

who was the factional leader of Boko Haram.<br />

It was also revealed that Shekau was not<br />

directly killed by ISWAP, the splinter rival<br />

group, but blew up himself when ISWAP<br />

attempted to capture him (Shekau) alive,<br />

during a gun duel.<br />

According to a security report obtained by<br />

Saturday Vanguard, “unconfirmed source<br />

reported that Abubakar shekau was dethroned<br />

and killed by ISWAP and they have taken over<br />

the entire Sambisa forest. ISWAP is more<br />

equipped and better funded than Boko Haram.<br />

So, their mode of operation will change, and<br />

there is likely going to be frequent attacks<br />

around Konduga, Bama, Gwoza, Biu Local<br />

Government Areas and part of Adamawa. All<br />

humanitarian groups around the axis should<br />

be security conscious and be very vigilant.”<br />

It was learnt that a fierce battle that lasted<br />

several days between the two factions led to<br />

the death of dozens of commanders and<br />

hundreds of foot soldiers from both sides, with<br />

multiple sources saying Shekau has killed<br />

himself or fatally injured himself to the extent<br />

that he might not survive<br />

Many media platforms and social media<br />

•Malami<br />

political appointee. The AGF has to focus on<br />

the law. So, this is the problem that I see here<br />

because in this particular instance, the AGF<br />

responding to the 17 governors of the South is<br />

crossing the line from discussion of law into<br />

partisan politics.<br />

“The second point is S. 41 of the 1999<br />

Constitution which he was referring to, does<br />

not talk about cattle. It talks about persons. It<br />

says, “every person...” And this is without being<br />

presumptuous because I don’t imagine that I<br />

can teach the AGF on the point of law. He is a<br />

Senior Advocate of Nigeria, SAN and all of<br />

that, but with due respect, the governors of the<br />

17 Southern states are talking about cattle<br />

going about and disturbing people in the<br />

Southern part of the country, destroying farms.<br />

“If I recall, in that 12-point communique,<br />

there was no where they said northerners have<br />

been banned from the South. Nobody has<br />

banned the Fulani or anybody from any part<br />

of Nigeria. In the Southwest or the Southeast,<br />

you can go anywhere, but the issue is about<br />

cattle grazing and that is why they are calling<br />

for ranching. They are not calling for the<br />

ranching of human beings, they are calling for<br />

the ranching of cattle.<br />

“The third point is his analogy. I think it is<br />

entirely misplaced. Look, the Southern<br />

Governors can say yes, don’t even bring the<br />

cattle, they will eat fish. There are even<br />

southerners who have set up their own ranches,<br />

if the issue is about economic conflict that is<br />

indicated. The people selling spare parts in<br />

the North, if they come from a particular part<br />

of the country, maybe, from the Southeast or<br />

Southwest can gladly say okay, they will leave,<br />

that they will not sell spare parts in the North<br />

again. Now, in terms of cost, the people in the<br />

South have an alternative. They can eat fish,<br />

they can eat snails, but if you don’t have spare<br />

parts, how do you maintain your vehicles? How<br />

do you replace vehicle parts? So, that is why I<br />

think that the analogy is a bit misplaced but<br />

what is more important is that we will like a<br />

situation whereby the AGF does not get<br />

involved in partisan politics and just<br />

concentrate on the job of defending the rule of<br />

law, which is what is important in this regard.<br />

On her part, Tundun Abiola, daughter of late<br />

Chief MKO Abiola said comparing cattle<br />

grazing and activities and criminal herders<br />

with spare parts dealers is a false equivalence.<br />

She said; “I think that is a false equivalence<br />

he made there. He was referring to S. 41 of the<br />

Uncertainty trails Abubakar Shekau’s rumoured death<br />

had reported that ISWAP fighters armed<br />

with sophisticated weapons had<br />

penetrated Sambisa forest from<br />

different fronts and surrounded the<br />

place Shekau used as a safe<br />

sanctuary for years. They<br />

reportedly killed many of his<br />

fighters and forced him to<br />

surrender.<br />

Signal from security<br />

sources indicated that when<br />

Shekau discovered that it<br />

was the end of the road for<br />

him, and ISWAP fighters<br />

had directed him to<br />

relinquish his position<br />

as the grand amir and<br />

successor to the<br />

founder of the group<br />

Mohammed Yusuf,<br />

he opted for suicide<br />

by detonating the<br />

explosives he<br />

strapped to his body.<br />

However, the AFP<br />

news agency reported<br />

that when Shekau reached the point of no<br />

return as he was surrounded by ISWAP fighters,<br />

he shot himself in the chest, fell on the ground<br />

while bleeding profusely but was whisked away<br />

to an unknown destination by some of his<br />

surviving loyal fighters.<br />

Impeccable sources revealed that most of<br />

the fighters that fought for the defeat of Shekau<br />

were aged between 12 and 30 years.<br />

“They are actually children of some ISWAP<br />

members killed over time,” one of the sources<br />

said.<br />

According to him, “Others are youths<br />

sourced during raids on multiple islands<br />

around the Lake Chad. The ISWAP carefully<br />

selected the youths. It was therefore much<br />

easier for recruitment as some of the youths<br />

willingly joined the group and others were<br />

forcefully conscripted. Some of them were born<br />

during the wartime and others were very young<br />

when their parents joined the group around<br />

2002.<br />

After their parents died because of illness or<br />

confrontation with Nigerian troops, the<br />

children naturally took over and when the<br />

group split into two in 2016, those that<br />

moved on their own or forcefully<br />

taken to the shores of Lake Chad<br />

under the umbrella of ISWAP had<br />

an upper hand in terms of training<br />

because they were taken to Libya<br />

for training in guerrilla warfare<br />

and other purposes. Others were<br />

sent to Syria and Somalia. They<br />

were taken to many<br />

countries abroad for<br />

training. However,<br />

those that came back<br />

especially between<br />

March and April<br />

this year took<br />

active part in<br />

confronting<br />

Shekau in the<br />

•Shekau<br />

last few days.<br />

T h e y<br />

launched a<br />

serious<br />

offensive<br />

alongside other top commanders and<br />

fighters already on ground and they succeeded<br />

in taking over,” he said.<br />

Another credible source said some of the 300<br />

youths were trained as “medical doctors,<br />

paramedics, engineers, IT specialists, bomb<br />

specialists and mechanics.”<br />

He added that among them were women<br />

“who serve as nurses or cooks while others<br />

have gun-handling skills, meaning they can<br />

partake in combat operations.”<br />

He said after their return from abroad, they<br />

were camped at a village called Shuwaram in<br />

Kukawa Local Government Area of Borno<br />

State.<br />

Another source said ahead of the invasion of<br />

Sambisa by the factional group, one of the top<br />

commanders of the Islamic State of Iraq and<br />

the Levant and his lieutenants had visited the<br />

shores of the Lake Chad in company of ISWAP<br />

leader Goni Mustafa.<br />

“Members of the entourage were seen on<br />

two boats with ISIS flag. Some of those in the<br />

entourage were light-skinned people possibly<br />

from Libya or Syria. It was only Mustafa that<br />

Constitution that guarantees freedom of<br />

movement all over the country to all Nigerians<br />

and you cannot be expelled from any part of<br />

the country. However, we have a pressing<br />

security issue at the moment. Nobody has any<br />

problem with lawful herders. We never had<br />

because we all grew up with herders roaming<br />

the country. But now we have a new breed of<br />

herders who are brandishing AK-47. So, it is<br />

disingenuous of him to talk about it like it is<br />

just about cattle rearing. It is not. It has taken<br />

a sinister dimension and it will be irresponsible<br />

for southern governors to fail to curb this<br />

menace. So, it is a false equivalence on that<br />

score.<br />

“Now, spare parts traders in the North do<br />

not have AK-47s, do not shoot down customers.<br />

What is happening between the farmers and<br />

the herders is completely different and I really<br />

like that he would raise the spare parts issue<br />

whereas when Hisbah goes and destroys the<br />

stocks of Christians trading in Kano, what do<br />

we hear? Crickets. This is the kind of problem<br />

and tension that we are facing in the country<br />

when people don’t feel a sense of belonging<br />

and that some are more equal. I don’t<br />

appreciate this kind of comparison to lawful<br />

businessmen; comparing them to criminals”.<br />

Another presenter, Rufai Oseni expressed<br />

dismay that Nigeria has so degenerated to a<br />

level where cows have become subjects of<br />

national discuss at a time the country should<br />

be thinking of other developmental issues.<br />

“I saw the interview and it was quiet very<br />

sad. The fact that as a nation with the might<br />

and the size of Nigeria the potential it has got,<br />

that our national issue and development have<br />

been reduced to issues about ‘ma’alu’, that is<br />

cattle. It is problematic. And when you sense<br />

the body reaction of the AGF, you expect more<br />

from an AGF in cases like this. At first, an<br />

Attorney General trying to distort the law... S.<br />

41 talks about movement of persons. So, why<br />

twist it? Cattle are not human beings except if<br />

you are telling us that cattle have become<br />

human beings in this country or you are giving<br />

them human status.<br />

“Sometimes, maybe we need to check. Look<br />

at the open grazing law- they have had this<br />

since 1965 in the North but in the ’70s we<br />

had the Land Use Act that vests powers<br />

over land in the hands of the state<br />

governors and that still subsists. The state<br />

governors still call the shots on the land. What<br />

is residual should be left for the residual. So,<br />

why is the AGF talking as though there is<br />

another law he is quoting from in this<br />

country, trying to play technicalities with<br />

us? And we have seen the signs and the<br />

next thing, you use a very tribalistic slur<br />

by saying spare parts. Because we all know<br />

that the major dealers in spare parts are<br />

the Igbo. Why are you doing this? At first, you<br />

put forward Ruga, we said no. Just because<br />

of this same land, you come and collect<br />

land from people and call it settlement<br />

for cows. You went further ahead and put<br />

forward the Water Bill and we said no. Let us<br />

cool things down. We all want this country to<br />

work. Let us not inflame passions. We should<br />

all be statesmen in the collective development<br />

of this country. Nobody is bigger than any other<br />

person”.<br />

was black. They first visited Marte before they<br />

proceeded to Sabon Tumbu. They also visited<br />

Kirta, Kusuma and Kwallaram where they held<br />

meetings with commanders and other<br />

fighters,” the source said.<br />

The source added that after the strategy<br />

meeting, the visiting terrorists left and since<br />

then, the ISWAP fighters started mobilising<br />

ahead of launching attacks on Sambisa Forest.<br />

“Some of them gathered at Kurnuwa, Kayuwa<br />

and Tumbin Jaki before they launched the<br />

offensive. They had RPGs, GPMGs and AA guns<br />

on some vehicles,” he said, adding that the<br />

attackers also moved their “vulnerable women<br />

and children” from the Marte area to some<br />

locations around Kukawa.<br />

Another source said before they aimed at<br />

Sambisa forest, the ISWAP fighters were<br />

responsible for the recent attacks in Damasak,<br />

Marte, Mainok, Dikwa and Maiduguri towns<br />

in Borno as well as in Geidam in Yobe State.<br />

“They did not target civilians in most of their<br />

attacks; rather, they launched attacks against<br />

constituted authorities including security<br />

forces. The group handpicked and killed people<br />

perceived as enemies such as members of a<br />

volunteer security group, CJTF.<br />

“On the other side, Shekau and his followers<br />

operated from the southern parts of Borno<br />

State, mostly around the Mandara Mountains,<br />

Sambisa National Park and the Alagarno<br />

forest. The group had carried out several<br />

deadly attacks on its targets including civilians.<br />

Shekau was strict on his followers and did not<br />

tolerate rebellious behaviour. He had killed<br />

several of his renegade commanders and that<br />

was why many of those alive ditched him,” he<br />

said.<br />

It was further revealed that before the ISWAP<br />

fighters moved en masse to Sambisa, military<br />

operatives had launched several attacks on<br />

their hideouts in the northern parts of Borno<br />

State while air raids continued unabated.<br />

“The military had sustained onslaught<br />

against the group which has its hideouts in the<br />

semi-arid landscape with sparse vegetation.<br />

Their enclaves are being decimated and with<br />

time they will have no hiding place,” he said.<br />

Continues on www.vanguardngr.com


Putting issues at NPA in perspective<br />

By Opeoluwa Lawal<br />

It is no longer news that Minister of<br />

Transportation, Rotimi Amaechi,<br />

suspended the Managing Director of<br />

Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), Hadiza Bala-<br />

Usman.<br />

To be sure, Ministry of Transportation<br />

supervises the NPA. Hadiza is passing through<br />

a baptism of fire, for the first time in her public<br />

service career. The only other time she came<br />

close to open public inquisition was when she<br />

was a Special Assistant to Malam Nasir el-<br />

Rufai as Minister of the Federal Capital<br />

Territory between 2003 and 2007 and the<br />

Senate could not come to terms with the fact<br />

that Hadiza and one other were being paid<br />

N1m as monthly salary. el-Rufai who was the<br />

one on the spot had put up a robust defence of<br />

his decision to remunerate them handsomely.<br />

But this time, Hadiza is the one directly in<br />

the eye of the storm and she would have to<br />

throw in everything to defend herself,<br />

decisions, actions and inactions, and<br />

reputation against being deliberately<br />

clobbered and dented for whatever reasonsbe<br />

they personal, political or arising from<br />

proximate association with a foe.<br />

This, without a doubt, is a reputational<br />

battle, given her pedigree- as the daughter of<br />

the radical Nigerian academic, politician and<br />

historian, the late Professor Yusuf Bala Usman.<br />

Hadiza is one of his seven children.<br />

The consensus is that having been well<br />

brought up by the respected Bala Usman,<br />

Hadiza would not want to engage in official<br />

acts that would call to question that pristine<br />

pedigree.<br />

It may appear relieving to her fans that the<br />

Ministry has narrowed the scope of Hadiza’s<br />

supposed original sins, which began with nonremittance<br />

of operational surpluses to the<br />

Consolidate Revenue of the Federation (CRF)<br />

to one infraction, to wit: failure to obey<br />

directive to procure equipment for clearing of<br />

channels instead of giving the job out as<br />

contracts. For this reason, she was suspended.<br />

The ministry was piqued that the NPA had<br />

continued to award the clearing of channels<br />

as contracts to companies instead of procuring<br />

necessary equipment and executing the<br />

contracts in-house. But, then, this a somewhat<br />

recondite issue. The probe will shed light on<br />

it and possibly raise other issues.<br />

Agreed that if that had been strictly done, as<br />

canvassed by the ministry, cost effectiveness<br />

and savings would be achieved and the<br />

nation’s revenue base would have witnessed<br />

some huge accretions. But who says the<br />

method adopted by Hadiza is not utilitarian?<br />

The ministry’s suggested approach and<br />

Hadiza’s approach make a smart economic<br />

•Amaechi<br />

sense.<br />

Procuring necessary equipment and<br />

executing the contracts in-house are not too<br />

dissimilar form the extant approach. But this<br />

is a simple issue that could have been quietly<br />

looked into and resolved without the ballyhoo<br />

in the public space. If there are other<br />

infractions that may be played up, the probe<br />

provides the opportunity to do so and for<br />

Hadiza to put up her defence.<br />

Talking about quiet resolution, it may<br />

have become impossible as it were, having<br />

gone past the intersection of reasoning<br />

together to the expansive market place<br />

where they are now involved in a macabre<br />

dance. It has now become a matter of<br />

necessity for both parties to defend their<br />

integrity. Unlike Michael Jackson in one<br />

of his popular hit tracks, “Beat It” wherein<br />

he admonished foes to: “Just beat it…No<br />

one wants to be defeated. It doesn’t<br />

matter who is right or wrong; just beat<br />

it…”, here it matters to know who is the<br />

victor and the vanquished in this gritty<br />

reputational battle; it matters to know<br />

who is right or wrong.<br />

Whereas one still ponders the<br />

possibilities of amicable resolution of the<br />

impasse, certainly not in the interest of<br />

any of the gladiators or protagonists, but<br />

in the national interest amid fears that<br />

are looming like a veritable bugaboo<br />

about the hurt this face-off could cause to<br />

the economy. A plethora of questions<br />

continue to play themselves out: In what<br />

•Bala-Usman<br />

OPINION<br />

ways will this feud, which is largely about<br />

personal greed and ego, benefit the<br />

national economy? Will it bolster foreign<br />

investors’ confidence in the maritime subsector<br />

of the economy? And, what<br />

implications would it have for domestic<br />

trust capital in the management of the<br />

nation’s ports? What legacies do they want<br />

to leave behind against the backdrop of<br />

the fact that this would be the first time<br />

there would be a face-off of this nature<br />

between a serving minister of<br />

transportation and a sitting (now<br />

suspended) managing director of NPA?<br />

Sans the festering feud, there would be<br />

a soothing calmness in the atmospherics<br />

and the nuances of management of the<br />

nation’s ports through the instrumentality<br />

of the NPA and the robust supervisory role<br />

of the ministry of transportation. This is<br />

the irreducible minimum that is expected<br />

from the operators of this sub-sector to<br />

bolster the national economy. I am not sure if<br />

officials are very conversant with this<br />

philosophy that undergirds the operation of<br />

the revenue-generating agencies of the<br />

government.<br />

This is another theme for another narrative<br />

for another time.<br />

But Hadiza’s thinking is in pari materia with<br />

the NPA’s philosophy of running strictly as a<br />

business/revenue-generating authority.<br />

Hadiza knows very well how the ports over<br />

which the NPA superintends are strategic base<br />

for economic development.<br />

SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021—17<br />

At The Nation newspapers’ Economic<br />

Forum on Thursday, May 4, 2017, she said<br />

that the strategic role of ports in economic<br />

development was that they functioned as<br />

gateways to international trade and,<br />

accordingly, were regarded as major<br />

accelerators of local economic development.<br />

Quoting the Economic and Social<br />

Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP),<br />

she noted that “the Netherlands has been able<br />

to sustain a relatively high economic growth<br />

rate because of the Port of Rotterdam, in spite<br />

of the intensely competitive environment in<br />

Europe. The success of Singapore is equally<br />

attributed to the Port of Singapore, which has<br />

developed a transport logistic centre and has<br />

successfully been able to attract foreign<br />

investment.” These are quite instructive<br />

referrals. They signposted clarity of thoughts,<br />

vision, possibilities and destination, where she<br />

wanted to take the Nigerian Ports to through<br />

her superintendence at the NPA.<br />

Her essential summation, to the effect that<br />

the maritime sector, as an essential<br />

component of the transportation system, is<br />

crucial for wealth creation, continues to enjoy<br />

eternal approbation. But her warning then in<br />

2017, is what is rearing its head in 2021.<br />

It is to the credit of her knowledge that the<br />

NPA on her watch realized that the function of<br />

a port is not only limited to the traditional<br />

activities but has expanded to a logistical<br />

platform. According to her, “Ports not only<br />

platform the basic operations, they provide<br />

inland access and intermodal connections as<br />

well as complementary services to shipping<br />

carriers.” In her further summation, she had<br />

declared that the need to adequately explore<br />

the port sector as a road to boosting economic<br />

development in Nigeria could not be overemphasized.<br />

One is at great pains, therefore, to fault<br />

Hadiza’s passionate commitment to the<br />

development of the nation’s ports, which she<br />

was working at before the suspension. She<br />

said developing the ports was very crucial for<br />

realizing the lofty but achievable development<br />

objectives of the Federal Government,<br />

stressing; “our port infrastructure like the<br />

quay walls and aprons would need to be<br />

reconstructed and reinforced to make them<br />

fit to handle anticipated heavy solid<br />

minerals cargo. For agricultural produce,<br />

we would need specialized and refrigerated<br />

warehouses, etc. The channels must be<br />

constantly dredged and maintained and<br />

deep seaports must be developed to address<br />

the dynamics in trade and transport<br />

demand.” It is the constant dredging of<br />

channels that has become her undoing.<br />

Consider yet another significant take<br />

from her stable: “Improved port<br />

infrastructure will bring about improved port<br />

activities, which would stimulate economic<br />

growth and in turn would impact positively<br />

on the economy.”<br />

The sole claim of how to dredge channels,<br />

which is standing one leg, may soon collapse<br />

like a pack of cards, but the concern now is<br />

the negative effect this feud is having on Port’s<br />

operations in terms of operators’ comfort,<br />

confidence and trust in the system during the<br />

pendency of the probe. I so submit.<br />

•Lawal is a professional mariner based in<br />

Lagos.<br />

Why I stabbed my motherin-law<br />

to death — suspect<br />

By Evelyn usman<br />

Atan Otta community in Ogun State<br />

was recently thrown into panic,<br />

following the frightening sight of a<br />

woman who lay in the pool of her blood with<br />

a knife thrust in her ribs.<br />

She stretched out her right hand begging to<br />

be rushed to the hospital and at the same time<br />

held on to the position of the stab , with her<br />

left hand.<br />

A young lady was seen crying and pleading<br />

with everyone to assist her get any available<br />

vehicle that would convey the dying woman<br />

to the hospital.<br />

Help came but unfortunately, the wounded<br />

woman later identified as Mrs Abosede<br />

Oyewole , did not live to tell her story, as she<br />

died three days later, at a private hospital<br />

she was rushed to.<br />

Death trap<br />

Surprisingly, her assailant turned out to be<br />

her 28-year-old son-in-law, Opeyemi Adeola,<br />

a popular welder in Atan Otta community.<br />

Crime Guard gathered that her daughter,<br />

Tope and the suspect, Adeola, had been living<br />

together for two years. She reportedly left the<br />

house for her parents place because she was<br />

beaten by her husband.<br />

The deceased, as gathered, had gone to her<br />

son –in-law’s place to reprimand him for the<br />

incessant battery of her daughter, only to meet<br />

a dead end.<br />

Escape<br />

Spokesman for the Ogun State Police<br />

Command, DSP Abimbola Oyeyemi ,<br />

explained that “ on that fateful day, the<br />

suspect, as usual, beat up his wife and inflicted<br />

injuries on her. The deceased went to meet<br />

him to warn him to desist from beating her<br />

daughter.<br />

“On sighting the deceased in his house, the<br />

suspect descended heavily on her, beat her<br />

mercilessly before stabbing her on her ribs<br />

with a knife. Having heard that the victim<br />

had died, the suspect fled.<br />

“ The Divisional Police Officer, Atan Ota,<br />

CSP Abolade Oladigbolu, detailed his<br />

detectives to go after him. They embarked on<br />

an intelligence based investigation which<br />

led them to his hideout in Ikorodu, Lagos state<br />

where he was eventually apprehended.<br />

Preliminary investigation revealed that the<br />

suspect is a member of a notorious cult group<br />

in the area. He was also one of those who led<br />

hoodlums to burn down Atan Ota Police<br />

division and killed the Divisional Crime<br />

Officer on October 21, October 2020, during<br />

the Endsars protest”.<br />

Why I did it<br />

In this interview with the suspect, he<br />

admitted culpability but blamed his action<br />

on uncontrolled emotion and an attempt to<br />

defend himself from an attack by the deceased<br />

and her two children.<br />

Hear him: “ My wife told me she was going<br />

to see her sick mother on April 20,2021 , that<br />

she would return by 12 noon the next day.<br />

But three days later, I did not see her . I<br />

went to check on her at her parents’ and saw<br />

her with another man.<br />

“ The man asked where I had been , I told<br />

•Opeyemi Adeola<br />

him I went to Ile Olugi to work . I have seen<br />

that man with my wife before, in my house. In<br />

Fact, that first time, he came to give my wife<br />

some money.<br />

“When my mother-in-law saw me, she<br />

accused me of not taking care of my wife<br />

and children. I have one child with my wife,<br />

an eight months old girl. The older child is<br />

five years old. She is mine from another<br />

woman.<br />

“ My mother –in-law told me to my face<br />

that she had given her daughter, my wife , to<br />

another man since I was not giving her money<br />

to eat. My wife refused to follow me home<br />

that day. I went to her parents place again<br />

to pick my five- year -old child from her and<br />

left our eight-month-old baby with her.<br />

Journey to<br />

SCIID<br />

“On April 28, 2021, my wife , her mother<br />

and sister came to my house. They said they<br />

came to pack my wife’s belongings. I told them<br />

to go and collect what were hers. In the process,<br />

they started fighting with me and broke my<br />

skull . I brought out a knife which I brought<br />

from the farm ,just to scare them but the knife<br />

pierced into my in-law’s ribs.<br />

“My wife and I have been together for two<br />

years. I was preparing to pay her dowry<br />

someday. Her parents were aware we were<br />

together. Her father even advised me to get<br />

my wife something to do when our baby<br />

would be a year old .<br />

“I didn’t know she would die. I only did it<br />

to prevent myself and to scare them. She was<br />

rushed to Hyacinth hospital at Otta by her<br />

daughter<br />

I ran away because I was afraid of being<br />

lynched. While I was in my village where I<br />

hid, I heard my wife and members of her<br />

family packed all my property from the house<br />

to sell to treat my mother-in-law. Three days<br />

later, I was told she was dead. Again, I ran<br />

from the village, to my father’s place in<br />

Ikorodu, Lagos.<br />

“I left my father’s place in 2008. When I<br />

told him what happened, he took me to<br />

Ikorodu Police station that same day ,<br />

from where I was taken to Atan division<br />

and thereafter, transferred to the State<br />

Criminal Investigation and Intelligence<br />

Department.<br />

“ It is unfortunate she died. She was the<br />

reason my wife was misbehaving. Before we<br />

met, my mother-in-law used to send her (wife)<br />

out to sleep with men. I met her in the process”.<br />

Asked what age was his supposed wife, he<br />

said , “ She told me she was 19 years old when<br />

we met. But her father claimed she is presently<br />

17 years old. I regret my action and wished<br />

things could return the way they were , in order<br />

to remedy the situation”, he said in an<br />

emotional laden tone.


18—SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021<br />

In 2015, a young Nigerian girl,<br />

Oghenekevwe (Surname withheld)<br />

landed in the US on scholarship for<br />

post-graduate studies, after an exceptional<br />

undergraduate performance in a Nigerian<br />

university. In the US she continued from<br />

where she stopped in Nigeria, smashing<br />

records and putting in one exceptional<br />

performance after the other. She got her<br />

Ph.D. in no time. Her performance in the<br />

US was so good that her American<br />

university wrote to the Nigerian university,<br />

where she did her first degree, to link it up<br />

with more exceptional students.<br />

My wife and I met ‘Kevwe for the first<br />

time in New York in 2015, not too long after<br />

she got to the US, though I had heard of<br />

her and her siblings from my eldest brother.<br />

She was (still is) a simple girl, but very<br />

intelligent, even if her humility will not<br />

allow her acknowledge that. But<br />

intelligence alone takes no one to her<br />

destination. It only speeds your journey.<br />

‘Kevwe is very hardworking and focussed.<br />

In her six years in the US, she has achieved<br />

so much that you can only<br />

stand in awe of her, her<br />

relative young age<br />

notwithstanding.<br />

Families, young people<br />

and Nigeria have a lot to<br />

learn from the life of this<br />

exceptional young lady. She<br />

grew up in a Christian home<br />

with very high morals. Her<br />

parents brought her up in the<br />

way of the Lord and she<br />

never departed from it, even<br />

when she was far away in the<br />

US. Many parents in<br />

Nigeria today are miserable<br />

wrecks. The children they<br />

sent to school in Europe and<br />

America in one piece have<br />

returned in pieces. They have<br />

lost not only hundreds of<br />

thousands in hard currencies<br />

on fees that produced only<br />

misery, but more painful,<br />

their children who have<br />

completely derailed. How do you soften<br />

cement that has hardened and remould it<br />

into what you desire. That is what<br />

rehabilitating these children, who have<br />

derailed, is like. It is a herculean task.<br />

Good things still come from<br />

Nazareth, nay Nigeria<br />

I have said it multiple times here and<br />

I will continue to reiterate it. The first<br />

10 years of a child’s life are very<br />

crucial. That is when they are most<br />

pliable and amenable. That is also<br />

when they need the highest standard<br />

of care. Parents<br />

should devote<br />

quality time to them.<br />

Make sacrifices for<br />

your preteen<br />

children. You can<br />

always do your<br />

economic pursuit<br />

and make your<br />

money anytime, but<br />

if you get it wrong<br />

with your children<br />

during the first 10<br />

years of their lives,<br />

you have a big<br />

problem on your<br />

hands. However, but<br />

if you get the first 10<br />

years right, you<br />

spend the next six<br />

years consolidating<br />

on the work you<br />

have done in the first<br />

10. By the time your<br />

child is 17 years,<br />

parenting becomes autopilot. But if<br />

you get the first 10 years wrong, you<br />

spend the next six years amending, like<br />

someone amending a defective<br />

building. But it is more difficult with a<br />

I have said it<br />

multiple times here<br />

and I will continue to<br />

reiterate it. The first<br />

10 years of a child’s<br />

life are very crucial.<br />

That is when they are<br />

most pliable and<br />

amenable<br />

person because he has a mind of her<br />

own, unlike a building that does not.<br />

You might be lucky to use the<br />

amendments to straighten the crooked<br />

paths and smoothen the rough edges.<br />

Your efforts can also fall short.<br />

It was not only ’Kevwe’s academic<br />

prowess that endeared her to the<br />

university; she also had exceptional<br />

character. Her parents laid the<br />

foundation that still endured and<br />

when she graduated from the<br />

university, she was found worthy both<br />

in character and learning. How come<br />

that with the negative reputation<br />

Nigerians have all over the world, an<br />

American university is writing a<br />

Nigerian university to link it up with<br />

its exceptional students? It is because<br />

’Kevwe was (still is) a great Nigerian<br />

ambassador. This is also a lesson for<br />

everyone, especially those who think<br />

it is government’s responsibility only<br />

to polish our negative image. It is<br />

every one’s responsibility. Wherever<br />

you find yourself, be a good<br />

ambassador of your family and<br />

country.<br />

To the youths, ’Kevwe should be an<br />

inspiration to you. While she was here,<br />

she was like any youngster, she had<br />

her challenges like passing JAMB<br />

exams. He wrote the exam more than<br />

once and did not get the course she<br />

wanted to study. In the university, she<br />

did not sleep with lecturers or bribe<br />

them to get good grades. She studied<br />

hard, acquired knowledge and got good grades.<br />

Some university graduates today cannot write<br />

an application letter for a job, yet they<br />

complain of unemployment. How did they<br />

graduate? How did they pass through primary<br />

and secondary school? Some parents are part<br />

of the problem. They bribe teachers and<br />

invigilators during exams for their children to<br />

allow their children cheat. The parents ate<br />

soured grapes and the children’s teeth are now<br />

on edge.<br />

You must study hard and get good grades<br />

legitimately. There are no short cuts and no<br />

way around it. You should also stay focussed<br />

and have an idea of where you are going. Even<br />

when you do not fully grasp where are going,<br />

just keep moving, staying in one place is not<br />

an option. As you move on, look out for<br />

opportunities, they will come. At some points<br />

the dots will connect, things will fall into place<br />

and your life will make a meaning. Whatever<br />

bad point or situation you find yourself now is<br />

temporary. Do not descend into despair and<br />

depression.<br />

One question that has been on my mind, if<br />

’Kevwe were here, would she have gone this<br />

far? Very unlikely. We have a system that stifles<br />

growth. Some students have been pursuing<br />

their Ph.D. unsuccessfully for the past 10 years,<br />

why? There are too many wicked academics in<br />

the ivory towers. Nigerians must realise that<br />

wherever you are, you are supposed to be a<br />

solution provider, you are supposed to make<br />

life easy for people, not complicate it. If a<br />

professor is supervising a doctoral student and<br />

a programme that is supposed to take four<br />

years, takes 10 years, unless it is the student’s<br />

fault, the professor has failed.<br />

Another very worrisome trend is our inability<br />

to retain our best brains. Many Nigerians, who<br />

excel, travel out and never come back. In the<br />

past, it was not like this. Nigerians travelled<br />

abroad and came back home after studies or<br />

sojourn to contribute to the growth of their<br />

motherland. I almost cried recently when I saw<br />

a Nigerian proudly displaying his American<br />

passport. This Nigerian is a Nigerian to the<br />

core. He had been in America for a while and<br />

his plan was to relocate home. He never had<br />

the intention of taking American citizenship.<br />

But he had a rethink, seeing the chaos and<br />

insecurity back home. Nigeria is bleeding. A<br />

nation that cannot retain its best and provide<br />

an enabling environment for them to flourish<br />

cannot make any meaningful progress. This<br />

haemorrhage has to stop.<br />

There was everything extraordinary<br />

about Green Eagles goalkeeper,<br />

Emmanuel Anthony Oguejiofo<br />

Okala when he demobilised one of Africa’s<br />

best, Diables Rouges (Red Devils) at the<br />

Revolution Stadium, Brazaville on July 13,<br />

1975. The Congolese may yet recover from<br />

that shock 1-0 defeat.<br />

It was the Second Round of the Ethiopia<br />

’76 African Nations Cup qualifiers. Sunny<br />

Oyarekhua put the Nigerians ahead in the<br />

very first minute. And that was the last<br />

anyone saw of the visitors. The next 89<br />

minutes were played away from the Devil’s<br />

half.<br />

Congo won the Cameroon ’72 African<br />

Nations Cup. They finished fourth at the<br />

next Championships and were the only<br />

team that beat eventual winners, Leopards<br />

of Congo Democratic Republic (Zaire). That<br />

same year, 1974, CARA of Brazaville lifted<br />

the African Cup for Champion Clubs (<br />

today’s CAF Champions League).<br />

CARA dethroned defending champions,<br />

Vita of Zaire before dismissing Mehala of<br />

Egypt, home and away in the finals. What<br />

Okala faced was a combination of 1972<br />

African champions and 1974 winners. A<br />

star studded formation that was handled<br />

by Rumanian, Cicekone Manolache.<br />

Francois M’Pele had joined French side,<br />

Paris Saint Germain. He played with Les<br />

Blues star, Marius Tressor at Ajaccio. PSG<br />

Manager,Just Fontaine, top scorer of the<br />

1958 World Cup with 13 goals in six<br />

matches, believed so much in the<br />

Congolese striker.M’Pele scored 21 goals<br />

for PSG in the 1974/1975 season and till<br />

date remains the club’s leading scorer in<br />

Coupe de France with 28 goals.<br />

July 13 was M’Pele’s birthday. Born in<br />

Brazaville in 1947, he turned 28 on that<br />

day. That was none of Okala’s business.<br />

The goalkeeper was not in the mood for a<br />

party. Two months earlier, he was more<br />

interested in taking Enugu Rangers to the<br />

quarter finals of a continental club<br />

Championships than his own birthday.<br />

Jean-Michel M’bono was Golden Boot<br />

winner at the Cameroon ’72 African Nations<br />

Cup with four goals. Moukila Paul, African<br />

Brazavile, Okala’s best game<br />

Footballer of the Year, 1974 joined<br />

Strasbourg after lifting the Cup of<br />

Champion Clubs with CARA. His fans<br />

called him ‘Sayal’.<br />

Noel Minga Tchibinda, better known<br />

as ‘ Minga Pepe’, Jonas Bahamboula,<br />

Jean-Jacques N’Domba<br />

and goalie Maxime<br />

Matsima were Nations<br />

Cup veterans. The<br />

CARA brigade of<br />

keeper Tandou Paul,<br />

Right back, Gabriel<br />

Dengaki, hit man,<br />

Sebastine Lakou and<br />

Gaston Nganga-Mulvi,<br />

Joseph Ngassaki,<br />

Andre Mbouta- Bella<br />

and Gilbert Ponty also<br />

had Nations Cup<br />

pedigree.<br />

With all these names,<br />

the 50, 000 crowd<br />

expected Okala to<br />

succumb. He simply<br />

stood like Man<br />

Mountain and refused<br />

to be cowed. At the end<br />

of 90 minutes, that lone goal scored by<br />

Oyarekhua was all that counted. The<br />

Nigerian goalkeeper made it happen.<br />

The Eagles won the second leg 2-1 in<br />

Lagos and were sure of an Ethiopia<br />

’76 African Nations Cup ticket.<br />

What the opposition failed to realise<br />

was that Okala was also a Red Devil<br />

and had lived with another Red Devil<br />

in their Ogbe-Otu, Onitsha home.<br />

Okala joined Enugu Rangers in 1970<br />

from Onitsha Red Devils. His uncle,<br />

Walter kept for Port Harcourt Red<br />

Devils when the Nigerian National<br />

team wore Red Devils as identity.<br />

Today, Okala<br />

can only tell<br />

stories of the<br />

bravado in<br />

Brazaville for<br />

that battle does<br />

Today, Okala<br />

can only tell<br />

stories of the<br />

bravado in<br />

Brazaville for that<br />

battle does not<br />

exist anywhere in<br />

Nigerian records<br />

not exist<br />

anywhere in<br />

Nigerian<br />

records. The<br />

commentaries<br />

were lost due to<br />

technical hitches.<br />

Okala said : “<br />

Talking about<br />

memorable<br />

matches, there<br />

were so many<br />

saves. When we<br />

qualified for the<br />

1976 African<br />

Nations Cup, in<br />

the Second Round,we played against<br />

Congo. In Brazaville, we scored them<br />

in the first minute of the match. Sunny<br />

Oyarekhua scored our only goal and<br />

it turned out to be the only goal of the<br />

match.<br />

“The game was played between the<br />

Congolese team and myself.<br />

Unfortunately, the match was not<br />

recorded by Nigeria. We traveled with<br />

Bisi Lawrence of Radio Nigeria, who ran the<br />

commentary. Surprisingly, when we returned<br />

to Lagos, they said the commentary did not<br />

reach Nigeria. So we have no record at all of<br />

that match.”<br />

While Nigerians remain in the dark about<br />

Okala’s Red Letter Day, the Congolese have<br />

not forgotten.Poetic Journalist, Uzor Maxim<br />

Uzoatu was reminded of that epic battle many<br />

years after, by a Congolese in the United States.<br />

Uzoatu took to Facebook. “ I once met a<br />

Congolese soccer fan in Pittsburgh, United<br />

States who promptly asked me if the goalkeeper,<br />

Emmanuel Okala is still alive... The old man<br />

promptly told me that Okala is the greatest<br />

goalkeeper that ever lived”, he said.<br />

Curiously, after all the heroics in Brazaville,<br />

Okala was not part of the Green Eagles squad<br />

to the Ethiopia ’76 Nations Cup. The NFA<br />

settled for Joseph Effiong Erico Okafor, an<br />

Arochukwu man born to an Odukpani mother,<br />

as first choice keeper. Prince Zion Ogunfehinmi<br />

was reserve goalie.<br />

Enugu Rangers had issues with the NFA.<br />

Captain Christian Chukwu did not travel with<br />

the team but made it eventually. In his absence,<br />

Aloy Atuegbu of Mighty Jets stood in as skipper.<br />

Three other Flying Antelopes, Ogidi Ibeabuchi,<br />

Ikechukwu Ezidinma and Alex Nwosu made<br />

the trip.<br />

Okala was indeed a legend. All through his<br />

years as player, he did not lose to Cameroon in<br />

regulation time, both at club and national level.<br />

He dwarfed Thomas Nkono in the finals of the<br />

1977 African Winners Cup which Rangers won.<br />

As a result of Okala’s superlative outing,<br />

Cameroonians claimed he was one of them and<br />

pleaded with him to come back home.<br />

Strangely, Okala is the name of a town in that<br />

country’s Centre Region. Their first Foreign<br />

Minister after Independence in 1960 was<br />

Charles Rene-Guy Okala. His daughter, Nicole<br />

Okala Bilai is a serving senator.<br />

In 1990, I met Guinea and Hafia veteran,<br />

Petit Sorry at Zaranda Hotel Bauchi. When I<br />

said cava to him, he fired a question : “Where<br />

is Okala? And continued. “ Okala was a great<br />

goalkeeper. We feared him but I am glad I beat<br />

him in Lagos”.


C<br />

M<br />

Y<br />

K<br />

Those who came into this<br />

world from the 80s upwards<br />

and are not into music, may not<br />

know who James Brown was. He<br />

was the quintessential musician<br />

and showman; one of the best<br />

performers of his generation. I<br />

can almost imagine the nostalgic<br />

smiles on the faces of those of my<br />

generation as they remember JB<br />

- the ‘hardest working man in<br />

showbiz’ as he liked to call<br />

himself - and his many hit songs.<br />

At a point, almost all his songs<br />

became hit songs and youths of<br />

the 60s and 70s avidly collected<br />

them irrespective of colour. Even<br />

then, there were hits within hits.<br />

And a song like ‘It’s a man’s<br />

world’ will always be an<br />

evergreen. He was more than a<br />

musician however. He was also a<br />

black icon who tried to use his<br />

enormous influence to awake the<br />

consciousness in Blacks all over<br />

the world but especially in<br />

America. His song ‘Say it loud, I<br />

am black and proud’ was about<br />

the ‘loudest’ of the<br />

songs he used to<br />

send his message of<br />

black awareness.<br />

I was probably<br />

caught up in the<br />

black consciousness<br />

of the sixties and<br />

seventies when I<br />

wrote a poem titled<br />

‘White is for leprosy’.<br />

I was in my teens.<br />

The poem was about<br />

kids playing outside<br />

in the park. The<br />

black kids were so<br />

proud of their<br />

luxuriant black skin<br />

that they saw the<br />

‘paleness’ of the<br />

white skin as a<br />

disease. They<br />

jokingly and<br />

derisively pointed to the white<br />

kids and asked a parent if the<br />

white kids had leprosy. I had<br />

never seen a leper before I wrote<br />

the poem. All I knew was how the<br />

Bible described a leper. The Good<br />

Book said his skin was ‘as white<br />

as snow’. Hence the title of the<br />

When will we ‘say it loud, I am<br />

black and proud’?<br />

poem. In my young mind, I was<br />

hoping for the time when our<br />

melanin rich skin would be seen as<br />

an advantage rather than a<br />

disadvantage; when those of the<br />

black skin would pity rather than<br />

envy those with the white skin. It<br />

was a futuristic poem which<br />

envisioned such a time when Blacks<br />

would have come to their own in<br />

the affairs of the<br />

world and be more<br />

confident of their<br />

skin colour.<br />

The poem was<br />

written about fifty<br />

years ago. It is sad<br />

When Africa earns<br />

its respect – and it will<br />

happen – then we can<br />

actually live the song<br />

‘Say it loud. I am<br />

black and proud’<br />

instead of just<br />

singing it.<br />

that nothing much<br />

has changed in the<br />

way the black skin<br />

and what it covers<br />

is regarded. It is<br />

even sadder that<br />

people of my<br />

generation are not<br />

likely to witness<br />

any significant<br />

change. The dream<br />

for the future that<br />

the poem was<br />

wrapped around is<br />

still a pipe dream.<br />

Last year marked<br />

another watershed<br />

in the battle over race<br />

discrimination with the killing of<br />

George Floyd. Sports that had<br />

significant black representative<br />

forced the world to pause and<br />

acknowledge the injustice Blacks<br />

face on an everyday basis. This led<br />

to some multinationals making<br />

sympathetic noises and effecting<br />

cosmetic changes. But nothing<br />

fundamental has changed as the<br />

recent shootings in America have<br />

shown. In my mind, nothing<br />

fundamental will change until<br />

Blacks get more comfortable in their<br />

own skin – forgive the pun- and stop<br />

chasing the White calendar and<br />

milestones. The narrative that<br />

white is good and black is evil has<br />

to be changed. The notion that only<br />

Whites can define what civilisation<br />

is has to be expunged. The mindset<br />

that Blacks are inherently<br />

inferior to Whites has to be<br />

adjusted. None of these<br />

assumptions is based on truth and<br />

so must be challenged. The lie that<br />

some White explorers discovered<br />

Africa is just what it is; a lie. The<br />

history of the world has always been<br />

written by Whites. It is time for<br />

Blacks to visit the past and begin<br />

to write their own story.<br />

We are told that civilisation<br />

started from Africa. What happened<br />

to that civilisation? Blacks had<br />

learnt to fend for themselves<br />

according to the dictates of the<br />

time. They learnt to feed<br />

themselves; they learnt to heal<br />

themselves; they learnt what herbs<br />

to use for difficult child births; they<br />

learnt to defend themselves by<br />

‘fortifying’ their bodies against the<br />

weapons of their time – knives,<br />

machete, arrows and Dane guns.<br />

They developed their own<br />

recreation and their art forms. But<br />

it was in the area of spiritual<br />

SATURDAY Vanguard, , MAY 22, 2021—19<br />

prowess that our forefathers had an<br />

edge. They learnt the power of the<br />

spoken word and used the power to<br />

magical effects. They could speak to<br />

the elements and be obeyed. Some<br />

could disappear from a dangerous<br />

scene and reappear elsewhere. Our<br />

‘masters’ didn’t understand these<br />

powers. And because they didn’t<br />

understand, they feared them and<br />

labelled them evil. We believed them<br />

just because they said so. So we lost<br />

our knowledge, we lost our mysticism,<br />

we lost our potency, we lost our<br />

spirituality, we lost our edge. We<br />

allowed them to define good and evil<br />

on their terms.<br />

Despite the passage of time, our<br />

leaders still look up to the West. It<br />

must stop. Despite past<br />

marginalisation and manipulation,<br />

some of our people still believe in the<br />

goodness of the West. It is wishful<br />

thinking. We have to stop relying on<br />

the West for our every need. It is a<br />

beggarly mentality. We must look<br />

inwards and develop those things that<br />

are unique to us. Like a good chess<br />

player, we must objectively appraise<br />

our strengths and deploy them. We<br />

must look at our assets and seek to<br />

develop rather than exploit them. We<br />

must seek to feed ourselves and<br />

educate our minds. All other forms of<br />

‘civilisation’ will follow. The earlier we<br />

can wean ourselves off age-old<br />

attachments, the better for the Black<br />

race. The first battle to be won is the<br />

battle of the mind – our minds have<br />

to be at the right place - and we<br />

desperately need the set of leaders<br />

who can help us achieve this. For<br />

Blacks all over the world to be<br />

respected, Africa as a continent must<br />

earn respect.<br />

One can imagine for example how<br />

Blacks all over the world would feel if<br />

the most efficacious Covid-19<br />

medicine or vaccine was developed in<br />

Africa by Africans. It would have been<br />

a defining moment. Instead, we are<br />

typically waiting for the West to heal<br />

itself and send the left-over crumbs<br />

to us. Or worse, we are waiting for<br />

them to tell us why we have survived<br />

the worst of the virus when it has<br />

brought the rest of the world,<br />

especially the ‘mighty West’, to its<br />

knees. Why can’t we tell our own<br />

Covid-19 story?<br />

In justifying his defection from the<br />

Peoples Democratic Party, PDP to<br />

t h e<br />

All Progressives Congress, APC,<br />

Governor Ben Ayade last Thursday cited<br />

his determination to forge a national<br />

consensus around President<br />

Muhammadu Buhari for Nigeria to move<br />

forward.<br />

“Instead of us rising as an orgasmic<br />

whole to see how we can support the<br />

President to deal with these foreign<br />

herders that are colonising our various<br />

roads and farms, we rather sit back; we<br />

tend to create an impression as if the<br />

government is not doing well,” he said<br />

in a television interview last Thursday.<br />

But for a presidency that has been<br />

severely challenged with showing<br />

positive performance indicators, the<br />

governor’s assertions are easily<br />

questionable. What input would Ayade<br />

give to the Muhammadu Buhari<br />

presidency despite the voracious support,<br />

many in the APC gave it at inception and<br />

the blueprint laid for it that it discarded?<br />

Indeed, one of the governors present at<br />

Ayade’s defection was Dr. Kayode<br />

Fayemi.<br />

Fayemi, who was one of those who<br />

authored the blueprint for the APC had<br />

in a television interview on Channels<br />

Television last March firmly affirmed that<br />

the APC federal administration had failed<br />

in the three key areas of security,<br />

economy, and anti-corruption it<br />

campaigned on prior to 2015.<br />

So, as Chief Dan Orbih, the South-<br />

South Zonal Chairman of the PDP said<br />

in his reaction, the rationale for Ayade<br />

wishing to identify with failure is<br />

shocking.<br />

Beyond that, Ayade is undoubtedly<br />

among the most educated of governors in<br />

the country with advanced degrees in<br />

Microbiology and Law.<br />

Assessing Ayade’s yardstick<br />

So, his action was not without scientific<br />

reasoning. Indeed, it was the consequence<br />

of much cogitation and political<br />

permutations over a period of time.<br />

For one who is given to<br />

often speaking<br />

impromptu, it was not<br />

difficult for the secret<br />

reason for his defection to<br />

flow out as he spoke last<br />

Thursday.<br />

“(What) We want to<br />

achieve is a country where<br />

we all can sit with the<br />

President and agree on our South<br />

succession process, we<br />

don’t have to fight,” Ayade<br />

explained.<br />

In effect, the governor<br />

opened to all that for him<br />

in Cross River State the<br />

issue of his succession was<br />

a difficulty, a fact that lured<br />

the governor towards<br />

fraternization and alleged<br />

pummeling of the PDP.<br />

So, as Chief Dan<br />

Orbih, the South-<br />

Zonal<br />

Chairman of the<br />

PDP said in his<br />

reaction, the<br />

rationale for Ayade<br />

wishing to identify<br />

with failure is<br />

shocking.<br />

GWG.NG, an online<br />

newspaper had in a report last March,<br />

https://gwg.ng/2021/03/09/exclusiveayade-leaving-pdp-as-party-snubs-courtorder-against-s-south-congress/<br />

referenced this seeming hounding in an<br />

exclusive report of Ayade’s planned<br />

defection.<br />

The report had also shown how a tendency<br />

reportedly aligned to Ayade tried to scupper<br />

the South-South zonal congress of the PDP<br />

last March.<br />

Though he tried to deny<br />

the claim in his television<br />

interview last Thursday, it is<br />

globally known that the<br />

governor lost control of the<br />

PDP structure to the<br />

National Assembly<br />

members from his state<br />

during the last congresses.<br />

Sources in the PDP have<br />

revealed to this<br />

correspondent how the<br />

governor took the<br />

congresses for granted<br />

perhaps believing that the<br />

structures were pliable to<br />

his verbose ventilations.<br />

What he lost was taken<br />

over by the National<br />

Assembly members, some<br />

of whom are playing along<br />

the historical political<br />

pathway that was postulated even before<br />

the governor left the classroom for the<br />

political arena.<br />

Indeed, before Ayade joined politics, the<br />

trio of Liyel Imoke, Gershom Bassey and<br />

Donald Duke, famed in Cross River as the<br />

three musketeers, and with Victor Ndoma-<br />

Egba as a helper, had carved a political corridor<br />

through which governors of the state would<br />

come.<br />

In 2007, Imoke was literally, a shoo-in after<br />

the first of the trio, that is Duke. The next was<br />

to be Gershom Bassey who was the chairman<br />

of the party while Duke was governor.<br />

However, by happenstance of zoning and logic,<br />

reason prevailed that the governorship should<br />

not return to Bassey’s Cross River South just<br />

after eight years of Duke without the North<br />

having its feel of the seat.<br />

Hence, Ayade came in. Ayade’s emergence<br />

also came after the three musketeers of Duke,<br />

Imoke alongside Ndoma-Egba had their<br />

famous falling apart in 2014.<br />

Duke and Ndoma-Egba fell out of the<br />

mainstream and it fell on Imoke and Bassey to<br />

ensure the emergence of Ayade as governor<br />

despite the desires of those who left the PDP.<br />

Indeed, what makes Ayade’s defection<br />

interesting is that a number of the political<br />

leaders of the state like Senator John Enoh left<br />

the PDP for the APC because of Ayade.<br />

By Thursday night as Ayade’s defection<br />

became formalized, there was a whispering<br />

campaign in Calabar on the prospects of some<br />

of the defectors returning to the PDP.<br />

As was expected, the governor has been<br />

crowned as the leader of the APC. But which<br />

faction of the APC he will superintend over is<br />

one that will in the next few days become an<br />

issue given the historic bitterness among the<br />

factions of the party in Cross River State.<br />

It is a bitterness that has seen the factions<br />

fight over virtually everything. If Ayade<br />

coming in, will help cement them will be a<br />

welcome development. But the yardstick with<br />

which a governor who lost power within his<br />

PDP caucus would be able to enforce his<br />

succession agenda on the whole state without<br />

the coercive instrument of the Federal<br />

Government is one that will be a wonder!


20—SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021<br />

And that was the benign picture.<br />

Someone said he saw a bigot.<br />

Another saw an ethnic jingoist.<br />

My grandmother had warned us not to<br />

prattle. That way, we could hide our ignorance<br />

from the world. That way, we would not soil<br />

ourselves in public with bitterness in our<br />

hearts.<br />

Now Malami, Senior Advocate of Nigeria,<br />

thinks that a ban on open grazing is akin to a<br />

ban on sales of motor spare parts. And he said<br />

it, gesticulating like Aristotle. Tomorrow,<br />

those naughty Ghanaians will start mocking<br />

Nigeria again.<br />

I had once told a few friends to spare<br />

Malami, cut him some slack. Brilliant people<br />

can suffer stage fright. We had watched him<br />

during the first senate screening. Tense, rigid,<br />

voluble and loud. His composure and<br />

elocution were that of a clumsy secondary<br />

school student floundering in a debating<br />

competition, lobbing jargons and ill-fitted<br />

sentences at his audience. An amateurish and<br />

futile eagerness to come across as intelligent.<br />

That day, I stood by Malami and reminded<br />

my friends he was a learned Senior Advocate<br />

of Nigeria.<br />

There have been occasions when these<br />

friends came back to mock me. They knocked<br />

me the day Malami sweated profusely and<br />

mopped his brows with his bare hands while<br />

being badgered by a house committee<br />

investigating the smuggling of human<br />

contraband, Abudulrasheed Maina, back<br />

into the civil service. They ridiculed me when<br />

Malami started chasing Magu with the<br />

kitchen sink. Now they are back at me.<br />

That Malami’s motor-spare-parts<br />

performance on television was like a child<br />

appearing at a party, dancing excitedly with<br />

his shoes mixed up, on the wrong feet.<br />

Ebullience without grace and rhythm. He<br />

could have quietly sent one brilliant young<br />

lawyer to convey his ethnic bias. Ministers<br />

and Governors have many of these special<br />

assistants who cover their asses. Someone<br />

praised Malami for being himself. An adult<br />

doesn’t try to be himself by baring his anus<br />

to the world. Okay, take away the animosity<br />

for the Igbo hidden in the “motor spare parts”<br />

analogy. What shall we do with the puerility<br />

of his logic.<br />

Malami appeared like a representative<br />

of Miyetti Allah, overcome by emotions. A<br />

Chairman of Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders<br />

Association might be forgiven for thinking<br />

that the state governments cannot regulate<br />

the movement of cattle. I have heard some of<br />

them say it’s their culture. Their ancestors<br />

might have misinformed them that the forests<br />

belonged to them. But I am optimistic that<br />

even Miyetti Allah wouldn’t liken open<br />

grazing to the sales of motor spare parts.<br />

Wonders will never end, so the<br />

saying goes. I never thought I<br />

would see the day when a sitting<br />

Minister of Justice and Attorney-General<br />

of the Federation, would exhibit the kind of<br />

crude illogicality one would expect from a<br />

primary school dropout. Yet, Alhaji<br />

Abubaka Malami (SAN) did just that last<br />

Wednesday when he termed the Southern<br />

governors’ “ban” on open grazing,<br />

unconstitutional.<br />

Malami explained that the governors’<br />

position “does not align with the provisions<br />

of the constitution, hence it does not hold<br />

water. It is about constitutionality within<br />

the context of the freedoms expressed in our<br />

constitution. Can you deny the rights of a<br />

Nigerian? For example: it is as good as<br />

saying, perhaps, the Northern governors<br />

coming together to say they prohibit spare<br />

parts trading in the North. “Does it hold<br />

water? Does it hold water for a Northern<br />

governor to come and state expressly that<br />

he now prohibits spare parts trading in the<br />

North?”<br />

Then, in a stinking example of “the bad<br />

being filled with passionate intensity,” the<br />

same Malami who left the express way for<br />

the jungle, advised the Southern governors:<br />

“If you are talking of constitutionally<br />

guaranteed rights, the better approach to it<br />

is to perhaps go back to ensure the<br />

constitution is amended. It is a dangerous<br />

provision for any governor in Nigeria to<br />

think he can bring any compromise on the<br />

freedom and liberty of individuals to move<br />

around,” he said.<br />

It is terribly easy to see the two things<br />

glaringly wrong with Malami’s utterance.<br />

This becomes clearer if we recall what the<br />

Southern governors said about open<br />

grazing; one, they “resolved that open<br />

grazing of cattle be banned across Southern<br />

Nigeria; noted that development and<br />

population growth has put pressure on<br />

available land and increased the prospects<br />

of conflict between migrating herders and<br />

local populations in the South.” “Given this<br />

scenario, it becomes imperative to enforce<br />

the ban on open grazing in the South<br />

(including cattle movement to the South<br />

by foot); recommended that the Federal<br />

Abubakar Malami: A Beer<br />

Parlour Logician?<br />

Because the sales of motor spares should<br />

be the equivalent of sales of cattle<br />

and onions. Miyetti wouldn’t<br />

make such pedestrian<br />

arguments. Miyetti should have<br />

the experiential knowledge that<br />

marching around thousands of<br />

kilometers on foot with<br />

cattle in 2021 is inhuman and<br />

degrading punishment for the<br />

herders and cruelty to the<br />

animals. A knowledge that might<br />

be lost on even a former cattle<br />

herder who has come by buttered<br />

living.<br />

Malami sleepwalked on<br />

television. The constitution<br />

guarantees the right of freedom<br />

of movement. That right is for<br />

humans. And not for chickens<br />

and goats. But even that human<br />

right is not absolute. That right<br />

can be abridged for the right<br />

reasons. The right reasons<br />

include the attainment of stated<br />

national security or public health<br />

goals. Every cobbler knows the<br />

government can regulate the<br />

movement of persons for the right reason.<br />

Our governments routinely restrict<br />

movements on election days.<br />

Governments can place curfews.<br />

Governments locked down entire nations<br />

during the COVID pandemic. Malami<br />

should know that the constitutional<br />

freedom to move from place to place isn’t<br />

absolute, inviolable freedom. That was<br />

why watching Malami discuss basic<br />

constitutional rights like a novice made a<br />

hard watch.<br />

The southern governors placed a ban on<br />

open grazing. The states would enact local<br />

laws to enforce the ban. The role of a peeved<br />

Open grazing: Abubak<br />

bubakar<br />

ar<br />

Malami’s fallacies<br />

Government should support willing<br />

states to develop alternative and<br />

modern livestock<br />

management<br />

systems.”<br />

Yes, the governors<br />

agreed to “enforce the<br />

ban.” If some states<br />

have banned open<br />

grazing through acts<br />

of their state<br />

Assemblies, and such<br />

have been signed into<br />

laws, what would any<br />

sane person make of<br />

Malami’s position that<br />

such does not “hold<br />

water?” What really, if<br />

not a call to anarchy?<br />

In states where such<br />

laws have been<br />

enacted, would<br />

Malami not be guilty<br />

of inciting herders to<br />

openly and<br />

reprehensibly disobey<br />

the law? And is that<br />

what is expected of the attorney-general<br />

of any country?<br />

Yet, he was advising the governors to<br />

attempt to amend the constitution first.<br />

Why didn’t he advise those opposed to<br />

federal Attorney General would be to<br />

challenge<br />

the<br />

constitutionality of<br />

those laws in court.<br />

Nigeria is a<br />

federation. Cattle<br />

do not enjoy the<br />

rights granted to<br />

humans under the<br />

constitution. If they<br />

did, we wouldn’t<br />

be killing and<br />

eating them as we<br />

like. The proposed<br />

Miyetti ban on open<br />

grazing by the<br />

southern governors<br />

open<br />

is moral and lawful<br />

because it is a nondiscriminatory<br />

m i n i m u m<br />

m e a s u r e<br />

But I am<br />

optimistic that<br />

even<br />

Allah wouldn’t<br />

liken<br />

grazing to the<br />

sales of motor<br />

spare parts.<br />

the enforcement of the ban, to go to court<br />

to first shoot down the ban if it is<br />

unconstitutional? This is disappointing.<br />

Second, I take due<br />

notice of Malami’s<br />

baseless claim that the<br />

banning of open grazing<br />

negates certain<br />

constitutional rights of<br />

There is a limit to<br />

the constitutionally<br />

guaranteed<br />

freedomof<br />

movement, so<br />

I’ll use Fela’s lyrics<br />

for Malami:<br />

“Teacher don’t<br />

teach me nonsense<br />

necessary to<br />

achieve a stated<br />

public security<br />

objective.<br />

Malami had<br />

watched open<br />

grazing occasion<br />

massacre after massacre. He didn’t flinch.<br />

He forgot that as the nation’s chief law officer,<br />

he had a duty to promote and protect justice,<br />

justice for those who were being<br />

slaughtered. Perhaps, he didn’t know that<br />

prevention of crime is justice. Open cross<br />

country grazing has fostered cattle rustling,<br />

the militarization of cattle herding, the<br />

proliferation of militias, clashes and<br />

massacres with a wanton waste of lives and<br />

property. Where has Malami been? What<br />

were the Justice Minister’s answers to the<br />

Criminal Justice questions asked by open<br />

grazing?<br />

The open grazing ban didn’t fall from the<br />

Nigerian citizens.<br />

Section 41 of the<br />

constitution upholds the<br />

right of citizens to move<br />

freely throughout<br />

Nigeria, to reside in any<br />

part thereof, and not to<br />

be expelled from the<br />

country, or be refused<br />

entry or exit therefrom.<br />

If that is where Malami<br />

got the shamefully<br />

defective idea that<br />

banning open grazing is<br />

akin to Northern<br />

governors banning<br />

spare parts selling in the<br />

North, then, Nigeria has<br />

no effective Attorney-<br />

General. This is because it is only defective<br />

logic, a case of crass and galloping<br />

illogicality that would make a man take<br />

that leap to a most unfounded conclusion.<br />

Open grazing may be a kind of business,<br />

sky. Northern governors proposed an open<br />

grazing ban in the south three months ago. They<br />

did it to safeguard national unity while Malami<br />

was slumbering. The Attorney General’s office<br />

should have grazed on the relevant jurisprudence<br />

and saved the Attorney General from the<br />

constipation he suffered in public. Many of our<br />

lawyers detest philosophy and often march<br />

around the field of legal theory with mental<br />

handicaps.<br />

But this wasn’t complex. Okadas have been<br />

banned in many places for many good reasons.<br />

Street hawking has been banned in many wellrun<br />

cities to curb road traffic accidents, crime and<br />

littering of public spaces. These didn’t need<br />

constitutional amendments. Cows are cows; they<br />

are no Sacred Cows.<br />

The constitution aside, Malami’s hypocrisy is<br />

startling. Malami knows that alcohol movement<br />

has been prohibited in many places in northern<br />

Nigeria. The reason was to service religion<br />

through sharia. Malami knows there are no<br />

compelling reasons for that particular ban. That<br />

ban is therefore unconstitutional. But the ban has<br />

stayed. Why hasn’t Malami told the northern<br />

governors and their Hisbah commanders<br />

destroying beer bottles that they needed a<br />

constitutional amendment to deter bottles of beer<br />

from flowing from place to place? The alcohol ban<br />

is unconstitutional, yet he allowed it. Open<br />

grazing ban is constitutional, yet he is conjuring<br />

inane bigoted analogies to oppose it.<br />

A chief law officer doesn’t need brilliance to<br />

be sensitive. The country is tense. Yet, Malami<br />

chose a childish and divisive analogy that could<br />

pass for a dog whistle. His gesticulations made<br />

him look like he was warning the south to desist,<br />

or a certain southern ethnic group associated with<br />

plying the spare parts trade could be chased away<br />

from a section of the country. Sometimes<br />

ignorance could be criminal. Malami’s wayward<br />

analogy made him sound like an advocate of<br />

trouble.<br />

And what could be worse? Now adept at scoring<br />

own-goals, the federal government has lost the<br />

initiative to the governors. Akeredolu, a Senior<br />

Advocate Of Nigeria, chairman of the southern<br />

governors’ forum, who belongs to the same party<br />

as the Attorney General, described Malami’s logic<br />

as embarrassingly shallow. Ordinarily dogs don’t<br />

eat dogs. And Alsatians should never eat<br />

Alsatians. I feel for Malami. I wish there were a<br />

way he could say he was quoted out of context.<br />

The southern governors must pay no heed to<br />

Malami. Not to his ignorance, not to his mischief,<br />

not to his belligerence. Open cross-country<br />

grazing is antediluvian. Malami doesn’t<br />

understand the times. Law is interpretive. But<br />

suppose anything in the constitution is<br />

misconstrued to support Malami’s beer parlour<br />

logic, that provision of the constitution will fall<br />

into immediate abject redundancy in the south<br />

because the people have already moved on. Yeah,<br />

half of the country has moved. No open grazing!<br />

but it is totally different from running a spare<br />

parts shop. A spare parts seller does not invade<br />

other people’s farms or shops, destroying their<br />

crops or merchandise. He has to set up his<br />

shop in a legally approved place, say a market.<br />

But an open grazing herder has proved to be a<br />

destroyer of other people’s farmlands and<br />

crops. He obeys no rules of engagement and<br />

roams from other peoples’ farms to other<br />

people’s farms. While the spare parts<br />

shopkeeper has a shop, the herder would only<br />

resemble him if the herder has a ranch; yes a<br />

ranch. Will someone please point this out to<br />

Malami! And, Malami, have spare parts shops<br />

in unapproved areas not routinely destroyed?<br />

Now, Malami has to explain why he can’t<br />

appreciate the difference between the business<br />

environment of the spare parts seller and the<br />

open grazing herder, and the implications of<br />

how each of them does his business, and the<br />

effects of their activities on other people’s<br />

properties and RIGHTS?. What is his problem;<br />

crass ignorance or deceit?<br />

That brings us to “ignoratio elenchi” or<br />

fallacy of Red Herring, a distraction from the<br />

argument typically with some sentiment that<br />

seems to be relevant but isn’t really ontopic...just<br />

as Malami’s appeal to the<br />

constitution is a blatant distraction from the<br />

issue at hand. Also, Fulani apologists have told<br />

us that the mad and maddening criminal<br />

herders are undocumented foreigners.<br />

Then this: In Malami’s Northern Nigeria,<br />

Section 342 of the Penal Code (applicable to<br />

Northern Nigeria) provides that ‘Whoever<br />

enters into or upon property in the possession<br />

of another with intent to commit an offence or<br />

to intimidate, insult or annoy a person in<br />

possession of that property, or, having lawfully<br />

entered into, or, upon that property, unlawfully<br />

remains there with intent thereby to<br />

intimidate, insult or annoy such person or with<br />

intent to commit an offence, is said to commit<br />

criminal trespass.’ Is that too against the<br />

citizen’s right of movement? There is a limit<br />

to the constitutionally guaranteed freedom of<br />

movement, so I’ll use Fela’s lyrics for Malami:<br />

“Teacher don’t teach me nonsense.” Or, am I<br />

free to saunter, gun in hand, into Malami’s<br />

home, take what suits my fancy, whimsically<br />

destroy things I can’t cart away, and leave as<br />

he claps for me for exercising my freedom of<br />

movement? Haba, Mallam, Haba!


C<br />

M<br />

Y<br />

SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021—21


22—SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021<br />

Lagos Film Fund C'ttee:<br />

Jide Kosoko kicks<br />

•Wants Sanwo-Olu to include Lagos-born<br />

film maker on the committee<br />

Barely two weeks after Governor Sanwo-<br />

Olu of Lagos State inaugurated a 9-<br />

member film production empowerment<br />

committee to fund youth creativity and<br />

entertainment activities in the state, veteran<br />

actor, Jide Kosoko has expressed the need for<br />

the government to include a Lagos-born film<br />

maker in as well as a filmmaker from any tribe<br />

of the country.<br />

Kosoko, made this position known in a<br />

statement titled , “ My stand on Lagos State<br />

Film Fund Committee”, which he released<br />

during the week.<br />

According to him, “It is only by doing so that<br />

the objectives of your administration for the<br />

industry can be best served.”<br />

The veteran actor said, while he commends<br />

Governor Sanwo-Olu for coming up with such<br />

an idea, the need to give indigenous film<br />

practitioners who he said sustain what we<br />

call Nollywood a sense of belonging is<br />

imperative in this respect.<br />

He writes: “I have been inundated by several<br />

calls and have read several arguments for and<br />

against the composition of a committee set up<br />

by the Lagos State Government for funding of<br />

the movie industry in the state.”<br />

“For this, I cannot pretend to be unaware of<br />

the controversies that has trailed it, especially<br />

its composition.”<br />

“Let me however start by commending our<br />

able Governor, Mr. Babajide Sanwo-Olu for<br />

coming up with such an idea, an idea that<br />

was surely born in time and most assuredly<br />

needed. I dare say that whatever misgivings<br />

anyone may have, one thing is sure, you<br />

cannot fault the motive behind it.<br />

We have had several administrations in<br />

Lagos and other states of the federation, but<br />

not many have given as much thought to our<br />

industry to be able to come up with such an<br />

idea and putting it to work. So, I commend<br />

Governor Sanwo-Olu for that.”<br />

“Secondly, I must say here that I am aware<br />

of the observations of The Eko Foundation and<br />

other organisations on this issue and I<br />

appreciate their intervention not because my<br />

name is mentioned, but because their<br />

statement is not far from my view on the<br />

issue.”<br />

“Let me, however quickly say here that I<br />

don't know who the members of these<br />

associations are. Though I was once the<br />

Cultural Secretary of Eko Foundation when<br />

the late Justice Muri Okunola was our<br />

President. But that was so many years ago.”<br />

“I have followed the arguments on social<br />

media, groups that I belong to and online<br />

publications and I must say I appreciate<br />

everyone that has made contributions, though<br />

I may not completely agree with some of the<br />

approaches employed.”<br />

“That you are a Lagosian by virtue of your<br />

birth or length of stay, does not take away the<br />

right of the indigenes! Do you know the kind<br />

of struggles it took our forefathers that brought<br />

Lagos to be? Or do we have any other place<br />

called home that we go for holidays like Easter,<br />

Christmas and the likes? The truth is that no<br />

matter how<br />

accommodating<br />

Lagos is or has<br />

been, there are<br />

people who are<br />

indigenes,<br />

whose rights<br />

for inclusion must be respected<br />

without tagging it tribalism. Lagos<br />

and Lagosians, if fair must be fair,<br />

cannot be tagged with the toga of<br />

tribalism in good conscience.”<br />

Recall that Lagos State<br />

government weeks back, set up<br />

a 9-member film production<br />

empowerment committee to fund<br />

youth creativity and<br />

entertainment activities in the<br />

state, following the disruption<br />

caused by the spread of COVID-19<br />

that impacted negatively on<br />

entertainment and tourism in the<br />

State,<br />

The committee members consisting<br />

of five industry practitioners and four<br />

government officials including AMAA<br />

founder Peace Anyiam-Osigwe, Tunde<br />

Kelani, Kunle Afolayan, Mo Abudu and<br />

Richard Mofe-Damijo as the chairman of the<br />

committee.<br />

Other side of<br />

Erica revealed in<br />

a new reality TV<br />

show<br />

F<br />

ormer BBNaija housemate,<br />

Erica Nlewedim is warming to reveal<br />

the other side of her life that's rarely<br />

known to her fans as she features in<br />

MTV Base’s new reality TV series,<br />

Inside Life.<br />

The show will start airing weekly<br />

from Wednesday, June 9, 2021, on<br />

MTV Base DStv and GOtv<br />

Channel respectively.<br />

The Queen of the Elites made<br />

this revelation during 'her tell-all<br />

IG Live interview' with VJ,<br />

Nenny-B.<br />

“I am super excited about the<br />

show. Viewers will get to see<br />

sides to me that the public has<br />

never seen before. I think my<br />

excitement comes from being<br />

on live camera again and<br />

thinking about how my fans<br />

will react when they finally see<br />

what my everyday life looks<br />

like.”<br />

“Inside Life with Erica captures<br />

every aspect of me. Erica the actress,<br />

the entrepreneur, the star girl, lover-girl, and<br />

even my vulnerabilities. The name of the show<br />

is Inside Life, so it’s inside my life, no stone<br />

unturned,” she explained.<br />

According to the producer, this scintillating<br />

soon-to-launch series will feature Erica in her<br />

element as she navigates the business and<br />

entertainment worlds, as she continues to grow<br />

to become one of the most respected<br />

entertainment moguls in Nigeria. On the show,<br />

viewers will also get to see the most important<br />

people in her life, from her family members to<br />

her friends.<br />

Commenting on the launch of the new content<br />

Popular publisher of Genevieve Magazine, Betty<br />

Irabor has revealed how her seemingly perfect<br />

life began to spiral out of control after she started<br />

battling feelings of insecurity and grief<br />

following the death of her father and brother.<br />

Featuring in this week's episode of<br />

#WithChude, Irabor shared her horrible<br />

experience that led her into a season of<br />

depression, insomnia and even<br />

attempted suicide.<br />

"I always felt I wasn't good enough<br />

or that I hadn't accomplished<br />

enough, because at that<br />

moment, I was not thinking<br />

•Betty Irabor<br />

about my successes," she said.<br />

Growing up as a student of<br />

Methodist Girls' High School,<br />

Irabor was familiar with the<br />

Neuropsychiatric Hospital,<br />

Yaba, known to be a place for "mad"<br />

people. However, she never thought that<br />

she would one day be a patient of the<br />

famous clinic. After seeing nine<br />

different psychiatrists, she was<br />

•Jide Kosoko<br />

•Erica<br />

Music is my religion<br />

— Daniel Oyiaro<br />

F<br />

ast rising singer, Daniel Oyiaro, popularly known as ‘Danie’<br />

has dropped yet another single titled ‘Waka’, a song which<br />

recaptures the grass root story of his rise to fame.<br />

‘Waka’, according to Danie , was the last music project he executed<br />

before the release of his debut EP titled ‘SIOS’, an acronym for ‘Sorry<br />

I Overslept’.<br />

Speaking on the inspiration behind 'Waka', Dannie said; the song<br />

was inspired by everything that matters to me."This song represents<br />

everything I went through in life," he added.<br />

Also, on the inspiration behind the title of his forthcoming<br />

EP titled 'SIOS' (Sorry I Over Slept), Danie said: “As the<br />

name implies, I feel like I’ve been away on a<br />

personal journey of self-rediscovery. Before my<br />

debut song, ‘Halo’, which I dropped last<br />

November, I have not really released any music<br />

again. So this is my way of saying I’m here<br />

now. I’ve been away for some time,but I’m back<br />

again ”, he said.<br />

Speaking further, Danie explained<br />

why he chose to release an EP,<br />

instead of an album. “To be very<br />

honest I just wanted to create good<br />

music so that the world can feel my<br />

passion and creativity. This is<br />

because I’ve been working tirelessly<br />

for a while. I was able to contain an<br />

exquisite feeling working on this<br />

project and It was an amazing feeling. The<br />

journey is just getting started, I’m not in a<br />

hurry to push out songs. I’ll take my time to<br />

give the world the best of everything I can offer<br />

as a singer," he said.<br />

Describing music as his own form of religion,<br />

Danie said henceforth, his fans should<br />

expects hit after hit from him.<br />

“I want to do the unthinkable. I’ve<br />

been quiet for a while. Music is my<br />

religion, so my fans shouldn't be<br />

disappointed; rather it’s going to be<br />

better than ever from now<br />

on..." Danie<br />

assured.<br />

on Nigeria's number one music entertainment channel,<br />

MTV Base, Solafunmi Sosanya, Senior Channels Manager<br />

at Viacom CBS Networks Africa (the parent company of MTV<br />

Base), said: “Erica is one celebrity that certainly sparkles in<br />

the spotlight. The light and cameras absolutely love her and<br />

that’s a mark of a true reality TV star. Inside Life With Erica<br />

is a brilliant, non-invasive avenue for her teeming fans to see<br />

her for who she really is, outside of the glitz and the glamour.<br />

The show will definitely give viewers a different perspective<br />

to their favourite celebrity’s life. This reality series is keeping<br />

with MTV Base’s drive to provide our viewers with<br />

premium entertainment and storytelling with original<br />

scripted and non-scripted shows."<br />

How I almost committed suicide --Betty Irabor<br />

desperate for help and decided to visit a professor at<br />

that hospital as advised by her uncle.<br />

Recalling this horrible experience, Irabor said, "All I<br />

wanted was my sanity. They say, 'he who is down need<br />

not to fear foes'. I was already at the grass level and I<br />

was looking for where I could find help."<br />

After taking series of medications, seeing a long list<br />

of doctors and repeatedly attempting suicide, Betty<br />

eventually found a way to overcome her depression with<br />

the help of her husband and trusted friends. Today, she's<br />

stronger than ever.<br />

"In a strange way, I have managed to find a way of<br />

dealing with things that would normally knock me<br />

down. I am not that skinny, insecure woman, who<br />

fretted about everything. I am a different person, I am<br />

happier. I know that I am actually in control of what<br />

I internalize, and I can filter out what I don't want in<br />

my life."<br />

Betty has continued to share her story with<br />

the world in the hope that her story will<br />

inspire others to get help and hopefully,<br />

be in control of their stories, proving that<br />

depression is real, not insurmountable.<br />

•Daniel Oyiaro


SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021—23<br />

08116759759<br />

Moment migrant baby is plucked from water by<br />

hero police officer who dived in to save him<br />

Aheroic policeman rescued a<br />

drowning baby as thousands<br />

of migrants swam into the<br />

Spanish enclave of Ceuta from<br />

Morocco. A powerful image shows<br />

the Spanish Guardia Civil officer<br />

clutching the infant while clinging<br />

to a lifeboat in the water. The baby<br />

boy, who was being carried by his<br />

mother, is one of several children<br />

saved by emergency crews. Around<br />

8,000 people including 1,500 minors<br />

travelled to Ceuta, on the border of<br />

Spain and Morocco, in the last two<br />

days, according to officials.<br />

They faced an exhausting journey<br />

to reach the North African enclave<br />

by swimming across the<br />

Mediterranean Sea or scaling a<br />

double-wide border fence – before<br />

sleeping wherever they could find<br />

shelter. Unaccompanied children<br />

were taken into care, according to<br />

reports. But military vehicles<br />

deployed to Ceuta to intercept the<br />

migrants turned away 4,000 people.<br />

Soldiers and police used batons to<br />

remove people from the beach and<br />

hurled smoke bombs to discourage<br />

others from crossing. Now the flow<br />

of people arriving is said to have<br />

been reduced to a ‘trickle’ on<br />

Wednesday, with reports suggesting<br />

some were voluntarily returning to<br />

Morocco.<br />

Spain’s Prime Minister, Pedro<br />

Sanchez, flew to the area in a bid to<br />

‘restore calm’. ‘This sudden arrival<br />

of irregular migrants is a serious<br />

crisis for Spain and Europe,’<br />

Sanchez said in a televised address<br />

before his arrival in Ceuta. He later<br />

criticised Morocco for carrying out<br />

an ‘act of defiance’, adding: ‘The lack<br />

of border control by Morocco is not<br />

a show of disrespect of Spain, but<br />

rather for the European Union.’<br />

Ceuta, which has a population of<br />

80,000, is on the northern tip of<br />

Morocco across from Gibraltar.<br />

Along with another Spanish<br />

enclave, Melilla, Ceuta is said to be<br />

a magnet for African migrants<br />

seeking a better life in Europe.<br />

Morocco has a claim on both. The<br />

‘influx’ of migrants comes amid<br />

heightened diplomatic tensions with<br />

Morocco. The regional leader of<br />

Ceuta criticised what he described<br />

as Morocco’s passivity over the crisis.<br />

Morocco is said to have initially<br />

allowed migrants to enter to pressure<br />

Madrid over its decision to allow the<br />

leader of a rebel faction to receive<br />

treatment for coronavirus in a<br />

Spanish hospital. Spanish foreign<br />

minister, Arancha Gonzalez Laya,<br />

said Spain believes Morocco<br />

loosened its border control to<br />

retaliate for Spain having given<br />

medical assistance to the head of the<br />

Western Sahara liberation<br />

movement, a disputed territory to<br />

Morocco’s south. ‘It tears our hearts<br />

out to see our neighbours sending<br />

children, even babies… (because)<br />

they reject a humanitarian gesture<br />

on our part,’ she said.<br />

Woman asks friends to fake cry around<br />

her coffin as she rehearses own funeral<br />

People in India warned covering themselves<br />

in cow poo will not fight Covid<br />

DOCTORS have warned<br />

people in India against<br />

covering themselves in<br />

cow poo in defence of coronavirus.<br />

In Hinduism, the cow is seen as<br />

a sacred symbol of life and earth,<br />

making some believe that its waste<br />

could help protect them as Covid<br />

ravages the country. An increasing<br />

number of people in India have<br />

been smothering themselves in the<br />

animal’s faeces and urine<br />

believing it will fight off the virus.<br />

Some residents in the Indian state<br />

of Gujarat have reportedly been<br />

visiting cow shelters once a week<br />

and rubbing their excrement over<br />

themselves.<br />

Once covered in the substance,<br />

they hug each other or leave the<br />

mixture to dry in an effort to honour<br />

the cows. When they are done,<br />

milk or buttermilk is used to wash<br />

off the mixture.<br />

Given that this practice involves<br />

breaking social distancing,<br />

officials are increasingly<br />

concerned that it could fuel the<br />

spread of COVID-19 - as well as<br />

causing other health<br />

complications from the dung itself.<br />

Medical officials have been<br />

forced to explain there is no<br />

evidence cow poo can boost<br />

immunity or help treat COVID-19.<br />

Dr J.A. Jayalal, national<br />

president of the Indian Medical<br />

Association, said: “There is no<br />

concrete scientific evidence that<br />

cow dung or urine work to boost<br />

immunity against COVID-19, it is<br />

based entirely on belief.<br />

“There are also health risks<br />

involved in smearing or<br />

consuming these products – other<br />

diseases can spread from the<br />

animal to humans.”<br />

The advice comes as India<br />

reports a rise in “black fungus”<br />

found in patients suffering from<br />

coronavirus. Medics in the country<br />

have been told to look out for<br />

possible signs of mucormycosis in<br />

Covid patients, despite it usually<br />

being a rare infection.<br />

It can cause blackening or<br />

discolouring of the nose, blurred<br />

or double vision, chest pain,<br />

breathing difficulties and<br />

coughing up blood.<br />

There are strong links to<br />

diabetes, which can be made<br />

worse by some of the steroids<br />

being used to treat coronavirus.<br />

Gujarat has had confirmed<br />

cases of mucormycosis, but<br />

India’s authorities have assured<br />

people that there is not a major<br />

outbreak.<br />

India currently accounts for one<br />

in every three Covid deaths<br />

reported worldwide daily, with<br />

362,727 new cases reported in the<br />

last 24 hours.<br />

Doctors and scientists all over<br />

the world are reminding people<br />

that using alternative treatments<br />

for coronavirus usually causes<br />

more harm than good, given that<br />

they provide a false sense of<br />

security and usually have no<br />

medical benefits in relation to<br />

the virus.<br />

Awoman rented a coffin for<br />

the day and staged her<br />

own funeral because she<br />

was desperate to see how her<br />

friends would mourn her.<br />

Mayra Alonzo, 59, organised a<br />

full dress rehearsal of her wake<br />

in the city of Santiago in the<br />

Dominican Republic at the end<br />

of April. The bizarre event saw<br />

her dress in white and lie in the<br />

coffin with cotton wool stuffed<br />

into her nostrils, to replicate what<br />

would have happened to her if<br />

she’d been in a mortuary. Her<br />

friends and family then took<br />

turns to say their teary ‘final<br />

goodbyes’ with some doing a<br />

better job of fake crying than<br />

others.<br />

Mayra spent several hours in<br />

the coffin while guests enjoyed<br />

refreshments and exchanged<br />

stories about their loved one. The<br />

Dominican news site Listin<br />

Diario said the party cost the<br />

equivalent of £710 to organise,<br />

with the money going towards<br />

food, drink and coffin hire.<br />

Mayra described the event as a<br />

‘dream come true’ and thanked<br />

her friends, family and<br />

neighbours who helped to<br />

organise the fake funeral. She<br />

said it was the number of deaths<br />

during the pandemic that<br />

inspired her to celebrate her life.<br />

According to Listin<br />

Diario, Mayra warned loved<br />

ones not to die anytime soon as<br />

being inside the coffin was a very<br />

unpleasant experience.


24—SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021<br />

Insecurity: Facts, fiction<br />

and response in Imo<br />

By Chidi Nkwopara, OWERRI.<br />

I<br />

branded as “unknown gunmen”,<br />

t is no longer news that Imo State, unleashed mayhem recently, in Owerri.<br />

has been in the news in the past At the end of their damnable act, they left<br />

weeks, and if you like, for all the bad a trail of destruction and injection of over<br />

reasons as far as insecurity is concerned. 2,000 criminals into the free society!<br />

It must also be admitted at this point that Yes, the correctional facility in Owerri,<br />

there are some sad facts and fictitious was attacked and no fewer than 1,844<br />

stories that have been trending in the inmates were let loose! If the figures being<br />

social media, even as you prepare to read bandied in some media outlets are<br />

this piece.<br />

credible, no fewer than 600 suspects<br />

To say that there is no crime-free were also set free from the cells of the<br />

community anywhere in the world, Police Headquarters Owerri, during<br />

including Imo State, amounts to stating the same operation.<br />

the obvious. It becomes problematic and These are not good stories to tell<br />

nerve wrecking, when it becomes a daily about Imo State and the Nigerian<br />

occurrence and the magnitude,getting security architecture. The hoodlums<br />

bigger and deeper.<br />

appeared very determined to do more<br />

It is also a fact that no administration collateral damage to the state and<br />

worth it’s salt, can afford the luxury of security agencies, as the rampaging<br />

idly folding it’s hands and watching “unknown gunmen” did not stop at the<br />

criminals kill, maim, rape women and two establishments in Owerri, owned<br />

young girls, as well as sack innocent by the Federal Government.<br />

citizens from their ancestral homelands. Apparently not satisfied with the<br />

We shall come back to this later, especially successes they recorded in their<br />

as criminality has never been known to previous attacks, the criminals<br />

germinate overnight.<br />

descended on other police formations,<br />

Criminality is like a marathon race and burning, looting whatever they could lay<br />

not a 100 metres dash. It develops their filthy hands on and killing<br />

gradually and culminates into a gigantic policemen on duty.<br />

conglomerate that we are witnessing Similarly, the Governor’s Omuma, Oru<br />

today, in Nigeria.<br />

East local government area country home,<br />

Before the coming of the Senator Hope was attacked. Three people reportedly<br />

Uzodimma administration, gory stories died. These are indisputable facts and<br />

•Uzodimm<br />

were told about the activities of armed the citizens naturally became alarmed.<br />

robbers, kidnappers, baby factory owners Night life became a mirage.<br />

and herdsmen, in some parts of Imo State. Now, a bit of the fictional stories that<br />

run away from the state, after the Easter<br />

Monday attack in Owerri. While these<br />

In like manner, Owerri indigenes, have made the rounds. A story went viral about<br />

not forgotten how a sitting government the burning of the magnificent Imo State<br />

fake stories, and a lot of other such stories,<br />

engaged the services of dare devil thugs, House of Assembly, which was built by<br />

kept trending in the social media,<br />

Uzodimma, who knew that he had a<br />

when Eke Ukwu Owerri market was late Chief Samuel Onunaka Mbakwe. The<br />

demolished! One wonders what else, can fake news was so strong and looked so<br />

serious problem in his hands, was in<br />

best be described as state sponsored real that a Catholic Bishop from one of<br />

Abuja, as Saturday Vanguard reliably<br />

gathered, to effectively work out a<br />

brigandage.<br />

the South East states, called this writer at<br />

This generation and subsequent ones, about 10.05pm, to inquire if the story was<br />

commensurate strategy, with the security<br />

will never meet Pontus Pilate, but he will true.<br />

chiefs, for countering the activities of the<br />

hoodlums.<br />

forever, be remembered for being Beyond this, there was also the false<br />

responsible for the death of Jesus Christ. story that no road in Imo was safe, as<br />

On the Governor’s return to Imo State,<br />

In the same vein, whenever and wherever armed hoodlums was said to be having a<br />

he did a few notable things, including the<br />

purchase and donation of 100 operational<br />

the story of the destruction of Eke Ukwu field day on all of them, daily. This again,<br />

Owerri ancestral market, and the death was not true, but it kept making the<br />

vehicles and communication gadgets to<br />

of 10-year old, only son of the Ibeanusi rounds in the social media and people<br />

the joint security team, code-named<br />

“Operation Search and Flush”, OSF.<br />

family, Somtochukwu, would be told, the dreaded anything that would warrant<br />

Senator Rochas Okorocha their coming to Imo State. The economic<br />

Speaking at the event, Uzodimma said:<br />

administration will be perpetually life of the state was threatened and the<br />

“It is a bold statement on our iron-clad<br />

resolve to flush out criminals from our<br />

mentioned.<br />

citizenry were the worse for it.<br />

Yes, a gang of criminals that were The social media was also awash with<br />

dear state. It is a signal to bandits,<br />

the story that Governor Uzodimma had<br />

hoodlums and trigger-happy criminals<br />

Igbo heritage: Chukwudum Okeke launches<br />

‘Embers of Tradition’<br />

By Prisca Sam-Duru<br />

“Embers of Tradition”, the debut novel<br />

of Chukwudum Okeke was on Wednesday<br />

May 19, 2021, launched to a global<br />

audience on a digital space. The 318-page<br />

attention-arresting book that<br />

reminiscences “Things Fall Apart”, by<br />

late literary legend, Professor<br />

Chinualumogu Achebe, is structured<br />

around some of the old traditions of the<br />

Igbo people of South-Eastern Nigeria.<br />

The work of fiction explores the effects<br />

of colonisation on the culture of the Igbo<br />

through the eyes of the protagonist-<br />

Nweke’s family.<br />

The book launch featured a rather long<br />

reading session smartly spiced with<br />

robust conversations around the very<br />

enriching piece laced with Igbo proverbs,<br />

archaic names and deep rooted Igbo<br />

tradition, jettisoned for modern day<br />

religions.<br />

The portions read by the author exposed<br />

the cultural discrepancy between Nweke<br />

and his son; a situation he noted, still<br />

trails people till date. Nweke’s<br />

relationship with his gods as well as his<br />

son is revealed as a way of life which is<br />

not alien in today’s world. “We know our<br />

relationship with our children who think<br />

sometimes that we are archaic”, the<br />

author said.<br />

Chukwudum Okeke, a Nigerian-<br />

American Education Consultant, and a<br />

twin, who was almost a victim of an<br />

asinine extremism of culture, said that to<br />

ensure authenticity of content, he<br />

consulted with older people back home<br />

in Nigeria. “As a matter of fact, as I was<br />

writing this book, I don’t want to put any<br />

falsehood on a book that if you publish,<br />

you can’t take it back. So, many times, I<br />

consulted with old people back home for<br />

the things I was not very sure of because<br />

some of the things here are older than<br />

me. I’m sure Ichie Onyeogadilinma can<br />

confirm whether these cultural practices<br />

are true or false”, the author explained.<br />

On why he decided to publish a book<br />

with archaic cultural content in a modern<br />

era, Okeke said, “First of all, the Igbo<br />

people are very controversial,<br />

even in America here there’s what<br />

they call ‘Igbo Landing’. I think<br />

it’s in Georgia. It’s about<br />

slaves<br />

against their captors<br />

and in the process,<br />

d r o w n i n g<br />

themselves and<br />

their captors.<br />

The place is a<br />

t o u r i s t<br />

attraction in<br />

the US. Also<br />

in Virginia,<br />

they have<br />

Igbo village;<br />

it is like<br />

living in the<br />

revolting<br />

•Okeke<br />

old Igbo<br />

land here in<br />

America. So<br />

among all<br />

A f r i c a<br />

people, Igbo<br />

people are<br />

most controversial. In those days, the Igbo<br />

who were known as ‘Eboe’, were very<br />

hardworking so, they were much sort after<br />

by the slave owners who needed to make<br />

profit. They are also reliable. So I was<br />

trying to bring out some of the<br />

characteristics of the Igbo”.<br />

Okeke further described Igbo people as<br />

very industrious and highly innovative.<br />

“The Igbo are very enterprising and<br />

usually accept their children who<br />

succeed. There’s a cultural lesson the<br />

book attempts to expose which is that no<br />

culture is superior to the other; it’s just a<br />

that their time is up in Imo State.<br />

“Again, this event further underscores<br />

the fact that our government can never<br />

be intimidated by criminals and their<br />

sponsors. It also reaffirms our<br />

commitment to the protection of lives and<br />

property of all citizens of the state,<br />

including those on transit.<br />

“No matter what might have happened<br />

recently, the gallantry and sacrifices of<br />

these patriotic officers have never been in<br />

doubt. May I use this opportunity to<br />

commiserate with families of the officers,<br />

who paid the supreme price in the course of<br />

executing their lawful duties. My<br />

administration will always do the needful<br />

to cushion the pains of these losses.<br />

“In like manner, we shall do all that we<br />

can to ameliorate the pains of families, who<br />

lost their loved ones in the course of<br />

accidental engagements with security<br />

agencies. Our sincere condolences go to the<br />

affected families<br />

“My beloved people of Imo State, in a<br />

way we can say that today’s event is part of<br />

our response to the evolving security<br />

challenges in the state. We are re-energising<br />

the security architecture in the state to make<br />

it more proactive and result-oriented. These<br />

vehicles and equipment being donated by<br />

my administration are eloquent testimony<br />

to our resolve to confront and combat<br />

criminality headlong.”<br />

After promising that he will, in the<br />

coming weeks, integrate the Imo State<br />

Vigilante outfit, otherwise known as<br />

Ebubeagu, to complement the efforts of<br />

Operation Search and Flush, in fighting<br />

crime in the state, Uzodimma also used<br />

the opportunity to declare “a total war against<br />

crime, criminality and their sponsors in the<br />

state”.<br />

His words: “In this regard, I am today<br />

declaring a zero-tolerance for crime in Imo<br />

State. From now onward, Imo State shall be<br />

a no go area for criminals. We shall take the<br />

war to the doorway of all criminals; their<br />

kindred, their hamlets and their hideout. We<br />

shall smoke them out and flush them out of<br />

Imo State.<br />

“Consequently, I hereby charge our security<br />

agencies to chase the criminals to their<br />

hideouts. All smoking joints where marijuana<br />

and other dangerous drugs are sold and used,<br />

should be searched and flushed out.”<br />

Uzodimma equally issued a stern warning<br />

to landlords and traditional rulers:<br />

“Henceforth, any landlord who avails his<br />

property to criminals, even smokers of weeds,<br />

would be answerable to the law. In like<br />

manner, any traditional ruler in whose<br />

domain criminals abide and who fails to<br />

report same to relevant authorities will be held<br />

accountable. We can no longer tolerate a<br />

situation whereby our state is used as a<br />

breeding haven for criminals.<br />

“To the good people of Imo State and<br />

residents, I say to you, you are Safe; go about<br />

your lawful engagements without any fear of<br />

molestation. No shaking. Your safety is<br />

guaranteed.”<br />

It remains a thing of joy that thereafter, it<br />

has been a harvest of arrests of criminals in<br />

the state. The State Police Command’s<br />

bulletins bear eloquent testimony to this.<br />

way of life”. In other words, ‘Embers<br />

of Tradition’, tries to reflect some<br />

cultural issues still relevant till date;<br />

for instance, the problem of<br />

generational gap between Nweke<br />

and his son which still exists till<br />

today.<br />

Corroborating the author’s stance<br />

on the relevance of the book, the<br />

anchorman of the book<br />

launch, Dr Bertram<br />

Okpokwasili (Ichie<br />

Onyeogadilinma)<br />

said, “If some of<br />

these things are<br />

not constantly<br />

before us, we will<br />

forget what they<br />

used to be; I mean<br />

before Christians<br />

showed up. I can<br />

see among the<br />

attendees of this<br />

meeting, three<br />

individuals born as<br />

twins, they were lucky<br />

otherwise, they wouldn’t be<br />

here with us today”, stressing<br />

that the author wouldn’t have<br />

been alive if the culture was not<br />

abolished.<br />

“As strange as they may sound, the<br />

young ones need to read and understand<br />

what it used to be”, he said, pointing out<br />

that the book also brings out advantages<br />

of the coming of the missionaries who<br />

were instrumental to abolition of deadly<br />

traditions such as the killing of twins and<br />

sacredness of the Python.<br />

Also a guest corroborated the relevance<br />

of the book noting that a place in<br />

Madagascar is still killing twins and so,<br />

they can learn from the book that those<br />

of us that ended the culture of killing twins<br />

are doing okay.


SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021—25<br />

bunmsof@yahoo.co.uk<br />

You might be the reason your man strayed!<br />

Mothers certainly know<br />

best no matter how old<br />

their children. Eccua, a<br />

younger friend, paid a visit to her<br />

mum some few months back,<br />

virtually bending her ears with tales<br />

of her husband’s latest escapades.<br />

“She always made a soothing noise<br />

whenever she realized all I needed<br />

to do was let off steam”, said Eccua,<br />

“but this fateful afternoon, my mum<br />

gave me a bored look, yawned and<br />

declared: ‘Aren’t you a bit tired of<br />

hearing your own moan? I mean<br />

look at you! A graduate we were all<br />

proud of now turned into a what?<br />

Look at the back of your feet. When<br />

last did you have a pedicure? Or a<br />

good facial? Or a fancy stint at the<br />

hairdresser’s? I scarcely see you in<br />

anything glamorous but a frumpy<br />

boubou. If I were your husband,<br />

believe me, I wouldn’t be interested<br />

either!” I glanced at her and she<br />

glared right back. Whose side was<br />

she on? I’m a mother of three for<br />

goodness sake, not some femme<br />

fatal! She ought to be more<br />

sympathetic.”<br />

I hate to rob salt into Eccua’s<br />

wound but I told her gently that I<br />

agreed with her mum. She was<br />

really fashionable when she was<br />

younger and we weren’t surprised<br />

when she married into a respectable<br />

family. Now a couple of decades<br />

later, she’s settled into a rut. She’d<br />

become sort of ‘mum-sy’ and even<br />

mothered her husband. I told her<br />

that if she didn’t snatch a bit of her<br />

old self back, find some self-respect,<br />

her husband might not appreciate<br />

her. My harsh words obviously hit<br />

home. She looked at me as if I were<br />

You twist and turn every<br />

night, trying to get to<br />

sleep. Nothing seems to work<br />

– and you get more and more<br />

stressed. You snap at the<br />

kids, snarl at your partner and<br />

you can barely get through the<br />

day. It is estimated that a lot<br />

of the population is prone to<br />

insomnia with women more<br />

likely to suffer than men.<br />

All sorts of factors can affect<br />

our sleep – medical conditions<br />

like sleep apnoea, lifestyle<br />

issues such as poor diet, or the<br />

stress of bereavement, divorce<br />

or losing your job. But if<br />

insomnia is ruining your life,<br />

remember that your family<br />

may be suffering too.<br />

“However supportive your<br />

a traitor, but I gently pointed out to<br />

her that she might be running a<br />

successful primary school, that didn’t<br />

mean she had to dress the part of a<br />

school ma’am! She’d put on more<br />

weight than necessary and in spite<br />

of her mum’s warning, she had on<br />

an unflattering boubou which<br />

seemed to be her trade mark lately.<br />

“Why don’t you give away your<br />

boubous and get some more<br />

flattering gears?”, I asked her gently.<br />

She nodded, then left, a bit dejected.<br />

Had I gone too far? She needed to<br />

Tackling the monster of Insomnia<br />

partner may be, seeing<br />

someone at your worst for<br />

much of the time is hardly a<br />

recipe for a happy domestic<br />

life”, says Lynda Brown,<br />

author of the Insomniac’s Best<br />

Friend: How to get a Better<br />

Night’s Sleep. And if you are<br />

an insomniac with kids,<br />

normal family life might seem<br />

impossible at times. How<br />

many insomniac mothers<br />

chide themselves for being<br />

irritable with their children?<br />

Advise about when you eat,<br />

what you eat, how you relax,<br />

and what you do and don’t do<br />

in the evening, all becomes<br />

more complicated when there<br />

are two or more to consider.<br />

But working out how your<br />

be shocked out of her complacency,<br />

I consoled myself. Who best to do<br />

that but a well meaning ‘aunty’ like<br />

me?<br />

When I next spoke with her on the<br />

phone, she told me excitedly that<br />

she’d started on a diet and joined a<br />

group of ladies that went for walks<br />

in their estate. Good for her, I<br />

encouraged, my conscience salved.<br />

When next I saw Eccua, I nearly<br />

flipped. She’d lost the right amount<br />

of weight, had a lovely and flattering<br />

dress on. She’d also put some fancy<br />

insomnia impacts on the<br />

people you love is just as<br />

important as tackling the<br />

problem itself.<br />

Lynda’s tips will make your<br />

days more bearable and<br />

hopefully good nights will<br />

follow. If you are an<br />

insomniac: Remember that<br />

your partner needs support<br />

too. Show your appreciation<br />

whenever you can. Don’t let<br />

insomnia rule both of your<br />

lives. Try to be more relaxed.<br />

“Be nice to yourself and<br />

you’ll be nicer to be with.<br />

Don’t blame yourself for not<br />

sleeping. Tossing and<br />

turning, it is usually more<br />

disruptive to partners than<br />

reading in bed or getting up.<br />

Train yourself to lie very still<br />

or go into the spare room.<br />

Failing that, head for the sofa.<br />

Sleeping in separate rooms<br />

can be a very touchy issue.<br />

Your partner may feel<br />

abandoned and you may feel<br />

guilty. But if your<br />

sleeplessness is getting both<br />

of you down, separate rooms<br />

may save your relationship.<br />

If your partner is an<br />

insomniac: Don’t tell them<br />

they had more sleep last night<br />

than they realise. It doesn’t<br />

help – an insomniac’s reality<br />

is the amount they think<br />

they’ve slept. Understand<br />

that when they have a go at<br />

you, it’s not really aimed at<br />

you.<br />

highlights in her hair. “Wow!” I yelled<br />

encouragingly. “Double<br />

wow!” she shrieked and<br />

then her phone rang. Her<br />

face instantly lit up as she<br />

checked the caller’s<br />

identity. She had on a<br />

smug smile after she<br />

finished her call. ‘That was<br />

Femi, one of my pupil’s<br />

dad’ ‘Oh’, I gulped. She<br />

joked: ‘Thanks to you and<br />

mum, I can now pull men!”<br />

“Heh, that wasn’t the idea”,<br />

I quickly told her, “we just<br />

wanted you to feel good<br />

about yourself, not start<br />

pulling men, left, right and<br />

centre!” Had we created a<br />

monster?<br />

“The good thing about<br />

having an inner glow is<br />

that other people notice,”<br />

she told me smugly. ‘Femi<br />

has two children in my<br />

school and sometimes<br />

comes for them instead of<br />

sending a driver. We’ve<br />

often chatted but it never<br />

even occurred to me that<br />

he could be anything but a parent.<br />

After I lost weight, he started staying<br />

longer and longer. When the staff<br />

decided to do a play and one of<br />

Femi’s sons was involved, he was<br />

excited, chipping in his bits at<br />

rehearsals and since I hadn’t<br />

forgotten my sewing skills I made<br />

some of the costumes. Femi praised<br />

my efforts to high heavens one<br />

evening after rehearsal. We were<br />

alone in my office and I thanked him.<br />

‘What coud I have done without you!”<br />

I told him innocently until I saw the<br />

dirty look on his face.<br />

“Show me,” he declared as he<br />

moved closer to me giving me a kiss.<br />

He must have unlocked some hidden<br />

passion in me because I couldn’t stop<br />

myself – I was all over him and he<br />

was kissing me as if I was a much<br />

needed drug. We made love right<br />

there and then in my office. It was<br />

so daring, so passionate. And by the<br />

time I got home that evening, I was<br />

still smiling. Seyi, my husband, was<br />

waiting for me – he’d been coming<br />

home early since I changed. I felt<br />

like a teenager rather than a staid<br />

married woman!<br />

“Instead of dashing to the kitchen,<br />

I asked the maid to rush to a lovely<br />

canteen a few doors away – that<br />

specializes in home-made meals<br />

and Seyi made a show of actually<br />

enjoying the meal. In the past, he<br />

used to moan about my penchant<br />

for buka foods and how I should<br />

take pride in serving home made<br />

meals. After the meal, he brought<br />

out my favourite wine, I was<br />

pleasantly surprised. My hard work<br />

at keeping fit had certainly paid off<br />

as we retired to the bedroom. Then<br />

it hit me! I would be making love<br />

twice with different men in the space<br />

of a few hours! Wicked!<br />

“I intend to sleep with Femi a<br />

couple more times. It is thanks to<br />

him that I got my sensual self back.<br />

After that, I intend to let him know<br />

deep down, it is my husband and<br />

my marriage that I really want.<br />

Thanks to my mum’s seemingly<br />

cruel jab at my appearance, and<br />

your backing her all the way, I was<br />

jolted into taking another look at<br />

myself. Now, I’ve virtually got my<br />

husband back and it is worth the<br />

effort. We go out more often than<br />

we ever did in the last few years and<br />

we make love more. Once he asked<br />

suspiciously about why I decided to<br />

spruce myself up and I told him<br />

about my mum. He was amused<br />

Apparently, he had first thought I<br />

made the effort for a lover! “It’s only<br />

you I’ve told about Femi and I don’t<br />

feel guilty for cheating on Seyi,<br />

because my fling has made our<br />

marriage stronger. I’m glad I<br />

followed you people’s advice. By<br />

taking some pride in the way I look,<br />

I’ve found the respect I deserve.”<br />

Zylus Group of staff sharing foods for Ajah residents<br />

during Eid celebration.


26—SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021<br />

Mixed reactions trail emergence<br />

of Anambra Cargo Airport<br />

By Lawani Mikairu<br />

The rate state governments are<br />

building and operating state owned<br />

airports has attracted mixed reactions<br />

from aviation stakeholders. While some<br />

stakeholders have applauded the governors<br />

for using airports to create job opportunity for<br />

their citizens, others have questioned the<br />

viability of these state owned airports.<br />

The latest of the state owned airports is the<br />

Anambra State International Cargo Airport<br />

at Umueri. Last Monday, Chief Willie Obiano,<br />

Governor of Anambra State said the Anambra<br />

International Cargo and Passenger Airport,<br />

Umueri, would be commissioned mid-July for<br />

commercial operations.<br />

The Chief of Staff to the Governor, Primus<br />

Odili, who disclosed this in Awka on behalf of<br />

the governor said: “By July this year, possibly<br />

mid-July, the airport will be officially<br />

commissioned. By this time, all facilities<br />

befitting of a modern international cargo and<br />

passenger airport must have been ready and<br />

in place. The airport portends a good fortune<br />

for the entire South East region. The<br />

importance of the airport cannot be overstressed<br />

as it would boost the Internally<br />

Generated Revenue (IGR) of the state, help<br />

traders transport their goods and services as<br />

well as a host of other benefits which can hardly<br />

be quantified.”<br />

The Chief of Staff also said what happened<br />

on April 30 was not the official inauguration<br />

of the airport for public use, but a test-run of<br />

the runway.<br />

He said: “On Friday, April 30 this year, we<br />

organised a ceremony where we summoned<br />

Anambra people and friends of the state to the<br />

airport for a test-run of the runway to ascertain<br />

whether it was fit for aircraft to land and<br />

takeoff. Test-run of facilities are series of routine<br />

checks before an airport is commissioned for<br />

public use. A lot of tests had taken place at the<br />

airport before the event of April 30; the Nigerian<br />

Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) had carried<br />

out tests on the runway to ascertain its quality<br />

prior to the actual test-run of the airport.”<br />

On the benefits of the airport to the people,<br />

Odili said the inauguration of the cargo airport<br />

in Anambra would ensure all cargoes come<br />

directly into the state at very reduced cost.<br />

Reacting to the spate of building of state<br />

owned airports, with particular reference to<br />

the new Anambra State international Cargo<br />

Airport, some aviation stakeholders who spoke<br />

•Obiano<br />

with Vanguard expressed mixed reactions.<br />

The immediate past Secretary General of<br />

National Union of Air Transport Employee,<br />

NUATE, Comrade Yinka Abioye said : “It has<br />

now become the vogue that state governments<br />

across the length and breadth of Nigeria have<br />

chosen a new vocation, which is building<br />

airports, not withstanding the merits or<br />

otherwise of such ventures. From the point of<br />

view of a unionist, I am in full support of such<br />

enterprise since it will not only create direct<br />

and indirect job opportunities for indigenes<br />

and other citizens, it will impact positively on<br />

the economic growth of Anambra State and<br />

expand the opportunity of air travellers. Being<br />

also a cargo airport, business environment will<br />

improve so much that businessmen and<br />

peculiar traders will have the privilege of<br />

travelling straight from Anambra to any part<br />

of the world.<br />

“This being said, it will also throw up some<br />

challenges for other airports which hitherto<br />

depend on passengers from the zone. It may<br />

affect drastically traffic flow from Asaba and<br />

even Lagos. Instead of travellers from Anambra<br />

travelling first to Lagos before going to China,<br />

for instance, this they can safely do in the<br />

Anambra airport thereby causing low traffic<br />

in adjoining airports”.<br />

“On the flip side, the Federal Government<br />

may eventually get involved should the<br />

management fail or neglect to do the needful<br />

as it had happened in some other state airports<br />

where Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria,<br />

FAAN , had to take charge. We must not also<br />

lose sight that other agencies under the Federal<br />

Ministry of Aviation will become players at<br />

the airport such as FAAN, Nigeria Airspace<br />

Management Agency, NAMA, Nigeria Civil<br />

Aviation Authority, NCAA, Nigeria<br />

Meteorological Agency, NIMET, and Nigeria<br />

College of Aviation Technology, NCAT, Zaria,<br />

which may be the first beneficiary of the venture<br />

as local personnel had to be trained in certain<br />

aspects of airport operations and<br />

management.<br />

“The FG should also collaborate with the<br />

State government to bring the process of<br />

establishing aerotropolis near and around the<br />

airport, which ultimately brings more<br />

development to the airport and enhance<br />

economic activities through non aeronautical<br />

sources.”<br />

Speaking further about other states owned<br />

Airports, Abioye said , “By and large, if Jigawa<br />

or Kebbi States can do it, why not Anambra<br />

which has more prospects of succeeding than<br />

other states”.<br />

The former Commandant, Muritala<br />

Muhammed International Airport, Lagos,<br />

Group Captain John Ojukutu ( rtd) however<br />

disagreed with Comrade Yinka Abioye.<br />

According to Group Captain Ojukutu, “how<br />

many of them ( state owned airports ) are viable?<br />

What is the passenger traffic of the airports<br />

around them? What is the statistics of the air<br />

passengers traffic from these states with new<br />

airports that are travelling through proximate<br />

airports? Most of these states have serious<br />

challenges in other social sectors that will<br />

benefit their larger populace of millions than<br />

airports that would serve few thousands air<br />

travellers. Kano and Ibadan have larger<br />

population than the new comer states capitals<br />

building airports. None of the two has recorded<br />

significant figure over 500,000 passengers<br />

traffic .<br />

“Ibadan has not recorded 200,000 in any<br />

year. Anambra, the latest has its airport in<br />

between Enugu, Asaba and Owerri; the three<br />

airports combined barely have 1.5m passenger<br />

traffic annually. Anambra airport competing<br />

among them would not give it more than<br />

200,000 because of the closeness of some states’<br />

towns; like Onitsha’s closeness to Asaba than<br />

Umueri and others’ closeness too to Enugu.<br />

“On the other hand, what are the projected<br />

export or import cargo for the Anambra<br />

airport? The total air cargo in Nigeria is very<br />

bad at 200,000 tons at the five international<br />

airports; how much of this is the airport<br />

targeting or how much can it take from the<br />

over 100m tons with container-trailers and<br />

trucks on the road? Airports before the new<br />

ones are counting their losses and would want<br />

concession to those who can make them viable,<br />

definitely not a government venture anywhere<br />

any more “.<br />

When Vanguard told him that Anambra<br />

State business men and traders may now decide<br />

to bring in their goods through the state airport<br />

at Umueri, instead of Lagos or Port Harcourt<br />

just to help make the airport viable, Ojukutu<br />

replied , “What value would it be from the<br />

national figures of 200,000 tons? To make the<br />

airport viable, you must have significant<br />

exports and imports. What export will<br />

compensate for the low imports?,” he asked.<br />

The former Spokesman of the defunct<br />

Nigeria Airways, Mr Chris Aligbe , while<br />

advising the Anambra State government had<br />

said that for the Anambra airport to be of “high<br />

utility and profitable, it must be designated as<br />

cargo airport, whereby the federal government<br />

would recognise it as cargo facility to enable it<br />

take in cargo directly from overseas.<br />

“They should seek an approval for<br />

international cargo operation, they should not<br />

bother about passengers. Passengers can go to<br />

Enugu for major international flights, but they<br />

should look at cargo and seek approval for<br />

international cargo operation. If they can do<br />

that and begin to build on it, the airport will<br />

become attractive. For cargo, the airport will<br />

be the only one in that region, except Enugu.<br />

But if it does well as a cargo airport, it can go<br />

a long way,” Aligbe added.<br />

The new Anambra State International<br />

Cargo Airport came to limelight earlier in the<br />

year when the Director General of the Nigerian<br />

Civil Aviation Authority ,NCAA, Captain Musa<br />

Nuhu commended the facility after detailed<br />

inspection describing it as one of the best in<br />

the country.<br />

Captain Musa Nuhu said : “I am amazed,<br />

almost speechless at the level of work, and the<br />

level of compliance with our regulatory<br />

requirements and also with international<br />

standards and recommended practice.<br />

“We have gone round the airport, we have a<br />

runway of 3.7kilometers with a runway safety<br />

area on both ends of the airport of about 1000<br />

meters. There’s no airport in Nigeria that has<br />

a racer area of 1000 meters at both ends of the<br />

runway. With two taxiways, we have gone to<br />

the tower; the control tower is amazing,<br />

certainly if not one of the best control towers in<br />

Nigeria today. We have seen the fire service<br />

station, amazing. It’s going to be a CAT<br />

(category) 955 firefighting station which will<br />

allow big planes and international flights to<br />

be landing and taking off here once flight<br />

resumes. It takes care of the need of not only<br />

the airport but also of the firefighting service.<br />

We have seen the emergency evacuation center,<br />

trauma center in case, God forbid, anything<br />

happens. There’s an arrangement to deal with<br />

any eventuality. I have seen the operational<br />

fence, I have seen the perimeter fence,<br />

significantly done or almost completed.<br />

Anambra means business. And I mean it when<br />

I say Anambra means business,” the NCAA<br />

Director General said.<br />

Foreign Countries Should Refund Stolen Funds With Interest – ICPC Chairman<br />

…Nigeria Reviewing Oil & Gas, Tax, Waivers Transactions To Curb IFFs<br />

Soni Daniel, Abuja<br />

The Chairman of the Independent<br />

Corrupt Practices and Other Related<br />

Offences Commission (ICPC), Prof.<br />

Bolaji Owasanoye, has canvassed the payment<br />

of interests on stolen funds by benefiting foreign<br />

nations as part of measures to redress the<br />

menace of illicit financial flows.<br />

The ICPC chairman, who stated this in Abuja<br />

, said that the Federal Government of Nigeria<br />

was currently reviewing legacy transactions<br />

in oil and gas, tax investments and the use of<br />

waivers in Nigeria in order to curb IFFs.<br />

Prof. Owasanoye spoke at the International<br />

Conference on IFFs and Asset Recovery, held<br />

at the ICPC Headquarters, Abuja, said illegal<br />

movements of funds from African countries<br />

abroad has made the continent to be the biggest<br />

victim of IFFs.<br />

He urged foreign beneficiaries of IFFs to<br />

deduct loans to African countries from the<br />

illegal funds in their possessions, and return<br />

the outstanding amount with interests to the<br />

continent.<br />

He said, “Africa is the biggest victim of IFFs.<br />

If you evaluate what we have lost as a continent<br />

against what African counties owe, Africa<br />

should be a net creditor to the world. They can<br />

decide to deduct the loans given to African<br />

countries from all the money taken from the<br />

continent, there will still be a substantial<br />

amount to return to Africa.<br />

“The money should also be returned with<br />

interests as they have been in use over there.<br />

The money should be placed in an Escrow<br />

account, and a regional development bank<br />

that knows how to manage money should be<br />

in charge of such funds.”<br />

The ICPC Chairman advocated a workable<br />

framework that will reduce the timeframe for<br />

the repatriation of identified stolen funds and<br />

assets, decrying the huge loss suffered by the<br />

•Prof. Bolaji Owasanoye<br />

continent due to long and tedious processes<br />

which usually takes several years to complete.<br />

Besides, Prof. Owasanoye said there were ongoing<br />

efforts by the Federal Government to<br />

block illicit outflows of funds through the<br />

review of international transactions that<br />

enable IFFs.<br />

His words: “We are reviewing the legacy<br />

transaction in oil and gas, tax investments and<br />

the use of waivers in Nigeria to close loopholes<br />

that facilitate IFFs. For instance, a lot of<br />

damage can be done through confidential<br />

clauses in loans, oil and gas contracts, and<br />

others. The review will prevent dodgy<br />

politicians from taking money out.”<br />

A member of the Thabo Mbeki Panel on<br />

Illicit Financial Flows out of Africa, Ms. Souad<br />

Aden Osman, said that efforts to stop IFFs were<br />

more critical now than ever due to the huge<br />

level of poverty and underdevelopment in<br />

Africa.<br />

In her lead presentation on the Common<br />

African Position on Asset Recovery (CAPAR),<br />

Osman urged African countries to mount a<br />

coordinated effort against IFFs by taking<br />

action and speaking with one voice to recover<br />

stolen funds.<br />

She said, “CAPAR is the bedrock for<br />

technical instrument for negotiating for funds<br />

taken from the continent to be returned. It<br />

recommends efficient recovery and<br />

unconditional return of stolen assets with due<br />

respect to our sovereignty.”<br />

CAPAR, she added, recommended the<br />

deployment of recovered assets for the good of<br />

the citizens and not be allowed to be re-stolen.<br />

“The recovery and return of asset must be<br />

applied for the development of the country. We<br />

should be mindful that the identified assets are<br />

at the risk of retransfer unless frozen by<br />

destination countries,” said Osman of the<br />

Coalition for Dialogue on Africa (CoDA), a<br />

civil society organisation.<br />

In his contribution, the Chairman African<br />

Union Advisory Board Against Corruption<br />

(AU-ABC), Hon. Luis Andriamifidy, identified<br />

some of the challenges the Board face in<br />

repatriation of IFFs to include the matter of<br />

sovereignties of countries involved, a common<br />

legal framework to be adopted, and how to<br />

proceed with court processes especially on<br />

admissibility of evidence, among others.<br />

Andriamifidy, who emphasised the need for<br />

a policy dialogue to ensure a common Africa<br />

position, called for a strong advocacy<br />

approach both within and outside the<br />

continent.<br />

The Commissioner of Anti-Corruption<br />

Commission of the Republic of Sierra Leone,<br />

Francis Ben Kaifala, lamented the issue of<br />

cultural differences and how assets recovery<br />

has not taken root in many African countries<br />

unlike Nigeria and Kenya.<br />

He revealed that his organisation had in two<br />

years recovered over $3 million in cash<br />

excluding cars, houses, among others, which<br />

was more than what they country had achieved<br />

in 18 years.<br />

He stressed the importance of developing a<br />

common legal assistance which will reduce<br />

the resources spent in chasing after IFFs by<br />

African countries.<br />

Kaifala also recommended training,<br />

development of pressure system on<br />

international bodies, streamlining of recovery<br />

processes to make them less cumbersome, and<br />

a proper framework for the discovery and<br />

disposal of assets as part of measures address<br />

IFFs.<br />

In her lead presentation during the second<br />

plenary session, a member of the United<br />

Nations High Level Panel on IFF (FACTI<br />

Panel), Hon. Irene Ovonji-Odida, expressed the<br />

hope that the conference will result in an<br />

increased understanding of IFFs and<br />

commitment to action which is needed to curb<br />

it.<br />

Speaking on “Financing Sustainable<br />

Development by Stemming IFFs: the FACTI<br />

Report in Perspective”, Ovonji-Odida revealed<br />

the cost of financial integrity gaps.<br />

According to her, FACTI discovered that $1.6<br />

trillion, which is 2.7% global Gross Domestic<br />

Product, was lost in money laundering by<br />

criminals; $500-600 billion lost to tax<br />

havens by corporations and PEPS while<br />

$20-40 billion was lost to bribes to public<br />

officials in developing countries, and $7<br />

trillion private wealth hidden by banking<br />

secrecy in advanced countries.<br />

She said these loses were responsible for<br />

fiscal deficits, regressive taxation,<br />

criminality, low public trust, and weak rule of<br />

law, among others.<br />

On FACTI Panel’s recommendations, Hon.<br />

Ovonji-Odida mentioned an overhaul in the<br />

international tax norms and institutions, plus<br />

a corporate tax vision including reforms on<br />

transparency; a domestic structure; law and<br />

enforcement mechanism to be reformed with<br />

increased transparency and more dynamic<br />

response to emerging risks.


Parchive App to eliminate car parking<br />

stress in Nigeria<br />

Stories by Moses Nosike<br />

Parchive App, a first of its kind<br />

technology-driven<br />

innovation,<br />

is<br />

revolutionizing the parking<br />

industry, simply by helping<br />

Nigerians search, reserve, and pay<br />

for parking space since its inception<br />

in 2020.<br />

Speaking on the motivation<br />

behind the initiative, Parchive’s<br />

Chief Executive Officer, Oluyinka<br />

Oginni, said that the difficulty he<br />

experienced in securing a parking<br />

space when he visited Computer<br />

Village, Ikeja, Lagos, prompted his<br />

decision to proffer a solution.<br />

According to Oginni, I frequently<br />

visit Computer Village in Ikeja,<br />

Lagos to get technology gadgets.<br />

During one of my trips in August<br />

2018, I drove to my usual parking<br />

spot, but on arrival, it was<br />

completely occupied. “I spent over<br />

30 minutes searching the area in a<br />

bid to locate a parking spot to no<br />

avail. I eventually got stuck in traffic<br />

and finally had to go back to the<br />

previous car park I visited before<br />

finding an open spot to park. This<br />

frustration led to in-depth research<br />

to find a solution to reserving a<br />

parking spot before getting to his<br />

destination”.<br />

Oginni further said, “in August<br />

2018 I took time conducting<br />

research on the best solution to<br />

resolving the parking menace in<br />

Lagos and if there was currently a<br />

solution in the market. We also<br />

carried out a market survey to ensure<br />

that this was a solution users actually<br />

wanted and its results revealed an<br />

overwhelmingly positive response<br />

to the idea and highlighted the<br />

potential benefits users saw with the<br />

solution. Before the end of 2018, I<br />

assembled a team to develop the<br />

product and I was actively involved<br />

in ensuring we got to the Minimum<br />

Viable Product (MVP) stage.<br />

However, I and my team still had<br />

The world is faced with<br />

complex social and<br />

economic challenges ravaged by<br />

an arduous pandemic in today’s<br />

knowledge-based environment.<br />

However, societal progress<br />

depends on cultivating leaders<br />

who can operate effectively in a<br />

global and changing<br />

environment and adapt to<br />

diverse systems and institutions<br />

to meet the change demands of<br />

disparate communities. Moreso,<br />

for young people situated at the<br />

margins and exposed to societal<br />

ills, which renders them<br />

vulnerable to alienation or<br />

resentment from mainstream<br />

social institutions such as<br />

education and vocation. So,<br />

therefore, with globalization<br />

uncertainty, what can we, as<br />

individuals, do in our immediate<br />

environment or inside our<br />

organizations to effect the desired<br />

change? These, amongst other<br />

things, have entreated the need<br />

for socially conscious leaders to<br />

pursue social goals as part of<br />

their enterprise objectives<br />

leading to change as social<br />

entrepreneurs. The social<br />

entrepreneurship essence aims<br />

to create public good by exposing<br />

and ameliorating social problems<br />

by adopting entrepreneurial<br />

precepts with social values to<br />

achieve positive social changes.<br />

The social entrepreneurial impact<br />

excels through new communitybased<br />

ventures that focus on<br />

value creation, sustainable<br />

L-R: Adewale Alli, the CMO, Oluyinka Oginni, the CEO and Fola<br />

Oyewole, the CTO<br />

our individual full-time jobs, and<br />

that meant we could not fully<br />

dedicate adequate resources to<br />

launch the product once it got to the<br />

MVP stage. In 2020, the team<br />

decided to dedicate all our time to<br />

complete and launch the product.”<br />

Continuing, Oginni said that<br />

Parchive’s main goal is to ensure<br />

people conveniently drive their cars<br />

in Nigeria without the struggling of<br />

a place to park. Since its launch in<br />

October 2020, over 1000 parking<br />

transactions have been completed<br />

on the platform despite the fact that<br />

some people now work from home<br />

due to the COVID-19 pandemic.<br />

Furthermore, as part of measures<br />

to eliminate transactional and<br />

financial monitoring bottlenecks<br />

for car park operators, Parchive<br />

introduced cashless transactions as<br />

a gamechanger in an industry<br />

notorious for physical cash<br />

payments. Current car park<br />

operators on the platform can<br />

easily withdraw their earnings<br />

directly into their bank accounts,<br />

further driving digital transactions<br />

in the economy<br />

On the company’s long-term plan,<br />

he said, “five years from now, Parchive<br />

would have expanded to the rest of<br />

Africa. We designed the application<br />

with potential users across the<br />

continent in mind ensuring that<br />

anyone with a smartphone/device<br />

can easily download the app on<br />

Google Play store or use our WebApp<br />

for IOS users, create an account, type<br />

their destination in the search bar,<br />

view car parks closest to that location,<br />

and easily reserve a parking spot. We<br />

were also excited to see that over 60%<br />

of our customers are women, with<br />

use cases ranging from paying for<br />

parking at their workplaces to<br />

making reservations when they visit<br />

the market.”<br />

In addition, the Chief Technology<br />

Officer, Fola Oyewole said that<br />

Nigerians only need to download the<br />

app on Playstore or visit<br />

parchive.space to create accounts.<br />

Once their accounts have been<br />

created, they can type their<br />

destinations in the search bar to view<br />

and reserve the closest car parks to<br />

their destinations. For Car park<br />

providers who are interested in<br />

partnership, they can also visit their<br />

website to sign-up<br />

Ken Etet<br />

ete: e: The social entrepreneur<br />

solution, empowerment and<br />

innovation, and collaboration not<br />

maintained status quo and the<br />

appetite for controlling industry<br />

forces that have impoverished<br />

communities in the first place.<br />

As a general principle, on the<br />

one hand, social change aims to<br />

reduce inequality and make<br />

other people’s lives better. As<br />

such, notions of social change are<br />

situated around institutional<br />

policy changes to benefit a group<br />

and implicit changes in a group’s<br />

value, status, or authority that<br />

leads to better individual, social<br />

condition and societal<br />

development, and<br />

empowerment. Accordingly,<br />

community wellness and social<br />

innovations are good for society<br />

and enhance society’s capacity<br />

to act and foster a shift in attitudes<br />

and actions that enable sound<br />

policies centered on creating<br />

community-based sustainable<br />

economic opportunities. On the<br />

other hand, a social entrepreneur<br />

or a change broker fosters<br />

collaboration that elevates active<br />

inclusion within organizations<br />

and communities.<br />

Consequently, I care about<br />

social innovation and positive<br />

social change because people out<br />

there need modified social<br />

transformation toward equality.<br />

Ostensibly, social innovation<br />

through the impact of a change<br />

broker agency and its significant<br />

role in infusing sustainable<br />

development that leverages<br />

technology<br />

and<br />

entrepreneurship and is a<br />

priority in strategies for social<br />

change, which is a major driving<br />

force behind common wealth<br />

creation. Conversely, social<br />

entrepreneurship and its related<br />

innovation development are vital<br />

to empowering societies and are<br />

often critical for marginalized<br />

communities’ equity and must<br />

bring concerned groups<br />

permanent benefits, unlike<br />

technical innovation, which are<br />

contemplated innovations only<br />

after the strikingly groundbreaking<br />

discovery that can be<br />

marketed.<br />

As a strategic thinker and sociopolitical<br />

conscious enterprise<br />

innovator: Ken Etete uses his<br />

green space above his private<br />

residence hoisted by a social app<br />

to create a fitness and leadership<br />

community, which means he<br />

opened his home to total strangers<br />

to engaged socially, contributing<br />

to societal well-being, astonishing<br />

right? I thought as much too. The<br />

green space is now a family<br />

community called: The Rooftop<br />

Gym, which aims to promote<br />

fitness and mentor young leaders,<br />

acting as a change vector. During<br />

and the still existing Covid-19<br />

complexities and the apparent<br />

incapacity of existing public<br />

Evans Jakpa-Johns, PhD<br />

Student, Management &<br />

Technology<br />

read more on<br />

www.v<br />

.vanguar<br />

anguardngr<br />

dngr.com<br />

SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021—27<br />

Zylus Group feeds 1000 Ajah<br />

residents for Eid celebrations<br />

A<br />

leading business capital organisation, Zylus Group International,<br />

on Wednesday 13, May 2021 put smiles on the faces of young, old,<br />

needy as they took to the streets of Ajah community Lagos in the spirit Eidel-Fitri<br />

feeding more than 1000 with its “Feed the 1000” initiative.<br />

The GMD, Zylus Group International, Oluwatosin Olatujoye, said, “the<br />

“Feed the 1000” initiative came up as a result of the group’s dedication<br />

towards helping the less privileged in the society with the inclusion of those<br />

who cannot afford to celebrate Eid-el-Fitri by themselves.<br />

“We are dedicated towards our service to humanity, besides the<br />

programme of feeding some less privileged persons, we carried out many<br />

activities geared towards helping the needy and putting a smile on their<br />

faces. We’ve had several CSR programmes where we feed children and<br />

even those in correctional facilities. With our “Feed the 1000” initiative we<br />

wanted to bring smiles to the people’s faces this Eid, we don’t want them to<br />

feel left out because they can’t afford to celebrate in their homes. We are<br />

positive that this would be a beginning to greater initiatives”.<br />

He added that the company has plans towards celebrating children of<br />

selected schools during the upcoming Children’s Day, this May.<br />

A member of the team, Jolayemi James, said that the company choose to<br />

carry out this initiative during this period to show love and celebrate with<br />

the less privileged.<br />

“If you want to transform lives and reach out to people, you have to start<br />

from somewhere. We are committed to our mantra: Nurturing dreams,<br />

fulfilling realities. Jolayemi added.<br />

One of the residents, Ahmed commended Zylus Group International for<br />

their kind gesture in celebrating the festival with them by sharing food to<br />

residents in the area.<br />

Zylus Group of staff sharing foods for Ajah residents during Eid-el-Fitri<br />

celebration<br />

NIMN Elections: Presidential<br />

candidate assures of a more<br />

professional institute<br />

A<br />

s preparations for the National Institute of Marketing of Nigeria<br />

(NIMN) elections gather momentum, one of the candidates<br />

vying for the office of the institute’s president, Mr. Idorenyen Enang,<br />

has said his priority on assumption of office would be to further<br />

enhance professionalism among members.<br />

Idorenyen made the pledge, recently, while presenting his agenda,<br />

at the institute’s Presidential Debate, organized for candidates vying<br />

for the office of the president.<br />

According to him, with the huge presence of its members in different<br />

sectors of the nation’s economy, the time has come for the marketing<br />

institute to take its pride of place in the comity of professional bodies<br />

in the country.<br />

While commending the outgoing president of the institute, Mr.<br />

Tony Agenmonmen for its efforts at rebuilding the institute, Idorenyen<br />

assured of his commitment to continue with the rebuilding process<br />

to enable him effectively reposition the institute.<br />

He argued that one of the strategies he intends to adopt is by<br />

unleashing the power in members, and make them actively involved<br />

in the affairs of the institute.<br />

Besides, he assured that the institute, under his leadership, would<br />

strengthen its bond with the academia, to enable its vast human<br />

resources in the nation’s academic space contribute their own quota<br />

to the growth of the institute.<br />

“One of the things I intend to do is to strengthen the bond between<br />

the institute and the marketing departments in the nation’s higher<br />

institutions. For instance, we need to make our professors of<br />

Marketing, contribute to capacity development in the institute.<br />

“We intend to have a huge bank of materials in the institute, and<br />

we can achieve that by asking marketing professors among us to<br />

give us highly researched works which would be warehoused for<br />

the use of members”.<br />

The president hopeful assured members of the institute of a quality<br />

leadership, on assumption of office, on May 28, this year. Earlier,<br />

one of the candidates vying for one of the two vacant council<br />

seats, Mr. Chidi Nwakpa, promised to use his influence as a council<br />

member to enhance the quality of membership to the institute.<br />

Ohanaeze Ndigbo Lagos Women’s Wing<br />

visits Gani Adams<br />

The Women’s Wing of Ohanaeze Ndigbo, Lagos state has said that<br />

contrary to the media report, the visit by the group to the Aare<br />

Onakakanfo, Iba Gani Adams was not a “powerful delegation of IPOB<br />

Women” as tagged by the media. The women leader of the Igbo sociocultural<br />

organisation, Chief Mrs Violet Uche Obiora said in a<br />

statement.<br />

The statement titled: Rebuttal on the media post; “Powerful<br />

Delegation of IPOB Women Visits Gani Adams in Lagos”. Read: “It is<br />

with a deep sense of duty, that I humbly write to correct an impression<br />

generated by a wrongly tagged post.<br />

“We the “Ohanaeze Ndigbo Lagos state, Women’s Wing”paid Chief<br />

Gani Igbo Adams, Aare Onakakanfo a courtesy visit in his Lagos State<br />

residence to mark Eid-el-Fitri celebration on Wednesday, May 12, 2021.<br />

Unknown to us, pictures taken at the said courtesy visit were posted on<br />

several social media platforms with the caption, “Powerful Delegation<br />

of IPOB Women visits Gani Adams in Lagos. The above statement is<br />

false, misleading and misrepresents the identity of our group and the<br />

purpose of our visit.


28—SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021


C<br />

M<br />

Y<br />

K<br />

lease allow me to take literary<br />

Plicense and write about Lee<br />

Edward Evans again this week.<br />

On Tuesday, May 17, some 15<br />

minutes to midnight, the man<br />

died.<br />

It must never be said that one<br />

of the greatest athletes in the<br />

history of sports in the world died<br />

and bells were not rung to make<br />

the announcement.<br />

This is my humble<br />

announcement, a recall of my<br />

experiences of the man outside<br />

of sports during a period that<br />

he finally found peace with his<br />

restless spirit.<br />

Lee loved his grandson in<br />

America with a passion. He<br />

always talked about him with<br />

pride. He believed the young<br />

lad would be a supreme athlete,<br />

a gift to the world of sports who<br />

would replace him one day on<br />

the tracks. Lee Evans’s dream<br />

was to watch Keith’s son, his<br />

grandson, race at the Olympics.<br />

He also talked often about his<br />

mother and her overwhelming<br />

influence on his life: how she<br />

made him love gardening, and<br />

to know a lot about plants and<br />

their uses, and how she<br />

developed his social character.<br />

He often spoke fondly about his<br />

siblings and their growing up<br />

years in California.<br />

Through all these, he loved that<br />

I would sit and listen to him at<br />

evening, outdoors in the front<br />

yard with glittering stars above<br />

our heads. We were<br />

mesmerised by his stories, his<br />

infectious laughter, echoed in<br />

the still night, infecting all of us<br />

in the small, daily assembly of 2<br />

or 3 of my friends that became<br />

his own friends, at our<br />

communion of grills - corn,<br />

prawns, guinea fowl, fish or<br />

chicken, yam, potatoes,<br />

everything ‘grillable’, downed<br />

with chilled drinks.<br />

Lee would explain the different<br />

uses of the several plants he<br />

planted around the perimeter<br />

of our walled fence - mustard<br />

seed, bitter leaf, pineapple, King<br />

of Bitters, Goron Tula, and a few<br />

others he nursed and watered<br />

at dawn to start his daily routine.<br />

He spoke of the peace he now<br />

enjoyed after finally<br />

surrendering to the spirit that<br />

Nigerian footballers Paul<br />

Onuachu and Cyriel<br />

Dessers were instrumental to<br />

ensuring Racing Genk qualified<br />

for next season’s UEFA<br />

Champions League, following<br />

its 4-0 thrashing of Royal<br />

Antwerp in the Belgian Jupiler<br />

League at the Luminous Arena.<br />

The result keeps Genk in second<br />

place in the Belgian First<br />

Division A table heading into<br />

the final round.<br />

Onuachu and Dessers played<br />

key roles in the win by being<br />

involved in three of the four<br />

goals scored by the Limburg<br />

club.<br />

had troubled him for years since<br />

he realised, as a young student,<br />

that he was a descendant of the<br />

Black slaves in pictures and<br />

paintings shackled in chains,<br />

who originally came from a<br />

distant land called Africa.<br />

His decision to go to Africa<br />

when the opportunity came as<br />

a coach was to appease that<br />

agitating spirit that would not<br />

let him rest.<br />

He finally found peace when he<br />

returned to the land of his<br />

ancestors that were forcefully<br />

shipped to America and other<br />

places to become slaves and<br />

builders of new worlds. By<br />

returning ‘home’, he had chosen<br />

a path that led to service, to<br />

living and to dying in Africa.<br />

He found purpose for his life<br />

when he started to discover<br />

young talented Africans and<br />

honed them to become the best<br />

they could be in athletics, using<br />

his influence to get them into<br />

the American collegiate system<br />

to get educated and to become<br />

sports champions.<br />

After traversing and<br />

experiencing much of the world,<br />

he accepted entirely that his<br />

final ‘home’ would be Africa,<br />

particularly Nigeria, where<br />

science revealed his genes were<br />

23% of the southern Nigerian<br />

stock!<br />

At the end of diiner every night,<br />

Lee would bid us goodnight<br />

early, return to his room, and<br />

take his ‘sleeping pill’ - bedtime<br />

chit chat on telephone with his<br />

partner in Calabar and their 3-<br />

year old son, Destiny. He loved<br />

those chats, loved both of them<br />

dearly, and shielded them like<br />

a lioness would shield her cub.<br />

When he and his African/<br />

American friend, John Cashing,<br />

accompanied me to the Segun<br />

O d e g b a m i<br />

International.College and<br />

Sports Academy, SOCA, in<br />

Wasimi Orile some years ago for<br />

the first time, they saw the<br />

environment and their faces lit<br />

up, speaking more than a<br />

thousand words could ever<br />

have done. They loved it. To Lee,<br />

this was the home he had been<br />

looking for, the ‘lost’ paradise,<br />

the Garden of Eden now found.<br />

They saw beyond what I could<br />

ever have seen.<br />

When I offered that Lee could<br />

spend his idling time to come<br />

and teach the children how to<br />

run whilst he was still battling<br />

his 6- year old court case to clear<br />

his name of a concocted<br />

allegation that he assisted a<br />

teenage athlete to dope, he<br />

excitedly and readily accepted.<br />

I had followed the court case<br />

since it started and I believed<br />

he was the victim of some<br />

dangerous conspiracy. The case<br />

could have broken him, and<br />

destroyed his reputation forever,<br />

but like the determined athlete<br />

that he was all his life, he<br />

patiently fought it for 7 years.<br />

He was finally vindicated when<br />

he won in court and his name<br />

was finally cleansed of that ugly<br />

stain and stench.<br />

That’s how he moved with me<br />

to Abeokuta and adopted<br />

SOCA as his personal project,<br />

to train and run with the lives of<br />

its students to sports success!<br />

Within weeks, we were<br />

conjoined in living the dream of<br />

the biggest and best high-level<br />

sports training centre in Africa.<br />

Lee started to dig up all his old<br />

friends in positions of authority<br />

in international sports, asking<br />

for support for the academy as<br />

well as scholarships for the<br />

students into American<br />

Colleges.<br />

John Cashin embarked on<br />

researching how the scattered<br />

bamboo plantations in the<br />

environment could become<br />

useful raw material for a Bamboo<br />

Village in Wasimi Orile where<br />

returnee African/Americans<br />

could live whilst investing in the<br />

vast agricultural opportunities<br />

that lie wasting in the<br />

environment.<br />

Thats how Lee Evans finally<br />

settled down with me in<br />

Abeokuta preparing for our full<br />

settlement on the campus of<br />

SOCA in 2022.<br />

His next plans, in the order of<br />

priority, were to see his<br />

grandchildren in the US, to buy<br />

himself a truck he could use on<br />

a farm, to build a small home<br />

next to mine in the academy,<br />

bring his Nigerian family from<br />

Calabar to stay with him, invite<br />

Earnest Itche, his Cameroonian<br />

assistant based in the US, to join<br />

him in the academy to continue<br />

Onuachu, Dessers send<br />

Genk to Champions League<br />

Onuachu assisted Kristian<br />

Thorstvedt score two of his three<br />

goals; he set up the Norwegian<br />

three minutes after the restart,<br />

then provided his second assist<br />

of the game in the 64th minute.<br />

With sixteen minutes left on the<br />

clock, Dessers came off the<br />

bench to replace his<br />

international teammate, a move<br />

that meant Onuachu’s scoring<br />

the breeding process of the next<br />

generation of world-class African<br />

sprinters and jumpers.<br />

Lee was going to start an<br />

athletics revolution that would<br />

take young girls and boys from<br />

grass to grace, to mounting<br />

Olympic podiums after 3 years<br />

of the unique SOCAexperience.<br />

He was going to enjoy the rest<br />

of his life in that community, to<br />

die and to be buried beside his<br />

ancestors.<br />

As I sit down this afternoon, all<br />

of these thoughts running<br />

through my mind, I am deeply<br />

pained that Lee is no longer<br />

around me to finish the journey<br />

we both embarked upon.<br />

Last Tuesday night, at a quarter<br />

to midnight, peacefully in his<br />

deeply unconscious state, he<br />

embarked on another journey,<br />

alone, a terminal one on earth<br />

that is designed and<br />

understood only by the Creator<br />

of the Universe himself.<br />

I am thinking of Lee as he<br />

journeys to his creator.<br />

He loved children and athletics<br />

in equal measure. Talking to<br />

them closely about how they can<br />

become great athletes, and<br />

working out with them on the<br />

training ground and the tracks<br />

were his oxygen. Those things<br />

made him very happy.<br />

Football fans across the world<br />

are set for a thrilling end to the<br />

2020/21 Premier League season<br />

this Sunday with much to be<br />

decided towards the top of the<br />

table.<br />

Manchester City have already<br />

SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021 — 29<br />

‘And the man died’ - Lee<br />

Edward Evans<br />

streak in the division ended at<br />

seven games.<br />

Dessers made an immediate<br />

impact, scoring barely a minute<br />

after his introduction – his sixth<br />

goal of the season.<br />

Racing Genk will face back-toback<br />

champions Club Brugge<br />

in its final fixture of the 2020-<br />

2021 season on Sunday, May<br />

23.<br />

Babangida must be joking — Westerhof<br />

By Jacob Ajom<br />

Recently, former Ni<br />

geria international,<br />

Tijani Babangida accused<br />

former Nigeria<br />

coach, Clemens Westerhof<br />

of not including him<br />

in the 1994 AFCON and<br />

World Cup squads because<br />

he refused the<br />

Dutch to manage him.<br />

Speaking in an interview<br />

with an online publication,<br />

the former pacy<br />

winger said he was too<br />

good to have been ignored<br />

by any coach as he was at<br />

his prime. Said he, “I was<br />

too good to be left out of<br />

the squads,” adding, “I<br />

had issues with the coach<br />

(Westerhof), who wanted<br />

to manage me and I disagreed.”<br />

The former Nigeria<br />

coach has reacted to the<br />

allegation, saying, Babangida’s<br />

claim was a<br />

big joke. “I want to believe<br />

it was a joke because<br />

I doubt if he has forgotten<br />

that Nigeria had a<br />

glut of stars who were far<br />

ahead of him in the Eagles’<br />

pecking order.”<br />

Continuing, Westerhof<br />

who called from his base<br />

in Holland said, “although<br />

I admit Babangida<br />

was a good player but<br />

he was not better than<br />

Finidi George, or Siasia,<br />

or Amokachi or Yekini.<br />

Who then should I have<br />

dropped fto make space<br />

for him?”<br />

The former coach<br />

doubted if Babangida<br />

would have done better if<br />

he were in his shoes. “I<br />

Westerhof<br />

coached numerous Nigerian<br />

players who still appreciate<br />

my role in their<br />

development. Finidi was<br />

in Holland sometime ago<br />

and was asked who was<br />

his best coach in his career.<br />

He told the journalists<br />

that Westerhof had<br />

been his best coach ever.<br />

I am not boasting, I produced<br />

the best Nigerian<br />

team ever.”.<br />

Lee Evans<br />

He would wake up in the<br />

mornings and announce with<br />

seriousness and pride that: ‘I<br />

have a class in school today’.<br />

He told me how he once scored<br />

a student 100% in a test when<br />

he lectured at the University of<br />

Ife, and the head of department<br />

summoned him and told him<br />

that no student was that good,<br />

and even if he answered every<br />

question correctly, it was<br />

preposterous to score him<br />

‘perfect’.<br />

He had to take away some<br />

points from the student’s<br />

excellent performance. In sports<br />

that would never happen.<br />

When you win, you win<br />

completely.<br />

Amongst the things that he also<br />

told me fondly was his love to<br />

dance. Three weeks ago, I saw<br />

him dance for the first time.<br />

Bored with sitting at home one<br />

Friday evening we decided to<br />

go to the Sports Lounge in<br />

Abeokuta, a bar and hangout<br />

place I own. The lockdown and<br />

Covid 19 restrictions had badly<br />

affected the place. It had been<br />

idle for over a year.<br />

That evening, Lee arranged that<br />

the single staff left in the place<br />

should arrange some music, the<br />

kind of music the loved, music<br />

of the 1960’s and 1970’s - James<br />

Brown, U-Roy, Bob Marley, Fela<br />

EPL: Curtain falls<br />

been crowned champions while<br />

Sheffield United, West Brom<br />

and Fulham have been<br />

relegated.<br />

Ndidi to stop Kane<br />

Leicester City will need<br />

to deal with the threat<br />

of Harry Kane if their finalday<br />

push for a top-four spot<br />

is to prove successful.<br />

To stand any chance of<br />

overtaking Liverpool or Chelsea,<br />

the Foxes must in all likelihood<br />

take three points at<br />

home to Tottenham Hotspur.<br />

For this to happen, Wesley<br />

Fofana and Wilfred Ndidi will<br />

need to be on top of their<br />

game.<br />

Both have enjoyed excellent<br />

campaigns and it is imperative<br />

they work together<br />

to dominate their duel with<br />

Anikulapo, and a whole<br />

generation of other reggae<br />

artists.<br />

As soon as the music rented the<br />

air, Lee hit the dance floor and<br />

started to move his feet. He was<br />

a real rocker, with incredible<br />

dancing feet. He had all the<br />

structured and measured<br />

moves of a tutored dancer. The<br />

only other people at the bar, a<br />

couple, joined me in watching<br />

and marvelling at Lee’s<br />

mastery, his waist gyrating in<br />

sync with his feet moving in<br />

rhythmic patterns. He danced<br />

to every music that night -<br />

Reggae , Jazz and Afrobeat. It<br />

was the happiest I have seen<br />

Lee in a long time of our<br />

relationship. That was three<br />

weeks ago.<br />

He lived to compete and to win.<br />

The moment he tasted the<br />

sweetness of winning big, he got<br />

hooked on winning like a drug.<br />

To him winning is about coming<br />

first in every race. Thats why<br />

throughout his career in athletics,<br />

from the age of 19, he probably<br />

only ever lost one race, and,<br />

definitely, it was not to a White<br />

athlete. He was not a racist, but<br />

experiencing racial injustice in<br />

America drove him to excel in<br />

athletics and never to allow any<br />

White athlete defeat him in a race.<br />

He grew up during the peak of<br />

the civil movement in the United<br />

States and was fed on the diet of<br />

social injustice, inequality and<br />

racism. He and his fellow Black<br />

colleagues took this with them to<br />

the 1968 Olympics, and if there<br />

was any tonic that made them<br />

run and ‘destroyed’ 5 world<br />

records in the process, that was it<br />

- to make the point that Blacks<br />

were as good and even better.<br />

Their stances, the black berets, the<br />

raised fists were all protests that<br />

changed the world of sports<br />

forever.<br />

Lee’s complete story in Africa<br />

will still be told. His life in Nigeria<br />

and in SOCA, the institute he<br />

wanted to turn into the best<br />

training centre for sports in<br />

Africa, has not ended. It is<br />

indeed a new chapter.<br />

His legacy, planted already in<br />

the academy, will sustain the<br />

Lee Evans story for a long time<br />

to come.<br />

For now, in fulfillment of his<br />

wish, and with the<br />

acquiescence of his family and<br />

closest friends, the academy in<br />

Wasimi, will be the final resting<br />

place of Lee Edward Evans, one<br />

of the greatest 400 metres<br />

runners in history. I believe that<br />

in that place he will finally rest<br />

and find divine peace in the<br />

land of his ancestors.<br />

But the race for the European<br />

places is heating up nicely as<br />

teams head into their final<br />

game and it is set to go right<br />

down to the wire.<br />

Kane, who is tied with Mohamed<br />

Salah on 22 goals in<br />

the race for the Golden Boot.<br />

Ndidi will be asked to stop<br />

the service into Spurs’ forwards<br />

and close down<br />

Kane’s space when he drops<br />

between the lines.<br />

Over the course of the last<br />

four seasons Ndidi has been<br />

a remarkably consistent ballwinner<br />

for Leicester.<br />

The 24-year-old is coming<br />

into his prime and is a tremendous<br />

asset for Brendan<br />

Rodgers’ side.<br />

No Premier League midfielder<br />

makes more interceptions<br />

per 90 minutes than<br />

Ndidi, who is also second only<br />

to Manchester City’s Rodri<br />

this season for the number of<br />

times he recovers possession.<br />

LaLiga final day: Atletico, Real Madrid set for<br />

nail-biting title battle finale<br />

Expect the unexpected.<br />

That’s been the theme<br />

throughout the LaLiga season.<br />

Up until the final few<br />

matchdays of the season, four<br />

teams were still in the Liga<br />

title race and that has not<br />

been for a very long time.<br />

There have been countless<br />

twists and turns in this runin<br />

and it is expected to go<br />

down to the last minute of<br />

the final matchday as Atlético<br />

and Real each battle to win<br />

the title.<br />

Away from the title race, six<br />

other teams have it all to play<br />

for with European spots and<br />

LaLiga survival to be decided.<br />

Everyone is expecting an<br />

easy victory for league leaders<br />

Atlético Madrid away at<br />

Real Valladolid – who are one<br />

of three clubs fighting for survival<br />

– but expect it to be another<br />

tense game.<br />

Atlético fans have suffered<br />

Ndidi<br />

over the years, and they may<br />

have to do that for a little<br />

while longer, the title they<br />

have so close to winning may<br />

head to Real if the Zinedin<br />

Zidane boys up their game<br />

against Villarreal.<br />

Diego Simeone’s inspired<br />

team talk at the water break<br />

helped his side turn it around<br />

against Osasuna in just eight<br />

minutes. Simeone said it was<br />

going to be Luis Suárez’s<br />

moment and it was written<br />

in the stars that he scored the<br />

late winner.


30— SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021<br />

Chioma<br />

Ajunwa's<br />

leap of<br />

destiny<br />

•Says ys I never er knew w the enormity<br />

of Olympic gold medal<br />

•To o Launch a N6 billion Sports<br />

ts<br />

Development Centre in Owerri<br />

soon<br />

It’s 25 years since Chioma Ajunwa won<br />

Nigeria’s, first individual Olympic Gold<br />

Medal in track and Field. Here, our Deputy<br />

Sports Editor, Jacob Ajom recalls the exploits<br />

of the former athlete, now an Assistant<br />

Commissioner of Police. She has also initiated<br />

a Foundation which plans a Sports<br />

Development Centre for the training of young<br />

talents and providing them with up-to-date<br />

facilities. Read on:<br />

The story of Nigeria’s first and<br />

only winner of an individual<br />

Olympic Gold medal, Chioma<br />

Ajunwa could be likened to one<br />

scripted for Nollywood big screen.<br />

Here was an innocent<br />

village girl who<br />

took to sports as an<br />

infantile pastime,<br />

playing football<br />

with her siblings<br />

who were mostly<br />

boys, and a few<br />

years later, found<br />

herself at the centre<br />

of the world,<br />

I started<br />

playing<br />

football very<br />

early in my<br />

life with my<br />

brothers. I<br />

was even a<br />

better player<br />

than them<br />

attracting global<br />

attention. As a young<br />

girl who ran in the<br />

streets<br />

of<br />

Umuihiokwu village<br />

in Ahiazu-Mbaise<br />

Chioma Chioma<br />

Ajunwa said she never<br />

reckoned she would<br />

one day be celebrated<br />

through what she felt<br />

she was doing naturally. “I didn’t<br />

know what it meant to be an Olympic<br />

champion.” Little wonder she could<br />

not comprehend the enormity of her<br />

achievement at Atlanta until much<br />

later after her return to Nigeria.<br />

Born on December 25th, 1970 at<br />

Umuihiokwu Ahiazu-Mbaise in Imo<br />

state, Chioma was the last and the<br />

only girl in a family of 9. In an<br />

interview with the Channels<br />

television, she told her story.<br />

“I was about 13/14 when I was<br />

moving in the street. Then I saw<br />

three Policemen,<br />

including a female officer<br />

coming towards me. I was<br />

afraid and thought they<br />

wanted to arrest me.<br />

Strangely, they asked me<br />

to come to them. I asked<br />

for what? And I took off,<br />

running as fast as I<br />

could.<br />

“One of my friends who<br />

saw me running asked<br />

why. I told her I didn’t<br />

know what I had done<br />

but the Police were<br />

after me and wanted to<br />

arrest me. When they<br />

got hold of me, they<br />

informed me that their<br />

boss in the office<br />

wanted to see me. I<br />

asked them why?. They took me to<br />

their boss and on seeing me, the<br />

officer, who, perhaps, was expecting<br />

to see a grown up adult asked, ‘where<br />

is the antelope? Where is the person<br />

I asked you to bring to me?’ They told<br />

him I was the one. They explained<br />

that I was a fast runner, thus the locals<br />

likened me to running as fast as an<br />

antelope.”<br />

•Chioma Ajunwa<br />

Chioma continued her story. “After<br />

asking me my name, where I lived<br />

and other relevant questions about<br />

my person, he told me that the Police<br />

wanted me to become one of theirs.<br />

It happened that the state Police<br />

Command was organising zonal<br />

qualifiers for Police Games and they<br />

needed good athletes who would<br />

represent them and they felt I could<br />

be a perfect fit.<br />

“The Officer offered me N200 and<br />

promised to get in touch again. But I<br />

refused to accept the N200 gift<br />

because I feared my mother would<br />

kill me if she discovered I accepted<br />

money from a stranger. I explained<br />

this to him and he took back the<br />

money. Undaunted though, he then<br />

brought out N500 and gave it to the<br />

female Police officer and asked her<br />

to take me to my mother. He<br />

instructed the officer to tell my mother<br />

why the Police wanted me. After that<br />

encounter, I was eventually recruited<br />

into the Nigeria Police Force and<br />

taken to the Police College before<br />

going to Ilorin for the Police Games.”<br />

Her joining the Police changed her<br />

fortunes as she was not only good in<br />

athletics, Ajunwa also<br />

played football. Indeed,<br />

football was her first love.<br />

“I started playing football very<br />

early in my life with my brothers. I<br />

was even a better player than them.”<br />

Chioma played football up to<br />

international level as she was part of<br />

the Super Falcons squad that<br />

represented Nigeria at the 1991 FIFA<br />

Women’s World Cup in China. She<br />

cut short her football career because<br />

“there was a certain coach who didn’t<br />

like to field me.”<br />

She then concentrated on athletics.<br />

She was active and successful in the<br />

women’s long jump event. She<br />

specialised in the 100m and 200m.<br />

Also, she performed remarkably at<br />

the African Games and African<br />

Championships between 1989 and<br />

1991.<br />

In 1995, Chioma said of how former<br />

Nigeria international, Chief Segun<br />

Odegbami picked her up to further<br />

hone her skill in athletics. “Fatima<br />

Yusuf, one of Nigeria’s best athletes,<br />

was always coming to me. She told<br />

me that Segun Odegbami wanted to<br />

see me. One day I accompanied her<br />

to see Odegbami. He took me up and<br />

sent me to the UK, where I<br />

concentrated on my training, under<br />

a very strict schedule.”<br />

That was the turning point in her<br />

life as an athlete. She took part in<br />

the trials for the 1996 Olympics and<br />

she made the mark that qualified her<br />

for the Games in Atlanta.<br />

How she made history<br />

At the Olympics nobody gave her a<br />

chance. She recalled. “On the day of<br />

the final of the long jump event,<br />

everybody, including the officials were<br />

all interested in going to watch the<br />

football final the following day. When<br />

we got to the venue, and we were<br />

called out, I saw my more<br />

accomplished competitors warming<br />

up. I was scared. I looked at the<br />

crowd in the stadium and started<br />

shaking. At one point, I went to sit at<br />

a corner, still looking at the other<br />

athletes I was to compete with, I<br />

asked myself, why am I looking<br />

scared. Were their legs made of steel.<br />

Common, Chioma get up.<br />

“I obeyed my instincts and stood up<br />

to them. I started doing the same<br />

thing they were doing. If they moved<br />

this way, I would move in the other<br />

direction. I warmed up seriously.<br />

Then came the moment of truth. I was<br />

called to jump. I took to the track. I<br />

collected myself, heaved a big breath<br />

and took off, accelerating forward.<br />

When I got to the board I sprang and<br />

leapt in flight, after landing in the<br />

sand I looked back and the<br />

umpires raised the white<br />

flag, signaling the jump<br />

was good. That gave me<br />

hope. But when the<br />

covered distance of<br />

7.12m was flashed on<br />

the board I knew I<br />

made a good jump.”<br />

Chioma didn’t know<br />

t h a t with that jump, she<br />

had set a new African and<br />

Commonwealth record. At the end,<br />

the jump turned to gold. Her second<br />

jump of 6.99m was not as good but<br />

still ranked high among the ones<br />

returned by the other athletes.<br />

Chioma defeated the likes of Fiona<br />

May of Italy and legendary US<br />

athlete, Jackie Joyner-Kersee to the<br />

gold medal. It was a historic moment<br />

for the little known Nigerian.<br />

Irony<br />

When Chioma was announced<br />

winner, drama ensued as there was no<br />

Nigerian flag to do a lap of honour.<br />

“When we were leaving for the event<br />

we asked for a flag. Dr Amos Adamu<br />

who was the Director General then<br />

promised he would come with a flag. I<br />

was surprised that after winning the<br />

event, there was no flag and Dr Adamu<br />

was nowhere to be found. As I was<br />

searching for any semblance of a<br />

Nigerian flag, someone from the crowd,<br />

threw a Nigerian flag at me and I was


elieved. I did the victory lap. But it’s<br />

like nobody believed I was going to<br />

win any medal, talk less of a gold<br />

medal. It’s a big lesson to our<br />

administrators. Once an athlete is in<br />

the final of any event, anything is<br />

possible.”<br />

Still on that memorable day Chioma<br />

was called to the podium for medal<br />

presentation. Before then she had<br />

seen athletes who were emotional and<br />

shed tears after receiving their medals.<br />

She never understood why somebody<br />

would cry after winning an event. “It<br />

didn’t make sense to me. When I got<br />

my medal, I didn’t feel anything<br />

special. I took it like any other medal<br />

I had won before,” she recalled.<br />

But she was to know the enormity of<br />

her achievement when she got home<br />

in Nigeria. “It all started dawning on<br />

me when we were returning home. We<br />

had a stop over in Senegal. There, we<br />

were welcomed by traditional troupes<br />

who sang and danced. I began to<br />

wonder about what was happening. It<br />

was more when we arrived at the<br />

Muritala Mohammed International<br />

Airport, Ikeja. There was an<br />

unprecedented crowd waiting to<br />

welcome us. Different dance troops.<br />

Government declared a three-day<br />

public holiday and we were treated<br />

specially. It was a wonderful<br />

experience that became even more<br />

real after getting back home in<br />

Nigeria. I never knew what an<br />

Olympic medal meant. But in Lagos I<br />

knew what it was all about.<br />

Today, Chioma Ajunwa, an Assistant<br />

Commissioner of Police is one of the<br />

most celebrated athletes in Nigeria.<br />

Even though her career was earlier<br />

hit by a failed drug test, she would<br />

later re-establish herself and achieve<br />

a lot at a personal level.<br />

Today, the former Super Falcons<br />

forward has initiated a platform, the<br />

Chioma Ajunwa Foundation through<br />

which she can pay back to the society<br />

which made her what she is today.<br />

The Foundation has announced plan<br />

to establish a N6 billion Sports<br />

Development Centre.<br />

Before that, there have been a lot of<br />

other initiatives by the foundation,<br />

which has Henry Amike, another<br />

Olympian as head. The celebration of<br />

the Chioma’s historic jump, 25 years<br />

after, has taken the centre stage.<br />

Athletics, football and taekwondo are<br />

three sporting events chosen to<br />

celebrate the golden jump.<br />

Amike, said that the centre was also<br />

organising Olympics Talent Hunt for<br />

girls. It has already held in Lagos<br />

(May 11-13), Abia (May 18-19), and<br />

would move to Edo (May 28-30),<br />

Anambra (June 7-9), Enugu (June 16-<br />

18), Ebonyi (23-27) and Imo, her place<br />

of birth, (July 6-8) and Abuja (August<br />

16-18). A dinner will be held at the<br />

Transcorp Hotel, Abuja on August 19.<br />

The Chioma Ajunwa Foundation will<br />

launch an N6 billion ultra-modern<br />

Sports Development Centre in Owerri<br />

later in the year.<br />

SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021 — 31<br />

Thanks to Femi Otedola, I can walk again<br />

— Coach Charles Bassey<br />

By Jacob Ajom<br />

The philanthropic works of the<br />

Femi Otedola Foundation have<br />

continued to affect the lives of many.<br />

Most of the beneficiaries have been<br />

ex-Nigeria internationals.<br />

The likes of former Nigeria coach,<br />

Christian Chukwu, former Nigeria<br />

goalkeeper, Peter Fregene, Nigeria’s<br />

music icon, late Majek Fashek,<br />

veteran actor Victor Alaotan and<br />

Nollywood star late Sadiq Aba,<br />

retired University of Uyo lecturer Dr<br />

Inih Ebong, among others are some<br />

of the notable names who, at one<br />

time or the other attracted the<br />

sympathy of the Foundation, with<br />

profound results after its<br />

intervention.<br />

The foundation is at it again. This<br />

time, the it has intervened in the<br />

treatment of a former Nigeria<br />

international and renowned football<br />

coach, Charles Bassey, who had been<br />

bedridden for a long time. The Femi<br />

Otedola Foundation has<br />

underwritten all the medical bills and<br />

paid upfront for six-months his<br />

treatment.<br />

A tearful, but grateful Charles<br />

Bassey told Sports Vanguard,<br />

“Thanks to Femi Otedola, I can walk<br />

again.”<br />

He said he had been rendered<br />

immobile with a spinal cord ailment.<br />

“I could not move on my own. I was<br />

helpless as countless letters I wrote<br />

seeking help yielded nothing. Even<br />

my state government, the Akwa<br />

Ibom state government would not<br />

even reply to my appeals. I resigned<br />

to fate, waiting for the worst,” he<br />

recalled.<br />

From nowhere, the Femi Otedola<br />

Foundation got in touch with the<br />

ailing coach, established his location<br />

and before long they took up his<br />

case.<br />

Bassey said he was being treated<br />

at the Ibom Specialist Hospital Uyo<br />

•Otedola<br />

Lee Evans want<br />

anted me to break the 400m<br />

world record --- Egbunike<br />

By Ben Efe<br />

Former Nigeria 400m great Innocent<br />

Egbunike and other athletes have<br />

been mourning the passing of veteran<br />

US-born coach Lee Evans.<br />

Evans shocked the world in 1968, when<br />

he won the 400m gold at the Olympic<br />

Games staged in Mexico. Evans was the<br />

the first man to break the 44.00 barrier<br />

with a time of 43.86secs a world record,<br />

and also he let the world know that ‘Black<br />

Lives Matter’ when he raised his fist to<br />

protest racial injustice during the medals<br />

presentation where he wore a black beret<br />

to buttress his point.<br />

He suffered a stroke on May 19 and<br />

could not recover from it. He died to fulfill<br />

his wish of working and dying in Africa.<br />

His family members are currently<br />

and he has witnessed a lot of<br />

improvement in his condition. “I can<br />

walk now, but I walk with the aid of<br />

a walking stick. The hospital is now<br />

carrying out what they call<br />

Conservative Management of my<br />

ailing spinal cord. I go to the hospital<br />

Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays<br />

for treatment.<br />

The treatment will last for six<br />

months and at the end of it all, I am<br />

told, I will be able to walk again,<br />

unaided. This has been paid for<br />

upfront by the Foundation.”<br />

The former technical director of<br />

Nigeria Premier League side, Akwa<br />

United said he would continue to<br />

thank God for the life of Femi<br />

Otedola, chairman of Geregu Energy<br />

Group and Femi Otedola<br />

Foundation. “He is godsend and I<br />

wished there were more Nigerians<br />

like him. I am still in shock for what<br />

he has done for me and many other<br />

Nigerians.”<br />

Bassey said that former Nigeria<br />

discussing whether to bury him in<br />

Nigeria to fulfill his wish or ferry his<br />

remains back to America.<br />

After Lee Evans' world conquering<br />

feats, he came to Nigeria in 1973 and<br />

worked with several top Nigerian<br />

athletes, including Innocent Egbunike<br />

who still holds the national 400m record<br />

of 44.17 seconds.<br />

“He encouraged me that I could break<br />

the world 400m record. He was the<br />

greatest quarter miler and a trailblazer.<br />

“I’m grateful to God for all the blessings,<br />

coach Lee helped me to believe in my<br />

God-given talent and understanding<br />

certain things of life,” Egbunike said.<br />

Also 400m hurdler and national record<br />

holder Ajoke Odumosu credicted Lee<br />

Evans with her success in athletics.<br />

“He was a mentor, a role model, a coach<br />

Captain, UBTH<br />

Golf Club, Hon<br />

Mathew<br />

Iduoriyekemwen<br />

presenting the<br />

Inter-Club Match<br />

Play trophy to the<br />

Captain, Ibori Golf<br />

and Country Club,<br />

Alfred Ebreneyin at<br />

the IGCC golf<br />

course, Asaba,<br />

Delta State over the<br />

weekend.<br />

•Charles Bassey at the Hospital<br />

international, Barrister Adokiye<br />

Amiesimaka has also been of<br />

tremendous help to him in his time<br />

of need. “Adokiye has been like a<br />

pillar for me. I want to use this<br />

medium to thank them all for<br />

keeping me alive to this day.”<br />

and a father to me and many more<br />

successful athletes around the world.<br />

“His love for motherland and Africa<br />

made him spend the last of his days in<br />

Nigeria.”<br />

Coach Lee was part of the successful<br />

Cross River grassroots sports initiative<br />

supervised by former 400m runner Bruce<br />

Ijirigho. The programme supported by<br />

former Cross River governor Liyel Imoke<br />

produced a pool of talented athletes<br />

including Patience Okon-George, Mercy<br />

Ntiabong, Fabian Edoki and Nkiru<br />

Iwoha. Lee was soon contracted by Lagos<br />

State but the romance did not last long.<br />

“Coach Lee was like a father figure in<br />

Nigerian athletics,” said Jide Josiah,<br />

former AFN vice president and presently<br />

a royal father in Ikogosi, Ekiti State.<br />

“I remember when he was coaching us<br />

there was a time we were late for training<br />

and he came to meet us where we were<br />

waiting to be fed and asked what the hell<br />

was keeping us from training.<br />

"We told him that we only had Eba ready<br />

but no soup. He thundered "well you can<br />

swallow the Iba and drink the soup later,<br />

come on guys it's time for training."<br />

•Lee-Evans


C<br />

M<br />

Y<br />

K<br />

SATURDAY Vanguard, MAY 22, 2021<br />

CROSS WORD PUZZLE<br />

SOLUTION ON PAGE 6<br />

Printed and Published by VANGUARD MEDIA LIMITED, Vanguard Avenue, Kirikiri Canal, P.M.B.1007, Apapa. Phone: Newsroom: 018773962. Deputy Editor: 01-4548355.<br />

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Website: www.vanguardngr.com (ISSN 0794-652X). EDITOR: ONOCHIE ANIBEZE. Phone: 01-7742861, All correspondence to P.M.B. 1007, Apapa Lagos.

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